Monday, May 09, 2022

Is Nato's Nordic expansion a threat or boost to Europe?

BBC:

Is Nato's Nordic expansion a threat or boost to Europe?

By Frank Gardner
BBC security correspondent


IMAGE SOURCE,GETTY IMAGESImage caption,
Swedish Prime Minister Magdalena Andersson and Finnish Prime Minister Sanna Marin at a meeting to discuss Nato membership



Finland and Sweden, two neutral Nordic countries, are so alarmed by Russia's invasion of Ukraine that they are both now seriously considering joining Nato, as early as this summer.


Russia has warned them not to. It has threatened "a military technical response" if they do.


So, on balance, is Europe a safer or more dangerous place if either or both of these countries become a part of Nato?


Nato - the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation - is a 30-nation defensive alliance founded shortly after the end of World War Two. It has its headquarters in Brussels but is dominated by the massive military and nuclear missile power of the US.


Finland and Sweden are both modern, democratic countries that fulfil the criteria for Nato membership. The organisation's chief, Jens Stoltenberg, has said he would welcome them with open arms and there would be minimum delay in processing their membership.


US Army Lt Gen (retd) Ben Hodges, who commanded all US land forces in Europe, is in no doubt of the benefits of this for the West:



"Sweden and Finland joining Nato is huge - a very positive development. They are two very strong democracies, and the military of both is very good, capable and modernised, with remarkable mobilisation systems."


In the case of Finland, a form of military integration is already under way. British tank crews recently went on exercise with a Finnish armoured brigade, together with US, Latvian and Estonian troops as part of Nato's so-called Joint Expeditionary Force (JEF). The UK's ministry of defence said the aim was to "deter Russian aggression in Scandinavia and the Baltic states".


So, what is the problem if either or both countries want to join?


What is Nato and how is it helping Ukraine?


Russia, and more specifically President Vladimir Putin, does not see Nato as a defensive alliance. Quite the opposite. He views it as a threat to Russia's security. He has watched in dismay as Nato steadily expanded eastwards - closer to Moscow - after the disintegration of the Soviet Union in 1991.


When Putin was a young intelligence officer in the Soviet state security apparatus, the KGB, Moscow controlled all the countries of eastern Europe, with Russian troops stationed in most of them. Today, nearly all those countries have opted to look westwards and join Nato. Even the Baltic states - Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania - countries that were once, unwillingly, part of the Soviet Union, have joined the alliance.



Only 6% of Russia's vast borders are with Nato countries, yet the Kremlin is feeling encircled and threatened. Shortly before President Putin sent his troops into Ukraine on 24 February, he demanded a redrawing of the security map of Europe. Nato troops, he insisted, should pull back from all of these eastern European countries, and no new countries should be allowed to join.



His invasion has now resulted in the opposite.

For decades, Finland and Sweden have carefully nurtured their neutrality. Culturally, they are firmly in the western camp, but until now they have been wary of antagonising their giant nuclear-armed neighbour, Russia. The Ukraine invasion prompted a radical rethink, with both government and people wondering if they might not be safer after all "inside the tent", sheltering under Nato's collective protection known as "Article 5". This views an attack on one member as an attack on all. A recent poll in Finland showed 62% of Finns in favour of joining.

The case in favour

From a purely military perspective, the addition of Finland's and/or Sweden's substantial militaries would be a major boost to Nato's defensive power in the north of Europe, where it is massively outnumbered by Russia's forces.


Finland, says Ben Hodges, brings F35 fighter jets, Sweden brings Patriot missile batteries and has re-secured its large Baltic island of Gotland, where Russia has recently been probing. The armed forces of both Finland and Sweden are experts in Arctic warfare, training intensively to fight and survive in the frozen forests of Scandinavia. When Russia invaded Finland in WW2, the Finns fought ferociously against the invaders, inflicting serious losses.


Geographically, the addition of Finland fills in a huge gap in Nato's defence, doubling the amount of its border with Russia. Security and stability in the Baltic Sea, says Hodges, are now dramatically improved.

Politically, it would add to the cohesion of western mutual defence, sending a signal to Putin that almost all of Europe is united against his invasion of a sovereign country, Ukraine.


