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FEATURES: The Guns of Brussels
By John C. Hulsman
Burden sharing and power sharing with Europe
Throughout history alliances have been made and unmade, joined and dissolved, based upon the
strategic calculations of their individual member states. It is a commonplace that no
alliance has survived victory; once the specific goals of an alliance have been satisfied,
its members lose their common strategic vision, the glue that has held together their
entanglement in the first place. So, on the face of it, it would seem to be folly to
expect the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) to confute both history and common sense. Yet some ten years on
from the end of the Cold War that was its reason for being, NATO has not only
survived but continues to be the most successful alliance in history.
Which is not to deny the real and perilous problems that NATO must confront in
coming years. One of the biggest of these is the enduring and debilitating problem of the
relative weight of the European versus the American commitment of resources to the
alliance and the relative weight of the say Europeans versus Americans have in the
alliances decision making. Proof of the enduring nature of the problem is evident in
the recent resurrection of the idea of creating a European pillar within NATO. At a 1998
conference in Saint Malo, France, European members of the alliance agreed to a proposal
for defense cooperation conducted through the European Union (EU) in Brussels, the seat
of European aspirations for greater transnational unity and cooperation. Thus was the idea
of a European Security and Defense Policy (ESDP) born.
Saint Malo was quickly followed by NATOs operation against Serbian
aggression in Kosovo beginning in March 1999. The Kosovo campaign significantly hastened
the process begun at Saint Malo by forcing the Europeans to recognize the growing gap
between American and European military capabilities. This newfound momentum culminated in
an EU
conference in Helsinki in December 1999, at which EU member states agreed to create a 60,000 man
rapid reaction force in order to conduct missions, perhaps like the one in Kosovo, without
relying on American participation. Today, the leading allies in the EU are seeking to make ESDP function as the
European pillar within NATO. How the rest of NATO, particularly the United States, responds to these initiatives may
well determine the future of the alliance.
Trojan horses?
Two imaginary trojan horses currently
stifle NATO
reform. The Europeans fear that American efforts to cajole them into bearing a greater
share of the military burden are based on a fundamentally isolationist strategy to bring
the boys home. On the other hand, some Americans fear that the EU views ESDP as a tool to
liberate Europe from American domination and become a global counterweight to U.S.
preeminence. Fortunately for the alliance, neither of these fears is based on reality.
While there is considerable frustration in the halls of Congress
regarding the burden sharing chasm between America and its allies, no one this side of Pat
Buchanan wants to withdraw from Europe. There is simply no political movement of any kind
in this direction. The danger is more subtle and long-term than this European fear
acknowledges. In the long run, failure to reform the alliance and more equitably
distribute burden sharing costs is a real threat to NATOs viability. Support for the
continuance of the alliance will not prove politically tenable over time in either
American political party if defense spending within the alliance continues to vary as
widely as it did in 1998. In that year, U.S. defense spending accounted for 3.2 percent of
GDP, while France spent 2.8 percent of its GDP, the UK 2.7 percent, Italy 2.0, Germany 1.5, and
Spain 1.3 percent. These numbers speak volumes. The old European fear of America urging
burden sharing reform in order to quit the continent is entirely unfounded. Rather, the
opposite is true: More equitable burden sharing within the alliance will encourage
American military involvement on the continent, as it makes the American outlay of
resources more politically palatable.
The second Trojan horse is more significant. Lord Robertson, secretary
general of NATO, has acutely summed up this fear in an interview with the Washington Post:
"The U.S. suffers from a sort of schizophrenia. On one hand, the Americans say
You Europeans have got to carry more of the burden and when the Europeans say,
ok, we will carry more of the burden, the Americans say, Well, wait a
minute, are you trying to tell us to go home? " Indeed, in the wake of Kosovo
and the European resolutions to do more, epitomized by the ESDP initiative, there
has been a contradictory and muted response from the United States. John Bolton of the
American Enterprise Institute warned in the Financial Times, "If the Europeans
desire and then achieve a separate unified military capacity without recourse to the U.S.,
they will have eliminated the rationale for NATO as we have known it." Surely, given the avowed French desire
to escape the yoke of "hyperpower" dominance, such a decoupling would herald the
end of NATO?
