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NATO must prepare for nuclear first strike, report urges
By Bill Van Auken
24 January 2008
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A chilling report prepared by a group of top military commanders
from the US and its NATO allies declares that the alliance must
be prepared to launch a preemptive nuclear first strike because
of asymmetric threats and global challenges posed
to the West.
The first use of nuclear weapons must remain in the quiver
of escalation as the ultimate instrument to prevent the use of
weapons of mass destruction, in order to avoid truly existential
dangers, declares the report, which is titled Towards
a Grand Strategy for an Uncertain World: Renewing Transatlantic
Partnership.
The authors of the document, which has been submitted to the
Pentagon and the NATO command, include Gen. John Shalikashvili
(ret.), who was chief of the joint chiefs of staff under the Clinton
administration, as well as former chiefs of the armed forces in
Britain, France, Germany and the Netherlands.
According to a report published Tuesday in the British Guardian,
The manifesto has been written following discussions with
active commanders and policymakers, many of whom are unable or
unwilling to publicly air their views. It is expected to
be a key subject of discussion at a NATO summit to be held in
Bucharest in April.
The report presents a grim picture of the 21st century, portraying
the major Western powers as under siege from real and potential
enemies as well as objective changes in the global situation.
It calls attention to population growth and climate change
as exacerbating world conflicts and warns that terrorism, proliferation
of weapons of mass destruction and the struggle for scarce
resources, particularly oil, poses new threats. It also
singles out China, Russia and Iran as actual or potential enemies.
In response to these supposed threats, the report calls for
the NATO alliance to adopt a strategy of escalation dominance,
the use of a full bag of both carrots and sticksand indeed
all instruments of soft and hard power, ranging from the diplomatic
protest to nuclear weapons.
It warns that traditional forms and methods of governments
and international organizations, particularly the UN, are
incapable of proceeding with sufficient speed to maintain such
dominance, and therefore a sweeping overhaul of NATO is required
to create an adequate instrument for global intervention.
In a tone that recalls nothing so much as the rantings of Dr.
Strangelove, the report states, Nuclear weapons are the
ultimate instrument of an asymmetric responseand at the
same time the ultimate tool of escalation.
It continues: Regrettably, nuclear weaponsand with
them the option of first useare indispensable, since there
is simply no realistic prospect of a nuclear-free world. On the
contrary, the risk of further proliferation is imminent and, with
it, the danger that nuclear war fighting, albeit limited in scope,
might become possible.... In sum, nuclear weapons remain indispensable,
and nuclear escalation continues to remain an element of any modern
strategy.
The report goes on to describe nuclear escalation
as the ultimate step in responding symmetrically, and at
the same time the most powerful way of inducing uncertainty in
an opponents mind.
While the passages on the prospects of a preemptive nuclear
strike name no specific targets, there is little doubt that the
immediate opponent in the mind of its authors is Iran.
The document perversely portrays a nuclear first strike as an
instrument for preventing nuclear weapons proliferation.
Iran is strongly suspected of engaging in a military
nuclear programme, the report states. It continues: The
willingness of the USA and its coalition partners to rid the world
of the two terrible regimes of Saddam Husseins Iraq and
the Taliban has left a vacuum that Iran is stepping into, with
the world unable to contain Irans growing influence in the
region.
As a nuclear power, it continues, Iran could
become immune to international sanctions. Furthermore, it would
dominate the region, which possesses the worlds largest
oil and gas reserves.
This last question is clearly the principal concern among the
ruling elite in both the US and Europethat the major powers
would face a direct challenge to their control over strategic
energy supplies now dominated by the multinational oil companies.
The report essentially reiterates positions already enunciated
by the Bush administration in Washington, which has repeatedly
stressed that it is keeping all options on the table,
including the use of nuclear weapons, in its global war on terror
and its confrontations with so-called rogue states.
In 2002, the US administration drafted a Nuclear Posture Review
that spelled out the kind of preemptive nuclear first-strike policy
put forward in the NATO report. It declared that the US reserves
the right to respond with overwhelming forceincluding the
use of nuclear weaponsto the use of [WMD] against the United
States, our forces abroad, and friends and allies. It went
on to assert that the US must develop the capabilities to
detect and destroy an adversarys WMD assets before these
weapons are used.
In 2006, investigative journalist Seymour Hersh cited extensive
intelligence and military sources in a report that revealed the
Bush administration had drafted plans for a preemptive attack
on Iran, which included the use of tactical nuclear devices
to obliterate not only the countrys nuclear program, but
also large elements of its security forces and basic infrastructure.
