General Mattis knows that now is not the time to let Nato wither

With Russia more military active than for many years, Nato’s future role may lie in an echo of the past

Wednesday 15 February 2017 14:06 EST
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US Defence Secretary James Mattis was attending his first Nato defence ministers' meeting
US Defence Secretary James Mattis was attending his first Nato defence ministers' meeting (AFP/Getty Images)

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As he arrived in Brussels for a meeting with European defence chiefs, General James Mattis had warm words for Nato, describing it as the “fundamental bedrock” of the US’s relationship with Europe. After months of Nato-bashing by Donald Trump, it will reassure America’s allies to know that the President’s defence secretary takes a rather more positive view.

Nevertheless, it is unlikely that General Mattis will take a more conciliatory position than his boss when it comes to the question of Nato’s funding. After all, America’s concern that other members of the alliance do not pay their fair share of Nato’s costs is not an invention of the new regime. The Obama administration made it clear on several occasions that it was uneasy at the defence cuts being made by its European partners; and anxiety at the prospect of further retrenchment in the UK was particularly troubling. As things stand, Nato says that only the US, the UK, Poland, Estonia and Greece are meeting the target of spending at least 2 per cent of GDP on defence.

Even this is the subject of dispute. A report by the International Institute for Strategic Studies concluded on Tuesday that Britain’s defence spending had dipped just below the 2 per cent figure. Unsurprisingly the Ministry of Defence said the calculation was flawed. Either way though, the US wants its allies to stump up more. The Prime Minister appeared to win a commitment to Nato’s future from President Trump when she visited Washington but America wants firm financial assurances in return.

In truth, the Americans are right to press for greater input from their partners. Austerity may still be stunting growth across Europe and the last thing the world needs is a new arms race; but now is not the moment to let Nato wither. General Mattis described it yesterday as “the most successful military alliance in history” and it is important for European and global security that it remains so.

Earlier this week the New York Times reported claims by unnamed intelligence source that Russia has deployed a new cruise missile in breach of the 1987 Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty. The reports were conveniently timed for the Nato summit, and were immediately met with a firm denial from the Kremlin. Yet at their heart is the indisputable truth that Russian intentions towards the West are more uncertain today than at any time since the collapse of the Soviet Union. Nato is the only effective bulwark against the potential strategic threats posed by Moscow.

Baseline budgets, though, are not the be all and end all. Splashing extra cash on hardware or additional troops is a way to increasing available resource but the most important issue for Nato to determine is what its core objectives are. The organisation’s difficulties in Afghanistan showed it has limitations as an expeditionary force. By contrast, when the Cold War was at its height Nato’s focus was based around notions of deterrence and collective defence. With Russia now more military active than for many years, Nato’s future role may lie in an echo of the past.

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