NATO, Brexit, and America's Security
NATO, Brexit, and America's Security
NATO, Brexit, and America's Security
Unraveling
of the
EU and
NATO
This summer the United Kingdom held a referendum on whether the British should leave
the European Union. Those advocating Brexit won by almost four points, sending shock
waves throughout the European Union, along with predictions of dire consequences
for the British and the unions possible dissolution. Around the same time, Republican
presidential candidate Donald Trump roused a shorter-lived squall of criticism for
comments questioning Americas participation in the North Atlantic Treaty Organization
(NATO). While very different in their nature and effects, both events raised questions
about what an unraveling of these two multinational organizations could mean for
Americas security.
Trumps campaign rhetoric about US participation in NATO is less consequential than
the intensity of the criticism of it suggests. His claims that our contributions to NATO are
costing us a fortune and that the Europeans are getting a free ride are exaggerated
and more simplistic versions of a long tradition of voicing similar frustrations with the
Europeans chronic refusal to meet their funding obligations, especially for the voluntary
contributions that pay for NATO operations.1 In 1970, Montana Democratic senator
Mike Mansfield wrote a column calling for the Europeanization of NATO to reduce the
300,000 American service members stationed in Europe.2 His aim was to cut back on some
of the then $14 billion a year spent on Europes defense. More recently, the continuing
failure of NATO members to meet their fiscal obligationscodified in the NATO treatys
Article Three, which directs member states to maintain and develop their individual and
collective capacity to resist armed attackin 2006 led the Riga Summit to require that
each state spend at least 2percent of GDP on defense. As of 2015, only five of the twentyeight NATO countries are meeting that requirement, a group that does not include the first,
third, fourth, and fifth largest economies in the European Union.3
We should not be surprised, then, that criticism of European defense parsimony is
common. In 2011, then defense secretary RobertM. Gates subtly threatened NATO
members for their failure to carry their weight. The blunt reality, Gates warned,
isthatthere will be dwindling appetite and patience in the US Congressand in the
American body politic writ largeto expend increasingly precious funds on behalf of
nations that are apparently unwilling to devote the necessary resources or make the
necessary changes to be serious and capable partners in their own defense.4 Nor is it
justskinflint Americans making the complaints. As Carnegie Europe pointed out last
year, the number of NATO members has doubled since 1990, but defense spending has
gone down 28percent.5
Military History
NATO knows this imbalance is a problem. Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg said last year,
We need to redouble our efforts to reverse this trend. We are facing more challenges, and
we cannot do more with less indefinitely.6 On its website, NATO confesses that in military
operations, there is an over-reliance by the Alliance as a whole on the United States for
the provision of essential capabilities, including for instance, in regard to intelligence,
surveillance and reconnaissance; air-to-air refuelling; ballistic missile defence; and airborne
electronic warfare, not to mention other matriel.7 During the 2011 NATO operation in
Libya, for example, of the 246 cruise missiles launched, the United States fired 218.
As for Trumps undiplomatic suggestion that as president he might not honor Article Five,
which states that an armed attack against one or more of [member states] in Europe or North
America shall be considered an attack against them all, his critics put too much faith in the
carefully crafted language of the treaty. In the event of such an attack, Article Five continues,
each member will respond by taking forthwith, individually and in concert with the other
Parties, such action as it deems necessary, including the use of armed force [emphasis added].
That last clause suggests a whole host of actions that would not require the mobilization
of a countrys armed forces for actual fighting and dying. And it contains a convenient
loophole that leaves the decision of what is necessary up to what each country deems.
This decision would no doubt involve each countrys calculation of its own national interests
and the will of its electorate as higher priorities than the fate of its fellow NATO member.
No country would be prudent to entrust its fate to a parchment barrier like Article Five.
Despite all these problems, however, we are unlikely to see a president seriously try to
leave NATO. And the Europeans are getting too good a deal to want to leave. There seems
to be a consensus in the foreign policy establishment that the United States benefits from
NATOs deterrent effect and the diplomatic cover it provides when America intervenes
militarily abroad. And despite Gatess veiled threat, American voters do not see spending
inequities in the alliance as an issue they are passionate about. In a Pew poll taken right
after Trumps comments, 51percent of Americans did not view NATO favorably, only four
points higher than in 2009.8 This is hardly a mandate for any politician to spend political
capital on dismantling a sixty-seven-year-old institution.
