This reminds me of Serbia's president Tadic: .."Sarkozy may be the first
French president who seems not to like France. Or at least, to like the
United States better (from watching television).  He can give the impression
of having wanted to be president of France not for love of country, but in
social revenge against it. .."

===========

 

 <http://www.counterpunch.com/johnstone03132009.html>
http://www.counterpunch.com/johnstone03132009.html
French Kissing
NATO's Global Mission Creep 

By DIANA JOHNSTONE 

NATO, the main overseas arm of the U.S. military-industrial complex, just
keeps expanding.  Its original raison d’être, the supposedly menacing Soviet
bloc, has been dead for twenty years.  But like the military-industrial
complex itself, NATO is kept alive and growing by entrenched economic
interests, institutional inertia and an official mindset resembling
paranoia, with think tanks looking around desperately for “threats”. 

This behemoth is getting ready to celebrate its 60th birthday in the twin
cities of Strasbourg (France) and Kehl (Germany) on the Rhine early in
April.  A special gift is being offered by France’s increasingly unpopular
president, Nicolas Sarkozy: the return of France to NATO’s “integrated
command”.  This bureaucratic event, whose practical significance remains
unclear, provides the chorus of NATOlatrous officials and editorialists
something to crow about.  See, the silly French have seen the error of their
ways and returned to the fold.

Sarkozy, of course, puts it in different terms.  He asserts that joining the
NATO command will enhance France’s importance by giving it influence over
the strategy and operations of an Alliance which it never left, and to which
it has continued to contribute more than its share of armed forces.

The flaw in that argument is that it was the totally unshakable U.S. control
of NATO’s integrated command that persuaded General Charles de Gaulle to
leave in the first place, back in March 1966. De Gaulle did not do so on a
whim.  He had tried to change the decision-making process and found it
impossible. The Soviet threat had diminished, and de Gaulle did not want to
be dragged into wars he thought unnecessary, such as the U.S. effort to win
a war in Indochina that France had already lost and considered unwinnable.
He wanted France to be able to pursue its own interests in the Middle East
and Africa.  Besides, the US military presence in France stimulated “Yankee
go home” demonstrations.  Transferring the NATO command to Belgium satisfied
everyone.

Sarkozy’s predecessor Jacques Chirac, wrongly labeled “anti-American” by US
media, was already willing to rejoin the NATO command if he could get
something substantial in return, such as NATO’s Mediterranean command. The
United States flatly refused.

Instead, Sarkozy is settling for crumbs: assignment of senior French
officers to a command in Portugal and to some training base in the United
States.  “Nothing was negotiated. Two or three more French officers in
position to take orders from the Americans changes nothing”, observed former
French foreign minister Hubert Védrine at a recent colloquium on France and
NATO.

Sarkozy announced the return on March 11, six days before the issue is to be
debated by the French National Assembly.  The protests from both sides of
the aisle will be in vain.

There appear to be two main causes of this unconditional surrender.
<http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/158367084X/counterpunchmaga>
<http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/158367084X/counterpunchmaga>
<http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/158367084X/counterpunchmaga> 

One is the psychology of Sarkozy himself, whose love for the most
superficial aspects of the United States was expressed in his embarrassing
speech to the U.S. Congress in November 2007. Sarkozy may be the first
French president who seems not to like France. Or at least, to like the
United States better (from watching television).  He can give the impression
of having wanted to be president of France not for love of country, but in
social revenge against it.  From the start, he has shown himself eager to
“normalize” France, that is, to remake it according to the American model.


The other, less obvious but more objective cause is the recent expansion of
the European Union.  The rapid absorption of all the former Eastern European
satellites, plus the former Soviet Republics of Estonia, Latvia and
Lithuania, has drastically changed the balance of power within the EU
itself.  The core founding nations, France, Germany, Italy and the Benelux
countries, are no long able to steer the Union toward a unified foreign and
security policy. After France and Germany refused to go along with the
invasion of Iraq, Donald Rumsfeld dismissed them as “old Europe” and gloated
over the willingness of  “new Europe” to follow the United States lead.
Britain to the west, and the “new” European satellites to the East are both
more attached to the United States politically and emotionally than they are
to the European Union that took them in and provided them with considerable
economic development aid and a veto over major policy issues. 

This expansion effectively buried the longstanding French project to build a
European defense force that could act outside the NATO command.  The rulers
of Poland and the Baltic States want U.S. defense, by way of NATO, period.
They would never accept the French project of an EU defense not tied to NATO
and the United States.

France has its own military-industrial complex, totally dwarfed by the one
in the United States, but the largest in Western Europe.  Any such complex
needs export markets for its arms industry.  The best potential market would
have been independent European armed forces.  Without that prospect, some
may hope that joining the integrated command can open NATO markets to French
military products.

A slim hope, however.  The United States jealously guards major NATO
procurements for its own industry.  France is unlikely to have much
influence within NATO for the same reason it is giving up its attempt to
build an independent European army.  The Europeans themselves are deeply
divided.  With Europe divided, the United States rules.  Moreover, with the
economic crisis deepening, money is running short for weaponry.

>From the viewpoint of French national interest, this feeble hope for
marketing military hardware is vastly outweighed by the disastrous political
consequences of Sarkozy’s act of allegiance.

