By Jim Garamone, DoD News, Defense Media Activity
WASHINGTON -- The North Atlantic Treaty Organization is as
important to the United States as it is to Europe, NATO Secretary General Jens
Stoltenberg said here at the Heritage Foundation yesterday.
The NATO chief spoke at the foundation following talks with
U.S. security officials. In his remarks, he stressed the importance of the
nearly 70-year-old organization to America.
The alliance has guaranteed peace and stability in Europe
since it was founded in 1949, Stoltenberg said. NATO was a response to
aggression from the Soviet Union in the aftermath of World War II, and has
morphed into an alliance seeking a stable, rules-based international climate
where all nations can prosper.
The past 70 years have seen an unprecedented period of
prosperity in Europe and North America, Stoltenberg said. NATO is the
foundation for that prosperity. “Europe and North America together represent
half of the world’s economic output,” he said. “And while we now have our
disagreements over tariffs, it does not change the fact that Europe and North
America are each other’s biggest trading partners.”
Ensuring a peaceful, prosperous Europe is in the interests
of all parties “on both sides of the Atlantic,” he said.
“NATO allies share and support the fundamental values which
are at the heart of American society,” he said.
Alliance nations are democracies, support individual
liberties and abide by the rule of law. “They are the foundations of our free
societies, but they are also the foundations of our engagement with the rest of
the world,” the secretary general said. “These values are magnets for other
countries, and lead them to join our alliance.”
After the Berlin Wall came down and the Soviet Union
dissolved, former Warsaw Pact and Baltic nations joined the alliance. Nations
in the Balkans and others aspire to join, he said. “NATO has helped to spread
democratic values, free enterprise, and stability to millions of people in the
eastern part of Europe, and this represents a historic geopolitical shift that
has benefitted the United States and the world at large,” Stoltenberg said.
Finally, NATO allies are a boost to American military power.
The Europeans have nearly 2 million active duty service members with
cutting-edge capabilities. The European allies are on duty in Afghanistan, Iraq
and Syria. They work with the United States in counter-piracy operations and in
maintaining sea lines of communication and the airways.
“France and the United Kingdom contribute 30 percent of
NATO’s nuclear ballistic-missile submarine fleet,” he said. “America’s NATO
allies also maintain dual-capable aircraft for nuclear delivery to enhance our
deterrence and keep the peace.”
NATO allies have strong and capable intelligence networks
that work alongside American professionals. This alliance intelligence sharing
runs the gamut of capabilities from tracking submariners in the Arctic to
identifying terrorists, the secretary general said.
“NATO allies also hosts 28 American main operating bases
across Europe,” he said. “These bases in Europe are not only for Europe, they
enable the U.S. to project military power across the wider Middle East and
Africa providing a clear strategic advantage in the fight against terrorism and
other threats.
The classic example of this is U.S. Africa Command which is
based in Stuttgart, Germany, or the U.S. 6th Fleet based in Naples. “When US
troops are wounded in places like Iraq and Afghanistan, they are flown for
quick treatment to Ramstein, Germany,” he said. “When thinking of the value of
NATO to the United States, I am also reminded of what [Defense] Secretary
[James N.] Mattis once told me that never in his entire career had he fought a
war without NATO allies at his side. The U.S. never has to fight alone.”
Stoltenberg noted that the only time the alliance invoked
Article 5 of the Washington Treaty establishing the alliance was in the
aftermath of an attack on the United States – 9/11. “Since then, hundreds of
thousands of European and Canadian soldiers have fought alongside the United
States in Afghanistan,” he said. “More than a thousand have paid the ultimate
price.”
NATO continues to be relevant and effective in Afghanistan,
in the Defeat-ISIS coalition and in deterring Russia. “For nearly seven
decades, the United States has been able to call upon its close allies and
friends in NATO,” he said. “No other power can match that. No other power in
the world has so many friends and allies.”
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