TO THE
PERMANENT REPRESENTATIVES OF THE NORTH ATLANTIC TREATY ORGANISATION
March 28, 2024
Excellencies,
A TRANSATLANTIC COMPACT
TO MEET THE CONVERGING CHALLENGES OF RUSSIAN AGGRESSION AND ALLIANCE IMBALANCES
Abstract
This letter to Allied
governments proposes a Transatlantic
Compact to stimulate and facilitate reconfirmation of the Alliance’s critical importance to the security of all the Allies
while guiding the way for NATO
transformation. It is also a substantive roadmap with specific capacity
benchmarks and metrics that calls upon the Allies to focus at the 75th Anniversary
Summit in Washington on the requirements necessitated by the new Russian threat
and to accelerate progress towards fulfilling NATO Agenda 2030 and a more
balanced and effective Alliance defense and deterrence. The accompanying annex, which
is an integral part of this agenda,
outlines key deliverables, benchmarks, and metrics for the
recommended actions.
Introduction
As the NATO Allies approach the 75th anniversary of the Alliance in Washington in July, they will reflect
on today's challenges and rededicate the Alliance to its enduring purpose and
necessary response to a more dangerous threat environment.
Beyond assistance to Ukraine, two converging challenges require
extraordinary responses at the Summit. One is the indisputable new threat posed by Russia
as demonstrated by its aggression against Ukraine and President
Putin’s assertion that this war is against
the West, not just Ukraine.
Therefore, the Allies must
remain committed to the Harmel Principles that call for Alliance
policies that ensure defense and
deterrence, but also leave room for confidence-building and cooperation when
adversaries demonstrate that they are willing. Such a commitment is necessary for international peace and
internal Alliance consensus. But given recent
Russian aggressions against
Ukraine and the West,
the
Allies must now renounce the NATO-Russia Founding Act (NRFA), which Moscow’s belligerence
has made obsolete. A new basis for cooperation can always be
reestablished with a future Russian leadership that seeks a more collaborative
relationship.
The second challenge is an internal one that has confronted the
Allies for many decades, to better redistribute both contributions and
leadership responsibilities between the United States and the European Allies
and Canada in line with NATO Agenda 2030 to rebalance the Alliance and help
ensure, in a lasting way, that it can successfully meet urgent present and
future security demands. Failing to respond effectively to these two challenges
will invite further Russian belligerence and, possibly aggression against which
the Allies will have no sufficient response and will thus risk deepening
Euro-Atlantic divisions over burden and responsibility sharing.
More equitable burden-sharing will not lead to an autonomous European ‘pillar’ outside NATO, but rather promote greater European strategic
responsibility inside the framework of the transatlantic Alliance more broadly. This approach would involve North
American as well as European
Allies and, among the latter, both EU and non-EU Allies,
working together toward the goal of
a more balanced Alliance, while preserving the unity and
diversity of Allies. It would
reflect the continuing necessity of American contributions to deterrence and
defense and of the transatlantic link. It
will not, nor should it, inhibit the members of the European Union from
developing security cooperation among themselves, particularly in defense
industrial areas, which will enhance European capabilities and cooperation in
NATO.
The Alliance consensus is that Russia will be an adversary for the
long-term which compels the Alliance to deal with a post-Ukraine war world to
facilitate negotiating with Russia on a new European security architecture that
reflects contemporary Euro-strategic reality.
Maintaining and strengthening Alliance
unity, including a strong transatlantic link, thus remains the
priority. The Allies must commit themselves to helping Ukraine defeat Russian aggression
as a critical requirement for the future of transatlantic security.
They must also set a clear path to NATO membership and commit
to helping Ukraine manage the
requirements that lie ahead on that path.
The Transatlantic Compact 2024
The Transatlantic Compact
calls for:
Using the Allied
Reaction Force (ARF) and the consolidation of all Allied
rapid response forces into one single pool of forces to
lead in time to the creation of a European-led Allied heavy mobile force
supported by the requisite force structure.
Much more intense
cooperation between NATO and the European Union to better enable a pan-
spectrum response to the challenges posed by Russian
aggression against Ukraine
and the consequent threat to the West. The two
organizations working together reinforce deterrence and Euro-Atlantic security.
