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US dismisses Macron's NATO warnings
by Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) Nov 29, 2019

US to cut spending on NATO budget, Germany to pay more
Brussels (AFP) Nov 28, 2019 - The United States is to cut its contribution to NATO's operating budget, officials said Thursday, with Germany increasing payments as the alliance tries to appease President Donald Trump ahead of a summit next week.

Trump has repeatedly criticised European members for freeloading on the US, singling out Germany -- the continent's economic powerhouse -- for lagging behind on an alliance commitment to spend at least two percent of GDP on defence.

While most of Trump's anger has been focused on European national defence budgets, American officials have also grumbled about how much Washington contributes to NATO's running costs, and the 29-member alliance has now agreed to a change.

"All allies have agreed a new cost-sharing formula. Under the new formula, cost shares attributed to most European allies and Canada will go up, while the US share will come down," a NATO official said.

"This is an important demonstration of allies' commitment to the alliance and to fairer burden-sharing."

Washington currently pays 22.1 percent of the NATO budget -- which totalled $2.5 billion (2.37 billion euros) in 2019 -- and Germany 14.8 percent, under a formula based on each country's gross national income.

Under the new agreement, the US will cut its contribution to 16.35 percent of the total, Germany's will rise to the same level and other allies will pay more.

Though the sums involved are relatively small in military terms -- the 29 alliance members spent a total of nearly a trillion dollars on defence in 2018 -- not all allies are happy with the move.

Diplomats say France has refused to go along with the new arrangement and will keep its contribution the same at 10.5 percent, arguing that the deal to change the figures was cooked up between Trump and German Chancellor Angela Merkel without properly consulting other allies.

NATO chief Jens Stoltenberg is expected to announce new figures on Friday showing how much more allies have spent since Trump came to power in 2016 in a bid to improve the mood going into Wednesday's leaders' meeting in London.

During the 2018 summit in Brussels, Trump unleashed a public tirade during a breakfast meeting with Merkel, berating her for weak defence spending and accusing her of cosying up to Russia -- and there were fears of a repeat performance this year.

French President Emmanuel Macron added to the gloom earlier this month by declaring NATO was experiencing "brain death" thanks to poor coordination between Europe and the US, and Turkey's military operation against the Kurds in northern Syria.

Despite an angry response from many allies, the French leader stood by his comments after talks with Stoltenberg in Paris, saying "a wake-up call was necessary".

Emmanuel Macron is "still kind of working out" his vision for NATO, a senior US official said Friday, brushing aside the French president's call for reinventing the American-led alliance.

Ahead of next week's NATO leaders' summit outside London, the Trump administration official dismissed the views expressed by Macron, who argues the military bloc is suffering "brain death."

"President Macron is still kind of working out what he wants out of the group," the official told reporters on condition of anonymity.

Macron on Thursday stood by his startling diagnosis of the alliance and called for a shift in priorities away from great powers like Russia or China to confronting the "common enemy" of terrorism.

Macron has courted controversy by pursuing thawed relations with Moscow, despite Russia's ongoing occupation of Crimea in Ukraine and support for separatists in the east of the country.

Russian President Vladimir Putin has also been condemned across Europe for allegedly overseeing assassination campaigns against opponents and exiles.

By contrast, Trump will tell the NATO summit that China and Russia remain major challenges.

"China above all," the US official said.

The official said it was "no wonder" that many other NATO members were worried by Russia's "consistent disregard for the sovereign and territorial integrity of its neighbors."

Macron's NATO comments have led to an unusually angry war of words with Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

The US official said he would not comment on what he called the "back and forth" between the two leaders.

Yet another of Macron's projects -- boosting European Union defense independence from the longstanding US umbrella -- also got pushback from the US official.

Such efforts must "not undermine or duplicate those of NATO," he said. "We are stronger together."

