Kdtic: NATO, The Subjective Alliance
Kdtic: NATO, The Subjective Alliance
Kdtic: NATO, The Subjective Alliance
The point is not that nothing has changed. Rather, it is that although
much has changed in 25 years, the debate over the crucial issue of the
U.S. commitment has changed very little. The European Couplers
have always been afraid that the American fear of opening the
Pandora's box of nuclear war might prevent the Americans from using
nuclear weapons in behalf of even their closest allies. The quarter-
century of changes, including the onset of strategic parity, has added
only one more element to the mutual fears and doubts that have
resonated across the Atlantic almost since the beginning of the Alli-
ance.
Four of the issues-The American commitment, The conventional-
nuclear link conventional force levels, and The Soviet role--are thus old
ones, having been debated in much their current form since the
sFmn9oi itterd,i in Le Monde, July 31, 19W, quoted in horn
Lellouche, LAvenir de la Guerre, Mazarine, Paris, 1965, p. 39.
l ,pp.
1
Pierre allois, o7w Balne of Ternr, Houghton Mifflin, Boston, 1961, p. 191.
. n mm mmm m ~mm mm W k - ..
32
beginning of the Alliance in the 1950s or at least since its reformula-
tion into its present shape in the 1960s. The other four issues are
somewhat newer, at least as they are now discussed.
Discussions of The Europeans' Commitments to Themselves might
have moved into their current form in the 1960s, as fears of Germany
past faded in the minds of the other NATO members. But de Gaulle's
difficulties in reconciling a Europe des Patries with a more unified ver-
sion under distinct French leadership postponed such changes, and the
debate did not really take its current form until the suspicions of the
United States induced by Carter, Reagan, and strategic parity grew
stronger in the late 1970s and the 1980s.
Before and after the Soviet suppression of the Prague spring in
1968, the primary assumption about NATO's role in Eastern Europe
was that NATO did not have a role in Eastern Europe. Militarily that
remains the case, but from the advent of Ostpolitik through the rise
and fall of Solidarity, it has become increasingly clear that NATO
members and to some degree the organization itself can and want to
play a political role in the differentiating world of what are now seldom
called the "Soviet satellites." This role has become the subject of a
changing debate.
The issue of NATO and the Rest of the World has taken on many
different shapes, from the American involvement in Vietnam, through
the rise and decline of OPEC, to the terrojn and Persian Gulf
scenarios of the 1980s.
Arms Control and Disarmament have been debated throughout the
period. In the early 1960s proposals related to Europe took the form of
"disengagement" of NATO and Warsaw Pact forces in central Europe.
This was not taken very seriously by the American Maintainer and
European Coupler establishment, and it faded. From the mid-1960s to
the mid-1980s, "serious" arms control discussions concerned the stra-
tegic weapons of the two superpowers and eventuated in the ABM
treaty and SALT I and II. So far as European arms control was con-
cerned, the establishment used ongoing negotiations to provide a politi-
cal sop to the Remover peace movement. The second track of NATO's
1979 INF two-track decision-the offer to negotiate down the levels of
intermediate missiles being installed-and the 1981 offer to zero them
out if the SS-20s were also removed, were offered in the belief that
they were not serious because the Soviets would never agree. When
Gorbachev did agree in 1986, the issue and the debate became very
serious indeed and turned out to have an intimate relationship to the
central issue of the American commitment.
The NATO debate of the late 1980s thus turns on the old issues, in
somewhat but not very new forms. The American commitment
i _ ' , ; :,, .' ..",
Im ,v -
33
remains pivotal; the nuclear-conventional link, nuclear weapons issues,
the Europeans' commitments to themselves, and the arms control-
disarmament debates all depend in greater or lesser degree on under-
standings of what that commitment is and beliefs about what it should
be. The debate over levels of conventional forces is also related to the
commitment issues, but proceeds on even more ancient premises. And
the question of whether Soviet policy toward the West is changing sub-
stantially has become the wild card that may well start all the other
debates off in very new directions.
I!
....
MII. THE COUPLERS
For Germans and other Europeans whose memory of the
catastrophe of conventional war is still alive and on whose
densely populated territory both pacts would confront each
other with the destructive power of modem armies, the
thought of an ever more probable conventional war is terrify-
ing. To Germans and other Europeans, an ever more prob-
able conventional war is, therefore, no alternative to war
prevention through the current strategy, including the option
of a first use of nuclear weapons.
-Karl Kaiser, Georg Leber, Alois Mertes,
and Franz-Josef Schulze
1
For de Gaulle, the fate of the American nuclear guarantee
was sealed. Sooner or later, he predicted, an "equilibrium of
deterrence" would replace American superiority, and this
"equilibrium" would protect only the two superpowers "and
not the other countries of the world, even though they found
themselves tied to one or the other of the two colossal
powers."
-Pierre Lellouchel
NATO is about Europe, so the Couplers, the mainstream European
School of Thought, provide an appropriate place to begin this survey.
The first of the two quotations, by four Germans, including spokesmen
for both the Christian Democratic (CDU) and Socialist (SPD) parties,
summarizes succinctly the major common European value judgment,
one sometimes forgotten by Americans: Europeans value their own
self-preservation, and their historical experience leads them to fear the
conventional war they have experienced almost as much as the nuclear
war they can imagine.
The European dilemma, however, is based on the belief that the
nuclear threat is needed to deter conventional war. The ultimate
nuclear deterrent for the West is the American strategic force, and, as
Lellouche's quote from a 1964 de Gaulle press conference illustrates,
West Europeans have been nervous for many years about the reliability
of the commitment of this force to their defense. Issues of I
commitment-the commitments of European nations to each other as
'Karl Kaiser, Georg Leber, Alois Mertes, Franz-Joseph Schulze, "Nuclear Weapons
and the Preservation of Peace," Foreign Affair, Summer 1982, p. 1164.
2Pierre Lellouche, L'Avenir de la Guerre, Mazarine, Paris, 1985, p. 47.
34
'., '
35
well as that of the United States to Western Europe as a whole-and
of how these commitments might be implemented are central to the
European portion of the debate. Indeed, it is this focus more than any-
thing else that distinguishes the European Couplers from the American
Maintainers.
The eight issue categories are analyzed in four groups:
" Alliance political issues, including the U.S. Commitment to
NATO, the Europeans' Commitments to Themselves, and the
Rest of the World;
" Military issues: the Conventional-Nuclear Link, and Conven-
tional Weapons;
" The Opponent. the Soviet Union, and Eastern Europe;
" Arms Control, as one output of the East/West interaction.
This section takes up the groups of issues in the above order.
(Because the Americans stress military analysis of NATO issues, the
section on the Maintainers reverses the order of the first two groups.)
The section ends with a summary of Coupler recommendations; in
spite of the broad range of Coupler viewpoints manifested on the issues
of the debate, their common stress on the central role of American
nuclear deterrence in their own preservation ultimately leads them to a
much narrower set of policy recommendations.
ALLIANCE POLITICAL ISSUES
The U.S. Commitment
The French, since de Gaulle, have been the most concerned about
the strength of the American commitment. Lellouche, an Assistant
Director of the Institut Fran~ais des Relations Internationales (IFRI), is
at the forefront of those who contend that de Gaulle was prescient in
his "sooner or later" prediction of the erosion of the American nuclear
commitment. Lellouche believes that the time has come and that
France and the rest of Europe must recognize this and plan accord-
ingly:
General de Gaulle's defense system which we have inherited was
essentially conceived by him at the beginning of the 1960s. Another
world. A world marked by the incontestable nuclear superiority of
the United States and by an ,mprecedented economic boom, with
these elements assuring the stability of Germany and of Europe at
the heart of the Atlantic Alliance, and permitting the birth of the
process of European construction.... Nuclear arms technology
im am m mnmom~m m ~nm , . .. m . . m
36
hardly hinted at its first great revolution: intercontinental missiles
had only just appeared, the conquest of space had no more than
begun, and guidance precision was measured in kilometers.
On all of these points, we almost live today on another planet. Not
only has the USSR put an end to American nuclear superiority, but
it has established in Europe an absolute superiority as much nuclear
as in conventional forces, thus creating political instability at the
heart of NATO.
3
And, as a result:
The famous American "umbrella," though it may still retain an
important political value, has lost its strategic significance. Without
doubt, America will fight for Europe-but it will fight with conven-
tional armies, without risking uncontrollable escalation to the nuclear
level'
Complementing Lellouche's strategic thinking, Jimmy Goldsmith,
the Anglo-French publisher of the largest French weekly newsmaga-
zine, L'Express, added an analysis of American demographic and
economic change, and then echoed a series of arguments for reduced
commitment that he had heard within the United States. In an article
widely discussed in France, he wrote that:
San Antonio, Texas, is now largely Mexican. Miami is a sort of capi-
tal of Latin America. Los Angeles aspires to become the same for
the Pacific. The European sensibility and heritage is on the decline.
The volume of American commerce with the Pacific region has
exceeded that of commerce with Europe....
The debate is not limited to the left or the right; neither to isolation-
ists nor internationalists.... The reasons for change are identifi-
able: (1) Americans have the conviction that chronic assistance to
those who do not need it is injurious.... (2) Americans think that
Europe potentially has all that it needs to defend itself.... (3) The
softness [toward the Soviets] of European foreign policy is considered
a "polluting" element for American foreign policy.... (4) When an
alliance is made up of a dominant partner and a number of weaker
ones, the distortions are evident.... (5) At a time when Europeans
criticize the budget deficit ($221 billion in 1986) and the balance-of-
payments deficit ($140 billion) of the United States, the cost of parti-
cipation in NATO is an argument well-used by partisans of retreat.'
3
Lsllouche, L'Avenir de la Guerre, pp. 28-29.
4Ibid.,
p. 88.
"Jimmy Goldsmith, "Le Levier de Is fens," L'Exprea, February 17-March 5, 1967,
pp. 37-38. In his role as Anglo-French financier, Jimmy Goldsmith is Sir James
Goldsmith.
37
Lellouche and Goldsmith express a common French view of the ero-
sion of the American commitment, but they express it somewhat more
extremely than many of their countrymen. Francois Heisbourg, an
influential French analyst and official who has become Director of the
International Institute for Strategic Studies (IISS) in London, for
example, contends in a review of Lellouche's book that less has
changed than he implies: "That the American guarantee was categori-
cal is not new, and France, in its time, had considered this situation
sufficiently disquieting to create a national deterrent force."" And
several writers suggest that many of thE problems are based more on
the idiosyncracies of the Reagan administration than on any funda-
mental American tendencies.
7
In any case, most French analysts and officials agree that either fun-
damental strategic changes or current ideologies will cause the United
States to reduce its commitment to NATO, although a few argue that
American vital interests will continue to support the commitment.
8
This discussion began before the suddenly serious U.S.-Soviet nego-
tiations in 1987 over NATO's nonserious (in 1981) "zero-zero" proposal
to remove all U.S. and Soviet INF missiles from Europe. Zero-zero
caused additional consternation, with worries centering on whether it
was the first step down "the slippery slope" to full denuclearization of
Europe and thus full abrogation of the American commitment. Even
before the 1987 negotiations, these concerns had received a major boost
from the November 1986 Reagan-Gorbachev Reykjavik meeting, where
the President's failure to consult the allies, and his apparent tendency
to present proposals without having thought them through, added
greatly to West European insecurities. One post-Reykjavik statement,
by French Prime Minister Jacques Chirac to the Western European
Union, shows both the extent of disquietude and the degree to which
official France was willing to put this tactfully on the record. Discuss-
ing potential removal of the intermediate range missiles, Chirac said:
If one could only be grateful for the declared intention of the Soviets
to dismantle most of their 88-20s, one could but hope to avoid the
possibility that the eventual removal of the American missiles would
not begin a weakening of the tie between Europe and the United
States.... We can never repeat frequently enough that the danger
Fangois Heisbourg, "Ralit6s et illusions," Le Monde, 1985.
7s, for eiample, Pierre Hassner, "L'upe entre les htats-Unis at l'Union
Sovietique," Commentaire, Spring 1986, p. 7.
SFor an example of the latter, see Yves Boyer, "The Development of the Strategic
Rationale for United States Forces in Europe," paper presented to the Conference on
Conventional Forc, jointly sponsored by The RAND Corporation, IFR, and the Royal
Institute of International Affairs, at Wiston House, England, March 1987.
i . ' .
A - ( .
.. . . .
38
to our existence presented by the formidable nuclear, conventional,
and classical arsenal of the East must always be seen in its totality.
Considering the inherent superiority of the Soviet Union in conven-
tional and chemical forces on the European continent, security over
the long term will continue to require the presence in West Europe of
a sufficient number of American nuclear armsy
In addition to its audible whistling in the dark over continuation of the
American commitment, Chirac's statement is notable for the continued
public agreement by a French official that, even with its own indepen-
dent nuclear deterrent, France still must count on American weapons
as well. It should also be noted that President Frangois Mitterand,
Chirac's political opponent but resident of the same political home in
the French constitutional "cohabitation," appeared far more relaxed
about the same matters.
10
The British Couplers," although concerned with the same issues,
differ in tone and substance from the French. If the French are
tensely worried about a diminishing U.S. commitment and believe the
diminution to be the result of such objective changes as strategic parity
and changing American ethnicity, the British are fairly relaxed, feeling
that much of the apparent erosion is subjective and should be
approached under the banner of "Come, let us reason together."
The prevailing British view has been expressed in a series of articles
by Frederick Bonnart, a retired Army officer who edits NATO's Sixteen
Nations, an unofficial journal published in Brussels. Bonnart is clear
on both the need for maintaining the Alliance in something like its
current state, and the cooperative way in which this should be done:
[Hiowever well matched Soviet conventional power in Europe may
be-and at present it is not-there can be no security for Europeans
in the long term without the presence on their continent of sizable
American nuclear and conventional forces.
12
Marriages are for better or for worse, for good or for evil. Alliances
may be a little more flexible. But both stand to gain by a mature
OJacques Chirac, -Allocution du Premier Ministre devant l'Assemble de l'U.E.O,"
Paris, December 2, 1986, in Ministire des Affaires atrangbres, Direction des Affaires
Politiquee, Questions Politico-Militaires, 2ime Semestre 1985, Ann6e 1986, pp. 164-166.
108m for example, Jim Hoagland, "A Horse Race in France," in the Washion Post,
April 3, 1987, p. A2.
"Politically, this School includes the Conservatives and a few remaining "right-wing"
members of the Labour Party, although mainstream Labour is in the Remover category.
The Liberal-Social Democratic Alliance has also been largely Coupler and has taken offi-
cial positions consistent with this viewpoint, but much of the LIberal segment has stayed
substantially on the Remover side. At this writing, however, with the merging of the two
parts into a single party, which some Social Democrats are leaving, the ultimate position
is not clar.
UlFroderick Bonnart, "West Europe Ponders Soviet Aims," Intenionrl Herald 2-
bum, May 6, 197.
.... % : 4t
-~~~
4
I
mF
attitude of each partner toward the other. As in any cooperative
human endeavor, the cost to each should be considered less impor-
tant than the common benefit to both. In a matter of life and death,
it is only that which counts in the end.S
3
This is not to say that the British believe that no movement is tak-
ing place. Historian Sir Michael Howard sees substantial change hap-
pening, with more needed, but nothing like an end to NATO or a fun-
damental restructuring that might, for example, shift the Alliance to a
primarily European rather than an Atlantic basis. Howard stresses a
common British theme-that the Alliance has been slow in adapting to
change--quite different from the French idea that the world has begun
to fall down around our ears as the American nuclear commitment
comes into doubt. He suggests that, starting with 1949:
The American presence was wanted in Western Europe, not just in
the negative role of a deterrent to Soviet aggression, but in the posi-
tive role of a reassurance to the West Europeans.... There can be
little doubt that since 1949 changes have occurred, both objective and
subjective, on a scale comparable to those between 1815 and 1854, or
1870 and 1914.... What is needed today is a reversal of that pro-
cess whereby European governments have sought greater security by
demanding an ever greater intensification of the American nuclear
commitment; demands that are as divisive within their own countries
as they are irritating for the people of the United States. Instead we
should be doing all we can to reduce our dependence on American
nuclear weapons by enhancing, so far as is militarily, socially and
economically possible, our capacity to defend ourselves.
14
Howard's last sentence brings up another central theme in the
transatlantic debate over the U.S. commitment to NATO, that of
burden-sharing. This is not much talked about by the French who,
because they consider their own contribution to NATO to be an
independent one, are reluctant to either criticize the contributions of
others or defend their own. Many in the United States, though
strongly pro-NATO, believe that the Europeans should be bearing
much more of the economic and other weight; and this is much on the
mind of the British. But Foreign Secretary Sir Geoffrey Howe, after
suggesting that sudden unilateral attempts by the United States to
"equalize" burdens could turn out to be quite negative from the Ameri-
can as well as the European standpoint, contends that they are not
badly balanced in any case:
"lFrederick Bonnart, "Danprs of Divorce," NATO'. Siaeen Nations, February-March
1997.
4Michael Howard, "Reassurance and Deterrence: Western Defense in the 19S0s,"
Forein Afar, Winter 1982-1983, pp. 310-322.
I,
,;41- 11,
V L Tg
40
(Tihe most likely result of withdrawing the American -prop" might
well not be to spur the Europeans to stand on their own two feet and
multiply their own defense efforts. It could be more likely to make
them question whether their own commitments to each other were
still worth the sacrifices involved. It would certainly strengthen the
platform of those (happily a small minority at present) who have
always argued for European neutrality and/or accommodation with
the East....
Overall, the non-U.S. NATO allies do appear to be shouldering
roughly their fair share. (This paragraph will not, I hope, be taken
as European special pleading. Every sentence in it is taken from
Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger's report to Congress of March
1984 about the balance of allied contributions.)
15
And finally, many of the British agree with other Europeans that
the problems of the role and commitment of the United States, what-
ever their fundamental basis, have been substantially exacerbated by
the policies and style of the Reagan administration. The British, like
the French and all other West Europeans, were deeply distressed by
President Reagan's nonconsulting unilateralism at Reykjavik. What-
ever remains of the "special relationship" encourages British writers to
comment more directly and pungently on American politics than do
the French. Even before Reykjavik, David Watt, former Director of
the Royal Institute of International Affairs, wrote:
Let us put our cards on the table. There are two basic views about
President Reagan's foreign policy. One, the Administration's,
appears to be accepted (if the opinion polls are to be believed) by the
majority of Americans. It is that the United States, after years of
weakness and humiliation, has once again faced the challenge of an
aggressive, expansionist Soviet Union, revived the global economy,
rescued the Western Alliance and generally reasserted true American
leadership in the world. The other view is shared to a greater or
lesser extent by much of the rest of mankind, with the possible
exceptions of the Israelis, the South Africans, President Marcos of
the Philippines and a few right-wing governments in Central and
South America. It is that the Reagan administration has vastly over-
reacted to the Soviet threat, thereby distorting the American (and
hence the world) economy, quickening the arms race, warping its own
judgment about events in the Third World, and further debasing the
languag of international intercourse with feverish rhetoric. A sub-
sidiary charge, laid principally by the Europeans, Canadians and
many Latin Americans, but frequently endorsed in the Arab world
and the Far East, is that in a desperate attempt to rediscover "leader-
ship," the United States under Reagan has reverted to its worst uni-
lateral habits, resenting and ignoring, when it deigns to notice, the
ibSir Geoffrey Howe, "ThOe European Pillar," Forewn Affaws, Winter 1964-1986,
pp. 384.
It,
, u |slnmj~ m I . l~~k sm e ms
m
'
- m
'
41
independent views and interests of its friends and allies. It is in my
experience almost impossible to convey even to the most experienced
Americans how deeply rooted and widely spread the critical view has
become.
1
s
Or, put with perhaps more typical English restraint by an even
stronger pillar of the Establishment, Field Marshall Lord Bramall,
retired Chief of the General Staff:
The question therefore that we should perhaps be asking ourselves is
whether... the somewhat erratic content of some of the policies that
sadly have recently been evident across the Atlantic, should somehow
be changing what we do. In general terms, I am sure that the answer
to the... question is emphatically
no.
1
7
Even after Reykjavik, and even after the reappearance of zero-zero,
not "changing what we do" as a West European response to actual or
potential changes across the Atlantic has been the standard British
response. Over the long run, moves in the direction of self-reliance are
inevitable and desirable, but, as Howard points out, they should be
gradual and constrained.
The German Couplers cover a broader spectrum in their views on
the U.S. commitment than do the French or the British: some German
views resemble the French tension of Lellouche, others the British
calm of Bramall. To be sure, the German Couplers-the governing
coalition of the Christian Democrats (CDU), Bavarian Christian
Socialists (CSU), and Free Democrats (FDP), plus a large portion of
the opposition Social Democrats (SPD)
1
8 -do all agree on the crucial
importance to the Federal Republic of the continued American nuclear
commitment. Opposition was widespread, for example, to the sugges-
tion for No First Use of nuclear weapons by NATO, tentatively put
forth in the early 1980s by the American "Gang of Four" (McGeorge
Bundy, George Kennan, Robert McNamara, and Gerard Smith). The
four Germans quoted at the beginning of this section-Karl Kaiser
(Director of the Deutsche Gesellschaft fur Auswartige Politih or DGAP),
Georg Leber (an SPD Bundestag Deputy and former Defense Minis-
ter), Alois Mertes (a CDU Deputy), and Franz-Josef Schulze (a retired
general and NATO commander)-wrote:
16
David Watt, "As a European Saw It," Foreign Affairs, Fall 1983, p. 521.
"Lord Bramall, House of Lords Official Report, Parliamentary Debates (Hansard),
Her Majesty's Stationery Office, London, 25 March 1987, Columns 194-195.
18
How large a portion is unclear on two grounds: First, estimates vary on how many
of the Social Democrats in the Bundastag or elsewhere are "moderates" like several
quoted in this discussion of the Couplers; second, it is not clear how immoderate the "left
wine is. Virtually the entire SPD remains committed to NATO and to the U.S. com-
mitment to NATO, but how to weigh this against various SPD antinuclear stances is les
well defined than for, say, the British Labour Party.
t
42
The tight and indissoluble coupling of conventional forces and
nuclear weapons on the European continent with the strategic poten-
tial of the United States confronts the Soviet Union with the incal-
culable risk that any military conflict between the two Alliances
could escalate to nuclear war.... Not only the inhabitants of the
Federal Republic of Germany but also American citizens help bear
the risks, the conventional as well as the nuclear. The indivisibility
of the security of the Alliance as a whole and of its territory creates
the credibility of deterrence.
[T]he proposed no-first-use policy would destroy the confidence of
Europeans and especially of Germans in the European-American
Alliance as a community of risk, and would endanger the strategic
unity of the Alliance and the security of Western Europe."1
In fact, however, this 1982 statement of principle papered over deep
German worries about the U.S. commitment, which antedate the No-
First-Use proposal let alone Reykjavik, and cracks in the German
Coupler front, which the 1987 zero-zero revival has turned into widen-
ing fissures. In 1981, Uwe Nerlich, Research Director of the major
German defense analyis institute, the Stifftung Wissenschaft und PoU-
tik, expressed great doubts about U.S. policy as it had manifested itself
in the 1970s:
Given the leading role of the United States in Western affairs, the
most distressing aspect of the current political reality is that the
United States no longer propounds a concept of world affairs within
which Western Europe could play roles at all commensurate with its
inner dynamics. In fact, U.S. policies no longer follow any design;
they are guided by crisis behavior as the occasions arise, without suf-
ficient instruments to control the outcomes....
If during the first Nixon term a more complex American approach
put the Soviet Union temporarily on the defensive, the primacy of
American domestic affairs imposed itself again with the end of the
Vietnam war and the climactic events of Watergate. To make
matters worse, the Carter administration painfully demonstrated that
competence is the key element in all relations with the Soviet
Union'20
The invidious comparison between Carter and Nixon might lead
some Americans to believe that this is a right-wing diatribe against
American softness, but Nerlich was no right winger in any conven-
tional sense. Six years later, he was even darker in his views of the
conservative governments that then ruled all the major NATO nations:
"Kaisr et al., "Nuclear Weapons and the Preservation of Peace," pp. 1159-1162.
20Uwe Narlich, "Change in Europe: A Secular Trend?" in Dadeka, Journal of the
American Academy of Arts and Sciences, Winter 1981; pp. 71-83.
. -.
43
[TIhe alliance tends to be engaged in a vicious circle: The weaker
the political leaderships, the more security policies are victimized by
domestic policies, which in turn overburdens democracies and often
lowers their quality, and, of course, this exacerbates the need for
political leadership, etc. The INF debate since 1986 is a case in
point. Friedrich Nietzche stated 110 years ago: "Those who aim
publicly at something too large and beyond their capacity will also
lack the capacity to disavow their aims publicly."
2
1
A part of the 1981 paper was devoted to the contention that "the
only way the Atlantic Alliance can persist is through social democratic
support."' This was apparently a shot in the civil war to save the soul
of the social democratic SPD for then-Chancellor Helmut Schmidt's
strongly pro-NATO, pro-nuclear policies. Schmidt lost the war and the
chancellorship, the SPD lost the government for at least a decade, and
the cracks in the Coupler consensus have become gulfs. Although
many members of the SPD remain Couplers in that they continue to
support NATO-perhaps a majority, depending on the precise line used
to delineate the School-even the moderates differ substantially on
nuclear issues from the CDU and from Nerlich, as will be seen below
in the discussion of German attitudes toward the zero-zero arms con-
trol proposals.
One reason for the SPD civil wars is that the West German
Couplers must keep on looking back over their shoulders at the
Remover peace movement, with its profound distrust of everything
American and nuclear. This is discussed in a 1983 analysis by Chris-
toph Bertram, former Director of 1ISS, now political editor of Die Zeit
of Hamburg-
While the [German] antimissile movement had acquired an unprece-
dented depth and articulation, it nevertheless remained the manifes-
tation of a minority. The efforts within the SPD to prevent the
party from drifting into opposition to the Atlantic Alliance reflected
this. They were motivated not only by the conviction of the leader-
ship that there was no alternative to NATO, but also by the realiza-
tion that no party opposed to the security link with the United
States would stand a chance with the conservative, security-minded
German electorate.
In any case, by 1987 the zero-zero negotiations caused, or revealed,
the great gap between the two sides of what had once been the German
2
1Uwe Nerlich, "Conventional Arms Control in Europe: The Objectives," in James
Thomson and Uwe Nerlich (eds.), Conventional Arm. Control and the Future of Europe,
Westview Press, Boulder, 1988.