Enhancing the Alliance’s capacity to contribute to the prevention of
crises and the resolution of conflicts, as well as to the strengthening of international security, through maintaining a credible rapid intervention capacity and
strengthening its partnerships and other cooperative security instruments.
Further strengthening NATO’s operational capacity by combining
credible and effective multi- domain conventional forces,
missile defenses, nuclear
deterrence, space support,
cyber defenses, and protection against multi-form hybrid
threats. The credibility and effectiveness of this comprehensive posture will depend, in part,
on the commitments and efforts of every Ally and on achieving a high degree of
unity across the Alliance.
European Allies and Canada assuming a significantly greater
responsibility, financially, militarily, and politically for delivering this
composite, combined capacity, with the United States assisting in these
endeavors, while Washington continues to play its enduring and irreplaceable
leadership role in and through NATO.
The Roadmap
The proposed roadmap provides a broad outline of immediate Allied commitments matched by actions to reinforce and accelerate NATO Agenda
2030. It includes measures to:
Establish a larger, stronger
European role and contribution, alongside and in partnership with the essential, enduring
role and contributions of North American Allies.
Use the creation of the Allied Reaction Force (ARF) to reinforce
NATO’s defense and deterrence through full implementation of the Euro-Atlantic Area (DDA), the Military Strategy and the
NATO Force Model thus strengthening NATO’s conventional deterrence posture and
operational capacity.
Further enable European conventional forces and capabilities through enhanced sustainment of forces and improved infrastructure, including enhanced military
mobility, in the direction of a much stronger European collective operational
capacity for all NATO core tasks.
Set new input and output goals
for Allied defense efforts by strengthening the Vilnius Summit defense spending
commitments.
Promote greater complementarity
between European and US security assistance contributions to Ukraine as part of
a rebalanced Alliance.
Make new commitments and plans
for improving standardization and interoperability from the low
to high ends of the conflict spectrum, particularly among the European members
of the Alliance, but also
with North American forces.
More effectively develop, share, and integrate
modern technology into NATO defense
and deterrence systems, by better exploiting the Defense Innovation
Accelerator for the North Atlantic (DIANA).
Revitalize defense industrial
bases on both sides of the Atlantic to better respond to current and future defense
and deterrence requirements by expanding the European Defense
Technological Industrial Base (EDTIB),
create a shadow
factory scheme with companies which can reinforce the defense supply chain, and make it easier
and cheaper for Allies to buy capabilities off the shelf (COTS).
Broaden and modernize NATO’s ability to defend against
hybrid threats by developing
information and cyber capabilities that strengthen conventional and
nuclear deterrence through their threat to Russian resources, forces, and
capabilities.
Further enable European nuclear
forces, missile defenses, cyber and space capabilities, and begin broader and
deeper nuclear consultation and cooperation between France, UK, and US, on the
one hand, and
non-nuclear Allies, on the other.
Critically Reinforcing NATO’s Conventional Deterrent
Reinforcing NATO’s conventional deterrent must be a dynamic and continuous process of adaptation because Russia will present
a direct and increasing threat
to NATO Allies within 3-5 years. NATO should
be
working now to deploy forward defenses more robust than brigades. Renouncing the NATO-Russia
Founding Act, as suggested above, would also have the benefit of
removing the self-imposed restrictions on deploying larger than brigade sized
units permanently to the East.
The strengthening of deterrence across the conventional and nuclear
domains, while respecting the clear separation between them, calls for
extending NATO’s long-standing nuclear sharing arrangements to the
conventional domain by sharing both the political risks and operational burdens across the
Alliance through the creation of an airborne conventional deep strike capability. Today’s NATO Force Model is driving the development of the new
standing Allied Reaction Force. Each of the improvements noted in this
letter will also require additional investment in capabilities and capacity
by non-US Allies and only the Alliance can provide the necessary balance between capability,
capacity and affordability
through efficiency and enhanced effectiveness.
Fulfilling the commitments to defense investment and force levels
that Allies made at the Madrid and Vilnius Summit are simply the latest iteration of a process that is as old
as NATO, and which is vital if
a strong European
Pillar with a strong Canada
inside a credibly
strong NATO is to be realized. The ARF will be at NATO’s future core and
provide the framework for a European-led high-end, first responder force
in an era in which
Allies must expect
that territorial aggression in Europe will coincide with aggression elsewhere in the
world that will demand US attention and forces. US forces are sufficiently
capable of meeting several
high-end contingencies simultaneously but the premise upon which all future NATO military
strategy must
be established is that European
members of NATO should
AS THEIR MINIMUM
CAPABILITY REQUIREMENT be to be able to defend Europe
at any time and in any circumstances when the bulk of US forces could
be engaged globally.
