A4 THE DAILY ASTORIAN • FRIDAY, ApRIL 5, 2019 OPINION editor@dailyastorian.com KARI BORGEN publisher JIM VAN NOSTRAND Editor Founded in 1873 JEREMY FELDMAN Circulation Manager JOHN D. BRUIJN production Manager CARL EARL Systems Manager PRO-CON Should the US push to expand NATO? AP Photo/Mindaugas Kulbis German NATO soldiers train in 2018 near Vilnius, Lithuania. The U.S.-led military exercise involved 18,000 soldiers from 19 countries. PRO: America – and Europe – need a bigger NATO to stymie Russia’s ambitions CON: If US succeeds in expanding NATO, it would set stage for another Cold War W C ASHINGTON — Europe needs sible only if Moscow can break up NATO NATO. America needs NATO. and decouple the U.S. from Europe. You know who else needs NATO? And there is good reason for NATO to Vladimir Putin. keep adding willing nations to its ranks. The Russian leader has long used the In a defensive alliance, geography mat- existence of NATO to justify his antago- ters. A coherent frontier that keeps the bad nism toward the West. guy further and further away is a good Moscow’s aggressiveness, you see, is thing. Putin isn’t going away anytime soon, merely a response to the “threat” NATO so NATO must consider the geography of poses to Russian security. It’s malarkey, of defending its eastern flank for the foresee- able future. course — like a burglar claiming it’s your Freedom matters, too. Denying will- fault he robbed your house because you had ing nations the right to participate in collec- the audacity to buy a new TV. tive defense would only restrict freedom. Unlike Putin’s Russia, NATO poses no threat of aggression. It is and always has Nor does it make any sense to discourage been a purely defensive alliance. Even at aspirant nations from meeting the politi- cal-military standards to qualify for NATO the height of the Cold War, NATO har- bored no designs on Soviet Russia and its membership. satellites. Know what doesn’t matter? Size. And once the Berlin Wall fell Many small states that have and the Soviet Union crumbled entered NATO have been net con- tributors to security. They have hit without a shot being fired, NATO or are on track to hit the agreed- welcomed new members to the upon NATO defense spending tar- alliance — contributing further to gets. They participate in NATO mis- the mutual security of all and the sions. In terms of manpower and James expansion of freedom and democ- racy in Europe. Carafano operational contributions, they kick NATO and the new Russia lived in more than they take out — easily peacefully side-by-side for years, outperforming many much bigger until Putin embraced the fiction that, by countries on a pound-for-pound basis. increasing its membership, NATO was Tiny Estonia is a case in point. It easily somehow encroaching on Russia and threat- meets NATO’s annual defense spending tar- get of 2 percent of GDP. ening its security. Inside and outside the alliance, no one Meanwhile, big, rich Germany struggles wants to pick a fight with Russia. Yet to do devote more than 1 percent of its GDP Putin’s aggressiveness — from his inva- to defense; its finance minister recently pro- posed a budget that would actually reduce sions of Georgia and Crimea to his mili- tarism in Ukraine — has made joining the defense spending after 2020. alliance even more attractive. Today, Macedonia is poised to join the And it’s not just nations who’ve already alliance. But the prospects of more nations taken casualties who seek membership. joining the club anytime soon are dim. In addition to Georgia and Ukraine, Yet, NATO’s open door policy is more Finland and Macedonia are knocking on than symbolism. It represents what NATO NATO’s door, membership applications in is: an alliance of free nation-states commit- ted to mutual defense cooperation. As long hand. These countries and more rightly see NATO as a counter to Russia’s destabilizing as there are rulers like Putin, the need for that kind of commitment will not diminish. adventurism. No wonder Putin wants NATO to stop Putin knows that. He fears that. It expanding. It crimps his style. restrains him. This is no time for NATO to There is zero likelihood that Putin remove that restraint. would stop harassing the alliance if NATO James Jay Carafano directs the Heri- stopped taking in new members. Much like tage Foundation think-tank’s research into matters of national security and foreign the czars of old, he wants a hard sphere of relations. influence over Europe — something pos- OLUMBUS, Ohio — Expanding NATO has brought into membership the North Atlantic Treaty Orga- a number of former Russian allies — nization is not a rational step if Albania, Bulgaria, Croatia, East Ger- many, Poland, Czech Republic, Slo- the aim is to blunt the ambitions of the vakia, Slovenia, Montenegro and government of Russia. Romania. The first fallacy is the premise that Even more problematic for Russia, Russia has ambitions that need to be NATO has accepted three countries that blunted. were part of the Soviet Union — Lithu- Despite claims by some that Russia ania, Latvia and Estonia. under President Vladimir Putin is try- ing to reconstitute the Soviet Union in These expansions set relations the territory it held before 1991, Russia between Russia and the West on a downward spiral, following a time after has been modest in its aims. the demise of the Soviet Union when it The only territories in which it has seemed that the relationship might be indicated expansionist tendencies have been territories that were closely linked friendly. The West — and specifically the to Russia historically. United States — assured Russia that The Crimean Peninsula never had the weakened posture of Rus- any connection to Ukraine prior sia would not be exploited to to 1954, when Soviet leader expand NATO. But then NATO Nikita Khrushchev, for rea- sons that have never been accepted one Eastern European clear, decided to switch it from country after another into its the Russian component of the treaty, which dates from 1949. Soviet Union to the Ukrainian Russia considered the West component. duplicitous. John Crimea had been part of Rus- The United States should not sia since the late 18th cen- Quigley make the situation even worse tury, and Crimea’s population by promoting NATO mem- bership for more of Russia’s western was and is predominantly Russian, not neighbors. Ukrainian. Despite the influx, NATO still does Even Russia’s promotion of sepa- rationists in eastern Ukraine is a step not count as members Ukraine, Ser- bia, Armenia, Azerbaijan, Moldova, that reflects historical links, because Belarus, Georgia, Macedonia and in that sector, the population is mixed Bosnia. Ukrainian and Russian. NATO’s expansion has brought a The Ukraine government had refused pleas for local autonomy from the pop- dangerous polarization in east-west ulation of eastern Ukraine, setting the relations and has increased militariza- tion on both sides. stage for a push for separation. President Donald Trump wants Even if I am wrong about all that — new aircraft carriers and upgraded even if Russia does harbor broad terri- torial ambitions — expanding NATO is nuclear weapons. He browbeats West- ern Europe to spend more on its not a rational policy. military. Expanding NATO encourages Rus- sia to be defensive and to feel the need Last year Putin test-launched a to protect itself. In 1939, the Soviet supersonic missile that he says can pen- etrate existing U.S. missile defenses. Union invaded Finland out of fear that Nazi Germany might make a move into An arms race is not in the interests of either country. Finland. John B. Quigley is a professor at To date, NATO has expanded sig- nificantly into Eastern Europe, creating Ohio State University’s Moritz College in the Kremlin the same jitters it felt in of Law and a leading scholar on U.S. 1939. relations with Russia.