Date: Mar 16, 2012
Source: The Daily Star
Libya showed us that European militaries are deficient

By John D. Podesta, Ken Gude

 

NATO’s intervention in Libya one year ago helped to avert a humanitarian catastrophe and created the conditions for Libya’s citizens to end Colonel Moammar Gadhafi’s dictatorship.
 
The military operation highlighted important improvements in European leadership since the Bosnian debacle in the 1990s, but the conditions underlying the Libya mission’s success cannot be counted upon to exist again in the future. Indeed, NATO’s accomplishment in Libya risks obscuring persistent weaknesses in Europe’s military capabilities.
 
Europe’s unity of purpose in Libya contrasts sharply with its divisions and indecisiveness when Yugoslavia disintegrated during the early 1990s. The United States had to coax many Western European countries into helping to stop the slaughter of innocents in Bosnia. And, though the trans-Atlantic alliance was more unified and responsive during the subsequent Kosovo crisis, the U.S. was still firmly in the driver’s seat. In Libya, the roles were reversed: Western Europeans had to push the U.S. to take action.
 
The manner in which President Barack Obama brought the U.S. into the effort to protect Libyan civilians mollified European concerns about American hubris that had grown out of the Iraq war. It also made possible a broad coalition of countries, as well as the first-ever call for intervention from the Arab League. Obama’s decision that the U.S. should play a supporting role, with other NATO partners – particularly France and the United Kingdom – taking the lead, reinforced the global perception of the mission’s legitimacy.
 
Today, the growing debate about a Syrian intervention raises legitimate questions concerning whether Libya was a unique situation. Libya’s proximity to Europe both lowered barriers to participation and stimulated Europe’s sense of responsibility, while Gadhafi was a reviled figure with few friends. Moreover, many European countries have direct interests in Libya, and thus had a clear stake in the outcome. Libyans’ opposition to Gadhafi was relatively well organized, was recognized by the international community, and had explicitly called for outside intervention.
 
While the conditions in Libya were certainly optimal, the situation in Syria is better described as uniquely complicated for any intervention. For starters, Syria’s location in the eastern Mediterranean is not as advantageous as is Libya’s position in North Africa. Syria’s borders with Turkey, Iraq, Lebanon and Israel also present unique challenges to regional security, given the potential not only for international conflict, but also for destabilizing cross-border flows of refugees. Syria also has allies – most importantly Russia, with its veto-wielding seat on the United Nations Security Council.
 
The significant obstacles to intervention, and the genuine risk of making an already terrible situation worse, makes direct military intervention in Syria a remote possibility at this time. That is tragic in many ways, but it does not mean that the positive post-Libya momentum toward the protection of civilians is entirely lost.
 
Even though it ended in failure, the Arab League agreement with the Assad regime to allow observers into Syria to facilitate an end to the conflict was brokered, as Oman’s foreign minister said, “to save the Arab world from Western intervention.” The League’s mission did not stop the killing, but it represented an escalation of pressure to end the slaughter – and it was based on leverage gained in Libya.
 
For NATO, that leverage depends upon its members’ ability to marshal the will and resources to intervene if necessary. In Libya, Europe finally showed the will to lead, but it lacked the means, and still relied heavily on the U.S. Even though Washington was not the first to call for military action, its participation in the mission was essential and confirmed its status as the one indispensable nation in the Western alliance.
 
With very small exceptions, the Libya campaign was exclusively an air war. True, the majority of strike sorties were carried out by non-U.S. aircraft, with particular credit going to Denmark, Norway and Belgium, which flew a disproportionate share of the missions. But European policymakers should not fool themselves into thinking that these numbers mean that their air-combat capabilities are sufficient to operate independently of America.
 
In addition to its airstrike deficiencies, Europe demonstrated serious shortfalls across all of the areas required to sustain any air campaign. As General Mark Welsh, Commander of U.S. Air Forces in Europe, told top officers and industry executives at a gathering last summer, “We need more intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance capability, and we need it now.”
 
Unfortunately, the ongoing economic crisis is exerting downward pressure on defense budgets across NATO, exposing the need for greater cooperation among the alliance’s European members. The harm caused by budget cuts is likely to multiply if all European governments slash spending in the same areas. German Air Force Commander Lieutenant General Aarne Kreuzinger-Janik warns that this would create “even bigger gaps and shortfalls.” European governments must now work to ensure that they invest their limited resources in the right areas.
 
The trans-Atlantic alliance has reached a fork in the road. Down the path less traveled lies greater coordination on both strategic objectives and development of military capacity. This is particularly true within Europe, where governments must better allocate resources among themselves in order to overcome the key deficiencies revealed by the Libya mission. The more familiar road leads to wasteful overlap and lower investment in key technologies, leaving wider gaps than ever in Europe’s defense capability.
 
If Europe is to build on its success in Libya, it needs to take the road less traveled. It will make all the difference.
 
John D. Podesta, chief of staff to President Bill Clinton from 1998 to 2001, is chairman of the Center for American Progress. Ken Gude is chief of staff and vice president of the Center for American Progress. THE DAILY STAR publishes this commentary in collaboration with Project Syndicate-Europe’s World © (www.project-syndicate.org and www.europesworld.org).