In time, a European-led division-strength, air, sea, and land force that helps take the Allied Response Force to a new level of capability will enhance deterrence by denial, raise the threshold for the use of nuclear weapons in Europe,
ease pressure on US forces and resources. It will also provide a high-end
focal point for the transformative NATO Force Model and future readiness
initiatives. An Allied Heavy Mobile Force
(AHMF) would be a high-end, first responder dedicated conventional deep strike capability shared among Allies, and which is the natural
consequence of current force planning.
The AHMF would be drawn from the Warfighting Corps proposed herein at be
at the core of a future NATO Warfighting Cornerstone Concept. It would be
critical to establishing a clear link between NATO's conventional deterrence posture
and operational capacity
by harnessing additional European conventional forces though a deeper reform of the NATO
Force Structure; the strengthening of European operational enablers including
deep fires, air defenses, and the realization of substantially improved force
movement capabilities, sustainability, survivability, and resilience.
Recommended specific steps:
Europeans and Canadians must
actively work with the US to overcome the critical shortfall in enabler by establishing a Minimum Enabling
Capability for the Alliance. The NATO Response
Force, to be replaced
in July 2024 by the standing Allied
Response Force, was an otherwise
brilliant concept but it had the unintended consequence in that the rotational leadership principle encouraged a division
of already limited capabilities among European Allies.
While the United
States has been building up the US Army’s V Corps stationed in
Germany and Poland, European Allies have exhausted themselves trying to build up ten army corps concurrently. Whereas
the US Army’s V Corps
has the enablers it would need to fight a high intensity war, none of the European corps do,
with the partial exception of the Allied Rapid Reaction Corps (ARRC).
To accelerate the process of
force transformation one option could be to re-deploy HQ ARRC from the UK to
Poland to become HQ ARF to reinforce HQ Multinational Division (Northeast) to
work alongside Polish forces and US V Corps to create on ‘unblinking eye. This
British-led headquarters would still be able to move rapidly anywhere
in SACEUR’s Area of Responsibility. By becoming HQ ARF, it would also function as a rapid reaction
force that could move rapidly from a low-end to a high-end conflict, undertake
the full spectrum of missions, act as a rapid deployable strategic reserve, and
reinforce deterrence with its presence in Central Europe not in the Western
England. With a focus on NATO’s
northern, eastern, and south-eastern flanks it would also offer support to Allies on the southern
flank if called
upon.
In time the ARF must aspire
to become a high-
end, first responder Allied Future
Force able to act from seabed to space and across the multi- domains of air, sea, land, cyber, space, information,
and knowledge. The ARF must also become sufficiently robust and responsive, and held at a sufficient level of readiness, to meet all threats to the territory of the Euro- Atlantic
Area in the first instance and have sufficient capacity to support those
front-line nations facing transnational threats, such as terrorism.
Europeans must also spend more
on defense and better consolidate their dispersed capabilities multinationally, through
greater pooling of resources and assets. Critical requirements are deep fires,
battlefield air defense, combat engineers, wet gap bridging, movement
control, medical support, intelligence, surveillance, target acquisition, and
reconnaissance (ISTAR) and electronic warfare. Similarly, instead
of having six half-empty Joint
Force Air Components
(JFAC), European Allies must commit
to building three, fully structured, fully capable Composite Air Strike Forces,
each with the full complement of fighters, fighter-bombers, tactical
reconnaissance, electronic combat, airlift, tanker, early warning and Combat
Search and Rescue (CSAR) aircraft. These three multinational CASFs would
work together with USEUCOM’s 3rd Air Force,
thereby providing the Supreme Allied Commander Europe (SACEUR) with four
potent, full spectrum air packages.
The same template must also apply to navies with the activation of European Standing Fleets in
the Atlantic and Mediterranean operating alongside and together with the US
Navy’s 2nd and 6th Fleets. This will include NATO cross-attachment of European surface
ships, submarines, amphibious forces, and maritime patrol
aircraft to USN naval task groups and similar US Navy assets
being cross- attached to
European naval task groups.
