Details Published on Friday 08 July 2022 15:00 Written by Radical Socialist
JAIME PASTOR
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After the costly and patriarchal spectacle of this summit held for the greater glory of US President Joseph Biden and Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez, the main conclusion to be drawn is that NATO has formalised a new leap forward in its old project of establishing itself as a global gendarme at the service of the Western capitalist bloc. Indeed, its “new strategic concept” constitutes a much wider redefinition of its enemies and threats than the concept that led to its birth in 1949, or what was understood during what was known as the “second cold war” in the 1980s.
Now, not only is there a continuation of the global war on a terrorism in all its forms and manifestations’ waged in the wake of 9/11 , but, after the 2010 hiatus, Russia is once again presented as ‘the most significant and direct threat to security’. China is considered a a strategic competitor’ in all areas in the medium and long term (as it represents a systemic challenges’ to a our security, interests and values’). Most seriously, ‘illegal immigration’ is described as a a threat’ to the ‘sovereignty and territorial integrity’ of NATO member states. A list, by the way, to which the new candidates, Finland and Sweden, are added, provided they accept the demands of the Turkish regime, another winner at this summit, to the detriment of Kurdish residents in their own countries.
As if all this were not enough, the document is full of mentions of a authoritarian actors’, a strategic competitors’ and a potential adversaries’ resorting to a hybrid warfare strategies’ – including a disinformation campaigns, the instrumentalisation of immigration, the manipulation of energy supplies and the use of economic coercion’. We read that a conflicts, fragility and instability in Africa and the Middle East directly affect our security and that of our partners’.
The document does not shy away from acknowledging that its alleged “defensive” character is mere rhetoric. “While NATO is a defensive Alliance, no one should doubt our strength and determination to defend every inch of Allied territory, to preserve the sovereignty and territorial integrity of all Allies and to prevail against any aggressor”. All this, moreover, based on the reaffirmation of nuclear weapons as NATO’s “supreme security guarantee”.
In the service of this general militarisation, in addition to the European space being particularly privileged with the reinforcement of the US presence in the East and the growth of NATO rapid reaction forces from 40,000 to 300,000 military personnel, the commitment by all member states to increase their military spending to at least 2% of GDP now appears only as “a floor, not a ceiling”, as the Secretary General, Jens Stoltenberg, has assured us. These proposals, therefore, will serve to increase the profits of the old military-industrial complex that former US President Eisenhower denounced and to relaunch the arms race, including the nuclear arms race, on a global scale.
In short, using the alibi of the Russian invasion of Ukraine, the US has managed to make the effects of the defeat suffered in Afghanistan be forgotten very quickly. Washington has thwarted any hint of EU autonomy and has turned the vast majority of European countries into faithful servants of the project of recomposing its hegemony against its main strategic enemies. That means Russia in the short term and China in the medium and long term – but also anything and anyone that might represent a threat to the EU and its geo-economic and political interests anywhere in the world. This approach is closely associated with the defence of Western white supremacism.
In the case of Spain, this new warmongering scenario is euphorically ratified by Pedro Sánchez, who has rushed to once again show his servility to his American friend by means of the a joint declaration between the Kingdom of Spain and the United States of America’. In this declartion, alongside proclamations about the “defence of democracy”, the two leaders reaffirm themselves as “allies, strategic partners and friends” and agree to “the permanent stationing of US warships’ in Spain’s Rota naval base, increasing the number of US warships from 4 to 6. They also affirm their common willingness to collaborate in the “management of irregular migratory flows”, or, to put it another way, in migratory necropolitics. They immediately delegate this task to their common friend, the Moroccan regime, recently responsible for the brutal massacre in Melilla that has violated the most basic human rights. Let us not forget that the USA and Spain are complicit in Morocco’s illegal occupation of the Western Sahara.