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NATO Builds History's First Global Army

By: Rick Rozoff
Global Research,
August 9, 2009
Two months before the eighth anniversary of the U.S. invasion of
Afghanistan and the beginning of NATO's first-ever ground war the
world is witness to a 21st Century armed conflict without end waged
by the largest military coalition in history.
With recent announcements that troops from such diverse nations as
Colombia, Mongolia, Armenia, Japan, South Korea, Ukraine and
Montenegro are to or may join those of some 45 other countries
serving under the command of the North Atlantic Treaty
Organization-led International Security Assistance Force (ISAF),
there will soon be military personnel from fifty nations on five
continents and in the Middle East serving under a unified command
structure.
Never before have soldiers from so many states served in the same
war theater, much less the same country.
By way of comparison, there were twenty six (higher, and looser,
estimates go as high as 34) national contingents in the so-called
coalition of the willing in Iraq as of 2006. In the interim between
now and then troops from all contributing nations but the United
States and Great Britain have been withdrawn and in most cases
redeployed to Afghanistan.
In 1999 NATO's fiftieth anniversary summit in Washington, D.C.
welcomed the first expansion of the world's only military bloc in
the post-Cold War era, absorbing former Warsaw Pact members the
Czech Republic, Hungary and Poland, in the course of conducting
NATO's first war, the relentless 78-day bombardment of Yugoslavia,
Operation Allied Force.
Two years later, after the 9/11 attacks in New York City and
Washington, D.C., NATO activated its Article 5 - "The Parties agree
that an armed attack against one or more of them in Europe or North
America shall be considered an attack against them all" - for the
first time in the bloc's history and launched a number of operations
from deploying German AWACS to patrol the Atlantic Coast of the U.S.
to launching Operation Active Endeavor, a naval surveillance and
interdiction program throughout the Mediterranean Sea which
continues to this day.
But the main effect, and the main purpose, of invoking NATO's mutual
military assistance clause was to rally the then 19 member military
bloc for the invasion and occupation of Afghanistan and the
stationing of troops, warplanes and bases throughout South and
Central Asia, including in Kyrgyzstan, Pakistan, Tajikistan and
Uzbekistan. Flyover rights were also arranged with Kazakhstan and
Turkmenistan and newly acquired airbases in Bulgaria and Romania
have since been used for the transit of troops and weapons to the
Afghan war zone.
If the 1999 war against Yugoslavia was NATO's first "out of area"
operation - that is, outside of North America and those parts of
Europe in the Alliance - the war in Afghanistan marked NATO's
transformation into a global warfighting machine. In the years
intervening between the October 2001 invasion of Afghanistan and now
NATO officials and advocates have come to employ such terms as
Global, Expeditionary and 21st Century NATO. Afghanistan provided
the Alliance the opportunity to add to its previous expansion to
Eastern Europe with its attendant military operations in the Balkans
into asserting itself as the world's first global military force.
As the U.S. State Department's Deputy Assistant Secretary of State
for European Affairs Kurt Volker (later U.S. ambassador to NATO)
said in 2006, “In 1994 NATO was an alliance of 16 [countries],
without partners, having never conducted a military operation. By
2005, NATO had become an alliance of 26, engaged in eight
simultaneous operations on four continents with the help of 20
partners in Eurasia, seven in the Mediterranean, four in the Persian
Gulf, and a handful of capable contributors on our periphery.” [1]
The updated details of what he was alluding to are these:
From 1999 to this year NATO has added twelve new members - Albania,
Bulgaria, Croatia, the Czech Republic, Estonia, Hungary, Latvia,
Lithuania, Poland, Romania, Slovakia and Slovenia - all in Eastern
Europe, nine of them formerly in the Warsaw Pact and three former
Soviet and two Yugoslav republics.
All of the new members were prepared for full NATO accession under
the Partnership for Peace {PfP) program, which first demands weapons
interoperability (scrapping contemporary Russian and old Warsaw Pact
arms in favor of Western ones), increasing future members' military
spending to 2% of the national budget no matter how hard-hit the
nation is since the collapse of the Eastern Bloc, the purging of
"politically unreliable" personnel from military, defense and
security posts, training abroad in NATO military academies, hosting
U.S. Alliance military exercises, and instructing the officer corps
in a common language - English - for joint overseas operations.
