U.S. plans for NATO run into a wall
By Sara Flounders
Apr 13, 2008
NATO held a three-day meeting in Bucharest, Romania, on April 2 to 4,
attended by George W. Bush and other heads of state. It was a stormy affair.
This alliance of imperialist military powers, long dominated by the U.S., was
divided on several proposals being pushed by Washington.
One was the proposed further expansion of NATO eastward to include Ukraine
and Georgia, which were once part of the Soviet Union and sit on the border of
Russia. Another was the plan to place a U.S. ballistic missile system in the
Czech Republic and Poland, the heart of Europe. Another was Washington’s
recognition of independence for the Serbian province of Kosovo.
The most immediate problem for Bush, however, was resistance to his call for
NATO to send thousands more troops to Afghanistan. The problem of finding more
youth to be cannon fodder exposed the obvious weakness of this rapidly
expanding military alliance.
The U.S. is so bogged down and overstretched in Iraq that it is twisting the
arms of other NATO members to fill the gap as the Pentagon’s situation in
Afghanistan deteriorates. However, there is mass opposition in Europe to
increased military spending and especially to bailing out the U.S. in Iraq or
Afghanistan by sending troops.
In poll after poll in both Eastern and Western Europe, the overwhelming
majority of the people have opposed deeper military involvement. Politicians
know that agreeing to send troops to either Iraq or Afghanistan is political
suicide.
U.S. imperialism has grand and ominous plans to surround Russia and China
with U.S./NATO bases. The plans look great on paper and in war games. But
putting troops on the ground is becoming more and more difficult.
Demonstrations against this NATO summit and other NATO meetings and
exercises show the deep opposition fermenting among the masses.
In addition, Russia has warned that the eastward expansion of NATO and the
stationing of U.S. missiles in the Czech Republic and Poland pose a grave
threat to its security and could lead to European-wide instability and even
war.
Both the strong Russian opposition and growing resistance at home have led
to disagreements and contention among the European imperialists. At the
Bucharest meeting, Germany, France, Spain, Italy, Belgium, the Netherlands and
Luxemburg strongly and openly opposed Bush’s demands to include Ukraine
and Georgia in NATO.
The ruling classes of these countries are imperialist plunderers in their
own right. But they are fearful that these aggressive U.S. military advances
may be arousing mass opposition from below. Their continued profits are based
on capitalist stability.
The weak and dependent capitalist regimes of Eastern Europe and the Balkans,
recently added to NATO, voted with the U.S.
U.S. ruling class for expanding NATO
Bush declared in Bucharest that “NATO is no longer a static alliance
focused on defending Europe. ... It is now an expeditionary alliance that is
sending its forces across the world. ...” (New York Times, April 5) The
U.S. president was not just speaking for his increasingly narrow circle. He
carried with him a resolution passed unanimously by the House supporting his
demand that Georgia and Ukraine be accepted into NATO.
In Congress and among the presidential candidates and other leading
political figures of both capitalist parties, there was no debate or opposition
to these dangerous proposals on the future direction of NATO.
Barely reported in the U.S. corporate media was how Bush’s demands
became a source of contention at the usually sedate and scripted NATO dinner.
The political discussion at this state affair lasted two hours past its
scheduled time. Finally Laura Bush and the spouses of other political leaders
withdrew from the gathering as the sharp exchanges continued.
While the U.S. media was focusing on the Dalai Lama and China’s
actions in Tibet, there was no coverage of the total lockdown of the entire
population of Bucharest by 30,000 police and the outlawing of any political
gatherings or protests there.
The unanimity of the U.S. ruling class on NATO’s expansion is
reflected even in the U.S. progressive political movement. While there is
overwhelming opposition to the U.S. occupation of Iraq, there is little
discussion of the long-term cost and dangers of NATO expansion.
Washington’s hopes had been high before the NATO summit. On the eve of
the gathering, Gen. Ray Henault, chairman of the NATO Military Committee, made
the following bragging points: “Less than 20 years ago, NATO consisted of
16 members, counted none as partners, and had conducted no operations or
exercises outside its member state borders. ... Today, NATO counts 26 members
and 38 other countries in four Partnership arrangements. ...
“In a few short years, NATO has conducted eight operations on four
continents. NATO has expanded five times since its creation, and further growth
looks inevitable. ... It does not seem that the pace of activity will lessen
any time soon.”
General Henault predicted that the “Bucharest Summit is going to be
critical to the future orientation of the Alliance and its Partners, resulting
in key political decisions on enlargement, enhancements to our military
capabilities, and how we conduct our operations.”
But that is not the way the meeting turned out. The differences could barely
be papered over at the state dinners or in the final press conference. NATO
leaders decided to leave the contentious issue of Ukraine and Georgia to a
meeting of their foreign ministers in December 2008. There was no agreement on
recognition of Kosovo. Each politician tried to avoid firm or sizable
commitments of more troops for Afghanistan.
NATO’s rapid growth
NATO as a U.S.-dominated military alliance was, until the collapse of the
Soviet Union, a bloc of industrialized, prosperous imperialist countries that
had grown wealthy on generations of colonial plunder. It was essentially an
imperialist bloc determined to defend capitalist markets against the spread of
socialist revolutions in Europe through military might, nuclear blackmail,
economic sabotage, espionage and terror.