22Nerlich, "Change in Europe: A Secular Trend?" p. 81.
23Christoph Bertram, "Europe and America in 1983," Foreign Afjiwa, Winter-Spring
1984, p. 627.
4........................ ... ' . ,
Coupler consensus. Both sides remained committed to NATO, to
dependence on the United States of the Alliance in general and the
Federal Republic in particular, and to the crucial role of the American
nuclear deterrent. But whether to endorse zero-zero, what would hap-
pen if and when it was adopted, and what to do next were all subjects
of major contention. On a political level, the issue divided the govern-
ment coalition, with FDP Foreign Minister Hans-Dietrich Gencher
favoring the zeroing out of all intermediate-range missiles; and CDU
Chancellor Helmut Kohl, who strongly opposed the removal of the
500-1000 kilometer-range weapons (the Short-Range Intermediate
Nuclear Force, or SRINF), being dragged into acquiescence by
Genscher and by American pressure. This will be discussed in the
arms control section below.
With regard to its effect on coupling, however, the anti-zero-zero
view is expressed analytically by Nerlich, who contends that the with-
drawal of American INF missiles would so weaken the link with the
United States that European deterrence would have to depend on
French and British nuclear weapons:
The zero option-a treaty agreement not to deploy U.S.
intermediate-range weapons in Western Europe for some quid pro
quo-raises fundamental questions about the maintenance of
NATO's deterrence strategy and for the foreseeable future can in no
way be justified on strategic grounds. However, were such an agree-
ment, a treaty of whatever kind resulting in a withdrawal of the
American INF, nevertheless to come about, then the French and
British nuclear forces would have to acquire completely new func-
tions.
2 4
But Gert Krell, the Director of the Peace Research Institute of
Frankfurt (which, in spite of its name, is not part of the antinuclear
peace movement), believes that the effects of zero-zero on the U.S.
commitment have been vastly overblown:
It is very difficult to understand that there should still be resistance
against this package in the West.... The objections are... not
credible. They sound schizophrenic when raised by French leaders
who complain about what they see as decoupling by the United
States, but who hold on to France's own and long-standing decou-
piing from the defense of Europe.... Coupling the United States to
Europe through nuclear escalation linkage is not a question of
hardware but of deterrence politics and metaphysics. Security
through extended deterrence cannot be enforced by the deployment
of nuclear weapons-of which there will be an abundance even after
24
Uwe Nerlich, "La force de dissuasion nucl6aire frangaise et Ia securit6 de Ia RFA,"
in Kaiser and Leflouche, p. 187. The volume was published simultaneously in German;
this and other quotations here are translated from the French version.
A
. .. - ., .. . -.
45
LRINF withdrawal on European soil or in the adjoining waters.
More important are the political unity of the alliance and the pres-
ence of U.S. troops.
2
'
Being fully dependent on the United States nuclear deterrent, the
Germans on both sides of these issues may just have thought about
them more thoroughly and more pragmatically than the philosophers
in the other major European members of NATO.
The Europeans' Commitments to Themselves
It has been abundantly clear since the beginning of the Alliance that
no other member than the United States had any individual capability
to stand up to Soviet military power. The independent nuclear forces
of France and Britain might enable those two nations to keep the
Soviets on the proper side of the Rhine and the Channel by mounting
essentially suicidal threats behind the deterrence of "the strong by the
weak," in the phrase used by the French. But implementation of the
threats would be a fatal remedy for a fatal disease, and for that reason
use of the independent nuclear forces for national purposes was uncer-
tain; pledges for Alliance purposes were even more uncertain in the
case of Britain, unmade in the case of France. These deterrents were
thus of little comfort to the rest of NATO, particularly to the Federal
Republic of Germany, the only large European nation bordering on the
Iron Curtain.
It has been equally clear since at least the 1960s when Western
Europe became economically strong that if the nations to the west of
the Elbe became a unity instead of a loose confederation, they could
command enough economic and military power to deter the Soviets,
defend against them and probably, if need be, defeat them.
Western Europe remains confederal at best, which Americans fre-
quently ignore when thinking in terms of "the European contribution."
In recent years, however, European uncertainties about the U.S. com-
mitment, American prods to share more of the burden, and economic
incentives to produce more weapons in Europe have combined to bring
various steps toward defense unity into consideration. Discussions
have had two foci: the broad one of a West European "alliance within
the Alliance," or at least more of a common contribution and strategy;
and the narrower possibility of a specifically Franco-German arrange-
ment at the center.
25Gert Krll, "Reyhjavik and After," Peace Research Institute, Frankfurt, April 1987,
mimeographed, pp. 13-14.
I .,; ",-
im m l m m lm mlmmm imm , m wmmmlm~m ~ ~ m mm mm m mm m mm m -
46
For the Germans and the French, it is this central arrangement that
dominates the debate, even though few of either nationality would
dissent from the longer-run objective set forth by Peter Schmidt of the
Stifftung Wissenchaft und Politik: "the renewed interest of France in
cooperating more closely with the Federal Republic of Germany could
be used as a 'moving force' to improve the state of European integra-
tion."2 More recently, in 1987 after zero-zero turned serious, French
analyst Jean d'Aubach set forth a far-reaching conclusion of the line of
thought that begins with fear of U.S. abandonment:
The probability of a diminution of the American commitment in
Europe is not negligible.... This is the reason why Europe has no
alternative solutions in the next three decades: it must possess
nuclear weapons to guarantee its security.... It seems that the "jux-
taposition" of the French and British capabilities could reach this
result.2
7
Few French or British-or Germans-would go that far, however.
On the other side (and somewhat earlier) former Chancellor Helmut
Schmidt grumbled:
On balance, I have come to think that General De Gaulle was right
in his belief that the British are not really prepared to cast their lot
with the rest of the European nations.... The British will join the
club only if they cannot prevent it from being successful. (If this
sounds harsh, I apologize to the British.)"
Such harshness would command less than a consensus in Germany or
France.
In any case, what is more important than the specific view of Brit-
ain is the fact that that view is not very important in the debate, nor is
d'Aubach's Franco-British nuclear melding- Most German and French
debaters are intense about their own relationship, vague about its
extension to "Europe" as a general entity, and don't think any more
than do Americans about the other specific nations making up this
general entity.
Virtually all the debaters hope for a stronger Franco-German rela-
tionship as a reinforcement of their mutual defense. Leilouche puts it
strongly:
2
6Peter Schmidt, "Europeanization of Defense: Prospects of Consensus?" The RAND
Corporation, P-7042, December 7, 1984, p. 34.
7Jean d'Aubach, "To Gather Europe for its Defense," CoYementire, Spring 1987
(trans. Michel Klein), pp. 1-9.
JHelmut Schmbidt, A Grand Strter for the West, Yale University Press, Nw Haven,
1985, pp. 52-M3.
. - n i m d lgl -nmmm~~mmmm~ m ammm n mm aqoa nmumu -.. w -- - -- -- -
47
(Ojur defense-of our survival as well as our liberties-begins on the
Elbe and not on the Rhine.... But in that cme, let us be clear with
ourselves, with Germany, and with the adversary. The only way to
transmit this signal consists of redeploying our forces, masing them
no Ionr on the Rhine, but on the ELe.W
This is particularly important to Lellouche because of his fears that a
weakened American commitment will leave the Franco-German alli-
ance as the mainstay of French defense. A secondary reason for
French interest in strengthening the linkage between the two nations is
that, as Helmut Schmidt puts it: "in the long run the Germans will
remain on the Western side only if the French help them and bind
them to the West."30 This thought could be expressed more tactfully by
Schmidt than by a French writer about Germany.
The hope has not been father to the relationship, however. The
Germans and the French had been trying for many years. In the
1970s, Schmidt, as Chancellor, became so disgusted with President
Carter's eccentricity (see Nerlich's comments above) that he tried to
substitute a German-French core for American leadership of the Alli-
ance. The concept faded when Giscard was replaced by Mitterand and
Schmidt by Kohl; but in 1984, he urged it on these two successors:
Cooperation began to decline during the administration of President
Carter. He confronted his European allies with surprising "lonely"
decisions, taken without consultation. The situation was not eased
when he made a number of subsequent corrections, since some of
these were put into effect just as surprisingly.... [The] vacuum in
transatlantic leadership was filled in considerable degree by the close
cooperation on foreign and economic policy between Giscard
d'Estaing and the German Chancellor [Schmidt]. With Giscard's
departure in the spring of 1981 and the accession to office a few
months earlier of Ronald Reagan, the situation worsened again....
Valery Giscard and I had it in mind to establish a considerably closer
link between, on the one hand, France's nuclear power and its con-
ventional army and, on the other, conventional German military
forces and German economic power. This goal today is a task for
Mitterand and Kohl."
1
At about the same time, he made all this much more concrete in a
Bundestag speech, where he proposed 18 German and 12 French divi-
sions, under French command, with some financial support for the
French effort coming from Germany. French-born Harvard Professor
2
OLllouche,
p. 281.
Helmut Schmidt, A Grand Sratey for the West, p. 56.
3t
Helmut Schmidt, "Saving the Western Alliance," New York Review of Books, May
31, 1984, pp. 25-27.
'sw-
.- i : ":. - : * ".? , ' .
(
5!
48
Stanley Hoffman reported that "The speech was barely discussed in
France."
32
In fact, starting in 1982, two years before the Schmidt proposal,
Chancellor Kohl and President Mitterand had begun a formal attempt
to move their two nations' security structures and strategies closer
together. It did not work well; Pierre Hassner evaluated the results of
this effort, much more modest than Schmidt's proposal, in a terse
phrase: "Never so much talk, never so little progress."33
The summary statement of a joint volume sponsored by the German
and French institutes, DGAP and IFRI, illustrates the problems and
the issues in this, or any, substantial Franco-German defense arrange-
ment, as seen from both sides. As put by the editors, Lelouche and
Karl Kaiser.
Four years after the "new start" in cooperation in the realm of secu-
rity, it must be conceded that the Franco-German defense partner-
ship is still a long way from achieving real substance....
From the French side, the dominant impression is that the major
French initiatives toward the Federal Republic, in principles, in polit-
ical platforms, and more concretely in technological, military, and
space policy, have paid hardly any return....
From the German side, the same impression of frustration dominates.
In spite of the positive movement seen by the French, the feeling of
distrust and deception lives on, reinforced by French defense con-
cepts still viewed as nationalistic.... While France has taken a sub-
stantial step to fill German needs for consultation on French tactical
nuclear weapons.., it is clear that rather than tending toward
greater cooperation on nuclear matters, forward movement has come
up against a barrier created by the convergence of psychological pres-
sures (on both sides), and by military considerations concerning the
conditions for employing French forces and tactical nuclear weapons,
as well as the political fallout of Soviet-American arms control nego-
tiations.
34
Why these frustrations? Perhaps the general answer is that put by
Dominique Moisi of IFRI: "France and West Germany have deeply
3Stanley Hoffman, "The U.S. and Western Europe: Wait and Worry," Foreign
Affairs, Spring 1984, p. 647.
33Pierre Hamner, "La Cooperation Franco-Allemande: Achille Immobile i Grand
Pas?" in Kaiser and Lellouche, p. 171.
54
Karl Kaiser and Pierre Lellouche, "Synthises et Recommendations," in Kaiser and
Lellouche (eds.), pp. 311-312. Their volume, Le Couple Franco-Aliemand et Ia Difense de
L'Europe, provides an excellent binational multivoiced treatment of the history and pos-
sibilitie of Franco-German defense cooperation.
... .. .
4.
different visions of the world. France at heart is a status quo power,
West Germany belongs to the revisionist camp.05
The more specific answers are based on this asymmetry. What the
Germans want from the French is basic but unachievable at least for
now, without it the partnership is likely to progress only incrementally.
What the French want from the Germans is less basic and more
achievable; but because the French needs are themselves marginal,
their effects, if achieved, are also likely to be incremental at most.
What the Germans want from the French, as summarized by CDU
Bundestag Deputy Markus Berger, is that:
We must assume in common-and, in the interests of the Federal
Republic, as long in advance as possible and under the best possible
conditions-a tight joining of Alliance contingents for a forward
defense [of Germany's Eastern border].
France must participate there with all its forces. Any distinction
between a zone protected and defended by the global power of
France, the French homeland for example, and a strategic rampart
defended by conventional forces, where France will participate only
on its own decision and with selected contingents, is in the interests
neither of the Germans nor of French security.c
French Prime Minister Chirac, however, maintains the distinction
between the inner and outer zones, taking the French commitment to
the Federal Republic as far as it can be taken in words alone, but mak-
ing clear that it does consist largely of words:
[I]f the survival of the nation rests at the frontiers of our land, its
security rests at the frontiers of its neighbors.
But
Crisis situations for which we must prepare so that deterrence
remains strong are, in truth, largely unpredictable. That is why
France attaches so much importance to conserving her freedom of
action-to avoid the deterioration of her forces in automatic engage-
ments for which they are badly adapted.
37
More recently, Chirac told the West Germans that if they are
attacked by the Soviets, France will come to their aid "immediately
Dominique Moisi, "As the Pillars of Postwar Stability Shake, Europe Looks for
Shelter," Intrnational Herald Tribune, April 4, 1987, p. 4.
85
Markus Berger, "La Force do Dissuasion Frangaie et la Securt6 do Is Rh6pblique
Federale d'Allemne," in Kaiser and Lellouche, p. 198.
"Jacques Chirc, Diocours du Premier Miniatre Devant l'Institd des Haute. Studes de
Do e Nationale, Septmber 12, 1986, mimeographed, pp. 13-14.
4i
50
and without reservation,"38 which is a stronger statement but still
leaves French forces under French command and retains the decision
to use nuclear weapons for the president of France, as President Mit-
terand pointed out at the same time. One French battalion has joined
a new Franco-German brigade, but that is far short of the 12 French
divisions contemplated by Schmidt, or of the French redeployment
desired by Lellouche. (And even the mild step-up of symbolism
marked by the Chirac statement and the brigade have caused visible
upsets to other member nations, particularly Italy, one more obstacle
to real movement.)
In any case, conserving freedom of action by maintaining the
independencs of the French deterrent and by keeping out of NATO's
integrated command structure is nearly unanimous among the French.
The Germans and the French are both realistic nations: They under-
stand that this is essentially unchangeable, that it is inconsistent with
the German goals as outlined by Berger, and that these facts put a
severe constraint on strengthening the Franco-German coupling.
A strong German central premise puts an equally binding constraint
on the coupling, and it is equally well recognized by the French: the
need of the Federal Republic for mainentance of the full NATO and
the full American connection. As put by Lothar Rueh, a Minister of
State in the Ministry of Defense:
It must be impossible for the Warsaw Pact to mount an attack that
will allow it to isolate German forces and to seize German territory
without immediately engaging the entire Alliance, and, in particular,
American and British forces.... The allied defense within the
NATO framework thus has the absolute priority over all other mili-
tary cooperation.
39
This emphasis on the Alliance as a whole and the United States in
particular is why Nerlich can write: "The French nuclear force
remains for the Federal Republic a second-order question."40
Although the German-American tie constrains Franco-German pos-
sibilities, it is well understood by the French who recognize that they
too depend in part on the American strategic deterrent. Several other
German-imposed constraints that annoy the French, while by no
means trivial, are less central. One is based on the fact that since
Willy Brandt the Federal Republic has been looking East toward the
German Democratic Republic. Benoit d'Aboville of the French Foreign
NQuoted in the Boston Globe, December 23, 1987, p. 9.
Lothar Ruehl, "1982: La Rlance de Ia Cooperation Franco-Allemande," in Kaiser
and Lellouche, p. 38. Italics added.
4Nerlich, "La Force de Dissuasion Nucl6aire Franaise," pp. 175-176.
a 51
Office mentions that "for a large fraction of French opinion, it is the
Germans who, in the name of Ostpolitik, insist on the pursuit of
dangerous chimeras."
41
The most basic French complaint about the Germans is more
economic than political. It concerns German cooperation in coproduc-
tion of weapons. Heisbourg is generally upbeat about Franco-German
cooperation in weapons production, but his title, "Cooperation in
Matters of Armaments: Nothing is Ever Achieved," reveals certain
doubts,
4 2
and in another piece published about the same time (1986)
his exhortation for the future exhibits some signs of pessimism:
There is little time for Europeans to put their act together, both in
terms of organization and of funding, if they wish to be true partners
in developing the combat systems of the 1990s-this is especially true
for West Germany. Even though the Federal Republic's military
R&D funding has increased by close to 30 percent in 1985, it will
take several years for Bonn to catch up with the French or the Brit-
ish in this realm.
3
The summation of the Franco-German debate over the Europeans'
Commitments to Themselves is that it is positive and limited. The
flirtation warms and cools but, as is inherent in a flirtation, it is essen-
tially symbolic; both sides understand that it remains far from a con-
summation. In the same 1987 issue of L'Express in which Jimmy
Goldsmith mentioned his doubts about the American commitment,
staff writer J6rome Dumoulin started off an enthusiastic article about
the future of the Paris-Bonn defense arrangement by quoting the
next-to-last sentence in Kaiser and Lellouche's summary of their
Franco-German volume: "The hour has come to make the great leap
toward tying together the destiny of the two lands."" What he does
not quote is the next sentence-the very last of the book-"It remains
to be seen if the occasion will be seized."
45
The British, properly enough, do not write about the special
Franco-German relationship; they certainly do not seem to fear it.
Rather, unlike the Germans and the French, they devote some
41Benoit d'Aboville, "La France, la RFA et Is Contr6le des armements: des Mal-
tendus a la Cooperation," in Kaiser and Lellouche, p. 248.
'
t
Frangois Heisbourg, "Cooperation en Mati6re d'Armements: Rien n'est Jamais
Acquis," in Kaiser and Lellouche, pp. 117-130.
Fran"ois Heisbourg, "Conventional Defense: Europe's Constraint's and Opportuni-
ties," in Andrew Pierre (ed.), The Conventional Defense of Europe: New Technokje# and
New St eiea, Council on Foreign Relations, New York, 1986, p. 99.
"J6rome Dumoulin, "Paris-Bonn: ce que d6mandent lea Allemands," L'Ezprua,
February 17-March 5, 1987, p. 39.
*Kaiser and Lellouche, p. 325.
j. 1
77"
. iN aila'*PH2 i a i , .
52
attention to the more general and abstract concept of a broader Euro-
pean military alliance within (or in the limit as a substitute for) the
North Atlantic Alliance.
One motivation, existent although far less ubiquitous in Britain than
among continental writers, is fear of American withdrawal, particularly
after Reykjavik. Lord Gladwyn, as Sir Gladwyn Jebb, a long-time
high-level British diplomat, exhibits a perceptible sense of panic about:
retreat as it were, into Fortress America ... In such distressing cir-
cumstances, short of having arrived at a credible form of European
political unity, there is every reason to suppose that Western Euro-
pean governments would be found willing and able to enter into some
arrangements which would leave the Soviet Union in a position to
exercise a sort of hegemony over the whole Continent.... There are
elements in Germany which might favour such a solution. Indeed we
should probably dismiss the classic German Drang nach Osten as
they call it, at our peril The only way to eliminate this danger is for
us to favour the genuine embodiment of Western Germany in an
operative European political union which, at the moment and unlike
the French, we seem as a government to be far from favoring.'
Most British officials and analysts take the American aberrations of
the mid-1980s more in stride, as being transitory. British interest in
greater unity on defense is longer run and lower key. Hedley Bull, an
Australian turned Oxford Professor, had an early-1980s vision of the
need for greater West European defense unity that was taken as a pos-
sibly appropriate direction for the long run; it still is by many Britons:
There are three reasons why the countries of Western Europe should
explore a Europeanist approach to their security. First, the old for-
mulas of North Atlantic unity do not adequately recognize the differ-
ences of interest, both real and perceived, that divide the United
States from its European partners.... Second, the policies advo-
cated by the [European peace movement], while they are based partly
on a correct perception of the differences of interest between the
United States and Western Europe, would expose the latter to Soviet
domination.... A third reason why Western Europe should explore
this new course relates to what may be called its dignity.... [It] is
demeaning that the rich and prosperous democracies of Western
Europe in the 1980s... should fail to provide the resources for their
own security and prefer to live as parasites on a transatlantic protec-
tor increasingly restless in this role ....
[A] Europeanitt policy is not viable unless the nations of Western
Europe can develop some appropriate form of unity. This is the
greatest uncertainty of all.... The object should be a West Euro-
pean military alliance-an alliance within an alliance, preserving the
4Lord Gladwyn, Houe of Lords Offickl Report, Parliamentary Debate (Hansard),
Her Majesty's Stationery Office, London, 25 March 1987, columns 190-191.
Il
wider structure of NATO. There might ultimately be a European
alliance without NATO.'
7
For other Britons, however, more pragmatically oriented toward the
short run, such an alliance, within or instead of NATO, is more of a
fantasy than a vision of the future. As put by Bonnart, a few years
after Bull's piece:
When the [European Communityl has overcome the problems of the
common agricultural policy, the integration of new members, Irish
neutrality, growing unemployment, industrial stagnation, and a few
others, it might well, in the next century, be ready to tackle its own
common defense.... Before such an EC defense could be created,
however, the [NATO] alliance would likely disintegrate rapidly, with
its members falling like ripe plums, one after the other, under the
domination of the one superpower then left on the Eurasian con-
tinent.0
Bonnart is more typical of the British than is Bull. The most seri-
ous part of the debate over the Europeans' commitments to themselves
takes place on the continent and concerns the Franco-German connec-
tion. And unless the American commitment goes as sour as Lellouche
predicts, both the French and the Germans recognize that progress is
likely to be slow.
The Rest of the World
The debate over the appropriate relationship of the Alliance to the
"rest of the world"-the two-thirds of the earth's population living
south of the Mediterranean, the Caucasus, Siberia, and the Rio
Grande-has undergone a sharp reversal since the beginning of the
Alliance. In the early 1950s, the French, Portuguese, and Belgian
empires were still close to their pre-World War II sweeps; so was the
British, except that it had lost the jewel in the crown and the raison
d'Otre for the rest, India; and the Dutch alone had shed their imperium,
the Dutch East Indies having become Indonesia. Before the Vietnam
war-the American Vietnam war of the 1960s, not the French war of
the 1950s-the NATO debate consisted in large measure of anti-
imperialist nagging from west of the Atlantic, and the debate within
the United States centered on the question of how much risk we should
take of weakening NATO in the name of anticolonialism. In 1959, for
example, former Secretary of State Dean Acheson wrote:
4
7
Hedlsy Bull, Zuopean Seif-Rebiane and the Reform of NATO,* preign Afain,
Spring 1983, p. 875-892.
'
5
Fredsrick Bonnart, "NATO Is an Alliance that Should Not Be Diaandu" lntern-
ional Herald lhbun, September 24, 1966, p. 4.
54
The most important objective today... is to hold together those
sources of strength we possess. These sources are North America
and Western Europe... This ... immediately draws the usual objec-
tions: "But you will throw in your lot with the colonial empires .....
If we would approach life from the point of view of formal moralistic
rules, this caveat may be interesting. But if we approach our prob-
lem from the point of view of solving it, then these considerations are
not at all important.
49
The combination in the 1960s of European shedding of most of the
remnants of empire and American fiasco in Vietnam reversed the
direction of moralizing and condescension. By 1987, Frenchman
Jimmy Goldsmith could be as understanding of American interests in
the Third World as Acheson had been of European interests 28 years
earlier.
In fact, the question of NATO's role outside of Europe-and, even
more important, the American role as it affected the commitment to
the Alliance-while on such occasions as the American bombing of
Libya it may have weighed more heavily on public opinion on both
sides of the Atantic than it did on officials and analysts-was a serious
one. Like other issues south of the Mediterranean, however, it did not
preoccupy most West European officials and analysts.
Peter Stratmann of the Stifftung Wissenschaft und Politk does take
the issue up in order to caution that it ought not misdirect NATO:
Many statements made by defense and foreign-policy experts in the
current Western and, in particular, American, debate on strategy
convey that Soviet strategy may have undergone a significant
change.... [T]he focus of Soviet political ambitions and strategic
preoccupation has shifted to third-world regions outside the NATO
area... Many analysts are so fascinated by the challenge to
"prepare for the unexpected" in the Third World that they tend to
neglect or deemphasize the all-too-familiar "eurocentric" scenarios of
"Soviet aggression against NATO." The indisputable fact that the
Soviet Union continues to accord priority to the enhancement of its
offensive capabilities directed against NATO has apparently had lit-
tle effect on their views.
5
0
And Former Chancellor Schmidt picks up another common Euro-
pean strand, that the United States oversimplifies and knows not what
it does in the Third World. To the south:
fDean G. Acheson, "The Premises of American Policy," OrbiB, Fall 1959.
0
OPeter Stratmann, "NATO Doctrine and National Operational Prioritis The Cen-
tral Front and the Flanks: Part II," in International Institute for Strategic Studies,
Adelphi Paper 207, pp. 35-42.
A *..|
West Europeans have a clear interest in peaceful solutions in Central
America. If the problems cannot be solved peacefully, then, in the
European perception, the danger might arise that the traditionally
good and close relations between Europe and Latin America might be
jeopardized. The credibility of the United States as the Western
leader might also be damaged in the eyes of a considerable part of
the West European public, and this would add a strain to the
European-America relationship.
51
To the east-the Middle East:
In my view there is no chance that the West, or the United States,
can bring about a "solution" for this troubled region that could possi-
bly bring about a stabilized peace. The truth is that no one in the
world can defend the Persian Gulf oil.... The best we can do is to
try from time to time to shift our weight a little bit to one side or the
other.
52
The questions of the appropriate Third World role of the Alliance
and of the United States within or outside the Alliance have continued
unsolved and indeed not even completely defined. In themselves, they
remain an abrasive rather than a major determinant of European
NATO policies or of the European side of the NATO debate; but they
provide another indicator of European fears of American desertion, or
at least distraction. The prevailing view is Stratmann's-keep your eye
on the center ring of the circus-but European Couplers are aware that
events in the Third World or American reaction to those events could
pull the action into the outer rings, particularly in the Middle East,
and that European or American public opinion could focus there no
matter what is going on in the center.
MILITARY ISSUES
The Conventional-Nuclear Link
The conventional-nuclear link represents the military side of the
issue of the U.S. commitment. The political question discussed above
was: How strong is the American commitment to use nuclear weapons
if necessary? The military question is: How will the commitment be
implemented if necessary? European positions on the conventional-
nuclear link, unlike positions on the more political aspects of the
debate, do not fit easily into national categories. The major disagree-
ment on the link is the one between Europe and the United States, and
51
H. Schmidt, A Gaond Strategy for the West, p. 83.
62
Id., pp. 8-96.
