Wednesday, November 2, 2011

Europe’s free ride on the back of Nato is over - Telegraph

Europe’s free ride on the back of Nato is over - Telegraph

Time for NATO's countries to start to look inward and prepare for a post-American alliance.
... In 2000, America’s share of Nato defence spending was around 50 per cent. Today, it has risen to 75 per cent. With peace at home, many European nations have redirected spending towards other priorities, free-riding off the US when it comes to threats overseas. And this problem is set to get worse, since every European Nato member is set for severe defence cuts – including France, whose own equivalent of Britain’s defence review begins next year.
This decline in capability has come about not just because we are spending less, but because we continue to spend badly. Military funding is channelled through dozens of separate national programmes and structures, creating enormous duplication and failing to achieve economies of scale. While Europe has half a million more military personnel than America, it can deploy just a fraction of them overseas.

Nato is also being weakened by changes in US foreign policy: as the then defence secretary, Robert Gates, said earlier this year, his country is starting to look west as much as east. What America sees in Nato is yesterday’s vision of the future: allies with declining capabilities, reluctant to put troops in harm’s way, and an institution ill-suited to addressing US interests – especially with defence cuts looming in Washington as well.
NATO has become militarily worthless not only to the United States but to itself. And it is past time to ask ourselves, "What has NATO done for us?" Well, not much.

And this should make the Brits sleep well at night: The Royal Navy has not even one warship to spare for emergency response within Britain's territorial waters.

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