NATO is by no means sufficient for the security needs of the United States and Europe, however necessary it may be for contemporary security requirements. Following the Iraq crisis in U.S.-European relations, the United States and Europe need a major initiative to help restore mutual confidence in transatlantic cooperation. Functionally, the Euro-Atlantic nations need a broader cooperative framework for security, one that includes all NATO and EU members and which concentrates on all areas of non-military cooperation.
A Changing Agreement for a Changing Security Landscape
The new leaders of the alliance in the United States and in Europe should make it a high priority to create such a framework after the election of a new American president. They could do so by directing the preparation of a New Atlantic Community Treaty to be signed by all NATO and EU members. The new treaty then should be opened for signature by all democratic states that can subscribe to and defend treaty values and goals.
The treaty would create an Atlantic Community Treaty Organization for non-military security cooperation that would complement NATO and the EU. Such a structure would be ideally suited for dealing with the complex issues raised by globalization and the post-9/11 terrorist and security challenges. Regular consultations would take place among all members and candidates of NATO and the EU, following patterns already established in both organizations.
Blending of Powers
To advance such a framework for non-military security cooperation, Europe must show a greater willingness to blend its impressive soft power capabilities with hard power to provide coherent answers to tomorrow’s challenges. And the United States must build a better balance between soft and hard power instruments in its foreign and security policy tool kit. In the long run, the effective marriage of U.S. and European soft and hard power capabilities could help reduce potential military challenges, and enhance the ability of the world community to deal with post-conflict scenarios in ways that promote stability.
A healthy and productive future for the Euro-Atlantic relationship is neither guaranteed nor doomed. The quality of the relationship will depend to a great degree on the choices made by leaders on both sides of the Atlantic. Recent years have demonstrated how bad choices can drive the relationship into crisis. Lessons should be learned from this period and applied constructively for the future.
Stanley R. Sloan is the founding Director of the Atlantic Community Initiative, a Visiting Scholar at the Rohatyn Center for International Affairs at Middlebury College, and President of VIC–Vermont, a private consulting firm. For the past three years, he has taught a Winter term course on transatlantic relations at Middlebury College. His most recent book, NATO, the European Union and the Atlantic Community: The Transatlantic Bargain Challenged (Lanham, Maryland, Rowman and Littlefield, 2005), contains a suggested draft for the New Atlantic Community Treaty discussed in this article.
Related Materials from the Atlantic Community:
- Heiko Borchert and Karina Forster argue that EU Energy Security Requires Hard Power
- CSIS on Recasting the Euro-Atlantic Partnership
- Daalder and Goldgeier Call For A Global NATO



June 29, 2007
Philipp Rock, Holger Haibach, MdB, Silver Contributor (34)