NATO Integrated Air and Missile Defense
(IAMD) must be extended to allow earlier
intercepts, including "left of launch", including the possible
deployment of the OTH-R system to NATO’s eastern flank. The war in Ukraine has shown that, however capable Patriot,
SAMP-T, and other air defense systems, relying on point defenses alone will not
protect critical permanent (non-mobile) headquarters, facilities, and assets
when confronted with swarms of incoming ballistic and cruise missiles and drones. NATO’s premier Aegis-based ballistic missile defense
(BMD) system, currently focused on Iranian missile
threats, should thus be optimized to create a "360 degree" capability against
Russian ballistic and cruise missiles. This
would require not only a policy decision, but also deployment
of a TPY-2 advanced mobile radar in Poland or Bulgaria.
The 67%/50% Rules
Many European Allies and
Canada have consistently failed to
meet the criteria of the North Atlantic Treaty’s Article 3 which
specifies that “…separately and jointly,
by means of continuous
and effective self-help and mutual aid, [Allies] will maintain and develop their individual and collective capacity
to resist armed attack.”
The recommendations in this Compact,
if implemented, will bring noncompliant Allies back in line with
their commitments in the Treaty.
To realize their minimum capability requirements non-US NATO Allies must collectively provide
by 2030 at least
50% of all NDPP designated capabilities. The NATO Defense Planning
Process (NDPP) has a cardinal rule that no single ally should provide
more than 50% of any agreed Capability Target. Compliance with that rule has failed in far too many
"strategic enabler" domains, with the United States providing 70, 80
or even 90% in various categories. Over
the longer term, (2040) European Allies and Canada
should aim to deliver two thirds (67%) of NATO’s combined operational capacity for collective defense,
as measured in rapidly usable
forces, enablers, and other capabilities to execute advance
plans across SACEUR’s Area of Responsibility.
In addition to the 50% rule, the Compact must include new and elevated
input objectives. Most Allies
have met the current objective
of spending at least 2% of their Gross Domestic
Product (GDP) on
defense and some have exceeded that goal, but non-US Allies have the financial
ability to do more. At the same time, it would also be wise to include measures
that enhance security in addition to defense spending as part of the new set of
goals, with systems in place that would enable them to increase both investment and outputs rapidly
in an emergency. Allies should
aim to spend at least 3%
of their GDP on traditional defense, whilst enhancing security in all its forms. They must meet these goals no later than 2030.
When the European Allies accomplish the objectives described in this
proposal, NATO civilian and military leadership roles and
structure can then be reorganized to reflect
the greater share of burdens that they carry, and the
greater influence within the Alliance they will generate.
Improving standardization and interoperability
Greater affordability and interoperability will only be realized
through enhanced unity of purpose, greater efficiency of effort, and thus
standardization wherever possible. European Allies must overcome long-standing
political and financial obstacles to standardization and interoperability. When
multiple Allies buy the same equipment, even if it is from a non-EU source,
interoperability can be enhanced. But the longer-term solution is for the European
Union NATO members,
along with the United Kingdom, to work out co-production and sharing arrangements to better produce
and field rapidly on a
multi-national basis equipment for multiple Allies that would enhance both
interoperability and affordability.
The NATO Standardization Organization (NSO) must be strengthened to
improve its ability to influence and facilitate national decisions that affect interoperability. NATO abdicated its unique role in promoting interoperability,
notably through standardization. The various NATO military headquarters routinely circumvent persistent
materiel standardization shortfalls by encouraging Allies to standardize tactics, techniques, and procedures. Military
and defense procurement executives also
frequently talk past each other, and industry. Unfortunately, while the NATO
Standardization Organization promotes interoperability, national and commercial
interests regularly take precedent.
To improve the prospects for better standardization and
interoperability, European and North American
Allies must agree
that before decisions on major equipment
purchases are made, they will pose and answer a seminal question
for the Alliance: “how will this choice affect NATO standardization and
interoperability?”
