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Rod
(new)
Jan 21, 2017 05:12AM
I confess only a cursory understanding of the NATO charter. Originally, to defend western Europe from incursion by the USSR. How has the charter/mission changed since the breakup of the USSR and how are the member countries in the region ramping up for Russia's expansion? Would it be safe to say that NATO is the only thing that is keeping Russia at bay in the region?
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The original mission of NATO hasn't changed, but that's mainly because it wasn't focused specifically on the USSR - it was more broadly written with platitudes about protecting member nations from aggression. Make no mistake, though, it was geared towards the USSR. Member countries are increasing their interoperability training, with more joint exercises than we've had in years. NATO may not be the only thing, but it's the primary thing. There's a reason Russia went into Ukraine (a non-member) while leaving the Baltic states alone (member nations).
So, it is a valid deterrent in the region? Who are the coalition forces (NATO) typically training and equiping to fight against? What is their current plan for addressing terrorist attacks? Are they training for classic warfare or do they plan for insurgent attacks? Does ISIS, AQ, BH, etc. doctrine rise to the level of aggression that would trigger invoking NATO article five?What is your experience/opinion of the UN "peace keepers"? They don't have a very good reputation, but then again, its difficult to judge based on media reports.
Sorry, but your questions would require a completely separate blog. Suffice to say that each country trains for any threat they deem valid, and NATO's sole function is interoperability between countries. Beyond coordinating and intelligence functions between member nations, NATO doesn't dictate what each individual country trains for, although when member nations participate in NATO exercises, it's NATO driving the show. It's an alliance, not a specific command that can interfere with a sovereign country's direction. Their biggest contribution for addressing terrorist attacks is intelligence sharing. While NATO does have some SOF functions (SOCEUR from the US is involved, for instance), individual terrorist attacks are the responsibility of the country where they occur. NATO doesn't have an international CT force prepared to intervene in any of the 28 member nations, nor should they. The US CIF from SOCEUR isn't going to fly in to France and tell the GIGN to step aside. As for whether ISIS/AQ/etc rising to the level of invoking Article Five, as I said in the blog, it's only happened once - after AQ dropped the world trade center. So yes, it has risen to that level in the past.