With a dozen PfP graduates now full NATO members who have deployed
troops to Afghanistan - Bulgaria, the Czech Republic, Estonia,
Latvia, Lithuania, Poland and Romania were also levied for troops in
Iraq - the partnership still includes every former Soviet Republic
not already in NATO but Russia - Armenia, Azerbaijan, Belarus,
Georgia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Moldova, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan,
Ukraine and Uzbekistan - and ten European nations that had never
before been part of a military bloc: Austria, Bosnia, Finland, the
Republic of Ireland, Macedonia, Malta, Montenegro, Serbia, Sweden
and Switzerland.
All of the latter but Malta and Serbia have been tapped for soldiers
in Afghanistan. The 28 full NATO members all have troops there also.
Of the former Soviet republics, troops from Armenia, Azerbaijan,
Estonia, Georgia, Kazakhstan, Latvia, Lithuania, Moldova and Ukraine
served in Iraq under PfP obligations. At the time of the South
Caucasus war last August Georgia had the third largest national
contingent in Iraq - 2,000 troops deployed near the Iranian border -
which the U.S. rushed home on transport planes for the war with
Russia.
NATO also upgraded its Mediterranean Dialogue, whose partners are
Algeria, Egypt, Israel, Jordan, Mauritania, Morocco and Tunisia, at
the 2004 NATO summit in Istanbul, Turkey with the so-called Istanbul
Cooperation Initiative, which also laid the groundwork for military
integration of the six members of the Gulf Cooperation Council:
Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab
Emirates. The last-named is the only Arab state to date with troops
in Afghanistan.
The Afghan war has led to another category of NATO partnership, that
of Contact Countries, which so far officially include Australia,
Japan, New Zealand and South Korea.
The Alliance also has a Tripartite Commission with Afghanistan and
Pakistan for the prosecution of the dangerously expanding war in
South Asia, and defense, military and political leaders from both
nations are regularly summoned to NATO Headquarters in Belgium for
meetings and directives.
Afghan and Pakistani soldiers are trained at NATO bases in Europe.
Though not members of formal partnerships, nations with troops
serving under NATO in Afghanistan like Singapore and Mongolia have
been pulled into the bloc's global nexus and necessarily adopt
military doctrines and structures in line with NATO standards.
Another component of the 2001 decision to activate the Alliance's
Article 5 provision was to deploy NATO forces to the Horn of Africa,
primarily to Camp Lemonier in Djibouti, where they have conducted
maritime surveillance and boarding operations ever since. Last
autumn NATO deployed its first naval task force off the coast of
Somalia.
In addition to the five African nations in the Mediterranean
Dialogue, NATO has expanded its penetration of the continent over
the past eight years: An Alliance naval group has docked in Kenya.
NATO has held military maneuvers in South Africa. Even Libya has
begun cooperation with NATO in the Mediterranean.
With the launching of the Pentagon's Africa Command (AFRICOM) last
year - and AFRICOM is the personal project of retired Marine General
James Jones, from 2003-2006 top military commander of NATO and the
U.S. European Command where AFRICOM was incubated and now U.S.
National Security Adviser - the distinction between Pentagon and
NATO operations in Africa will be a largely academic one and all of
Africa's 53 nations except for Eritrea, Sudan and Zimbabwe are
potential Alliance partners.
The central focus for the operationalization of NATO's worldwide
plans is Afghanistan and adjoining nations.
In calendar year nine of the war in that nation and now with its
expansion into Pakistan NATO has built upon previous and current
joint military deployments in Bosnia, Albania, Kosovo, Macedonia,
Djibouti, Iraq, Kuwait, Jordan, Sudan and off the coast of Somalia
and secured a long-term, indeed a permanent, laboratory for molding
history's first international rapid deployment, combat and
occupation military force; a 650,000 square kilometer firing and
weapons testing range; a string of airbases in the center of where
Russian, Chinese, Indian and Iranian regional interests converge; a
boot camp for breaking in the armed forces of dozens of nations
slated for NATO membership.
As such, discussions about the "winnability" of the current war are
beside the point.
