Should NATO Expand Eastward?
by Jack Beatty, March 25 - April 8, 1996
View the results of this poll.
See the responses to
this scenario.
Read how Executive Decision works.
EXECUTIVE-DECISION MEMORANDUM
To: The President of the United States
From: D. N. Forser, Chief of Staff
Re: NATO expansion--Should the West go East?
Date: March 25, 1996
"NATO Is Expanding!" Except perhaps for "Canada: Our Powerful Neighbor to the North,"
a more snore-inducing headline is not conceivable. But wait; this is
important. NATO is going East. Plans call for including the new
democracies of Eastern Europe--Poland, Hungary, the two statelets of the
former Czechoslovakia, perhaps others--within the NATO defensive alliance.
What about Ukraine? The Baltic states? Russia? Not yet, say the NATO
member countries. And that's why the issue matters. Russia is not happy
with the prospect of NATO--which was formed in 1949 to contain the former
Soviet Union--so close to its borders.
Just last week the lower house of
Russia's Parliament, in what some analysts interpreted as a reaction to
NATO expansion, voted to declare the dissolution of the Soviet Union
illegal. It was a non-binding resolution, backed by Communists and
nationalist deputies and denounced by President Yeltsin (who is also, by
the way, strongly opposed to NATO's enlargement), yet it was a worrying
portent. Russian presidential elections are to be held in June. Russia,
which since November has had a Communist/nationalist-dominated Parliament,
could have a Communist or nationalist President committed to resisting NATO
enlargement after those elections. Under these circumstances, should NATO
proceed?
We see two options:
A. Take a public stand opposing eastward NATO expansion.
B. Take a public stand advocating the absorption of the former
Eastern Bloc countries and the Baltic States--and, ultimately, Russia--into
NATO.
A brief argument in favor of Option A
Option A:
No! Halt--or at least postpone--NATO expansion.
Mr./Ms. President, it would be foolish to ignore a warning like this one, from
General Alexander Lebed, who may well succeed Yeltsin after Russia's
presidential election in June: "NATO enlargement into Eastern Europe may
force Russia into forming a military bloc of its own," Lebed told Reuters.
Russia could cancel treaties and agreements with the West. "The Cold War
is over. They won... So why have you decided to re-open the competition?"
A good question. The answer seems to be a desire on our part to look
strong, to be seen as leading the Alliance. But we have since led the Alliance
in Bosnia. Elsewhere, we have flexed our muscles in
East Asia, Haiti, and now Cuba. The need to look strong is no longer so
pressing.
A second answer to Lebed's question is that Western Europe fears a U.
S. return to isolationism. As one Western European diplomat explained to a
writer for The Atlantic Monthly, "We have to give the Americans some new
toys to play with in NATO, because we're afraid that otherwise they may
get bored and go home." In other words, Mr./Ms. President, the Europeans want
to keep us on their continent even at the price of inflaming tensions with
Russia. That is too high a price to pay. Russia, as we all know, is still
a nuclear power.
We should put the enlargement idea on hold. There's no need to cancel
it--just let the bureaucratic-propaganda momentum work backward instead
of forward, and fog enlargement under studies and commissions and yet
more studies and commissions. Why delay? Because in addition to the
potentially dangerous Russian response to expansion (summarized above)
there is the eventual reaction of American taxpayers to consider. Already
nearly half of our $250 billion defense budget goes to subsidize the
protection of the NATO countries. From whom? From a Russian military whose
incompetence has been on display in Chechnya? This is not a credible
threat.
We are not the Romans, Mr./Ms. President. We stationed troops in Europe to
contain Soviet communism. It has been contained. The Soviet Union no
longer exists. NATO has fulfilled its historic role. The issue is not NATO
enlargement. It is NATO contraction. It is relief for U.S. taxpayers. It is
Medicaid cuts and forgone domestic investment. It is guns versus butter.
Let's remain in NATO. But let's adopt the strategy Walter Lippmann
recommended before we decided to station troops permanently in Europe. He
called it "the blue-water strategy." Our defensive line should begin not in
Germany but in the blue water of the Atlantic. We are a maritime--not a
land--power. Let the Europeans defend--against whom?--their own land on
their own land. We can help to defend it with our carriers on the blue
water--as well as from U.S. air bases and missile sites. The Cold War is over.
Let's bring the boys home.
A brief argument in favor of Option B
Option B:
Expand eastward in the name of peace!
Mr./Ms. President, if we back away from enlargement now, even if we do it in
the slow-motion way others of your aides are urging, we will look weak.
We will be accused of backing down to Russian pressure. Safire, Will,
Rosenthal, Krauthammer, to say nothing of Senator Dole, will attack us. In an election year! A political disaster.
The effects abroad of saying "No" to NATO enlargement would be, if
anything, worse. Alliance solidarity
nearly broke over Bosnia. It could break yet over our proposed December
pull-out from Bosnia. If we have public second thoughts about NATO
enlargement, our allies will have public second thoughts about us. Our
steadiness. Our capacity to lead. Your steadiness. Your leadership
capacity.
The No option is strategically myopic. Yes, Russia presents no threat to
the West TODAY. Who knows about tomorrow? Policy should be made with an
eye to tomorrow--that is, with an eye to history.
Then there is Germany. Twice in this century Germany has sought to
dominate the European continent. We can't say this aloud, but another
reason to enlarge NATO is to contain Germany towards the East as she is
already contained towards the West. We can't expect the Russians to see
that now. But in time they will understand that enlargement can help to
protect them from Germany.
NATO enlargement to the East will help to realize Woodrow Wilson's dream of
collective security formed by a league of peace so powerful as to deter
aggression. Those advocating a caesura before eastward expansion envision a
peace dividend. But what about peace itself? Isn't that worth a few more
tax-dollars? With Russia itself an eventual member of NATO, peace through
collective security will be a reality from the English Channel to Russia.
Then and only then will the vast slaughters of the two World Wars be
vindicated.
The way ahead is the road to peace. The way back is the road toward
instability, toward the break-up of the Alliance, toward arms races and
the scramble between states for security and possibly toward war. History
will judge us harshly if we retreat from the promise of peace.
Click here to return to the Executive Decision index page.
Copyright ©1996 by The Atlantic Monthly Company. All rights
reserved.
|