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As NATO Looks East, Will It Stumble in the South? The Case of Protection of Civilians Policy

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Fear and Uncertainty in Europe

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Abstract

For more than a decade beginning in the early 2000s, NATO’s main area of concern was crisis management in Afghanistan via the NATO-led International Security Assistance Force (ISAF). With the closing of the ISAF mission and in parallel with Russia’s aggression in Ukraine, both in 2014, NATO returned to a preoccupation with European security and collective defense. The focus of this article will be on how NATO’s “return to realism” affected one of the main lessons coming out of the Afghan mission, namely the need to define and institutionalize a PoC (Protection of Civilians) policy. At the 2014 Wales summit, when NATO enhanced its regional deterrence with a renewed NATO Response Force, NATO also committed to developing a PoC policy. Some two years later, at the Warsaw summit, NATO further enhanced its regional deterrence with a so-called Enhanced Forward Presence posture and then also signed off on its newly developed PoC policy. PoC policy is eminently a lesson of crisis management operations, and so the question is how NATO nations framed this lesson and propelled it forward at a moment when their main concern was collective defence. To answer this question and thus evaluate the depth and implications of the “return to realism” for crisis management policy, this article traces the making of NATO’s PoC policy 2014–2016 and identifies implications.

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Notes

  1. 1.

    The UN adopted such a “responsibility to protect” doctrine in 2005. See further UN (n.d.).

  2. 2.

    Author’s interview with NATO official, December 2016.

  3. 3.

    Interview with NATO international staffer with ISAF experience, December 2016.

  4. 4.

    NATO allies had agreed to the principles of a Comprehensive Approach in 2006 when ISAF had become a national campaign, and it rolled out both an overarching Comprehensive Approach policy and an Afghan-related plan in 2008. See further Rynning (2015), Williams (2011), and Steinsson (2015).

  5. 5.

    NATO ’s PoC policy of June 2016 ends with a 10-point plan for military activities—effectively a political tasking of work the military authorities must carry out.

  6. 6.

    The United States maintains app. 4000 troops in Afghanistan outside Resolute Support. The total number of Western troops is thus around 20,000. See further Emmott (2017).

  7. 7.

    Based on interview with NATO official, May 2017.

  8. 8.

    Based on interviews at NATO headquarters, November 2016.

  9. 9.

    Based on interviews at NATO headquarters, November 2016.

  10. 10.

    Interviewed by author, NATO headquarters, November 2016.

  11. 11.

    NATO is thus introducing two new command components to facilitate troop movement and reinforcements along the East-West axis, connecting North America to Western Europe and then also Western Europe to the new allied territories in the East. See further Matthias Gebaur et.al. (2017). These new commands will likely be approved at a NATO summit in July 2018.

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Acknowledgements

The author is grateful to the Gerda Henkel Stiftung for supporting research for this article and the overarching project Can NATO Learn Afghan Lessons?

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Correspondence to Sten Rynning .

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Rynning, S. (2019). As NATO Looks East, Will It Stumble in the South? The Case of Protection of Civilians Policy. In: Belloni, R., Della Sala, V., Viotti, P. (eds) Fear and Uncertainty in Europe . Global Issues. Palgrave Macmillan, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-91965-2_11

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