- t " ,-
nl
m
nnnli n el nnnliasu n n ionnn i
1 'V
56
even that is more a distinction in ways of thinking about the issue
than in recommended solutions.
I
The European-American difference can be described in the terminol-
ogy of operations analysis as a question involving two variables: The
European Couplers want to maximize one variable subject to con-
straints imposed by the other, the American Maintainers consider the
second the variable to be maximized, the other as the constraint.
* The West Europeans want a strategy that will maintain the
credibility of the link between any potential conventional war
on their continent and the American nuclear weapons that are
counted on to deter the war's outbreak in the first place. The
constraint is that the link to American nuclear forces cannot be
so automatic as to scare the Americans away from the initial
engagement.
" The Americans want a strategy that will avoid invoking nuclear
weapons. The constraint is that this must be done without
breaking the link completely, so that the nuclear deterrent to
Soviet aggression in Europe will remain credible enough to do
its job.
The two major American schools in the strategic nuclear debate con-
tain those who, like Albert Wohistetter, stress the controlled use of
nuclear weapons for deterrence, damage limitation, and warfighting;
and those who think it likely that such control will fail and that deter-
rence is, in McGeorge Bundy's term, "existential," depending on the
uncertainties associated with the very existence of nuclear weapons.5
Parallel to the American nuclear-control school are those Europeans
who recognize the distinction between conventional and nuclear
weapons and the importance of the threshold between the two, but
espouse a carefully conceived strategy including controlled nuclear use
as a potential defense and hence as a deterrent. Stratmann argues:
Given the comprehensive nature of the Soviet military challenge, it is
unfortunate that the Western debate on force development programs
has been based on a purported dichotomy between conventional and
nuclear options. What is required ir my view is a more complemen-
tary, integrated approach rather than the sweeping rejection of the
utility of nuclear weapons which is in fashion now. Of course, in
order to reduce NATO's current dependence on early employment of
nuclear weapons stronger conventional capabilities are mandatory.
But the availability of capable nuclear forces can significantly con-
tribute to the stability of conventional defense."
8se Levine, The Srute Nuclear Debate.
"K.-Peter Stratmann, 'The Conventional Balance of Forces in Central Europe," in
Netherlands Institute of International Relation., Clingpndael, Convenional Balance n
~Zvi
57
And Lelouche adds an argument for the doctrine closest to the hearts
of the American nuclear controllers, targeting of nuclear strikes on the
enemy's military forces rather than trying to deter him by threatening
his
cities.ss
This contrasts with Norwegian Johan Hoist's view of NATO deter-
rence, which draws on Bundy's existentialism:
The need to preserve a system of conventional denial and residual
nuclear deterrence in Europe... does not imply the elimination of
nuclear weapons, only a strengthening of the presumption against
inevitable use. As long as nuclear weapons exist and are deployed in
survivable and controllable fashion, no aggressor could have high
confidence that he could push 'his conventional advantage with
impunity. The residual capacity for nuclear response provides a kind
of existential
deterrence.5
6
From a similar point of view, SPD Bundestag Deputy Karsten Voigt
echoes the American arms controllers' doubts about the deterrent util-
ity of controlled counterforce strategies: "So long as it is even faintly
conceivable that a threat of selective nuclear strikes could lead to a
major nuclear war and thus to mutual destruction, the threat itself [of
a controlled response]-by rational standards-is not credible."
57
The European debate has many layers. NATO's "Flexible
Response" doctrine, official Alliance policy since 1967, is summarized
succinctly by the German foursome whose statement about Europeans'
indifference between conventional and nuclear war waged on their ter-
ritory headed up this section:
The strategy of flexible response attempts to counter any attack by
the adversary-no matter what the level-in such a way that the
aggressor can have no hope of advantage or success by triggering a
military conflict, be it conventional or nuclear. The tight and indis-
soluble coupling of conventional forces and nuclear weapons on the
European continent with the strategic potential of the United States
confronts the Soviet Union with the incalculable risk that any mili-
tary conflict between the two Alliances could escalate to nuclear war.
Europe: Problems, Strategies and Technologies, Zoetermeer, The Netherlands, May
11-13, 1984, p. 13.
*~
5
Leilouche, pp. 259-260. Atypically among Europeans, Lellouche's nuclear concept
* is close to that of the Americans of the Wohlstetter school, who contend that their
opponents favor counter-city targeting. Americans of the Bundy school deny this, assert-
ing that the threat to the cities is an existential fact of life, not a preferred policy. See
Levine, The Strategic Nuclear Debate.
"Holst, "Denial and Punishment: Straddling the Horns of NATO's Dilemma," p. 69.
57
Karaten D. Voigt, "Nuclear Weapons in Europe: A German Social Democrat's Per-
spective," in Pierre, 1984, p. 103.
- .-
- nm ~ mmnmmn~mlmm nnm nm ,kmm nnm m m ~* "|
58
The primary function of nuclear weapons is deterrence in order to
prevent aggression and blackmail.M
But of course the simple military statement covers a host of political
as well as military subtleties.'e Flexible Response was as much a
response to the allies' inability to agree on a precise strategy as it was
to the Soviet threat as such. Voigt points out that:
The contradictions and conflicting interests inherent in the strategy
of flexible response have never been fully discussed. They have been
covered over by a NATO doctrine that views the resulting strategic
ambiguity as an added factor of risk and thus an additional element
of deterrence against the Warsaw Pact. But this is of dubious value
for Alliance politics: it presents the Soviet Union with the opportun-
ity to exploit unresolved conflicts of interest among the Atlantic
allies thereby causing considerable strain in the Alliance.e
4
Lellouche, p. 107.
N.
-3t
4 ( ! . . . . .
76
Intuitively, I think that these new men, while they certainly will be
younger, will not necessarily be "newer," in the measure that they
have been molded by the same bureaucratic/ideological machinery.
The powerful inertia of the system (that of the Party) to act to curb,
even to block, any attempts at innovation, should not be underes-
timated. From all evidence, the succession crisis which has occupied
the Kremlin since Brezhnev is far from over.
1
05
Experience since this passage was published in 1985 would neces-
sarily moderate it somewhat; the evidence indicates that the Party has
"curbed" at least some of Gorbachev's attempts at innovation, but it
has "blocked" very few. Nonetheless, many West Europeans as well as
Americans retain their suspicions of the directions and actions of the
Soviet Union. One reason is suggested by Helmut Schmidt, in his book
published about the same time as Lellouche's:
[Tihe key point I want to stress is the deep historical roots, and
resulting steadiness, of the Grand Strategy of Soviet Russia itself. It
is worthwhile to look at historical maps to see how small the Grand
Principality of Moscow was some five hundred years ago.... And
look at the map of today. Russia has grown and grown and
grown.... For over five hundred years, all the Tsars pursued a pol-
icy known as "Gathering of the Russian Lands," which, practically
speaking, meant conquering other people's land and afterward rus-
siying the inhabitants. This Grand Strategy of cautious but con-
tinuous expansion has been continued and carried forward by the
Soviet leadership of Russia.1
3 6
Traditional Russian history looms large among West European
analysts. Even so strong an anti-Communist ideologue as Lellouche
starts his chapter on Soviet expansionism with a quote from the Tsar's
Prime Minister of 1905.107 Although Americans come out at about the
same place, they tend to stress the Communist roots of Soviet behavior
rather than the Russian roots. In any case, however, a 500 year per-
spective like Schmidt's, which makes Peter the Great and Lenin into
blips on a long-run trend, is likely to reinforce doubts about a Gor-
bachev turn in the trend.
Nonetheless, Gorbachev has made a difference in Coupler thinking
about the Soviets. One of the most upbeat statements is by Lord Car-
rington, retiring Secretary General of NATO:
Whatever may be said about Mr. Gorbachev's public relations, his
remarkable capacity for dealing with the press and his -ew style, it is
equally evident that he is, in substance, seeking a different path, a
1
Lellouche, p. 109.
16Helmut Schmidt, A Grand Strategy for the West, pp. 24-25.
107Lellouche, p. 93.
II i,, m~ mmmm m
i I
77
more modern path for the Soviet Union. This is not of course a
non-Marxist path, but a new route to Marxism through greater effi-
ciency and the better use of resources. To achieve that, he will wish
to spend less on defence and to transfer resources to the civilian sec-
tor.... We witnessed some remarkable developments at Reykjavik.
Remarkable, because only a few weeks before it would have been
unthinkable for concessions of the kind proposed by the Soviet
Union to have been made."o
In a later piece, in which he worried about the effect of the then-
imminent zero-zero agreement on the Alliance he had shepherded so
long, he qualified his earlier enthusiasm: "But there is also room for
skepticism about Mikhail S. Gorbachev's foreign-policy goals."
1
'9
Earlier in 1987, former French Prime Minister Barre also exhibited
substantial skepticism:
Mr. Gorbachev has broken sharply with his predecessors on several
major issues: a younger generation of political leaders, better social
discipline, the drive for improved economic efficiency, the many steps
taken to reduce intolerance and promote greater freedom of speech,
and the start made in the release of political prisoners. We must
welcome these changes and not belittle them, while suspending judg-
ment as to whether they will ultimately turn out to be marginal or
fundamental....
It should also be borne in mind that in the field of foreign policy, Mr.
Gorbachev has essentially taken up where his predecessors left
off.... New disarmament plans are being advanced in rapid succes-
sion, but in fact seem to be inspired by the traditional Soviet objec-
tives going back to the 1950s. And above all, Soviet military
capacity..,
continues to grow."
0
The Couplers' perception is that the Soviet Union is changing. The
degree and the speed of the change are highly uncertain, and until
these are clearer, the change cannot be fully factored into the debate.
What may hasten its inclusion, although perhaps on a temporary basis
only, is that although the perception of Gorbachev is moving one way,
the perception of Reagan is moving the other. As put by Dominique
Moisi of IFRI:
In the East-West confrontation, images are as important a part of
reality as the objective factors such as the arms race. On this count
the Soviet Union lately has fared better than the United States.
Here in France the combination of Reykjavik and the Iran arms
18Lord Carrington, "Requirements for Stable Security Relationships," in Atlantic
Institute for International Affairs, 1986, pp. 34-35.
10Lord Carrington, "Picturing Soviets .". Sirens Over European Landscape," Los
Aneles Times, September 27, 1987, Part V, p. 1.
"
0
Barre, p. 293.
4
-,
78
scandal has helped revive an old negative image of the United States.
At the same time, the Soviet Union is enjoying a new and more posi-
tive image under the impulse of an energetic and dynamic leader who
is beating Ronald Reagan at his own game of public relations.
11
'
This gradual relative movement of Reagan and Gorbachev is the
mild Coupler version of the belief of some European Removers in the
"moral equivalence" of the United States and the Soviet Union. In any
case, the comparison may be temporary because unlike Gorbachev's,
Reagan's tenure is distinctly limited, and a new American president
may not only compete with Gorbachev in dynamism but may overcome
some of the negative images of the United States and its presidency
that have bedevilled Alliance relations throughout the 1980s and
before.
Perhaps the best European summary on the new Soviet opponent is
the agnostic one provided by Bertram:
Gorbachev is the first Soviet leader to talk of "common security"
(unlike Stalin), to abstain from saber-rattling and dramatic Third
World adventure (unlike Khrushchev) and to emphasize the Soviet
need for international stability as a function of his desire to promote
domestic reform at home (unlike Brezhnev). Indeed if the state-
ments made by the general secretary were to come to reflect a com-
mitted, sustained policy, this would be the kind of attitude that the
West has always sought....
The problem is that even if these expressions of intent are genuine,
Soviet power will be of a profoundly ambiguous nature for a very
long time to come.1
12
It is the potential change in the Soviet Union, real as well as per-
ceived, that may change the Alliance and the NATO debate even more
rapidly than any perceived change in the United States.
Eastern Europe
The Couplers' discussion of Eastern Europe provides one of the
clearest illustrations of the NATO debate as depending as much on dif-
ferent emphases as on different views. In this it resembles many of the
differences between the Couplers and the American Maintainers.
There are, in fact, few differences among Coupler views in regard to
the bloc of Soviet satellites. Nobody believes either that they can be
"liberated" or that they are any longer simple microcosms of Soviet
"'Dominique Moisi, "U.S. and Soviet Images Shift in France," Los Angeles Times,
February 4, 1987, Part II, p. 5.
"
2
Christoph Bertram, uEurope's Security Dilemmas," Foreign Affairs, Summer 1987,
pp. 944-945.
m m l i u #i Ha I r l mm- -
79
Russia, unable to vary because of fear of the Red Army. The con-
sensus picture is somewhere in between: NATO policy can affect the
nations of the Warsaw Pact and within strict limits can help increase
their autonomy and their internal ease. But few in most of the Euro-
pean NATO nations care enough to write about it; indeed, the multi-
ethnicity of the United States leads more Americans than West Euro-
peans to concentrate on Eastern Europe.
Except for Germans. The German Democratic Republic (GDR) is in
many ways the second most important member of the Soviet Bloc;
although it is exceeded in population by Poland, it has a far stronger
economy, an apparently more loyal tie to the USSR, and it lies along
most of the East-West border. It also shares a language, a culture, and
a history, as well as the border, with the Federal Republic of Germany.
West Germans are acutely aware of the very different situation of their
relatives across that border; indeed, the goal of reunification is written
.into the constitution of the Federal Republic.
The West Germans of today are also comfortable realists who recog-
nize the limits of cross-border brotherhood and the risks of too much
of it. Reunification as such sometimes comes up on special
occasions-in May 1987, for example, pique at the pressure being put
on the Germans to agree to zero-zero led a CDU Bundestag deputy to
call for negotiations on the issue with the Soviets-but the occasions
are rare and what little sound and fury there is quickly disappears.
Rather than political reunification, the operational goals of most West
German officials and analysts tend toward liberalization of the East,
economic cooperation, and relaxation of border-crossing restrictions.
Krell describes the breadth as well as the substance of agreement
within the Federal Republic to subordinate or ignore reunification:
[Flor a long time the idea of reunification was the framework in
which the other issues were defined. ... Gradually the primacy of
reunification has lost its force. Hope for restoration of the territories
east of the Oder-Neisse [now in Poland] has waned almost com-
pletely, as has the support for legitimacy of that hope. As for reunifi-
cation with East Germany, no political group sees it as a near-term
prospect. There is a broad consensus that living with and improving
the status quo between East and West is the order of the day. And it
is now also widely accepted that any chance for improving the politi-
cal and economic situation of the Germans in the GDR requires the
active support of that status quo. Working for more freedom for the
East Germans (and East Europeans) on the basis of a definite terri-
torial status quo has gained priority even over the long-term pros-
pects of reunification. Even the non-desirability of reunification can
now be discussed. The Germans are rediscovering that throughout
most of their history the German nation has lived in separate states,
-lie
80
and that this may have advantages, not only for the international
order, but for the Germans themselves.
113
True, the basic consensus receives different expression from dif-
ferent portions of the German political spectrum. On the right,
Walther Kiep, a leader of the CDU, starts off with a manifesto, but
moves quickly to realism:
The German question is unresolved. It will remain on history's list
of unfinished business until all Germans have had a chance to freely
exercise their right of self-determination. Until then, we in the
Federal Republic will maintain our unswerving view that the German
question must be resolved by achieving unity through peaceful
means. Keeping the question open, Germany's legal status must not
in any way be placed in question or otherwise rationalized away....
For West Germans, however, the yardstick of the quality of relations
with the G.D.R. continues to be the measure of the freedom of move-
ment that can be attained for the people in both parts of Ger-
many.... It will only be possible to reduce... tensions by bringing
about a steady improvement within divided Germany. This is the
specific contribution the two states in Germany must make in sup-
port of the d6tente and peace process in Europe as a whole."
4
Professor Richard Lowenthal takes more account of the internal
motivations of the GDR, suggesting that their political mood is growing
more similar to that of the Federal Republic, accepting the division of
Germany, and with at least the leadership valuing superpower protec-
tion of their status. He sees, on both sides of the border: "a common
acceptance of both the achievements and the recognized horrors of a
common past and.., a growing pride in a common contribution to
d~tente and peace-expressed in the phrase, used equally on both sides
of the border, that 'no war must ever arise again from German soil.
'
"115
That "no war must ever arise again from German soil" is not only a
German slogan. It still rises to the surface on occasion when other
NATO nations consider German reunification. In 1984, for example,
Italian Foreign Minister Giulio Andreotti, in the midst of a fight over
the use of the German language in the Northern Italian provinces
bordering Austria, contended sharply that "There are two German
states now, and there should be two in the future."I's
"
3
Krell, Osoiitih Dimensions of West German Security Poicy, Peace Research Insti-
tute, Frankfurt, December 1986, pp. 32-33 (mimeo).
'
4
Walther Leisler Kiep, "The Now Deutachlandpolitik," Foreign Affairs, Winter
1984/85, pp. 317-318.
11
1chsrd Lowenthal, "The German Question Transformed," Foreign Affair, Winter
194/85, p. 303.
'Nuoted in Michael H. Haltzell, 'Germany Has Its Own Priorities," Los Angela
Time, Auput 31, 1986, Part V, p. 2.
3. Ii
4
81
One of the few non-German European Couplers to write on these
issues is Pierre Hassner, a French analyst of East European origins,
who cautions about the limitations of the possible within the satellite
nations.
The formulation of Franois Duchine at the beginning of the 1970s:
'The Soviets cannot leave Eastern Europe because of the political
control function of their troops, and while they are in Eastern
Europe, Western Europeans need the American presence to balance
them," still remains the best summary of the situation....
Seen from Europe, probably the most favorable situation would be
that in which, within each of the two alliances, the European states
exercise, in parallel or in concert, an influence on their respective
leaders and, by maintaining contacts at the appropriate level, prepare
the outlines for dialog at the summit.... But this model, the most
realistic, is also the most limited. It does not take account of ten-
sions and conflicts between societies and states, between small and
medium states and superpowers, or of the profoundly asymmetric
responses to these challenges from the two systems.'
17
Hassner's realism summarizes a West European consensus on an
issue that few officials or analysts brood about outside of Germany.
ARMS CONTROL AND DISARMAMENT
The incremental policy edge of all these discussions is the gradual
change of weapons systems, strategies, budgets, and arrangements
within the Alliance. Potentially much less incremental is the chance of
substantive and substantial arms control agreements affecting weapons
and postures in Europe. This section primarily examines the debate
over the zero-zero agreement as it suddenly became real in 1987. That
agreement led to far more serious consideration than before of poten-
tial subsequent European arms control measures, both conventional
and nuclear.
When Gorbachev picked up the dormant NATO zero-zero proposal,
and when U.S. Secretary of State Shultz negotiated it to near reality in
Moscow and then brought it back to NATO in Brussels, the reactions
of most European Couplers were between qualified and negative. To
be sure, one reason was the process by which it had come about, begin-
ning with American unilateral and apparently not-thought-through
negotiations at Reykjavik, and continuing with the failure to consult
meaningfully until Shultz returned with a putative agreement. But
Coupler doubts centered also on the substantive effects of the
'
1 7
Hlir, "L'Europe Entre in Ltats-Unis et r1Union S vietique," pp. 6-9.
_ _ __-
j . t* "
82
agreement on nuclear deterrence in Europe; and both the process and
the substance led to the fear that this would be merely the first step
toward full denuclearization and withdrawal of the American guaran-
tee.
The doubters included almost all French analysts and many German
Couplers. In March 1987, when the negotiations were beginning to be
understood as being quite serious, former French Premier Barre
expressed a series of doubts:
First- implementation of the zero option could weaken ... NATO's
ability ... to offset the conventional and chemical superiority of the
Warsaw Pact.... Second: also to be avoided is the probability that
the zero option, by removing an intermediate stage of escalation,
could weaken NATO's capacity for Flexible Response, thereby bring-
ing about the dilemma, if not "all or nothing," at least "all or too lit-
tle.". . . Third: ... just as the credibility of extended deterrence by
the United States implies the physical presence of American forces,
those forces can only stay in Europe so long as they remain protected
by extended U.S. deterrence.... All this suggests that it would be
far preferable, as a first step, to achieve a substantial reduction of
both strategic nuclear forces and medium-range missiles. This would
avoid the decoupling of Europe's defense from the United States."
8
This was a standard French view. The Germans were more divided.
Hans-Dietrich Genscher had been Foreign Minister in the government
of SPD Chancellor Helmut Schmidt when the two-track option was
agreed to and the zero proposal for INF extended; he was still Foreign
Minister in the government of CDU Chancellor Helmut Kohl when the
negotiations became serious; and he still backed them, as did many
other German politicians, including some in the CDU. The defense
analysts (and appointed officials, particularly in the Ministry of
Defense) were far more concerned with the loss of NATO's INF mis-
siles, however. Joffe treated it as a Soviet conspiracy:
Needless to say, Gorbachev knows what he is doing. First, in offer-
ing double-zero, he invited NATO to get rid of its most modem
weapons, the Pershing II and cruise missiles, and to forgo deploy-
ment on the next level down.... The second catch is conceptual.
Nuclear weapons in Europe, especially those that could pierce the
Soviet sanctuary, represented the core of Western Europe's
defenses.... The third catch is psychological. In the age of
"parity"... the Europeans have always sought safety in nuclear
arrangements that obliterate the distinction between local and global
war. Pershing II and cruise missiles standing in the path of a Soviet
advance might just go off (whereas a Minuteman III stationed in
"Barrs, p. 295.
'P,.
. . . . .
7
I!
83
Montana might not), destroying along with Kiev any dream of a war
neatly confined between some Central European "firewalls."11
9
Joffe's view was particularly bitter; the more typical attitude of the
French and German Couplers was summarized in the headline over an
editorial in Le Monde, "Euromissiles: the resigned "yes" of Europe-
ars
"120
ans."
2
The British were, in general, more relaxed than the French and the
CDU Germans. Lord Bramall, former Chief of the General Staff,
expressed a common view:
As someone who has been connected with the problem for seven or
eight years, I firmly believe that in the light of Mr. Gorbachev's so-
called initiative-which only seems to say what many in the West
have been wanting for some time-it makes considerable sense to
start by mutually reducing or eliminating medium-range missiles,
which have always had more useful political and bargaining potential
than real military value.
121
Other Britons favored other starting points, and most had substantial
doubts about the process, beginning in Reykjavik, that initiated the
negotiations culminating in the zero-zero agreement. University of
Southampton Professor Phil Williams' negative summary, however,
described continental fears more closely than those of British Couplers:
There are several aspects of the process which bother many Europe-
ans. The first is that there was little or no consultation about the
negotiations.... Another aspect of the process which worried the
European allies is that the Soviet Union seemed to be far better
prepared for the negotiations than the United States.... West
European concerns about the negotiating process are accompanied by
alarm about the assumptions that President Reagan brought with
him to the negotiations. The European allies see a growing trend in
U.S. thinking toward the deemphasis of nuclear weapons.... The
president's Strategic Defense Initiative and, in particular, his
emphasis on the transition from an offense-dominant to a defense-
dominant world, is seen in Europe as destabilizing and decou-
pling... What makes the zero-zero option even more unpalatable
to European governments is that it was accompanied at Reykjavik by
President Reagan's proposal to eliminate all ballistic missiles over a
10-year period.... Although the United States would still be able to
deter attack on its own territory, there would be additional question
marks over extended deterrence.
122
'
1
1Joseph Joffe, "Cruisin' for a Bruisin': The INF fallout," New Republic, October 5,
1987, pp. 17-18.
1
'
2
Le Monde, May 28, 1987, p. 1.
12'Bramall,
Column 195.
122Phil Williams, "West European Security After Reykjavik," Washington Quarterly,
Spring 1987, pp. 39-42.
i
" "
- 1. ~ ~
*.,. - ' ,:
84
When zero-zero became a fait accompli, acceptance, at least on the
official level, became general and even enthusiastic as the debate
moved on to next steps. Ongoing developments will be discussed in the
Epilog;, but one basis for such developments, in addition to zero-zero,
will probably be a series of proposals produced in Europe in the early
1980s when any real agreements with the Soviets looked unlikely, but
some arms control and disarmament advocates kept on trying.
Their major proposal, for a nuclear-free zone in central Europe, is
associated with the Coupler wing of the German SPD. In 1984, Bun-
destag Deputy Karsten Voigt first made clear that he was not a
Remover unilateralist:
Even if the United States were to renounce unilaterally the deploy-
ment of land-based, intermediate-range weapons in Western Europe,
the West would still possess a sufficient nuclear deterrent. But for
primarily political reasons NATO should not agree to renounce such
deployments until the Soviet Union is ready to reduce its nuclear
arms adequately.
1 3
And then he went on to discuss the nuclear-free zone:
Theoretically, it is conceivable that a devastating war could be fought
in Central Europe with only conventional and short-range nuclear
weapons without any greater risk of escalation. From the perspective
of deterrence, anti-demolition munitions and nuclear artillery con-
tribute little to NATO's military capability.... The Palme [late
Swedish Prime Minister] Commission proposed a nuclear weapons-
free zone extending approximately 150 kilometers in each direction
from the border between NATO and the Warsaw Pact. Agreement
on such a zone should be sought even if compliance with it, particu-
larly at a time of rising tensions, would be difficult to control....
[This] proposal reduces the risk of a nuclear war restricted to Central
Europe.
1
24
This proposal has not been taken up by other segments of the Coupler
community in Germany or elsewhere; it may have been made obsolete
by the fact that zero-zero removes most other nuclear weapons, leaving
the short-range battlefield systems the major remaining nuclear
tripwire for the American strategic deterrent, thus making their
removal unlikely. The nuclear-free zone proposal nonetheless illus-
trates the direction of thinking coming from the portion of the Coupler
school that is centrally interested in arms control and disarmament.
Among the Couplers in general, nuclear arms control is looked at
skeptically because of the fundamental belief that nuclear arms remain
123Voigt, "Nuclear Weapons in Europe: A German Social Democrat's Perspective,"
p. 106.
1241Ibid., pp. 114-115.
85
the essential deterrent against Soviet conventional as well as nuclear
power. By the same token, conventional arms control should be of
more interest, although until very recently it has not been a serious
topic; 15 years of negotiations in Vienna that never got off dead center
have induced some cynicism. In the wake of zero-zero, and the fears
that the removal of nuclear weapons will accentuate the conventional
imbalance in Europe, such controls are being taken very seriously
indeed.