Now NATO has grown to four times its original number and spread far beyond
its stated North Atlantic area. All the new members and “partners”
of this military bloc are countries from Eastern Europe and the former Soviet
Union that have become captured ministates, economic colonies of European and
U.S. imperialism. Until 1990 they had far more integrated and planned economies
flowing from public ownership of the means of production. Basic necessities
from food to housing, health care and education were guaranteed and subsidized
by the state.
Membership in this imperialist military alliance is not based on equality or
democracy. It is based on a narrow, privileged elite who have benefited
enormously from the forced privatization of once publicly owned industries.
These elite are anxious to stabilize their new capitalism by tying their
countries securely to the markets of the West. Membership in NATO and in the
European Union is viewed by this narrow grouping as a security barrier against
their own workers.
The process of absorbing these economies has been ruthless. In order to join
NATO, the governments have up to 10 years to bring their formerly socialist
economies into U.S. and Western capitalist “alignment.” NATO calls
it the Membership Action Plan (MAP). It is a roadmap telling the regimes what
increasingly stiff economic and military conditions they must impose in order
to be considered for NATO membership.
Those accepted into the MAP must turn their entire country over to U.S.
planners to ensure that changes are made to integrate them into Western
capitalist markets. The countries must commit to extensive
“cooperation” with the U.S. in political, security and economic
fields.
They must develop all military facilities requested of them, contribute
forces to participate in NATO military actions, and ensure that their military
is under the NATO command structure. Political and economic sovereignty are
lost. All long-term planning must be done in coordination with the U.S. But
most onerous is that they must vastly increase their defense and police
spending and fully integrate their intelligence system with NATO. They must
sign for huge new loans and commit to purchases of U.S. military equipment that
mesh with NATO.
Enormous promises were made to these countries about the long-term
prosperity that awaited their total submission. But now they are the first to
feel the brunt of the economic crisis sweeping the capitalist markets.
Demonstrations and mass opposition
Throughout Europe, seething opposition to NATO expansion, U.S. ballistic
missile deployment and the sending of NATO forces to Afghanistan is seen in
both demonstrations and polls.
In the Czech Republic and Poland, polls show up to 70 percent oppose the
missile installations in their countries. Mass rallies, demonstrations and
petition campaigns are demanding the issue be decided by national referendum.
The weak U.S.-backed governments in Prague and Warsaw had hoped for
NATO’s blessing for the missile-basing project.
Three quarters of Russians are against the entry of Ukraine and Georgia into
NATO, a study conducted by sociologists of the Levada Center showed. A Harris
survey reported on March 28 that Europeans, East and West, oppose the U.S.
missile deployment in the Czech Republic and Poland, seeing it as the beginning
of more U.S. missiles in Europe. Those polled saw as far-fetched the idea that
Iran is a nuclear threat, which Washington gives as a reason for the
deployment. Popular understanding across Europe is that Russia would be the
target.
In Germany More than 70 percent of people polled came out against the
deployment. In Spain the opposition was 61 percent and in France 58 percent.
Actual support for the U.S. missiles was very low—
11 to 20 percent.
A 2008 German Marshall Fund poll found that only 30 percent of Europeans
supported committing troops for combat operations in Afghanistan.
In Ukraine, a survey published in February showed 70 percent opposed their
country joining NATO; only 11 percent actually supported NATO membership.
Another poll confirmed that 70 percent of Montenegrins would vote against
joining NATO if given a chance to do so.
This popular sentiment is reflected in growing mass movements in the
streets.
On the eve of the Bucharest summit, a bloc of socialists and communists in
Ukraine called for mass demonstrations. Their leaflet read: “Today
average Americans who give a significant part of their family budget for
military operations in Iraq do not want to pay for this operation any more and
do not want their men to die there. Do Ukrainians want this?
NATO—NO!”
A demonstration in Ukraine’s capital of Kiev marched on the U.S.
Embassy and blocked the city center for hours. Some stayed into the night and
erected tents for a longer stay.
Mass demonstrations also took place in the Ukrainian cities of Kharkov,
Dnipropetrovsk, Donetsk, Luhansk, Odessa, Zaporizhzhya and Sevastopol.
Three days later, when NATO failed to reach a decision on Ukraine and
Georgia joining the MAP program, tens of thousands across Ukraine took to the
streets celebrating victory.
In Bucharest, where demonstrators were expected from throughout Romania and
across Europe to protest the NATO meeting, 30,000 police, military, snipers and
secret police occupied the central city.
They made mass arrests at the legally rented anti-NATO convergence center.
All protest permits were denied, making anti-NATO demonstrations illegal.
Residents were encouraged to leave the city. Schools and workplaces were closed
for the duration of the summit. Bucharest’s police chief publicly warned
that protests would not be tolerated. Activists attempting to enter Romania
from other European Union countries were denied entry, with no cause given.
Hundreds rallied in northern Poland on March 29 against U.S. plans to build
a missile-defense base in the region. The demonstrators carried banners
reading, “We don’t want to be your missile shield” and
“Not one step more in the arms race.”
To be continued. Next: Iraq, Afghanistan and NATO.