“Beware the ides of March”
Julius Caesar by William
Shakespeare
Geneva, Switzerland.
15 March. Prime Minister Theresa May’s statement to the House of Commons
yesterday on the Skripal attack was proportionate given the status of the
investigation and the need for an initial response. The 15 March use of the
Russian nerve agent Novichok in the
English provincial city of Salisbury during the attempted murder of one Russian
citizen and another former Russian turned Briton is an outrageous act of
aggression that must be countered. The next
step is to consider a subsequent and consequent set of responses. Yesterday, I
was contacted by a senior figure at NATO and asked what I would suggest the
Alliance should do in support of the UK. Given that NATO is likely to be in the
vanguard of the international response my considered reaction is set out below.
Investigation
and Action
In the wake
of this attack, a thorough investigation must necessarily form the basis for
action. The aim of any response must be to assert that NATO will respond to any
attack on an ally in a robust but proportionate manner and to uphold
international regimes and law relating to the use of biological and chemical
weapons. May’s decision to expel 23
Russian ‘diplomats’ from London as part of a suite of measures is just such a
proportionate response. She cleverly left open the option to escalate to
further measures if and when the available evidence hardens as to the source of
the attack, whilst offering Moscow the chance to climb-down by ‘admitting’ it
had lost control of the nerve agent.
The response must
be further divided into two distinct tracks – investigation and action. The investigation would see NATO in support
of the British seeking to establish exactly the sequence of events that led to
the attack and identify those who designed and carried out the attack. Whilst
there is overwhelming circumstantial evidence that Russia, in some capacity, is
responsible for the attack the legitimacy of any subsequent response will be strengthened
if due process has been seen to have been followed.
Specifically,
it would be useful to set up two expert panels, one under the auspices of the
Organisation for the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons (OPCW), and another conducted
by NATO allies, possibly led by France which has a similar capability to
Britain in countering chemical and biological hazards. Past experience would
suggest that Russia will doubtless try to interfere with such an investigation
and such efforts will need to be resisted.
Equally, prior to the 2003 Iraq War London was not sufficiently skeptical
about Iraq’s supposed WMD capability and locked itself into a political position
from which it could not retreat.
The
Maintenance of Proportionality
There has
been some suggestion that NATO triggers the cornerstone collective defence Article
5 of the North Atlantic Treaty, the so-called doomsday article the invoking of
which during the Cold War would almost inevitably have led to nuclear
Armageddon. At this stage, such a response would be disproportionate given the scale
of the attack and thus enable Moscow to suggest the Alliance is the
aggressor. On the eve of Sunday’s Russian
presidential elections, it may well be that the Kremlin would like nothing more
than to suggest to the Russian people that Russia is under attack from NATO. Given
the extremely high likelihood that Moscow was involved in the attack it may
also be that triggering such a response by the Alliance was central to the political
design of the attack.
To invoke
Article 5 would also devalue its importance and thus the gravity of its
invocation in a crisis. In a sense, the Alliance is already preparing a
response that is in the spirit of Article 5. The North Atlantic Council has met
and offered its support to Britain re-iterating that an attack on one ally is
an attack on all. NATO has also confirmed Britain’s right to self-defence under
Article 51 of the United Nations Charter. The attack has been reported to the
United Nations Security Council and the Alliance is considering the subsequent and
proportionate action it could take.
NATO Action?
Proportionality
does not preclude the preparation of a robust and timely set of actions to
deter Russia, or any other state actor, from ever again contemplating such an
attack on a NATO ally. Indeed, even if due process has yet to be completed it
is reasonable for the Alliance to assume the identity of the attacker and
prepare measured and appropriate responses. There is a range of actions I have
proposed that would provide a credible considered escalation in the wake of
such an attack and thus reinforce deterrence:
Reinforce the agenda of the NATO Brussels Summit: The Alliance should immediately introduce onto the agenda of the
July 2018 Brussels Summit an assessment of the threat posed by what appears to
be illegal Russian use of chemical weapons.
Such a debate should also perhaps take place in the context of Moscow’s
deployment of new nuclear weapons systems that are illegal under the 1987
Intermediate Nuclear Forces Treaty.
