The outcome of the upcoming U.S. presidential election
is going to have major consequences for the relationship between the U.S. and
its allies. While President Joe Biden is a firm believer in
the value of the transatlantic alliance, Republican contender Donald Trump has
for years railed against U.S. participation in the North Atlantic Treaty
Organization, the military alliance commonly referred to as NATO.
In February 2024, for example, Trump said that if he were
reelected president, he would tell Russia to do “whatever the hell they want” against NATO members that are “delinquent” in not having
invested enough in their own military capabilities. Foreign policy commentators
viewed that as an invitation for Russia to attack these NATO countries.
In September 2022, six months after Russia’s full-scale invasion,
Ukraine applied to join NATO. Now, Ukraine’s potential membership is one of the
top questions that representatives from NATO’s 32 member countries in North America and Europe will consider when they
meet in Washington in July 2024.
At the root of debates over policy toward alliances such as NATO
is the assumption that NATO requires its members to step in and help with
defense if another member of the alliance is attacked.
As political scientists who study the
role of international organizations like NATO, we think it is important to
understand that, in reality, alliance agreements are more flexible than people
think.
In practice, it is possible for the U.S. and other Western
countries to stay out of a conflict that involves a NATO country without having
to break their alliance commitments. The NATO treaty’s language contains
loopholes that let member countries remain out of other members’ wars in
certain situations.
What does Article 5 really mean?
One key part of the NATO
treaty that countries sign when they join the alliance is called Article 5. This says that an “armed attack”
against one NATO member in Europe or North America “shall be considered an
attack against them all.”
In the case of such an
attack, NATO countries agree to assist the country that requires help,
including through “the use of armed force, to restore and maintain the security
of the North Atlantic area.”
But the treaty does not
include a clear definition of a what an “armed attack” actually is. This mattered in February 2020, when Turkey asked for a NATO meeting and
requested that NATO intervene with military force in response to Russian and
Syrian forces’ attacks on its territory, which had killed 33 Turkish soldiers,
during the Syrian civil war. NATO allies chose not to defend Turkey
with military force, arguing that the level of violence against Turkey wasn’t
enough to call it an “armed attack.”
Other exceptions to the rule
Even when NATO members
decide that Article 5 should apply to a specific situation, each country can
still individually decide how to act. That is, while NATO does have administrative staff based in Brussels,
there is no central NATO authority that tells each country what it must do.
Instead, each country tells NATO what it is – and is
not – willing to do.
NATO members have only formally invoked Article 5 once – following
the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon outside
of Washington.
At that time, 13 NATO countries sent fighter aircraft to help the U.S. patrol its skies from
mid-October 2001 to mid-May 2002.
But most NATO allies chose not to send troops to
Afghanistan to support the U.S. in its fight against the Taliban. This lack of
action on the part of some NATO allies was not seen as breaking the treaty and
didn’t prompt a major debate – and the countries that chose not to join the
fight were not sanctioned by or ejected from the alliance.
The NATO treaty also provides some exceptions based on geography.
When Argentina went to war with the United Kingdom (a NATO member) over the
Falkland Islands in 1982, the U.S. and other NATO members were able to use the
fact that the alliance only applies to the North Atlantic region as a reason to stay out of
the conflict.
Would public opinion force the president’s hand?
Some political scientists argue that voters will demand their leaders take the
country to war to defend an ally. This implies that what really binds the
members of an alliance together is not the legal text of an international
treaty itself, given that no international court is empowered to enforce the treaty,
but rather the public’s expectations of what it means to be an ally.
As part of our research into
how the American public thinks about international legal obligations, we
decided to construct an experiment to see if presidents could use alliance
loophole language to justify keeping the U.S. out of a war involving an ally.
In 2022 and 2023, we conducted a pair of survey-based experiments
that involved asking nearly 5,000 American adults to consider a hypothetical
scenario in which a U.S. ally comes under attack from a powerful neighbor.
Some of the respondents were told that the text of the alliance
treaty would allow the U.S. government to avoid having to send troops to defend
the embattled ally, while others were not told that information. Though the
survey did not mention a specific alliance, we described the terms of the
alliance in a way that matches the language used in treaties like NATO’s. We
then asked the respondents to tell us their views on sending U.S. troops to
defend the ally under attack.
Our results revealed a big difference between the people who were
told about the flexibility in the alliance treaty and those who were not. While
respondents from both groups were generally inclined to come to the defense of
an ally, their willingness to do so was significantly lower when they were told
that the alliance treaty did not necessarily require the U.S. to send troops.
This suggests that political leaders can, under certain
circumstances, manage to convince a large segment of the public that it’s OK to
abandon an ally in a time of need.
So, when it comes to debates about U.S. policy toward its alliance
partners – and whether it should admit new members like Ukraine – it is
important for both sides to appreciate that alliance commitments are not quite
as binding, either legally or politically, as the conventional wisdom suggests.
Dan Reiter,
Professor
of Political Science, Emory University and Brian
Greenhill, Associate Professor of Political Science, University
at Albany, State University of New York
The Conversation
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