By Nick Simeone
DoD News, Defense Media Activity
WASHINGTON, July 14, 2014 – As NATO prepares for a summit in
September, a senior Defense Department official today characterized the alliance
as being at a turning point, with questions emerging about the kinds of
missions it should take on post-Afghanistan, appropriate levels of defense
spending by its members, and whether NATO publics will question the alliance’s
relevance going forward.
“For NATO to continue to be seen as relevant to our publics,
it needs to be seen as addressing the security issues that are relevant to our
publics, so that’s why as an alliance we need to work harder,” Derek Chollet,
assistant secretary of defense for international security affairs, said during
a "Transatlantic Talks" discussion at the German Marshall Fund of the
United States here.
Chollet, whose Pentagon portfolio includes department policy
on Russia and Ukraine in addition to alliance issues, said the NATO summit set
to be held in Wales will come at a critically important time for the alliance,
given the uncertain security situation in Eastern Europe and the scheduled end
of NATO’s combat mission in Afghanistan in December, as well as other possible
responsibilities that its 28 members could be asked to take on in the future.
“As we are approaching the end of this year with Afghanistan
transitioning to a train, advise and assist mission, we are once again facing
for the alliance a moment where we are asking, ‘What is the alliance for?’” he
said.
The crisis in Ukraine, Chollet said, has served to bring
some of these issues to the forefront, including the question of capabilities,
which inevitably touches on defense spending by European governments.
“Declining defense budgets [and] declining capabilities
remain a challenge, they remain a problem, and they remain something we worry
very much about, and that’s why these issues have been on the agenda at NATO at
ministerials, and that’s why they will be front and center at the summit,”
Chollet told his audience of journalists, think tank members and diplomats.
It was an echo of warnings by Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel
and his recent predecessors, who have publicly called on NATO’s European
members to pick up an increasing share of the alliance’s budget, the bulk of
which is paid by the United States.
Chollet said demonstrating the importance of holding the
line on defense spending is one reason why President Barack Obama has asked
Congress to approve up to $1 billion to fund the European Reassurance
Initiative, a program he announced last month intended to reassure U.S. allies
of American support on the continent through security operations that include
exercises and troop rotations.
“Think of it as a challenge pledge,” he said. “We’re showing
that we’re still willing to try to buck the political trends here and continue
to spend on European security, and we expect our European partners to show the
same.”
No comments:
Post a Comment