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Daily Archives: March 9, 2021
Bruce to stand for Aberdeenshire West Liberal Democrats – Grampian Online
Posted: March 9, 2021 at 1:06 pm
Aberdeenshire West Liberal Democrats have chosen Rosemary Bruce as their candidate for the Aberdeenshire West constituency in the Scottish Parliament election on May.
She is also the Scottish Liberal Democrat lead list candidate for the north-east of Scotland region having been announced for that role back in November.
Rosemary Bruce has been a member of the Liberal Democrats for more than thirty years and has served as the councillor for Banchory and Mid Deeside ward on Aberdeenshire council since May 2017, she is deputy leader of the Aberdeenshire Council Scottish Liberal Democrat group and vice-chair of the Education and Children's Services Committee.
She previously served as the councillor for Aboyne, Upper Deeside and Donside from 2009-2012 and has a long record of involvement in local community groups such as chairing her local community council andtoddler group, and actively campaigned for the retention of the local maternity services.
Commenting on her selection Rosemary said: I am delighted to have been selected for Aberdeenshire West - the area in which I and my family live and work.
I know that many people across the north-east of Scotland feel let down by successive nationalist governments and that the last thing that we need is another divisive referendum.
"What matters is getting on with their lives as we face the challenges of recovery from the pandemic and the difficulties emerging over Brexit.
If elected, my priority will be to put recovery first to rebuild our economy and health services - including mental health, invest in education and skills, ensure good connectivity across the country, decentralise control of services, take new steps to tackle injustice and meet our climate change targets.
I also want to ensure that resources and skills of the oil and gas sector can be re-directed, to make a major contribution to achieving net zero carbon and creating sustainable jobs for the future.
Outside of politics, Rosemary works part-time as a company registrar and has previously worked as an office manager, diary secretary and personal assistant in both the private and public sectors.
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Ontario Liberals say they’ve paid off $10-million debt from the 2018 election – CP24 Toronto’s Breaking News
Posted: at 1:06 pm
TORONTO - Ontario's Liberals say they have paid off their $10-million debt from the 2018 provincial election in which they suffered the worst defeat in the party's history.
Liberal Leader Steven Del Duca says the party was able to eliminate the debt by tightening internal spending and growing its membership and donor base.
Del Duca says that by eliminating membership fees the party has been able to grow its ranks to more than 75,000 members, which in turn has increased contributions.
The Liberals went into the last election holding a majority, but lost their official party status when they won only seven seats.
The devastating loss prompted the resignation of Kathleen Wynne as party leader.
Del Duca, who was elected leader last March, says eliminating the debt will allow the party to continue to prepare for the next election, which is scheduled for June 2022.
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Something must be done: Former Liberal MP slams culture that excludes women – The New Daily
Posted: at 1:06 pm
Canberras problem with women has been encouraged for decades by a boys club mentality that chases women out of politics and protects poor behaviour.
That is the message from former female members of parliament who are speaking out against the culture, and asking women still walking the halls of power to do the same, or risk losing this moment of change.
Long-serving former Liberal MP Sharman Stone told The New Daily that women would continue to quit politics if the culture isnt changed soon.
I dont think anyone can be shocked and dismayed by what has transpired recently, Dr Stone said.
She rattled off a long list of names including Nicolle Flint, Kate Ellis, Nicola Roxon, Julia Banks, Julie Bishop who had all decried the sexist culture in Canberra after leaving.
They cite how its not conducive to them having a work-life balance, or they talk about the toxic environment.
We want the parliament to be the most inclusive place, to properly represent the Australian population. But if this persists, who would want to put their hand up and run?
Dr Stone said that while Prime Minister Scott Morrison had done the right thing in admitting there was a problem,the LNP needed to do more to respect and promote the women within their ranks.
Women on the LNP side are hugely outnumbered, way below 30 per cent, she said.
As women in parliament, we are very conscious it is a man contest.
Dr Stone said a culture of secrecy, and who you know not what you know, leads to cliques forming, where parliamentarians and staffers are promoted based on who they are mates with, not on merit, which can be exclusive. And In this case, it excludes women.
Dr Stone said Liberal MPs and staffers considering coming forward with their experiences of sexism would be feeling the pinch to stay quiet so as not to risk making the party look bad.
Its all about maintaining power, control and government, she said.
They would be feeling the pinch not to come forward or do anything that might rock the boat, especially in the current environment because the seats are so evenly divided.
