Ukraine Crisis Provides a Chance to Re-Examine U.S. Alliances


Writing in The National Interest the Cato Institute's Justin Logan asks whether Estonia would be worth a war and whether the existence of an alliance like NATO creates any interest that would be worth fighting for.
Unlike Ukraine, Estonia is a member of NATO, the military alliance made of up 28 countries that was formed in part as an anti-Soviet expansion organization. Article 5 of the North Atlantic Treaty states that an attack on a member state in Europe or North America would constitute an attack on each member and that such an attack would be met with assistance that could include military force for the attacked party from other NATO members.
As Logan points out, this sort of alliance made sense in the wake of the end of World War II, but that there is no risk today of Moscow dominating Europe today:
The early Cold War rationale was strong. Leaving Germany vulnerable to the Soviet Union risked allowing Moscow to dominate Europe. But that's not going to happen today, with or without NATO. If Russia annexed all of Ukraine and seamlessly integrated it into the Russian Federation without a hitch—something that's not going to happen—the Russian economy would be about 14 percent larger, equivalent roughly to that of Italy and Turkey combined.
NATO Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen has said that he would not hesitate to invoke Article 5 if Estonia were attacked, although as Logan points out, Rasmussen is vague about what exactly he would do next, saying "ambiguity strengthens the deterrence."
As Reason's Zenon Evans mentioned earlier today, NATO's Supreme Allied Commander in Europe recently suggested that he may send American troops to NATO members in Eastern Europe. Russia claims that it does not intend to invade eastern Ukraine, despite the large Russian military buildup taking place near the Ukrainian border.
As Logan points out, the lesson that should be learned from the ongoing crisis in Ukraine is that it is dangerous to have numerous military alliances in places where there are no interests that justify a military engagement:
The lesson is not that Washington should have started World War III over Ukraine, but rather that there is danger in littering the globe with alliance commitments in places where there is no interest that warrants war. This is particularly true when those countries seem to have beenemboldened by the alliance commitment, and have politics that reflect the NATO commitment better than they reflect the nation's geography or power position. Eventually one or more of NATO's bluffs could be called, and a U.S. president could find himself—or herself—threatening war in a context where it has no vital interest, and war was never intended or even seriously considered.
More from Reason on Ukraine here.
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If the Euros were organized, motivated, and armed, they could easily stand off Russia without the US or NATO.
I'm not sure any of those three conditions are actually met today.
In Estonia, alliance arms YOU!
I dunno about that. The EU military sure kicks ass in this video.
Can they stand up to singing Russian Paras?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0rAHrHd2lcw
Actually a kind of catchy song.
You know who else wanted to organize, arm and motivate Europe?
Pope Urban II?
Charlemagne?
The Umayyad Caliphate?
Gustav Adolphus?
Joey Tempest?
Ork-Ta of the Neanderthal Confederation?
Losers!!!
/Og of the Homo Sapiens Sapiens Alliance
Ork-Ta fights Homo sapiens sapiens with violent interpretative dance!
Leaving Germany vulnerable to the Soviet Union risked allowing Moscow to dominate Europe. But that's not going to happen today, with or without NATO.
What makes you so sure of that? The threat of cutting off the gas supply is already getting Germany to see things Moscow's way, imagine how bleak the situation would be if there were no US military deterrent to invasion.
The writers here give some bizarrely pollyannish rationales for their foreign policy pullbacks.
The Fogh of War?
"there is no risk today of Moscow dominating Europe today"
Then why is participating in NATO risky?
I'm not saying this is worth going to war over, but Estonia has some intriguing practices since they rebuilt government services from scratch in an internet world:
Meanwhile, the Pentagon plans to play "I'm not touching you! I'm not touching you!" by massing on Russia's borders and seeing what happens.
Wouldn't Alaska tip over?
No, it would rest upon the already sunken island of Guam!
That would seem an appropriate response to Russia invading the Crimea.
What business is it of the United States' who claims 10,000 square miles of real estate along the Black Sea?
Oh, right, I almost forgot to add another point to my tough guy response below: Admit Turkey to the EU. Oh, so sorry, there's a friggin' huge toll to pass through the straits now.
Mr. Feeney,
By "re-examine" you mean "leave", yes? Why be coy about it - I think it is a perfectly valid question to ask. "In light of events in Ukraine, should the US leave NATO?" There, not so hard, eh?
We should certainly consider phasing out our role as Europe's de facto military. It's not a great idea for us or for Europe, especially in the east.
Want to piss off and slow down the Russians? Give Germany an incentive to build up its military, which actually isn't entirely small and powerless even today.
Economically, Russia is a joke compared to Europe. Even today's messed up Europe. Europe can figure out a workaround to Russian oil--after all, that's a relatively recent thing in the first place.
Of the foreign militaries I got to train with, the Germans were the most competent. Not gung-ho or any of that shit, just real professional and with good equipment - better than ours in many cases. The fucked up Russian Army doesn't want any part of that.
Seriously, the tough guy response to Russia is, "Fine. We'll encourage Germany to fully rearm and the rest of Europe to switch back to other sources of oil. Good luck with everything!"
Fully rearm? Nukes?
Sure. If Iran and the Norks can have nukes, why not Germany?
They were not very impressive in Afghanistan - very 9 to 5 "can we get back to Camp Warehouse and start drinking beer yet?" Paid more attention to running a pirate radio station out of Konduz than guarding stuff in their sector (Finished a Girl's Highschool in Surobi and the Taliban burned it down the day after grand opening, etc).
I hope you didn't mention the war to them.
He mentioned it once but thinks he got away with it.