NATO Incorporates Libyan Experience for Global War Template
Rick Rozoff
June 18, 2011
As the West’s war against Libya has entered its fourth month and the North Atlantic Treaty Organization has flown more
than 11,000 missions, including 4,300 strike sorties, over the small nation, the world’s only military bloc is already
integrating lessons learned from the conflict into its international model of military intervention based on earlier
wars in the Balkans, Afghanistan and Iraq.
What NATO refers to as Operation Unified Protector has provided the Alliance the framework in which to continue
recruiting Partnership for Peace adjuncts like Sweden and Malta, Istanbul Cooperation Initiative affiliates Kuwait and
the United Arab Emirates and Mediterranean Dialogue partnership members Jordan and Morocco into the bloc’s worldwide
warfighting network. Sweden, Jordan and the United Arab Emirates also have military personnel assigned to NATO’s
International Security Assistance Force in the nearly ten-year-long war in Afghanistan. In the first case, troops from
the Scandinavian nation has been engaged in their first combat role, killing and being killed, in two centuries in
Afghanistan and has provided eight warplanes for the attack on Libya, with marine forces to soon follow.
The military conflicts waged and other interventions conducted by the United States and its NATO allies over the past
twelve years – in and against Yugoslavia, Afghanistan, Macedonia, Iraq, Somalia, Sudan, Pakistan and Libya – have
contributed to the American military budget more than doubling in the past decade and U.S. arms exports almost
quintupling in the same period.
The Pentagon and NATO are currently concluding the Sea Breeze 2011 naval exercise in the Black Sea off the coast of
Ukraine, near the headquarters of the Russian Black Sea Fleet based in Sebastopol. Participants include the U.S.,
Britain, Azerbaijan, Algeria, Belgium, Denmark, Georgia, Germany, Macedonia, Moldova, Sweden, Turkey and host nation
Ukraine. All but Algeria and Moldova are Troop Contributing Nations for NATO’s Afghan war. The once-annual maneuvers
resumed again last year after the Ukrainian parliament banned them in 2009. This year’s exercise was arranged on the
initiative of chairman of the U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff Admiral Michael Mullen. Last year’s Sea Breeze drills, the
largest in the Black Sea, included 20 naval vessels, 13 aircraft and more than 1,600 military personnel from the U.S.,
Azerbaijan, Austria, Belgium, Denmark, Georgia, Germany, Greece, Moldova, Sweden, Turkey and Ukraine.
This year the guided missile cruiser USS Monterey joined the exercise. The warship is the first deployed to the
Mediterranean, and now the Black, Sea for the Pentagon’s Phased Adaptive Approach interceptor missile program, one which
in upcoming years will include at least 40 Standard Missile-3 interceptors in Poland and Romania and on Aegis class
destroyers and cruisers in the Mediterranean, Black and Baltic Seas. Upgraded versions of the missile, the Block IB,
Block IIA and Block IIB, are seen by Russian political analysts and military commanders as threats to Russia’s
long-range missiles and as such to the nation’s strategic potential.
As former Indian diplomat M K Bhadrakumar wrote in a recent column:
“Without doubt, the US is stepping up pressure on Russia’s Black Sea fleet. The US’s provocation is taking place against
the backdrop of the turmoil in Syria. Russia is stubbornly blocking US attempts to drum up a case for Libya-style
intervention in Syria. Moscow understands that a major reason for the US to push for regime change in Syria is to get
the Russian naval base in that country wound up.
“The Syrian base is the only toehold Russia has in the Mediterranean region. The Black Sea Fleet counts on the Syrian
base for sustaining any effective Mediterranean presence by the Russian navy. With the establishment of US military
bases in Romania and the appearance of the US warship in the Black Sea region, the arc of encirclement is tightening.”
USS Monterey, whose presence in the Black Sea has been criticized as a violation of the 1936 Montreux Convention, will
return to the Mediterranean where the U.S.’s newest nuclear supercarrier, USS George H.W. Bush, and its carrier strike
group with 9,000 service members and an air wing of 70 aircraft is also present, having recently visited U.S. Naval
Forces Europe/Africa and Sixth Fleet headquarters in Naples, Italy, due north of Libya.
Last week the amphibious assault ship USS Bataan engaged in a certification exercise with its French counterpart FS
Tonnerre in the Mediterranean. The U.S. Navy website stated that the certification “will provide Tonnerre with
additional flexibility during their support to NATO-led Operation Unified Protector,” the codename for the Alliance’s
war against Libya. The USS Bataan Amphibious Ready Group includes an estimated 2,000 Marines from the 22nd Marine
Expeditionary Unit and dozens of warplanes and attack and other helicopters, and is poised for action in Libya and, if
the pattern holds, Syria.
The U.S. and NATO allies and partners – Albania, Algeria, Croatia, Egypt, Greece, Italy, Malta, Mauritania, Morocco,
Spain, Tunisia and Turkey – conducted the Phoenix Express 2011 maritime exercise in the Eastern and Central
Mediterranean from June 1-15, which included maneuvers in support of the U.S.’s global Proliferation Security
Initiative.
Also earlier this month NATO held this year’s Northern Viking air and naval exercise, the latest in a series of biennial
drills under that name, in Iceland with 450 NATO military members from the U.S., Denmark, Iceland, Italy and Norway. The
United States European Command website cited the Norwegian detachment commander saying, “exercises like [Northern Viking
2011] allowed the pilots to prepare for real-world scenarios, like Operation Odyssey Dawn,” the name for the Western
military campaign in Libya from March 19-30.