SUMMARY: COUPLER RECOMMENDATIONS
One thing this section has demonstrated is that the Couplers do not
form a close-knit School of Thought, nearly unanimous on all matters;
far from it. It is remarkable, then, that in spite of the wide differences
and vigorous disputes within the school, they do reach consensus-not
unanimity, but consensus-on several broad policy recommendations:
" Europe should move at "all deliberate speed" toward forming a
stronger second pillar for the Alliance. This is agreed upon
both by those most frightened by the prospect of a weakened
U.S. commitment and those most relaxed.
" It is necessary to spend some more on conventional capabilities,
if for no other reason than to satisfy the United States, but not
a lot more. And when the finance ministers say "No," the
answer is acceptable.
" Nuclear deterrence, particularly American nuclear deterrence, is
what keeps the bear from the border, and must be maintained.
* The "rest of the world" outside of Europe is important but not
very important, and the United States should not be diverted
from the preservation of Europe.
" Arms control is A Good Thing, which we should all favor, but
we should also all be suspicious, particularly when the super-
powers agree between themselves. This conclusion may become
more positive, as the implications of zero-zero for conventional
arms control in Europe become clearer.
These all stem, one way or another, from the central value judgment
that the preservation of Europe is the most important objective for
Europeans, and the central analytical premise that the American com-
mitment continues to be necessary for that preservation. The
corresponding policy recommendations of the American Maintainer
school stem from different premises, and turn out considerably dif-
ferent on each count. And all the premises aid recommendations on
- 2,.....: : -
f ':'." ,
86
both sides of the Atlantic may change, given enough real change on the
other side of the Elbe.
Before crossing the Atlantic to the American Maintainer main-
stream, this analysis turns to the two minority schools that help define
the mainstreams-the European Removers and the American With-
drawers.
i
.' ,
, ..... ' : i, ;"
"
'-:' ' ; '
' ' .' t
. .
4!
IV. THE REMOVERS
At our 1986 Annual Conference, my Party once again com-
mitted itself-by an overwhelming vote of 5 to 1-to our
country's full membership and participation in NATO....
The size and location of our country means that using nuclear
weapons would always be pointless or self-destructive, or both.
-British Labour Party Leader Neil Kinnock'
This confession of our faith is incompatible with the develop-
ment, deployment and use of weapons of mass destruction.
Such weapons are capable of exterminating the human race
which God has loved and elevated, and of devastating all of
Creation.
-Reformist Federation (German Reform church)
2
The views of the European peace movement, the Removers, cover a
broad range. On the moderate end are the politicians who, both by
conviction about the requirements for defense and because they are
striving for electoral success with an electorate that can be both
antinuclear and pro-NATO, argue for change within the Alliance. On
the more radical end are the church and other peace movements,
which, like the American disarmament movement, simply want to do
away with nuclear weapons. But it is the central desire to move away
from nuclear defense and deterrence, within the Alliance or outside of
it, slowly or rapidly, conditionally or unconditionally, that defines the
Remover school.
The Removers form a considerable minority in Britain, where they
dominate Labour, the leading opposition party, and also include many
Liberals; and in West Germany, where they include the environmental-
ist Green Party with up to 10 percent of the electorate, and are strong,
although not dominant, in the SPD, which leads the opposition. Their
minority status in both countries was confirmed by elections in 1987,
and electoral arithmetic and calendars make it extremely unlikely that
they will have another chance at gaining power until at least 1991.
'Neil Kinnock, Address to the National Press Club, Washington, D.C., December 4,
1986, pp. 3-11.
2
D= Bekannei zu Jesus Christus und die Friedensverantwortung der Kirche. Rine
Erklarung des Moderamens des Reformierten Bundes, quoted in Thomas Risse-Kappen,
"'Final Respite' or 'Unconditional No'? The Church and Questions of Peace in the
Federal Republic of Germany,- Bulletin of Peace Propoals, Vol. 16, No. 3, 1984, p. 209.
87
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r
.:"T -'i,, . j,, ,,.' , '-., .< ' ; .9
i i Ii | I N H Ill J i l 4i i
88
Further, public opinion surveys as well as voting data in both Britain
and Germany imply that the prospects for both Labour and SPD (or a
not very likely federal-level coalition between the SPD and the Greens)
are directly proportional to the degree of their moderation on defense
issues. The voters in both countries have strongly and consistently
favored the Alliance and the American tie.
3
Nonetheless, public opinion can change. And votes in these coun-
tries (as in the United States) are ordinarily swayed more by domestic
conditions than by international relations. Major economic difficulties
before the next election, for example, could bring to power in either
Britain or Germany governments dominated or at least substantially
influenced by Removers. Whether or not events move in this direc-
tion, the Remover minorities are strong enough to keep the Coupler
governments looking back over their shoulders.
The 1979 decision to deploy INF, for example, added the second
track-the offer to the Soviets to trade INF reductions for SS-20
reductions-because European governments wanted to keep the peace
movement at bay. In the event, when the INF missiles were brought to
Europe, the movement took to the streets and commons, but failed to
prevent entry; had it not been for the second track, the Removers
might have been strong enough to impede installation of the weapons.
As has been discussed, the price the INF Couplers paid for the second
track was the turmoil caused by Gorbachev's unexpected acceptance of
the offer to trade down.
Moreover, in addition to the United Kingdom and the Federal
Republic, the Removers are strong in some of NATO's smaller member
nations, notably in parts of Scandinavia and the Low Countries. They
have been in the minority there too, but in multiparty situations that
are sometimes quite volatile. And each of these countries, although not
contributing major military power to the Alliance, is important because
of location and politics.
For all of these reasons, the European Removers are politically far
more important in the NATO debate than is the radical opposition in
the American debates over strategic nuclear issues and Third World
policies. The following discussion does not analyze the Removers'
views in the same categories (e.g., U.S. Commitment, Conventional-
Nuclear Link) as have been used for the Couplers, and will be for the
American Maintainers. With the Removers as with the other schools,
the choice of issues is as important as the viewpoints on these issues.
This analysis follows the natural contours of the Removers' discourse,
3s., for example, Gregory Flynn and Hans Rattinger (eds.), The Pubic and Atlantic
Defense, Rowman and Allenheld, Totowa, N.J., 1985; and Gebhard L. Schweigler, "Anti-
Americanism in Germany," Waahinaton Quarterly, Winter 1986.
_____ 4 __ _ mX__m____m.
taking up first their negative arguments-what they are against, partic-
ularly nuclear deterrence and defense in Europe-and why, and then
moving to their positive proposals for "defensive defense."
The German Reformist church statement at the head of this section
is radical in the religious pacifist mode that has informed part of the
international peace movement since the invention of nuclear weapons
and, indeed, long before. As a statement of personal faith it stands
with the eloquent words of the American Quakers' precept expressed in
their uncompromising position on nuclear and other war-peace issues:
"Here I stand. Regardless of relevance or consequence I can do no
other."' As an argument on policy, the Reformist statement is part of
the religious debate on nuclear morality centered in some measure
around the more equivocal statement of the American Catholic
bishops, who reluctantly endorsed continued nuclear deterrence while
arguing against almost all uses of nuclear weapons.
5
The German
Catholic bishops took a similar stand as did the Evangelical Church,
much the largest Protestant denomination.
Political radicalism within the West German peace movement is
expressed as advocacy of "nonalignment of the German states, with-
drawal of all foreign troops from Western and Eastern Europe, dissolu-
tion of the NATO and Warsaw Pact military blocs," and sees these
policies not only as leading to elimination of the nuclear threat but
also as a step toward German reunification:
In this way the German question will become an instrument of peace
for Europe; a withdrawal of the two German states from the military
blocs will create a real d6tente zone and at the same time facilitate
closer cooperation between the two German states.... A confedera-
tion between the two German states would be conceivable as a state
in the proces of attaining national unity.
6
This is by no means an expression of the views of all the German
Removers. The more moderate wing-perhaps a majority depending on
where one draws the line between the moderate Removers and the
more radical of the Couplers within the SPD-wants to remain within
NATO while moving away from nuclear deterrence. In its 1986
4American Friends Service Committee, Speak Truth to Power, Philadelphia, 1955,
p.
S&I
Nationsl Conference of Catholic Bishop., The Chanenie of Peace: God's Prmise and
Our Response, Wahington, D.C., 1983.
sBoth of these are quoted in Walther Leisler Kiep, 'The New Deutshlandpolitik,"
Forei Affairs, Winter 1984-85, p. 319. The first is from the Berlin Green Party,
Thesen fur eine ruene Deutschlandpohti, January 1984, in Reader sun deutschkndpoi-
tisohen Konrgres der ORUENEN, March 1984, p. 131; the second from P. Brandt and H.
Ammon, 'Patriotism von Links," in W. Venohr (ed.), Die deutsche Enheit komnt bes-
timmt, Bergiach Gladbach, 1982, pp. 16f.
i , ,-", . ' : . , "
I
90
resolutions, the SPD, as political parties do, balanced its platform
between its two wings. On one key statement, however, concerning
removal of the INF missiles (which had been brought in initially at the
urgent behest of former SPD Chancellor Schmidt), the Removers
clearly won out:
[T]he SPD: appeals to the United States immediately to stop
delivery of further Pershing II and Cruise missiles and to remove
those already deployed; appeals to the Soviet Union to remove the
missiles. counterdeployed in the GDR and Czechoslovakia and drasti-
cally to reduce its SS-20s to the 1979 level. With a view to achieving
these aims an SPD federal government will ... [reverse] the Bundes-
tag decision of 22 November 1983 in order to remove the parliamen-
tary basis for the deployment of such weapons for which permission
was granted by the present conservative government.
7
The seeming symmetry of language on Eastern and Western missiles
does not really obscure the facts that not only are the Western missiles
to be eliminated while the Eastern ones are to be reduced to former
levels; but that the Soviet Union is appealed to, whereas the Bundestag,
were the SPD to gain control, would require the removal of the Ameri-
can missiles. Indeed, when, some months later, Gorbachev agreed to
an arms agreement eliminating all of his SS-20s in return for all of the
Western Pershing Ils and cruise missiles, the SPD was left in the
embarrassing position of having to "retreat" from unilateral Western
withdrawal to bilateral withdrawal, which would remove the Soviet
missiles as well.
Nonetheless, the SPD firmly endorsed the Federal Republic's links
to the West:
The Federal Republic of Germany is politically and militarily
integrated into the European Community and NATO. For as long as
the Soviet Union remains an excessively armed superpower in Europe
the West Europeans will need to be linked with the military counter-
balance of the United States.
8
And in several other ways-for example forward defense and continua-
tion of conscription-it shows itself to be far from pacifist or other rad-
icalism.
The British political left is quite similar. Labour Party Leader
Kinnock's balance, set forth in his statement quoted at the head of this
section, is expressed in terms of strongly antinuclear policies backed by
strongly pro-NATO arguments:
7
Social Democratic Party of Germany, Peace and Security, Resolutions adopted by the
Party Conference, Nuremberg, 25-29 August 1986, p. 13.
8
lbid., p. 2.
! -
91
Britain must choose between effective conventional defense and its
own nuclear weapons, and we in the Labor Party hope that it will
choose conventional defense even if Britain has to take unilateral
action to renounce the nuclear program. Moreover, a careful stra-
tegic assessment of United States nuclear weapons systems in Britain
leads us to the conclusion that these nuclear systems should be with-
drawn....
Our entire effort in the Labour Party is dedicated to ensuring that
our country is effectively defended and that our alliance with our fel-
low democracies remains strong. To those ends, we want to make
the transfer of precious funds from expenditure on Polaris and Tri-
dent nuclear forces to improved conventional capabilities, thereby
enhancing both our domestic defense and the quality of our NATO
contribution. Moreover, we want to insure that real progress is made
toward changing the "first use" NATO strategy which currently con-
tradicts the interests of common security between East and WestO
Kinnock's then-Shadow Foreign Secretary and former Labour
Defense Minister Denis Healey (he left the shadow position after
Labour lost the June 1987 election, because of his age), after presenting
a similar set of arguments for the same positions, concluded on a
rather different note:
The main objective of a Labour government in NATO would be to
persuade its allies to cooperate in building an effective conventional
deterrent in Europe.... Yet we recognize that we cannot change
NATO strategy unilaterally and that NATO strategy must be indi-
visible. So we shall continue to cooperate in the existing strategy
until we succeed in changing it, as the Kennedy Administration did
in the 1960s.
10
The last passage sounds very much as if, had Labour won the 1987
election, at least the plank about ousting American nuclear weapons
from Britain would have been implemented very slowly indeed.
Much of the analytical basis for Labou'r's Remover political policies
lies in a study entitled Defence Without the Bomb, prepared in 1983 by
the Alternative Defence Commission made up of academics, clerics,
union officials, and others. As in the German case, the intellectual
base is far more radical than the political cutting edge represented by
Kinnock. The study is, in fact, a rather radical analysis with a few
members of the Commission being even more radical than the con-
sensus that wrote the document. In sharp distinction to Healey's "we
will teach them patiently," the group's position is:
Nel Kinnock, "How Labor Would Defend Britain," New York Time, March 27,
1987, p. 31.
lODeni Healey, "A Labour Britain, NATO and the Bomb," Foreign Affa., Spring
1987, p. 726.
92
The Commission
is unanimous
that a nuclear
disarmed
Britain
could
not accept NATO's current nuclear-based strategy. It debated at
length whether it would be better for Britain to stay in NATO and
seek to influence its policy in a non-nuclear direction, or to leave the
Alliance altogether. The majority reached the conclusion that Brit-
ain should seek to initiate a process of nuclear disarmament in
Europe by staying in the Alliance subject to the condition that
NATO does move decisively toward abandoning any reliance on a
nuclear strategy. The goal of de-nuclearising NATO strategy implies
the following steps: (1) Acceptance by NATO of a policy of no-first-
use of nuclear weapons. (2) Withdrawal of short-range, 'battlefield,"
nuclear weapons. (3) Withdrawal of "theatre" nuclear weapons. (4)
The decoupling of the U.S. strategic deterrent from NATO by ending
reliance on U.S. nuclear weapons as an element in NATO strat-
egy....
If NATO was not willing to renounce nuclear strategies, Britain
should withdraw from the Alliance. It could then explore the possi-
bility of alternative approaches to collective security in Europe, or
adopt a non-aligned position. Some Commission members thought
that from the outset Britain should adopt a non-aligned approach."
The study provides a variety of arguments and proposals in its 300
pages. One thing it does not go in for is America-bashing. Although it
is obviously quite critical of American nuclear policies, the nearest it
comes to hostility is in terms of future possibilities, and slightly
shamefacedly at that: "If Britain went non-nuclear and left NATO, we
would be less directly threatened by Soviet nuclear strategy, but we
might also need to ask whether the USA posed any kind of military
threat," a theme not expanded upon. In fact, although peace-
movement hostility to the United States and belief in the "moral
equivalency" of the United States and the Soviet Union is a theme fre-
quently written about, it is one that is hardly ever written down by
those who espouse it.
13
The Alternative Defence Commission volume provides little assess-
ment, hostile or otherwise, of the United States. Its discussion of the
Soviet Union is more extensive, falling within the "on-the-one-hand,
on-the-other-hand" frame that was the most optimistic anyone was
willing to get in the pre-Gorbachev era. One contradiction to a stan-
dard and central Coupler belief is set forth, however. It concerns "Fin-
landization."
"Alternative Defence Commission, Defence Without the Bomb, Taylor and Francis,
London, 1983, pp. 8-9.
'1
2
Aternative Defence Commission, p. 56.
13For a Danish third-person version, see Monitor, "SDP Successor Generation Less
Sympathetic to U.S., E.C. Goals," BerWi~ske Tidende, April 28, 1986, p. 12.
93
The term Finlandisation tends to be used in a way that oversimpli-
fies the degree of control exercised by the Soviet Union over Finland.
Though Finland is obliged to observe a neutrality which in some
respects leans towards the Soviet Union, and limits its criticism of
the Soviet Union, it undoubtedly retains independent democratic
institutions, and its economic links with the USSR benefit Finland
and do not prevent it from trading freely with the rest of the
world.... A comparison with Panama's relationship to the United
States ... puts Finland's position into better perspective. As a coun-
try small in population bordering on a powerful neighbor, and occu-
pying a position of strategic importance to it, Finland enjoys a rea-
sonable
degree of autonomy.
14
It may be noted that Britain does not border on any such "powerful
neighbor." West Germans may take less comfort from the "reasonable
degree of autonomy," however.
The Alternative Defence Commission also takes up and extensively
discusses the positive theme of the Removers-nonnuclear defensive
strategy, centered largely on "defensive defense." The Commission
advocates:
preparations for military resistance which would deny an easy victory
to an invading force. This aim might be met either by having the
ability to hold an attacking force for several weeks by an in-depth
deployment which would ensure serious attrition of advancing forces.
It... means possessing few, if any, offensive missiles or long-range
ground-attack aircraft, and limiting the number of tanks to those
required for a mobile defense.
15
Another exclusion (in addition to offensive missiles and long-range air-
craft) suggested by a Danish analyst, contrasts sharply with the tech-
nological hopes of the Couplers: "without entirely abandoning
advanced weapons systems, we have to put the main emphasis on older
and more primitive weapons which are not dependent on radar and
which, therefore, are not as accurate but which, on the other hand,
cannot be put out of action electronically."
1 6
Coupler David Gates' pre-
viously cited critique of defensive defense, however, suggests that, in
contrast to the Removers' ethos of militia defense of home and hearth,
they would, in fact, also have to depend on high technology to be mili-
tarily effective.
The issue of defense on the continent is of more specific interest for
the Germans (and for the Danes) than it is for the British. Andreas
von Bulow, a defense analyst and spokesman for the SPD, admires
Swiss and Swedish defenses and argues for a similar German system:
14
Alternative Defence Commission, p. 76.
'
5
lbid., pp. 179-180.
160le Koefoed, "Aspects of 'Defensive' Military System Discussed," Berdmphe
Tidende, December 23, 1985, p. 9.
i ummn m mm mm rm= rm= m~m~l.. ,,a ,,,,,. mw m .. .. ...........
94
A look at the Swedish and Swiss structures strikingly shows that
these certainly not militarily incompetent nations put a considerable
emphasis on the infantry.... For their defense the Swiss and the
Swedes have thus set up relatively tight-knit configurations in order
to stop attacking, highly-mechanized units; behind these stand
defense forces with strong tank components that can be used at
points of main effort where there is a danger of breakthrough. These
forces are not sufficient, however, to be used for territory-taking
operations. In contrast, at the center of NATO's armament is the
great mass of tanks....
The Federal Republic will be able to maintain a balanced defense
commitment in the 1990s only if military structures are radically
changed.... A more static defense requires a great deal of man-
power in case of war. This personnel, especially for a network that is
strong on anti-tank defense, should by no means be manned by con-
scripts, but rather, as in Sweden and Switzerland, by reserves.
7
Von Bulow's ultimate objective for Western defenses, aside from the
denuclearization of Europe, is surprisingly like that of some of the
French Couplers. He wants Western Europe to defend itself.
By the turn of the century, at least, the conventional defense of
Western Europe should be in the hands of the West Europeans. A
certain reliance on the U.S. nuclear umbrella, possibly also a limited
physical presence of conventional U.S. troops, for example, in geotac-
tically precarious Berlin, might still be necessary. The East Euro-
pean communist regimes should by then be able to stand on their
feet. Their own security system should no longer be dependent on
the Soviet Union.'"
The Removers are some years at least from power in the major
European NATO nations, Britain and West Germany. (They are vir-
tually nonexistent in France.) In some of the smaller member nations,
notably Denmark and the Netherlands, the combination of the
inherent political instability associated with large numbers of small
parties maneuvering for position and with vocal Remover contingents
means that such issues as denuclearization and defensive defense loom
quite large in the arms debates and sometimes in the national political
debates. In Denmark in particular, former Social Democratic Prime
Minister Anker Jorgensen, whose party did well enough in the Sep-
tember 1987 elections to allow him to jockey for return to the Prime
Ministership (he did not make it) took a stand a year earlier in favor of
defensive defense:
1
Andreas von Bulow, "Defensive Entanglement: an Alternative Strategy for NATO,"
in Andrew Pierre (ed.), The Conventional Defense of Europe, pp. 136-147.
8
l1bid., p. 151.
A nonthreatening nonoffensive defense structure is a defense system
which by its structure demonstrates peaceable nonoffensive aims, but
which at the same time possesses the capacity to work together with
other nations in order to inflict on an attacker such losses in and
from one's own sovereign territory that attack cannot be assumed
beforehand to result in a successful outcome for the attacker.
1
One of the ways that the Social Democrats proposed to implement this
policy was to move the Danish NATO brigade in Schleswig-Holstein
(West Germany) to Jutland-Funen (Denmark).
More broadly, an organization called Scandilux, made up of the
Social Democratic parties of Benelux and the continental NATO
members of Scandinavia, has, according to Danish Professor Nikolaj
Petersen, coalesced around a set of ideas that can serve as a summary
of Remover recommendations. They are:
the concept of "common security".. . between the NATO and War-
saw Pact countries....
the ccncept of a larger and more independent European role in
Western defence....
an alternative NATO strategy for the defence of Western Europe,
including the following elements: (a) reduction of the role of nuclear
weapons in NATO strategy, including a large-scale removal
of... tactical nuclear weapons, the adoption of a no-first-use
doctrine,. . . and the establishment of nuclear-free zones.. .(b)
opposition to "deep-strike" strategies.. .(c) formulation of a so-called
"defensive" concept for the defence of Western Europe.'
It is not clear what the political prospects are for the Removers,
either in Scandilux (where, for example, Norwegian Defense Minister
Hoist, a member of the Social Democratic government, remains a char-
ter Coupler), or in the larger countries (where the possibilities before
the 1991/92 elections are limited). What is clear is that the European
Remover school has as complete and coherent a vision of policy and
the future as any other. Its closeness to power (and, in the cases of
Denis Healey and Anker Jorgensen at least, its experience of past
power) and the depth of its support have enabled it to think through
its ideas in a way not required of all radical factions in all aspects of
the arms debate of the 1980s.
1
9Quoted in Berlingske Tidende, June 17, 1986, p. 4.
2Nicolsj Petersen, "The Scandilux Experiment: Towards a Transnational Social
Democratic Security Perspective," Cooperation and Conflict: Nordic Journal of Interna-
tional Politics, March 1985, p. 11.
".4
V. THE WITHDRAWERS
Approaching the millenim... Americans are coming to real-
ize that our front line is the skyline; America's primary
national defense interest is to protect itself from the threat of
incoming missiles. Our global mission is better served by
investing money in a new nuclear shield than in manning old
casernes in Germany.
-William Safire
Abroad, an assertive American foreign policy meets with
great resistance from our allies, most of whom are utterly
risk-averse, and some of whom believe that a grudging
appeasement of Soviet power will mollify its messianic
appetite. This is especially evident in Western Europe,
where, under the American nuclear umbrella, national pride
has softened into something that resembles national pique.
-Irving Kristol
2
The American Withdrawer school is newer and narrower, and there-
fore less complete in its ideas, than its corresponding (in a sense)
European school, the Removers. The two correspond, even though the
Removers come primarily from the "left" and the Withdrawers from
the "right," in that they both favor a sharp drawdown of the American
commitment to NATO. Further, they both have deep historical roots:
the Removers in pacifism and post-World War II European anti-
Americanism, the Withdrawers in the pre-World War II American iso-
lationism echoed by Safire and the post-war visceral anticommunism
exemplified by Kristol. Indeed, although the American peace move-
ment, on the left, pays little attention to NATO, the policy recommen-
dations that they do make fit quite nicely with those of the right With-
drawers. They do not share the strong anticommunism, but they do
share the isolationism; and they fit the defining characteristic: they
want the United States to withdraw from Europe.
Avowed isolationism has been out of date in the United States since
the early 1950s. True, one American undercurrent in the isolationist
tradition-that, since the restoration of West European prosperity by
the 1960s, the Europeans have not carried a fair share of the responsi-
bility for their own defense-provides an important basis for the
1
William Safire, "Europe After NATO," New York Times, June 22, 1987, p. 21.
2
frving Kristol, "Foreign Policy in an Age of Ideology," National Interest, Fall 1985,
p. 14.
96
L
97
Withdrawers' arguments. But it took cumulating feelings on the Amer-
ican right that the West Europeans were insufficiently anticommunist
and insufficiently supportive of American anticommunism and other
American global interests to reactivate their isolationism in the early
1980s.
The Withdrawers' view of insufficient European anticommunism
had early roots in lack of NATO support for our war in Vietnam. In
the late 1970s, some of the Withdrawers' feelings were based on the
lukewarm (at best) support by our allies for President Carter's post-
Afghanistan Olympic boycott; some were based on what was perceived
as incomplete support for the Polish Solidarity movement; some on
lack of support regarding Iran and the Persian Gulf; some, a bit later,
on West European opposition to U.S. activities in Central America. A
precipitating event in the early 1980s, though, took place within
Europe-the bargain by the West European nations to bring in
Siberian natural gas through a pipeline that some Americans contend
was subsidized largely by concessions from these nations.
3
NYU
Economics Professor Melvin Krauss, one of the most prolific of the
Withdrawers, uses the pipeline as an instance to combine the
insufficient-anticommunism theme with another used by the With-
drawers that the West Europeans are too willing to compromise princi-
ple for economic advantage:
[Tithe pipeline deal clearly is part of the overall European strategy of
Soviet appeasement. But there is another important aspect of the
deal.... The truth of the matter is that the Soviet pipeline deal
probably had as much to do with increasing employment and profits
in a severely depressed European industry as it did with paying trib-
ute to the Kremlin.
4
At another point, under the subhead "European Defense Free-
Riding," Krauss asserts that "The reason we allocate a greater portion
of our economic product to defense than the Europeans is not that we
are more warlike than our allies, but that we subsidize Europe's
defense needs,"' and he defends this analysis with numbers. Burden-
sharing is a common American theme, and not only among the With-
drawers; as has been noted, Europeans cite other numbers to argue the
point.
Krauss and fellow NYU Professor Kristol, editor of the neoconser-
vative Public Interest quarterly, are both cited by French publisher
3 Se Geneher.
4
Melvin Krauss, How NATO Weakens the West, Simon and Schuster, New York,
1986, p. 149.
|ibid., p. 18.
