Donald Trump
gets what John
McCain, Lindsey Graham, and a bevy of hidebound American elites --
Republicans and Democrats -- refuse to get. America's relationship to, and
military involvement in, Europe is long overdue for a big overhaul.
World War II ended in 1945. The Berlin
Wall fell in 1989. The Soviet Union collapsed in 1991. Yet nearly a generation
after the USSR went away, the U.S. is still, broadly, non-Russian Europe's
principal defender.
Why?
The nations of Western Europe, primarily,
affluent for decades, have benefited from American protection at American
taxpayers' expense. All this time, Western Europe's progressive leaders enjoyed
the luxury of diverting untold treasure into their social welfare systems.
Cradle to grave, they call it. Americans provide a disproportionate share of
NATO's hardware and soldiers, while the French, for instance, practically give
workers every August at the beach. Lose your job? No worries. In Denmark, you
can live off the public teat for up to 104 weeks at 90% your previous
salary.
The USSR had global ambitions. It was
meddlesome and scheming, aiding
and abetting bad players across the planet. Russia was then infected
with communism, which dovetailed smartly with the historic Russian desire to
expand its empire. Communist Russia posed multiple threats to the U.S.
But Putin and the Russians no longer
promote or even speak off world revolution and domination. Putin is attempting
to reclaim some turf, namely in the Ukraine and Georgia. He has a covetous eye
on the Baltic States.
Yes, Putin's in Syria angling to gain a
lasting foothold in the Eastern Mediterranean. But that's thanks to Barack
Obama, Hillary Clinton, and John Kerry, who in the name of promoting
"democratic reform" succeeded in destabilizing much of the Middle
East, engendering chaos and bloody conflict. And lest we forget the
president’s appeasement
of Iran, which is a real enemy of the U.S.
Why, though, are Putin's machinations and
gambits in Europe a U.S. concern? Democrats are using Putin and Russia as
convenient fall guys for their election debacle, but what real threat is Putin
posing to vital U.S. interests?
Europe needs to be Europe's concern.
That's not to excuse Putin's aggression in the Ukraine or any designs he may
have on the Baltic States. It's to say that there’s no fundamental American
stake in outcomes. That's realpolitik. Its respect for George Washington's
warning: avoid entangling -- and harmful -- alliances. Europe's angst about
Russia's aims, it's determination to pushback and punish Putin, is happening
with the U.S. sharing the risk -- a risk minus hard benefits to itself. Of
course, it’s hoped that among Europeans, differences and disputes can be
settled peaceably.
NATO is a relic. It shouldn't be
transformed into a roving
globalist military machine, as seems the intent, in the quest for a new
mission. The U.S. needs to sunset its
NATO membership. NATO needs to become the "European Union Treaty Organization"
or some such. It's high time for Europeans to reorder their priorities. Or not.
Europe's fate belongs to Europeans. No more free rides compliments of the U.S.
Not only should President-elect Trump
serve notice that the U.S. will transition out of NATO, but he needs to discard
the Wilsonian notion that America's role is to make the world safe for
democracy.
America's role is to make the world safe
for itself. America isn't the world’s nanny-cop.
There's a heaping spoonful of folly in the
proposition that the U.S. is somehow charged with remaking miscreant
governments and societies into benign democratic neighbors. George W. Bush and
the neo-cons were very much about democratizing Iraq. This effort, well
intended though it was, was doomed to fail.
Iraq wasn’t post-war Germany, which was a
success story in nation-transformation. Germany isn't Afghanistan, Syria,
Somalia, or any number of places that are dramatically different in many
critical aspects. Even if nation-transforming has a ghost of a chance to
succeed, it means decades of involvement in the target nations. That's
militarily and economically. How many 19-year-old American soldiers would die,
and isn't a $19.5 trillion national debt -- and growing -- enough? If others
can reform their countries into peaceful, law-abiding, democratic bastions,
wonderful, but not at great American expense.
The U.S. is unexceptional in this regard:
it’s a nation with practical interests that need to be clearly defined and
prioritized, and national security concerns that require a robust defense;
that's diplomatic, economic, and military action (conventional and non) against
hostiles when they menace critical U.S. interests aboard and/or the homeland.
The PRC’s increasing militarization of the South and East China Seas
(international waters) are moving toward a threat to U.S. vital
interests.
The U.S. has coexisted with nondemocratic
countries since its founding. Bad players there have been and always will be in
the world. Americans don't need to like or trust Putin. Realpolitik mandates no
blinkers. Putin is, after all, a thug and murderer, and, first and foremost,
he’s cold-bloodedly about advancing Russian interests and his (the two are very
much entwined). But Russia's czars were a bloody lot; yet Americans had no beef
with them as long as they left the U.S. alone.
President Trump will be steely in
advancing American interests. Where U.S. interests coincide by cooperating with
Putin, so be it. Certainly, a rapprochement that permits the Russians and
Americans to defeat Islamic insurgencies (jihads) that threaten both homelands
is very good. This will entail tradeoffs. Agreements between or among nations
do.
A guy like Trump, who gets The Art
of the Deal, appreciates that successful deals are about securing advantages,
but, finally, need to be win-wins. How many good deals are a zero-sum games?
Putin will require advantages, too. For instance, in dealing with growing
and, perhaps, restive Muslim populations within Russia’s borders.
American interests take precedent. Trump
shouldn’t let NATO get in the way of a smart deal with Putin.
Back to John McCain, poster boy for the
barnacled-encrusted Cold War and Wilsonian mindsets. Regarding Russia, McCain’s
doing the very thing a military man shouldn’t: fight the last war.
This from McCain via Reuters:
"I think
the presence of the American troops here in Estonia is a signal that we believe
in what Ronald Reagan believed, and that is peace through strength,"
McCain told reporters in the Estonian capital.
"And the
best way to prevent Russian misbehaviour by having a credible, strong military
and a strong NATO alliance."
This isn’t the 1980s. No longer is the
world bipolar, split roughly between U.S. and Soviet spheres. The PRC is the
coming military power in Asia. Its desire is to supplant the U.S. as the
world’s preeminent power. Militant Islam is a ideological-religious and
practical threat to nations and worldviews across the globe. Refugee crises are
burgeoning in the Old and New Worlds.
NATO members (sans the U.S.) have the
wealth to attend their own collective security. What Europeans may lack is the
will to contain the Russians, relying on the U.S. to furnish that as well. We
don’t need any more American military cemeteries in Europe.
What Trump needs to say to McCain and
Europe: “Enough done. No more.”
Read more: http://www.americanthinker.com/articles/2017/01/enough_with_defending_europe.html#ixzz4UiuvwfsZ
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