Although there are currently over 100,000 troops serving under U.S.
and NATO command in Afghanistan, many of them so-called niche
deployment special forces, mountain and airborne troops and other
units ordered by NATO from member and candidate nations, on August 7
the newly-installed Alliance Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen
issued an "open call for more troops" which "was perhaps the
clearest indication yet that a major escalation ordered this year by
new U.S. President Barack Obama is far from over."
In Rasmussen's words, "Honestly speaking, I think we need more
troops." [2]
Two days after being sworn in as NATO chief on August 1 Rasmussen
"ruled out setting a deadline for the withdrawal of international
forces from Afghanistan, saying the western alliance will stay there
'for as long as it takes.'" [3]
The new secretary general hadn't time to begin to settle into his
new post when he and NATO Supreme Allied Commander James Stavridis
flew into Kabul on an unscheduled visit two days afterwards "in
order to get a comprehensive view of the international effort." [4]
On August 7 British General David Richards, who will become Chief of
the General Staff on August 28, stated that "There is absolutely no
chance of Nato pulling out" [5] of Afghanistan and that his own
nation's role there "might take as long as 30 to 40 years." [6]
Eight days earlier the British ambassador to the U.S., Sir Nigel
Sheinwald, anticipated Richards in saying of the British - and by
implication NATO - role in South and Central Asia that "This is
going to be for decades...." [7]
In late July the Afghan ambassador to the U.S. also revealed that
any hopes for an imminent deescalation of the war in his country,
not to mention its eventual end, were non-existent by revealing that
"NATO countries will provide 8,000 to 10,000 additional troops to
allow Afghans to vote securely" [8] in this month's national
elections. The official explanation by the U.S. and NATO for their
increased deployment of troops to Afghanistan is that it is an ad
hoc effort to insure the elections there proceed without
interruption, but past elections have occurred and the fighting has
increased with the introduction of more and yet more Western
soldiers, tanks and other armor, attack helicopters, warplanes and
large-scale military offensives.
In fact August is a good month for a NATO summer offensive and
concerns over elections are a public relations ploy.
The day before the British envoy to the U.S. acknowledged the
decades-long plans of his country, his host country and NATO,
British Foreign Minister David Miliband held a joint press
conference in Washington with his American counterpart Hillary
Clinton at which he stated that despite polls in both Britain and
America showing majority opposition to the continuation of the
Afghan war "I want to be absolutely clear that we (the UK and the
US) went into this together and we will work it through together,
because we are stronger together." [9]
That the British and American publics are as anxious for NATO troops
to leave Afghanistan as the Afghans themselves means nothing to
Western political elites for whom much more is stake than the fate
of Afghanistan, about which they couldn't care less.
As a reflection of the urgency the Pentagon and NATO attach to the
deteriorating security situation in the nation, an emergency
conclave was held on a U.S. airbase near NATO Headquarters in
Belgium with American Defense Secretary Robert Gates, chairman of
the Joint Chiefs of Staff Admiral Mike Mullins, commander of NATO
and U.S. forces in Afghanistan General Stanley A. McChrystal, deputy
commander of U.S. forces in Afghanistan General David Rodriguez,
NATO Supreme Allied Commander Admiral James Stavridis and Central
Command chief David Petraeus.
Two days later NATO's governing body, the North Atlantic Council,
announced plans "to reorganize the alliance's command structure in
Afghanistan by setting up a new headquarters" to be named
Intermediate Joint Headquarters and commanded by U.S. General
Rodriguez.
A news account of the NATO decision said that "It is similar to the
model used in Iraq, where overall command of the multinational
forces was under a four-star American general, while a three-star
general ran daily operations." [10]
Afghanistan is not the only battleground in the South Asian war
theater.
From July 20-24 senior leaders of the American and Pakistani armed
forces met in Atlanta, Georgia at a counterinsurgency seminar.
The director of the U.S. Army and Marine Corps Counterinsurgency
Center, Colonel Daniel Roper, said of the proceedings: "This week we
presented some lessons learned in counterinsurgency. We used those
lessons to stimulate conversation and took our previous experiences
in Iraq and applied them to our current status. We exchanged our
viewpoints on the challenges in Afghanistan, Pakistan and South Asia
at large."
South Asia at large includes not only Afghanistan and Pakistan but
India, Nepal, Bangladesh and Sri Lanka.