Such fears founder on two basic points. First, it is not at all certain
that French fears of overweening American dominance translate into a coherent national
desire to subvert NATO. It seems far more likely that French opinion is genuinely divided on the
matter. As Defense Minister Alain Richard was quoted in the New York Times, "If
Europe takes on more responsibility by building up its military strength, that will
contribute to the long-term equilibrium of the alliance." No ardent American
supporter of the alliance could have put it better. Besides, why would the other European
members of NATO go along with an insidious French plot to subvert the alliance, were there such
a thing? As Elizabeth Pound noted in Foreign Affairs regarding the motivations for ESDP, "the Europeans
have differing goals: the French would like to cut the hegemonic hyperpower
down to size, whereas the British and the Germans want exactly the opposite
relieving the U.S. of enough of its burden in Europe to prevent an isolationist Congress
from someday yanking U.S. troops home in disgust." If a coherent European defense
force is to flourish, the French will need the closest possible relations with Germany,
the economic powerhouse of Europe, and Britain, which possesses the most advanced,
experienced, and probably the best military on the continent. It is hard to see how French
desires (if thats what they are) are going to prevail, especially given that both
Britain and Germany are entering into ESDP largely to keep America involved with Europe. Britain and Germany
will surely see that France does not make a Trojan horse of ESDP.
Second, even if France was somehow able to magically overcome German
and British objections and convince the two to abandon their long policy histories in
pursuit of the closest possible strategic ties with America, ESDP would still come up
short as a threat to destroy the alliance. As Defense Minister Rudolf Scharping of Germany
put it, "In the transatlantic Alliance we do not have too much America, we have too
little Europe." Those who fear ESDP have it backwards. The problem for Europe, as history and current
levels of expenditure show, is not that it will do too much regarding defense spending,
which is the only way ESDP could develop to the point at which it would threaten to make NATO superfluous; it is
that Europe consistently does too little. As Foreign Minister Joschka Fischer of Germany
reasonably noted at a February speech in Munich, "Europes security and defense
policy will continue to be on a much too modest scale to really worry the U.S."
The forgotten EDC
This is not the first time Europe has
attempted to establish a pan-European defense force nor the first time America has
had to respond to such an initiative. The first major attempt to bolster the European
pillar was a 1950s proposal for a European Defense Community (EDC). The history of the EDC provides many clues
about the problems of burden sharing and power sharing. It is indicative of both the depth
of the real NATO reform problem and the degree to which both poles, European and American, yearn
for it to be solved.
Tensions relating to burden sharing within the alliance have been the
snake in the garden for NATO since its inception. Before the Korean War brought a massive
American conventional buildup in Europe, the Article V commitment for collective
self-defense rested almost entirely on the American nuclear guarantee to Europe. As a
prostrate Europe began to recover economically from the devastation of World War II,
pressures grew to make the alliance more equitable, as well as to diversify the military
options open to NATO in the event of a Soviet attack. Before leaving to become the first Supreme
Allied Commander, Europe (SACEUR), Gen. Dwight Eisenhower stopped by Secretary of State Dean
Achesons office for a briefing on European affairs. What Acheson told Eisenhower has
a contemporary ring. Acheson felt that one of NATOs greatest problems was political: "The U.S. Congress
would not support a major effort in Europe if the Europeans did not pay their fair
share." Burden sharing problems have imperiled the political cohesion of the alliance
from the beginning.
A recovering Europe was well aware of political tensions within the
United States over burden sharing. In fact, one of the major reasons for the attempt to
establish the EDC was the recognition among Western Europeans that they had to be seen
contributing more. EDC advocates argued "that the U.S. would not indefinitely maintain their
troops in Europe if the Europeans refused to prepare and to participate in their own
defense," in Raymond Arons words. The impetus for the establishment of the EDC almost foreshadows
the drive to create an ESDP. In both cases, the European allies came to the realization that
they must act collectively to forestall American complaints about unequal burden sharing.
