NATO will not expand to include Ukraine
or Georgia - at least not any time soon. There are many reasons - and many good
ones - that membership hasn't yet extended to these countries. Alas, it is
difficult not to have the impression that it was Russian grumbling that
ultimately deterred Western leaders to invite these former Soviet republics
into their military alliance.
True to style, Russia
took NATO's decision as a sign that the West is unwilling to face the newly
emboldened, post-Soviet Russia
- much less commit to defend Russia's
neighbors against possible outside aggression. The ink on the unsigned
Membership documents wouldn't have been dry, when Russia stepped up its
contribution to the ruckus in Abkhazia, a formerly independent Soviet -and now
aspiring-separatist Georgian- province. With flyovers and Russian
‘peacekeepers' uninvited by Georgia, Russia lays further claim to Abkhazia as
belonging to its sphere of influence.
NATO's dilemma - apart from the general unease
with which the West views Russia's gloves-off power politics - is clear: It
cannot give Russia, no member of NATO, a de
facto veto over NATO membership decisions, whether it concerns a
bordering nation or not. At the same time, denying Russia a veto does not
logically require tha t
the Ukraine and Georgia join NATO. It would be folly to
conclude that everything but Ukrainian and Georgian NATO membership would mean
having caved to Russian pressure.
There are good reasons for and against the Ukraine and Georgia joining NATO that can be considered
independently of the noises coming from the Kremlin. Among these reasons is -
also logically - the reaction in Moscow.
Not because the West bows before the increasing belligerence with which Russia
plays its international game of intimidation and threats, but because the West
has an inherent security (and otherwise) interest in the relationship with Russia. And
while the relationship is not good, it need not be made worse by decisions
which offend, and which are not absolutely essential to Western strategy. The
dilemma doesn't end here: Since the cold war ended, NATO has been an outdated
security alliance desperately in search of meaning. It has found its meaning in
expansion for its own sake and must therefore be intent on spreading its
military wing to more countries that used to be "the enemy". New members are
thus very welcome.
But as the recent rifts between Georgia and Russia
in Abkhazia's Kodori
Valley have shown, the Eastern
NATO members may take the common defense obligation a little more seriously
than the allies likely feel comfortable with. When NATO last expanded, its main
role was that of antechamber to EU membership: NATO has come a long way from
essential military alliance to free trade zone prerequisite.
A realistic assessment of NATO's utility is that
of sweetly forcing greater transatlantic ties in times where friendship alone
can't be counted on to do the trick - not unlike a marriage vow: When times are
rough, the partners can't run off quite so easily. If NATO is more than a rich kid's
club with military toys, the expansion to the Ukraine
and Georgia
- put off for now, but a forgone conclusion - should recall the question of
original importance: Would we, were these countries attacked in some way, be
willing to put everything on the line in defending it?
The official answer is clear, of course. And
perhaps, though unlikely, even the honest answer would be "yes". But what
security could NATO actually offer vis-à-vis Russia
(neither an official nor even potential enemy, of course) when half of Western
Europe is desperately dependent on Russian oil and gas? Russian
leaders are keenly aware of this problem - and know they need not to fear their
policy of aggressive audacity elicit any meaningful policy response from the
West.
Where once the Soviet Union's
military potential made Western Europeans shake in their boots, now it'd be one
cold winter without Russian gas. A point that only underscores the futility
with which Georgia,
with NATO now sidelined, appeals to the EU for protection of its interests.
The only possible conclusion from this is that at
the beginning of any true security
policy for Europe would be a smart energy
policy, ideally coordinated with her transatlantic allies. NATO's upcoming
60th
anniversary meeting in Strasbourg
and Kehl will show if there are any leaders bold and realistic enough to touch
on this subject.
Jens F. Laurson is Editor-in-Chief of the International Affairs
Forum. George A. Pieler is a senior fellow with the Institute for Policy
Innovation.
Related materials from the Atlantic community:
- Heinrich Bonnenberg: Ukraine's Future Lies in the EU, not NATO
- Richard G. Lugar: A Transatlantic Energy Security Strategy is Essential
- Memo 6: NATO and Russia: Relationship Must be Redefined



June 13, 2008
Gasprop pay's off for this kind of propaganda stuff
Just keep russians away from energy routes from Central asia and keep boosting democracy arround the Caucasus region it's important for Caucasus nations and also Iran and Russias future developmant don't wright such ordered by Gasprom krapp it's not a 20th century anymore!