The case against


Put simply, the risk here is that such a major expansion of Nato, right on Russia's doorstep, alarms and enrages the Kremlin so much that it responds by lashing out in some form. When Putin threatened to take "military technical measures" in response this, it is widely taken to be two things - a reinforcing of its own borders by moving troops and missiles closer to the West, and possibly a stepping up of cyber attacks on Scandinavia.


Staying neutral has served Sweden very well over the years. Giving up that neutrality is not to be taken lightly. There will also be an economic cost for Sweden's domestic arms industry if the country is obliged to buy Nato weapons instead of its own.


The Kremlin spokesman Dmitri Peskov was emphatic in warning that Finland and Sweden joining Nato "will not bring greater security for Europe".


Vladimir Putin likes to remind people of the time in his youth when he cornered a rat in a room and it turned on him in attack. Putin and his advisers already blame Nato, with some justification, for thwarting their plans to take over Ukraine. If they decide, unreasonably, that this sudden expansion on their northern flank presents an existential threat to Russia's security then there is no knowing exactly what Moscow could do in response.


3 comments:

  1. It is vital to the security of Europe as well as the whole World that nations do not just dance to Putin's tune.
    It seems only Russia's security nightmares matter, other countries security concerns, including those of Ukraine and those of Sweden and Finland don't matter.
    For too long, Russia under Putin has carried one aggression after another, with piddling consequences.

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    Replies
    1. This is not a reply to that know-nothing mfer with his indoctrinated twisted fart.

      It's for the consumption of the other readers from my readings of the world war history.

      Security!

      For whom & from what prospective?

      Before the rise of Nazis Germany, many of the surrounding European countries have already WELL AWARE of the insidious intention of Hitler for his greater European empire. That would inevitable threaten their national SECURITY.

      But many keeps to their own selfish & individualistic security considerations even though there were multitudes of treaties & political/military pacts.

      Russia of the 1940- 41 played safe by not trying in anyway to agitate Hitler's every moves - military &/or political. Similarly of the gimmicky 'protective' promises of UK & France to their allies against any military moves of Nazis Germany.

      The results were Russia was wasted & ignored on the peace treaties he signed with the Nazis Germany. UK & France, the two countries had pacts with Poland and had declared war on Nazis Germany on 3 September; in the end their aids to Poland was very limited & inconsequential! Poland was invaded by Blitzkrieg within days.

      The end result is a cruel & bloody war cultivated by the leniencies induced by the selfishness of each individual European countries in the face of known coming threats. & yet NONE took any preventive actions to quench the sparkling Nazis flame!

      Contextualized all these atrocious historical failings of the inter-European political plays/compromises with the current NATO eastward expansion to encircle Russia, it's not hard to understand WHY Putin starts his special military operation in Ukraine.

      Rather than waiting for the unavoidable war from a more arrogant & powerful NATO to force itself, military & politically, unto Russia, Putin has to strike FIRST to secure the unique sovereignty of Russia, which the NATO is vowed to overthrow.

      It's a preventive action that the Russko bears have learned hard - 27million deads in WWII to defend their motherland.

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  2. "Finland and Sweden, two neutral Nordic countries, are so alarmed by Russia's invasion of Ukraine that they are both now seriously considering joining Nato, as early as this summer"

    The old dilemma of which one comes first - chicken or egg!

    If Finland and Sweden remain to their neutral status what r they to be alarmed?

    Bcoz of the current Ukraine crisis?

    What if Ukraine retains its neutrality, then what security crisis?

    The unspoken problem is NATO wants to have a bogeyman in Europe such that the Yank can continue playing his dominant role in determining the sopo military direction of Europe!

    Russia is that convenient blackgoat that almost all European nations have an inherent/illogical fear.

    Part of the reason, is due to the over exaggerated & deeply indoctrinated conflicts of socialism VS capitalis, long cultivated within the psyche of these nations.

    Most of all, is that EU members like to define Russia as what they have imagined of the old Soviet Union & not what Russia is actually a new European state!

    The Eastern Orthodoxy plays a small part as the Catholicism & Protestantism view it as a deviant cult according primacy of honor to the patriarch of Constantinople and adhering to the decisions of the first seven ecumenical councils and to the Byzantine rite of the old Eastern Roman Empire or Byzantium!

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