NATO reaches back to Cold War past with first major defense plans in
decades
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[May 18, 2023]
By Sabine Siebold
BRUSSELS (Reuters) - NATO will step back to the future at its Vilnius
summit in July, with leaders set to approve thousands of pages of secret
military plans that will detail for the first time since the Cold War
how the alliance would respond to a Russian attack.
The move signifies a fundamental shift - NATO had seen no need to draw
up large-scale defense plans for decades, as it fought smaller wars in
Afghanistan and Iraq and felt certain post-Soviet Russia no longer posed
an existential threat.
But with Europe's bloodiest war since 1945 raging just beyond its
borders in Ukraine, the alliance is now warning that it must have all
planning in place well before a conflict with a peer adversary such as
Moscow might erupt.
"The fundamental difference between crisis management and collective
defense is this: It is not we but our adversary who determines the
timeline," said Admiral Rob Bauer, one of NATO's top military officials.
"We have to prepare for the fact that conflict can present itself at any
time."
By outlining what it calls its regional plans, NATO will also give
nations guidance on how to upgrade their forces and logistics.
"Allies will know exactly what forces and capabilities are needed,
including where, what and how to deploy," said NATO chief Jens
Stoltenberg about the highly classified documents that will, as in the
Cold War, assign certain troops to the defense of certain regions.
This formalizes a process triggered by Russia's annexation of Crimea in
2014, which prompted Western allies for the first time to deploy combat
troops to the east, with Britain, Canada and Germany each taking the
lead in one of the Baltic states.
NOT A COLD WAR RE-RUN
But while many features resemble NATO's military line-up before 1990,
some crucial factors have changed for an alliance that has since then
expanded some 1,000 km (600 miles) to the east and grown from around a
dozen to 31 members.
Finland's accession last month has alone doubled NATO's border with
Russia to some 2,500 km, forcing a more flexible approach to deployments
than in the past, when Germany was seen as the main battlezone.
Also, the alliance is no longer preparing to fight a large-scale nuclear
war against Moscow and its allies - most of whom are now NATO members -
said Ian Hope, historian at NATO's Supreme Headquarters Allied Powers
Europe (SHAPE).
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The Chair of the NATO Military
Committee, Admiral Rob Bauer listens during an interview in Tallinn,
Estonia September 16, 2022. REUTERS/Janis Laizans/File Photo
"We don't envision the type of war that the Cold War was, where
allied forces ... would be hit simultaneous with large-scale Warsaw
Pact attacks," he said, pointing rather to regionalized conflicts
that needed to be contained by quick force deployments.
At the same time, the internet, drones, hypersonic weapons and a
rapid flow of information present new challenges.
"The good news is that we talk about the transparency of the
battlefield. With all the satellites, with all the intel we're able
to see a maturing crisis," said Lieutenant General Hubert Cottereau,
SHAPE's Vice Chief of Staff. "For Ukraine, we had all the indicators
quite in advance."
This transparency is one of the reasons why NATO, contrary to the
Baltic states' demands, does not see any immediate need to ramp up
troop numbers in the east.
"The more troops you are massing up on the border, it's like having
a hammer. At some point, you want to find a nail," warned Cottereau.
"If the Russians are massing troops on the border that will make us
nervous, if we are massing troops on the border that will make them
nervous."
CHALLENGES
Still, it will be a huge task to drastically improve readiness. NATO
agreed in 2022 to put 300,000 troops on high alert, up from 40,000
in the past.
Shortcomings in the alliance's capacity to produce sufficient
weapons and ammunition have been highlighted by the struggle to keep
pace with Ukraine's demands, and NATO must also upgrade the
long-neglected logistics needed to quickly deploy troops via rail or
road.
The need to finance the implementation of the regional plans is one
of the reasons why Stoltenberg has called upon leaders to raise the
alliance's military spending target, another topic that will be
discussed in Vilnius.
NATO officials estimate it will take a few years for the plans to be
fully implemented, though they stress that the alliance can head
into battle immediately if required.
"We are ready to fight tonight. You know, you are never sufficiently
ready. Never," said Cottereau. "We have to be able to fight tonight
if necessary, with what we have."
(Reporting by Sabine Siebold; Additional reporting by Andrew Gray;
Editing by Alex Richardson)
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