Repeating several times that Trump and Macron "have a healthy level of respect," the US official downplayed the fallout from Macron's statements saying they are "well within the standard of democratic politics and indeed the democratic politics of NATO."

NATO at 70, five things to know
Brussels (AFP) Nov 29, 2019 - The NATO alliance, which turned 70 in April, celebrates its birthday at a summit on Tuesday and Wednesday at a luxury golf hotel outside the London suburb of Watford.

Hailed by its leadership as "the most successful alliance in history", it now includes superpower the United States, Canada and 27 European partners, old and relatively new.

Here are five things to know as Donald Trump, Boris Johnson, Angela Merkel, Recep Tayyip Erdogan and their colleagues prepare for the big event.

- French leave -

France has had a complicated with its allies, even before current president Emmanuel Macron declared NATO "brain dead" in an interview earlier this month.

France was a founder member of the alliance with the North Atlantic Treaty was signed in April 1949.

But president and former general Charles de Gaulle, distrustful of US leadership, pulled France out of the alliance's military command structure in 1966.

It was 43 years before President Nicolas Sarkozy took France back to full membership, winning by doing so a promise of prestigious commands for French officers.

- All for one -

The core of the NATO treaty is Article 5 which states that allies agree "that an armed attack against one or more of them in Europe or North America shall be considered an attack against them all."

If one of the allies were to invoke the article, and the other allies are unanimous in agreeing that the member is indeed under attack, each will take "such action as it deems necessary, including the use of armed force, to restore and maintain the security of the North Atlantic area."

During the Cold War, this principle translated as an effective US security guarantee for smaller allies facing the implied threat of the Soviet Union and its Warsaw Pact allies in Europe.

But it has never been invoked for that purpose.

- One for all -

In fact, Article 5 has only been invoked once, to defend the United States.

In October 2001, just weeks after Al-Qaeda members hijacked four airliners and crashed them into targets in New York and Washington DC, the alliance came to America's defence.

While the US military response was dominated by its own troops under its own command, NATO AWACS reconnaissance planes were deployed to US skies and warships headed to the eastern Mediterranean.

- Growth pact -

At its birth, NATO was an alliance of North American and western European democracies, facing their Cold war communist foes across the Iron Curtain.

But after the Berlin wall fell many former Moscow satellites in eastern Europe turned westwards, to the fury of post-Soviet Russia.

NATO's 29 members now include for example the three Baltic republics -- Latvia, Estonia and Lithuania -- which have tense borders directly with Russia.

The next new member is to be North Macedonia, a former Yugoslav republic which should be ratified as a member as soon as Spain elects a government that can add its signature to the accession.

- Money problems -

The alliance has been dominated by the United States from the outset, in part because the superpower's defence budget dwarfs that of all the other members combined.

But Washington has assumed security responsibilities far beyond the North Atlantic theatre, and President Trump has repeatedly accused European allies of not pulling their weight.

In 2014, under Trump's predecessor Barack Obama, members agreed to aim to increase their individual defence budgets up to two percent of their national GDP -- but only nine have done so.

Nevertheless, NATO secretary general Jens Stoltenberg confidently forecasts that Canada and European members will have spent between them 400 billion dollars between 2016 and 2024, bringing them close.


Related Links
Learn about the Superpowers of the 21st Century at SpaceWar.com
Learn about nuclear weapons doctrine and defense at SpaceWar.com


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SUPERPOWERS
Berlin denies reports of Merkel-Macron clash over NATO
Berlin (AFP) Nov 25, 2019
Berlin on Monday denied reports that German Chancellor Angela Merkel and President Emmanuel Macron clashed over dinner after the French leader described the NATO defence alliance as suffering from "brain death". The two European leaders met on November 10, a day after Germany marked the 30th anniversary of the fall of the Berlin wall. Their dinner came just days after Macron stunned NATO with his remarks, and prompting Merkel to slap down what she called "sweeping judgements" that were unnecessa ... read more

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