Confronting NATO’s War Summit in Washington
by Medea
Benjamin and Nicolas J. S. Davies
Posted on July 02, 2024
https://original.antiwar.com/mbenjamin/2024/07/01/confronting-natos-war-summit-in-washington/
After NATO’s catastrophic, illegal invasions of Yugoslavia, Libya and Afghanistan, on July 9th NATO plans to invade Washington DC. The
good news is that it only plans to occupy Washington for three days. The
British will not burn down the U.S. Capitol as they did in 1814, and the
Germans are still meekly pretending that they don’t
know who blew up
their Nord Stream gas pipelines. So expect smiling photo-ops and an overblown
orgy of mutual congratulation.
The details of NATO’s agenda for the Washington summit were
revealed at a NATO foreign ministers’ meeting in Prague at the end of May. NATO
will drag its members into the U.S. Cold War with China by accusing it of
supplying dual-use weapons technology to Russia, and it will unveil new NATO
initiatives to spend our tax dollars on a mysterious “drone wall” in the
Baltics and an expensive-sounding “integrated air defense system” across
Europe.
But the main feature of the summit will be a
superficial show of unity to try to convince the public that NATO and Ukraine
can defeat Russia and that negotiating with Russia would be tantamount to
surrender.
On the face of it, that should be a hard sell. The one
thing that most Americans agree on about the war in Ukraine is that they
support a negotiated peace. When asked in a November 2023 Economist/YouGov poll “Would you support or oppose Ukraine and
Russia agreeing to a ceasefire now?,” 68% said “support,” and only 8% said
“oppose,” while 24% said they were not sure.
However, while President Biden and NATO leaders hold
endless debates over different ways to escalate the war, they have repeatedly
rejected peace negotiations, notably in April 2022, November 2022 and January 2024, even as their failed
war plans leave
Ukraine in an ever worsening negotiating position.
The endgame of this non-strategy is that Ukraine will
only be allowed to negotiate with Russia once it is facing total defeat and has
nothing left to negotiate with – exactly the surrender NATO says it wants to
avoid.
As other countries have pointed out at the UN General Assembly, the U.S. and NATO’s rejection of negotiation and
diplomacy in favor of a long war they hope will eventually “weaken” Russia is a
flagrant violation of the “Pacific Settlement of Disputes” that all UN members
are legally committed to under Chapter VI of the UN Charter. As it says in Article 33(1),
“The parties to any dispute, the continuance of which
is likely to endanger the maintenance of international peace and security,
shall, first of all, seek a solution by negotiation, enquiry, mediation,
conciliation, arbitration, judicial settlement, resort to regional agencies or
arrangements, or other peaceful means of their own choice.”
But NATO’s leaders are not coming to Washington to
work out how they can comply with their international obligations and negotiate
peace in Ukraine. On the contrary. At a June meeting in preparation for the
Summit, NATO defense ministers approved a plan to put NATO’s military support
to Ukraine “on a firmer footing for years to come.”
The effort will be headquartered at a U.S. military base in
Wiesbaden, Germany, and involve almost 700 staff. It has been described as a
way to “Trump proof” NATO backing for Ukraine, in case Trump wins the
election and tries to draw down U.S. support.
At the Summit, NATO Secretary General Stoltenberg
wants NATO leaders to commit to providing Ukraine with $43 billion worth of
equipment each year, indefinitely. Echoing George Orwell’s doublethink that
“war is peace”, Stoltenberg said, “The paradox is that the longer we plan, and
the longer we commit [to war], the sooner Ukraine can have peace.”
The Summit will also discuss how to bring Ukraine
closer to NATO membership, a move that guarantees the war will continue, since
Ukrainian neutrality is Russia’s principal war aim.
As Ian Davis of NATO Watch reported, NATO’s rhetoric echoes the same lines he heard
throughout twenty years of war in Afghanistan: “The Taliban (now Russia) can’t
wait us out.” But this vague hope that the other side will eventually give up
is not a strategy.
There is no evidence that Ukraine will be different
from Afghanistan. The U.S. and NATO are making the same assumptions, which will
lead to the same result. The underlying assumption is that NATO’s greater GDP,
extravagant and corrupt military budgets and fetish for expensive weapons
technology must somehow, magically, lead Ukraine to victory over Russia.
When the U.S. and NATO finally admitted defeat in
Afghanistan, it was the Afghans who had paid in blood for the West’s folly,
while the US-NATO war machine simply moved on to its next “challenge,” learning
nothing and making political hay out of abject denial.
Less than three years after the rout in Afghanistan,
US Defense Secretary Austin recently called NATO “the most powerful and successful alliance
in history.” It is a promising sign for the future of Ukraine that most
Ukrainians are reluctant to throw away their lives in NATO’s
dumpster-fire.
In an article titled “The New Theory of Ukrainian Victory Is
the Same as the Old,” the Quincy Institute’s Mark Episkopos wrote, “Western
planning continues to be strategically backwards. Aiding Kyiv has become an end
in itself, divorced from a coherent strategy for bringing the war to a close”.
Episkopos concluded that “the key to wielding [the
West’s] influence effectively is to finally abandon a zero-sum framing of
victory…”
We would add that this was a trap set by the United
States and the United Kingdom, not just for Ukraine, but for their NATO allies
too. By refusing to support Ukraine at the negotiating table in April 2022, and
instead demanding this “zero-sum framing of victory” as the condition for
NATO’s support, the U.S. and U.K. escalated what could have been a very short
war into a protracted, potentially nuclear, war between NATO and Russia.
Turkish leaders and diplomats complained at how their American and British allies
undermined their peacemaking, while France, Italy and Germany squirmed for a month or two but soon surrendered
to the war camp.
When NATO leaders meet in Washington, what they should
be doing, apart from figuring out how to comply with Article 33(1) of the UN Charter, is conducting a clear-eyed
review of how this organization that claims to be a force for peace keeps
escalating unwinnable wars and leaving countries in ruins.
The fundamental question is whether NATO can ever be a
force for peace or whether it can never be anything but a dangerous,
subservient extension of the U.S. war machine.
We believe that NATO is an anachronism in today’s
multipolar world: an aggressive, expansionist military alliance whose inherent
institutional myopia and blinkered, self-serving threat assessments condemn us
all to endless war and potential nuclear annihilation.
We suggest that the only way NATO could be a real
force for peace would be to declare that, by this time next year, it will take
the same steps that its counterpart, the Warsaw Pact, took in 1991, and finally
dissolve what Secretary Austin would have been wiser to call “the most
dangerous military alliance in history.”
However, the world’s population that is suffering
under the yoke of militarism cannot afford to wait for NATO to give up and go
away of its own accord. Our fellow citizens and political leaders need to hear
from us all about the dangers posed by this unaccountable, nuclear-armed war
machine, and we hope you will join us –
in person or online – in using the occasion of this NATO summit to sound the
alarm loudly.
Medea Benjamin and Nicolas J. S. Davies are the
authors of War in Ukraine: Making Sense of a Senseless
Conflict, published
by OR Books in November 2022.
Medea Benjamin is the cofounder of CODEPINK for Peace, and the author of several books, including Inside Iran: The Real History
and Politics of the Islamic Republic of Iran.
Nicolas J. S. Davies is an independent journalist, a
researcher for CODEPINK and the author of Blood on Our Hands: The
American Invasion and Destruction of Iraq.
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