Another U.S. military official present at the four-day workshop
said, "Pakistan is a pivotal country in our current operations. The
Pakistan military actually just came out of fighting the insurgency
over there to bring their knowledge to us and for us to talk about
certain practices we have used both historically and more recently
in Iraq and Afghanistan." [11]
In early August commander of U.S. and NATO troops in Afghanistan
Stanley McChrystal and Special Representative for Afghanistan and
Pakistan Richard Holbrooke spoke with Vietnam War scholar Stanley
Karnow in an "effort to apply the lessons of the earlier conflict to
the fight against the Taliban.
"Holbrooke confirmed to The Associated Press that the three men
discussed
similarities between the two wars. [Karnow] says envoy Richard
Holbrooke called him and passed the phone to Gen. Stanley McChrystal."
[12]
Not only is "South Asia at large" included in the West's Greater
Afghan war but so is Central Asia and the Caspian Sea Basin. In both
instances nations already involved in providing bases for U.S. and
NATO forces (Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Uzbekistan) and those supplying
troops and ancillary services are being pulled deeper into the NATO
web.
This past January U.S. Central Command chief David Petraeus visited
Kazakhstan which like Mongolia, about which more later, is among
only three countries bordering both Russia and China, North Korea
being the third. Petraeus pushed for his host country to open up its
air bases for transit to Afghanistan and it was later revealed that
discussions concerning the recruitment of Kazakh troops for the war
front were also held.
Kazakhstan is a member of the Russian-led Collective Security Treaty
Organization (CSTO) and the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO)
along with three of its four Central Asian neighbors [Kyrgyzstan,
Tajikistan and Uzbekistan), Russia and China.
It is also the Caspian nation with the largest oil and natural gas
deposits and a key nation in Western plans to dominate the transport
of hydrocarbons to Europe and Asia.
The penetration of Kazakhstan, a member of NATO's Partnership for
Peace, by the Pentagon and NATO will simultaneously insert a hostile
Western military presence on Russia's and China's borders and
undermine the very existence of the CSTO and SCO. Part of the
purpose of the war in Afghanistan, which was started four months
after the founding of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization in June
of 2001, is precisely to install U.S. and NATO military forces in
Central Asia to sabotage attempts by China and Russia to develop
common security, energy, transportation and other projects.
On August 7 American ambassador to Kazakhstan Richard Hoagland met
with the nation's defense minister to expand military collaboration.
"During the meeting Kazakh Defense Minister Dzhaksybekov paid
special attention to the increased number of actions under the plan
of military contacts...[and the] study of advanced experience and
organization of the U.S army, as well as the exchange of
experience." The sharing of experience has already included "over
320 Kazakh military men...trained within the program of
international military education and training in educational centers
of the U.S armed forces." [13]
Also on August 7 Pentagon chief Robert Gates expressed his
gratification that Kyrgyzstan, which earlier this year evicted U.S.
and NATO troops from the air base at Manas, had proven susceptible
to bribery and allowed the U.S. military to conduct transit again
through the same base. The new arrangement "will enable the U.S. and
Kyrgyzstan to continue their highly productive military relations
created earlier...." [14]
Kyrgyzstan like Kazakhstan is a member of the CSTO and SCO, though
it's not certain for how long.
In Kazakhstan's Caspian neighbor to the south, Turkmenistan, the
Pentagon has been no less active of late. At the end of July Under
Secretary of State for Political Affairs William Burns announced
plans for what was described as an intergovernmental commission for
regular consultations with Turkmenistan which "marks progress
in...the contribution to stability in Afghanistan and across the
region...." [15]
A news report two weeks earlier revealed that "Turkmenistan is
quietly developing into a major transport hub for the northern
supply network, which is being used to relay non-lethal supplies to
US and NATO forces in Afghanistan. The Pentagon has confirmed a
small contingent of US military personnel now operates in Ashgabat
to assist refueling operations." [16]
Similar processes are occurring on the western end of the Caspian
with Azerbaijan and its neighbors in the South Caucasus. With the
massive increase of troops and equipment and the escalation of
combat operations in Afghanistan, NATO partners are being drafted
into not only providing more troops but making their airspace and
air bases available for the transit of soldiers, weapons and
supplies. Plans are underway to employ air bases in Bulgaria and
Romania acquired in recent years as forward operating bases for the
U.S. and NATO alike to connect with bases in Georgia and Azerbaijan
and thence to Central Asia and Afghanistan.