The primary difference between the two cases lies in the historical era in which they
occur. During the Cold War the preponderance of the American commitment to NATO (in terms of men,
materiel, and money) was deemed a reasonable price to pay in order to secure the
fundamental interest of preserving Western Europe from communist domination. Put simply,
while NATO
reform was desirable from an American point of view, it was not essential. With the
passing of the Cold War and the absence of the Soviet threat, this American geopolitical
calculation has changed, while European defense habits have not. Kosovo has been a real
watershed in NATOs ongoing saga precisely because it exposed strains in the alliance at a
time when there is no discernible immediate threat to rally a disgruntled America to
overlook Europes unequal burden sharing efforts. This makes the burden sharing
controversy a real threat to the continued viability of the alliance. Whereas the
establishment of a genuine European pillar through EDC would have been desirable, in the new era ESDP is crucial.
The European response to the earlier burden sharing crisis, EDC, was embodied in the
Pleven plan, named after the premier of France. The plan was based on seven basic points.
First, France accepted German participation in the EDC. Second, the German contribution could
only be made to an integrated European army at the lowest organizational level. Thus,
military integration was to occur at the regimental level rather than in the form of the
fusion of different European countries corps or armies. The EDC signaled the merging,
under supranational units, of a polyglot army of the Western European states for the
defense of their region. Third, the EDC must be linked to democratically elected European authorities.
Fourth, the EDCs executive work was to be entrusted to a minister of defense, with a
Defense Council to assist. Fifth, the EDC was to be financed through a common budget. Sixth, the European
army would be used to fulfill the allies Atlantic commitments in NATO. Seventh, with the
large exception of Germany, member countries retained the right to possess military forces
exclusive of their contribution to the EDC and could petition the European defense minister for the temporary
release of their national contingent of EDC forces during times of crisis. There were two further tacit points
underlying the EDC plan. First, West Germany would not be admitted directly into NATO. In the Truman
administrations view, Plevens government, which had formally proposed the EDC plan, was to be given
this as a diplomatic reward for allowing German rearmament within the context of this
all-European army. Second, the U.S. pledged to develop an active conventional presence in
Europe to insure against German treachery. Thus, the American conventional commitment to
Europe, a major characteristic of Cold War defense strategy, arose primarily in response
to events in Korea and intra-Western European politics, rather than to an immediately
enhanced Soviet threat to Western Europe. This was not to be the last time that military
commitments epitomized the underlying political relationships within NATO. This same linking
of military capability to political commitment is currently driving the post-Kosovo burden
sharing controversy.
Architecturally, the EDC was probably doomed from the beginning. As with ESDP, the EDCs organizational
relationship with NATO was initially very vague. The dominant ideological school of thought underlying
the European integration experiment is known as functionalism, the emphasis of which is on
the development of political cohesion rather than agreement on final plans. The very
vagueness of functionalism is a political tool designed to make its policy outcomes become
all things to all people while they are being negotiated. The theory is that momentum
generated by bringing disparate political groups together in pursuit of vague aims
eventually locks the parties into agreement once the policy finally becomes clear. As
doctrine, it is the triumph of process over precision.
The EDC experience illustrates there are significant drawbacks to pursuing
such a strategy. After the release of the Pleven plan, subsequent negotiations made it
clear that the EDC would not be the vehicle for the rise of a genuine third great world power, as
many leaders of France at the time desired. It was decided at the NATO Lisbon Conference of
February 1952 that the EDC would coordinate with the alliance, but somehow operate separately
from NATO.
This view was matched by a contrary one which saw the EDC as nothing more than the active European
military arm of NATO, and thus under full NATO control. This discrepancy exactly mirrors the different conceptions
of ESDP that
have sprung up in Europe since the Washington summit in 1999. The functionalist language
of the Lisbon conference eerily echoes the current mantra regarding ESDP: "separable,
but not separate." While such a distinction is interesting for theologians, in
practice "the EDC remained subordinate to NATO, and within NATO, U.S. influence remained preeminent," as Melvyn Leffler
described it in A Preponderance of Power (1992). Obviously, this is not what the French
had in mind. It also explains subsequent French attempts to destroy their own creation.
