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   <TITLE>Michael Portillo</TITLE>
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<CENTER><FONT FACE="Palatino"><FONT COLOR="#000000"><FONT SIZE=+3>NATO:
Risks as Well as Opportunities</FONT></FONT></FONT></CENTER>

<CENTER><FONT FACE="Palatino"><FONT COLOR="#000000"><FONT SIZE=+2>The Right
Honorable Michael Portillo</FONT></FONT></FONT></CENTER>


<P><FONT FACE="Palatino"><FONT COLOR="#000000">At the present time, NATO
has much to celebrate. Two years ago its leading members were locked in
disagreement over Bosnia, and the organization appeared powerless to halt
the slaughter. The end of the Cold War had removed NATO's reason for existence
and the Alliance had yet to discover a new role and purpose.</FONT></FONT>
<CENTER>
<H4>
<B><FONT FACE="Palatino"><FONT COLOR="#000000">NATO TODAY</FONT></FONT></B></H4></CENTER>
<FONT FACE="Palatino"><FONT COLOR="#000000">Things look different now.
NATO took effective action in Bosnia, first by bombing the Bosnian Serbs
following the massacres in Sarajevo, and then by deploying large-scale
ground forces in support of the Dayton Agreement. The effort was a thoroughly
effective operation, which in itself defined a new role for NATO: promoting
security beyond the territory of its members. NATO has begun to reorganize
itself in line with that new role, and to tempt France and Spain into the
Alliance's integrated military system.</FONT></FONT>

<P><FONT FACE="Palatino"><FONT COLOR="#000000">Over the recent period there
has been a flattering rush of Central and Eastern European countries seeking
NATO membership as well as skillful negotiations that have overcome the
substantial obstacles to a NATO-Russia agreement. These successes will
rightly be celebrated at the Madrid Summit, particularly the enlargement
of NATO to include former Warsaw Pact countries. While our Russian friends
have protested loudly and launched a most effective campaign to woo opinion
makers and editors in the West, and have succeeded in convincing many that
NATO's enlargement to Russia's borders would be an affront to Russian pride
and therefore a source of future instability, I see enlargement differently.
I believe that we must not allow the world to be frozen in the Yalta pattern
of 1945. Stability in Europe depends mainly on entrenching the new democracies.
And they will flourish only if they feel secure. As NATO members they will
feel secure. There are more democracies in Europe today than ever before,
but since democracies do not invade each other, the prospects for stability
are correspondingly good.</FONT></FONT>
<CENTER>
<H4>
<B><FONT FACE="Palatino"><FONT COLOR="#000000">CHALLENGES OF THE FUTURE</FONT></FONT></B></H4></CENTER>
<FONT FACE="Palatino"><FONT COLOR="#000000">The admission of new member-states
to NATO is an historic achievement, and the agreement with Russia is a
triumph of diplomacy. But Russia and NATO both know that the Alliance faces
important challenges in the near future. We hope that the champagne drunk
in Madrid will leave NATO Ministers clearheaded enough to deal with these
challenges adroitly.</FONT></FONT>
<CENTER>
<H4>
<B><FONT FACE="Palatino"><FONT COLOR="#000000">Defining NATO's Role</FONT></FONT></B></H4></CENTER>
<FONT FACE="Palatino"><FONT COLOR="#000000">One of these challenges is
that NATO has not properly redefined its purpose. What threat to European
security justifies such sophisticated military preparation? The Russians
believe that NATO exists now, as before, to counter Russia. NATO denies
it. The Western European public no longer feels threatened by Russia�or
by anyone else�and European governments therefore continue to cut their
defense spending.</FONT></FONT>

<P><FONT FACE="Palatino"><FONT COLOR="#000000">We believe that Russia will
remain democratic and pose no risk to security. We are more likely to be
threatened by one of the militant dictatorships now developing weapons
of mass destruction and ballistic missiles, and exporting terrorism. As
the Gulf War demonstrated, to protect our allies or our interests, we may
need to fight in high-intensity conflicts far from home. NATO must articulate
its purpose better and stop cutting its defenses. Otherwise dictators will
think us weak-willed, and that could be dangerous.</FONT></FONT>

<P><FONT FACE="Palatino"><FONT COLOR="#000000">The debate about enlarged
security and the correct defense identity for Europe risks being only a
sideshow. Europeans ought to do more for themselves but they will not be
able to if they spend less. It is important to keep America involved in
Europe, but while we can find posts for European commanders at top levels
in NATO, we must not risk creating confused chains of command that would
be ineffective in an emergency.</FONT></FONT>

