“…the
Alliance is a dynamic and vigorous organisation which is constantly adapting
itself to changing conditions. Given such changes people in NATO societies want
action/protection and not seeing it. It has also shown that its future tasks
can be handled within the terms of the Treaty [of Washington] by building on
the methods and procedures which have proved their value over many years”.
Report of the Council on the Future Tasks of
the Alliance, 13 December 1967
Alphen, Netherlands. 13 December. If the
Netherlands had a slope it would be sliding ‘slippererily’ down it! Right now I should be in Stockholm having addressed
a joint Atlantic Council-Konrad Adenauer
Stiftung event on security in the North Atlantic and Arctic. Instead, I was
trapped at home, KLM cancelled my flight, and the Netherlands declared ‘Code
Red” due to snow. My apologies to my friend Anna Wieslander at the Atlantic
Council. So, by way of very limited recompense
here are my remarks that in the end I made by Skype.
Fifty years
ago Pierre Harmel published his seminal report, “The Future Tasks of the Alliance”. The report was based on a
dual-track approach – sound defence and engaged dialogue – to deter the Soviet
Union whilst talking to it. Dealing with
Russia in the North Atlantic and the Arctic will require a similar approach, a new
Northern Dual Track. Indeed, because whilst Russia signals co-operation at
times, particularly in the Arctic, it is also developing military capabilities
which means if Moscow’s intent changes NATO allies and EU member-states in the
region could very quickly face an overtly hostile Russia. Credibly deterring Moscow from crossing such
a threshold must be our collective aim, and by so doing convince President
Putin of the mutual benefits of co-operation across the region.
My core
message is this; security in the Arctic sits perilously on the cusp between
co-operation, competition and conflict; between regimes and treaties and force
majeure; and between legitimacy and legalism and a Realpolitik sphere of influence.
EU and NATO together must develop sufficient hard power in the region to ensure
soft power prevails as the modus operandi
of co-operation with Russia.
Anna posed
four questions for this session which I will endeavour to answer:
1)
What is at stake
in the North Atlantic and what should be our response in order to increase
security?
The keyword is
deterrence. I worry about Russian
ambitions on Norway’s North Cape because of what it would mean for the Russian Northern
Fleet to control it, and the Greenland-Iceland-UK (GIUK) gap. Therefore, with
the United States Navy (USN) stretched thin the world over ‘credible deterrence’
would mean an essentially European Naval Joint Expeditionary Force at least able
to match that of Russia.
2)
How does Climate
Change affect security operations in the Arctic?
Moscow clearly
thinks a new Northern Sea Passage could open up shortening the sea route
between Europe and Asia by some 3000 nautical miles, with much of it along
Russia’s northern coast. Russia would naturally
seek to control that trade. However, even if some scientists suggest the Arctic
ice cap is melting far more quickly than envisaged many suggests it could still
be 30 years before such a route opens up.
In any case, there could, in time, be as many as four such routes across
the Pole.
Either way,
Russia seems to have ambitions to see much of the Arctic under its sphere of
influence which is why we must collectively resist such a goal. Specifically, the EU and NATO together must
ensure current relationships are locked into regimes, treaties and institutions
so that they remain the mechanisms for resolving what look like inevitable
future disputes over sea-lines of communications and natural resources.
3)
Does it continue
to make sense to view the North Atlantic and Arctic as two separate areas?
In a sense the
EU and NATO are forced to as long as Russia is willing to co-operate in the
Arctic, but competes in the North Atlantic.
The real challenge for the Allies and Partners in the region will be to
get non-regional NATO and EU members to take the Russian threat in the ‘High
North’ seriously. Too many eastern
allies look east, southern allies look south, ne’er the twain ever meet, and
very few look north. The UK? God knows
where London looks these days. The real
question is what will the EU and NATO do if and when Russia tries to exert
unreasonable influence over either the Arctic or the North Atlantic, or both.
4)
What are Russian
strategic concerns and perspectives?
-
Political: Part of Moscow’s strategy is simply to
keep EU and NATO states politically and permanently off-balance and the on
strategic back-foot around its extensive periphery from Syria to Svalbard.
-
Economic-domestic: Russia, dangerously to my mind,
too often sees Arctic resources as a ‘one shot’ chance to avoid much-needed
economic reforms, and as a ‘silver bullet’ to solve all of its economic
contradictions.
-
Military-Operational: It is vital to
Moscow that the Northern Fleet can ingress and egress between North Cape and
Bear Island without detection or molestation the main fleet base at Severomorsk
and the secondary base at Kola and maintain the nuclear launch ‘bastion’ for
the one Typhoon-class SSBN currently operating there (Dmitriy Donskoy), the seven ageing Delta IV-class ‘boomers’ and the
one new Borei-class boat. There are more
Borei-class SSBN boats planned.
- Military-Strategic: It is also vital to Moscow that
the Northern Fleet bases can operate as springboards for offensive maritime-amphibious-land
ops across the Arctic, Baltic and North Atlantic regions to assert Russian
interests and claims, to intimidate and if needs be to seize.
To conclude, we
Europeans are very good at talking these days, but very poor at defending. Therefore,
NATO must re-kindle Harmel in the High North (Frozen Harmel?) and in conjunction
with the EU. To that end, it was encouraging to see some progress made this
week on enhancing the EU-NATO strategic partnership at the NATO Ministerial. Peace
through legitimate and realistic strength must be purposely allied to engaged
dialogue with Russia. Indeed, whilst we
must never stop talking, we must never stop defending.
Now, where’s
that bloody snow shovel?\
Julian
Lindley-French
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.