
Despite Trump cajoling Europe to pay up, Putin is the victor from this week's Nato summit
Nato leaders departed their summit in The Hague on Wednesday with relief. All, except for Spain, promised to spend what much more money on defence (though the concept of 'defence' is now being elasticated to includes things like another runway at Heathrow).
Thirty-one of those leaders felt they had succeeded in placating the 32nd, or rather, the number one, Donald Trump. The Nato secretary-general, Mark Rutte, had written him a pre-summit letter about his great achievements in the baby language considered suitable. He also referred to him as 'Daddy '. I would call this fawning, or, in preferred Trump style, 'FAWNING!!!'.
Nevertheless, Daddy seemed content. As he left, he announced that Nato 'is not a rip-off'; so that was good.
But if you read the declaration which the Nato leaders published, you can see how markedly it differs from past ones.
Three omissions stand out. The first concerns Ukraine. In the Nato declaration in 2022, the year of Putin's full-scale invasion, the leaders warned that 'War has returned to the European Continent.' They condemned Russia's 'war of aggression' and 'blatant violation of international law'. Their text spoke, in strikingly undiplomatic terms, of Russia's 'lies', 'cruelty' and the 'humanitarian catastrophe' caused. It offered 'full solidarity' with 'our close partner' Ukraine and vindicated its 'territorial integrity'.
The 2022 declaration judged Russia to be 'the most significant and direct threat to peace in the Euro-Atlantic area.'
Three years on, that war still rages. Yet this week's declaration says only this about Ukraine: 'Allies reaffirm their enduring sovereign commitments to provide support to Ukraine, whose security contributes to ours, and, to this end, will include direct contributions towards Ukraine's defence and its defence industry when calculating Allies' defence spending.'
That word 'sovereign' was included to placate pro-Russian Nato members (e.g. Hungary) who would not want Vladmir Putin to think they are helping Ukraine. The stuff about paying to Ukraine's defence industry is part of the fudge over extra spending. The collective endorsement of Ukraine is now distinctly un-ringing.
Gone is the talk of European war being caused by Russia. All the declaration says is that Nato spending is going up because of 'the long-term threat posed by Russia to Euro-Atlantic security and the persistent threat of terrorism'. 'Long-term'? The day before the summit, 350 drones and 16 missiles attacked Ukraine and killed ten people in Kyiv. Such occurrences are almost daily.
If I were Putin, I would feel well pleased by the muffling of Nato's rhetoric: another couple of years, he may think, and the words 'Russia' and 'Ukraine' can be excised from its communiques altogether.
Another omission is the word 'nuclear'. In Cold War declarations, the range, level and balance of nuclear armaments between Nato and the Soviet Union were often discussed. Their importance was emphasised. In 1983, when the Soviet threat was high and Reagan and Thatcher were hitting back with cruise and Pershing deployment in Europe, the Nato declaration said, 'A sufficient level of both conventional and nuclear forces remains necessary for the credibility of deterrence.' With the word 'nuclear' now gone, what deters?
The final three words absent from the latest declaration are 'The United States'. It is almost as if a major Vatican document did not mention His Holiness the Pope. There is a great big orange elephant in the room trumpeting uncontrollably but no one wants to talk about it.
That is a dramatic change. This passage from the 1982 Nato declaration could stand for the alliance's whole doctrine and its key American dimension: 'The security and sovereignty of the European members of the Alliance remain guaranteed by their own defence, by the presence of North American forces on European territory and by the United States strategic nuclear commitment to Europe. The United States and Canada likewise depend for their own security upon the contribution of the European partners to the defence of the Alliance.'
The reason the doctrine is not repeated today is, presumably, that it would not be believed. That 'credibility of deterrence' has weakened. Nato communiques often talk of member states' commitments being 'ironclad'. That adjective is repeated this year, but the iron looks rusty now. There is an additional reason: the current occupant of the White House may not believe it himself. Those anxious leaders in The Hague probably thought, 'Best not to ask'.
So the question naturally follows, 'What is Nato for?'
It must be for something, since 31 of its 32 nations are committing to spend much more money on it: but what? Who is the enemy? How great is the threat? What is the posture? There is now a radical disjunction between the imminence of the Russian threat perceived by roughly half of the Nato allies – including Baltics, Nordics, Poland and (rather more tentatively) Britain – and the sort of denial or reluctance visible in southern or Balkan countries and, above all, in elements of the American administration.
In Britain, most of us have spent most of our lives believing or half-believing that we are under the American nuclear umbrella. I say 'half-believing' because we cannot be certain what would happen if Armageddon loomed, but we have at least believed that the size and seriousness of US nuclear capacity have deterred our common enemies from trying on anything too dangerous.
I probably do still believe that. President Trump's bombing of Iran's nuclear sites – though in no sense a Nato action – shows he is on the side of the West against the maniacs. But it could be that 'Daddy' regards Israel as a sort of Prodigal Son whom he will indulge, while for Nato he is more like an absent father who resents having to see his kids.
We confront the contradiction that the man who tells us to contribute much more money and acts as if he is the boss may be the one least likely to stick around.
He is also the friendliest towards our greatest immediate foe. Mr Trump has been absolutely consistent in refusing the underlying Nato approach, which is that Putin is completely in the wrong because he is trying to change the borders of Europe by force. Trump will criticise Putin sometimes. Yes, he has gone too far ('What the hell happened to him?'), he will say. That he should not have attacked at all, he will never, ever say.
So it becomes very hard to imagine circumstances in which Trump's finger would press the button to save Europe – or even Britain, for whom he has a soft spot – from Putin. Hence our inglorious but not completely foolish playing for time in The Hague. Perhaps Mr Trump will eventually see more sense, or just calm down – and anyway power will have drained away from him in not much more than three years' time, or even, perhaps, after the mid-terms next year.
In these trying circumstances, we should feel sympathetic to Sir Keir Starmer's efforts to take the defence and security of Britain more seriously. So it was marginally good news this week that we shall buy 12 dual-capable F-35A bombers from the United States, thus improving our nuclear capacity.
When you consider, however, that they will be American and under American custody and command, and that we are not buying more bombers than before, but simply different ones (switching from B models to A models), you – and Vladimir Putin - may be underwhelmed.
On VE Day 1945, Churchill said, 'Our enemy lies prostrate before us.' Eighty years on, we risk it being the other way round.

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