Although Dr Stone acknowledged the political culture silenced female MPs and staffers, she called on women across the political spectrum to stand up and publicly call out sexism, arguing that is the only way forward.
This cant just be another once over lightly, quick and dirty investigation where we dont see any real information. That will just be the same old same old. Something must be done, she said.
To clean up the culture in Canberra the government needs to set up an independent body to deal with claims of sexism and harassment and have more transparency over the hiring and firing of staff, Dr Stone said.
Its not rocket science, she said.
Dr Stone is not the only one with concerns about the culture in Australias halls of power.
Former Labor Senator Trish Crossin, who became the first Northern Territory woman voted into Parliament in 1998 and stayed for 15 years, said Canberra has always been a boys club.
She said the toxic culture was turning off talented women.
I think the more women look inside, the more it deters them to stand. Or if they are currently politicians, they get out and dont seek pre-selection, Ms Crossin said.
Ms Crossin is now working with Gender Equity Victoria to develop a plan to safeguard women in politics, including an annual survey where women can anonymously report their views and experiences.
Theres no gender-equity audit. Theres no assessment of how safe the workplace is for people, she said.
In some ways, this is an opportunity to make long term sustainable change that protects not just women in that workplace, but every worker.
The list of female MPs who have decried the sexist culture after walking out the door has been getting longer for years.
Upon leaving politics Julie Bishop famously opened up about how lonely it can be for women, and called out her colleagues appalling behaviour.
It is evident that there is an acceptance of a level of behaviour in Canberra that would not be tolerated in any other workplace across Australia, Ms Bishop told the audience at a Womens Weekly awards event in Sydney in 2018.
I have seen and witnessed and experienced some appalling behaviour in parliament, the kind of behaviour that 20 years ago, when I was managing partner of a law firm of 200 employees, I would never have accepted. Yet in Parliament, its the norm.
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Something must be done: Former Liberal MP slams culture that excludes women - The New Daily
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BC Liberals step up criticism of BC NDP over COVID-19 – Powell River Peak
Posted: at 1:06 pm
As we head into the second year of the COVID-19 pandemic, it appears the relationship between the BC NDP government and the BC Liberals is returning to its traditional cantankerous level.
The days of the two parties working together in non-partisan ways went goodbye when the provincial election was held last fall.
However, the opening week of the B.C. legislature session revealed a BC Liberal opposition that is more aggressive in its attacks and more questioning of public health policy. Whether this is a good move on their part remains to be seen.
Question period last week occasionally sounded like the ones we experienced before the pandemic shut down so much political debate and theatre.
At one point, every BC Liberal MLA who stood up to ask questions ensured they slipped the word incompetent at least once into every question, attaching it to the governments performance in general and to whichever cabinet minister was being asked something.
Speaker Raj Chouhan took the opposition to task after question period, voicing his displeasure at these vocal orchestrations. We shall see whether his pleas for calmer and nicer discourse will be heeded.
But considering the heckling that went on when the tables were reversed and the NDP was on the attacking opposition side, I dont expect things to cool down much.
And the BC Liberals seemed to score some points by attacking the NDP governments lack of response when it comes out to helping such public institutions as the PNE and various markets, fairs and rodeos.
The BC Liberals are navigating some trickier terrain in their increasing attacks or criticism of various public health measures.
Under former party leader Andrew Wilkinson, the BC Liberals worked closely with the government and health officials during the pandemic and rarely voiced any criticism of health protocols.
Recently, though, the BC Liberals have criticized the low rapid-testing numbers for COVID-19, the safe school re-start plan, the time it is taking to determine who is designated an essential service worker in order to get an earlier vaccine, as well as the communications associated with moving the second vaccine dose to four months after the first.
None of these measures was dreamt up by the NDP government. Instead, all are policies devised by provincial health officer Dr. Bonnie Henry and her team. It is not as if Health Minister Adrian Dix or his cabinet colleagues are setting the public health rules.
As the vaccination plan begins to roll out, it will be interesting to see how often the BC Liberals pounce on the inevitable mistakes, hiccups and genuine screw-ups that will surely occur as we try to jab needles in the arms of more than four million British Columbians in a little more than four months.
Henry and her team or public health officials anywhere are certainly not immune from criticism on some issues. However, political parties walk a narrow tightrope when it comes to critiquing policies based on science and the experts in a medical specialty such as public health.
We shall see whether the BC Liberals continue to walk that tightrope and, if so, whether they can keep walking it without falling off.
