Müs wrote:
The bigger question is "So what?"
The other one is "How is this our problem?" Sure, we're a part of NATO... but most of Europe is too. If they don't want to participate when its right next door... why the **** should we care?
I liken this to a neighbor getting broken into when they can't be bothered to buy locks, security systems, or even a **** door.
Well, that's a legitimate point - why ARE we still part of NATO when the other major NATO powers can't be assed to provide for the defense of their neighbors per their treaty obligations? These countries aren't like Poland which is actually large enough to make a meaningful contribution to defense (and in the case of Poland, is one of the few NATO allies to give a **** about doing so).The alliance took the decision to add a bunch of small, very hard to defend members that can't contribute a great deal to their own defense, so it assumed an obligation to defend them. that is to say, the alliance did; it doesn't mean the U.S. takes them under its defense umbrella at our expense while everyone else provides lip service and a few token airplanes.
However, the other side of the coin is that the ship of "is it actually a good idea to add the Baltic states to NATO?" has already sailed. They ARE a part of it now, and so are we. If we're going to pull out we should do so for our own reasons and on our own terms, not after the Russians have already called our bluff.
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Oh. **** them then. I'd much rather those dollars be spent here, rather than Europe.
The problem with that is that the people we can't defend are not the ones at fault here - Estonia and LAtvia are small, poor, and suffered under Soviet occupation during the 45 years when the early NATO members were economically prosperous. they cannot be blamed for trying to get help to protect against their large, scary neighbor. Who can be blamed are the Germans and British that think their militaries are endless supplies of largesse for politicians to buy votes with.
The problem with NATO is that there are 3 types of countries - Those that could contribute but don't like Germany and Britain (at least, not to the degree they should), those like Estonia and Latvia that want to but really can't, and then the U.S. and Canada both of which are special cases because of the giant ocean in the way.
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To understand why the **** we should care, we need to understand a little bit about American history.
NATO was the military's excuse to have unlimited funding during the latter half of the twentieth century. NATO was how they justified spending money without having to explain to anyone what they were actually it money for. Now we've pissed money away for fifteen years **** around in third world countries. Terrorism doesn't bring in those tax dollars the way it used to. The war hawks are hoping another good old-fashioned Red Scare will get them the unfettered, no-questions-asked access to the public coffers they they became accustomed to.
To understand a bit about American history, you'd have to understand a bit about American history. First, the term "war hawk". "War hawk" is a term for a particular political group. It's proper definition is "Anyone who is, in any way shape or form, for any reason, in favor of any action of the national defense that the speaker finds uncomfortable, inconvenient, or inappropriate in any way." Much like "racist" or "misogynist" its purpose is to distract from the issues and make some vague class of scary boogeymen the issue instead.
NATO was never the military's excuse for anything; certainly not for "unlimited funding" which never occurred, and the implication that there haven't been and aren't now any threats and it's all just a "Red scare" is laughable. Why don't you go ask some people in Georgia or the Ukraine about Russian aggression? For that matter, how about the citizens of the Baltic states under discussion? You do realize that the reason they want to be in NATO is that they were occupied by Russia in 1939 and stayed that way until 1991 or so?
During the 1950s the Air Force was the only show in town; the Navy had to struggle just to get a carrier and the Army was an afterthought. It could barely hold off North Korea even before Chinese intervention due to excessive post WWII - Kennedy - notably, not a "warmongering Republican" campaigned on, among other things, adding 6 divisions to the Army because it was so badly understrength. The military in general missed an entire equipment upgrade cycle due to Viet Nam, and then missed even more under Carter. This was part of the reason for the 1980s defense binge - it was necessary because everything the military had in 1980 was obsolete, worn out, or both. The F-105 fleet for example lost almost half the production run in Viet Nam.
The fact is that Defense is the ONLY area of government spending that EVER sees significant cutbacks. The imaginary "unlimited funding" of the last 15 years came largely at the expense of the Navy and Air Force- the Navy continues to shrink and other than the F-22 and a few support planes the Air Force is flying a long list of aircraft that are mostly older than you are - the B-52, U-2, F-15, and F-16 are designs from the 1970s or earlier. The B-1B and B-2A have their origins in the 1970s as well. On the Navy side, the F-18 is in the same boat; it was originally a competitor with the F-16 in its YF-17 version; the only significantly newer form is the Super Hornet variant. The Harrier is also an aging beast. Other than the F-22, that's every major combat aircraft, and part of the reason the F-35 is in trouble is the need to make it do everything since so many aircraft were retired with no replacement. Hell even the Europeans have managed to buy new fighters in that time - the Eurofighter, Rafale, and Gripen are all decent aircraft, to say nothing of what Russia and China are coming up with.
Our nuclear capabilities are in the same boat - the MX was retired, leaving us with the Minuteman III; we have not built a strategic bomber in 25 years and only 21 of those (and pissed away the capabilities of the best of the 3 in a bad treaty) nor have we built a new SSBN in about the same timeframe, plus converting 4 of what we had to SSGNs and eliminating some of the missiles off the others. We haven't built any new warheads, either - not even one that would have been smaller, but significantly safer and more reliable.
The real fact is that since the 1970s, EVERY major combat platform has been the target of arguments that "we don't actually need it because reasons". The left, and a significant portion of those who think basic government functions like defending the country are somehow authoritarian, have never seen a defense cut they didn't like and when the reality that this means other large countries can stomp around and do as they please - thereby setting the conditions to dictate to their neighbors on economic issues, much to our detriment - is pointed out, we get this sort of nonsense about "red scares". There has never been any "no questions asked unfettered funding" - ANY defense expenditure aside from pay raises and benefits that can be dressed up as social spending has had to be some sort of struggle. We can't even build ABM systems that explicitly defend our own home territory without some idiot freaking out about them.