Corrosion, Coercion
and Resilience
NATO will continue
to be a nuclear Alliance
and the enduring
U.S. extended deterrent will be the core
of NATO deterrence. NATO’s nuclear deterrent posture must also reflect and forge
stronger complementarity between conventional and nuclear forces,
promote greater conventional deep strike
capabilities on a multinational basis, and favor greater British and French
nuclear cooperation. The contributing role of other Allies,
particularly in hosting
and supporting nuclear
capabilities, should be acknowledged, and updated to reflect
new strategic realities. NATO also needs a new consensus on the means and ways
to adapt nuclear deterrence to new requirements, particularly Next Generation
Dual Capable Aircraft (DCA).
With Russia expanding and diversifying its theater and tactical nuclear
capabilities, including moving some systems into Belarus,
NATO nuclear sharing,
including stationing of nuclear delivery
systems, must be broadened
to include Allies that have joined NATO since 1999. Renunciation of the NATO-Russia Founding
Act, recommended above,
will also remove
NATO’s self-imposed three
“no’s”. In December 1996 NATO
stated that it has "no intention, no plan and no reason" to deploy
nuclear weapons on the territory of new members, including nuclear weapons
storage sites, even though NATO nations have since 2014 repeatedly agreed in
their Summit communiques that Russia is in violation of its obligations under
the Founding Act.
If Allies cannot protect their own people, it will be hard for them
to project power. Looking to the
future the Alliance needs to get ‘Quantum-ready’. Modern conflicts are not
simply fought with military systems on the battlefield but increasingly in the algorithms matrix. Allies must also enhance their cooperation in countering
disinformation, cyber and other hybrid threats and prepare to take advantage of the coming
revolution in computer
technology. NATO’s vital role will be to coordinate
Allied efforts to deal with and develop hybrid capabilities that add up to more
than the sum of their parts. Corrosion
will be as dangerous as coercion. It is easy for authoritarian regimes, like Russia,
to control information and messaging. All NATO
democracies must be alert to threats adversaries pose to democratic cohesion using modern means of communication,
disinformation, and malicious applications of artificial intelligence. The Allies
must enhance their cooperation in dealing with such
aspects of the threat posed by their adversaries.
Finally, the Allies must address a variety of measures
to fortify the resilience of their military forces and societies. Allies must make access
to, use and protection of space-based assets
much more robust, including through expanded cooperation among Allies and within NATO.
Greater effort must also be devoted to protecting NATO and
nationally owned and operated communications networks and information services,
as well as critical military
and civilian infrastructure, against cyber and physical
threats.
Greater effort must also be devoted to enhancing the survivability and endurance of Allied forces and
the resilience of Allied societies, against lethal and non-lethal threats, including
through the implementation of measures aimed at strengthening the dispersal and
hardening of military infrastructure, logistical sustainability, defense
industrial innovation, mobilization and production, wartime supply chains, and
civil-military cooperation.
Technological innovation and the sharing of scientific research,
notably in the fields of artificial intelligence and quantum computing,
machine-learning, Big Data, Nanotechnologies, industrial development,
production and cooperation, the pursuit of standardization of materiel to
attain higher level of interoperability among Allied
forces, are all important tools to attain
the objectives outlined above.
Conclusion
The Transatlantic Alliance
is composed of democratic, sovereign
nations. They each decide through national processes how and
when their forces might be engaged on behalf of their NATO commitments. While NATO should
remain the privileged framework for common
resolve and, when necessary, collective action, each
Ally is free to engage its forces under the United Nations or European Union flags, or in coalition
of the willing frameworks. Under whatever flag an action
takes place all Allies will benefit from a transformed and rebalanced Alliance, not only to address cogent and
pressing threats to the North Atlantic Treaty area, but beyond, including in
the Indo-Pacific region. Capable and skilled Allied forces and capabilities not
only help protect and promote transatlantic security worldwide, but they also
make the world a safer place.
The convergence of the renewed threat from Russia and the urgent
requirement for the European Allies to take on more responsibility for the defense
of their continent suggests that the Alliance must move quickly and decisively to seize
the momentum of the moment. A new Transatlantic Compact would thus provide the pathway toward a future
in which the NATO Allies will be demonstrably and affordably sustain their ‘do no harm’
commitment in the North Atlantic Treaty to “safeguard the freedom, common heritage and civilization of their peoples,
founded on the principles of democracy,
individual liberty and the rule of law.” Such renewed commitment, reinforced
energy and restored will is the foundation of an Alliance
that continues to serve the vital interests of North American
and European interests well into the future.
