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WSWS : News
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US, Germany clash over NATO expansion plan
By Bill Van Auken
2 April 2008
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In a provocative gesture on the eve of the NATO summit in Bucharest,
Romania, US President George W. Bush flew to Kiev and appeared
with Ukrainian President Viktor Yushchenko to press for the former
Soviet republics admittance into NATO.
Your country has made a bold decision, Bush said
of Yushchenkos quest for NATO membership, and the
United States strongly supports your request.
Bush praised the Ukrainian government for having dispatched
token military forces to aid the US wars in Iraq and Afghanistan
as well as the NATO force in Kosovo.
A poll released last month indicated that barely 11 percent
of the Ukrainian people back membership in NATO, while 36 percent
strongly oppose it. Opposition is particularly strong in the countrys
east.
Thousands of people gathered in Kievs Independence Square
and rallied outside the US embassy carrying banners with slogans
that included NATO is Worse than the Gestapo and Put
Bushs Bloody Dictatorship before an International Tribunal.
The crowd chanted Yankee go home!
Anger towards Bush was heightened by a report leaked to the
Ukrainian media that the US president had come to Kiev accompanied
by American sniper teams, which had been authorized to fire on
anyone suspected of carrying a weapon.
V. Geletey, chief of Ukraines state security service,
issued a public statement warning residents of downtown Kiev not
to go out on balconies, open windows, climb roofs of the
houses and take photos and videos.
In January, Ukraines government asked to join NATOs
Membership Action Plan (MAP), a process that sets out a timetable
and set of conditions to be met to achieve NATO membership. Washington
immediately backed the move, as it has the request by the former
Soviet republic of Georgia for MAP status.
In Bucharest this week, I will continue to make Americas
position clear: we support MAP for Ukraine and Georgia,
Bush said after meeting with Yushchenko. My stop here should
be a clear signal to everybody that I mean what I say: Its
in our interest for Ukraine to join.
The Kremlin responded in February to Kievs NATO application
with a warning that, if Ukraine joined the Western alliance and
allowed it to establish bases on its soil, Russia would treat
it as a military target. Russia could target its missile
systems at Ukraine, declared Russian President Vladimir
Putin. Imagine that for a second.
The Kremlin has also strongly opposed NATOs expansion
into Georgia, threatening that it could lead to Moscows
recognition of separatist republics in the Georgian territories
of South Ossetia and Abkhazia, both of which border on Russia.
The sharpest problems are Georgia and Ukraine,
Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov told the newspaper Izvestia
Monday. They are being impudently drawn into NATO. Even
though, as is known, the overwhelming majority of Ukrainians are
against this and in Abkhazia and South Ossetia they wont
even hear of it.
In the past decade, NATO has admitted nine ex-member states
of the former Soviet-led Warsaw Pact, beginning with Poland, the
Czech Republic and Hungary in 1999. Moscow has viewed the expansion
as a growing military encirclement, which would be qualitatively
intensified if it were to be extended to Ukraine and Georgia,
both formerly part of the Soviet Union.
The German government of Chancellor Angela Merkel has made
it clear it will oppose admission of both Ukraine and Georgia.
As the NATO alliance functions on the basis of consensus, Berlin
can effectively wield a veto over the further expansion of the
alliance.
Germany is heavily dependent on Russian energy and is also
Russias biggest trading partner. Likewise, German capitalism
is by far the largest source of foreign direct investment in Ukraine,
having invested four times as much as US-based interests. Politically
motivated cutoffs of energy supplies in recent years have demonstrated
how vulnerable Ukraine is to Russian retaliation.
Last month, Merkel spelled out the position of the German government
in a speech to German armed forces commanders in Berlin that was
also attended by NATO Secretary-General Jaap de Hoop Scheffer.
Countries that are entangled in regional and internal
conflicts cannot become NATO members, she said in a transparent
reference to Georgia and its confrontations with the breakaway
movements in Abkhazia and South Ossetia. German officials have
warned that Georgias admission could result in NATO being
drawn into a confrontation with Russia over the two territories
if the Georgian government were to invoke Article 5 of the NATO
treaty, committing the alliance to come to the aid of member states
under attack or the threat of attack.