... . .. I L + " " :
. .. _. ..- " + '.,. " 4
95
Jimmy Goldsmith as leaders of the American drive to cut the commit-
ment to Europe.
6
The citation is essentially accurate, but Goldsmith
also mentions Senator Sam Nunn; and Nunn, as well as Henry Kis-
singer and former National Security Advisor Zbigniew Brzezinski who
are frequently grouped with Nunn, is quite different from Krauss and
from Kristol. Nunn, Kissinger, and Brzezinski are not Withdrawers;
they are interested in restructuring NATO or NATO strategy precisely
in order to preserve the Alliance under what they see as new condi-
tions. As such, they form an important portion of the American Main-
tainer consensus quite different from the Withdrawer viewpoint.
Kristol philosophizes historically on NATO interference with
America's larger mission:
When George Washington warned the young republic against any
entangling alliances, the U.S. was a medium-size power, geographi-
cally distant from the Great Powers of Europe.... The U.S. today,
however, is one of the Great Powers, not a middling power. The
meaning for us, therefore, of an entafgling alliance has changed...
In general, an entangling alliance for a superpower today is one that
is more likely to inhibit or prevent its taking action that it deems to
be appropriate or timely. The Soviet Union, of course, has no such
entangling alliances....
[T]he NATO alliance, as now constituted, is not limited to the
defense of Western Europe.... As things now stand, the U.S. would
not even have the legal right to use any of the American bases in
Western Europe to support military operations in the Mediterranean,
Northern Africa or the Middle East. Several members of NATO
have made it quite clear that they would feel free to deny us this
right, should they disapprove of our action.
7
And what may be worse yet, according to Krauss, is that the United
States has softened in response to West European softness: "The
Europeans said, in effect, 'You adopt d~tente, or else we won't let you
defend us'- and they got away with it."
s
They also get away with
opposing us in international forums: "Western Europe often votes
against the United States on key strategic issues in the United
Nations-Nicaragua, El Salvador, Grenada, and so forth."
9
His conclu-
sion on the theme of collective European softness is in the form of a
rhetorical question: "[C]an there be any doubt as to the long-range
6
Jimmy Goldsmith, "Le levier de Ia d6fense," L'Express, February 27-5 March, 1987,
p. 24.
7
lrving Kristol, "'Global Unilateralism' and 'Entangling Alliances,'" Wall Street Jour-
na4 February 3, 1986, p. 18.
sMelvin Krauss, 'Why Has Reagan Yielded to Europe?" New York Times, January 6,
1986, p. A17.
9Krauss, How NATO Weakens the West, p. 27.
10%
hv
99
debilitating effect wrought by the American security blanket on Euro-
pean perceptions
of the external danger?"
10
Krauss's book has specific chapters on West Germany and France
(although, surprisingly, neither a chapter nor even an index reference
to Britain). On Germany: "The desire for dtente is so strong in the
Federal Republic that it transcends political parties and ideological
allegiances."
11
This, however, is in large measure the fault of the
United States:
[T]he idea of keeping West Germany in a militarily inferior position
by having a foreign power provide for its defense and basic security
needs had considerable appeal after World War I, given Germany's
dubious historical record... When West Germany's commitment to
democracy could no longer be challenged and its economy became the
strongest in Western Europe, it should have been obvious that unless
there was an adjustment of its status as a militarily inferior nation,
West Germany increasingly would feel estranged from those respon-
sible for its condition and particularly from that country most
responsible and upon which it was most dependent, the United
States. The appeal of neutralism to the West Germans should have
come as no surprise, though it did to many.'
2
And as for France, in 1983 he held up French independence as a model
for what NATO should be, suggesting a separate German nuclear
deterrent in addition to the French and the British." By the time of
his 1986 book, however, he was more dubious:
Though the basics of official French defense policy have changed
very little under Socialist Mitterand... there is a new revisionism
gaining credibility in France that threatens the entire Gaullist
defense edifice. This new French revisionism has a most unlikely
spokesman in Yves Montand, the popular French actor and chanson-
nier.'
4
If it was fair for Krauss to cite Montand as a spokesman for France, it
was also fair a year later for Goldsmith to cite Krauss as a spokesman
for the United States.
More recently, Krauss has put his argument for turning nuclear con-
trol over to individual West European nations into the context of the
zero-zero negotiations:
'
0
lbid., p. 28.
1
Ibid., p. 93.
121bid., p. i0.
1
3Melvin Krauss, "It's Time to Change the Atlantic Alliance," Wal Street Jowntal,
March 3, 1983, p. 24.
H
4
Kraus, How NATO Weakens the West, p. 130.
I " , " ' " "" " ' ' ,, ' ; '- " -"j:
100
As pointed out by Gregory Fossedal of the Hoover Institution... the
president could respond to Mr. Gorbachev's offer to negotiate the
zero-based option by announcing his intention to give control of all
U.S. medium-range nuclear weapons located on European soil to the
Europeans.... The Europeans may or may not accept the American
lead in this matter, that is for them, not the U.S. to decide. For our
part, we should offer the missiles to the nation-states in which the
missiles currently are located. If the Europeans want an alternative
arrangement, we should stand ready to accommodate them.,
Christopher Layne, an attorney writing in Foreign Policy quarterly,
picks up the burden-sharing theme of the other Withdrawers and
comes out with similar recommendations for getting the United States
out of NATO. Layne, however, does not share the ideological anticom-
munism of most of the other Withdrawers:
Short of war, Europe's division can best be ended by a negotiated
superpower disengagement.... The United States has a vital
interest in lessening the tensions from Europe's division: Central
Europe has been the focal point of superpower confrontation for 40
years.... Both superpowers have an interest in reconciling legiti-
mate Soviet security concerns with Eastern Europe's desire for
greater political autonomy. The goal of disengagement, therefore,
would be not to induce states to leave Moscow's security orbit but to
achieve Eastern Europe's Finlandization.
1
'
Layne is of the right; the one affiliation he uses to identify himself
for his published articles, for example, is with the Cato Institute, an
organization devoted to very free-market' economics and associated pol-
itics. But his arguments, lacking the anticommunist tone of Kristol
and Krauss, are similar to those made by Richard Barnet of the Insti-
tute for Policy Studies on the left. Barnet, one of the few American
analysts on that end of the spectrum to include NATO seriously in his
military-disarmament writings, suggests that neither the Soviet threat
nor the American deterrent are any longer very plausible to West
Europeans and that, as a result, although Europe is capable of fielding
its own stronger forces, "taxpayers on the continent are not enthusias-
tic about supporting larger defense budgets or more conscription."
7
The central policy recommendation stemming from this reasoning
makes Barnet a Withdrawer:
'
5
Melvin Krauss, "Let Europe Negotiate with Gorbachev," WaU Street JournaL,
March 6, 1987, p. 30.
1Chrstopher Layne, "Atlanticiam Without NATO," Foreign Poicy, Summer 1987,
p. 84.
17
Richmrd J. Barnet, "Reflections: The Four Pillars," New Yorker, March 9, 1987,
p. 80.
101
Thus, the Europeans should bear the primary responsibility for their
own defense. The United States should use its power to make the
military environment in Europe less dangerous by negotiating the
denuclearization of the military forces facing one another in Europe
and by taking substantial steps toward the demilitarization of the
Continent.... The reality is that Europe can be defended only by
non-nuclear means, and the appropriate men and women to under-
take that defense are Europeans."'
Layne, like the other right Withdrawers, does not share Barnet's
desire for denuclearization; nonetheless, his recommendations sound
similar. His withdrawal stance comes in two styles, bilateral and uni-
lateral. The bilateral negotiated version revolves around the "reunifi-
cation and neutralization of Germany" and the "dissolution of NATO
and the Warsaw Pact."'
9
The unilateral version, which is accompanied
by a West German independent nuclear deterrent force rather than
German reunification, proposes: "Washington should fix an ironclad
timetable for the phased withdrawal over 4 years of all ground, air, and
nuclear forces from Europe. At the conclusion of its pullout, the for-
mal U.S. commitment to NATO would end."'
Not even Kristol would go quite as far as complete withdrawal of
both forces and commitment. His object, like Layne's, is to put Europe
on its own:
Obviously NATO-even a purely European NATO-would need a
sufficiency of [nuclear] weapons.., to deter a Soviet first use of
them, regardless of any arms control treaties that might be signed.
But reserving those weapons for this purpose would mean that
Western Europe would finally have to face its moment of truth: the
recognition that to deter the Soviets it would have to develop its con-
ventional forces, and convincingly assert the will to use them.
21
The "even a purely European NATO" implies that he is still open to a
transatlantic alliance, were that possible under acceptable terms. His
recommendation for the United States is a reduced, but not completely
dissolved, American commitment to Western Europe:
This means that NATO, as currently structured, is an archaic insti-
tution, that the defense of Western Europe will become primarily a
Western European responsibility, that Western Europe will have to
gird itself to fight and (hopefully) win a conventional war against the
"SIbid., pp. 81-82.
19
Christopher Layne, "Deutschland Uber Allies," New Republic, September 28, 1987,
p. 13.
mLayne, "Atlanticism Without NATO," p. 33.
21
lrving Kristol, "Nuclear NATO: Moment of Truth," Wail Street Journa, July 9,
1987, p. 28.
I
i4.
102
Soviet Union-with American help, if needed, but not with a recourse
to nuclear weapons.2
Krauss has a slightly different summary recommendation, close to
Layne but consistent with his own emphases on balanced contributions
and global anticommunism:
Washington should announce a phased withdrawal of U.S. troops
over a period of, say, five years.. . [but] a distinction should be
made between Europe's flank states and center. Clearly, in terms of
resources and the potential to hold together under duress, Europe's
center is far stronger than its flanks. Scandinavia is of sufficient
concern to the core states of Western Europe that they could be
expected to look after the northern flanks should the U.S. depart....
But what is to become of the flank states like Turkey, that do not
shortchange their defense and have significant strategic value to the
United States? Perhaps it would be wise for the U.S. to make a
separate bilateral agreement with Turkey after we leave Europe to
insure its security.2
Finally, mention should be made of a specifically naval version.
Washington analyst Jeffrey Record, paralleling the reasoning of the
other Withdrawers in a 1982 booklet he wrote with retired Admiral
Robert Hanks, lists three recommendations:
Withdrawal of non-nuclear U.S. ground forces from Germany and
attendant alterations in the U.S. Army's size and force structure.
A major expansion in U.S. naval power and seaborne force projection
capabilities.
Creation of a new global strategy based primarily on sea power and
sea-borne force projection capabilities, and oriented primarily toward
non-NATO contingencies."'
Withdrawal of U.S. ground forces implies a different direction from
Kristol's willingness to extend conventional help only, but otherwise
the recommendations are consistent. The naval version differs from
the other Withdrawer writings too in one additional and crucial partic-
ular: the stress on global sea-borne force projection has become part of
the Reagan administration's military strategy for the United States,
although certainly not accompanied by withdrawal from Europe.
The Withdrawers are not all identical, not even the pronuclear
right-wing Withdrawers. But where they do come together is in their
22Kristol, "Foreign Policy in an Age of Ideology,' p. 14.
2Krauss, How NATO Weakens the West, pp. 237-238.
UJeffrey Record, "Beyond NATO: Now Military Directions for the United States," in
Jeffrey Record and Robert J. Hanks, U.S. Strategy at the Crosroads: Two Views, Insti-
tute for Foreign Policy Analysis, Inc., Cambridge and Washington, July 1982, p. 29.
to3
central recommendation to the United Stater Get out of Europe. In
this they are similar to most of the European Removers, but they differ
from the mainstream American consensus, the Maintainers; some
Maintainers want to restructure NATO and the American commit-
ment, but they want to do it to strengthen both. "Maintaining and
strengthening" is their theme, not "getting out."
I
tI
tI
14
. :.++++.,+
VI. THE MAINTAINERS
The message is that we want to be a part of NATO; that we
are going to continue to be a part of NATO whether this
amendment passes or does not pass; that we will even con-
tinue to be a part of NATO if our European allies do not
comply with any of the provisions of this amendment; that
we will continue to have hundreds of thousands of troops in
NATO even if this amendment passes and even if the allies
do not comply with any of its provisions or tests. We will
still have a nuclear deterrent that will not only protect this
Nation but explicitly help protect our European allies. We'
will continue to have theater nuclear capability and commit-
ment to our European allies. We will continue to have naval
commitment....
But the amendment is designed to give NATO as an alliance
every incentive to improve its conventional defense. The rea-
son we need to improve conventional defense is that the con-
tinued reliance on the early use of nuclear weapons is
diametrically opposed to the national security interests of
this country and the security interests of our Western Euro-
pean allies....
[1If we do not have allies that are going to do their part,
there is no need for the American taxpayer to continue to
spend billions and billions and billions of dollars.... We
can have a tripwire-that is, having our forces basically link
the American nuclear deterrent to the defense of Europe-for
a lot less money.
-Senator Sam Nunn (Dem., Ga.), discussing his 1984
amendment to gradually withdraw some American
troops from Europe unless the European allies
made certain specified increases in their
contributions to the Alliance.'
Just as their own preservation is the central value judgment for
West Europeans and the U.S. commitment to the defense of Western
Europe is the focus of their debate on how to preserve their existence
and independence, preserving itself (and the rest of the world) from
nuclear holocaust is the central American value, and the
Conventional-Nuclear Link-the threshold-is the how-to on which
the Maintainers focus.
1
Senator Sam Nunn, Congruiona Recor Senate, June 20, 1964, p. 87722.
104
106
For the Americans as for the Europeans, the commitment and the
threshold are two sides of a coin. Senator Nunn's ringing reaffirma-
tion of the commitment to NATO defines the Maintainer school, but
the commitment is not much debated it is assumed rather than being
dissected as it is by the Couplers. Nunn's desire to. raise the nuclear
threshold, however, also commands a near-unanimous Maintainer con-
sensus, and how to do it absorbs much consideration by American offi-
cials and analysts.
The three points mentioned in the introductory chapter-No Early
Use of nuclear weapons, the need for stronger conventional capabilities
to support this, and the continued American commitment to NATO-
are, in fact, matters of consensus among the Maintainers. That is not
to say that they do not argue with one another; this section brings out
wide differences of opinion. Almost all of these differences, however,
turn out to be on overarching issues that concern NATO but are not
primarily about NATO-SDI and arms control, for example.
2
The
analysis here covers the NATO-related aspects of these debates, but
almost all the debates stop at the water's edge; the Maintainers all
espouse approximately the same policies toward NATO Europe.
MILITARY ISSUES
The Conventional/Nuclear Link
General Bernard Rogers set forth the Maintainers' view of NATO's
central military problem and the principle by which it should be solved,
in one of the many statements he made as Supreme Allied Com-
mander, Europe (SACEUR):
NATO's current conventional posture does not provide our nations
with adequate deterrence of Warsaw Pact non-nuclear aggression or
intimidation derived from the threat of such aggression. If attacked
conventionally today, NATO would face fairly quickly the decision of
escalating to a nuclear response in order to try to cause the aggressor
to halt his advance.... Credible deterrence requires NATO to attain
a conventional capability that would give us a reasonable prospect of
frustrating a non-nuclear attack by conventional means.... [This]
"reasonable prospect" formula is compatible with Flexible Response.,
The Maintainer consensus on both the problem description and the
need for its solution encompasses a broad range of officials and
For discusion of thee isus, oee m vine, The Strat Nuclear Debate.
S(eral Bernard Roer, #NATO's Straw an Undervalued Cumey,- in Interna-
tona Instote for Strategic Studies, Adelphi Paper M06, p.6.
L 8um uu m mma ml . .
106
analysts. Whether or how the solution can be brought about com-
mands much less of a consensus.
The consensus in favor of raising the threshold is a strong one,
including debaters who disagreed greatly on other nuclear issues. On
one end of the range, Albert Wohistetter, a leader of the group of
American analysts who feel that deterrence, particularly in Europe,
depends on our ability and willingness to use a variety of nuclear
options," is nonetheless clear that these options are last resorts that
should be avoided by being equally prepared to meet conventional force
with conventional defense. In a 1987 paper, for example, he repeated
the conclusion of the report of the 1961 Acheson Commission in which
he participated-
It emphasized the raising of the nuclear threshold, not its
removal.... It was more credible that we would use conventional
force to repel a conventional invasion and, if our conventional forces
were overwhelmed, that we would use nuclear weapons, if we could
use them discriminatsly and for a military purpose.'
On the antinuclear end of the spectrum, the "Gang of Four"-
McGeorge Bundy, George Kennan, Robert McNamara, and Gerard
Smith-while advocating serious discussion of No First Use by the
West of nuclear weapons,
6
recognized that they were suggesting an ulti-
mate direction, not an immediate policy proposal. In a later article,
the four, as part of a larger gang of ten, espoused No First Use as a
long-run goal, but No Early Use as an implementable step in current
and developing policy:
We believe that eventually the United States, in concert with its
NATO allies, should formalize its commitment not to initiate the use
of nuclear weapons and should alter its deployments, war plans, and
attitudes accordingly....
As an initial measure, the Western alliance could adopt a policy of no
early use .... A logical next step would be a policy of no early
second use .... We would argue, finally, that the United States
should adopt a policy of no strategic first use-a commitment not to
initiate the use of American strategic weapons based on the U.S.
mainland or at sea.
7
'See Levine, The Strae Nuclear Debate.
6Albert Wobistt, "Swords Without Shields," National Interest, Summer 1987,
pp. 53-54.
eMcGeorge Bundy, George F. Kennan, Robert S. McNamara, and Gerard Smith,
"Nuclear Weapons and the Atlantic Alliance,' Forein Affair, Spring 1962.
7
McGeorge Bundy, Morton H. Halperin, William W. Kaufmann, George F. Kennan,
Robert S. McNamara, Madalene O'Donnes, Leon V. Sigel, Gerard C. Smith, Richard H.
m n m nnlh mnN m m - - -- - .. . ... ... r
a
107
No Early Use is another name for the Maintainers' consensus goal,
a threshold as high as possible. The terminology crosses the spectrum
to those who remain far from the No-First-Use position. Ambassador
David Abshire, for example, then the Reagan administration's
representative on the NATO Council, has stressed that: "It is most
important to improve conventional defense because we must never be
forced to contemplate the prospect of too early use of nuclear
weapons.
"s
Abshire's stress on conventional improvement to raise the threshold
is also part of the Maintainer consensus, but many analysts contend
that as NATO is currently postured, No Early Use is almost impossi-
ble; NATO will have to use nuclear weapons almost immediately if it is
to fight at all. John Steinbruner of the Brookings Institution, for
example, contended in 1983 that:
As NATO forces have evolved, the capability to use nuclear weapons
has been closely associated with conventional forces. Artillery and
tactical air units that provide supporting firepower for the ground
armies responsible for holding NATO territory can use both conven-
tional and nuclear ordnance and are trained to do so. The elaborate
management procedures necessarily associated with nuclear weapons
inhibit flexibility in conventional operations and pose hard choices
for NATO commanders. In net effect the presence of nuclear
delivery systems in forward units introduces a strong bias toward
their use in combat, if not actually first then certainly very early.'
Since 1983, nobody has suggested that the threshold has risen substan-
tially, although Robert Osgood's fear, a year later, that it was dropping
rapidly, was also unjustified.
1
Such ever-present fears of ever-worse
conventional capabilities, provide one more illustration of the ubiquity
of former Defense Secretary James Schlesinger's colonel's rubber-
stamp, "In this perilous moment in the history of the alliance...
Steinbruner and Osgood doubted NATO's conventional capability to
postpone the decision to go nuclear in Europe. At about the same
time, William Kaufmann questioned the other end of the Flexible
Response range, the potential use of American strategic nuclear forces:
Ullman, and Paul C. Warnke, "Back from the Brink," Atlantic Monthly, August 1986,
pp. 36-41.
sDavid Abshire, Speech to the Southern Center for International Affairs, reprinted in
the Congressional Record, Senate, June 20, 1984, p. 7751.
9
John D. Steinbruner, "Introduction," in John D. Steinbruner and Leon V. Sigal
(eds.), Alliance Security: NATO and the No-First-Use Question, Brookings Institution,
Washington, D.C., 1983, p. 3.
lRobert Osgood, "Summation," in Netherlands Institute of International Relations,
Clingendael, Conventional Balance in Europe: Problems, Strategies and Technologies,
Zoetermeer, the Netherlands, May 11-13, 1984, p. 82.
Ian
j
108
Whatever NATO's military guidance may say, it is highly improbable
that the U.S. strategic forces would ever be ordered to launch a first
strike against targets in the Soviet Union in response to a conven-
tional invasion of Western Europe. Indeed, this probability has been
close to zero for at least twenty-five years [as of 1983J."
He used the point to advance the cause he had been active in for most
of those 25 years, including a stint as a major advisor to then Secretary
of Defense McNamara, raising the threshold by increasing conven-
tional capabilities.
Kaufmann's expressed doubt about the use of strategic weapons
exemplifies a belief likely to evoke the European Couplers' worst fears,
and few of the American Maintainers would go that far. Nonetheless,
it is not very surprising that a respected American analyst can make a
statement potentially so shocking to West Europeans; the interpreta-
tions of the link remain very different on the two sides of the Atlantic.
An American view (by Washington defense analyst Leon Sloss) of the
European view highlights the contrast:
Under the vague and sufficiently ambiguous formulation of Flexible
Response, we witnessed the emergence of two distinct and, to a
degree, contradictory objectives. Very briefly, the U.S. wants
manoeuvring room and options, while Europe wants to avoid think-
ing about a prolonged conventional war or limited nuclear exchanges
at the theatre level by threatening a much bigger war which would
entail the total destruction of Europe, the Soviet Union and the
United States. If the only war is a general holocaust-so goes Euro-
pean reasoning-then there will be no war. From this vantage point,
U.S. ground troops and U.S. theatre nuclear forces ... would not be
a "firebreak" as the U.S. envisaged. Rather they would be the "fuse"
which would ignite the strategic arsenals immediately.... All this is
highly dangerous in today's environment.
2
The question here is not whether Sloss's analysis of the West Euro-
peans is correct; it represents a common Maintainer view of the
Couplers. The Maintainers' primarily military thinking about the link
is lost on many of the European Couplers; the Couplers' primarily
political thinking about the U.S. commitment-the political side of the
same issue--is held in contempt by many of the American Maintainers.
In the view of many of the Maintainers as well as the Couplers, the
whole thing has been exacerbated over time by the onset of "strategic
parity." Sloss continues his argument on the danger of "today's [1985]
environment":
"William W. Kaufmann, "Nuclear Deterrence in Central Europe," in Steinbruner
and Segal, p. 29.
1
2
Leon Slos, "The Roles of Strategic and Theatre Nuclear Forces in NATO Strategyr
Part II," in International Institute for Strategic Studies, pp. 61-62.
II
109
The enormous shift in the overall strategic balance of the last 20
years has had different consequences for the U.S. and for NATO
Europe. While U.S. strategic forces have been able to maintain a
rough parity with their Soviet counterparts, the same forces cannot
be deemed equally able to buttress the U.S. commitment to a NATO
strategy which implies first use of nuclear weapons to deter a conven-
tional attack. And yet this is still the essence of NATO strategy and
of the official role assigned to U.S. nuclear weapons."
3
In was in this context of a strategic balance perceived to be
deteriorating that INF was proposed in the late 1970s and introduced
in the early 1980s. The issue to the West Europeans was less the level
of the conventional-nuclear threshold than it was the width of any gap
in the chain of Flexible Response that led from conventional defense to
the American strategic deterrent. If the failure of conventional defense
led to the use of short-range nuclear weapons in Western Europe, the
lack of an intermediate-range force might allow a pause after the West
was devastated but before the homeland of the Soviet Union was
involved. And if the Soviets were to foresee such a pause, this might
bring about a failure to deter their initial conventional attack.
Americans were more inclined to describe the gap in military terms.
General Rogers, for example, described INF's role in NATO strategy:
NATO decided to deploy land-based long-range I.N.F. missiles in
1979 to fill a gap in our spectrum of deterrence. The gap existed
because American F-111 aircraft based in Britain were then the last
remaining part of the theater nuclear system that could reach Soviet
soil, provided the aircraft could penetrate Warsaw Pact air defenses.
The fact that the Russians began deploying SS-20 missiles in 1977
made the NATO decision more urgent.
14
The political-military issue raised by some Maintainers opposed to
INF is whether the location of the missile launchers or their participa-
tion in the "theater nuclear system" (given that the president of the
United States must release them to the theater commander before he
can use them) make a difference for Flexible Response or anything
else. Jonathan Dean of the Union of Concerned Scientists expresses
doubts:
The decision of an American president as to whether to respond to
an overwhelming Soviet conventional attack on Europe... with
nuclear weapons would not depend solely on the pattern of deploy-
ment of U.S. missiles in Europe. Rather, such a decision would
depend primarily on the president's assessment of the overall
13
Ibid., p. 63.
14
Bernard W. Rogers, "Why Compromise Our Deterrent Strength in Europe," New
York Times, June 28, 1987, p. E25.
r.
110
situation at the time.... The presence or absence of land-based
American missiles deployed in continental Europe would be a second-
ary factor in this decision-and for that matter, in its execution;
many other American delivery systems are available for the pur-
pose.
15
Neither Rogers' "gap in our spectrum of deterrence" nor Dean's
doubts about this gap take up the question of what would be done with
nuclear weapons if deterrence were to fail. The actual fighting of a
nuclear war in Europe is not much discussed, at least not on the open
record. Wohlstetter, however, together with his colleague Richard
Brody, does build several scenarios to illustrate the point that NATO
must pay attention to the detail of localized nuclear warfare rather
than throwing up its hands in the belief that such combat would mean
the destruction of civilization in the major population centers of the
old continent. Using as an illustration "contingencies involving a
Soviet invasion of northwest Iran leading to the Gulf," and the con-
comitant "possibility that the Soviets might use nuclear weapons selec-
tively to eliminate unexpected obstacles to such an invasion," they sug-
gest that:
The foregoing scenario offers a good example running counter to the
conventional wisdom that the Soviets could not use nuclear weapons
to accomplish military objectives of importance to them and to the
NATO nuclear powers without doing so much damage to Western
population centers that the NATO nuclear powers would have no
stake in exercising prudence and control if they used nuclear
weapons in response.
16
And although the threat is more likely on the periphery, it is not
absent from the Central front in Europe:
Even Soviet nuclear strikes during an invasion through the center of
Western Europe, if directed selectively only at military targets criti-
cal for the invasion, could confine damage to these targets much
more extensively than is generally recognized. ... Precisely delivered
air bursts could destroy aircraft on main operating bases in Britain,
France, and the Federal Republic. The collateral fatalities might be
in the high tens of thousands. That would be an enormous disaster.