This week NATO Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen visited Britain and Spain, meeting with Prime Minister David
Cameron and Foreign Secretary William Hague in the first country and Prime Minister Jose Luis Zapatero, Foreign Minister
Trinidad Jimenez and Defence Minister Carme Chacon in the second.
While in London Rasmussen focused on the wars in Libyan and Afghanistan, both under NATO command, and promoted the
implementation of the European wing of the U.S. international interceptor missile system.
Perhaps in part responding to the dressing down NATO member states had recently received by the person Rasmussen truly,
if unofficially, has to account to – U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates – he boasted:
“NATO is more needed and wanted than ever, from Afghanistan to Kosovo, from the coast of Somalia to Libya. We are busier
than ever before.”
In Spain he addressed the nation’s upper house of parliament in a speech titled “NATO and the Mediterranean: the changes
ahead” and, according to the bloc’s website, emphasized “NATO’s changing role in the Mediterranean, particularly
focusing on Operation Unified Protector and NATO’s future role in the region.” He also pledged that “we can help the
Arab Spring well and truly blossom.” Libya and Syria, tomorrow Algeria and Lebanon, come to mind as the objects of
NATO’s false solicitude, and Egypt and Tunisia too, as Rasmussen has already mentioned, in regard to NATO training their
militaries and rebuilding their command structures in accordance with Alliance standards, as is being done in Iraq.
The war against Libya, NATO’s first armed conflict in the Mediterranean and on the African continent, is solidifying
control of the Mediterranean already established by the ongoing Operation Active Endeavor surveillance and interdiction
mission launched in 2001 under NATO’s Article 5 collective military assistance provision.
While Rasmussen was in Britain, Russian ambassador to NATO Dmitri Rogozin said that the Atlantic Alliance “is being
drawn into a ground operation,” and asserted “The war in Libya means…the beginning of its expansion south.”
Two days before, the U.S. and NATO completed Baltic Operations (BALTOPS) 2011, which included 20 ships from eleven
European nations and the flagship of the Mediterranean-based U.S. Sixth Fleet, USS Mount Whitney, other American
warships and Commander, Carrier Strike Group 8.
Concurrently in the Baltic Sea, the 11-day Amber Hope 2011 exercise was launched in Lithuania on June 13 with the
participation of 2,000 military personnel from NATO members the U.S., Canada, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Norway and
Poland and Partnership for Peace members Georgia and Finland. Former Soviet republics and Partnership for Peace
affiliates Armenia, Azerbaijan, Belarus, Kazakhstan, Moldova and Ukraine are attending as observers.
The second phase of the exercise will begin on June 19 and, according to the Lithuanian Defense Ministry, “troops will
follow an established scenario based on lessons learnt by Lithuanian and foreign states in Afghanistan, Iraq and off the
Somali coast,” in the last case an allusion to NATO’s ongoing Operation Ocean Shield. The bloc has also airlifted
thousands of Ugandan and Burundian troops into Somalia for fighting in the capital of Mogadishu.
Earlier this week NATO also held a conference with military officials of 60 member and partner states in Belgrade,
Serbia, which was bombed repeatedly by NATO warplanes 12 years ago, also focusing on the bloc’s current three-month-long
war in Libya.
The Strategic Military Partner Conference was addressed by, inter alia, French General Stephane Abrial, NATO’s Supreme
Allied Commander for Transformation based in Norfolk, Virginia, who said, “I’m convinced that the operation in Libya
will be successful,” though conceding that the hostilities may be prolonged well into the future in his opening
statement.
The Black Sea Rotational Force, a Special Purpose Marine Air-Ground Task Force, followed military training exercises in
Romania with a two-week exercise in Bulgaria on June 13 with troops from the host nation and, for the first time, Serbia
on one of the four air and infantry bases in the country the Pentagon has moved into since 2006. The earlier training in
Romania was at one of another four bases acquired in that nation.
The local press reported that most of the U.S. Marines involved arrived at the Novo Selo Range “straight from
Afghanistan” on Hercules-C-130 transport aircraft.
Lieutenant Colonel Nelson Cardella of the U.S. Marine Corps said of the drills, “Our troops will be trained to improve
the interoperability of our staffs” for the Afghan and future wars.
Bulgaria’s Standart News announced that “next year the Black Sea Rotational Force exercise will take place in Serbia.”
The mission of the Black Sea Rotational Force, formed last year, is to integrate the armed forces of twelve nations in
the Balkans, Black Sea region and Caucasus – Albania, Azerbaijan, Bosnia, Bulgaria, Croatia, Georgia, Macedonia,
Moldova, Montenegro, Romania, Serbia and Ukraine – through NATO for deployment to Afghanistan and other war zones and
post-conflict situations.
Each of the wars the U.S. and its NATO allies have waged since 1999 has gained the Pentagon and the Alliance new
military bases and expeditionary contingents in subjugated and adjoining nations in Southeastern Europe, the Eastern
Mediterranean and Persian Gulf, and South and Central Asia.
Just as the Yugoslav, Afghan and Iraqi wars contributed to developing a U.S.-led NATO international military
intervention capability for use against Libya today, so the Libyan experience is being employed for future conflicts.
ENDS