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Chicago Summit: NATO Remains AWOL from Europe's East (1)

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  • Chicago Summit: NATO Remains AWOL from Europe's East (1)

    Estonian World Review
    May 28 2012

    Chicago Summit: NATO Remains AWOL from Europe's East (1)

    Arvamus 28 May 2012 EWR Online


    With the salient exception of Georgia, NATO basically ignored its own
    immediate eastern neighborhood at NATO's Chicago summit (May 20-21).
    Europe's East - a `gray zone' of six countries bordering on NATO and
    the EU - faces a deepening security vacuum and Russian re-expansion.
    This region is the arena of protracted conflicts (Russia-Moldova,
    Russia-Georgia on two fronts, Armenia-Azerbaijan), territorial
    occupations, ethnic cleansing, massive Russian military bases
    (prolonged in Ukraine and Armenia since 2010 for decades to come), and
    failing tests of NATO's open-door and partnership policies.

    NATO seems to treat Europe's East with benign neglect, which deepens
    from one summit cycle to the next; NATO's policy from Lisbon to
    Chicago has confirmed the pattern. NATO/US disengagement and Russian
    sphere-of-influence rebuilding are concurrent processes, mutually
    reinforcing in this region.

    Benign neglect tends to grow deeper and even becomes institutionalized
    with the passage of time. In this region, it takes the form of
    conceding primary authority on peacekeeping and conflict-mediation to
    Russia, which acts within institutional formats that constrain the
    West and exclude NATO outright. Except for a fleeting moment in 2002,
    NATO has recused itself from a peacekeeping role in its eastern
    neighborhood.

    At the Chicago summit, NATO again urged all parties to the protracted
    conflicts to respect those same institutional formats (meaning: 5+2 in
    Moldova, the Geneva format in the case of Georgia, the `Minsk Group'
    in the Armenia-Azerbaijan conflict) despite their ineffectiveness.
    This summit's communiqué called on `all parties to engage
    constructively and with reinforced political will in peaceful conflict
    resolution.' Repeating a phrase from earlier communiqués, it declared
    that `the persistence of protracted conflicts in [the] South Caucasus
    and Moldova continues to be a matter of great concern for the
    Alliance.' But the concern seems to remain at the declaratory level
    (Chicago Summit Declaration, May 20).

    Overcommitted to failed expeditionary operations in distant theaters,
    NATO has no security solution to offer in its eastern neighborhood;
    and - as the Chicago summit confirmed - NATO lacks the collective
    inclination to provide one. While some NATO partners become security
    providers in the region, the Alliance itself has missed the chance to
    become an effective security actor in Europe's East.

    Again, with the singular exception of Georgia, others are scaling down
    their erstwhile ambitions for closer cooperation with NATO. The
    Ukrainian government has regressed from membership aspirant during
    Viktor Yanukovych's first premiership (2002-2004) to staunchly
    `non-bloc' under Yanukovych's presidency. At the Chicago summit,
    Yanukovych limited his role to seeking business opportunities for
    Ukraine in the context of NATO's withdrawal from Afghanistan. He
    offered to lease Ukraine's Soviet-era, heavy-duty transport aircraft
    for NATO's reverse transit, and to repair Soviet-made military
    equipment in Ukraine for the Afghan army's use (UNIAN, May 22).

    For its part, Azerbaijan joined the non-aligned movement in 2011 - a
    move that precludes NATO membership aspirations, though still allowing
    other forms of Azerbaijan-NATO cooperation. In the Karabakh conflict,
    Russian-backed Armenia occupies territories of Western-oriented
    Azerbaijan. Amid Western indifference to this situation, Azerbaijan
    seeks political support among the non-aligned countries. Baku
    continues to seek an upgraded individual partnership agreement with
    NATO, but the Alliance procrastinates. Azerbaijan is a troop
    contributor and a crucial way station for NATO forces operating in
    Afghanistan. President Ilham Aliyev attended the Chicago summit in
    that context. Armenian President Serzh Sarkisyan, on the other hand,
    followed Russian President Vladimir Putin's example and declined to
    attend the summit.

    Azerbaijan obtained a degree of satisfaction when the Chicago summit's
    communiqué endorsed Azerbaijan's `territorial integrity, independence,
    and sovereignty' along with those of Georgia and Moldova (Chicago
    Summit Declaration, May 20). This basically restates the formulation
    from NATO's 2010 Lisbon summit communiqué; but the restatement was in
    doubt until the last moment, as diplomats involved in the
    anachronistic `Minsk process' sought to change the Lisbon formula to
    Azerbaijan's detriment. Turkey defended Azerbaijan's interests in the
    drafting process (Trend, May 21).

    Presidents Dalia Grybauskaite of Lithuania and Traian Basescu of
    Romania expressed concern over arms sales by certain Western European
    countries to Russia. In their speeches at the Chicago summit,
    Grybauskaite and Basescu noted that such arms sales can generate
    security risks to NATO allies and partners. Basescu urged NATO to
    introduce controls over arms sales by NATO member countries to
    non-members (meaning essentially Russia). Such procedures should
    involve advance notice to the Alliance and a certification that the
    arms sales would not pose additional risks to allies and partners in
    the region (BNS, Agerpres, May 21). France is going ahead with the
    sale of Mistral-class amphibious assault warships to Russia. On the
    eve of the Chicago summit, Italy delivered samples of Centauro tanks
    and Iveco armored vehicles to Russia for testing and possible
    procurement (RIA Novosti, Gazeta.ru, May 12; Izvestiya, May 16).

    History's most successful alliance seems painfully irrelevant to the
    security of its own eastern neighborhood, from Ukraine to the South
    Caucasus. Yet, this neighborhood sits astride the Alliance's vital
    energy supply routes to Europe and logistical corridors to Asia.
    `Relevance' is a particularly sensitive word in the NATO lexicon. From
    the 1990s onward, NATO leaders serially insisted that NATO remained
    `relevant' and had to prove it. That proof, however, has yet to
    materialize in Europe's East.

    Source: Vladimir Socor, Eurasia Daily Monitor Volume: 9 Issue: 99
    May 24, 2012
    http://www.eesti.ca/?op=article&articleid=36478

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