But far less than the total destruction of Western European cities.
And European leaders might anticipate that as the consequence of
'
5
Jonathan Dean, "Military Security in Europe," Foreign Affair, Autumn 1987,
pp. 26-27.
'sAlbert Wohiatetter and Richard Brody, "Continuing Control as a Requirement for
Deterring," in Ashton B. Carter, John D. Steinbruner, and Charles A. Zraket (se),
Mwann Nuclear Operations, The Brookings Institution, Washington, D.C., 1987,
p. 159.
- - mm lmm rol m ireram
mmm memmm
~...-.-................................
i
ZZ1
their own use of nuclear weapons if the expected nuclear destruction
were to get out of control.
7
As part of his advocacy of controlled Western nuclear options to use
in (or deter) scenarios like this, Wohlstetter is a strong advocate of
SDI. Among most European Couplers, SDI "is seen... as destabiliz-
ing and decoupling" in Briton Phil Williams's words, but Wohlstetter
contends that this view is based on misunderstanding. He uses a
French publication to put his pro-SDI argument into NATO terms:
Certain technicians favorable to President Reagan's Strategic
Defense Initiative... have envisaged Soviet attacks which utilize
30,000 warheads ... all directed against cities in an attack mounted
as a total surprise. And they have given priority to the not very
obvious objective of intercepting all the warheads used in such an
absurd attack. It is more plausible, if the Soviets attack, that they
will use their ballistic missiles to obtain a greater probability of
destroying military obstacles (in the United States or Europe) in the
way of their invasion. Faced with this menace, a more modest
defense against ballistic missiles could be one of the effective ele-
ments of a solid Alliance posture, which would also have to include
the offensive capacity to respond selectively against Warsaw Pact
targets, including those in the USSR.... In this way, it would assist
in deterring the Soviet attack.
18
Wohlstetter's statement comparing the "30,000 warheads" to "more
modest" interpretations of the demands on SDI helps explain why, on
this even more than on other issues, West Europeans and Americans
misunderstand each other. It is because Americans confuse the argu-
ments in their own SDI debate. "Certain technicians" in Wohlstetter's
words, but President Reagan also, talk about SDI as a universal hard-
shell defense against all incoming ballistic missiles. Most military
analysts dismiss this kind of defense as a dream, but some, like
Wohlstetter, favor SDI for its role as part of a counterforce deterrent
against a range of Soviet attacks against Europe as well as the United
States. Some Europeans doubt the benefits they are to receive from
this modest defense and accept the worst possible interpretation:
President Reagan comes across louder than Wohlstetter, and these
Europeans believe that he really wants and can get his full hard-shell
defense for the United States; but they doubt that he is really very
interested in getting them one. Hence, they see SDI as part of Ameri-
can decoupling, a retreat to a happy life under the shell, with all wars
confined to Europe.
1
7
Ibid., p. 161.
1
8Albert Wohlstetter, "Au-deli de Is strategie du pire," Commentaire, Winter
1986-1986, p. 1013.
.. '..
.allm l sir ',A
112
By no means all Maintainers agree with Wohlstetter on the need for
SDI or for "a counterforce deterrent against a range of Soviet attacks;"
nor do they agree with Sloss on other effects of the onset of strategic
parity. Kaufmann's suggestion that the probability of an American
strategic nuclear strike in response to a conventional Soviet attack on
Western Europe "has been close to zero for at least twenty-five years"
implies that the shift to parity has been largely irrelevant for NATO
deterrence and defense; things have been the same since the 1950s.
And Bundy's existential statement that "What keeps the peace in
Europe then, is the whole range of consequences that aggression would
entail"
i
" contains no hint that he believes parity has changed that
range in any important way.
It does not take existentialism to worry about the European recep-
tion of SDI. American opponents have been concerned about its effect
on the Alliance. According to Stanford Professors Sydney Drell, Philip
Farley, and David Holloway:
The prospect of revival of ABM deployments thus brings Western
Europe not reassurance, but uncertainties and perhaps greater
dangers should it come about. In the short-term, American interest
in ABM exacerbates other concerns-the American confrontational
approach to the Soviet Union, an arms buildup which many see as
seeking military superiority and a nuclear war fighting capacity, and
a readiness to use military power and a scorn for negotiations and
political processes.
20
European discomfort is neither causal nor central to their case against
SDI, but the Drell-Farley-Holloway statement is one of many trans-
atlantic resonances heard among the Maintainers, arguments based on
the need to reconcile and soothe our allies to preserve the Alliance.
The European version discussed in the previous section was the will-
ingness of many Couplers to try to placate the Americans by agreeing,
in principle at least, to the need for stronger conventional capabilities,
even though these Europeans did not really want to diminish deter-
rence by decreasing the likelihood of escalation to the nuclear level.
Nor is opposition to SDI among the Maintainers based on resonance
alone. James Thomson of RAND questions both the president's and
Wohlstetter's versions on military grounds:
1
NcGeorge Bundy, "The Bishops and the Bomb," New York Review of Books, June
16, 1983, p. 6. This was the article where Bundy first used the phrase "existential deter-
rence."
2Sidney D. Drell, Philip J. Farley, and David Holloway, The Reagan Strategic
Defense Initiative: A Technical, Political, and Arms Control Assessment, Stanford Univer-
sity Press, 1984, p. 76.
__ __
-- i
113
The SDI was supposed to have ushered in a new era, based on a con-
cept of deterrence in which nuclear offensive threats would have
played little if any role.... In the face of technological uncertain-
ties, and perhaps European political objections, the U.S. administra-
tion appears to be scaling back its concept towards (or at least com-
plementing it with) a concept in which the deployed SDI would con-
tribute to deterrence by reducing the vulnerability of critical Western
military assets.... But at the present time there are many open
questions about the feasibility of this concept, as well as about the
more ambitious original concept.
2 1
How then do Maintainers hope to raise the threshold? Most of the
proposals call for increased conventional capabilities discussed below.
One set, however, centers on the No-First-Use discussion by Bundy,
Kennan, McNamara, and Smith. In spite of the fears their initial article
created among many West Europeans, it does fall short of a firm propo-
sal. And the most thoroughly thought through of related proposals-by
Morton Halperin, a member of the ten who signed the longer follow-on
article but not of the original four-steers around No First Use as such.
Halperin stresses instead the complete separation of nuclear "devices"
and their stigmatization as being completely inappropriate as weapons of
war.
[What] I am suggesting is not, strictly speaking, a no-first-use policy
for Europe. It is a somewhat different proposal--one that focuses
not on a public promise never to use nuclear weapons first, but
rather on the forces and operational plans for nuclear and conven-
tional weapons in Europe. If nuclear devices were not treated as
weapons, NATO's conventional military forces would be completely
separated from the specialized units designed to deliver nuclear
explosive devices should the political leadership of the Alliance ever
decide to employ them.... The nuclear force would retain the capa-
bility to be used first, and it could be employed at the direction of
the president of the United States in consultation with other NATO
allies. However, NATO would no longer threaten first use, and mili-
tary planning would be based on the assumption that NATO would
not initiate the use of nuclear weapons.n
The distance of Halperin's proposal from some current military think-
ing is illustrated by a contrasting statement in a paper by five U.S. Army
analysts writing in the publication of the Army War College:
2
Jamm A. Thomson, "Strategic Choicer Their Roles in NATO's Defence Planning
and Force Modernization, Part I," in International Institute for Strategic Studies, Adel-
phi Paper 206, pp. 20-21.
Morton H. Halperin, Nucle Fa lacy: DispdeU the Myth of Nucle Stt , Bal-
linger, Cambridge, 1987, pp. 95-96.
, .. , , .' !.'. " ./. . '* ..
... .,. .. .::.... . _ . . . ., .. . .
'-, , ",.i ' -,; . , ,'
, ,,;. ,-.-,'-. - :'
a
114
NATO's conventional and nuclear capabilities are not separate enti-
ties, but synergistic components of an effective defense posture. One
cannot replace the other and major deficiencies in one cannot be
compensated for by improvements in the other.'
Although this provides a reasonable description of NATO's current
posture, it is a view seldom defended in the explicit debate, particularly
among Americans. Central to the argument of those who stress the link
and worry about the threshold-virtually all of the Maintainers-is the
"firebreak" between conventional and nuclear combat, a different meta-
phor for what might be termed the threshold with the door closed. A
firebreak is a forest space denuded of vegetation so that a fire cannot
cross it into the part of the forest that has not been burned; the meta-
phorical firebreak is to keep a conventional war from jumping the lines
and consuming civilization in a general nuclear war.
24
But for the West Europeans, a better metaphor might be the "fire
door" at the threshold; fire doors are not locked, because people might
have to escape through them. In this case, the people at greatest risk are
the Germans. The American Four recognize German needs and fears as
the potential Achilles heel of No First Use and as the key issue to be
examined in their proposed study:
In such an exploration, the role of the Federal Republic of Germany
must be central. Americans too easily forget what the people of the
Federal Republic never can: that their position is triply exposed in a
fashion unique among the large industrial democracies. They do not
have nuclear weapons; they share a long common border with the
Soviet empire; in any conflict on the central front, their land would
be the first battlefield... Having decisively rejected a policy of neu-
trality, the Federal Republic has necessarily relied on the nuclear
protection of the United States, and we Americans should recognize
that this relationship is not a favor we are doing our German friends,
but the best available solution of a common problem....
A policy of no-first-use would not and should not imply an abandon-
ment of this extraordinary guarantee-only its redefinition. It would
still be necessary to be ready to reply with American nuclear weapons
to any nuclear attack on the Federal Republic, and this commitment
would in itself be sufficiently demanding to constitute a powerful
"Boyd Sutton, John X. Landry, Malcolm B. Armstrong, Howell M. Estes, and
Wesley K. Clark, "Strategic and Doctrinal Implications of Deep Attack Concepts for the
Defense of Central Europe," in Keith A. Dunn and William 0. Staudenmaier (eds.), MiWi-
tary Statee in Thmnition, U.S. Army War College, Carlisle Barracks, P., 1983, p. 78.
"The firebreak concept has existed since nuclear weapons wen first discussed pub-
licly It was formalized by Thomas Schelling in The Statv of Confer, Harvard
University Press, Cambridge, 1960, Appendix A.
i " "
I
115
demonstration that a policy of no-first-use would represent no aban-
donment of our German ally.'
Again resonances, undoubtedly heart-felt ones.
Few Maintainers, aside from the ten including Bundy and McNamara
who signed the follow-up article, take No First Use very seriously, even
as a study proposal. One reason is resonance to the strong negative reac-
tion from European Couplers. Even more important is the unlikelihood
of increasing conventional capabilities enough to support it, a need the
Four explicitly recognized. No First Use and related proposals, like
Halperin's, depend on either an increase of conventional capabilities or
an assessment that they are already sufficiently balanced. This is also
true for virtually any means of raising the threshold, in order to work,
they depend on conventional capabilities-improved, reassesed, or
rebalanced through arms control. Without such improvements or
reassessments, the Maintainer debate over the link and the threshold,
although central, is also rather theoretical, and the five Army officers'
description of the synergistic link between conventional and nuclear
capabilities will remain an accurate description of current reality.
Conventional Weapons
Senator Nunn's words, quoted at the head of this section, "The reason
we need to improve conventional deterrence is that the continued reli-
ance on the early use of nuclear weapons is diametrically opposed to the
national security interests of this country and the security interests of
our Western European allies," provide the central theme for the Main-
tainers' consideration of conventional weapons. The better we can
defend conventionally, the higher the threshold, the less likely we will
face the nuclear decision and, indeed, for the Maintainers more unani-
mously than the European Couplers, the stronger the deterrence of
Soviet conventional aggression.
A few Maintainers contend that we are really in pretty good shape
even now. Journalist Fred Kaplan sets up the standard view that "the
Russians... have an overwhelming advantage in conventional weapons,"
and then goes on to claim disagreement by Kaufmann and others,
who conclude that the view is simply wrong, at least highly exag-
gerated. "It's one of the great hoary myths of all time," says William
Kauf .... "I'm perfectly willing to say the balance of forces
isn't as good as I would like.... But it's not nearly as bad as a lot
25Bundy et aL., 1982, pp. 758-759.
n i-l iir'mil um =..
116
of people say, and the problems that are there aren't that big a deal
to fix"
2
Kaufmann has long been associated with this position. His own highly
detailed written analysis, however, was more carefully hedged and indi-
cated what he meant by "problems that... aren't that big a deal to fix":
[The] Pact's ground forces dwarf those of NATO in the number of
divisions, tanks, armored fighting vehicles, and artillery pieces. If
these numbers are approximately correct, what reasons exist for
questioning the ability of the Pact to conquer NATO in a conven-
tional war and to do so with great dispatch? One reason, quite sim-
ply, is that what are known as static comparisons, while not
irrelevant to a military analysis, are only one factor among the many
that must be taken into account.... Soviet strategists ... may have
little choice but to seek quick results through blitzkrieg tactics. Cer-
tainly the ground forces as presently constituted are not well suited
to extended campaigns of offense or defense.
27
Kaufmann is more upbeat than most of those who assess NATO's
ability to resist a conventional attack conventionally. It may be a case of
half-full or half-empty, but the more frequent view is that expressed by
Senator William Roth (Rep., Del.), co-sponsor of the Nunn Amendment:
The current status of NATO's conventional defenses insures that, in
the event of war, we, the NATO alliance, will be obliged to escalate
quickly to the nuclear level. According to General Rogers, such esca-
lation should be conceived in terms of days, not weeks.O
Roth's statement does not necessarily contradict Kaufmann's analysis.
The military analyst says we need some fixes, but even without them we
may well have enough strength to make the Soviets think hard about
their prospects at the conventional level, and probably to deter them; the
Senator's remarks suggest that without fixes, in a situation where the
* Warsaw Pact is not deterred and does attack, our conventional defenses
are likely to crack quickly.
* Both Kaufmann's analysis and the Senate debate stem from the first
half of the 1980s, however. The Alliance has not stood still since then,
but how much progress has been made is conjectural. Senator Carl Levin
(Dem., Mich.), for example, had backed the 1984 Nunn Amendment to
force the improvement of NATO conventional defenses; but in 1988, as
Chairman of the Subcommittee on Conventional Forces and Alliance
SFed Kapla. "Analystc.: Soviet Force in Europe Exserated," Boston Globe, April
20, 1987, p. 2.
2Wiliam W. Kaufmann, "Nonnuclear Deterrence," in Steinbruner and Sigsl,
pp. 44-5M
2%8enator William Roth, Conreuiona Record, Senate, June 20, 1964, p. 87728
-- - - -- :
-'w
II
iI
117
Defense, he released a report pointing out the uncertainties surrounding
any measurement of conventional strength, and then stated as his own
view- "I believe an uneasy conventional balance exists today in Europe."
Uneasy as it was, he thought that the balance should suffice to deter
Soviet conventional attack.
3
Even so, the conventional belief about the conventional balance, not
necessarily in contradition to Levin's view, is that NATO remains
dangerously deficient. Part of the reason lies in the rubber stamp "In
this perilous moment in the history of the alliance;" NATO's officials
and analysts have always felt this way about conventional defense in the
years since Lisbon. And part is explained by General Rogers' 1987 state-
ment. "NATO has gotten stronger every year, because of commitments
that have been met, but when one looks at the gap between our force
capabilities and those of the Soviet Union and the Warsaw Pact, you find
that the gap has widened in every area of measurement we have."' This
throws into question the meaning of "getting stronger," but it describes a
standard belief.
The primary problem, according to General Rogers is:
our inability to sustain our forces adequately with trained manpower,
ammunition and war reserve materiel. This major deficiency-lack
of sustainability-is generally ignored by those persons who maintain
that NATO can succeed conventionally. The problem is not that our
forces will not perform admirably at the General Defensive Positions
(GDP) (if appropriate advantage has been taken of warning times);
they will. The problem is that they cannot fight long enough through
lack of adequate sustainment.
31
In recent years at least, lack of sustainability has been widely per-
ceived as NATO's greatest weakness. Greater allied contributions to
sustainability by increasing the stock of munitions available was the first
of the two substantive demands of the Nunn Amendment (in addition to
the financial demand of annual increases in defense spending, the
burden-sharing issue, which will be discussed below). The second
demand was for greater European support for U.S. tactical air reinforce-
ment. Were the two not achieved according to numerical criteria speci-
fied in the Amendment, 90,000 U.S. troops (somewhat less than one-
U.8. Senator Carl Levin press release, announcing his report, Bowu the Ban
Cout Realtcaly Am ing Oe Conventional Baance in Burope, Senate Subcommittee
on Conventional Forces and Alliance Defens, Washington, D.C., January 20, 198&
3'General Bernard Ropr in conversation Ian Davidson," transcript of a recorded
documentary, British Broadcasting Corporation, London, May 13, 1987, p. 14.
3
1
plp% "NATO's StrateW. An Undervalued Currency," p. 6.
.. . . ...
118
third of the total) were to be withdrawn from Europe in three annual
increments.
32
In addition to these enforceable requirements, the bill listed as specific
needs to fill specific gaps in conventional capabilities: improvements in
air base defenses; increased trained manpower levels, particularly
reserves; increasing war reserve material, improvements in
mine/countermine capability; and improvements in offensive counter air
capability.
33
The amendment did not pass. It came close, but Senator
Nunn did not press it after 1984. Three years later, he reported some
improvement, but remained an armed agnostic:
Although signs of progress in this area are encouraging, we must
recognize that much remains to be done if NATO is actually to meet
the goals it has set for itself. NATO has less than a superb record in
following through on its force commitments, so I am in a sense still
watching and waiting to see if my amendment should remain on the
shelf.
34
Each authority has his own set of NATO shortfalls, each time frame
has its own. Kaufmann's come close to those of the Nunn Amendment,
35
as do those of three retired officers and one civilian expert who provided
specific proposals in 1985 for a European Security Study sponsored by
the American Academy of Arts and Sciences.
36
A year later, Washington
analyst Philip Karber termed "marginal" with an "ominous trend"
NATO's anti-armor capabilities and its ability to strike deep i la
FOFA.
37
In 1987, Anthony Cordesman of the Armed Forces Journal
paralleled Karber on NATO anti-armor deficiencies and long-distance
strike capability, but also listed: maldeployment among national sectors
on the central front; air and tactical missile defense capability; Naval
forces and anti-submarine warfare; lines of communication, logistics,
munitions, and war reserves (although reporting recent progress); and
32
The Nunn Amendment, Congressional Record, Senate, June 20, 1984, p. S7721.
3Ibid.
34
Senator Sam Nunn, Speech to the DMS Symposium on Industrial Cooperation
within NATO, Brussels, April 13, 1987, p. 7.
35
Kaufmann, pp. 44-58.
S
30
General Andrew J. Goodpaster, General Franz-Joseph Schulze, Air Chief Marshall
Sir Alasdair Steedman, and Dr. William J. Perry, Strengthening Conventional Deterrence
in Europe: A Program for the 1980s, The European Security Study Report of the Special
Panel, Westview Press, Boulder, 1985, pp. rv-xvi. Although both the overall group and
the panel of experts are European-American, the study comes up in the Maintainer sec-
tion because it was American-sponsored,
37
Philip A. Karber, "NATO Doctrine and NATO Operational Priorities: The Central
Front and the Flanks: Part I," in International Institute for Strategic Studies, Adelphi
Paper 207, table p. 16.
L _ - . .
119
C31.38 And Defense Secretary Weinberger chose to stress the "disadvan-
tage in the capability to generate adequately trained and equipped
reserves quickly to stop a Warsaw Pact breakthrough along the East.
West Border."M
Underlying it all is a general belief among Maintainers that it cer-
tainly would be nice to move a little way toward matching Warsaw Pact
numbers in manpower and weapons, but that it simply is not going to
happen. Thomson quotes another analyst: "Andrew Hamilton provides
a rationale for an additional 20-45 equivalent heavy combat divisions
which are stronger divisions than the average NATO division today,"
4
0
and without endorsing anything that substantial, then goes on to set
aside the possibility for any such change: "In any case, conventional
deterrence would require substantial force growth. That simply is not in
the cards."
4
' Thomson's own modest recommendations stress improve-
ments in the NATO planning process as being at least as important as
many of the proposed substantive fixes.
The point is not the disagreements among the officials and analysts;
there is rather more agreement on specific deficiencies than one might
expect. Rather, what is important here is the strong consensus that
several things are wrong, and at least some of them must be fixed if we
are to mount a conventional defense that is either going to stymie War-
saw Pact aggression or raise the threshold for the decision to go nuclear.
The consensus includes such optimists as Kaufmann and Senator Levin.
If major conventional improvements are not in the cards, one reason
lies in the questions: How much will it cost to fix these things? Will such
sums be forthcoming? Who is to pay? Like the needs, these are classical
issues dating back to Lisbon. The debate over burden-sharing will be
discussed in the section on the U.S. Commitment. As for 'How much?"
the Nunn Amendment demanded a 3 percent per year increase, which
was the ante agreed to by the NATO membership under Carter adminis-
tration prodding in 1977, but hardly adhered to religiously thereafter. In
1982, General Rogers upped it a bit, asking a 4 percent increase per year
for six years.
42
The Nunn requirement can be estimated at slightly below $10 billion a
j reAnthony H. Cordesman, "Alliance Requirements and the Need for Conventional
Forme Improvements," in James Thomson and Uwe Nerlich (e&.), Conventional Arm.
Control and the Security of Europe, Weaeview Press, Boulder, 1988
39Ca0par W. Weinberger, "Facing Reality on NATO Security," Los Arneles Timue,
September 13, 1987, Part V, p. 5.
'From Andrew Hamilton, "Redressing the Conventional Balance: NATO'. Reerve
Military Manpower," International Security, Summer 1985.
4
1
Thomaon, "Strategic Choices," p. 21.
4
Bernard W. Rogers, "The Atlantic Alliance: Preecriptiona for a Difficult Dcade,"
Foreign Afflairs, Summer 1982, p. 116.
120
year, the Rogers request at slightly more than $10 billion." Other propo-
sae for other packages price out at anywhere from $5 to $20 billion.
None of these costing efforts is very meaningful, however. When Carter
and Nunn's 3 percent a year has been reached only sporadically, and
Rogers' 4 percent not at all, there seems little reason to expend major
efforts to price out what is really needed. The Alliance has known about
and debated its deficiencies for 35 years, and for that length of time it has
estimated what it would cost to fill the deficiencies, and neither the debates
nor the estimates have been taken seriously enough for anyone to put up a
major portion of the funds.
Nor does any Maintainer believe that substantial increases are more
likely now than in the past. Thomson's appraisal of why "it is not in the
cards," in his words, would receive little dissent:
The money and manpower will not be available, especially in Europe,
which would have to contribute the lion's share of the resources
needed for conventional deterrence. Although NATO nations report-
edly did better in meeting the 3 percent real growth goal in 1984 than
in the previous few years, the long-term trend in Europe is toward
tighter defence budgets, including in Britain and Germany, the Euro-
pean countries with the largest defence efforts.... Prospects are
slim to zero that Europe's continued economic stagnation will be
ended by an extended period of great economic growth that would
permit decisive increases in defence efforts. In any case, the second
factor would militate against the defence sector becoming the benefi-
ciary of economic gains. Despite all the efforts of the United States
and of their own political leaders to "educate" them, European pub-
lics do not feel an imminent threat to their survival. Only an
extended period of substantially increased East-West tensions,
clearly the fault of the USSR, is likely to change the situation."
Since this 1986 writing, the Gramm-Rudman budget limitations have
closed down what little chance there might have been of "decisive
increases" on the part of the United States, Europe has not begun an
"extended period of economic growth," and the Reykjavik meeting and
the zero-zero agreement, whatever their ultimate effects on the conven-
tional balance, do not presage any "extended period of substantial East-
West tensions."
Lacking the political or economic support to move straight ahead
toward substantially stronger conventional capabilities, the Maintainers
have been increasingly attracted to the technological and strategic de-
vices that many European Couplers have questioned. They are also
questioned by some Maintainers, but the support-to-skepticism ratio is
uThis is based on Kaufmann's 1983 esmate of total NATO spending of $262 bil.
lion a year (Kaufmann, p. 79), raised to $300 billion for subsequent inflation.
"Thomson, "Strstegi Choices," pp. 21-23.
z t.
121
higher west of the Atlantic. The debate over strategic expedients has a
history going back almost as far as the other issues raised by the conven-
tional balance; even the technological fixes have been discussed for
nearly twenty years.
Richard DeLauer, former Under Secretary of Defense for Research
and Engineering, believes that the time has come for the "emerging tech-
nologies" to play a major role in righting the conventional balance:
The new technologies have... now reached the point where their
insertion into the military inventory of the NATO forces is readily at
hand. It is only by the vigorous pursuit of these technologies and the
related advanced warfare concepts that the Alliance can be expected
to overcome the vast numerical superiority enjoyed by the Warsaw
Pact forces.*
The enthusiasm is not limited to DeLauer, who had an official and
professional responsibility for introducing the new technologies into the
U.S. defense establishment. With the exception of Kaufmann, each of
the authorities quoted above on the deficiencies of NATO's conventional
capabilities included the new technologies as a significant part of the
solution; for the four experts of the European Security Study, and for
Cordesman, the technological possibilities were central.
Washington defense analyst and former Army officer Steven Canby,
however, expresses deep doubts about the new technologies, going far
beyond the issues of timing and net contribution expressed by the Euro-
pean skeptics and some Maintainers as well:
America's weapons have become too costly and too difficult to main-
tain because of systemic problems in the way they are designed and
procured. Many are militarily questionable.... America designs its
weapons for engineers and the Soviets design theirs for soldiers....
Our defense establishment is so fascinated by technology and one-
on-one duels that it loses sight of real combat, and often of the laws
of physics. Too many of our new systems are overrefined and unable
to operate against adaptive opponents in unpredictable
environments-the conditions that make war as much art as sci-
ence
. 6
Based on this philosophy, Canby mounts a heavy attack on SHAPE's
FOFA strategy. The strategy itself is described by Sutton, Landry,
Armstrong, Estes, and Clark (the five Army analysts quoted above with
regard to conventional-nuclear force integration):
'Richard D. DeLauer, "Emerging Technologies and their Impact on the Conventional
Deterrent," in Pierre, The Convenial Defense of Europe, pp. 42-44.