Englands departure from the European Union (EU) is a much more serious and portentous
event, though no one should have been surprised. Discontent with the EU has been
constant since its creation by the Maastricht Treaty in 1992. A year before the 2008
financial crisis, German foreign minister Joschka Fischer fretted, The EU is on autopilot,
in stalemate, in deep crisis.9 More recently, Eurobarometer public opinion surveys have
recorded the same angst among European citizens, only 25percent of whom in 2014 believed
things are going in the right direction in the European Union.10 Such pessimism remains
widespread. Nobel Prizewinning economist Joseph Stiglitz, in the very first sentence of his
new book, writes, Europe, the source of the Enlightenment, the birthplace of modern
science, is in crisis.11
The causes of this malaise have been repeatedly identified and analyzed. Intrusive
regulation of businesses, restrictive hiring and firing laws, overgenerous retirement
benefits, high taxes, and lavish social welfare spending have led to sluggish growth in
GDP and chronic high unemployment, problems exacerbated by the 2008 financial
crisis. Generous asylum and immigration policies, at the same time assimilation is
madedifficult in most European countries, have created a sullen, underemployed
classofMuslim immigrants overrepresented both in prisons and on welfare rolls.
Evenbefore the 2015 immigration crisis, violence by Muslim young men has been
endemic, particularly in France, where setting thousands of cars on fire has become
a sport. Moreseriously, terrorist attacks in London (2005) and Madrid (2004) killed
nearly250people, presaging last years bloody attacks in Paris, Brussels, and Nice
instigated byISIS.
Deeper structural problems suggest policy changes may not be able to make the European
Union viable. Birthrates are dangerously low, 1.58 births per woman, far below the
replacement rate of 2.1, with ominous implications for EU economies.12 As economist
Guillermo de la Dehesa writes, this demographic deficit could be very severe for the
E.U.s future growth....A graying population means a less active population, less
entrepreneurship, less innovation, higher and probably unsustainable public expenditures,
allof which result in lower growth.13 Lower growth means fewer workers, and fewer
workers mean fewer taxes to fund social welfare programs. The Great Recession has
worsened these problems, especially unemployment, now averaging 10.1percent, but
twicethat for those between the ages of fifteen and twenty-four.14
Equally troublesome is the famous democracy deficit that characterizes the European
Union. This problem became glaring in 2005, when the Treaty Establishing a Constitution
of Europe was rejected by France, the Netherlands, and Ireland in popular referenda.
The Treaty of Lisbon that replaced it in 2009 was not put to that democratic test. This
democracy deficit, moreover, is baked into the governing structures of the EU. Memberstate citizens vote directly only for the European Parliament, which cannot initiate
legislation. The other three main governing bodies comprise government ministers, heads
of state, or appointees from member states. Thus democratic principles of transparency
and accountability to citizens are compromised by the very governing structure of the
European Union.
In addition, the preponderance of officials appointed from sovereign nations means that
despite the ideal of a transnational European government able to transcend parochial
nationalist interests and achieve greater unity, those interests will have an outsized
influence on the workings of the European Union. And, obviously, the interests of the
more powerful states like Germany and France will take precedence. As is seen with NATO,
adherence to the rules will frequently be determined by national interests, and policy will
often ignore the interests of less powerful states.
The economic and immigration crises have illustrated this structural weakness. Despite
Article 125 of the Lisbon Treaty, which categorically forbids financial bailouts of member
states, the EU and the International Monetary Fund went ahead and bailed out Greece,
which still owes 323 billion euros in sovereign debt. Yet this casual adherence to the rules
has long been a habit of EU members. For example, the Stability and Growth Pact of 1998
set limits of 3percent of GDP for deficits and 60percent of GDP for debt. Since then all but
three countries have violated the 3percent limit at some point, although since 2008 most
EU states have met the requirement. Not so the 60percent of GDP limit on debt: in 2015
the average debt to GDP ratio in the European Union was 86percent and in the eurozone
90percent.15
Despite the demonization of nationalism and the goal of limiting nationalist interests that
lay behind the creation of the European Unionan ideal belied, of course, by the critical
role the EU government gives to politicians from sovereign statesthe recent financial crisis
has provoked among the masses a return of repressed nationalism and cultural differences.
