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North Atlantic Treaty Organization

From ProleWiki, the proletarian encyclopedia
Revision as of 23:20, 4 September 2022 by Amicchan (talk | contribs) (Update reference 6 to use a citation template.)
North Atlantic Treaty Organization

Organisation du traité de l'Atlantique nord
Flag of North Atlantic Treaty Organization
Flag
Location of North Atlantic Treaty Organization
HeadquartersBrussels, Belgium
Official languagesEnglish
French
Establishment
• Formation
4 April 1949


The North Atlantic Treaty Organization, more often called NATO, is an anticommunist international military treaty created in the imperial core following the Second World War.[1]

Its original aim was to defend bourgeois republics against a possible Soviet liberation of Europe. When this reality never materialized, NATO moved to funding anticommunist (more often fascist) acts in Europe and abroad. In 1955, the Soviet Union formed the Warsaw Pact to protect itself and its allies from NATO.[2]

NATO has started wars in Afghanistan, Iraq, Libya, and Syria, causing about a million deaths and creating 38 million refugees.[3]

Members

The 12 founding members of NATO were Belgium, Canada, Denmark, France, Iceland, Italy, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, Norway, Portugal, the United Kingdom and the United States.[4] Since that time, other countries have joined the alliance: Greece and Turkey (1952), Germany (1955), Spain (1982), the Czech Republic, Hungary and Poland (1999), Bulgaria, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Romania, Slovakia and Slovenia (2004), Albania and Croatia (2009), Montenegro (2017) and North Macedonia (2020).[4]

In 1990, U.S. Secretary of State James Baker claimed NATO would not expand into Eastern Europe, although this proved to be a lie,[5] and 14 countries in Central and Eastern Europe joined NATO after the overthrow of the Soviet Union.[3]

Finland and Sweden will likely join NATO soon. Turkish president Recep Tayyip Erdoğan gave permission for them to join NATO after they expanded domestic terror laws and lifted restrictions on selling weapons to Turkey.[3]

Anticommunist projects

NATO took over anti-Soviet subversive activities from their predecessors when they started operating Nazi general Richard Gehlen's network of spies in the Soviet Union.

NATO is perhaps best known among European communists for Operation Gladio, which is a name given to a series of operations that consisted of funding fascist groups in Europe to assassinate and destabilize communists in the 20th century. In 2022, a Spanish lawmaker Gerado Pisarello criticized NATO for promoting a New Cold War on China.[6]

Imperialist acts

The Coalition fighting in Afghanistan, in a conflict that started in 1979 when the Afghan government asked the USSR to help fight against the Mujahideen, was sent on the request of NATO.

NATO invaded and destroyed Iraq in 1991.[2]

NATO bombed Bosnia, Serbia, and Kosovo during the Yugoslav Wars.[3]

When the USA was attacked on September 11, 2001 and followed with a declaration of war against Iraq for imperialist interests, NATO—by their own admission—put their principle of collective defence to practice: if one member country is attacked, then all must join the war in defense. It is important to note that the government of Iraq never claimed responsibility or was ever tied to the terrorist attacks. Notably, president Bush admitted in 2006 that Saddam Hussein, president of Iraq in 2001, was not responsible for the attack[7].

NATO invaded the Libyan Arab Jamahiriya in 2011, causing a complete collapse of the country.[3]

NATO backed Turkey's occupation of parts of Syria and Iraq. Turkey has the second largest military of any NATO member.[3]

In June 2022, NATO announced it would increase its standing army in Europe from 40,000 to 300,000 troops, including over 3,000 troops in the Baltic states on the border with Russia.[8] NATO also added China to its list of enemies and labeled it a "systemic challenge."[9]

References