'Steven L. Canby, "High-Tech, High-Fail Defense," Los Angeles Tines, September
16, 1985, Part II, p. 5.
tI
m~li h a N_ i , |-
122
The SHAPE concept seeks to locate and track Warsaw Pact forces
during their entire process of deployment, from garrison to battlefield
commitment, and to attack them when and where they are most
vulnerable. The concept aims at exploiting particularly critical
enemy vulnerabilities in the reinforcement process, the rigidity of his
planning for an echeloned offense, the density of forces along limited
attack routes, and critical transportation facilities.
17
Canby attacks it from all directions:
Emerging technologies applied to the deep attack of Follow-on Forces
(FOFA) cannot be effective, in principle or practice. FOFA is a con-
cept beyond the capabilities of technology. Its infeasibility tran-
scends the many limitations of the specific equipment proposed. It is
necessarily a preprogrammed, deterministic system. Such systems
cannot operate in uncongenial, adaptative and unpredictable environ-
ment....
[Tihe new technologies fail on four counts: Technology can be a
trap; The Soviet operational method has been incorrectly analysed,
Technical and operational feasibility are not synonymous; Counter-
measures exist....
The concept rests on a survivable "top-down" command, control and
communications system, plus detailed pre-planning and timing of
reinforcements....
For the deep attack technologies, five problems exist: Cost; Equip-
ment Reliability; Equipment vulnerability; System complexity;,
Flawed logic.'
It seems probable that Canby's strictures would extend slightly less
strongly to the Army's AirLand Battle, which the five Army analysts
compare to SHAPE's FOFA. Both are "deep battle" concepts, depending
on air strikes well behind the immediate area of ground combat, but Air-
Land Battle is less "top-down" than FOFA and might thus meet Canby's
objections better:
AirLand Battle thrives on the early allocation of airpower to support
the ground commander, a process which reduces the extent of cen-
tralized control and application; the SHAPE concept, however, plans
for more traditional use of arpwer through centralized air allocation
and application theater-wide.
Jonathan Dean points out that AirLand "could involve use of nuclear
as well as conventional weapons in strikes deep into Warsaw Pact
47SUtton et al., p. 66.
ftven L. Canby, "New Conventional Force Technology and the NATO-Warmw
Pact Balance: Part I," in International Institute for Strategic Studies, New Techolog
and Western Security Pokcy Part II, Adelphi Paper 198, London, pp. 7-13.
498-tton et al., p. 76.
In II ev:LCab, Nw ovntoalFr eI holg and th ~ullNilAO-Warmn ulsamw I mlo~ m
123
territory in response to Pact attack," and therefore terms FOFA "less
far-reaching." He also says that although FOFA calls for initial conven-
tional deep strikes, "for the most part, their intended range would be
considerably less than in the Air-Land Battle concept-100 kilometers or
less.
"
' In any case, Dean opposes both strategies: "Although they may
be conceived by their supporters as a purely defensive response to possi-
ble Warsaw Pact attack, if deployed in large numbers, these weapons can
be used for attack."
5
'
The third in the triad of deep strategies is the "counteroffensive" of
Samuel Huntington, Director of the Harvard Center for International
Affairs. This differs from the other two in that it contemplates a distinct
ground offensive against the East, with objectives that are more political
than the other two purely military designs, and with the explicit intent to
threaten the Soviets' East European bloc.
A strategy of conventional retaliation in the form of a prompt offen-
sive into Eastern Europe would help to deter Soviet military action
against Western Europe.... The logical extension of the forward
defense concept is to move the locus of battle eastward into East
Germany and Czechoslovakia.... To date the Soviets have been
free to concentrate all their planning and forces on retaliatory moves
into West Germany. A Western retaliatory strategy would compel
them to reallocate forces and resources to the defense of their satel-
lites and thus to weaken their offensive thrust.
5 2
As has been discussed, the Huntington concept upsets many European
Couplers on political grounds. Keith Dunn of the U.S. National Defense
University and William Staudenmaier of the Army War College object to
the strategy on military grounds as well:
Whether considered in terms of suitability, feasibility, flexibility or
acceptability, the concept of a conventional retaliatory offensive does
not appear to offer a credible alternative to NATO's current strategy.
As a war-fighting strategy it is unsuitable because it does not provide
a decisive use of military force.... Nor is it feasible.... [By]
neglecting to account for the Soviet second strategic echelon, it woe-
fully underestimates the allied force required to implement it.... In
terms of flexibility, the concept depends on the Warsaw Pact to
launch its invasion in a specific way that will play into NATO's
hands.
51
50Jonathan Dean, Watershed in Europe. Dismantling the East-West Military Confron.
tat/on, D.C. Heath, Lexington, Mass., 1987, pp. 63-U4.
511bid., p. 66.
"28amuel P. Huntington, "The Renewal of Strategy," in Samuel P. Huntington (9d),
The Str atei Imperative, Ballinger, Cambridge, 1982, pp. 21-23.
"Keith A. Dunn and William 0. Staudenmaier, "The Retaliatory Offensive and
Operational Realities in NATO," Surviva/, May/June 1985, p. 11&.
L . . . . . . . . .
1241
This is followed by a summary paragraph quoted, with emphasis, by Gen-
eral Rogers, the progenitor of the FOFA alternative, himself:
Besides, and possibly most importantly, if NATO were able to adopt
all the force structure changes [to which this SACEUR would add
-and sustainability needs-] that would be required to make the retali-
atory strategy work, there would be no need to change NATO's stra-
tegy. Defence and deterrence would be ensured without the need to
endorse a politically and operationally risky course."
In sum, each of the three forward strategies has its advocates among
the Maintainers, and each receives far more detailed military analysis
than among the Couplers; but none commands a consensus. In case
NATO's conventional defenses were actually called upon to resist a Pact
attack, elements of FOFA in particular would probably be used, but in
their current and prospective states, none of the three alternatives is
viewed by any of the debaters as close to a complete substitute for the
current strategy or even a major strategic change. Nor does a consensus
view the emerging technologies themselves as bases for such a change,
although these do have their strong advocates.
The other end of the strategic spectrum, "Defensive Defense," is not
taken very seriously by the Maintainers. General Rogers disposes of it
quickly-
The concept is beset with inadequacies: it would leave the West
vulnerable to blackmail from the threat of overwhelming conven-
tional force, to say nothing of the nuclear threat; the concept pro-
vides no convincing deterrent to aggression; and it could take effect
primarily after NATO territory had been occupied. Finally, this con-
cept, with no means of ejecting the enemy from NATO territory, is
void of hope for our people.... Once in possession of NATO terri-
tory, it is unlikely that the Soviet Union could be persuaded to leave
by the very limited range of offensive options offered by the type of
forces associated with this concept.'
And Thomson relates it to another concept in a way calculated to make
both sides of the pair quite uncomfortable:
All the suggested alternatives [to current NATO strategy] have
greater military, technical or financial problems than the current
concept. This includes some of the most recent popular notions,
whether they be strategic defenses or their intellectual brother-
"defensive defenses.""
"Rogers, "NATO's Strategy. an Undervalued Currency," p. 14.
5"Ibid., p. 13.
"Jameo Thomson, "The Arms Control Challenge to the Alliance," Address to the
North Atlantic Asaembly in Plenary Session, Oslo, September 25, 1987, p. 3.
- ii :- ." ' '
i i ii i i []sin mia mas im H.
125
What the conventional force debate comes down to, then, is that all
the Maintainers stress a need for greater capabilities if the threshold is
to be raised (and almost all are anxious to raise it); they recognize the
economic and related constraints that make straight-line increases
impossible; some see a way out through more or less radical fixes; but no
such fix commands a consensus and perhaps not a majority. And their
Coupler partners on the other side of the Atlantic are much less
interested anyhow.
All of the Maintainers' conventional debate thus far examined, just as
virtually all of the Coupler's parallel debate, concerns the Central front.
The Americans, although sometimes concerned with the role of the
Northern flank in protecting the sea lanes to central Europe, seldom
bring it into explicit discussion, although Norwegian Defense Minister
and analyst Holst does get at least as much attention in the United
States as in central Europe.
One brief analysis of issues both north and south has been presented
by Karber. His general conclusion about the importance of the Northern
flank to NATO as a whole parallels Hoist's:
A successful defence in the North is a prerequisite for NATO's con-
ventional prospects in the Centre. This area is more than a flank. It
is the guardian of Europe's link to American reinforcement and sup-
ply.
57
And he provides an upbeat analysis of the Norwegian and allied efforts in
that country, but contrasts it with the southern part of the Northern
flank, where Danish efforts are weak and German defenses are diluted by
other demands on both naval and land forces.
5
M
So far as the Southern flank is concerned, he suggests that it too is
primarily a naval problem, with the issues here being as much political as
military, stressing particularly the problems raised by the Greek-Turkish
dispute.
5
0 These views, presented at the IISS annual meeting of 1985
were generally confirmed at the 1987 annual meeting in Barcelona, the
theme of which was the Mediterranean. In spite of all the political and
other problems, however, Robert O'Neill's conference summary reported
that: "The most important single observation of [the committee on
Mediterranean security) was that the balance of forces between NATO
and the Warsaw Pact in the Mediterranean favoured the West."00
5
7
Karbor,
p. 16.
5Ibid., pp. 18-19.
Ibid, p. 21.
wRobet O'NeiI, Concluding Remarka to the Twenty-Ninth Annual Confernce of
the International Institute for Strategic Studies, Barcelona, September 1987, p. 12.
126
The military issues on both flanks resemble watery reproductions of
the issues on the Central front, but they demand much less attention.
The political problems on the Southern flank are unique to that area.
What they share with the rest of NATO, however, is that the political
issues may well overwhelm military needs and strategies.
ALLIANCE POLITICAL ISSUES
The U.S. Commitment
Journalist Drew Middleton, long-since retired as military columnist
for the New York Times, wrote in 1987:
Should the United States lose Central America or the Middle East,
military survival would be difficult but far from impossible. The loss
of NATO Europe, on the other hand, would leave America virtually
without owerful allies and the many billions of dollars invested in
the
area.
I
This is the old-time religion. It reflects Dean Acheson's 1959 "The most
important objective today... is to hold together those sources of
%strength we possess. These sources are North America and Western
Europe." It is present in full evangelical strength in Senator Nunn's
1984 "we want to be part of NATO... we are going to continue to be part
of NATO" no matter what our European allies do, quoted at the head of
this section. It underlies the cautions expressed by many Maintainers,
exemplified by former Defense Secretary Schlesinger's "Therefore, all of
our public comments should be carefully gauged according to the realiza-
tion that the fundamental defense of Western freedom lies in preserving
the cohesion of the alliance."'
2
This section examines the Maintainers' restatement of the U.S. com-
mitment to NATO and the reasons for it; the resonance of their views as
they reflect and try to calm West European fears; "burden-sharing" as a
core issue; and various Maintainer proposals for restructuring the Alli-
ance and the American role in order to preserve both.
In spite of the fears of many European Couplers, the importance and
the preservation of the Alliance remain the central tenets of the Main-
tainers, and the Maintainers remain very much the majority of American
O
1
Drsw Middloton, "U.S. Is Too Faer for Miusile Pact with Soviet," Air Frm
Tima, July 6, 1987, p. 28.
RJamn Schlesinger, quoted by Senator William Cohen (Rep., Maine), Css~ional
BeeordL Senaft, June 20, I964, p. 87746.
ii
... , . , ". :] .. ,,. ;,., '., . .
i * (
debaters and American voters.' One underlying reason for this devotion
is suggested by Schlesinger: "Europeans are, in the view of Americans,
good people; thus they are deserving of our protection. That protection
does not arise out of a sense of Realpolitik."
6
'
Empathy does not make a strong political case for the spending of
hundreds of billions of dollars, however, so Ambassador to West Ger-
many Richard Burt continues to depend on Realpolitik in his defense
against both the Removers and those Maintainers who want to reduce
the size of American forces in NATO:
They are wrong. Maintaining a free, independent and democratic
Western Europe remains the pre-eminent strategic interest of the
United States. In global terms, the loss of Western Europe would be
as significant as the Chinese-Soviet split-with America on the losing
end.
Even though the Nunn Amendment did not pass, the 1984 debate
marked a trough in support for NATO. A few years later, the Congres-
sional commitment seemed stronger. In December of 1986, NATO
Ambassador Abshire reported that:
The good news for NATO is that a new partnership has been formed
with the Congress-after some Americans in the past had lost
patience with the Europeans never coming to grips with conventional
defense improvement. The new pro-NATO network feels that a new
attitude at NATO and in the European capitals has emerged, built
not only around the old-fashioned approach to arms cooperation of a
two-way street, but on a new coalition approach toward better return
on defense expenditures."
And in 1987, Senator Nunn, the leader among Americans who in
Abehire's phrase "had lost patience," used a few words quoted above to
express conditional satisfaction with NATO efforts since his 1984
amendment nearly passe& "signs of progress... are encouraging...
much remains to be done.... NATO has less than a superb record in fol-
lowing through." On the other side of Capitol Hill, the House of
Representatives in the spring of 1987 passed a resolution opposing reduc-
tion of U.S. troop levels in NATO.
0Surveys show that about two-thirds of the American electorate support NATO. The
residual included "undecided." as well as opponents.
"James R. Schlesinger, "An American Perspective," speech reprinted in Co'Wessional
Record, June 20, 1984, p. 87748.
G
5
,,ichard Burt, "Why American Forces Should Remain in Europe," Inenatona
Herald Tribune, March 25, 1987, p. 6 (reprinted from the Wahiwon Post).
"David M. Abshire, in Atlantic Institute for International Affairs, Mnqfv Ent.y
Into the 21st Centuy, Paris, 1966, p. 23.
128
This new warmth undoubtedly stemmed in part from increased Euro-
pean efforts, although, as suggested by Nunn, they still had a very long
way to go in 1987. Nonetheless, it may seem paradoxical that at the
same time that Reykjavik and zero-zero raised West European fears of
American abandonment to a crescendo, American Maintainers appeared
surer of the U.S. commitment than they had for some time.
Rather than paradox, it is cause and effect. Because the Maintainers
place the preservation of NATO near the top of their list of priorities,
they respond rapidly in resonance to West European views that seem to
threaten the Alliance: It is in the American interest to preserve the Ai-
ance; therefore it is in the American interest to satisfy the European
interests in the Alliance.
Georgetown University Professor Stephen Wrage, for example,
resonates with the Europeans against the Reagan administration:
Our actions set off the debate, yet now we are ignoring it. To the
Reagan administration, Europeans' concerns are inconvenient obsta-
cles in the drive toward and agreement with the Soviets. Reagan's
advisers calculate that any agreement, no matter what its conse-
quences for NATO, would be a foreign-policy triumph that wouldjput
the Iran-contra debacle behind them and help them finish strong.'
And Schlesinger, having served in the cabinet under both parties, is in a
position to resonate even more broadly: "Europeans, quite understan-
dably, have been irritated by what appeared to be the erratic weakness of
Jimmy Carter, and they have been almost equally irritated by what
appeared to be the erratic strength of President Reagan.
" 6
s And even
traditional conservative eminence William Buckley takes a stand 180
degrees away from neoconservatives Kristol and Krauss. They had
turned from Europe, he still resonated.
So Secretary of State George Shultz told the NATO commander-in-
chief to shut up about his objections to the INF agreement....
What General Rogers said... was that the projected swap means,
very simply, that our deterrent force in Europe is weakened....
That [leaves] us to contemplate this single point implicit in the pro-
jected deal, namely that its purpose is not military but political, and
that the advantages to be gained politically outweigh those lost mili-
tarily. On this point, General Rogers... tells us that many Euro-
pean leaders ruefully regret the treaty to which they are now commit-
ted but that they are "hoist on their own petard." ...
s
7
8tephen D. Wrap, "U.S. Finds Itself Dealt Out of European Debate," Los An ke
Times, August 26, 1987, Part II, p. 5.
Schlesinger, p. 87749.
man mn
u
laamn mm Ni lullInuml .a
mm
raiu nnmm m nu n In
129
Our allies are left in a bind, and it is dismaying to contemplate with
such icy detachment that, in the current controversy, Secretary
Shultz is Neville Chamberlain, General Rogers, Winston Churchill
Buckley does not supply a 1930s analog for Ronald Reagan.
7
0
Like Schlesinger's *Europeans... are good people," cited earlier, reso-
nance has its limits as a prop for policy. The major limit in the United
States is the feeling on the part of many Americans that the West Euro-
peans are letting us pay for their defense, either refusing to carry their
share or at least not volunteering to do so as long as "Uncle Sap (a pre
World War II isolationist epithet) is willing to pay it all. Although Sena-
tor Nunn avoided this theme in the Senate debate over his amendment,
stressing instead the need to reinforce conventional capabilities in order
to raise the threshold, many of his colleagues focused on "burden-
sharing." Senator Levin, for example, used several measures to estimate
European contributions to the common defense:
Despite their 1977 commitment to increase defense spending annu-
ally by 3 percent after excluding inflation [sic], our NATO allies had
an average 2.8-percent increase in real growth in their defense bud-
gets in 1981. In 1982, that average went down to 2.3 percent real
growth. In 1983 it declined to about 2 percent real growth. In 1984,
it is tentatively, projected that the average real growth for non-
United States NATO nations will be only between 1.2 and 1.7 per-
cent....
On a per capita basis, the United States far exceeds all its allies in
defense spending. We spent $819 per American citizen in
1982; ... our nearest ally-financially--was the United Kingdom,
which spend $467 per capita.... In 1982, we spent 6.5 percent of our
GDP [Gross Domestic Product] on defense. Other economically
strong allies spending far less were West Germany-3.4 percent; the
Netherlands-3.2 percent; Norway-3 percent; Denmark-2.5 per-
cent; and Canada-2.1 percent.
71
Nunn's tentative agreement that at least they're beginning to try
became more typical in subsequent years. Nonetheless, in 1987
Congresswoman Patricia Schroeder (Dem., Colo.) offered a bill similar to
the Nunn Amendment, putting it into the context of the balance-of-
payments deficit, which had become a major issue by that year:
'*William F. Buckley, Jr., "Generals Can Be Right," National Review, July 31, 1987,
. p.698.
VEdward VM?
7
1
8entor Carl Levin, Congrional Record, Senate, June 20, 1984, pp. 87768-87770.
1:%
180
Of the $300 billion the United States spends on defense, something
more than half, say, $150 billion, goes for NATO obligations Our
trade deficit is running at about $175 billion a year. What we are
spending to protect our allies is about the same amount by which we
are losing the trade war.7
Schroeder's effort was taken less seriously than Nunn's because she
lacked both his authority as senior Senate Democrat on defense and his
acknowledged expertise. And more generally, in spite of the trade prob-
lems of the late 1980s, post-Reykjavik resonance made the American
burden-sharing attack much weaker in 1987 than in 1984. General
Rogers, for example, without giving up his exhortation for more Alliance
conventional support all around, told an interviewer in 1987:
The fact is that those nations in Western Europe within this alliance
are not getting a just credit for the amount of the burden they do
share.... On average ... I find that the Western European nations
are bearing a fair share of the collective security burden but the fact
is, if we wish peace with freedom, we're going to have to spend more.
And I can tell you, if we accept these agreements ... go to both zero,
zero, zero, zero, levels, there's a major cost associated with that.7
Perhaps the best-hedged statement on burden-sharing is that
presented by New Republic editor Morton Kondracke:
The burden-sharing movement could lead to a stronger set of alli-
ances and a stronger U.S. economy-if conventional forces are built
up on our side or the Soviets can be induced to reduce theirs, and if
Japan can be induced to spend its surpluses on economic develop-
ment.
74
This will require sophisticated diplomacy on the part of the
United States. Unjudicious ally-bashing, however, will only help
Mikhail Gorbachev separate the United States from its friends.
75
For the short run, this might well command a substantial consensus
among the Maintainers, at least in their less cantankerous and political
moments. Over a longer period, however, the bottom line may be that
put forth by economist Charles Cooper, who was the Ford
administration's Assistant Secretary of the Treasury for International
Affairs. Cooper reflects that after the administration coming to power in
72
Patricia Schroeder, "Burt's Right on One Thing. Allies Must Pay More,* Interna-
tional Herald Tribwe, October 14, 1987, p. 4. (reprinted from the Washington Post).
7"General Bernard Rogers in conversation with Ian Davidson," p. 9.
74
Tha Japan theme frequently and the Third World economic development theme
occasionally have appeared in the burden-sharing debates analyzed here, but they have
been excluded from the analysis because they would take it off on tangents leading away
from the NATO debate as such. Another irony of 1987 was that fear of a transatlantic
trade war was muted somewhat when both sides of NATO joined in Japan-bashing.
75Morton M. Kondracke, "Make 'ea Pay," New Republic, October 12, 1987, p. 17.
, - . . .... . . -
131
1989 has shaken down, a reduction of the U.S. commitment to NATO
"seems to me almost inevitable. Some forty years on, the status quo in
Europe looks increasingly anachronistic and unstable as U.S. worldwide
and strategic commitments outstrip U.S. capacity to sustain them."
7T
The longer-run burden-sharing issue is also one of the roots of a
number of proposals for a much more thoroughgoing restructuring of
NATO, eventuating in a lesser American role. Two similar ones, from
Carter administration National Security Advisor Zbigniew Brzezinski
and Nixon-Ford administration Secretary of State Henry Kissinger,
have been taken very seriously in Europe-as a threat. They have been
taken somewhat less seriously in the United States.
Although some West Europeans lump these two proposals together
with the Withdrawers' efforts to get out of NATO entirely, and also with
Senator Nunn's pressures for the Alliance to live up to its stated commit-
ments and strategies, Brzezinski and Kissinger, Kristol and Krauss, and
Nunn really suggested three quite different directions. Some similarities
do exist: the Brzezinski and Kissinger proposals, like Kristol's and
Krauss's to get out, are based in part on the belief that the European
members of NATO are not carrying their fair share of either the burdens
or the responsibilities of an Alliance that was conceived under vastly dif-
ferent economic and political circumstances. And, like Nunn, Brzezinksi
and Kissinger are concerned about the U.S. nuclear deterrent, although
perhaps more with the possibility that the American commitment is no
longer sufficiently credible, and cannot be made credible, than with the
Senator's fear that the threshold is too low.
But the two former executive policymakers differ from the With-
drawers in that they want a continued strong American commitment,
conventional and nuclear, to Western Europe; and they differ from Nunn
in that they want to restructure fundamentally rather than improve
within the current apparatus.
In his 1986 book, Brzezinski started out sounding rather like the
Withdrawers, but ended up quite differently:
It is clear that the allocations for the defense of Western Europe
represent a massively disproportionate share of the overall U.S. mili-
tary budget.... These unbalanced global deployments have more to
do with history than with strategy. They reflect neither the actual
estimates of the Soviet military threat nor a measure of each area's
relative geopolitical importance....
Until and unless the European members of NATO are prepared to
raise and maintain enough conventional forces to fight those of the
Soviet Union to a standstill, the U.S. strategic deterrent and the U.S.
"Personal communication.
W -t.
132 I
front-line forces that would become immediately engaged in combat
remain a vital component of the overall Western effort to deter war
in Europe.
Undoubtedly, some Europeans will claim that any redeployment of
any U.S. troops will weaken U.S. defenses... [but a] gradual reduc-
tion of approximately 100,000 troops would... free U.S. budgetary
and manpower resources for the flexibility needed to respond to other
geostrategic threats.
77
And a year later, he made the strength of the commitment to NATO
within his reduction proposal even more explicit:
The U.S. commitment to the defense of Europe will remain as strong
as ever strategically and politically, given the fact that large U.S.
forces will continue to be.deployed in Europe, even with some reduc-
tions. Moreover, the U.S. nuclear guarantee will also continue to
provide a clear demonstration of that enduring commitment. In
brief, in the years ahead U.S. and European security should and will
remain organically insoluble and strategically coupled.71
Brzezinski's book is an overall analysis of the U.S. worldwide objec-
tives and strategy. Kissinger's proposal focuses more specifically on
NATO and is more detailed in both its analysis and its proposals. He
first discussed it in 1979, and later laid it out systematically in a 1984
article in Time magazine:
Existing arrangements are unbalanced. When one country dominates
the alliance on all major issues-little incentive remains for a serious
joint effort to redefine the requirements of security or to coordinate
foreign policies.... An imbalance such as the one now existing can-
not be corrected by "consultation," no matter how meticulous....
Those who governed Europe in the early postwar years were still
psychologically of the era when Europe bestrode the world... The
new leaders were reared in an era when the U.S. was pre-eminent;
they find it politically convenient to delegate Europe's military
defense to us.... The change in the nature of European leadership
has been paralleled in the U.S. Our new elites do not reject NATO
any more than do their European counterparts. But for them, too,
the alliance is more a practical than an emotional necessity, more a
military arrangement than a set of common political purposes....
A continuation of existing trends is bound to lead to the demoraliza-
tion of the Western alliance. An explicit act of statesmanship is
needed to give new meaning to Western unity and a new vitality to
NATO.
77Zbigniew Bruzinuki, Game P/w, The Atlantic Monthly Press, Boston and New
York, 1986, pp. 171-181.
"Zbigniew grrzenski, "Peosmful Change in a Divided Europ," in Thomson and Nor-
lich.
133
Kissinger's proposed program includes European assumption of "the
major responsibility for ground defense;" switching of the jobs of NATO
Secretary-General and Supreme Allied Commander so that the political
job of Secretary-General would become an American one whereas
SACEUR would be a European; European responsibility for "arms con-
trol negotiations dealing with weapons stationed on European soil;" and
redeployent of some, but by no means all, American ground forces to
U.S. soil.79
Whatever the perceptions of some European Couplers, Kissinger, like
Brzezinski, is far from advocating any sort of withdrawal from NATO.
Indeed, in Kissinger's case there is some irony in the fact that three years
after his Time piece, when he feared that something rather less radical
than his proposals-the zero-zero INF agreement-was about to hit
NATO, he sounded all the alarms. In an article questioning zero-zero,
written with former President Nixon, they warned that "If we strike the
wrong kind of deal, we could create the most profound crisis of the North
Atlantic Treaty Organization alliance in its 40-year history.
"
Ms Of
Kissinger's devotion to NATO there can be no doubt.
Not that the restructuring proposals go uncriticized by other Main-
tainers. An unspoken criticism is implicit in the fact that proposals by
such eminent, experienced, and responsible people as Brzezinski and
Kissinger are not widely discussed. They are feared by Couplers, but not
discussed in detail in Europe; for better or worse, most American Main-
tainer officials and analysts have ignored them in favor of the immediate
tasks and crises.