Keith Baldrey is chief political reporter for Global BC.
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New focus on emerging and disruptive technologies helps prepare NATO for the future – NATO HQ
Posted: at 1:04 pm
New technologies such as Artificial Intelligence, autonomous and quantum technologies are changing the world, and the way NATO operates. Recognizing the risks and opportunities that new technologies bring to the Alliance, Defence Ministers endorsed NATOs Coherent Implementation Strategy on Emerging and Disruptive Technologies in February 2021.
The Strategy sets out ways in which the Alliance will foster and protect the development of new technologies to maintain the Alliances technological edge, underpinned by robust principles of responsible use. NATO will work with partners, academia and the private sector including start-ups to develop and adopt new technologies more quickly, and strengthen the Allied industrial base. As part of the NATO 2030 agenda, Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg has also proposed a NATO defence innovation initiative to promote better transatlantic cooperation on critical technologies.
To support these strategic efforts the Secretary General announced in July 2020 the creation of an Advisory Group on Emerging and Disruptive Technologies to solicit outside views from specialists and practitioners. The group, composed of 12 experts from academia and industry, advises NATO on its efforts to drive the adoption of new technologies. In their first annual report, the experts offered concrete short-and long term recommendations on how NATOs approach to Emerging and Disruptive Technologies should look like. The group provided advice on how NATO might best finance its innovation efforts, build an operational network of Innovation Centres, promote successful innovation business and operating models, and increase the level of technical literacy across NATO. The experts agreed that NATO is exceptionally well-placed to be a global driver for a values-based innovation agenda. Commenting on the report, Assistant Secretary General for Emerging Security Challenges, David Van Weel, said To maintain our technological edge, the Alliance needs to win the technological adoption race. We are ready to take ambitious steps to adapt our business and operating models to cooperate closely with the outstanding Allied academia, start-ups and the wider private sector.
The Advisory Groups Annual Report can be found here.
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New focus on emerging and disruptive technologies helps prepare NATO for the future - NATO HQ
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NATO and the EU: What Does Brexit Mean for The UKs Position in European Security? – Global Risk Insights
Posted: at 1:04 pm
The UKs withdrawal from the EU last year calls into question the security implications that the split will have. The UK has continued to support NATO as the primary security provider on the continent and has acted at the forefront to reform the organization to better address the changing security environment in Europe. On the other hand, the EU forges on with its efforts to form an autonomous strategic partnership to ensure European security through collective efforts. Without resistance from London, this policy is likely to go ahead creating uncertainty for the future of NATO in Europe and UKs place in the security of the continent.
The UKs withdrawal from the EU and its collective security agreements could expose a large rift in opinion of how security should be ensured in Europe. The EUs push for greater strategic autonomy through its own security policy, stands in contrast to the UKs continued advocacy for NATO as the primary security provider of the continent.
On the one hand, the UK is likely to push for continued NATO dominance of European security affairs. By spending more on its military budget it is attempting to wrestle more influence from its European partners and cast itself as the go-to partner for Washington in times of crisis. By increasing its influence within the alliance it has been able to push for changes to ensure NATOs continued viability for the security of Europe.
The UK was at the forefront of changes to the alliance, to ensure that NATO would be able to address the diversifying security environment of Europe. This was namely an increased emphasis on cyberattacks, hybrid warfare, disruptive technologies, space and climate change. In doing so, it has been able to argue the case that the EUs own Common Security and Defence Policy (CSDP) was largely redundant. Similarly, it cemented the UKs conviction that the CSDP was another way to achieve greater integration than as a response to any specific security need. The Berlin Agreement in 1998 was consequently a way to obstruct the EU from building its own operational headquarters by instead encouraging it to work with NATO through its already established network of military planners at SHAPE.
On the other hand, countries in the eastern bloc, who have been traditionally wary for the constraints a European security and defence policy would pose, will find it harder to resist pressures from Berlin and Paris. The creation of the Permanent Structured Cooperation (PESCO) in 2017, which legally binds participant members to the collective defence of other participants and the European Defence Fund are likely to incentivise change within the bloc. The UKs withdrawal therefore comes as a double-edged sword. The removal of London from the equation has meant that the EU can continue to move forward with its autonomous security structure but has also removed a key military player from the unions arsenal.
