By David Swanson
The New York Times loves NATO, but should you?
Judging by comments in social media and the real world, millions of people in the United States have gone from having
little or no opinion on NATO, or from opposing NATO as the world’s biggest military force responsible for disastrous
wars in places like Afghanistan (for Democrats) or Libya (for Republicans), to believing NATO to be a tremendous force
for good in the world.
I believe this notion to be propped up by a series of misconceptions that stand in dire need of correction.
1. NATO is not a war-legalizing body, quite the opposite. NATO, like the United Nations, is an international institution that has something or other to do with war, but
transferring the UN’s claimed authority to legalize a war to NATO has no support whatsoever in reality. The crime of
attacking another nation maintains an absolutely unaltered legal status whether or not NATO is involved. Yet NATO is
used within the U.S. and by other NATO members as cover to wage wars under the pretense that they are somehow more legal
or acceptable. This misconception is not the only way in which NATO works against the rule of law. Placing a
primarily-U.S. war under the banner of NATO also helps to prevent Congressional oversight of that war. Placing nuclear
weapons in “non-nuclear” nations, in violation of the Nonproliferation Treaty, is also excused with the claim that the
nations are NATO members (so what?). And NATO, of course, assigns nations the responsibility to go to war if other
nations go to war — a responsibility that requires them to be prepared for war, with all the damage such preparation does.
2. NATO is not a defensive institution. According to the New York Times, NATO has “deterred Soviet and Russian aggression for 70 years.” This is an article of faith, based on the
unsubstantiated belief that Soviet and Russian aggression toward NATO members has existed for 70 years and that NATO has
deterred it rather than provoked it. In violation of a promisemade, NATO has expanded eastward, right up to the border of Russia, and installed missiles there. Russia has not done
the reverse. The Soviet Union has, of course, ended. NATO has waged aggressive wars far from the North Atlantic, bombing Bosnia and Herzegovina, Kosovo, Serbia, Afghanistan, Pakistan, and Libya. NATO has added a partnership with Colombia, abandoning all pretense of its purpose being in the North Atlantic. No NATO
member has been attacked or credibly threatened with attack, apart from small-scale non-state blowback from NATO’s wars
of aggression.
3. Trump is not trying to destroy NATO. Donald Trump, as a candidate and as U.S. President, has wondered aloud and even promised all kinds of things and, in
many cases, the exact opposite as well. When it comes to actions, Trump has not taken any actions to limit or end or
withdraw from NATO. He has demanded that NATO members buy more weapons, which is of course a horrible idea. Even in the
realm of rhetoric, when European officials have discussed creating a European military, independent of the United
States, Trump has replied by demanding that they instead support NATO.
4. If Trump were trying to destroy NATO, that would tell us nothing about NATO. Trump has claimed to want to destroy lots of things, good and bad. Should I support NAFTA or corporate media or the
Cold War or the F35 or anything at all, simply because some negative comment about it escapes Trump’s mouth? Should I
cheer for every abuse ever committed by the CIA or the FBI because they investigate Trump? Should I long for hostility
between nuclear-armed governments because Democrats claim Trump is a Russian agent? When Trump defies Russia to expand
NATO, or to withdraw from a disarmament treaty or from an agreement with Iran, or to ship weapons to Ukraine, or to try
to block Russian energy deals in Europe, or to oppose Russian initiatives on banning cyber-war or weapons in space,
should I cheer for such consistent defiance of Trump’s Russian master, and do so simply because Russia is, so
implausibly, his so-inept master? Or should I form my own opinion of things, including of NATO?
5. Trump is not working for, and was not elected by, Russia. According to the New York Times, “Russia’s meddling in American elections and its efforts to prevent former satellite states from joining the alliance
have aimed to weaken what it views as an enemy next door, the American officials said.” But are anonymous “American
officials” really needed to acquire Russia’s openly expressed opinion that NATO is a threatening military alliance that
has moved weapons and troops to states on Russia’s border? And has anyone produced the slightest documentation of the
Russian government’s aims in an activity it has never admitted to, namely “meddling in American elections,” — an
activity the United States has of course openly admitted to in regard to Russian elections? We have yet to see any
evidence that Russia stole or otherwise acquired any of the Democratic Party emails that documented that party’s rigging
of its primary elections in favor of Clinton over Sanders, or even any claim that the tiny amount of weird Facebook ads
purchased by Russians could possibly have influenced the outcome of anything. Supposedly Trump is even serving Russia by
demanding that Turkey not attack Kurds. But is using non-military means to discourage Turkish war-making necessarily the
worst thing? Would it be if your favorite party or politician did it? If Trump encouraged a Turkish war, would that also
be a bad thing because Trump did it, or would it be a bad thing for substantive reasons?