What the French perceived as a ticket to superpower status ended up merely buttressing an
American-dominated NATO. This is a lesson current American policy makers would do well to
consider when pondering the merits of ESDP.
Structurally and politically, the EDC project exhibited fatal flaws from the
start. In order to limit the chances a revived Germany could somehow use the EDC to establish a Fourth
Reich, a quasi-governmental structure was to be established around the European army: a
commissariat, council, assembly, and court a structure very like the European Union
of today. The great difference between the attempt to establish the EDC then and to start ESDP now is one of time
and organic growth. The echoes of the war and the lack of a history of close European
policy coordination made the EDC too revolutionary for its time. Encouraging supranational political
and military institutions to spring up was simply too great a leap of faith for Europeans
who could remember the horrors of World War II all too well. The chances for the success
of the ESDP
must be reckoned much greater, as the EU has come before this attempt at military coordination; the organic
growth of common mechanisms for policy decision making and common patterns of political
coordination have had 50 years to come to fruition. In this sense, a resolution of the
burden sharing and power sharing dilemma has had to await the organic development of
European policy coordination.
The American response
As is true of the current American response to ESDP, the Truman administration was initially of two minds about the Pleven plan. At
first, many in the Truman administration, including Joint Chiefs Chairman Omar Bradley,
felt the Pleven plan rendered NATO totally inoperable, as it precluded U.S. participation in an
all-European defense force. Bradley feared that the mechanisms for coordination, the very
cornerstone of NATO, would be imperiled by the vagueness of the EDCs structures and the lack of direct
coordination between the American military and individual Western European countries. In
the end, led by Acheson, the Truman White House grudgingly supported EDC, notwithstanding
private doubts, so as not to antagonize its Western European allies.
With the advent of the Eisenhower administration, the U.S. changed its
stance from tacit, skeptical support for the EDC to a more enthusiastic position. For Eisenhower, the EDC was the best
mechanism available to push the Europeans to spend more on defense; in other words,
Eisenhowers support for the EDC was based on his desire to correct burden sharing discrepancies
within the alliance. In Eisenhower (1990), Stephen Ambrose neatly sums up the
presidents strategy: "Eisenhowers high hopes for EDC involved not only
what he felt it would accomplish for Western Europe, but also the promise it held for the
U.S. A closely linked Western European community, held together by economic and military
ties, protected through NATO by the American nuclear umbrella and through EDC by numerous
all-European ground divisions, would not only be a source of security for the world but
would end the need for msa [Mutual Security Assistance] funds." Eisenhower presciently
saw the EDC
as a way to more equitably recalibrate burdens and responsibilities within the alliance, a
state of affairs that would allow the U.S. to be more flexible geopolitically and
financially. It is this forward-looking point of view that current decision makers should
rediscover today.
In the end Eisenhowers astuteness came to nothing. The French
National Assembly voted down the Pleven plan in August 1954 by a vote of 319-264. This was
at least partly because the French, like Eisenhower, realized that America had by far the
better part of the deal. As Richard J. Barnet wrote in The Alliance (1983), "French
support for an idea devised by Frenchmen and initially scorned by the Americans ended as
the reality of the scheme became clear in negotiations: The NATO commander,
inevitably a U.S. general, would have veto power over the deployment of French
troops." An EDC under the NATO umbrella entirely suited the United States while thwarting French
dreams of a more independent role for Europe (read: France) around the globe as a
"third force." An EDC within the overall control of NATO meant that the United States would remain
dominant in the alliance, even if the Europeans marginally gained more power within it
also. Given the preponderant nature of American power vis-à-vis its European allies in
the early 1950s, this very marginal loss was well worth bearing, as the U.S. was to be the
beneficiary of more equal burden sharing. Had the Pleven plan been adopted, the United
States would have had the best of both worlds.
The EDC experience should make it clear to all that, as in the time of
Eisenhower, it is in Americas interests to support the development of the European
pillar. The incoming administration should study this history and follow Eisenhowers
lead in seeing that ESDP (like the EDC before it) is a ticket to substantially increasing Americas
global military and political maneuverability in return for the very sustainable cost of greater power
sharing.