Better coordinate and share intelligence: Prevention of attacks on the Alliance’s civilian population would
be best facilitated by an effective intelligence-led defence. Efforts are underway within NATO to improve
such co-operation but if such intelligence is to be properly actionable the Alliance
needs to become far more effective at gathering, collating and distributing
intelligence.
Re-establish effective consequence management: Most NATO allies have lost the ability to quickly identify and
thus respond quickly to biological and chemical attack on either military or
civilian targets. In close conjunction
with the allies, NATO must move to close that gap in its defences. One idea
could be to create bespoke quick response teams of experts that could support
national authorities in the wake of a biological or chemical weapons attack.
Instigate a strategic review of Alliance defence and deterrence: A vital question NATO needs to answer is this: in the face of a
new concept of coercion how can the Alliance’s citizen be defended against an
adversarial strategy that combines disruption, destabilisation, and destruction?
Such a review would consider the implications of such an attack across the new
spectrum of warfare that Moscow is purposefully engineering and which extends
to and weaponises information, cyber, biology, chemistry, space, as well as the
eventual or parallel use of conventional and nuclear forces.
Make the Alliance more resilient: The Alliance as a whole must now properly consider how to make
critical structures and infrastructures upon which society depends to function
far more resilient to an attack. The Salisbury attack might be small in scale
but it implied the ease with which a perpetrator could inflict mass casualties
on a NATO ally without the use of nuclear weapons.
Enhance NATO’s Enhance Forward Presence: The threat the Alliance is facing involves an adversary who is
merging hybrid, cyber and hyper warfare into a new concept of warfare. Therefore, it is impossible at this stage to
know if the Salisbury attack was a one-off or part of some new form of conflict
escalation. It would thus be prudent to
strengthen the military defences of the most vulnerable allies Estonia, Latvia
and Lithuania.
Accelerate NATO force mobility: NATO
is already considering how to better facilitate its ability to move forces
across the Alliance in an emergency and how best to reinforce its forces in
Europe from across the Atlantic. This attack underlines the importance of that
work and the reform of the NATO Command Structure.
Close the NATO deterrence Gap: By
deploying short and intermediate range nuclear systems in Europe Russia is both
skilful and illegal. The aim is exploiting
a clear gap in Alliance deterrence between NATO’s conventional force and its strategic
nuclear forces and thus enhance Moscow’s ability to intimidate allies in a
crisis. As I written in these pages before, NATO must actively consider the
role of new technologies in closing that deterrence gap using non-nuclear
capabilities without joining Moscow in the destruction of treaty-based
security.
Power Politics,
Russia & Salisbury
When, and
frankly from what I have been told it is a question of ‘when’, Russia is confirmed
as the perpetrator of the Salisbury attack it will be but the latest of a now long-line
of flagrant and blatant flouting of international regimes and law by the
Kremlin. Let me be clear; I have a deep respect for Russia and I am firm in my
belief there can be no security in Europe without Russia. My desire is to seek an accommodation with
Russia via dialogue to establish a new peaceful order in Europe with which Russia
is comfortable and from which Russians benefit.
Russia is
also a great power and must be respected as such. However, the attack on my
country was an attack on other great power with an economy roughly twice the
size of Russia’s. If Russia really has
abandoned a rules-based international order in favour of the anarchy that is
geopolitics democracies likes Britain will respond. Like all democracies, there
has been a time-lag in that response but when it comes Moscow will quickly
discover that whilst Russia might be a great power it is no longer a
superpower. In any such struggle, Russia
will lose unless the Kremlin is mad enough to even contemplate that it could
win another European war.
Therefore,
whilst Britain and the NATO allies must follow due process, for such process is
in effect what divides the Putin regime from its neighbours, and never stop seeking
dialogue with Russia, the Kremlin must be under no doubt that the NATO allies accept
that the Novichok attack on a quiet
provincial English city was both an attack upon them all and an egregious act
of aggression that must not and cannot go unpunished. If they do not such
weakness would mark the beginning of the end of NATO…something the Kremlin no
doubt will also have considered at some length.
Julian
Lindley-French
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