Alan Caruba writes a weekly column, "Warning Signs," on the Internet site of the National Anxiety Center. His book, "Right Answers: Separating Fact From Fantasy," is published by Merril Press. A commentary by E. Wayne Merry that appeared in The Journal of International Security Affairs, “An Obsolete Alliance,” caught my eye. The author is a former State Department and Pentagon official who is now a senior associate of the American Foreign Policy Council.
Merry posed a question that had buzzed around in the back of my brain for a long time. Why is the United States still a member of NATO, an alliance that initially was intended to exist for twenty years, but whose life and mission has been expanding now for nearly sixty years? Since the
“Over the years, NATO has turned its back on its inherently defensive and conservative origins to become a shameless hustler after engagements to justify its own perpetuation,” writes Merry. He quotes Manfred Woerner, its secretary general in the early 1990s, who said that in order to survive NATO “must go out of area or go out of business.”
NATO was established by the Treaty of Washington and Merry points out that it was “purely defensive; nothing in it can legitimize use of force other than in response to a direct attack against its members. Article V, contrary to popular myth, does not even commit its members to the use of force.” As such, “NATO lost its basic raison d’etre years ago, as
Thus, with the collapse of the
Merry noted that “the collapse of
Significantly, “
In effect, Americans provide
Bluntly stated, “European purposes in NATO are clear; to subordinate American power and resources to their interests and to maintain a mechanism by which to constrain the
So, as NATO readies itself for its seventh decade, well beyond its original stated purpose and need, it is surely time for the next