Please accept, Excellencies, the assurances of our highest consideration,
THE ALPHEN GROUP
ANNEX
Strengthening NATO: A Roadmap
Towards a Rebalanced Alliance
For non-US Allies to collectively assume a greater share of the
responsibility to assure, deter and defend the Alliance they must comply with four framing
guidelines related to the overall operational capacity sought, individual
capabilities underpinning that capacity, and the necessary supporting defense investment
effort:
To rebalance the Alliance, European Allies must by 2030
provide collectively two
thirds (67%) or more of NATO’s
overall required operational capacity, as measured
in rapidly usable forces,
enablers and other
capabilities needed to execute advance
plans across SACEUR’s Area of Responsibility.
No Ally must be expected to contribute more than 50% of any
individual NATO capability area, as pursued through the NATO Defense Planning
Process. Non-US Allies must aim at gradually filling collectively two thirds
(67%) or more of any given capability area, recognizing that progress will be easier and faster in
some areas than in others.
Allies must invest at least 3% of their Gross Domestic Product (GDP)
annually on defense to remedy existing
shortfalls and meet the requirements across all domains
arising from a more contested security order. In
addition, Allies shall invest at least 20% of their defense budgets on major
equipment, including related Research and Development.
Non-US Allies must assume collectively and individually a greater share of the
financial and military assistance to Ukraine.
The non-US component of NATO’s combined operational capacity will be
four fully- capable, fully-enabled, fully-ready War Fighting Corps (WFC) from which the division-
strength Allied Heavy Mobile Force will be drawn: These four WFCs will be sourced from the
eight Rapid Reaction
Corps Headquarters currently in the
NATO Force Structure with eight corps partnering together, in four pairs of two, with one each from northern
Europe and southern Europe. The current eight corps
HQs can continue but must be fully prepared to generate the four WFCs on short notice in
times of tension
or war. Each of the four corps
pairings will work with the corps framework and contributing nations to source all the required combat, combat support and combat service support units. In due course, SACEUR will certify to the North Atlantic Council
(NAC) that this is indeed the case.
No shortfalls or gaps will be tolerated.
Two fully capable, fully- enabled, fully ready “Shield”
Corps (Multi-National Corps, Northeast in Poland, and Multi-
National Corps, Southeast
in Romania) will be supported
by the Allied Reaction Force and its successors.
In a major
pre-war emergency these
two corps would constitute NATO’s
first line of land defense and would play a key role in
protecting forward-located Allies, delivering on the NATO commitment not to
yield Allied territory, and buy time and maneuver space for the four
Warfighting Corps. A special effort
will also be made by non-US Allies,
with the assistance of the United States,
to strengthen the operational capacity and credibility of these two fighting
formations, including the provision of combat support
and combat service
support units, to ensure that they can deter by denial incursions into and
respond in full to major aggression against the Alliance and thus defend
successfully.
Non-US Allies will also field three fully-capable, fully-enabled,
fully-ready Composite Air Strike Forces (CASF). These three CASFs will be available
at short notice and sourced from the current
six European JFACC Headquarters in the NATO Force Structure working together, in pairs,
to source the three non-US
CASFs at short notice. Each CASF will include the full complement of defensive and offensive aircraft. At the proper time, SACEUR
will certify to the NAC that this is indeed the case. No shortfalls or gaps
will be tolerated.
Non-US Allies will provide two fully capable, fully-enabled,
fully-ready Non-US Standing Fleets, Atlantic (European Canadian Standing Fleet Atlantic ECSFLant) and Mediterranean (ECSFMed). The two fleets will be sourced
from the current six European Maritime
Force (MARFOR) Headquarters. MARFORs will source the naval task groups in such a way that the two Standing Fleets
will always have a minimum
operational capacity that can be augmented at short notice.
The core of the two Fleets will be the aircraft and
helicopter carriers operated by France, Italy, Spain, and the United Kingdom,
with their complement of surface escorts (Anti-Air Warfare destroyers and Anti-
Submarine Warfare frigates), attack submarines and maritime patrol aircraft contributed by these Allies or by other European Allies. At the right time,
SACEUR would certify to the NAC that the two Standing Fleets are up and running.
No gaps or shortfalls would be permitted.
