Tuesday 24th of December 2024

NATO is the aggressor.....

“At the end of the day, Ukraine will be a member of NATO” — Finnish President Alexander Stubb calls for strong NATO deterrence and backs Ukraine's path to membership in an exclusive interview conducted by DW political correspondent Hans Brandt.

'We will do our part to fend off any Russian aggression'

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NATO’s Response to Aggression? Glorious Ambiguity

NATO’s “collective defense” doctrine is widely misunderstood. Article 5, and the process of invoking it, are deliberately structured to avoid forcing allies into war.

By Alexander Crowther

In the wake of World War II, as European states and the US bargained over their future, they came to a compromise — the Old World got Article 5 with its collective defense pledge, and the US got Article 3, which pledges “continuous and effective self-help and mutual aid.”  

Article 5, the best-known part of the treaty, was very carefully worded by the US to ensure no aggressive European action could drag it into a war. It was also designed to prevent the US from having to defend the European colonies, which at that point covered much of the globe. 

Article 5 reads, in full:  

“The Parties agree that an armed attack against one or more of them in Europe or North America shall be considered an attack against them all and consequently they agree that, if such an armed attack occurs, each of them, in exercise of the right of individual or collective self-defense recognized by Article 51 of the Charter of the United Nations, will assist the Party or Parties so attacked by taking forthwith, individually and in concert with the other Parties, such action as it deems necessary, including the use of armed force, to restore and maintain the security of the North Atlantic area.” 

There are three major elements to the article. First, there needs to be an armed attack. Second, “they agree that” means all NATO allies vote on whether it is in fact an armed attack. Third, “such action as it deems necessary” means each ally gets to decide how they will respond.  

Under international law, an “armed attack” usually requires one of the following: property is damaged, property is destroyed, people are hurt, or people are killed. If an operation does not achieve one of those effects, it is difficult to convince others that an armed attack has occurred. Without that as a pre-requisite, there is no case for invoking mutual defense.  

The “they” who vote comprise the North Atlantic Council (NAC), which includes all the allies. Each has an ambassador in Brussels to vote for them on routine measures, but heads of state and government can also attend in person, as is usual during summits.  

All must agree that an armed attack has occurred and decide whether it meets the threshold for a NATO response. Any of the 32 member states can veto a motion to invoke Article 5 and, because it is a vote by politicians, there are many considerations to their decision-making that cannot be codified into a checklist.  

“Such action as it deems necessary” means each ally gets to make an individual decision on their response. For example, an ally could vote in support of invoking Article 5 and then proceed to provide only rhetorical support. 

While Article 5 has only been invoked once, in support of the US after the 9/11 terror attacks, it has been requested on seven other occasions, and in each case, the allies “coordinated collective defense measures.”  

In several of these cases, the NAC decided to invoke Article 4 (consultation) instead. Three, all involving Turkey, then led to concrete action: Patriot missiles were deployed to the country during the 1991 Gulf War; it was supported with a package of defensive measures and Operation Display Deterrence in 2003; and in 2012 Patriot missiles were again stationed there in response to escalation in Syria.  

Hypothetical scenarios illustrate the issues involved. Imagine these situations involving Russia and Finland. 

Armed Russian aircraft cross into Finnish airspace, armed Russian patrol boats enter Finnish waters, or Russian soldiers cross the Finnish border — none would make the case for invoking Article 5.  

Russian ground forces shooting at Finnish forces might be sufficient for NATO to invoke the article, (although the NAC responded with an Article 4 process when Turkish troops came under fire) but it would certainly see someone — probably, but not necessarily Finland — citing Article 5 and requiring an NAC vote.  

There is no inevitability in the Article 5 process. Each ally votes on whether or not to invoke it, casting a veto if they choose, and then each decides their response. Taken together, this prevents states from being drawn into a war against their will.  

As a corollary, a “sub-Article 5” scenario allows coalitions of the willing, something rarely discussed in NATO terms but perfectly plausible. In terms of the Finnish hypothetical above, for example, the UK, France, the Netherlands, and Sweden might send troops, with US logistic and intelligence support. The response can be tailored to fit the circumstances. 

G. Alexander (Alex) Crowther, PhD, is a Non-resident Senior Fellow with the Transatlantic Defense and Security Program at the Center for European Policy Analysis (CEPA). He has published in a variety of formats and locations since 2005, mainly on cyber and European security issues.  

