[Page 41]
NATO’s Future
Moderator:
Henry A. Kissinger
Speakers:
Etienne Davignon
Richard C. Holbrooke
Yannos Kranidiotis
Peter Mandelson
|
THIS discussion was overshadowed by two events: the continuing peace
talks in Kosovo; and the European Union’s
announcement that it wanted to set up a defense body of its own. The
panellists tended to view both these developments as broadly
positive for both NATO and the western alliance. But
there were still plenty of doubts raised - particularly about
Europe’s relative lack of technological clout and political unity.
FIRST PANELLIST
The European Union has always had a defensive
component. The notion of politics and security was there at the
beginning of the European enterprise; and there have been questions
ever since about things like nuclear deterrence. As the European
Union enlarges and becomes more integrated, its membership will
become ever more similar to that of NATO, and the
relationship between the two bodies will change.
The underlying issue is whether the aspirations correspond with the
reality. The aspirations of the European Union are not
clear. Indeed, the very fact that the European Union seems to
be in the process of trying to define its identity shows that it
does not have one. There are also neutral countries within the
European Union. When the Berlin Wall came
down, the first aspiration of many of the Eastern countries was to
join the European Union; instead NATO expanded
first.
There are two realities that matter. The first is that the
European Union, as it becomes larger and more integrated,
will become a military power, whether it wants that role or not.
Indeed a common defense policy will correspond with the aims of the
defense lobbies; budgets may only be justifiable if a country is
contributing to a common EU force. The other reality
is that
[Page 42]
America has to be involved in the Continent’s defense. Once you
accept those realities, you can look at issues such as what the new
contract between NATO and the European Union
ought to be. That debate should start now.
SECOND PANELLIST
In an earlier discussion, another panellist suggested that
Slobodan Milosevic might be the father of European integration.
Kosovo has crystallized thinking about defense. This is a
good process for the European Union to go through -
even though it is not clear that it currently has the necessary
political or technological ability.
Kosovo leaves us with various lessons: that American involvement is
essential; that an integrated military structure is the only way to
win a serious war; that, although NATO is a defensive
organisation, it must still maintain an offensive threat. The
question now is why we would want to change the roles of NATO
and the European Union. One of the main answers is
that we need to do so in order to keep America involved: we cannot
expect America to police our backyard.
The new force is not an attempt to duplicate NATO, but
to give Europe the capacity to act in a more limited way, and to put
in place a decision making structure. This will strengthen the
European Union, but only if it has the means to reach
these ends. Most of Europe’s governments are weak. The convergence
on the centre-left could help cohesion. But there still has to be
more discipline. In terms of operating procedures, the new force
should follow the same ones as NATO; it should
intervene only after it has given peace a chance and when the
military objectives are clear.
THIRD PANELLIST
There has been a predictable series of delays at the border in
Kosovo. But some kind of treaty looks likely. The next
phase is bound to be difficult. The KLA is likely to
pose problems; the Serbs will inevitably play games. There is the
moral dilemma for the West of what to do with the war
criminals, and the financial one of how to pay for reconstruction:
the lion’s share of the reconstruction will come from
[Page 43]
Europe. This will count as a big achievement for NATO.
Only a few years ago many people would have considered an operation
like Kosovo impossible - particularly with three new members.
NATO’s first 50 years were about ensuring stability in
northern and central Europe, and bringing together Germany
and France. The next 50 years may well be about
southern central Europe. The cold war succeeded only in hiding the
nationalist impulses in the region. It will take a long time for the
wounds to be healed.
The Clinton Administration was wrong to set time
limits in Bosnia. Now it should recognize that
Yugoslavia and the Balkans is NATO’s
new patch, and that the commitment there will be neither short-term
nor cheap. And, needless to say, this environment will impact both
the enlargement of NATO and how the organization deals
with the emerging EU defense force.
FOURTH PANELLIST
The Finnish president’s peace mission has been a great success. The
prospect of a peace agreement gives a new perspective to the war in
Kosovo. We are now returning to a multilateral European foreign
policy, with, hopefully, the United Nations playing a prominent role
and Russia not being excluded.