For its part, the United States will commit to NATO permanently stationed in Europe,
under the command of the United States European Command (USEUCOM) a fully-capable, fully-enabled
and fully-ready WFC (US Army’s V Corps);
a fully-capable, fully-enabled and fully-ready CASF (US Air Force’s 3rd Air Force); and a
fully-capable, fully-enabled and fully-ready US Navy 6th Fleet and its NATO component (STRIKFORNATO) for Allied multi-carrier
operations, and complemented by US Marine Corps and
Special Operations Forces. These forces will at the very least meet the same NATO standards
as their European counterparts to ensure critical
interoperability at the high end of warfighting when both command and
forces are under intense pressure.
The four non-US
WFCs, two “Shield
Corps”, three CASFs and two ESFs will work together with USEUCOM’s V Corps, 3rd Air Force and 6th Fleet.
For example, in the maritime
domain, the foreseen Non-US
Standing Fleets, Atlantic, and Mediterranean, will operate alongside and together
with the 6th Fleet, including
through cross-attachment, but under NATO command and control, all tasked surface ships, submarines, amphibious forces and maritime patrol
aircraft. This new level of complementarity between European and US forces
in a rebalanced Alliance
would help ensure
the required level of compatibility and interoperability in tactics, materiel, and procedures, and provide
SACEUR with five fully capable war fighting corps, four CASF air packages and
three fleets.
Within this framework, Canada shall commit forces that meet the same
standards as other Allied forces and that represent
an equitable contribution to a rebalanced Alliance, alongside
the contributions of European Allies and the United States.
The Allied Reaction
Force will be an important
component of further
Allied force development and the strengthening and re-balancing of the Alliance’s conventional forces.
Mobile Force, which will at some
point emerge from the NATO Response.
The ARF will be a high readiness, highly mobile and responsive force
capable of deploying rapidly throughout SACEUR’s Area of Responsibility to
reinforce forward defenses, prevent a fait
accompli by an adversary, and demonstrate unity. The baseline and enabling
mechanism to reform the NATO Force Structure will be the new NATO Force
Model agreed at the Madrid and Vilnius
Summits, updated, and adapted over time, as necessary, to attain the outcome being sought
through this Compact.
In addition to conventional forces,
the foreseen re-balancing of the Alliance
will include steps in every other domain of Allied military
capacity (missile defenses;
nuclear; space and cyber
domains) and supporting civil measures (resilience; civil-military
cooperation). To this end, non-US Allies shall
endeavor to stand- up joint commands and organizations that have the mandate and skill set to plan and conduct multi-domain
operations.
NATO’s missile defenses
will be reoriented and strengthened to address all missile threats
to the territories and populations of European Allies,
on a 360- degree basis,
including early warning, tracking and interception
capabilities. Strong consideration will be given to deploying a second TPY-2
radar in NATO Europe, in addition to the
one already operational in Turkey, as well as to advance
planning for the use of NATO’s Airborne Early Warning (AEW) and Airborne Ground
Surveillance (AGS) Forces in a missile
defense role, both to help identify adversary
launch sites and to vector Allied deep strike fighters. Further consideration should also be given to deploying the Over the Horizon Relocatable (OTH-R) early
warning system to NATO’s eastern flank.
NATO’s nuclear deterrence posture will be strengthened and expanded,
including by facilitating broad participation by all nuclear and non-nuclear
Allies. This strengthening of the Alliance’s nuclear posture will involve
expanding NATO’s nuclear sharing arrangements to include Allies which joined NATO since 1999, as well as a deepening of
nuclear cooperation between France and the United
Kingdom, around the British and French ballistic missile submarine
components, as well as France’s
airborne component, based on the
2010 Lancaster House treaties.
The strengthening of deterrence across the conventional and nuclear
domains, while respecting the clear separation between them, must include replicating NATO’s
long-standing nuclear sharing arrangements in the conventional
domain, by procuring a dedicated airborne conventional deep strike capability
in addition to aircraft assigned to the
dual-use role that will be widely shared among Allies. This airborne
conventional deep strike capability will be associated with specially trained
fighter squadrons associated with the
foreseen Composite Air Strike Forces.
Allies will strengthen access to, use and protection of space-based
assets, including through expanded cooperation among Allies and within NATO in the sharing of early warning, communications, and navigation
information and in the development of space technologies and protection techniques.
Allies will devote
greater effort to protecting NATO and nationally owned and operated communications networks
and information services,
as well as critical military
and civilian infrastructure, against cyber and physical threats,
notably through enhanced
survivability measures, including hardening and dispersal.