It is extremely unlikely that the Europeans will ever be willing to do
enough in the way of burden sharing to merit an equal decision making say within the
alliance. A more equitable but not equal alliance promises to be the best of all possible
worlds for the United States. A reformed NATO will more easily adapt to the post-Cold War era, while allowing the
U.S. to attend more effectively to its other global interests. The more equal burden
sharing posture will also prove politically popular in the United States. Given the 50
year organic growth of European efforts at policy collaboration, the building of a
sustainable European pillar is an idea whose time has finally come.
Kosovo as a wake-up call
The Kosovo campaign catalyzed the drive to ESDP by revealing that NATOs conception of
an equal alliance, always an ideal, now has no bearing on military realities in Europe.
America dominated the operation because Europe was incapable of dealing with a military
challenge in its own backyard.
U.S. intelligence assets identified almost all the bombing targets in
Serbia and Kosovo; nearly every precision-guided missile was launched from American
aircraft. Technologically, the European contribution to the allied effort was deficient
due to a lack of computerized weapons, night-vision equipment, and advanced communications
resources. American Air Force Gen. Michael Short, who oversaw the NATO bombing campaign,
has since said that the deficiencies of the European aircraft were so glaring for
example, their lack of night-vision capability and absence of laser-guided weapons systems
that he curtailed their missions to avoid unnecessary risk. If this trend is
allowed to continue it will have devastating consequences for the alliance. As U.S. Gen.
John Sheehan, former Supreme Allied Commander, the Atlantic, noted in a speech to the
North Atlantic Council of the United States two years before Kosovo: "The
technological gap is increasing between the U.S. and Europe. Soon the other members of NATO will be little more
than constabulary forces, with the U.S. possessing the only genuine modern army." It
is this inequity that threatens to drive a stake through the heart of NATO.
The political tensions felt on both sides of the Atlantic regarding
burden sharing and power sharing can be summed up succinctly: Americans resent being asked
to shoulder more than their fair share of the military burden, while Europeans resent
being dictated to by the United States. Rather than participating in another futile round
of finger pointing, both pillars of NATO need to use the realizations of Kosovo to spur them on to achieving
lasting reform.
Strikingly, frank acknowledgement of this technological discrepancy has
emerged as the consensus opinion among European decision makers. As German Foreign
Minister Fischer has lamented, "The Kosovo war was mainly an expression of
Europes own insufficiency and weakness; we as Europeans never could have coped with
the Balkan wars that were caused by Milosevic without the help of the U.S."
Europes newfound understanding of its weaknesses has led to a reinvigorated attempt
to build a true defense capability. This is precisely what the U.S. should desire.
The ESDP present
While Kosovo was undoubtedly the catalyst,
the current NATO reform movement predates the war in the Balkans. The real beginning of the drive
was a conference in Saint Malo in December 1998, where Prime Minister Tony Blair turned
his back on 50 years of British skepticism and agreed that the European pillar of NATO should be built
using the EU
as its base. This at last put the British position in line with French desires for NATO reform. The end
result of Saint Malo and Kosovo was the Helsinki summit in December 1999, which laid the
institutional framework for ESDP. At Helsinki, the member states of the EU agreed to meet a
headline goal in three years. By 2003 they wish to be able to deploy a force of 60,000
trained rapid reaction troops, available within 60 days of the order, able to be sustained
in theater for at least a year. To accomplish this, an additional 60,000 troops would have
to be at the ready to reinforce the deployment as part of a six-month rollover. The EU created three
committees to manage this force. A political and security committee is to coordinate
day-to-day running of the EUs foreign and security policy; former NATO Secretary General
Javier Solana heads this effort. A military staff is to be composed of attaches from all
15 national governments. Last, a military committee comprised of the member states
chiefs of defense is to advise the EU on military matters.
