Alphen, Netherlands. 6
February. On Tuesday a senior Russian
from Moscow’s Academy of Sciences told me somewhat chillingly that Ukraine
should “…focus on the future and not on territory”. That was as clear a statement as yet of
Russian strategy; to confirm the gains made in eastern Ukraine and avoid any
debate over the status of Crimea. As
Chancellor Merkel and President Hollande (Prime Minister Cameron???) jet to
Moscow I think the phrase President Putin will be preparing will be succinct: fait accompli! "We hold what we have". Forget all the talk about implementing last
September’s Minsk Agreement the current pro-Russian offensive is all about
Russian strategy and the central role Moscow now accords its developing
military capability in creating an unstable ‘buffer zone’ around and along
Russia’s western borders. So, what is
NATO going to do about it?
The same day as my
Russian colleague proposed his fait
accompli in Ukraine I put a direct question to NATO Deputy Secretary General
Alexander Vershbow; what if forward deterrence failed, the unthinkable happened
and Russian military adventurism entered the Baltic States? The reason for my question was not that I am
expecting a Russian military incursion into the Baltic States tomorrow. However, I am worried. The Putin regime is fast becoming
increasingly idiosyncratic, opportunistic and unstable. Moreover, with the US increasingly over-stretched the
correlation of forces between NATO and Russian forces could reach a point in
which Russia calculates that short of a nuclear war on European soil there is
nothing NATO could do to prevent such an incursion. The start of wars are always all about 'the moment'. At such a moment a Moscow faced with growing
popular discontent at home may, just may, be tempted to attack.
Yesterday in Brussels
Alliance Defence Ministers met to discuss precisely this scenario and how best
to strengthen NATO collective defence.
NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg said the decision to enhance the
NATO Response Force and confirm the so-called Spearhead Force would “ensure that
we have the right forces, in the right place at the right time”. Really?
According to US
think-tank CSIS between 2001 and 2011
NATO Europeans cut their respective armed forces on average by 18%. Between
2012 and 2014 twelve of the world’s top twenty defence cutters were in NATO
Europe. Driven by sequestration by 2020 the
US plans to cut its armed forces by a sum greater than Europe’s entire defence
investment. And yet according to the Washington
Post an increasingly militarised Russia plans to inject some $775bn into
creating the more professionalised armed forces apparent in Ukraine. Notably, Russia is investing particularly
heavily in SAS-type Special Operations Forces (Little Green Men) that can
underpin the kind of disinformation-led hybrid/ambiguous warfare all-too-apparent
in Ukraine.
Cue Brussels. The problem with
yesterday’s declaration by NATO defence ministers is that I have heard it all before;
it is defence pretence. Yes, at the NATO
Wales Summit the nations agreed to stop cutting defence budgets and start
moving towards meeting the NATO guideline of 2% GDP on defence within a
decade). Frankly (and I have been
digging), even that extremely limited commitment is not worth the rather cheap toilet paper my Dutch
wife insists on buying and upon which such a ‘commitment’ seems to have been
written.
When in doubt pretend! That seems to be the mantra of many European
leaders when it comes to defence. For
years I was told defence was not being cut when it patently was. Now I am being told Europeans are spending
more on defence when they are patently not. It is something straight out of Monty Python - "run away".
Take my own country
Britain. Yesterday, Defence Secretary
Michael Fallon made much of the fact that Britain will take a lead by committing 1000 troops to the new
Spearhead Force alongside France,
Germany, Italy, Poland and Spain. The
same day the House of Commons Defence Select Committee slammed the Ministry of
Defence for its “strikingly modest” contribution of the British armed forces to
the fight against Islamic State. This week it has also emerged that plans are
afoot to cut and to partially merge the very spearhead formations NATO’s new
force will be reliant upon – 3 Commando Brigade and 16 Air Assault Brigade –
under the guise of a ‘new’ joint rapid reaction force. Critically, the all-important ‘enablers’ (the
key structures and kit that gets a force into action and supports it)
will also be cut. If true this is madness and
will critically undermine not only Britain’s defence but NATO too at this
pivotal moment in European history and stability.
The second, paperback
edition of my book Little Britain? Twenty-First
Century Strategy for a Middling European Power, which considers British
national and defence strategy in the round, is out next week (www.amazon.com). In the book I call for a radical British future
force that will look much like the US Marines Corps. A core force that is able to lead and
support Alliance coalitions built on firm principles of ‘deep jointness’
between the Navy, Army and Air Force.
However, a central contention of the book is that to create such a core
force the British must turn all of its now very small army and marines into a spearhead force
not turn the spearhead force into a kind of peacekeeping militia simply to save
money.
The reason for this
nonsense is that British and other European leaders still see the defence
budget as a welfare reserve to be raided whenever long-term strategy is to be
sacrificed for short-term politics. Sadly, this obsession with cutting armed forces at whastever the cost can take place only
because leaders like David Cameron steadfastly refuse to look at what is
happening in the world, most notably what is happening on Europe’s borders some two hours flying
time from London.
The bottom-line is this; NATO cannot go on creating ever more acronyms with ever less forces. The irony of the ‘new’ force NATO is proposing
is that it looks very much like the European Rapid Reaction Force (ERRF)
proposed amidst much fanfare back at the December 1999 EU Helsinki Summit. Some sixteen years on that force still exists
only as a political fantasy within the Brussels beltway and which if called
upon might just make Antwerp within sixty days. Creating such as force as policy is not the same as creating
such a force as fact. Too often European
leaders are happy to make grand declarations and then simply not follow
through.
Europe and the world is
getting far too dangerous for defence pretence.
Worse, such political folly is actively destabilising Europe for it is
encouraging Russian adventurism. It is
time to end defence pretence, before defence pretence ends NATO.
Julian Lindley-French
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