6. If Trump were elected by and working for Russia, that would tell us nothing about NATO. Imagine if Boris Yeltsin were indebted to the United States and ended the Soviet Union. Would that tell us whether
ending the Soviet Union was a good thing, or whether the Soviet Union was obsolete for serious reasons? If Trump were a
Russian pawn and began reversing all of his policies on Russia to match that status, including restoring his support for
the INF Treaty and engaging in major disarmament negotiations, and we ended up with a world of dramatically reduced
military spending and nuclear armaments, with the possibility of all dying in a nuclear apocalypse significantly
lowered, would that too simply be a bad thing because Trump?
7. Russia is not a military threat to the world. That Russia would cheer NATO’s demise tells us nothing about whether we should cheer too. Numerous individuals and
entities who indisputably helped to put Trump in the White House would dramatically oppose and others support NATO’s
demise. We can’t go by their opinions either, since they don’t all agree. We really are obliged to think for ourselves.
Russia is a heavily armed militarized nation that commits the crime of war not infrequently. Russia is a top weapons
supplier to the world. All of that should be denounced for what it is, not because of who Russia is or who Trump is. But
Russia spends a tiny fraction of what the United States does on militarism. Russia has been reducing its military
spending each year, while the United States has been increasing its military spending. U.S. annual increases have
sometimes exceeded Russia’s entire military budget. The United States has bombed nine nations in the past year, Russia
one. The United States has troops in 175 nations, Russia in 3. Gallup and Pew find populations around the world viewing the United States, not Russia, as the top threat to peace in the world. Russia has
asked to join NATO and the EU and been rejected, NATO members placing more value on Russia as an enemy. Anonymous U.S. military officials describe the current cold war as driven by weapons profits. Those profits are massive, and NATO now accounts for about
three-quarters of military spending and weapons dealing on the globe.
8. Crimea has not been seized. According to the New York Times, “American national security officials believe that Russia has largely focused on undermining solidarity between the
United States and Europe after it annexed Crimea in 2014. Its goal was to upend NATO, which Moscow views as a threat.”
Again we have an anonymous claim as to a goal of a government in committing an action that never occurred. We can be
fairly certain such things are simply made up. The vote by the people of Crimea to re-join Russia is commonly called the
Seizure of Crimea. This infamous seizure is hard to grasp. It involved a grand total of zero casualties. The vote itself
has never been re-done. In fact, to my knowledge, not a single believer in the Seizure of Crimea has ever advocated for
re-doing the vote. Coincidentally, polling has repeatedly found the people of Crimea to be happy with their vote. I’ve
not seen any written or oral statement from Russia threatening war or violence in Crimea. If the threat was implicit,
there remains the problem of being unable to find Crimeans who say they felt threatened. (Although I have seen reports
of discrimination against Tartars during the past 4 years.) If the vote was influenced by the implicit threat, there
remains the problem that polls consistently get the same result. Of course, a U.S.-backed coup had just occurred in
Kiev, meaning that Crimea — just like a Honduran immigrant — was voting to secede from a coup government, by no means an action consistently frowned upon by the United States.
9. NATO is not an engaged alternative to isolationism. The notion that supporting NATO is a way to cooperate with the world ignores superior non-deadly ways to cooperate with the world. A nonviolent, cooperative, treaty-joining, law-enforcing alternative to the imperialism-or-isolationism trap is no
more difficult to think of or to act on than treating drug addiction or crime or poverty as reason to help people rather
than to punish them. The opposite of bombing people is not ignoring them. The opposite of bombing people is embracing
them. By the standards of the U.S. communications corporations Switzerland must be the most isolationist land because it
doesn’t join in bombing anyone. The fact that it supports the rule of law and global cooperation, and hosts gatherings
of nations seeking to work together is simply not relevant.
10. April 4 belongs to Martin Luther King, Jr., not militarism. War is a leading contributor to the growing global refugee and climate crises, the basis for the militarization of the
police, a top cause of the erosion of civil liberties, and a catalyst for racism and bigotry. A growing coalition is
calling for the abolition of NATO, the promotion of peace, the redirection of resources to human and environmental
needs, and the demilitarization of our cultures. Instead of celebrating NATO’s 70th anniversary, we’re celebrating peace on April 4, in commemoration of Martin Luther King Jr.’s speech against war on April 4, 1967, as well as his assassination on
April 4, 1968.
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David Swanson is an author, activist, journalist, and radio host. He is director of WorldBeyondWar.org and campaign coordinator for RootsAction.org. Swanson's books include War Is A Lie. He blogs at DavidSwanson.org and WarIsACrime.org. He hosts Talk Nation Radio.He is a 2015, 2016, 2017 Nobel Peace Prize Nominee.
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