Accidents happen. For Norway at the conclusion of
NATO’s Trident Juncture 2018 military exercises, such an accident
occurred with its Lockheed Martin Aegis-equipped frigate, HNoMS Helge
Ingstad.
After a collision with an oil tanker, the frigate’s captain ordered the ship aground to prevent a total loss. The quick thinking may have saved the lives of Norwegian sailors and made salvaging operations easier. Thankfully no lives were lost and only eight injuries are being reported by the Western media.
The aggressor in the simulation is fictitious, but the setting and the scale of the exercises point clearly in one direction. Tensions between NATO and Russia, which shares an Arctic border with Norway, are running high. In the last five years, Russia has annexed Crimea, destabilized eastern Ukraine, provided military aid to a brutal regime in Syria, meddled in Western elections, and either walked away from or allegedly violated major multilateral security treaties.
NATO is a Cancer, Not a Shield
NATO,
driven primarily by Washington and immense corporate interests who hold
sway over it, has become a tool used to extend American ambitions
around the globe. Few could provide a credible explanation as to what
NATO’s nearly two decade-long occupation of Afghanistan has to do with
defending Europe.
For Norway specifically, Afghanistan has become the grave for at least 10 of its service members and a blackhole that has swallowed several billion dollars in Norwegian expenditures.
Likewise, it was US-led NATO that destroyed the North African nation of Libya (with Norwegian assistance), transforming it into a hotbed of terrorism and triggering a refugee crisis that flooded European territory and continues to be a source of socioeconomic tension today.
After a collision with an oil tanker, the frigate’s captain ordered the ship aground to prevent a total loss. The quick thinking may have saved the lives of Norwegian sailors and made salvaging operations easier. Thankfully no lives were lost and only eight injuries are being reported by the Western media.
The NATO exercises the Helge Ingstad was participating in
simulated an invasion of Norway. As the Council on Foreign Relations
made clear in their article, “NATO’s Trident Juncture Exercises: What to Know,” the imaginary invaders were obvious stand-ins for Russia.
The CFR piece would claim:
The aggressor in the simulation is fictitious, but the setting and the scale of the exercises point clearly in one direction. Tensions between NATO and Russia, which shares an Arctic border with Norway, are running high. In the last five years, Russia has annexed Crimea, destabilized eastern Ukraine, provided military aid to a brutal regime in Syria, meddled in Western elections, and either walked away from or allegedly violated major multilateral security treaties.
Of course none of what the CFR alleges is true and many of
the accusations leveled against Russia by the article have long been
abandoned by even most in the Western media.
The fact that Norway lost an expensive ship in the middle of this NATO exercise to prepare for a Russian invasion that will never happen suggests that the greatest threat much of Europe faces is from NATO itself, not Moscow.
The fact that Norway lost an expensive ship in the middle of this NATO exercise to prepare for a Russian invasion that will never happen suggests that the greatest threat much of Europe faces is from NATO itself, not Moscow.
NATO is a Cancer, Not a Shield
The amount of money required to host NATO members in Norway
to prepare for a Russian invasion that will never happen would seem
detrimental to Norwegians as well as other European nations spending
money to move their forces and their equipment (40,000 personnel, 120
aircraft and 70 ships) to and from the exercise areas.
Training is important and maintaining a strong military as
well as a credible deterrence is also important for all nations, both
Western Europe and Russia included. But such preparations should be
proportional to the prospective threats any nation or bloc of nations
face. Such preparations should also clearly be made to create a
deterrence rather than a provocation.
NATO’s Trident Juncture appears to be more of an exercise to
enforce NATO expansion eastward toward Russia’s borders than any
genuine preparation for a “Russian invasion” that even Norway’s
leadership says is highly unlikely.
Such exercises and the agenda they serve benefits a handful
of special interests, primarily in Washington (Lockheed Martin
included), at the expense of NATO’s European members.
For Norway specifically, Afghanistan has become the grave for at least 10 of its service members and a blackhole that has swallowed several billion dollars in Norwegian expenditures.
Likewise, it was US-led NATO that destroyed the North African nation of Libya (with Norwegian assistance), transforming it into a hotbed of terrorism and triggering a refugee crisis that flooded European territory and continues to be a source of socioeconomic tension today.
In this instance, NATO directly compromised European security, and Norway’s taxpayers helped underwrite the disaster.
It is clear that NATO is not protecting Europe. It is using
Europe to advance American ambitions around the globe, far beyond any
reasonable jurisdiction a defense alliance aimed at protecting Europe
should have. As NATO uses Europe, it is consuming funds that could be
better used domestically for the European people. The net result of
NATO’s activities undermine rather than uphold European security.
NATO’s Trident Juncture is simply an extension of this process, aimed at ratcheting up tensions with Russia and only further undermining European peace and stability in the process.
NATO’s Trident Juncture is simply an extension of this process, aimed at ratcheting up tensions with Russia and only further undermining European peace and stability in the process.
Other Ways NATO Undermines European Peace and Prosperity
Beyond military alliances and defense preparations, there
are also alternatives for creating a deterrence to war and military
aggression. These alternatives include economic cooperation. Here, such
cooperation between Europe and Russia is complicated by US-led efforts
to economically isolate Russia and sabotage trade and investment between
Russia and its neighbors to the west.
By conducting provocative exercises aimed at Russia,
tensions are only further encouraged and US efforts to place a wedge
deeper between Russia and the rest of Europe further advanced.
What we’re left with is a Europe compelled to view its
neighbor to the east as an enemy for lack of any viable alternative not
met with Washington’s ire.
NATO, a supposed defense alliance, instead promotes
tensions, exports wars and consumes the blood and treasure of
member-states for foreign military adventures thousands of miles from
European shores. Considering this, NATO, not Russia, seems to be the
greatest threat facing Europe today.
Ulson Gunnar, a New York-based geopolitical analyst and writer especially for the online magazine