Isolationist Trump stokes NATO defence fears

epa05623862 NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg delivers remarks after the US elections at the alliance's headquarters in Brussels, Belgium, 09 November 2016.  US businessman Republican Donald Trump has won the US presidential election. Americans voted on Election Day to choose the 45th President of the United States of America to serve from 2017 through 2020.  EPA/STEPHANIE LECOCQ

 

Brussels / AFP

Donald Trump’s “America first” approach has Europe worried he may cut US commitments to NATO just as it mounts its biggest military build-up since the end of the Cold War to counter a more assertive Russia.
Trump caused uproar during the campaign when he suggested Washington would think twice about coming to the aid of an endangered NATO ally if it had not paid its dues.
The fear is that Trump embodies an isolationist tradition—”avoid entangling alliances”—which will add to uncertainties as Europe faces challenges new and old from the east, the Middle East and
North Africa.
“A Trump administration will increase US isolationist tendencies, which is a further blow to (its global) leadership role,” said Fabian Zuleeg, chief executive at the European Policy Centre in Brussels. The United States set up NATO to protect post-war Europe from the Soviet Union and its “all for one, one for all” collective defence guarantee has stood the test of time.
But for many years Washington, which accounts for nearly two-thirds of combined NATO defence spending, has demanded that its 27 allies do more to share the burden.
Trump’s harking on this issue during the campaign caused such fears in the Baltic states and former Soviet-ruled eastern European NATO members that US Vice President Joe Biden was sent on a reassurance mission.
“Don’t listen to that other fellow—he knows not of what he speaks. America will never fail to defend our allies,” Biden told them.
Now that “other fellow” is set to be the 45th President of the United States of America.
NATO in shock
The shock in Europe Wednesday was palpable.
In an unusual series of public statements shortly after Trump’s victory was confirmed, NATO head Jens Stoltenberg stressed the continued importance of US global leadership.
“Our alliance has brought together America’s closest friends in times of peace and of conflict for almost 70 years. A strong NATO is good for the United States and good for Europe,” he said.
Poland’s President Andrzej Duda urged Trump to stick by commitments to boost NATO’s presence on its eastern flank to ensure allies would not be left in the lurch if Russia attempted another Ukraine-style adventure.
“We sincerely hope that your leadership will open new opportunities for our cooperation based on mutual commitment,” Duda said. The Polish deployment is led by a US battalion and so is especially emblematic.
European Council head Donald Tusk, a former Polish premier, weighed in with a plea that the European Union — of whose 28 members 22 also belong to NATO —and the United States work together in defence of shared values.
“I do not believe that any country today can be great in isolation,” he added, alluding to Trump’s campaign slogan “Make America Great Again.”
For some analysts, the fear factor may be overdone—foreign policy was not a major issue in the election, Trump’s focus is domestic and it is much too early to say what he will actually do as president.

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