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The chairman of the House Armed Services Committee, Rep. Howard P. "Buck" McKeon, recently complained that for every dollar the U.S. is spending on homeland missile defense it is spending four times that much on regional missile defenses such as the one being erected in Europe. "What's more, European missile defense will be a `national contribution' to NATO, meaning the cost will be borne entirely by the U.S. at a time when most of NATO is failing to meet even the 2 percent of GDP threshold," McKeon, R-Calif., said at a recent hearing. The Chicago summit is expected to announce that a nascent NATO missile defense system has achieved an "interim," or startup capability, a milestone that in practice means it is mainly an American system. It is unlikely to be fully operational, with substantial European contributions, before the end of the decade. The widening disconnect across the Atlantic prompted Robert Gates, in his final policy speech as U.S. defense secretary 11 months ago, to say that the alliance faced a "dim if not dismal" future. Speaking in Brussels, the city that hosts NATO headquarters, he said Europeans' penny-pinching and lack of political will could hasten the end of U.S. support for NATO. A short time later he said he did not expect NATO to shatter but rather to slowly grow apart. "It's a troubled marriage," he told The Associated Press. Since he took over from Gates last July as Pentagon chief, Leon Panetta has cast the alliance as central to U.S. defense strategy. Yet he also is cutting the number of U.S. Army brigades in Germany from three to one, while keeping one brigade in Italy and promising that rotational training missions in Europe by other Army units will keep the bonds tight. The impression that the U.S. is losing interest in Europe was reinforced, however when the Obama administration declared last year that in the aftermath of U.S. wars in the Middle East it was "pivoting" to Asia as part of a shifting of strategic priorities. Administration officials are so concerned about this perception that they have started substituting the word "rebalancing" for "pivoting," to avoid the notion of turning away from Europe. Annette Heuser, executive director of Germany's Bertelsmann Foundation in Washington, which focuses on trans-Atlantic cooperation, said in an interview that Europe is unmistakably anxious about U.S. intentions in Europe. "NATO is the one and only institutional anchor that Europe has with the United States, and also the only way Europe can magnify its military power," Heuser said. "Without NATO, Europe could not play on the world stage as a security actor." ___ Online: NATO: http://www.nato.int/
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