Fed
Up With Freeloaders
by
Patrick
J. Buchanan
Recently
by Patrick J. Buchanan: Obama's
Dilemma – and Ours
"The most
successful alliance in history," it was called at the end of the
Cold War in which NATO, for 40 years, deterred the Red Army from
overrunning Berlin or crashing through West Germany to the Channel.
And when that
Cold War was over, Sen. Richard Lugar famously said, "Either NATO
goes out of area or goes out of business."
In Afghanistan
and Libya, NATO went out of area. And given the trend in both conflicts,
NATO may soon be going out of business.
NATO faces
"collective military irrelevance," said Defense Secretary Robert
Gates on his valedictory visit to a stunned Brussels last week:
"The mightiest
military alliance in history is only 11 weeks into an operation
against a poorly armed regime in a sparsely populated country --
yet many allies are beginning to run short of munitions, requiring
the U.S., once more, to make up the difference."
Gates' patience
with the Europeans is, understandably, just about exhausted. Two
decades after the Soviet Union disintegrated and the Red Army went
home, America is still carrying 75 percent of the NATO burden for
the defense of Europe.
Only five of
28 members invest in defense the 2 percent of gross domestic product
required by NATO rules. Major members like the Netherlands, Spain
and Turkey refuse to fly air strikes in Libya. France and Britain
have run so low on munitions in a war against a sandbox country
on the African coast that they have had to borrow U.S. munitions.
Germany and Poland are AWOL.
With an air
operations command capable of handling 300 sorties a day, the allies
are struggling to put half that many in the air.
Another reason
besides European malingering why NATO is in trouble is the fiscal
crisis and sea change taking place in the United States.
Gates alluded
to it. In America, "the reality is changing. ... Choices are going
to be made more on what is in the best interests of the United States."
With GOP conservatives
joining congressional Democrats in seeking to cut off funds for
the Libyan war, John Boehner has been forced to take the lead in
charging the president with violating the War Powers Act. He is
demanding Barack Obama come to Congress to get authorization to
continue U.S. participation in the Libyan war.
Should the
Americans pull out, NATO loses.
The first Republican
debate in New Hampshire was astonishing for its anti-interventionist
tone. While front-runner Mitt Romney said he would listen to the
generals about when it is safe to get out of Afghanistan, he spoke
out against any more wars to win independence for nations not vital
to the United States.
This is straight
out of the Robert Taft tradition that America does not fight other
countries' wars or pay other countries' bills.
Michele Bachmann,
who emerged as the star of the debate and favorite for the backing
of the social conservative and Tea Party right, called Libya a strategic
mistake. No vital U.S. interests were imperiled.
That debate
was a fire bell in the night for the neoconservatives. The days
when Republicans stood up and saluted a commander in chief as soon
as he starting bombing a country appear to be over.
With Afghanistan,
Iraq, Pakistan and Libya, the GOP appetite for intervention has
been sated. Only Sen. Lindsey Graham is hot for air strikes on Syria
to bring down President Bashar Assad.
Moreover, there
are other reasons, based on painful experience, for the new hesitancy
to use U.S. military force. One is blowback, the whiplash recoil
that inevitably follows even beneficial U.S. action.
When Obama
sent SEAL Team Six on that secret mission to kill Osama bin Laden,
we so humiliated the Pakistani army its pro-American commander,
Gen. Ashfaq Parvez Kayani, could be ousted and replaced by officers
hostile to the United States.
Second,
while the U.S. military has shown itself capable of taking down
regimes, we have proven less capable of establishing replacement
governments that are strong, stable and pro-American. And we have
thus far not succeeded at the follow-up business of nation-building,
despite the investment of hundreds of billion of dollars.
Third, Americans
are fed up with freeloaders, domestic and foreign.
They are fed
up with politicians whose constituents pay no federal taxes howling
for higher taxes on those who carry the load. Fed up with foreign
aid to nations who never get off the dole and regularly vote against
us in the U.N. Fed up with allies who spend less than we do on their
own defense. Fed up with subsidizing the new international order
while nations like China exploit that new order for their own advantage.
"Yankee, go
home!" much of the world has been yelping for years. We may be all
about to find out what happens when the Yankees do go home, not
to return again for a long, long time.
June
18, 2011
Patrick
J. Buchanan [send
him mail] is co-founder and editor of The
American Conservative. He is also the author of seven books,
including Where
the Right Went Wrong, and A
Republic Not An Empire. His latest book is Churchill,
Hitler, and the Unnecessary War. See his
website.
Copyright
© 2011 Creators Syndicate
The
Best of Patrick J. Buchanan
|