Last month the world's first global strategic airlift base, at the
air base in Papa, Hungary - "the biggest NATO project in 40 years"
[17] - was put into operation for the war in South Asia and future
conflicts in the East. The twelve participating nations are NATO
members Bulgaria, Romania, Slovenia, Poland, Hungary, Latvia,
Lithuania, the Netherlands, Norway and the U.S. as well as two
Partnership for Peace states, Finland and Sweden.
After the meeting of the Russian and U.S. presidents in Moscow last
month, Russia agree to permit the Pentagon up to 4,500 annual
military flights over its territory without fees, saving the U.S. up
to $133 million a year in total transit costs.
An analysis by an American writer, Alfred Ross, in Russia Profile
several days ago warned of the consequences of Russia's
accommodation of American war plans in South Asia:
"Under Obama, the U.S. military presence on Russia's Central Asian
flank is proceeding at a ferocious pace. The appointment of Richard
Holbrooke, the former NATO Ambassador who orchestrated NATO's attack
on Yugoslavia as envoy to the region is indicative of Obama's
intentions. No area is more strategically important than the 'Af-Pak'
project, which positions U.S. troops within the zone fronting on
Iran, China, and Russia's Central Asia.
"For the new American irregular warfare approach, it is the ability
to map small terrain, analyze civilian traffic patterns and read
local radar systems that will be key to the next round of U.S.
operations across Russia's southern flank, from the Crimea to
Kyrgyzstan." [18]
To further demonstrate the accuracy of his concerns it was recently
announced that Mongolia, which directly abuts Russia as well as
China, was sending an initial contingent of 130 troops to serve
under NATO in Afghanistan.
A news report of the offer stated that "Mongolia's involvement in
Iraq and Afghanistan has helped cement its alliance with the United
States" and that it will facilitate the nation's "third neighbor"
policy to "reach out to allies other than China and Russia." [19]
Along with Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan and
Turkmenistan, the South Asian war is being exploited by Washington
and Brussels to intrude their military structures into nations
neighboring Russia and China, reorganize their armed forces as well
as shift their interstate allegiances and further encircle two of
the West's main competitors in the region and the world.
South Korea is also discussing sending troops back to Afghanistan.
Singapore now has a unit serving with NATO's ISAF and the possible
next defense minister of Japan, the Democratic Party's Keiichiro
Asao, recently affirmed that his nation would consider sending
ground troops to Afghanistan for the first time. [20]
The Afghan war has also allowed the West to consolidate the creation
of an Asian NATO, with armed forces from the above-mentioned
countries to join those of Australia and New Zealand already there.
With regards to the other end of Eurasia, the former Soviet Union,
in mid-July a Moldovan helicopter operating under contact with NATO
was shot down in Afghanistan, killing the six Ukrainian crew members
on board.
In the South Caucasus, Armenia announced two weeks ago that it
planned to send troops to Afghanistan "by the end of the year." An
analyst from that country said that "In addition to the Americans
wanting Armenia, Armenia also wants to play a greater role, a role
in Afghanistan that also builds on the strength of experience of
Armenian peacekeepers who've served in Iraq and Kosovo." [21]
Armenia, like all the former Soviet Central Asian nations except for
Turkmenistan, is a member of the Collective Security Treaty
Organization with Russia and Belarus, and like the four others is
being enticed by the West to shift its loyalties to NATO.
Georgia just announced that it has assigned a battalion of
US-trained troops to Afghanistan and neighboring Azerbaijan has
recently doubled its troops there.
Regarding the first nation, "Georgia has been involved in NATO
operations in the Balkans for nine years, and for five years in
Iraq, along with the U.S. and other NATO members.
"Georgia has proven its loyalty to the West by its actions since
1999. More than 10,000 military personnel have participated in
peacekeeping operations first in Kosovo, then in Iraq and briefly in
Afghanistan during 2005-06." [22]
The same source remarked that "[T]he participation in real combat
operations along with the military units of such powerful countries
will enrich Georgian soldiers with substantive operational
experience."