<P><FONT FACE="Palatino"><FONT COLOR="#000000">NATO has passed through
a period of self-congratulation. There is a whiff of decadence about an
organization that spends so much time contemplating how it is structured,
rather than what it can do. I am afraid that NATO members have hollowed
out their forces. In the future, ministers' meetings should focus on assessing
the risks to peace, making a realistic analysis of how well we could respond,
and on applying pressure to ourselves to bring our forces and equipment
up to standard. That applies to new members too. We have not yet given
enough attention to their military capabilities, to ensure that they can
strengthen the Alliance's effectiveness and credibility. Spending approximately
2% of GDP on defense is not consistent with the major problems of transition
that new members face.</FONT></FONT>

<P><FONT FACE="Palatino"><FONT COLOR="#000000">NATO must not begin to think
of itself as a peacekeeping or peace-enforcement organization. It must
remain capable of military operations at the top end of the spectrum. One
difficulty is that the United States, alone within the Alliance, has the
C4I capability to provide battlefield superiority and the most potent force
multiplier. Unless ways are found to bring the other Allies up to that
standard, the Alliance risks becoming increasingly non-interoperable as
the capability gap widens. Given the value of NATO to the United States,
the challenge is to find the means to prevent such a destructive technology
gulf from persisting.</FONT></FONT>

<P><FONT FACE="Palatino"><FONT COLOR="#000000">The enlargement of NATO
is both a triumph and a problem. More applicant countries will be refused
than admitted. To those disappointed now, the Alliance offers the prospect
of further admissions in years to come. But even if applicants meet all
our criteria, they have no guarantee of being let in. Ratifying the first
enlargement in the parliaments of member-states won't be easy, so those
who do not enter NATO now may fear that NATO may be wary of proposing further
additions to its numbers in the medium term. NATO has been careful to offer
the prospect of membership to the countries that were once part of the
Soviet Union. Doing so provides important reassurance. But we must recognize
that the countries that are not offered membership in Madrid may feel more
out in the cold than before. Paradoxically, NATO's expansion to the East
may reduce these countries' sense of security.</FONT></FONT>

<P><FONT FACE="Palatino"><FONT COLOR="#000000">NATO must develop a strategy
to make the Baltic countries, for example, feel that while NATO is not
willing to extend to them the protection of Article 5, their sovereignty
nonetheless matters to NATO. NATO should be prepared to make some �substantive
gestures.� Perhaps we could establish a NATO university of peace studies
in Vilnius, have a prestigious annual NATO-sponsored lecture in Riga, and
set up a Baltic security organization office in Tallinn. We would of course
also develop a similar consideration for Ukraine.</FONT></FONT>
<CENTER>
<H4>
<B><FONT FACE="Palatino"><FONT COLOR="#000000">Withdrawal from Bosnia</FONT></FONT></B></H4></CENTER>
<FONT FACE="Palatino"><FONT COLOR="#000000">A more immediate challenge
is that of Bosnia. NATO forces have done a superb job there and provided
a pilot study of how to work with Russia and other non-NATO countries.
But NATO proposes to withdraw its forces in summer 1998, and the former
warring factions appear to be counting the days and procrastinating on
nation-building.</FONT></FONT>

<P><FONT FACE="Palatino"><FONT COLOR="#000000">The continued liberty of
those indicted for war crimes makes the situation worse. While I understand
that NATO forces do not wish to become policemen nor give up their valued
reputation for evenhandedness, it is inconceivable that NATO should withdraw
leaving these people at large and in positions of influence. The damage
to NATO's prestige would be incalculable. I therefore believe that a NATO
objective should be seeing that those who have been indicted are brought
to justice in the Hague.</FONT></FONT>

<P><FONT FACE="Palatino"><FONT COLOR="#000000">We should also be frank
about NATO's �arm and train� policy. It was well-intentioned at its instigation,
because the Serbs were clearly better armed and more militarily effective
than the Bosnians. But the policy now risks producing an imbalance in favor
of the Bosnians, which could be just as destabilizing.</FONT></FONT>

<P><FONT FACE="Palatino"><FONT COLOR="#000000">If NATO were to withdraw
leaving Karadzic in control of the Serbs and under conditions in which
war could be quickly reignited, the impact on the Alliance's reputation
would be devastating. For that reason it is difficult to see how NATO can
actually pull out. I recognize the dilemma and the difficulty for the U.S.
administration. The U.S. Congress appears to be in earnest about requiring
withdrawal. But NATO must make it clear, at the least, as General Joulwan
has proposed, that it will not tolerate a return to violence in Bosnia.</FONT></FONT>
<CENTER>
<H4>
<B><FONT FACE="Palatino"><FONT COLOR="#000000">CONCLUDING REMARKS</FONT></FONT></B></H4></CENTER>
<FONT FACE="Palatino"><FONT COLOR="#000000">While glasses are raised in
celebration in Madrid, NATO Ministers must work hard to ensure that Bosnia
is not again the cause of division among the Allies nor a symbol of NATO's
impotence.</FONT></FONT>

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