Unity of NATO alliance is fraying

When Foreign Affairs published an article by John Mearsheimer tilted, “Playing with Fire in Ukraine” (8/17/22), the pushback from NATO leadership was swift and highly indignant. Central to the rejection of Mearsheimer’s critique was the insistent narrative of a unified NATO alliance led by the United States that had rallied the world in opposition to Russia’s barbaric invasion of Ukraine.

 This narrative, however, was belied by the fact that the great majority of the world’s people were led by governments that took no position on the war, many of them viewing the hostilities not as a “global crisis” but rather a “regional conflict”.

 Observers of NATO have also noted that over the past 20 years, beginning with the 2003 U.S. invasion of Iraq, the alliance has been anything but unified on questions of war and peace. Furthermore, with the passage of time the peoples of NATO countries have shown an increasing disinterest in the risks of military conflict. 

 A 2015 Pew Research Center poll found that among NATO countries, only in the U.S. and Canada did a majority of the public support the use of military force if a fellow NATO country was invaded.

 Last year the European Council on Foreign Relations (ECFR) polled 60,000 people in its 11 member states and found that, by margins of well over 2 to 1, public opinion believes that their countries should remain neutral in any conflict between the U.S. and Russia or China.

 What these troubling indicators tell us is that the reality and attitudes of Europeans today are very different from those that prevailed at the birth of NATO in 1949.

Nonetheless, the volatile events of the past few weeks have shown that Mearsheimer’s warnings about the “risks of catastrophic escalation” are anything but theoretical and now Europeans find themselves potentially on the brink of a looming conflict between the world’s two greatest nuclear powers—a contest in which for varying reasons neither side can afford to back down.

 Adding to the toxicity of NATO’s current challenges is the energy crisis triggered by Putin’s weaponizing of Russia’s vast energy resources, upon which Europe had become far too dependent.  Ironically, Europe had set itself up for this dilemma by its aggressive pursuit of a green agenda, which effectively decimated the continent’s nuclear and fossil fuel options.

 Writing in the Wall Street. Journal, Joseph Sternberg illustrated Europe’s self-inflicted wounds—“The Global Crisis of Climate Policy” (9/8/22)—by pointing out the approaching “tsunami of energy price bankruptcies”.

 As these economic woes engulf all NATO countries, generating attendant political instability, the fissures in the alliance’s “unity” regarding Ukraine continue to multiply. The anticipated accession of Finland and Sweden to NATO has been blocked by Turkey until at least 2023, pending those countries’ fulfillment of promises made to curb the terrorist group, Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK), which President Erdogan views as threatening to his country.

 With Black Sea ports effectively blocked by Russia, Ukraine has begun to export large amounts of its grain to Europe at cut-rate prices, which as reported by the Wall Street Journal (9/17/22), has antagonized European farmers and generated street protests from France to Bulgaria.

 Finally, pending elections may further erode NATO’s fragile commitment to the economic costs of the war in Ukraine, as former U.S. diplomat Kathleen Doherty pointed out in August—“Italy’s Snap Election Could Hand Putin the Win He Needs” (Foreign Policy 8/10/22). All eyes will be on Prime Minister-designate Giorgia Meloni as she takes over in coming weeks.

 And with Rasmussen’s recent polling (9/21/22) showing that 80% of Americans regard national security as an important electoral issue in November and that 42% consider the Ukraine war as harmful to American security, even the United States—NATO’s leader—is not immune from shifting tides of often volatile public opinion. 

 European memories of how the Biden administration did not consult their NATO contingents in Afghanistan before America’s sudden and incompetent exit haven’t faded and clearly contribute to current anxieties about America’s potential for unpredictability and unreliability as an ally. In this vein, the “America First” fixation of many prominent U.S. politicians is also not reassuring.

 In light of continuing economic deterioration as Europe faces a grim winter and volatility on the battlefields of Ukraine, public protestations of NATO unity must be viewed as an increasingly uncertain trumpet.

Bill Moloney is a Senior Fellow in Conservative Thought at Colorado Christian University’s Centennial Institute who studied at Oxford and the University of London and received his doctorate from Harvard University.  He is a former Colorado Commissioner of Education.