Contrary to the Obama administration’s official cover story, the outcome of the Strasbourg summit was disappointing. It was little more than a European diplomatic sop to Washington. America’s allies seem determined to persist in their policy of making symbolic rather than meaningful military deployments in Afghanistan. Germany and other countries have placed so many restrictions on the use of the forces they have already committed that U.S. generals express frustration bordering on fury. Several NATO governments insist that their troops be stationed far away from the principal combat areas in southern Afghanistan, or confined to noncombat roles entirely.
Allied pledges of “strong and unanimous support” at Strasbourg are simply more of the same. Michael Mandelbaum once skewered the Clinton administration’s approach to world affairs as tending toward “foreign policy as social work.” NATO’s European members have gone one step farther, apparently viewing military policy as social work. With the partial exception of the British, their contribution to the mission in Afghanistan is increasingly focused on vague “stabilization” efforts and barely disguised nation-building fantasies.
Washington needs far more than cheerleading and symbolic military deployments from its supposed NATO partners. The willingness of the European allies to wave their pompoms and express diplomatic support for the Obama administration’s new approach in Afghanistan will do precious little to defeat al-Qaeda fighters.
The outcome at Strasbourg ought to increase skepticism in the United States about the military utility of NATO going forward–and not just with respect to the Afghan mission. Even some perceptive European officials had previously warned against the kind of feckless behavior evident at the summit. In January 2009, British Defense Secretary John Hutton blasted European governments for failing to bear their fair share of the collective defense burden, particularly in Afghanistan. He issued an especially pointed rebuke to Germany and other allies who seemed to believe that humanitarian and nation-building tasks were an adequate substitute for combat responsibilities. “It isn’t good enough to always look to the U.S.” to assume dominant security responsibilities, Hutton admonished. “And this imbalance will not be addressed by parcelling up NATO tasks–the ‘hard’ military ones for the U.S. and a few others and the ‘soft’ diplomatic ones for the majority of Europeans.”
Hutton was right, but if the results at Strasbourg are any indication, his warnings have been ignored. America now has an alliance with nations that apparently believe that posturing and symbolism are adequate substitutes for meaningful military measures. That is a very bad bargain indeed for America, and it is high time that our leaders make a fundamental reassessment of our relationship with such irresponsible security partners.