During
World War II an “unnatural alliance” was created between the United States,
Great Britain, and the former Soviet Union. What brought the three countries
together, the emerging imperial giant, the declining capitalist power, and the
first socialist state, was the shared need to defeat fascism in Europe.
Rhetorically, the high point of collaboration was reflected in the agreements
made at the Yalta Conference, in February, 1945 three months before the German
armies were defeated.
At
Yalta, the great powers made decisions to facilitate democratization of former
Nazi regimes in Eastern Europe, a “temporary” division of Germany for
occupation purposes, and a schedule of future Soviet participation in the
ongoing war against Japan. Leaders of the three states returned to their
respective countries celebrating the “spirit of Yalta,” what would be a
post-war world order in which they would work through the new United Nations
system to modulate conflict in the world.
Within
two years, after conflicts over Iran with the Soviet Union, the Greek Civil
War, the replacement of wartime President Franklin Roosevelt with Harry Truman,
and growing challenges to corporate rule in the United States by militant
labor, Truman declared in March, 1947 that the United States and its allies
were going to be engaged in a long-term struggle against the forces of
“International Communism.” The post-war vision of cooperation was reframed as a
struggle of the “free world” against “tyranny.”
In
addition to Truman’s ideological crusade, his administration launched an
economic program to rebuild parts of Europe, particularly what would become
West Germany, as capitalist bastions against the ongoing popularity of
Communist parties throughout the region. Along with the significant program of
reconstructing capitalism in Europe and linking it by trade, investment,
finance, and debt to the United States, the U.S. with its new allies
constructed a military alliance that would be ready to fight the Cold War
against International Communism.
Representatives of Western European countries met in Brussels in 1948 to establish a program of common defense and one year later with the addition of the United States and Canada, the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) was formed. The new NATO charter, inspired largely by a prior Western Hemisphere alliance, the Rio Pact (1947), proclaimed that “an armed attack against one or more of them…shall be considered an attack against them all…” which would lead to an appropriate response. The Charter called for cooperation and military preparedness among the 12 signatories. After the Soviet Union detonated its first atomic bomb and the Korean War started, NATO pushed ahead with the development of a common military command structure with General Eisenhower as the first “Supreme Allied Commander.”
With the founding of NATO and its establishment as a military arm of the West, the
Truman administration adopted the policy recommendations in National Security
Council Document 68 (NSC 68) in 1950 which declared that military spending for
the indefinite future would be the number one priority of every presidential
administration. As Western European economies reconstructed, Marshall Plan aid
programs were shut down and military assistance to Europe was launched. Greece and
Turkey joined NATO in 1952, and fueling the flames of Cold War, West Germany
was admitted to NATO in 1955. (This stimulated the Soviet Union to construct
its own alliance system, the Warsaw Pact, with countries from Eastern Europe).
During
the Cold War NATO continued as the only unified Western military command
structure against the “Soviet threat.” While forces and funds only represented
a portion of the U.S. global military presence, the alliance constituted a
“trip wire” signifying to the Soviets that any attack on targets in Western
Europe would set off World War III. NATO thus provided the deterrent threat of
“massive retaliation” in the face of first-strike attack.
With
the collapse of the former Warsaw Pact regimes between 1989 and 1991, the tearing
down of the symbolic Berlin Wall in 1989, and finally the collapse of the
Soviet Union itself in 1991, the purpose for maintaining a NATO alliance
presumably had passed. However, this was not to be.
An
official history of NATO described the changes in its mission: “In 1991 as in
1949, NATO was to be the foundation stone for a larger, pan-European security
architecture.” The post-Cold War mission of NATO combines “military might,
diplomacy, and post-conflict stabilization.”
Reviewing
this brief history of NATO, observers can reasonably draw different conclusions
about NATO’s role in the world than from those who celebrate its world role.
First, NATO’s mission to defend Europe from aggression against “International Communism” was completed with the “fall of Communism.”
First, NATO’s mission to defend Europe from aggression against “International Communism” was completed with the “fall of Communism.”
Second, the alliance was
regional, that is pertaining to Europe and North America, and now it is global.
Third, NATO was about security and defense. Now it is about global
transformation.
Fourth, as its biggest supporter in terms of troops, supplies
and budget (22-25%), NATO is an instrument of United States foreign policy.
Fifth, as a creation of Europe and North America, it has become an enforcer of the interests of member countries against, what Vijay Prashad calls, the “darker nations” of Asia, Africa, and the Middle East.
Sixth, NATO has become the 21st century military instrumentality of global imperialism. And finally, there is growing evidence that larger and larger portions of the world’s people have begun to stand up against NATO.