txags92 said:
Old McDonald said:
txags92 said:
Old McDonald said:
txags92 said:
Old McDonald said:
txags92 said:
Old McDonald said:
AlaskanAg99 said:
I think it needs to be explicitly stated: the current treaty is obsolete and barely in any compliance. Tear it up and renegotiate a new treaty that puts a higher burden on countries to defend their own territory and mutual defense areas.
the mechanism for increasing burden sharing already exists within the treaty and is already working.
How about the mechanism for actually acting like allies towards one another? Do they have a mechanism for working on that? Because there are a bunch of our NATO "allies" who seem to have forgotten how that part works.
how so? because they didn't leap to join us in iran? something else?
No. Because they denied letting us even fly in their airspace or use the air bases we already paid them for and that are a huge economic contributor to them. It would cost them nothing to let us use their bases and overfly their airspace and they refused us even that. No reason other than to virtue signal to Iran whose side they were really on. Well, picking the wrong side has consequences as they are about to find out.
sovereign allies refusing to participate in a war they believe is strategically reckless is the system working as designed, the same principle that lets the US ignore european objections when it suits american interests.
if american power projection in the middle east and africa depends so heavily on european basing and overflight rights that denial creates genuine operational hardship, then the case for maintaining the alliance that guarantees routine access to the infrastructure makes itself
You are ignoring what is being said and creating a strawman to fit your narrative. I am not talking about asking them to participate in the war, such as protecting shipping in the SoH. I am talking about flights coming from the US to the Middle East being told to go around Spanish airspace. I am talking about Italy and Britain telling us that we cannot land or takeoff planes from our own bases that we paid them to let us place on their soil. That is not "refusing to participate in the war", that is needlessly making things more difficult and expensive for us in the name of virtue signaling to islamic regime in Iran that they are more on their side than on the side of the US.
If they are against us using our bases on their land to project power in the middle east and africa, that is fine. But we are also justified in reviewing whether a continued alliance with them is in our interests or not based on their refusal to act like an ally.
the distinction between participation and transit access blurs more than you'd like to admit. every nation that allowed american overflight and basing for iraq transit in 2003 paid real diplomatic costs in the muslim world, and these governments know that facilitating power projection against iran makes them co-belligerents in tehran's eyes, regardless of what washington calls it.
the entire reason you have those bases and routine overflight agreements is because NATO's legal and political architecture underwrites them. withdraw from the alliance and you don't punish them for saying no, instead you lose the standing to ask at all. dismantling the framework that gives you leverage over their behavior guarantees you get even less cooperation.
And the part in bold is exactly what I am talking about. They weighed the value of being an ally to us against the value of being seen as an ally to Iran and decided that being an ally to Iran was worth more to them. They believed that they would suffer little or no consequences from telling us no, and they are about to find out how wrong they were about that. Who else in the muslim world was going to hold it against them? All of the gulf states are under attack too and they are letting us use their bases. The reality is that being seen favorably by the Islamic regime in Iran and their own imported muslims was more important to them than being seen favorably by the US. Which is fine if that is what they want, but we should not just forget about it and pretend it never happened. We should reevaluate their value as an ally and reassess our own commitment to being tied to them geopolitically.
romania, bulgaria, greece, and the baltics all approved expanded access or deployment so characterizing NATO as uniformly siding with tehran over us collapses a split continent into a single villain. the gulf states letting us use their bases only really proves self interest. they are under direct iranian threat and would cooperate with anyone willing to shoot back, which ultimately undermines the point about them being reliable partners.
if spain and italy's refusal genuinely created operational hardship, that dependency is the strongest argument for using american leverage within the alliance to force compliance rather than walking away from the only legal framework that gives you standing to demand base access in the first place