The US, NATO Plan to Recruit
India Into Global Alliance Against China and Russia
by Rick Rozoff Posted on March 25, 2021
https://original.antiwar.com/Rick_Rozoff/2021/03/24/us-nato-plan-to-recruit-india-into-global-alliance-against-china-and-russia/
Call to admit India to NATO
partnership to sever ties with Russia, confront China
The policy he is promoting,
faithfully echoing as he does the global strategic plans of Washington and
Brussels is to end 74 years of Russian-Indian military cooperation, supplanting
Moscow’s influence with the very military bloc established to oppose Russia and
which now openly proclaims Russia its main adversary, so as to recruit India to
an international crusade against China and Russia. Nothing less. Should that
policy be effected, the world would witness the most dramatic – and most
dangerous – geopolitical shift in history.
In an opinion piece
appearing in the Hindustan Times of March 22, a former State
Department official, A. Wess Mitchell, called for this year’s North Atlantic
Treaty Organization summit to invite India, one of the world’s two most
populous nations, to become a NATO partner, thereby joining 40 other partners
throughout the world.
Mitchell was the Assistant
Secretary of State for European and Eurasian Affairs under the Donald Trump
administration and is currently the co-chair of the NATO 2030 Reflection
Process group preparing the alliance’s upcoming summit and the new Strategic
Concept to be approved by it. As such Mitchell’s recommendation is no idle or academic
one.
In testimony before the
U.S. Senate Committee on Foreign Relations in 2018 he foreshadowed what
has now become the US administration’s main international strategic goal: to
consolidate a global coalition centered around NATO to isolate and confront
Russia and China simultaneously and in unison:
“Russia and China are
serious competitors that are building up the material and ideological
wherewithal to contest US primacy and leadership in the 21st Century. It
continues to be among the foremost national security interests of the United
States to prevent the domination of the Eurasian landmass by hostile powers.”
He also said on that
occasion: “Our Russia policy proceeds from the recognition that, to be
effective, US diplomacy toward Russia must be backed by ‘military power that is
second to none and fully integrated with our allies and all of our instruments
of power.’”
As to which mechanism would
be employed to effect that purpose, he added that the US had “worked with NATO
Allies to bring about the largest European defense spending increase since the
Cold War – a total of more than $40 billion to date.”
To which he elaborated
further: “In addition to commitments from over half of the Alliance to meet
NATO’s two-percent defense spending requirement by 2024, the United States
achieved virtually all of our policy objectives at the NATO Summit, including
the establishment of two new NATO Commands (including one here in the United
States), the establishment of new counter-hybrid threat response teams, and
major, multi-year initiatives to bolster the mobility, readiness, and capability of the Alliance.”
Although in the Hindustan
Times column he dwells largely on threats posed by China, the above
demonstrates that he advocates what is now the standard Biden administration
and NATO strategy of identifying China and Russia as the two main adversaries
of the former two’s so-called rules-based international order. It is to be the
world against Russia and China if Mitchell, the White House, and NATO have their
way.
The title of the article
is NATO: India’s next
geopolitical destination. Its first sentence reads: “When the North Atlantic
Treaty Organization (NATO) leaders meet later this spring, they will debate the
recommendations from a group of experts (which I co-chaired) that advocates,
among other things, extending a formal offer of partnership to India.”
He invokes the military
clashes of recent years between Chinese and Indian forces and the fact that
China spends three times what India does on its military as concerns that might
induce India to respond to a NATO partnership proposal.
Not unexpectedly, Mitchell
highlights the role of what has recently been deemed the Quad in the
Asia-Pacific region: Australia, Japan, South Korea, and India. He doesn’t
mention that the first three are founding members of NATO’s Partnership Across
the Globe program, launched before the NATO summit in Chicago in 2012. Nor does
he mentions that there are no fewer than twenty NATO members and partners in the
broader Asia-Pacific region, including six that border China (and two that
border China and Russia: Kazakhstan and Mongolia).
Russia is to be ejected
from the equation, although it has been India’s main ally and arms provider
since India became an independent nation in 1947. The exclusive sales of NATO
interoperable weapons to India would perhaps be the largest military hardware
bonanza in history.
India is to be enticed to
affiliate with “the world’s most powerful alliance” by the latter offering, if
not full Article 5 mutual military assistance in any future conflict with
China, some effective pledge of aid and threat of intervention by the global
military bloc. In blunt geopolitical language that pulls no punches, Mitchell
says NATO can offer “military-to-military planning, and joint exercises that
improve readiness, interoperability and predictability”; and ‘in the event of a
conflict, India would benefit from having prior planning and arrangements in a place for cooperating with NATO and its Mediterranean partners (including
Israel, with which India has a close strategic relationship) to secure its
western flank and the approaches to the Red Sea.”
As there can be little
doubt how NATO would react should Israel enter into armed conflict with Syria
or Iran, for example, according to the author’s logic China similarly should
know what to expect in any future conflict with an India that is a NATO
partner.
In terms of carrot and
stick, Mitchell added: “[A]dding NATO partner status could also position India
to benefit from possible future programs aimed at lowering the barriers for
cooperation in emerging technologies between NATO and its Asia-Pacific
partners. It could also help to offset the growing concerns and negative scrutiny that India is increasingly attracting in Congress for its
disproportionate reliance on Russian military equipment.”
Russia out as a strategic
partner and arms supplier; NATO and the US and Israel in. That is the simple
equation.
The writer brushes aside
the question of India’s neighbor and arch-adversary Pakistan though fails to
mention that Pakistan itself has been a NATO partner for nine years.
Mitchell further advocates
– and as CO-chair of the NATO 2030 Reflection Process team he is preeminently
in a position to do such effectively – that “NATO leaders should extend to
India an offer of opening partnership talks” and in doing so would be
“seriously evaluating all of its tools, including partnerships, according to
how well they equip its members for dealing with a new era of great-power
competition in which large states such as China and Russia pose, by far, the
greatest threat to their security.”
The policy he is promoting,
faithfully echoing as he does the global strategic plans of Washington and
Brussels is to end 74 years of Russian-Indian military cooperation,
supplanting Moscow’s influence with the very military bloc established to
oppose Russia and which now openly proclaims Russia its main adversary, so as
to recruit India to an international crusade against China and Russia. Nothing
less. Should that policy be effected, the world would witness the most dramatic
– and most dangerous – geopolitical shift in history.
Rick Rozoff has been
involved in anti-war and anti-interventionist work in various capacities for
forty years. He lives in Chicago, Illinois. He is the manager of Stop NATO. This originally appeared at Anti-Bellum.
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