Nevertheless, it is not within the EUs interest to turn its back on NATO altogether. Indeed the halting of the withdrawal of 12,000 US troops from Germany at the end of the Trump administration was a welcome development. It is clear, however, that both Paris and Berlin are likely to oppose the continued hegemony of the US within the alliance. Instead, the two will aim to convince the new Biden administration to support the goal of European strategic autonomy as a means to both ensure more effective burden sharing and to free up US attention as it increasingly concentrates on issues in Asia-Pacific and China.
Despite the UKs continued ambivalence towards the collaborative nature of security on the continent, it will find itself dependent on these initiatives both as a part of NATO and a separate entity.
The first issue is that as NATO begins to diversify its range of security tasks, it will have to rely on EU expertise and resources more. This has been particularly true during the COVID-19 pandemic and cyberattacks such as WannaCry, in which real-time information sharing was vital for NATO military operations and exercises. As cooperation continues to deepen between the two organisations, key players are likely to shift to those with influence in both parties. As a result, the UK will lose influence within collaborative decisions. This is particularly evident, given the EUs stringent approach to Turkey, who as a part of NATO but not the EU has been confined to consultation on military operations in the Western Balkans.
The second issue is that the EU is likely to become an increasingly important part of the UKs own security. Despite the initiative of global Britain, the UKs security issues remain tied to Europe, whether it be in the form of Russian chemical attacks in Salisbury, attacks by Libyan terrorists in Manchester or the continued illegal immigration that takes place in Calais. As more of these security and defence issues are drawn into the institutional framework of the EU, its decisions are going to be felt more strongly in London. In turn, London will find itself increasingly far removed from the decision process.
The UK will find itself alienated from both decision-making in Washington and Brussels, which will likely play a role in ensuring its own security. With less influence, it will not be able to as effectively put its own concerns on the collective security agenda. This is likely to render the UK less secure in the long run as it increasingly will have to rely on itself to ensure its security.
The UK thus finds itself in the position where it can either prevent increased collaboration between NATO and EU or hold back as the two organizations become increasingly intertwined.
The first option will likely ensure that the UK continues to hold a prominent position within decision making both in its ability to act as the mediator between the two groups and as a highly influential member within NATO. It, however, would entail a decrease of security since NATO will be less effective in fulfilling its role without the resources and information it receives from the EU.
The second option is likely to improve security through increased cooperation between the EU and NATO, thus streamlining the sharing of information and resources and improving the efficiency of security operations. In doing so, it will hand greater influence to the countries that are members of both the EU and NATO to mediate their closer collaboration. Already NATO and the EU collaborate on 74 separate areas suggesting that this is the most likely scenario. Without the acceptance of an observer position within EU decision making circles, the UK will find itself further removed from decision-making and less able to influence the collective security agenda.
Nevertheless, the UK shows no sign of going back on its refusal to be part of the security integration projects on the continent. It is therefore likely that it will grow to be a less significant mediator of global security in the future.
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NATO Secretary General: I believe in Europe and North America together – NATO HQ
Posted: at 1:04 pm
NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg underlined the importance of strengthening transatlantic relations at an Inter-Parliamentary Conference, hosted by the Portuguese Parliament, on Wednesday (3 March 2021).
Strong transatlantic relations are the only way for our countries to address the great challenges of today and tomorrow, he said. Addressing parliamentarians, the Secretary General outlined the priorities of the NATO 2030 initiative to strengthen the Alliance, highlighted the strong cooperation between NATO and the EU, and thanked Portugal for championing strong NATO-EU relations. He also welcomed the recent US decision to join the project on military mobility, which can enable US and other NATO troops and equipment to move faster across Europe. He stressed that parliamentarians can help reinforce the ties between Europe and North America and push for more ambitious and practical joint efforts between NATO and the European Union. Strengthening transatlantic relations and working hand-in-hand is the right thing to do, he said.
Read the Secretary General's speech here
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NATO Secretary General: I believe in Europe and North America together - NATO HQ
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Upgrade You: NATO’s Global Hawk Drones Are About to Get Even Better – The National Interest
Posted: at 1:04 pm
High-speed, artificial intelligence (AI)-enabled computing can help multi-national coordinated air attacks reach new levels of proficiency and precision. This improvement in waging war is informing the North Atlantic Treaty Organizations (NATO) deployment of a new Alliance Ground Surveillance (AGS) technology connecting Air Force Global Hawks to allied air and ground nodes.
NATO AGS relies upon a connection with the U.S. Air Force RQ-4D Phoenix Global Hawk to gather, organize, analyze, process and transmit crucial intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance (ISR) data among partner nations, using common technical standards for interoperability.
