NATO proves we're not all in this together
By: Rachel Marsden
PARIS — Where has NATO been during this pandemic? U.S. President Donald Trump
and French President Emmanuel Macron have repeatedly referred to their nations
being at war with the coronavirus, so why haven’t we seen a coordinated
international response to the “attack”?
The North Atlantic Treaty Organization operates on the premise that an attack on
one member country warrants a response by all. In 2003, NATO formed the
Multinational Chemical, Biological, Radiological and Nuclear (CBRN) Defense
Battalion. According to NATO’s website, this unit is “prepared for deployment in
crisis situations such as natural disasters, infectious disease outbreaks and
industrial accidents, including those involving hazardous material.” A global
pandemic would certainly seem to qualify.
So what would NATO’s response to a pandemic look like? By the alliance’s own
standards, it would have a voluntary lead member nation with other countries
contributing troops, equipment and logistical support, with components such as
decontamination stations and deployable laboratories.
NATO’s website introduces us to Lt. Col. Piotr Wachna, deputy commander of the
4th Chemical Regiment of the Polish army. Wachna is also the current head of the
CBRN. Photos show his team in hazmat suits disinfecting hospital beds and
hallways — in Poland. What we don’t see are brigades of biological warfare
specialists going to war with a virus abroad.
Unlike its bombings of Libya and Yugoslavia, NATO’s war on coronavirus has been
more discreet. It’s been so subtle, in fact, that any 15-year-old kid with a
computer connection and a blog could achieve similar results. NATO has resorted
to posting appeals on its website that amount to: “Hey, Country X needs
protective equipment. Anyone have any?” The requests ask suppliers to contact
the country in need directly.
To be fair, NATO announced a few days ago that 10 CBRN medical specialists from
Romania will be helping Alabama authorities in a two-week deployment. But for
weeks, China, Cuba and Russia have been seen sending teams of doctors and
supplies to coronavirus hotspots all over the world, including NATO member
countries. Critics have accused them of exploiting the crisis for propaganda
purposes — every act of assistance can be played as a public relations and
diplomacy card, after all — but that doesn’t mean it’s not helpful.
NATO should have mobilized to outshine its traditional Cold War foes. Instead,
it seems largely focused on fighting what it considers “disinformation” coming
from Russia and China.
“We have several examples of statements coming from Moscow and Beijing, which
are not correct, which try to undermine the cohesion of NATO allies, and also
portrays NATO in the absolutely wrong way,” NATO Secretary-General Jens
Stoltenberg said last month, adding that both countries “portray NATO allies as
if we are unable to, for instance, protect our elderly people or that we are not
able to work together. We are working together. That’s exactly what we do.”
It’s not disinformation that NATO allies were hijacking each other’s mask
shipments. Sweden’s Sveriges Radio reported that a Swedish producer’s masks,
which were being sent from Chinese factories to Spain and Italy, were
intercepted in France. And there have been myriad reports of mask hoarding,
blocking and hijacking in the U.S. by states competing with each other for
supplies.
Nor is it disinformation that the elderly in care homes have been
disproportionately affected in NATO countries.
What NATO’s secretary-general calls “disinformation” is really just inconvenient
information. There has indeed been a lack of solidarity between NATO member
states, with every country looking out for itself. It’s not an unreasonable
position, of course. Anyone who’s flown in a plane knows that before you help
your neighbor with an oxygen mask, you’re supposed to make sure that your own
mask is properly secured.
Rather than focusing on how it can capitalize on this crisis to peddle
questionable propaganda against old Cold War foes, NATO should be examining how
it could perform better. Heaven forbid there’s ever a biological attack on a
NATO member country that kills millions of people. What would NATO do then?
Coordinate equipment bids online? Send 10 medical professionals into the field
two months later?
At the very least, NATO could have organized the transport logistics and
security of medical supplies from the outset. And if it really wanted to get
into the disinformation-busting business, it could have cautioned its members
against using “coronavirus cases” — a measure largely dependent on a country’s
ability or willingness to test — as a benchmark. NATO also could have lobbied
its member countries to establish a uniform definition of what constitutes a
coronavirus death. Instead, some countries (including the U.S.) have been
counting those with serious underlying medical conditions that could have caused
their death as coronavirus victims. Countries with lower fatality counts seem to
have a more strict interpretation of what constitutes a coronavirus death. This
disparity has impeded objective analysis of the epidemic.
NATO blew an opportunity to reposition itself during a global emergency.
Instead, it’s still obsessed with ghosts from the last century’s Cold War.
COPYRIGHT 2020 RACHEL MARSDEN