While there is some institutional structure supporting ESDP, a new governmental
structure is unnecessary. This is because a political structure, the EU, already exists; in
addition, ESDP is not a European standing army, but really a rapid reaction force. A new
supranational edifice is simply unnecessary for this limited reform. At Helsinki, prodded
by Britain, Germany, and the Netherlands, it was agreed that there would be a high degree
of transparency between NATO and the EU security committees. This has been interpreted to mean different
things by different people, but many commentators have concluded that, in the end, it will
lead to the adoption of a NATO right of first refusal for out-of-area action: only after NATO has declined to
intervene could ESDP be activated. In addition, the British and the French have proposed that the
Deputy Supreme Allied Commander for Europe (DSACEUR) have a permanent seat on the military committee in exchange for an
EU member
sitting in on NATO military committee meetings. Thus ESDP is in many ways a far more modest proposition than was the EDC; it bears witness to
the earlier overly ambitious failure.
The first basic reason for the creation of ESDP was as a political
bolster to NATO. As Lord Robertson observed in a January speech, "For the long-term health
of NATO, the
burdens, costs and the risks must be shared, and shared equally." The unequal
division of labor between the U.S. and its European allies, illustrated by the war in
Kosovo, represents a flawed strategy. It sets an awful precedent for the future of the
transatlantic alliance with the U.S. "doing" the war and the Europeans
"doing" the peace. Form is all too likely to follow function if such a division
persists; the Europeans will look at future conflicts from a peacekeeping perspective
while Americans adopt a war-fighting point of view. These functional differences will
result in intractable political schisms that could well spell the end of NATO. A permanent
two-tier NATO
in the post-Cold War era will doubtless exacerbate already divergent perspectives between
the U.S. and Europe regarding defense and foreign policy issues.
Far-sighted Europeans see this danger clearly. Prime Minister Blair,
commenting in reference to Kosovo and ESDP, said, "We Europeans should not expect the U.S. to play a role
in every disorder in our back yard." An America resentful of a Europe not pulling its
weight, engaged in missions, as in the Balkans, where its interests were not nearly as
paramount as those of its European allies, is an America far more likely to worry that the
NATO
commitment has become an entangling alliance. The U.S. ambassador to NATO, Alexander Vershbow,
echoed this sentiment in a speech in January 1999: "A robust ESDI that preserves the
transatlantic dimension will make both Europe and NATO stronger, and it is essential to
sustaining U.S. support for the alliance as a whole." Decision makers on both sides
of the Atlantic were reaching the same strategic conclusions even before the war in
Kosovo. Helsinki was thus the culmination, not the beginning, of a process designed to
revitalize NATO politically as well as militarily.
The second more directly military rationale behind ESDP was the desire to
give the European member states of NATO a greater degree of strategic maneuverability. Whereas the British
enthusiastically embraced the first reason for ESDP, this second rationale was of particular importance to the French.
An increased European military role would have significant political ramifications. As
Defense Minister Alain Richard has noted, "Now the EU is stepping up to its responsibilities and
over the next few years will become a genuine actor on the scene, one that did not exist
before." Other European countries not sharing this grand design for ESDP still found it
useful to place more policy instruments at the disposal of the EU. As Lord Robertson has
commented, "If the North American allies do not want to get involved in addressing
some purely European security challenges, the European allies will still have the option
of addressing these challenges on their own." A Europe able to field a significant
military force of its own would have the freedom to attack crises in its immediate
vicinity with more than just sanctions. This view of ESDP sees it as little more than a sort of
enhanced Combined Joint Task Force (CTJF), a formalized European coalition of the willing prepared to give
the EU more
diplomatic and military options in the event a crisis affects European and not American
interests.
ESDPs long road ahead
Obviously, these two views of ESDP are very different
in terms of scope and degree. The creation of ESDP is yet another example of the functionalist strategy of making a
policy seem all things to all people. Yet the policy cannot, in the end, be both a
geopolitically altering event and a mere refinement to the alliance; one group currently
supporting ESDP may find that it has not gotten what it has bargained for. Disillusionment
likely will follow, and if it finds expression in political terms, that could well lead to
the end of the initiative, much as occurred with the EDC.
