“Most human beings have an almost infinite capacity to take things for granted”.
Aldous Huxley, Brave New World
Download ALL the new GLOBSEC NATO Adaptation Initiative main
reports and supporting papers at:
Alphen,
Netherlands. 1 December. What a week! On Monday I had the honour of being part
of a delegation presenting the new GLOBSEC
NATO Adaptation Report to NATO Deputy Secretary-General Goettemoeller in
Brussels. The next day I flew to Rome to attend a high-level conference on NATO
and nuclear deterrence at the NATO Defence College, and which was organised by
my friend Dr Jeff Larsen. Now? I am knackered.
First, NATO adaptation.
Fifty years on from the last great attempt to ‘adapt’ NATO with the 1967 Harmel
Report, and the Alliance adoption of the then new doctrine of Flexible Response (to replace Massive Retaliation) the new report
considers the future of the Alliance in the round. To that end, and for for some fifteen months past,
I have had the pleasure of being a member of, and lead writer for a steering committee
which included a former NATO Deputy Secretary-General, a former minister of
defence and chairman of the NATO Military Committee, a former ambassador to the
North Atlantic Council and former senior NATO commanders. Led by General John R. Allen of the US, the
Steering Committee comprised Admiral Giampaolo di Paola of Italy, General Wolf
Langheld of Germany, Ambassador Alexander Vershbow of the US, Ambassador Tomas
Valasek of Slovakia…and me of Sheffield, Yorkshire, ardent Sheffield United fan,
but apart from that no other claim to fame whatsoever.
This massive
project was also reinforced with some truly excellent supporting papers by
leading practitioners and thinkers such as General Knud Bartels (Denmark), General
Philip M. Breedlove (US), Ian Brzezinski (US), Professor Paul Cornish (UK), Professor
Karl-Heinz Kamp (Germany), Professor Michael O’Hanlon, Ambassador Stefano
Stefanini (Italy), Jim Townsend (US), Admiral George Zambellas (UK) and organised
by the excellent Slovak think-tank GLOBSEC and their brilliant young leaders
Robert Vass and Alena Kudzko.
The main
report One Alliance: The Future Tasks of the
Adapted Alliance has over fifty considered recommendations across thirteen
main domains that can be thus summarised: embrace new geostrategic and transatlantic
realities; further strengthen NATO’s deterrence and defence posture; re-establish
a high-level of NATO military ambition; strengthen NATO’s role in
counter-terrorism; engage with Russia and Ukraine on the basis of principle, promote
a broad NATO security agenda; craft a smarter NATO; create an ambitious and comprehensive NATO-EU Strategic Partnership; foster
wider strategic partnerships; better equip and afford NATO; deepen relations
with established defence industries; forge deep partnerships with new defence
sectors with leading companies in the field of artificial intelligence such as SparkCognition; and purposively equip NATO
for the future of war.
How will the Alliance adapt? NATO faces the same problem as the
poor American traveller in that corny, but nevertheless telling Irish joke
about if one wants to get to Dublin one would not start here. NATO will need to do something for which it
is politically, constitutionally and institutionally ill-suited; be radical. Indeed, as the Executive Summary of the report
states: “To lay the basis for long-term adaptation, NATO leaders should
commission a strategy review at the July 2018 Summit that could be completed by
the seventieth anniversary summit in 2019,
and which might be embodied in a new Strategic Concept. NATO needs a forward-looking strategy that
sets out how NATO will meet the challenges of an unpredictable and
fast-changing world”.
Second, Rome, the Alliance and the future of nuclear deterrence. NATO is a defensive alliance, but it is also unashamedly
a nuclear alliance. Now, I know such language horrifies many people but nuclear
weapons are a vital part of the “appropriate mix” of defensive and deterrent
weapons the Alliance needs to maintain a credible Deterrence and Defence
Posture (DDPR). Back in 1967 when Pierre
Harmel and his team completed his seminal report The Future Tasks of the Alliance ‘deterrence’ was maintained by a
sufficiency of conventional and nuclear forces.
Today, new technology has rendered conceivable the rapid destruction by
an adversary of the critical functioning of an Alliance state or states via a
mix of disabling disinformation, crippling ‘de-organisation’, critical
infrastructure collapse and mass disruption, even before mass destruction is
unleashed. Holistic dismantling is
clearly the mix of offensive strategies Russia has adopted.
By way of credible deterrent response the Alliance will need new
ways to protect its people and its societies (resiliency) and ‘project’
deterrence. Indeed, deterrence without resiliency is impossible. That will, in
turn, need a new way of thinking about deterrence to enable it to reach across
the new coercion/escalation spectrum from hybrid war to hyper war via cyber
war, further underpinned by new critical relationships between civilian and
military expertise. Nuclear deterrence? Nuclear weapons exist to check-mate
nuclear weapons until the political conditions exist to enable their verifiable
eradication.
The message
from both Brussels and Rome? If NATO does not adapt to the dangerous but very
changed and rapidly changing strategic environment of the twenty-first century
NATO could fail. Unless as part of adaptation nuclear deterrence is modernised in
line with a new concept of deterrence that stretches across a resiliency,
conventional, unconventional, nuclear deterrence paradigm then the Alliance
itself could unwittingly lower the threshold for nuclear use as through our collective
weakness we inadvertently return to an implicit doctrine of Massive Retaliation.
One final
thing. At the start of my 2014 Oxford
Handbook of War (which is brilliant and very reasonably-priced) I quote
Plato. “Only the dead have seen the end of war”. Sadly, I fear the great man was right then
and is right today. You see NOTHING can be taken for granted in this brave new
world by NATO, our countries or even you and me. NATO is there to prevent war,
but only a properly adapted NATO can do that.
Julian
Lindley-French
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