Germanys dominant role in setting the terms of debt relief for Greece, for example, and
the irrelevance of a referendum in which 61percent of Greeks rejected the bailout package
and the austerity strings attached to it, provided another example that some EU nations are
more equal than others.
This resurgence of nationalist and populist sentiment cuts against the grain of the European
Unions centralized, supranational technocracy, and has been intensified even more by the
immigration crisis of 2015, when a million immigrants, half from war-torn Syria, flooded
into EU countries. Germany again has been at the forefront of the response to this crisis.
Chancellor Angela Merkel took the lead, publicly welcoming immigrants, suspending a 1990
protocol that refugees must seek asylum from the first European country they enter, and
insisting that other countries accept immigrants as well.
What seemed a highhanded unilateral policy to other EU nations, and the spate of terrorist
attacks and crimes such as last New Years Eve mass sexual assaults and rapes in Cologne
by Middle Eastern immigrants, have pitted EU nation against nation, brought back border
controls and barriers, and empowered nationalist and populist parties across Europe. The
policy was a major factor in the success of the Brexit referendum. How strong and durable this
electoral shift turns out to be will become clearer in the coming year after national elections
and possible further referenda on leaving the EU are conducted by other member states.
Finally, these recent crises have exposed the fundamental weakness of the European Union:
the lack of any unifying principle or ideal that can bestow on twenty-eight different cultures,
languages, politics, traditions, mores, folkways, religions, and histories a solidarity and
loyalty strong enough to make citizens put aside their national interests and subordinate
their national identities to a vague European one. Without a unum to unite the pluribis,
the EU is unlikely to survive in its current form.
Should this happen, what would be the implications for the security of the United States?
If NATO is unlikely to fall apart, then it will continue to be the key military alliance for
America and for Europe. Given that NATO existed for forty-four years before the creation
of the EU, and survived Frances absence for forty-three years, theres no reason to think it
will not continue if the European Union should fragment. And even if NATO did dissolve,
the United States could quickly negotiate bilateral or multilateral mutual defense pacts with
European nations.
As for the EUs defense needs, a breakup of the union may lead countries to strengthen their
military capabilities, which would benefit the United States as well. They would then have
greater national autonomy and flexibility in crafting a foreign policy more suitable for their
individual cultures, politics, and geographical circumstances. Moreover, as Jakub Grygiel
argued recently in Foreign Affairs, Only patriotism has the kind of powerful and popular
appeal that can mobilize Europes citizens to rearm against their threatening neighbors.
People are far more willing to fight for their countryfor their history, their soil, their
common religious identitythan they are for an abstract regional body created by fiat.16
No one is likely to die for the EU flag.
Their national autonomy restored, the countries of Europe could form alliances with other
states, including the United States, the terms of which would be more finely calibrated to
their particular shared interests and security needs. Or they could create a long-promised
multinational EU military. Now that the United Kingdom will leave the EU, the French are
pushing to create a joint European military headquarters and increase cooperation among
their armed forces, as the New York Times reports.17 Greater responsibility for their own
defense might also motivate the European nations to dedicate more of their national budgets
to their militaries. Then they could better finance the more NATO that NATO secretary
general Stoltenberg has recently called for.18 Of course, these developments would depend on
European citizens being willing to spend the money, an admittedly dubious proposition.
Some argue that such developments would be harmful to American and European military
cooperation. But given Americas enormous military power and defense spending, and the
cultural, economic, and political ties and affinities between European states and the United
States, it is likely the former will find the latter the best partner for advancing their interests and
providing for their defense. The result will be a world safer for Europe and the United States.
Notes
1Donald Trump on NATO, Turkeys Coup Attempt and the World, interview by DavidE. Sanger and Maggie
Haberman, New York Times, July21, 2016, www.nytimes.com/2016/07/22/us/politics/donald-trump-foreign-policy
-interview.html.