There are two other major difficulties threatening ESDP. First, there is a
real question as to whether the new institution serves any real practical use. As the
Economist remarks, "it is hard to imagine which missions, if any, the Europeans might
take on that are small enough not to need the U.S. alongside, yet big enough to justify
expending so much high-level political and military attention." With the possible and
unlikely exception of Montenegro (unlikely because America would most probably intervene
if Milosevic invaded his small neighbor), American and European military interests are
more compatible than they have been in a long while regarding continental Europe. There
are few cases left in which conflicting American and European interests could compel the
activation of the European rapid reaction force rather than direct NATO involvement. Since
American pressure to ensure NATO has the first right of refusal in any out-of-area brushfires is
likely to succeed, it is very hard to see how ESDP can practically enable the Europeans to acquire the capacity for
freedom of action that the French so fervently desire. It is far more likely that ESDP will prove to be
merely a way to coordinate an increased European defense effort within NATO which from
the point of view of the United States must be reckoned a good thing. The very limitations
of ESDP, far
from proving a problem for the United States, are one of the more attractive features of
the plan from an American perspective.
The danger is, as always, that the Europeans will do too little, not
that they will do too much. After Helsinki, U.S. Defense Secretary William Cohen voiced
this perennial American fear, wondering, "Where are the resources to match the
rhetoric?" Javier Solana, the coordi nator of the new EU Common Foreign and Security Policy, finally voiced what all
responsible analysts have known since the ESDP idea was first discussed. "In the short and medium term we
[the Europeans] will have to increase defense budgets." Given current political
attitudes in Europe toward increased defense spending, this must be seen as unlikely.
There is a basic reason for this, beyond the obvious political unpopularity in Europe for
defense spending. It is important to see that increased European defense spending is the
first step in the European integration process that will actually cost the Europeans money
rather than make them more prosperous. The EU has been a vehicle for Europes material gain, not a symbol of
sacrifice. This psychological factor is a major reason why significant defense spending
increases are unlikely.
Indeed, the backtracking is already starting. Gen. Klaus Naumann,
Chairman of NATOs Military Committee during most of the Kosovo crisis, told defense
ministers and generals at a Brussels symposium that Europe will need something like 10
years to build up a real capability to intervene militarily. The greatest danger to NATO is that ESDP will prove to be yet
another project in which European rhetoric is not matched by increased capabilities.
A larger compact
ESDP can serve another vital function; as
part of a larger strategic compact between the American and European poles of the
alliance. To some extent the controversy surrounding ESDP misses this larger point: A more
comprehensive bargain involving the U.S. and its European allies based around the issues
of burden sharing and power sharing can reinvigorate NATO.
Almost all of the alliances long-term problems stem from the
overarching dilemma of burden sharing and power sharing. The U.S. has always contributed
far more than its share to the bargain. Kosovo illustrated that the burden sharing
imbalance has become critical. European military hardware is significantly inferior to
American with regard to strategic transport and logistics (C-17s, rapid sealift,
inflatable fuel tanks, forward repair facilities); intelligence (satellites, sensors,
computers); and high-tech weaponry (precision-guided explosives, cruise missiles). Thus
compatibility problems, always the bane of this uneven alliance, have grown worse. As the
Economist puts it, "compared to U.S. forces inspired by the revolution in
military affairs that promises perfect knowledge of everything on a battlefield,
Europes static conscript-dependent forces look increasingly like dinosaurs. Western
Europes defense budget is almost two-thirds that of America, but it produces less
than one-quarter of Americas deployable fighting strength." For example, of
5,000 military aircraft available to Western Europes armies for deployment for air
strikes, barely 10 percent are capable of precision bombing.
