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<TITLE>2001Book - Final</TITLE>
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Chapter 12
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<P ALIGN="CENTER"><FONT COLOR="#1f1a17" SIZE="5" FACE="Palatino">
Crisis Management, NATO, the EU, and <BR>
The United Nations
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<P ALIGN="CENTER"><FONT COLOR="#1f1a17" SIZE="3" FACE="Palatino">
General Klaus Naumann<BR>
Former Chairman of the NATO Military Committee
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<BR>
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<P ALIGN="LEFT"><FONT COLOR="#1f1a17" SIZE="2" FACE="Palatino">
<FONT COLOR="#000000" FACE="Palatino" SIZE="7">T</FONT>he topic &#147;Crisis Management, NATO, the EU, and the United Nations&#148; gives
 us the opportunity to discuss why those three organizations can and should
 play a role in crisis management, and how they can bring to bear their
 different abilities and capabilities. I will not limit my remarks to NATO,
 the organization I know best. And I will not discuss the OSCE, although
 it has some real crisis-management potential, at least in the very early
 phases. I will try to discuss the following three points: first, the nature
 of crises that may require international efforts; second, the requirements
 an organization should meet if it wants to play a role in crisis management;
 third, the degree to which the three organizations&#151;NATO, the EU, and the
 United Nations&#151;meet the requirements.
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<B>THE NATURE OF PRESENT CRISES</B>
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Crisis management changed when the Cold War came to an end. Until that
 time, crisis management had been focused primarily on preventing conflict
 between the two superpowers. The local conflicts we saw during the Cold
 War were in many cases offsprings of the bigger game, and the best way
 to get those conflicts under control was through dialogue between the &#147;big
 two.&#148; Cold War crises, in most cases, were interstate conflicts or civil
 wars, with some third-party involvement. Today, the situation is no longer
 as simple.<FONT COLOR="#1f1a17" FACE="Times New Roman" SIZE="2"></FONT>
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Today&#146;s crises are increasingly intrastate conflicts, which do not easily
 lend themselves to outside involvement&#151;the principles of state sovereignty
 and non-intervention stand in the way. Moreover, non-state actors have
 entered the stage, some of whom are terrorists who want to be seen as freedom
 fighters, and some of whom are mercenaries, acting on behalf of the parties
 in conflict or for a third party. In addition, technology now seems to
 make war limitless, and the barely limited access to weaponry of all kinds
 and its availability on the market allow everyone to act far beyond their
 own region against increasingly vulnerable modern societies.
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&nbsp;Just as the kinds of crises have changed, so have the reasons for conflict,
 and they continue to change. During communism&#146;s rule, many causes of conflict,
 such as a nation&#146;s desire for independence, were suppressed in half the
 world. Communism, for ideological reasons, also deprived many nations of
 information regarding the wealth and high standards of living in industrialized
 Western countries. It also manipulated many nations through the distribution
 of biased information by state-controlled media.
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Now, with countries no longer suppressed and with the advent of the Internet,
 comprehensive information is available to everyone around the globe. We
 are in a totally different ball game. But, as a result of this, nationalism
 is on the rise. People are also increasingly aware of the rapidly growing
 gap between the very small number of very rich but aging societies and
 the big number of very poor but young nations. There is also the increasing
 possibility that we will see crises and conflicts because of sparse resources.
 The changing nature of crisis and conflict, and the growing complexity
 of crisis management that comes with it, require a much wider range of
 crisis-management measures and demands to prevent them, including addressing
 the reasons for the problems. This means that non-military crisis-management
 methods will theoretically gain in importance, that preventing crises will
 increasingly be seen as the best solution, and that crisis management will
 comprise a wider array of steps, from soft, preventive measures to targeted
 sanctions to intervention, including military intervention, to nation building
 or restoration.
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<B>REQUIREMENTS FOR CRISIS MANAGEMENT</B>
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In all forms of crisis management, the number one requirement is the authority
 to act. If a nation or an alliance can show its action to be in self-defense,
 however broadly that word is defined, then there is a legitimate legal
 basis for the act. If an act is not in self-defense, then the other obvious
 legal option is that it is mandated by the United Nations Security Council.
 But what if the United Nations Security Council is as incapable of acting
 as the Security Council has been so often in the past? We do not have an
 answer that is accepted by the majority of nations. <FONT COLOR="#1f1a17" FACE="Times New Roman" SIZE="2"></FONT>
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The second requirement for crisis management is that the nation, or group
 of nations, that wishes to act makes use of all crisis-management measures.