The document submitted to NATO by the former chiefs of staff
echoes the twisted logic utilized by the Bush administration in
its attempt to justify its policy of preventive war.
The early use of military responses is often linked to
pre-emption and preventionboth elements of modern strategy,
it states. Both are applicable throughout a crisis or conflict,
and neither is necessarily linked to a specific set of instruments,
such as the military. Pre-emption is the reactive response, when
an opponents action is considered imminent; whereas prevention
is a proactive step aimed at denialand thus at conflict
terminationin a situation in which the threat is not yet
imminent, but in which evidence indisputably points to the unavoidability
of conflict. Pre-emption is widely seen as a legal act of self-defence
under customary international law, whereas the question of the
legality of a preventive use of force so far remains unanswered.
This is a deliberate and nonsensical falsification. Under international
law, a preventive use of force is indistinguishable
from illegal aggressiona war of choice waged
by a military power to eliminate some perceived future threat
that would place it at a strategic disadvantage. At the Nuremberg
trial of the Nazi leadership, such a war was described as the
supreme international crime.
While the ex-defense chiefs report makes the case for
NATO playing the role of a global security provider,
independent of and, whenever necessary, in defiance of the United
Nations and international law, much of the document consists of
a worried critique of the present state of the Atlantic alliance.
It states, for example, that interventions in Bosnia, Kosovo,
Afghanistan and Iraq have all been characterized by the
absence of a properly defined political objective, the absence
of an integrated and allied strategy to achieve that objective,
and the absence of capabilities to implement the strategy.
It adds, In addition, nations have commonly imposed too
many national caveats on use of their forces. There exists an
unwillingness on the part of nations to transfer authority to
the operational commander once in the theatre of operations. Finally,
there is a tendency for nations not to resource operations effectively.
These statements appear to directly reflect the bitter divisions
that have opened up between Washington and its NATO allies in
Afghanistan, where the US has been forced to dispatch thousands
more Marines because of the refusal of Germany, France and Italy
to send more troops or waive restrictions on the rules of engagement
for those they have already sent. At the same time, the European
members have criticized the American military for excessive use
of force, which they have blamed for the mounting resistance in
the occupied country.
A section of the document proposes far-reaching changes to
the NATO command structure in order to enable the military alliance
to respond at short notice and conduct operations at a high
operational tempo.
These include changing from consensus decisions within NATO
to majority votes in order to prevent dissent from blocking military
interventions. The document also demands the scrapping of all
national caveats limiting the use of European military
forces, as in Afghanistan, placing them under a centralized and
unrestricted NATO command.
The document calls for NATO to deny any say in its military
operations to members of the alliance that do not contribute military
forces to carry them out. It also explicitly advocates that NATO
be prepared to carry out military action without United Nations
Security Council authorization when immediate action is
needed to protect large numbers of human beings.
In its conclusion, the document declares, The lack of
cooperationindeed, at times, the rivalrybetween the
EU and NATO is something that must be rectified. It insists,
For the USA to play its role as effectively as possible,
the transatlantic bargain between the European countries, Canada
and their American ally must be renewed.
The reality is that the transatlantic bargain is
coming unraveled as a result of the historic decline in the global
position of US capitalism and the relentless turn by the American
ruling elite towards militarism.
While the European bourgeoisie has repeatedly subordinated
itself to Washington, including in the war against Iraq and the
escalating threats against Iran, its interests and those of American
capitalism do not coincide. The struggle between rival capitalist
nations for scarce resourceswhich is the fundamental
source of both of these conflictsultimately pits European
capitalism against US imperialism.
Then there are China and Russia, which are increasingly asserting
their own interests internationally. Significantly, just the day
before the call for NATO preemptive nuclear strikes grabbed international
headlines, the chief of staff of the Russian military issued his
own similar warning.
We do not intend to attack anyone, but we consider it
necessary that all our partners in the international community
clearly understand that for the defense of our sovereignty and
the territorial integrity of Russia and its allies, the armed
forces will be employed, including preventively the use of nuclear
weapons, said General Yuri Bauyevsky.
It is the drive by US imperialism to offset its economic decline
in relation to rivals in Europe and Asia by exploiting its military
superiority to seize hold of vital natural resources and markets
that poses the threat of a world conflagration. It is in this
context that the recommendations of the former defense chiefs
in relation to nuclear first strikes and wars of aggression assume
their full menacing significance for the future of mankind.
See Also:
Iran: Why does Bush
invoke the threat of World War III?
[30 November 2007]
More warnings of a
US war on Iran
[29 October 2007]
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