If anything, the technological discrepancies pale next to problems
relating to "lift," the ability to transport a fighting force. Europe, in the
words of the Western European Assembly (the parliamentary arm of the soon to be defunct
Western European Union), has ceded "a virtual monopoly" in this field to the
United States. While unglamorous, logistical lift is probably the key component in
fighting a war in the post-Cold War era. Just as the British navys ability to
provide its forces with lift in the nineteenth century was the key to the success of its
empire, so the American ability to quickly place its troops anywhere in the world is the
crucial reason for U.S. military dominance. This is also the basic weakness of European
defense forces. As Michael OHanlon of the Brookings Institution explained in the
journal Survival, "Today, only the U.S. is in a position to deploy large numbers of
forces well beyond its national borders and operate them for an extended period. Europeans
are not only very limited in the amount of force they can project beyond Europe, but they
must also depend heavily on the U.S. in more nearby places like the Balkans."
European defense establishments must spend more wisely, but they must
also spend more. The major reason for European technological deficiencies is that they
simply do not devote enough resources to research and development. The U.S. spends nearly
four times as much as the European allies on defense R&D. These numbers speak for themselves.
Poor procurement decisions do not convincingly explain the totality of the technological
gap between the two pillars of the alliance; an insufficient financial commitment on the
part of the Europeans is also a significant part of the problem.
There have been efforts to address this fundamental problem, but they
have fallen short of the mark. At the Washington summit in 1999, the member states of the
alliance signed the Defense Capabilities Initiative, which attempts to provide a common
concept of operations for the future battlefield. The initiative points to a future in
which force postures are less dependent on overly large standing armies, with more
emphasis on deployability and sustainability. The document notes: "It is important
that all nations are able to make a fair contribution to the full spectrum of Alliance
missions regardless of differences in national defense structures." Unfortunately, it
simply does not tell us how to get there. It is an aspiration, not a plan. NATO defense ministers
met in December 1999 to try to advocate measures to give substance to the initiative, but
failed to come up with details. Burden sharing should entail close military coordination,
shared risks and responsibilities, and common experiences among allies. Until a concrete
plan explains how these concepts will be realized, the effort will remain rhetorical.
The other half of the equation, power sharing, has not been adequately
dealt with either. This is where ESDP is critical to the NATO reform process. Solana sees the link between burden sharing and
power sharing: "It is true that the U.S. may lose some leverage as Europe gets
stronger, but that is inevitable and by no means an unhealthy thing, because a strong
Europe can relieve some of the burdens carried by the worlds only superpower.
The way forward is simple. The European pillar must increase its
financial and military contribution to the alliance while being given a greater amount of
power within NATO. Likewise, while the U.S will benefit from being able to decrease its
transatlantic defense burden, it must consent to the Europeans having a greater role in
how the alliance is run. This fundamental tradeoff must underlie any successful NATO reform plan.
Elsewhere, I have proposed that the Europeans agree to modernize their
armed forces by raising defense spending to 3 percent of GDP a year, with an emphasis on decreasing the
technological gap, and that the United States in return agree to discuss a restructuring
of NATO
commands with an eye toward giving the Europeans a greater say in how the alliance is
run.* Such a concord is certain to reinvigorate the alliance by roughly balancing its two
pillars, both in terms of burdens expended and powers allotted.
Increased European integration within the context of NATO, symbolized by the ESDP drive, may well
facilitate economies of scale, making it easier for the Europeans to meet their increased
defense commitments under a NATO reform plan. As Eisenhower approached EDC, so should we
approach ESDP.
An enhanced ESDP must take place under the NATO umbrella; it must create synergies that allow the Europeans to make
progress technologically; and despite allowing for an increased role for the EU in the process, it
must be open to all European members of NATO, whether or not they are in the union. Above all, ESDP must enhance NATO reform, not be the
beginnings of a separate defense organization, designed to supersede the transatlantic
link.
While in many ways ESDP represents nothing new under the sun, reflecting the perennial
burden sharing and power sharing concerns that have plagued NATO since its inception,
something has changed. With the Cold War era consigned to history, the immediate threat
facing the alliance no longer obviates these festering issues of burden sharing and power
sharing. On the brighter side, a constituency on both sides of the Atlantic is in the
process of realizing this and seems intent on using ESDP to begin to redress the inequities that
have troubled NATO since its inception.
* See John C. Hulsman, "A Grand Bargain with Europe: Preserving
NATO for the
21st Century," Heritage Foundation Backgrounder No. 1360, April 2000.
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