Merkel continued by declaring that a country should be admitted
into the trans-Atlantic alliance only if there exists numerically
significant support for NATO membership in that countrys
population, a condition that was clearly meant to exclude
Ukraine.
The German position appears to be widely shared in Western
Europe. In a radio interview Tuesday, French Prime Minister Francois
Fillon warned against moving ahead with NATO membership for the
two former Soviet republics. We are opposed to the entry
of Georgia and Ukraine because we think it is not the right response
to the balance of power within Europe and between Europe and Russia,
and we want to have a dialogue on this subject with Russia,
he said. France will not give the green light to the entry
of Ukraine and Georgia, he told France Inter Radio, adding,
France has an opinion which is different from that of the
United States on this question.
In an interview with the New York Times Tuesday,
Frances European affairs minister, Jean-Pierre Jouyet,
stressed that while Paris opposed NATO membership for the two
former Soviet territories as premature, the European Union should
work to develop close strategic ties with both countries. Because
we consider NATO to be premature, in a way such partnerships become
even more important, he said.
NATOs eastward expansion has been a source of tension
between Western Europe and Washington since it began. In 2003,
faced with European opposition to the US war against Iraq, one
of the wars chief architects, then-Defense Secretary Donald
Rumsfeld, dismissed Germany and France as old Europe
and insisted that the center of gravity was shifting
eastward, where former eastern bloc countries were closely aligned
with US policy.
Washington viewed NATOs expansion into the former Warsaw
Pact region as a means of advancing its strategic interests, taking
advantage of the liquidation of the Soviet Union in 1991 and the
opening up of whole new areas to capitalism.
With the European Union, and Germany in particular, emerging
as the preeminent economic power in the region, the US has sought
to advance its own interests by asserting its military power and
dominance over the NATO alliance, into which these former eastern
bloc countries were recruited.
The statement of French opposition to Washingtons policy
came even as President Nicolas Sarkozy was signaling that France
intends to rejoin NATOs integrated military structure, from
which Charles de Gaulle broke in 1966. According to news reports
in France and Britain, Sarkozy is also preparing to announce at
the Bucharest summit that he is willing to send another 1,000
French troops into eastern Afghanistan.
The move would allow the US, which launched the Afghanistan
war and continues to bear the brunt of the fighting, to shift
a similar number of its own forces to Kandahar to support a Canadian
force of some 2,500. Ottawa had threatened to pull out of the
tense region unless it received reinforcement from other NATO
members.
Afghanistan will be another source of sharp friction between
Washington and its European NATO partners in Bucharest. Recent
reports have warned that Afghanistan is becoming a failed
state. In a report prepared by the Atlantic Councils
Afghanistan Study Group, former NATO commander Gen. James Jones
put it bluntly: Make no mistake; NATO is not winning in
Afghanistan. The report warned that failure in Afghanistan
would put in grave jeopardy NATOs future as a credible,
cohesive and relevant military alliance.
Goading Germany over its refusal to send its troops into combat
in the embattled south of the country, US Defense Secretary Robert
Gates asserted at a European security conference in Munich last
February that NATO was becoming a two-tiered alliance
in which some had the luxury of opting only for stability
and civilian operations, thus forcing other allies to bear a disproportionate
share of the fighting and dying.
The Merkel government has thus far refused to alter the rules
of engagement for the 3,200 German troops in Afghanistan, which
largely restrict them to security and civilian support operations
in the north of the country.
The German weekly, Der Spiegel, reported that German
officials hoped to stall on contested issues like NATO expansion
and the Bush administrations proposalbitterly opposed
by Moscowto deploy a missile shield in eastern Europe until
after Bush leaves office.
But even a new US president will not make things easier
for Germany in Afghanistan, the magazine commented. One
thing that Bush and all of his potential successors have in common
is the call for more German troops. They agree that what Obama
calls the dirty work in the embattled south and east
should no longer be left entirely to the Americans, Canadians,
British and Dutch.
See Also:
Sarkozy strives to establish
French-British axis
[31 March 2008]
NATO security conference:
US demands more European troops in Afghanistan
[13 February 2008]
NATO must prepare for nuclear
first strike, report urges
[24 January 2008]
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