It is true that even outside the NATO integrated command, France’s
independence was only relative.  France followed the United States into the
first Gulf War – President François Mitterrand vainly hoped thereby to gain
influence in Washington, the usual mirage that beckons allies into dubious
U.S. operations.  France joined the 1999 NATO war against Yugoslavia,
despite misgivings at the highest levels.  But in 2003, President Jacques
Chirac and his foreign minister Dominique de Villepin actually made use of
their independence by rejecting the invasion of Iraq.  It is generally
acknowledged that the French stand enabled Germany to do the same.  Belgium
followed.

Villepin’s February 14, 2003, speech to the UN Security Council giving
priority to disarmament and peace over war won a rare standing ovation.  The
Villepin speech was hugely popular around the world, and greatly enhanced
French prestige, especially in the Arab world.  But back in Paris, the
personal hatred between Sarkozy and Villepin has reached operatic heights of
passion, and one can suspect that Sarkozy’s return to NATO obedience is also
an act of personal revenge.

The worst political effect is much broader.  The impression is now created
that “the West”, Europe and North America, are barricading themselves by a
military alliance against the rest of the world.  In retrospect, the French
dissent accomplished a service to the whole West by giving the impression,
or the illusion, that independent thought and action were still possible,
and that someone in Europe might listen to what other parts of the world
thought and said.  Now, this “closing of ranks”, hailed by the NATO
champions as “improving our security”, will sound the alarms in the rest of
the world.  The empire seems to be closing its ranks in order to rule the
world.  The United States and its allies do not openly claim to rule the
world, only to regulate it. The West controls the world’s financial
institutions, the IMF and the World Bank.  It controls the judiciary, the
International Criminal Court, which in six years of existence has put on
trial only one obscure Congolese warlord and brought charges against 12
other persons, all of them Africans – while meanwhile the United States
causes the deaths of hundreds of thousands, or even millions, of people in
Iraq and Afghanistan and supports Israel’s ongoing aggression against the
Palestinian people.  To the rest of the world, NATO is just the armed branch
of this enterprise of domination.  And this at a time when the
Western-dominated system of financial capitalism is bringing the world
economy to collapse.
         
This gesture of “showing Western unity” for “our security” can only make the
rest of the world feel insecure.  Meanwhile, NATO moves every day to
surround Russia with military bases and hostile alliances, notably in
Georgia.  Despite the smiles over dinner with her Russian counterpart,
Sergei Lavrov, Hillary Clinton repeats the stunning mantra that “spheres of
influence are not acceptable” – meaning, of course, that the historic
Russian sphere of interest is unacceptable, while the United States is
vigorously incorporating it into its own sphere of influence, called NATO. 

Already China and Russia are increasing their defense cooperation.  The
economic interests and institutional inertia of NATO are pushing the world
toward a pre-war lineup far more dangerous than the Cold War.

The lesson NATO refuses to learn is that its pursuit of enemies creates
enemies.  The war against terrorism fosters terrorism.  Surrounding Russian
with missiles proclaimed “defensive” – when any strategist knows that a
shield accompanied by a sword is also an offensive weapon – will create a
Russian enemy.  

The Search for Threats

To prove to itself that it is really “defensive”, NATO keeps looking for
threats.  Well, the world is a troubled place, thanks in large part to the
sort of economic globalization imposed by the United States over the past
decades.  This might be the time to be undertaking diplomatic and political
efforts to work out internationally agreed ways of dealing with such
problems as global economic crisis, climate change, energy use, hackers
(“cyberwar”).  NATO think tanks are pouncing on these problems as new
“threats” to be dealt with by NATO.  This leads to a militarization of
policy-making where it should be demilitarized.
         
For example, what can it mean to meet the supposed threat of climate change
with military means?  The answer seems obvious: military force may be used
in some way against the populations forced from their homes by drought or
flooding. Perhaps, as in Darfur, drought will lead to clashes between ethnic
or social groups.  Then NATO can decide which is the “good” side and bomb
the others.  That sort of thing.

The world indeed appears to be heading into a time of troubles.  NATO
appears getting read to deal with these troubles by using armed force
against unruly populations.

This will be evident at NATO’s 60th anniversary celebration in
Strasbourg/Kehl on April 3 and 4.

The cities will be turned into armed camps. Residents of the tranquil city
of Strasbourg are obliged to apply for badges in order to leave or enter
their own homes during the happy event.  At crucial times, they will not be
allowed to leave home at all, except under emergency circumstances.  Urban
transport will be brought to a standstill.  The cities will be as dead as if
they had been bombed, to allow the NATO dignitaries to put on a show of
peace.

The high point is to be a ten-minute photo op when French and German leaders
shake hands on the bridge over the Rhine connected Strasbourg and Kehl.  As
if Angela Merkel and Nicolas Sarkozy were making peace between France and
Germany for the first time.   The locals are to be locked up so as not to
disturb the charade.

NATO will be behaving as though the biggest threat it faces is the people of
Europe.  And the biggest threat to the people of Europe may well be NATO.

Diana Johnstone is author of
<http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/158367084X/counterpunchmaga> Fools’
Crusade: Yugoslavia, NATO and Western Delusions (Monthly Review Press).
She can be reached at  <mailto:[email protected]> [email protected]

 

 

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