Europe’s Edge is CEPA’s online journal covering critical topics on the foreign policy docket across Europe and North America. All opinions are those of the author and do not necessarily represent the position or views of the institutions they represent or the Center for European Policy Analysis.

https://cepa.org/article/natos-response-to-aggression-glorious-ambiguity/

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Nigel Farage, leader of Reform UK, has asserted that the European Union (EU) and NATO “provoked” Russia’s invasion of Ukraine through their eastward expansion. These remarks were made during a contentious interview on BBC’s Panorama, aired on June 21 evening, where Farage was pressed on various policies and beliefs. 

Contrary to the narrative cultivated by Russia, the USSR was not offered an official guarantee at the end of the Cold War on the restriction of NATO’s enlargement. However, how such a narrative was born, for what, and to whom it is being told – the narrative x-ray enlightens.

Putin’s talk about the promises made by the Western countries to avoid the eastern expansion of NATO is not completely fiction. However, it is still a selective use and arbitrary interpretation of the facts, which, among other things, gave him the excuse to begin a full-scale military invasion of Ukraine.

How did the narrative of an agreement to limit NATO enlargement come about?

READ MORE: https://www.propastop.org/eng/2024/06/24/narrative-x-ray-did-nato-promise-russia-not-to-expand-eastwards/

One of those who have supported Russia’s claims about the promise is former US ambassador to the Soviet Union, Jack Matlock, who has repeatedly emphasized, both in congressional testimony and as recently as a few years ago, that Gorbachev received promises that if Germany joined and remained in NATO, NATO’s borders would not move eastward.

 

APART FROM A HANDSHAKE BETWEEN REAGAN AND GORBACHEV, THERE ARE DOCUMENTS THAT EXPLICITELY SAYS NATO SHALL NOT EXPAND EASTWARD... WE HAVE PUBLISHED AT LEAST ONE. SIMILARLY, THERE ARE (ALLIES) DOCUMENTS THAT ACKNOWLEDGE THAT CRIMEA IS RUSSIAN. WE BHAVE AT LEAST PUBLISHED ONE.

NATO HAS ALWAYS BEEN AN AGGRESSOR, FROM YUGOSLAVIA TO IRAQ, LIBYA AND SYRIA....

NATO IS STILL IS AN AGGRESSOR.... NATO IS AN ASCCESSORY TO AMERICA'S DREAM TO CONQUER THE HEARTLAND...

 

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YOURDEMOCRACY.NET RECORDS HISTORY AS IT SHOULD BE — NOT AS THE WESTERN MEDIA WRONGLY REPORTS IT.

 

 

 

 

 

brits behaving badly.....

Britain’s deputy head of mission in Russia, Tom Dodd, has assaulted multiple reporters at Moscow’s Vnukovo airport. The incident happenned late on Thursday after he faced a barrage of uncomfortable questions.

Dodd was in the company of several other UK Foreign Office personnel, including the head of the Eastern Europe and Central Asia Directorate (EECAD), Christopher Allan, when he arrived late on Tuesday. The delegation headed straight for the exit, followed by a sizable group of reporters, who bombarded Dodd with various questions, including on a recent spy scandal which resulted in the expulsion of six British diplomats.

Footage from the scene shows Dodd attempting to grab cameras from the reporters, ripping an ID off the neck of one, and rudely shoving a woman out of his path.

The Britons staged a press scrum of sorts outside the airport, speaking primarily about the weather and ignoring questions about more pressing matters. They were met by a small group of protesters, one of whom had their placard torn by a member of the delegation.

According to media reports, the British delegation’s primarily task will be inspecting the work of the country’s mission in Moscow in the aftermath of the spy scandal. In mid-September, six British embassy staff were declared persona non grata over their alleged involvement in “subversive activities” and espionage. London rejected the accusations as “completely baseless.”

Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova has strongly condemned the airport incident and said Dodd’s behavior clearly demonstrated London’s true stance on “the high standards they’ve been constantly proclaiming, press freedom, and media pluralism.”

“The British authorities and their diplomats in Moscow must finally realize they should reserve their neo-colonialist habits for their own journalists at home,” Zakharova said during a regular press briefing on Wednesday, urging British diplomats to acquaint themselves with Russian legislation protecting the press.

It was not immediately clear whether Dodd will face any repercussions given his high diplomatic status, and the immunity it confers. Russia’s Penal Code has an article dedicated to protecting journalists, with disrupting their work punishable by up to six years in prison.

https://www.rt.com/russia/606290-british-diplomat-russian-journalists/  

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YOURDEMOCRACY.NET RECORDS HISTORY AS IT SHOULD BE — NOT AS THE WESTERN MEDIA WRONGLY REPORTS IT.