NATO'S NON-PARTNER
The Argentine
government seeks to join NATO by any means and under any category, but how much
will membership cost?
By Sir Charlattam
Why should I be surprised that a government like the current one would beg Washington to include it in its global power structures? This is what an old Argentine friend of mine questioned me when we got talking after my visit to Buenos Aires a few days ago. As an aside, I thought the weather in London was bad but the rainy week I spent in Buenos Aires made it very similar.
Returning to the
subject with my friend, to some extent his answer doesn't surprise me, although
he didn't know how to answer my question: “Why haven't you done anything to
avoid it?” And that, of course, does not involve all the political blather
about the homeland, sovereignty or the constitutionality of that decision.
Argentines have a chronic problem with getting things done and that is where
the flaw that holds them back lies. Obviously, my colleague does not have the
power to change things and that is something that speaks more to the political
class that comes out of his society. But he does know first hand what it is
like to be used by your government to play their little games and once they
have done so, throw them in the historical dustbin.
I told him so that he
wouldn't feel bitter and as a way of making him see that we are in the same
boat, that in Britain and especially in continental Europe politicians play the
same cynical game and are as corrupt or more corrupt than those who hang around
here. Look at the European Parliament, I said. We are experiencing this with
the current war in Ukraine which is nothing more than a geopolitical arm
wrestling match between the US and NATO against Russia, behind which all these
politicians have woven fabulous deals.
I also made him
understand that European society is fed up with their business and silent
deals, such as the fact that a few days ago the senators of his country
increased their allowances seven times what they earned. In my country the
common people are fed up with Rishi Sunak and his cabinet of incompetents who
every day sink the economy by the astronomical spending they do (on the orders
-not suggestions- of Uncle Sam) to support the neo-Nazi regime in Kiev.
And if that is not enough for you, I told him, we have a parasitic royal
family, surrounded by gloomy palace intrigues and with a King who does not
reign and who is only good for the gossip magazines.
The problem is that
Milei's government worships these crats and is doing everything in its power to
imitate them.
I explained to him that
those in Milei's government who have managed to join NATO have expectations of
participating in big business, but I also explained to him the great risks
involved. But as it emerged from the conversation, the Argentines have already
experienced in the past the consequences of jumping on the Atlanticist
bandwagon without achieving anything good in return and my friend, who served
in the “Alfil” operation in the Persian Gulf between November 1990 and March
1991, knows this very well.
In the early 1990s,
when the disintegration of the USSR was already a fait accompli and we already
had relaxed contacts with our colleagues in the KGB, the then Peronist
government of Carlos Menem, which many believed would be nationalist in tone,
ended up taking off the mask that had brought him to power and went to knock on
the door of the White House to simply lay at the feet of an exultant George H.
Bush who, after years of working in the darkness of power, had arrived at the
presidency at a key moment in history.
At that time, in order
to show how servile he was going to be, Menem betrayed his own country with the
pacts he made with London over the Malvinas, the delivery to Washington of the “Condor”
missile projects and all the annexes that went with it, and the pinnacle of
that obsequiousness was to order the sending of a task force made up of two
Navy vessels without knowing or having foreseen the possible incumbencies that
could await his men. Even when we first met, I told my friend that the holds of
the destroyers carried alternating warheads with nuclear warheads as a last
resort.
Circumstances today are
very different from that time. The US is no longer the hegemonic power and is
losing not only its political and military power, which is being squandered in
its efforts in Eurasia, but also the little political credibility that can be
seen in its complicity with the state of Israel and its shameful abstentions in
the United Nations on a humanitarian ceasefire in the Gaza Strip.
Milei and his cohorts
do not seem to see these details, or rather, they pretend to act like good
neo-conservatives and convinced Zionists. Nor do they seem to have evaluated
what it means to ask to be involved with this war organisation and all the
consequences of this. Even in the ambiguous terms in which NATO membership is
requested, what does it mean to be a global partner of NATO? It's a bit like
we'd like to join the party but the club owner stands at the door and says you
can't go into the room, but you can listen to the music from the outside.
I remember that Menem
had done all those things I mentioned hoping that (among other promises)
Washington would open the door for him to be an “extra-NATO partner” to place
the country in that idyllic and gaseous “first world” that only Menem and his
gang of rascals imagined. I am quite sure that back then, the generals and
their lawyers -if they ever found out about it- in Brussels, looked at
each other's faces in astonishment wondering, “Do we have that kind of status
here?”
I also remember a good
friend who worked at the time in one of the old Foreign Office offices telling
me that old “Maggie” and her boys in Andover didn't like the idea at all, and
although some of them were rather scornful about the possibility -especially
those in naval intelligence- the last thing we should expect was to see the
Argentines as partners in NATO.
To make matters worse,
I told my friend that if Brussels were to take this government's pleas into
consideration, they would certainly be taken into account, not because of the
sympathy and obsequiousness of Argentina's rulers, but because this is the key
moment and Argentina is in a crucial strategic position to counter the
influence not only of China but also of Russia and the BRICS in particular.
I also made it clear to
my friend that if Argentina were to be accepted as a “partner”, it would be in
consideration of the advantages that membership would supposedly give it, much
less than the Poles, Romanians or Bulgarians who, despite being full NATO members,
are the useful idiots of the plans and agendas decided in Washington and then
forwarded by email to the organisation's Secretariat in Brussels. To get my
point across, I asked him just one question. Who do you think will fight on the
front line against the Russians and Chinese if a major war breaks out? I don't
think Milei and his people will.