 These range from pursuing a political solution to following through on
 all crisis-management operations to employing all necessary political,
 economic, and military instruments.
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Requirement number three is the resolve to stay involved until the reasons
 that led to the crisis are eliminated and self-sustaining stability is
 achieved. I would go so far as to say that a nation, or a group of nations,
 that has neither the ability nor the political will to meet this third
 requirement should stay out of crisis management and avoid intervention.

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A fourth requirement is that the intervening side should be capable of
 taking military action if no other option is left. The intervening side
 must be aware of the situation as well as have the will to employ military
 forces in a way that promises success. This means that the intervening
 side must not confuse the undisputed need for tight political control with
 micro-managing military operations, particularly while under pressure from
 the media, which are always convinced they have the best generals and admirals
 in their ranks. It also means the intervening side must be prepared to
 escalate as necessary, and thus keep the opponent off balance.
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Doing so is truly difficult, and can result in clashes between the military
 and the politicians. Many military leaders argue against gradually increasing
 military operations, and blame the politicians for not understanding that
 using overwhelming military power can be the most promising way to end
 a conflict relatively quickly and at an acceptable cost. Such military
 leaders are, in theory, right&#151;but not under the conditions that currently
 prevail in our interconnected world, which allow for instantaneous television
 coverage of every incident on every spot on our globe. Hence these leaders
 are wrong if they insist on following the theory that we all learned in
 war academy. The public will simply not tolerate the massive use of military
 power; hence, some gradual increasing of force is unavoidable. The military
 must learn to live with that, but politicians will have to accept two conditions
 as well. First, as soon as they agree to use military power, they must
 be prepared to see it through until they prevail; they must, in public,
 never exclude any option, which otherwise might give assurances to the
 opponent. Second, they must agree that no military option excludes casualties:
 &#147;La guerre de zero morts&#148; is and will remain an illusion.
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<P ALIGN="CENTER"><FONT COLOR="#1f1a17" SIZE="3" FACE="Palatino">
<B>MEETING THE REQUIREMENTS</B>
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<P ALIGN="LEFT"><FONT COLOR="#1f1a17" SIZE="2" FACE="Palatino">
The United Nations is undoubtedly the only organization that has the right
 to authorize the use of force, including military force, but it does not
 have the means to act on its own. The United Nations is no better than
 its member-nations allow it to be. In theory, it could be a superb instrument
 for crisis management, but the realities that prevail in the Security Council
 and the General Assembly do not permit an optimistic outlook. The watering
 down of the Brahimi Report, to which I had the privilege to contribute,
 and the watering down of its recommendations underline my somewhat gloomy
 outlook for the United Nations. NATO enjoys the unique advantage of still
 having a functioning military machine&#151;I stress the word &#147;still&#148;&#151;and of
 having the world&#146;s most powerful nation as its leading member. But NATO
 does not really have all the arrows it needs to prevent a crisis from becoming
 a conflict, nor does it have the legal authority to mandate intervention
 unless the action is regarded as self-defense. NATO also has some weaknesses
 in the post-intervention arena. Decisions were made to correct these deficiencies,
 but so far the impressive words have not been matched by deeds, although
 some progress has been made over the last two years. I remain skeptical,
 personally, that the EU will meet the 2003 deadline, since I do not see
 the political will to make it happen. Unfortunately, the example set by
 my own country in this respect is a particularly bad one. Furthermore,
 the European Union is weakening its own capacity since its approach to
 foreign and security policy is by no means coordinated. The Commission
 possesses many of the instruments that are needed for the preventive and
 post-intervention phases of crisis management, but foreign and security
 policy as such remain an intergovernmental issue.
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<P ALIGN="CENTER"><FONT COLOR="#1f1a17" SIZE="3" FACE="Palatino">
<B>CONCLUDING REMARKS</B>
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<P ALIGN="LEFT"><FONT COLOR="#1f1a17" SIZE="2" FACE="Palatino">
I believe we are faced with the likelihood of many future crises. We are
 also faced with the absence of properly functioning crisis-management machinery,
 since neither NATO, the EU, nor the UN can really shoulder the burden and
 be thought of as the crisis-management manager. My conclusion, therefore,
 is that all nations should do all they can to strengthen the United Nations.
 The nations concerned should also make every effort to improve the crisis-management
 capabilities of NATO and the European Union, and both these organizations
 must understand that they really must cooperate much more closely than
 they have before. Both organizations have the key in their hands; NATO-EU
 cooperation seems to be the only promising answer, at least for the transatlantic
 area and its periphery, for coping with the period of uncertainty and instability
 ahead of us.
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