New York Times columnist Flora Lewis provides a summary that
could be the last word in this particular variation of the structural con-
troversy. In contrast to Kissinger's mourning "the change in the nature
of European leadership" and parallel American leadership, she quotes
retiring NATO Secretary General Lord Carrington, and goes on from
there:
"I am of the World War H generation.... [T]he next secretary gen-
eral should be of the postwar generation." The observation goes
beyond personalities to the heart of NATO's problems, reflected in
an unusual outpouring of proposals from both Americans and Euro-
peans for drastic change in the structure of the alliance. Practically
all of the suggestions, from people such as Henry Kissinger, Zbieg-
mew Brzezinski, former French President Valery Giscard dT'staing
and former German Chancellor Helmut Schmidt, as well as less
famous figures, are impractieal, unreasonable, even out,....
79
Henry Kissinger, "A Plan to Reshape NATO," Time, March 5, 194, pp. 20-23.
URichard M. Nizon and Henry A. Kissinger, "To Withdraw Missiles We Must Add
Conditions," Lot Anps Time, April 26,1987, Part V, p. 1.
. ' .1'' J
imimmin la U a m n~mnem mm nm s s m nm mmu . - --
134
NATO is not out of date. Nor is the organization and operation of
the alliance. The conditions that led to its formation have not disap.
peared, and none of the ideas for structural change would improve it
or probably work as well. What it needs is stimulation to thought
and curiosity. What it gets from Western leaders is old rhetoric.8
1
The Maintainers share an unease about the state of the Alliance,
although not necessarily an unease that goes beyond the traditional "In
this perilous moment in the history of the alliance." They share no com-
mon analysis of causes or solutions. But what the American Maintainers
all do continue to share-which the European Couplers continue to
doubt-is a firm commitment to American assistance in the defense of
Western Europe.
The Europeans' Commitments to Themselves
Most Americans skirt the question of closer ties among the European
members of NATO, treating it as a matter for Europeans, within the
overall issues of the U.S. commitment and the structure of the Alliance
as a whole. Most Maintainers would welcome a shoring up of the "Euro-
pean pillar," some doubt the possibilities, and a few believe that creation
of a truly European structure would strengthen the entire Alliance.
Brzezinski and Kissinger fall into the last group; stronger European
organization is necessary for the greater responsibilities they would like
the West Europeans to assume.
Columnist Lewis expresses a typical Maintainer view. She observes
"new talk about more defense cooperation among Europeans. This is all
to the good, especially because there is little chance of an increase in con-
ventional European defense."
8 2
General Rogers hopes for that conven-
tional increase, but otherwise he comes out in about the same place:
(TIhe West Europeans have realized that they must take a greater
interest in their own defence-try to keep the strategic nuclear
umbrella of the United States, tied to the security of Western
Europe, but to do more to strengthen the West European pillar of the
Trans-Atlantic bridge, and I think that's a good thing. And you see
that in the WEU [West European Union]-you'll see it in the Euro-
group, and you'll see it just in the bilateral meetings... between
France and Germany and between France and the United Kingdom,
and I think that's a good thing because all of that is contributory to a
credible deterrent for NATO.... I don't think it's necessarily a
divergence of interest.... But I do think that [Reykiavik] had a sort
of an alarm clock effect here in Western Europe, it rang a few bells
lora Lewis, "The Doldrums at NATO," New York Tima, July 27, 1987, p. 19.
0Flora Lewis, Ratlng 'Doubh.Zero'," New York Time., September 27, 1987, p. 27.
... .. .......... ..................... T
135j
and made them think, you know we're going to have to do more for
ourselves.
5
Like the Couplers, most Americans focus on the Franco-German rela-
tionship. Analytically a few are upbeat. After interviewing Helmut
Schmidt, Joan Bingham of the Atlantic Institute presented her own
hopes:
The "German question" sends tremors through the Elys6e. The
French fear German dreams of reunification will lead to neutralism.
The time is ripe for .a new unified defense system such as Helmut
Schmidt described or another configuration with a Franco-German
nucleus. As it is unthinkable that France would agree to be militarily
reintegrated in NATO, this new entity would give her a chance for a
dominant leadership role in Europe. Always suspicious of the
Anglo-Saxon, de Gaulle would have applauded. A new American
adminis"tation should welcome any strengthening of the European
pillar of the Atlantic Alliance even if it should be outside U.S. mili-
tary command.8
But columnist William Pfaff, himself an advocate in the Brzezinski A
and Kissinger mode of "a necessary reassessment of burdens and respon-
sibilities in the alliance," is nonetheless skeptical about the prospects.
Also having interviewed Schmidt, he says of Schmidt's proposal for a
Franco-German alliance with a Frenchman in command-'
The Schmidt argument that France and West Germany should com-
bine to look after the defense of Europe is tenable as a military pro-
position. Is anyone going to do anything about it? The French
might. The West Germans won't. At least they show no sign, thus
far, of doing anything like this, or even of very seriously considering
it.
5
This assessment was made after the leaders of the Federal Republic had
begun to squirm under the pressures of the imminent zero-zero agree-
ment.
Particularly since zero-zero became real, West European cooperation
has become of interest to several American newspaper columnists.
Ernest Conine of the Los Angeles Times foresees an eventual separation
of Europe from the United States. (He is not, however, a Withdrawer,
anxious for it to come about. He just sees it coming as the result of exist-
ing trends.)
*%Generul Bernard Roges in conversation with Jm Davidson," p. 12.
"'Joan Bingham, -The Remurnce of Europe," NMahile Tennema, July 19, 1967,
Outlook Section, p. 3.
William Pfsf "urope: Toward Independent Defense?" lenoMMiond HeMld T-
bun., April 19, 1987, p. 6.
mmmmmm m mln I ,,~~wmm., I m . -,
186
[T]here is a distinct feeling of unease among European political
leaders and defense professionals, as well as among those with paci-
fist inclinations. The unease has several roots. For many young
Germans it stems from an active dislike of the United States and a
growing conviction that West Germany does not control its own des-
tiny. Fundamentally pro-alliance leaders resent the fact that
Western Europe's political influence has not grown in proportion to
its economic strength, and they know it won't as long as Europe
depends so heavily on the United States for its security. Perhaps
most important, there is a loss of faith in the quality of American
leadership. There is also concern, nourished by recent U.S.-Soviet
negotiations on arms control, that America has begun a process of
nuclear disengagement from Europe.
The bottom-line reality... is that present arrangements are no
longer consistent with economic and political realities-including the
fact that an economically strapped America may soon feel compelled
to reduce its commitments to Europe for the simple reason that it
can no longer afford them.0
Conine's reading of "European political leaders and defense profession-
als" is rather like French publisher Jimmy Goldsmith's reading of Ameri-
cans ranging from Kristol to Nunn, and indeed setting Goldsmith's
March 1987 column alongside Conine's July piece provides another
example of resonance, moving in the opposite direction from the
attempts on both sides of the Atlantic to bolster one another. The
reverse resonance can be seen in the mutual reading of negative experts
on each side, advocating separation in part because of fears of the other
side advocating it. Conine's observation that the West Europeans are
concerned "that America has begun a process of nuclear disengagement
from Europe" provides an example of his reading of the European read-
ing of an American movement-which most American Maintainers
would contend is not taking place.
Conine does not believe that anything is going to happen soon. His
lead sentence is "The 'Europeanization' of European defense is not yet
an idea whose time has come." Most Maintainers are not likely to think
much about coping with it until and unless its time does come.
The Rest of the World
In the summer of 1987, when the United States Navy recognized that
minesweeping was not among its capabilities and the State Department
appealed to our allies for assistance in the Persian Gulf, their initial
smJnset Conine, "Europe May Find It Can Go It Alone," Lo AnSel. Time, July 13,
1967, Part 1,p. 5.
AL ~ JR,
137
rejection induced angry reactions from within the United States. The
Chicago Sun-Times editorialized,
One after another, America's Western friends and allies have rejected
the Reagan administration's request for help with minesweeping in
the Persian Gulf, where last month a mine caused considerable dam-
9age to a tanker navigating under U.S. protection. The most severe
blow, the hardest to take, is the one from Britain. Also on the nay-
saying list are France, West Germany and the Netherlands.117
The allies did ultimately assist, but the initial demurrer and the Amer-
ican reaction took their place in a string of such events dating from ear-
lier Gulf incidents in the 1970s and going through the refusal of NATO
members other than Britain to allow the use of bases or transit rights for
the bombing of Libya.
In general, the indeterminate role of European NATO members in
supporting U.S. out-of-area activities has been an irritant, particularly
when Americans felt that the activities were in the mutual interest of the
members-e.g., the maintenance of the flow of Gulf oil, which went
mostly to Europe and Japan, and the punishment of terrorism, which hit
Europeans as much as Americans. The irritant, however, has had more
of an effect on public opinion as exemplified by the Sun-Times editorial
and on the Withdrawers than it has on the debate among the Main-
tainers.
Brzezinski's analysis sounds like a mild version of the Withdrawers':
Today, the United States is weakest where it is most vulnerable-
along the strategic front that poses the greatest risk of either a major
Soviet geopolitical thrust or an American-Soviet collision.... While
American power is tenuous along the third strategic front in
southwest Asia, the United States still allocates more than half its
total military spending for the defense of the first front in Europe.
s
But unlike the Withdrawers he wants only to readjust, removing 100,000
troops from Europe and allocating the budgetary savings to the areas he
considers to be in greater danger.
Kissinger arrives at approximately the same point by a more political
route. In contrast to the old days of European colonialism,
Now it is Europe that insists that the treaty's obligations do not
extend to the developing world. And it is Europe that feels free to
disassociate itself from U.S. actions where indigenous upheavals and
Soviet efforts to outflank the alliance produce contemporary
cie.... This produces the following problems which must be
solved if long-term paralysis is to be avoided. The United States
I"KAmerica Betrayed by its Friends,Chicw Sun-TMm, Auput 4, 1987, p. 23.
tBrzezinsid, Gfame Pan, p. 175. The second strategic front is in the Far Est.
f , 8 . -
, ,,~~~~~~~ ~~ - :.. ,
'
.7. . . . . ] ., . .
cannot grant Europe a veto over its actions outside the NATO ae
unless it is ready to abdicate its responsibilities for the global equilib-
rium; but neither can it be in Europe's interest to undermine
America's willingness to defend its vital interests, for the defense of
Europe is part of these vital interests....
The conclusion, I believe, is unavoidable: Some American forces now
in Europe would contribute more to global defense if redeployed as
strategic reserves based in the United States, able to be moved to
world trouble spots.... [The) objective should be to distinguish
clearly between those American forces earmarked exclusively for the
defense of Europe and those available for other areas."
Carter administration Under Secretary of Defense Robert Komer
presents two cautions about such moves. The first relates to American
interests: "We have to be more prudent about Third World use of mili-
tary force on a scale that would seriously interfere with other higher
priority U.S. commitments."
9
This appraisal balances Komer's Carter
administration Defense Department background when he was primarily
concerned with NATO against his late 1960s experience when he had
major responsibilities in Vietnam.
Komer's second caveat concerns the West Europeans. Rather than
accusing them of shirking, we should understand that they evaluate and
prioritize differently:
The Europeans realize that denial of Persian Gulf oil access would
undermine the viability of NATO Europe without any Warsaw Pact
attack. They also realize that the Soviet Union could exert great
political pressures on them simply by turning on and off the flow of
Middle East oil. But they are even more concerned that the Alliance
still falls short of meeting even initial conventional defence require-
ments in Europe itself... In effect, the U.S. seems to be focusing
increasingly on third-area contingencies, whereas NATO Europe
tends to regard this as a risky overextension of U.S. resources at the
expense of adequate priority to European defence.
9
'
Although Komer is, here and elsewhere, a strong advocate of increased
West European contributions for conventional defense, he does not com-
ment further on the irony of Europe's difficulty in increasing these con-
tributions while criticizing the U.S. lack of "adequate priority to Euro-
pean defence." This is what bothers the Withdrawers as well as the
burden-sharing Maintainers.
-enry A. Kimger, "Redo NATO to Restore the Alliance," Los Anueks Timm, May
11, 1966, Part V, pp. 1-4.
9Robert W. Komer, Maritime Strate& or Coalition Defense? University Pre of
America, Lanham, Md, 1984, p. 88.
"Robert W. Komer, "Problems of Overetension: Reconciling NATO Defence and
Out-of-Area Contingencies: Part It," in Intrnational Institute for Strategic Studies,
Adelphi Pape 207, pp. 64-06.
J..
Komer's own prescription is for specialization. In 1984, he argued for
a "division of labor" in which the United States would be responsible for
protecting the flow of oil "while the other affected allies concentrate on
shoring up their own home-defense capabilities. " Two years later, he
reported progress, in that the NATO Defense Ministers did accept "a
new set of biennial force goals meant to provide compensation for possi-
ble U.S. deployments outside the NATO area," but he pointed out that
"force goals are a far cry from actual forces.
8
Komer, and Brzezinski and Kissinger, and the other Maintainers all
provide answers to the question of allocation of responsibilities for
NATO defense of joint interests in the rest of the world. Further, they
recognize that not all interests are joint. An issue they tend to finesse,
however, is the overall failure of Europe to join in the global anticom-
munist crusade so ardently desired by the Withdrawers and espoused in
part by the Reagan administration. This is because few of the Main-
tainers outside of the administration espouse that crusade," and those .
within, wherever they stand philosophically, must balance it against the
immediate needs of NATO.
Komer, however, does confront the naval version of the Withdrawers'
global emphasis, which he believes to be the implicit strategy of the
Reagan administration, as inevitable defense budget cuts imposed by the
Congress leave in place the substantial number of new ships being built
together with the requirement to support them at the cost of other mili-
tary expenditures." And his own response strikes hard at the presumed
new strategy:
Cutting the coat to fit the cloth by concentrating on a primarily mar-
itime strategy cannot adequately protect our vital interests in Eurasia
because it cannot adequately deter a great land-based power like the
USSR.... Even if all Soviet home and overseas naval bases were
put out of action, and Soviet naval and merchant vessels swept from
the high seas, this would not suffice to prevent Moscow from seizing
or dominating the rimlands of Eurasia, including the two great indus-
trial agglomerations of Europe and Japan, and cutting off their
economic lifeblood-Middle East oil....
Some advocates of a maritime strategy evade this issue by contending
that Europe is now more than rich enough to provide for its own
defense.... True, a stronger and more integrated European defense
"Komer, Mwain Stratey or Coalition Defense? p. 86.
"Komer, *Problems of Overextension," p. 68.
"Kisinger is active in the debate over the Third World a well as NATO, although
he is close to the Reagan administration on many issues, he is of a distinetly different
viw hom'its a iwAr contingent. Bee Levin, The A Deate and t e71ird Wrt
Have We eda from Vietnam
f
t
omer, Maritime St vy or Coauion Defens, pp. N-59.
_ __
140
effort would be highly desirable, and has always been favored by
Washington on strategic grounds. But to suggest that Europe alone
would do what Europe plus America so far have not done is whistling
in the wind.... Indeed, adoption of a primarily maritime strategy
would have a devastating impact on the very network of alliances on
which the United States is so dependent to maintain a credible deter-
rent or defensive balance vis-&-vis the USSR96
Although the Maintainers agree with this continued European
emphasis, they remain worried about both the strategic and burden-
sharing issues, and about the effects of irritated American public opinion
as well, and they look for various means to structure American and Euro-
pean responsibilities. To the extent that the United States backs off
some extremes in defining its unilateral global interests-in a new
administration, perhaps
97
-the remaining issues between the Main-
tainers and the European Couplers will be no more divisive than those in
most other areas. Resonance with our allies is possible here, as else-
where. Schlesinger may be the most understanding of all the Main-
tainers:
From time to time, Americans have been annoyed to discover that,
for some reason or other, Europeans do not wish to see the cold war
resumed in the heart of Europe-just because the Russians
dispatched military forces into a country-Afghanistan in 1979-that
they had politically taken over a year earlier-or because of conflicts
in the Caribbean, Central America, the Horn of Africa or wherever.
A gratuitious spillover of Third World struggles into Europe is unac-
ceptable to the Europeans-and Americans simply have to accept this
reality.
9
8
But Schlesinger is not in office.
THE OPPONENT
The Soviet Union
There is less difference between the Maintainers and the Couplers on
their analyses of the Soviet Union than on any of the other issues.
Although the interpretation of Soviet ends and means is basic to design
of NATO political and military posture, the questions about the Soviets
are intellectual ones; and the answers are intellectual and perhaps
lbid., pp. 67-09.
978a Lei e, The Arm Debate and the Third World: Hae We Lawned Fron Viet-
n pam4
W$chlbenger, p. 87749.
____, 1./.,.,- : . .,. .*
141
ideological, rather than being based directly on varying national
interests. In the Western world, a Sovietologist is a Sovietologist is a
Sovietologist, and although their interpretations of objectives and stra-
tegies vary over a very wide range, the range is about the same on both
sides of the Atlantic. It is possible that the Maintainer range of recent
interpretations of Gorbachev and his changes is even broader than the
Coupler range, but that may be a statistical phenomenon based on the
fact that the United States turns out more Sovietologists than Europe.
Even more than in Europe, there is an American far right with the
views on the Soviet Union exemplified by President Reagan's "evil
empire" speech; but by the mid-1980s the president had dropped the
phrase and apparently the viewpoint, much to the disgust of some of his
more conservative supporters. Many of these had decided that the real
struggle with communism was elsewhere than in Europe and had become
Withdrawers; the remainder differed little from the more suspicious end
of the narrow range of views held by virtually all Maintainers before Gor-
bachev.
Before Gorbachev-indeed, from the death of Stalin to the death of
Chernenko, with some slight weakening during the Khrushchev era-the
standard view of American Sovietologists was that the Soviet objective
was to drive us out of Europe, that only their tactics varied over the
years, but that their military power was always an essential instrument
for those tactics. Almost alone as an exception among the Maintainers
was George Kennan who has contended for almost four decades that his
"containment"
doctrine had been badly misinterpreted and that he had
"never believed that they have seen it in their interests to overrun
Western Europe militarily."
More typically, Alan Platt of RAND has presented a succinct list of
Soviet objectives, and a history of recent strategies and tactics they have
used to reach these objectives, as of mid-1985. At that time, Gorbachev
had been in command only a few months:
Throughout the postwar period, there has been a fundamental con-
tinuity in what the Soviet Union has sought in Western Europe-the
transformation of the status quo in favor of Soviet interests. In try-
ing to bring about this long-term objective, the Soviets have sought
to: Maintain a Soviet military advantage in the European theater,
Ensure continued East European responsiveness to Soviet interests;
Secure widespread acknowledgment of the Soviet Union as a super-
power co-equal with the United States; Expand Soviet access to
Western technology and credits; Loosen American political and mili-
I III
_IIII ils l
tary ties with Western Europe; Transform West European political
systems from within by aiding "progressive" elements."
Platt then went on to describe Soviet policy through the first half of the
1980s as repeatedly attempting to achieve these objectives by tactics of
wooing the United States, then Western Europe, then both, then neither.
None of these worked, their failure set the stage for Gorbachev's more
radical changes.
Such descriptions of Soviet fundamental objectives and of the oppor-
tunistic means of reaching those objectives commanded a substantial
consensus among Maintainers at that time. As Helmut Schmidt did on
the Coupler side, Brzezinski put it into a historical as well as a geopoliti-
cal context:
From time immemorial, Russian society expressed itself politically
through a state that was mobilized and regimented along military
lines, with the security dimension serving as the central organizing
impulse. The absence of clearly definable national boundaries made
territorial expansion the obvious way of assuring security.... Rus-
sian history is, consequently, a history of sustained territorial expan-
sion.'
In a book whose subtitle, "Dismantling the East-West Military Con-
frontation" indicates its hope for a much more relaxed future, Jonathan
Dean described the same recent events discussed by Platt, but with less
of an air of Soviet inexorability-
There is a clear pattern in this record. It is one of repeated Soviet
attempts to influence West European, especially Federal German,
policy, using Soviet military power as a basis for these efforts-and
of repeated failure of these attempts. This is the reality of the Soviet
intimidation issue, and it seems likely to continue.0
1
'
Platt stressed the repetition of the attempts, Dean their failure; the dis-
tance is not great, but it spans the range of Maintainers' views before the
recognition that Gorbachev was likely to make a difference, one way or
the other.
Platt laid out five possible future Soviet policy alternatives as seen
from his 1985 vantage point: attempted breakup of NATO by favoring
Western Europe at the expense of the United Stats; the same by
OsAlan Platt, Soiet- Wed Ewvpe Reiktion: Recent Trends and Near-Term Pros-
Pects, The RAND Corporation, R-3316-AF, March 19K6, p. v. Although the report
appeared in 1986, Flatt's preface states that "It largely reflects information available as
of August 1985."
'Brseinski, Game Plan, p. 17.
1
'Dean, Watershed in Europe, p. 84.
m mn Immm~m mmm - .-
143
favoring the United States; defying both Western Europe and the United
States; attempted renewal of d6tente by extending overtures to both; and
"a purposefully confrontational policy toward the West."
12
His own esti-
mate was that "short-term Soviet policy, despite public denials, is likely
to proceed along the path suggested by the first alternative",
18
the
attempt to seduce the West Europeans away from the United States.
In fact, by the time 18 months had passed, the alternative chosen by the J
Soviets was recognized by the Maintainers, to the surprise of practically all
of them, to be the pursuit of detente with both sides of NATO. But this
recognition has not ended a debate, it has begun one-a far more funda-
mental debate over the Soviet Union than has taken place within NATO
since its beginning. The two sides were laid out by Platt in his evalua-
tion of what a Soviet move toward d6tente might imply:
[I]t might signify a major change in the way the Soviet Union sought
to approach the United States and Western Europe. Or, on the other
hand, it might just signify a continued long-term effort to loosen ties
within the Atlantic Alliance, but through the choice of different
short-term means to this end.
1
Gorbachev has made a difference. That is accepted by Maintainer as
by Coupler Sovietologists. Whether the difference is a "major change" in
direction or a new and perhaps brilliant set of tactics, still designed "to
loosen ties within the Atlantic Alliance," divides the Maintainers as it
does the Couplers.
On the suspicious side, Harry Gelman of RAND asserts that Soviet
goals are unchanged
The central core of [Soviet] goals remains the gradual reduction of
American presence and influence in Western Europe, provided this
happens under circumstances that do not promote the emergence of
an effective substitute-a coherent West European offset to Soviet
geopolitical weight in Europe.10
5
And he provides a scorecard of how well Gorbachev was doing, as of
mid-1987. On the pro-Soviet side, he counts narrowing West European
popular support for nuclear deterrence, decaying consensus in West Ger-
many, flexible Soviet adaptation to their failure to prevent INF installa-
tion, Soviet ability to exploit Western tensions over conventional arms
control, the favorable effect on Western public opinion of Soviet internal
reforms, the gap between the United States and Europe on Third World
102
Platt, pp. iu-i.
1
1%Ibd., p. 37.
10 4
1bid., p. 35.
lc6Harry Gelman, Gorbachev's Policies Toward Western Europe: A Balance Sheet, The
RAND Corporation, R-3588-AF, October 1987, p. vi.
~(
144
issues, and West European discomfort over American political errati-
cism." On the debit side for the Soviets are the failure of the left to gain
political power in West Germany or Britain, the anti-Soviet trend in
French policy, a strengthening of West European political forces favor-
ing security cooperation but not advocating greater independence from
the United States, the possibility that glasnost might unleash uncontroll-
able forces within the Soviet Union, internal Soviet controversy over
economic cooperation with the West, and the possibility that policies
within the Soviet Union might decrease control over the satellite
nations.
10 7
By no means all the Maintainers would agree with Gelman's assertion
that the Soviets retain the same core objective of dominating Western
Europe by driving the Americans out that they have had since Stalin's
day. Until Gorbachev, almost all did agree; after his first year, a number
diverged from the thinking that scored him purely on the old goals. Wil-
liam Hyland, the editor of Foreign Affairs, uses his journal to take direct
issue with those who see new means to old ends:
It is possible to see in Gorbachev's changes nothing more than shifts
in tactics. It can even be argued that the wily old Gromyko would
have arrived at similar conclusions about the position of the Soviet
Union, but without resorting to Gorbachev's novel rhetoric. A more
persuasive analysis, however, is that Gorbachev views foreign policy
in much the same way he sees his domestic situation. That is, he
still believes in the basic system but recognizes that radical changes
are in order, and that this will involve paying a price in the near
term to achieve longer term aims. Thus he is introducing innovative
elements into current Soviet foreignpolicies which are beginning to
outweigh the elements of continuity."
"Paying a price in the near term to achieve longer term aims" might be
interpreted as new tactics with old strategy, but Hyland's next two sen-
tences are:
In sum, the accession of Mikhail Gorbachev to the leadership of the
Communist Party of the Soviet Union marks the beginning of a new
historical period. The transition from Brezhnev to Gorbachev is a
genuine generational change, unlike the transfer of power from
Khrushchev to Brezhnev in 1964.
Professor Jerry Hough of Duke University and the Brookings Institu-
tion provides a historical-sociological explanation for the change. In
'
0
eIbid., pp. viii-xiv.
17Ibid., pp. xvi-xxiii.
'
1
eWilliam G. Hyland, "Reagan-Gorbachev III," Foreign Affairs, Fall 1987, p. 10.
-- -- .. . ...
q - - 14
opposition to the concept set forth by Brzezinski and Schmidt that
Soviet expansion is the continuation of centuries of Russian history, he
espouses the theory that interprets "the Communist revolution as an
overthrow of Peter the Great's Westernized elite and a break with
Russia's natural evolution toward constitutional democracy." In recent
years, however, the elite has reasserted itself and is demanding not
democracy but a "looser one-party dictatorship." The effect on external
policy is a tradeoff:
The deal for the middle class is clear: a looser political system in
exchange for the lash of foreign economic competition.... Moscow
needs to focus foreign policy on improving relations with Europe and
Japan. That means Moscow will have to make concessions to
Europe and Japan and decrease the number of troops facing Europe
to reduce fears about investing in the Soviet Union."w
And economist Charles Cooper agrees with Hough on attributing inter-
nal causes to Soviet change, but turns the argument in an economic
direction: "Gorbachev has indeed made a difference, but that difference
reflects the 'fact' of Soviet economic deterioration."