2Mike Mansfield, The Case for the Europeanization of NATO, Montana Memory Project, August7, 1970, www
.mtmemory.org /cdm/ref/collection/p16013coll41/id/874.
3NATO Public Diplomacy Division, Defence Expenditures of NATO Countries (2009-2016), news release, July4,
2016, www.nato.int/nato_ static_fl2014/assets/pdf/pdf_ 2016_07/20160704_160704-pr2016-116.pdf.
4Thom Shanker, Defense Secretary Warns NATO of Dim Future, New York Times, June10, 2011, www.nytimes
.com/2011/06/11/world/europe/11gates.html?_r =1.
5Jan Techau, The Politics of 2Percent: NATO and the Security Vacuum in Europe, Carnegie Europe,
September2, 2015, http://carnegieeurope.eu/2015/08/31/politics- of-2-percent-nato-and-security-vacuum-in
- europe/ifig.
6Naftali Bendavid, Just Five of 28 NATO Members Meet Defense Spending Goal, Report Says, Wall Street
Journal, June22, 2015, www.wsj.com/articles/nato- calls-for-rise-in- defence-spending-by-alliance-members
-1434978193.
7Funding NATO, North Atlantic Treaty Organization, June3, 2015, www.nato.int/cps/en/natohq/topics
_6 7655.htm.
8Bruce Stokes, Views of NATO and its role are mixed in U.S., other member nations, Pew Research Center,
March28, 2016, www.pewresearch.org/fact-tank/2016/03/28/views- of-nato-and-its-role-are-mixed-in-u-s- other
-member-nations/.
9Roger Cohen, For Europe, a Moment to Ponder, New York Times, March25, 2007, www.nytimes.com/2007/03
/25/weekinreview/25cohen.html.
10Public opinion in the European Union, Standard Eurobarometer 82, Autumn 2014, http://ec.europa.eu/public
_opinion/archives/eb/eb82/eb82_publ_en.pdf.
11Joseph Stiglitz, The Euro: How a Common Currency Threatens the Future of Europe (New York: W. W. Norton, 2016).
12Fertility Statistics, Eurostat, March2016, http://ec.europa.eu/eurostat/statistics- explained/index.php
/Fertility_statistics#Main_statistical_f indings.
13Guillermo de la Dehesa, Europe at the Crossroads (New York: McGraw-Hill, 2005), 85.
14Unemployment Statistics, Eurostat, August2016, http://ec.europa.eu/eurostat/statistics- explained/index
.php/Unemployment _ statistics.
15General Government Gross DebtAnnual Data, Eurostat, 2016, http://ec.europa.eu/eurostat/tgm/table.do
?tab= table&init=1&language=en&pcode= teina225&plugin=1.
16Jakub Grygiel, The Return of Europes Nation-States, Foreign Affairs, September/October2016, 95.
17James Kanter, European Leaders Debate Proposals for Closer Military Ties, New York Times, September16,
2016, www.nytimes.com/2016/09/17/world/europe/european-leaders-debate-proposals-for-closer-military-ties
.html?_r = 0. See also The Fog of War, The Economist, September24, 2016, www.economist.com/news/europe
/21707499 -after-brexit-vote-european-union-pushing-more -military-integration-its-proposals.
18Standing Up for NATO: A Conversation with Jens Stoltenberg, interview by Justin Vogt, Foreign Affairs,
April6, 2016, www.foreignaffairs.com/interviews/2016- 0 4- 06/standing-nato.
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BRUCE S. THORNTON
Bruce S. Thornton, a research fellow
at the Hoover Institution and an
executive board member of the
Military History Working Group,
received his BA in Latin from
the University of California, Los
Angeles, in 1975, as well as his PhD
in comparative literatureGreek,
Latin, and Englishin 1983.
Thornton is currently a professor of
classics and humanities at California
State University, Fresno. He is the
author of ten books on a variety
of topics. His numerous essays
and reviews on Greek culture and
civilization and their influence on
Western civilization, as well as on
other contemporary political and
educational issues, have appeared
in both scholarly journals and
magazines.