The immediate problem is the Kosovar refugees. But the only
long-term guarantee of stability in the region will be when all the
countries concerned become members of the European Union. In the
meantime we have to concentrate on bringing these countries into a
series of proper contractual relationships with each other. There
also needs to be a stability pact for south-east Europe. This should
be built around things like a basic respect for human rights,
democracy and a functioning economy.
One conclusion is that two roads stretch in front of NATO.
One leads to a new division of Europe, where the continent
returns to its ethnocentric ways. Under this scenario, the UN
is fairly powerless, Russia and China
are excluded, and NATO is little more than an
enforcer. The second road is a little closer to nineteenth century
Europe, with all the great powers - not just America
and the
[Page 44]
European Union but Russia, China and
Japan co-operating. The first road leads to Clausewitz;
the second to Jean Monnet.
DISCUSSION
A persistent theme throughout the discussion was a skeptical desire
to know more - both about the new European defense force and about
the continuing repercussions of the war in Kosovo. The
first speaker set the tone by asking how the new European force
would fit into NATO’S command structure. Others
followed with questions about where the force would operate and on
what scale. One panellist insisted that the European Union
and NATO should not be rival organizations. The
current process was all about the European Union
developing a force to deal with small, local crises in Europe before
they became big ones. NATO had a much wider global
parameter, in his view, and it concentrated on problems between
countries, rather than ones inside them. But another panellist
thought that NATO could never become a world-wide
organization. It was hard to imagine it intervening in Rwanda,
even though the killing there had been on a much more savage scale.
Another set of questions were inspired by the apparent growing
technological mismatch between the two continents. One speaker from
the Netherlands explained that Europe’s total defense budget is
around $290 billion against America’s $370 billion. But in terms of
effectiveness, the gap is much larger. Europe’s true spending is
probably a third of America’s. Like several other speakers, he
argued that there must be more transatlantic integration both of
defense forces and of defense companies. Some of the panellists
though that much of the gap between America and Europe could be
bridged by more effective spending.
One international participant argued that, on the evidence of
Bosnia and Kosovo at least, the mismatch in
hardware might be smaller than the software mismatch. America, he
pointed out, wanted to use air power and also had the necessary
offensive (as opposed to defensive) aircraft to do it. The Europeans
seemed more comfortable with putting troops onto the ground. This
mis-
[Page 45]
match he argued might help even out the hardware disadvantage. But
an American participant was much less confident. He did not think
that NATO had begun to work out how it needed to be
restructured for the current world. There was no longer a clear
enemy. Refugees were likely to be one big challenge; another was
nuclear proliferation. It was not just a question of changing
weapons, but also changing bureaucracies.
A few speakers worried about how these changes within NATO
were going to rebound within the UN system. One
panellist argued that the UN needed to be
restructured, but he also argued that it was a vital piece of
international architecture. The UN was the only place
where global power could be legitimized. Another panellist agreed,
though he immediately pointed out that one of the lessons of
Kosovo and Bosnia was that the UN
could not close deals, but NATO could.
An American participant echoed many other speakers when he asked
precisely what precedent had been set in Kosovo. One
panellist argued that the precedent in general was a positive one.
It would be easier to do again. He also thought it marked the
beginning of a new role for NATO, encapsulated in
Vaclav Havel’s claim that Kosovo was "the first
human rights war’’. That was an exaggeration; there were security
issues involved. But human rights had plainly become an issue too.
Several speakers worried about what the events in Kosovo meant for
NATO and European enlargement. One panellist argued
that enlargement should go ahead. The best guarantee of peace in
Europe was the idea that all the region’s countries could eventually
become members of the European family. Another Frenchman argued that
NATO’s health should be judged by how closely Europe
and America stayed together. The show of unity during the war was
good, but NATO could not always rely on people like
Slobodan Milosevic to unify it so perfectly. One of the
panellists preferred to end on a more optimistic note. The
European Union and the United States were
together: with NATO, it was question of how, not
whether.
|