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Political GuidanceCSBMsConfidence and Security Building MeasuresCSCEConference on Security and Cooperation in EuropeCSDPCommon Security and Defence PolicyCTcounter-terrorismDCIDefence Capabilities InitiativeEDFEuropean Defence FundEDSTAREuropean Defence Standards Reference SystemeFPenhanced Forward PresenceESDIEuropean Security and Defence IdentityEUEuropean UnionEUCOM[US] European CommandEUGSEU Global StrategyFNCFramework Nations ConceptGPSGlobal Positioning SystemIISSInternational Institute for Strategic StudiesINFIntermediate-Range Nuclear ForcesISAFInternational Security Assistance ForceISRintelligence, surveillance and reconnaissanceISTARintelligence, surveillance, target acquisition and reconnaissanceJEFJoint Expeditionary ForceJISRjoint intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissanceKFORKosovo ForceMAPMembership Action PlanMARCOMMaritime CommandMENAMiddle East and North AfricaMETOMiddle East Treaty OrganizationMPCCMilitary Planning and Conduct CapabilityNATONorth Atlantic Treaty OrganizationNDPPNATO Defence Planning ProcessNNECNATO Network-Enabled CapabilitiesNORDEFCONordic Defence CooperationNRCNATO–Russia CouncilOAFOperation Allied ForceORSOperation Resolute SupportOSCEOrganization for Security and Cooperation in EuropeOUPOperation Unified ProtectorPESCOPermanent Structured CooperationPfPPartnership for PeacePJC[NATO–Russia] Permanent Joint CouncilSACStrategic Airlift CapabilitySACEURSupreme Allied Commander EuropeSALISStrategic Airlift International SolutionSATCOMsatellite communicationsSEATOSouth East Asia Treaty OrganizationSHAPESupreme Headquarters Allied Powers EuropeSIPRIStockholm International Peace Research InstituteSTANAGsstandardization agreementstFPTailored Forward PresenceUNUnited NationsUNCLOSUnited Nations Convention for the Law of the SeaVJTFVery High Readiness Joint Task ForceWHOWorld Health Organization

      There would appear to be much wrong with the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. To its detractors, NATO (or ‘the Alliance’) has been written off as ‘irrelevant’.1 During the 2016 presidential campaign, Donald Trump called it ‘obsolete’.2 French President Emanuel Macron has suggested NATO is ‘experiencing […] brain death’.3 Hence, so the argument runs, if NATO did not exist, no one in Europe or North America would any longer want to create it.4 In this book, we outline the problems that beset the Alliance, but also put forward ways of addressing them. To declare our position up front: NATO, we argue, is salvageable and worth keeping. This book is structured around identifying what its problems are and then showing how they can be treated. Before doing so, however, it is worth outlining some of the broader issues which condition NATO’s state of affairs.

      Mutual suspicion reached its zenith with the election of Donald Trump in 2016. Trump went on to criticize NATO in a manner unparalleled among previous American presidents. Paradoxically, the level of material support for European defence actually increased in the Trump years. But words matter, and Trump’s broadsides against NATO as well as individual allies (he openly criticized France and Canada and reserved a particular animus for Germany) generated deep anxieties that the US could one day abandon its NATO commitments.10 NATO scepticism has not been limited to the US. We have already noted the comments of the French President. In 2016, Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlüt Çavuşoğlu suggested his country would ‘think of exit’ from NATO owing to a perceived lack of solidarity for coupthreatened President Erdoğan.11 The Prime Minister of Iceland, Katrín Jakobsdóttir, has said her country ‘shouldn’t be [a] member of NATO’.12

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