Combat experience that was put to use a year ago in its five-day war
with Russia. Three days ago the deputy chairman of the Georgian
parliament's foreign affairs committee, Georgy Kandelaki, told
reporters that his government would derive two major benefits from
sending additional troops to Afghanistan:
"First of all, our servicemen will gain combat experience because
they will be in the middle of combat action, and that is a really
invaluable experience.
"Secondly, it will be a heavy argument to support Georgia's NATO
aspirations." [23]
Gaining wartime combat experience in the Afghan campaign for action
on its border with Russia is not unique to Georgia.
A former commander of Finnish troops in the country, which in the
past weeks have been engaged in active combat operations in the
north of Afghanistan, said that "This is a unique situation for us,
in that we will get to train part of our wartime forces. That part
will get to operate as close to wartime conditions as is possible."
[24]
Finland has a 1,300 kilometer border with Russia and is in the
process of moving toward full NATO membership despite the opposition
of a majority of its citizens. NATO is progressively encroaching on
Russia's borders from most every direction and the Afghan war is
training the armies that may one day engage in combat much closer to
home.
The war in Afghanistan and on the other side of the border in
Pakistan has reached its highest pitch of intensity to date with
Afghan civilian deaths over 1,000 this year and the U.S. and NATO
experiencing their highest death tolls in almost eight years of
warfare.
Britain has announced that it is sending 2,000 more troops and
additional Predator drones, Chinook and Merlin helicopters and
armored vehicles.
Italy, France, Germany, Romania, Turkey, Portugal, Spain, new NATO
members Albania and Croatia and Contact Country partners Australia
and New Zealand have deployed and have been pressured to provide
more troops, including special forces units, warplanes, attack
helicopters and armored vehicles for the war.
A war that expanded into a 50-nation military campaign and that has
fanned out to include U.S. and NATO military incursions into South
and Central Asia and the Caspian Sea region.
A war that serves as a furnace to forge an integrated,
battle-hardened international military force that can be employed
wherever else in the world Brussels and Washington choose to use it
in the future.
The Afghan war, then, is no ordinary war, as abhorrent as all wars
are.
It is only going to expand in width and in the amount of blood shed,
but already it is distinguished by several developments:
It is the U.S.'s first war in Asia and its longest one anywhere
since Vietnam.
It is NATO's first ground war and its first military campaign in
Asia.
The German army has engaged in its first combat operations since the
defeat of the Third Reich in 1945.
Finnish soldiers have engaged in combat for the first time since
World War II and Swedish forces in almost 200 years.
Canada has lost its first troops in combat, 127, since the Korean
War.
Australia has registered its first combat deaths since the Vietnam
War.
More British soldiers have been killed, 191, than at any time since
the Falklands/Malvinas war in 1982.
A nation that borders Pakistan, Iran, China and two Central Asian
nations has been thrown into turmoil. The world's seven official
nuclear nations are either in the neighborhood - China, Pakistan,
India and Russia - or are engaged in hostilities - the U.S., Britain
and France.
The only beneficiary of this conflagration is a rapidly emerging
Global NATO.
1) Washington File, U.S. Department of State, May 4, 2006
2) Reuters, August 7, 2009
3) Bloomberg News, August 3, 2009
4) NATO International, August 5, 2009
5) BBC News, August 8, 2009
6) The Times, August 7, 2009
7) Boston Globe, July 30, 2009
8) Zee News (India), July 24, 2009
9) Press TV, July 29, 2009
10) Associated Press, August 4, 2009
11) United States Army, Army News Service, July 30, 2009
12) Associated Press, August 6, 2009
13) Trend News Agency, August 7, 2009
14) Interfax, August 7, 2009
15) Trend News Agency, July 24, 2009
16) EurasiaNet, July 8, 2009
17) Hungary Around The Clock, July 28, 2009
18) Russia Profile, July 31, 2009
19) Trend News Agency, July 22, 2009
20) Stars and Stripes, July 21, 2009
21) ArmeniaLiberty, July 23, 2009
22) Eurasia Daily Monitor, July 20, 2009
23) Russian Information Agency Novosti, August 6, 2009
24) Helsingin Sanomat, June 19, 2009 |