http://en.rian.ru/analysis/20080331/102574381.html

RUSSIAN INFORMATION AGENCY NOVOSTI

NATO extension, an end in itself
31/03/2008 13:47

MOSCOW. (Alexander Khramchikhin for RIA Novosti) - NATO is expected to open
its doors to Croatia, Macedonia and Albania at its April summit in
Bucharest. Their invitation will come as another manifestation of trends
that set in with the end of the Cold War. The eastward extension of the bloc
has entirely lost its military purpose, instead becoming an end in itself.

NATO lives to grow. Military might matters no longer. East European
countries that joined NATO in 1999 and 2004 are powerless to protect even
themselves. They are security consumers. Old and new NATO members are
steadily reducing their armed forces, so it has ever smaller means to defend
an ever larger area. Things will become still worse with the extremely weak
Albanian and Macedonian armies.

It is logical to assume that NATO continues to extend its borders for
political ends alone - to spread the European zone of liberty and democracy.
NATO lost its original purpose in 1991. As any bureaucratic structure, the
bloc shifted its priorities to sheer self-preservation, never caring about
its supposed mission. From this point on, eastward expansion became the
priority for the Brussels bureaucrats running the alliance - not for any
security considerations, but because it provides them with a big job, for a
long time. They never care about European security, especially as nothing
threatens it now. The new NATO members do not gain anything but the
psychological satisfaction of belonging to the club of civilized nations and
a soothing sense of security, even though they are safe as they are.

In fact, there is only one threat to Europe today and for the foreseeable
future. That is drug trafficking from Afghanistan. Here, NATO's military
incompetence is at its most striking. The alliance's contingent in
Afghanistan is powerless against drug growers and smugglers.

We can only regret that Russia does not fully recognize these trends and
clings instead to its Cold War phobias. NATO expansion not only lacks any
apparent point but also boosts those phobias by fueling suspicions of an
aggressive anti-Russian conspiracy. Be that as it may, even if the Balkan
Three join NATO, Moscow will hardly raise objections, considering their
apparent military weakness and geographic remoteness from the Russian
border.

Moscow would take a much tougher stance if Georgia or, even worse, Ukraine
joined the alliance. It would regard the move not merely as an invasion of
Russia's long-established, if largely illusory, sphere of influence, but as
downright aggression. And never mind the fact that expansion is not
accompanied by an increase in military might.

If Ukraine and Georgia join NATO, the Treaty on Conventional Forces in
Europe (CFE) will totally lose its point and finally be buried, leaving
Russia free to build up its forces west of the Urals. It might also put the
final nail in the coffin of the Intermediate Nuclear Forces (INF) Treaty.

As for Abkhazia and South Ossetia, Russia will at the least pursue a policy
of anything-but-recognition, if not simply recognize their independence. In
this sense, the West did Russia a good turn by recognizing Kosovo. Western
leaders proceed from double standards when they say that Kosovo is unique
and does not establish a precedent. Common sense and international law alike
ascribe the Abkhazians and South Ossetians the same right of
self-determination as the Kosovars. So, if Georgia joins NATO, it will put
an end to its own territorial integrity, though Tbilisi appears to hope, on
the contrary, that it will strengthen this integrity instead.

It is hard to say what Ukraine might gain from joining NATO beside a sense
of belonging to the "civilized community." In fact, present-day Ukraine is
an artificial heir to the Ukrainian Soviet Republic, with borders appointed
at the arbitrary will and volition of Soviet rulers. The West appears to be
blind to this. Ever since it gained independence, Ukraine has been divided
mentally, politically and geographically. This divide deepens with each move
that the country's west and southeast have opposite views on. Georgia may
lose small autonomies on its outskirts if it joins NATO. Ukraine may
jeopardize its very existence.

Further NATO expansion will not promote but torpedo European security - not
that the bureaucrats in Brussels and Washington appear to care.

Alexander Khramchikhin, Ph.D., heads the analytical department of the
Moscow-based Institute for Political and Military Analysis.

The opinions expressed in this article are the author's and do not
necessarily represent those of RIA Novosti.

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