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Europe and the Nato Shield
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 22 May 2009
Extract
Pressures to extend the activities of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) into fields other than the military, or actually to shift the emphasis to political, economic, and cultural objectives, have been so strong in recent years that one wonders whether there has not been a growing tendency, particularly in Europe, to lose sight of the purpose for which NATO was established and which makes it vital to the United States. Essentially, NATO is a multilateral military alliance for the protection of western and southern Europe against Soviet conquest, a means of denying these areas and their resources to the Soviets. If the members of the alliance, on one side or the other of the Atlantic, were ever to reach the conclusion that the threat of military attack from the east had vanished or that it could not be countered effectively by common military effort, NATO would have lost its original raison d'être, though it might be continued for the sake of what today are secondary non-military functions, such as political conciliation and economic collaboration. It should be added that the primacy of the military purpose of NATO, as it exists today, does not preclude the desirability or even the necessity of extending its scope beyond purely military matters. As Ruth C. Lawson has pointed out, there is little hope for reliable military collaboration among countries ohat do not succeed in attaining a reasonable degree of harmony between their political aims and policies. Cyprus, Suez, and Algeria are symptomatic of the problems NATO faces in the political field.
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References
1 Lawson, Ruth C., “Concerting Policies in the North Atlantic Community”, International Organization, Spring 1958 (Vol. 12, No. 2), p. 163–179CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
2 General Norstad, Lauris, speech at Ciocinnati, 11 12, 1957Google Scholar; text in NATO Letter, 12 1957 (Vol. 5, No. 12), p. 26–28Google Scholar.
3 The Economist, 12 22, 1956 (Vol. 181, No. 5913), P. 1057–1058Google Scholar.
4 Cf. a forthcoming paper on NATO strategies by Roger Hilsman to be presented at a January 1959 conference on NATO at Princeton University.
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7 Even if defensive forces of half th e strength of the attacker might prove effective eventually, it does not mean they could stop him on the line of attack. It has been suggested that the Shield could do so by means of atomic interdiction, thereby cutting off the Soviet armies at the front from their supplies and reinforcements. One wonders, however, how much advantage the NATO defenders would gain from such tactics if the Soviets reciprocated with the same kind of atomic interdiction. Presumably they would be in as good a position as NATO to pile up near the front whatever supplies the fighting forces would need to advance.
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16 For critical examination of the argument that this Whould be the nature of a limited nuclear War in Europe, see King, James E. Jr, “Limited Annihilation” (Part II of a review of Nuclear Weapons and Foreign Policy, by Kissenger, Henry A.). The New Republic, 07 15, 1957Google Scholar.
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