A strengthened ability by the Alliance to assure, deter and defend
credibly and effectively will also
require a greater effort to enhance the
endurance of Allied forces and the
resilience of Allied societies against
lethal and non-lethal threats, including through
the implementation of measures aimed at strengthening the logistical sustainability of forces; defense
industrial Technological innovation and the sharing of scientific
research, notably in the fields of artificial intelligence, Big Data and
machine learning, and quantum computing, industrial development, production and cooperation, the pursuit of standardization
of materiel to attain higher level of interoperability among
Allied forces, are all important tools to attain the objectives outlined above
and rebalance the Alliance.
To these ends, greater reliance shall be placed on well-proven NATO
institutional arrangements, revised as necessary to reflect the assumption collectively by European Allies
of a greater share of common responsibilities, including the NATO Command Structure, the NATO Defense Planning
Process, NATO common
budgets, the NATO Science and Technology Strategy, the NATO Warfighting Capstone
Concept, and other such processes.
Where applicable, multilateral, and regional groupings of Allies, as
well as NATO- EU cooperation, shall be pursued actively
to enhance the contribution of European Allies
collectively to Euro-Atlantic security. European Allies shall deliver
on the objectives and undertakings as part of a reinforced and
accelerated NATO Agenda 2030 as agreed at the 2024 NATO Washington Summit.
THE ALPHEN GROUP
Professor Julian Lindley-French (Chairman), Diego A. Ruiz Palmer and Stanley R. Sloan (Lead Writers)
Dr Franco Algieri
General (Ret.) John R. Allen
Anne C. Bader
Michal Baranowski
Lieutenant General (Ret.) Arne Bard Dalhaug
Paul Beaver
Dr Jordan Becker
Robert Bell
Iona Bennett
Dr James Bergeron
Lieutenant General (Ret.) Rob Bertholee
Dr Hans Binnendijk
Brigadier General (Ret) Robbie
Boyd
Professor Yves Boyer
Lieutenant General (Ret.) Jan Broeks
Dr John Bruni
Ian Brzezinski
Ambassador (Ret.) Kerry Buck
General (Ret.) Vincenzo Camporini
Ambassador (Ret.) Ivo Daalder
Professor Marta Dassu
Major General (Ret.) Gordon
Davis
Slawomir Debski
Judy Dempsey
General (Ret.) Sir James Everard
Keir Giles
Dr Camille Grand
Kate Hansen Bundt
Air Marshal (Ret.)
Sir Christopher Harper
LTG (Ret) Giles Hill
Lieutenant General (Ret.) Ben Hodges
James Holland
Dr Rich Hooker
Professor Jaap De Hoop Scheffer
Ambassador (Ret.) Robert
Hunter
Giedrimas Jeglinskas
Dr Karl-Heinz Kamp
Dr Sarah Kirchberger
Thomas Kleine Brockhoff
Ambassador (Ret.) Imants Liegis
Edward Lucas
Professor Neil MacFarlane
Dr Claudia Major
Dr K.J. McInnis
Brigadier General (Ret.)
Rainer Meyer zum Felder
Professor Andrew Michta
Ambassador (Ret.) Alessandro Minuto Rizzo
General (Ret.) John (Mick) Nicholson
Professor Zaneta Ozolina
Admiral (Ret.) Giampaolo di Paola
Air Chief Marshal
(Ret.) Lord Stuart
Peach
Eric Povel
Trygve Refvem
General (Ret.) Lord David Richards
Professor Peter Roberts
Colin Robertson
Professor Sten Rynning
Professor Paul Schulte
Dr Alexandra Schwarzkopf
Professor Simon Serfaty
Dr Hanna Shelest
General (Ret.) Sir Richard Shirreff
General (Ret.) Sir Rupert Smith
Ambassador (Ret.) Carsten
Sondergaard
Professor Emeritus Georges Henri Soutou
Ambassador (Ret.) Stefano Stefanini
Patrick Turner
Jim Townsend
Dr Harlan Ullman
Ambassador (Ret.) Alexander Vershbow
Lieutenant General (Ret.) Rick Waddell
Peter Watkins
Anna Wieslander
Professor Rob De Wijk
Professor Tomonori Yoshizaki