We have a strategy called the ISR 2030 Game Plan that looks at capabilities we have today and what we will have in the future, Gen. Jeffrey Harrigian, Commander, U.S. Air Forces Europe, Africa, told reporters during the 2021 Air Force Association symposium.
AI-empowered systems can instantly identify targets and objects of relevance and compare potential response scenarios against what has worked previously to optimize combat operation effectiveness and present possibilities to humans performing command and control. The concept, as articulated in a Northrop essay, is to enable continuous 24/7, uninterrupted in-theater operations among NATO allies.
Part of the increased allied collaboration, made more possible with emerging systems such as NATO AGS, rests upon a successful ability to safely and effectively manage airspace.
Many nations are much more supportive of our ability to operate over their territories and in their airspace, in part because we ensure that they are comfortable with the deconfliction. We help them understand how we are going to operate and what we are going to do, Harrigian added.
Allied interoperability, particularly as it pertains to rapid warfare decision-making, is something heavily emphasized by Air Force Chief of Staff General Charles Brown as well, who reminded people of the famous OODA loop in an interesting presentation at the 2021 Air Force Association Symposium.
We need to take a different approach, we need to make decisions at the speed of relevance. Those decisions need to be informed by analysis, and they need to be made in a timely manner to outpace our competitors decision cycle. Remember John Boyd and the OODA loop? We need to do that at the strategic level, Brown told an AFA audience, according to a transcript of his remarks.
Certainly, as referenced by Brown, Boyds well-known Observation, Orientation, Decision, Action Loop (OODA Loop) process not only applies to air-to-air combat as conceived of by Boyd, but also introduces wider-spanning strategic dynamics as well, given that NATO AGS and other surveillance technologies will enable faster, more precise and combat-relevant information sharing between NATO-allied countries.
Its really about how we move data. And thats the key aspect. And we already do that outside, you know, outside of the Air Force, outside of the Department of Defense, Brown said.
Certainly moving analyses and organized information in near instantaneous fashion could bear heavily upon the OODA Loop process, given that its successful competition to achieve victory in air-war engagement relies upon the speed of decision-making.
Kris Osborn is the defense editor for the National Interest. Osborn previously served at the Pentagon as a Highly Qualified Expert with the Office of the Assistant Secretary of the ArmyAcquisition, Logistics & Technology. Osborn has also worked as an anchor and on-air military specialist at national TV networks. He has appeared as a guest military expert on Fox News, MSNBC, The Military Channel, and The History Channel. He also has a Masters Degree in Comparative Literature from Columbia University.
Image: Reuters.
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Taliban to wreak carnage across Afghanistan in new spring offensive when Nato and US troops pull out – The Irish Sun
Posted: at 1:04 pm
THE Taliban could wreak carnage across Afghanistan in a new "spring offensive" when troops pull out, the US Secretary of State has warned.
In a letter to Afghan President Ashraf Ghani, Anthony Blinken proposed a 90-day Reduction-in-Violence that could prevent retaliation from the Islamic fundamentalist group.
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In the letter, obtained by the BBC on Sunday, the US Secretary of State called for a new international peace effort to be overseen by the UN in a bid to help reach a "permanent and comprehensive ceasefire".
The intervention will be urgently needed, Mr Blinken said, to prevent the security situation from deteriorating.
Turkey will also be asked to host a senior-level meeting with both sides to "finalise the peace agreement".
Under a deal between the Taliban and the Trump administration, all remaining US forces are due to leave Afghanistan by the end of April.
US troops invaded Afghanistan in 2001 to remove the Taliban from power in response to the 9/11 terrorist attacks.
At the height of the deployment in 2011, the US had around 110,000 troops and it was costing $100bn a year.
In January, the Biden administration said it would review the peace agreement made with the Taliban under Donald Trump.
In that deal, the remaining 9,600 US-led Nato troops would pull out by May 1 in exchange for Taliban security guarantees.
Critics say pulling out would hand the Taliban a victory after the terror group went back on promises to stop attacks and cut ties with al-Qaeda.
Meanwhile, European diplomats have claimed that Nato's two-decade war against the Taliban is "unwinnable".
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One European diplomat said ahead of Nato talks in February: "This war is not winnable, but Nato cannot allow itself to lose it pitifully."
And Germany's defence ministerAnnegret Kramp-Karrenbauer said: "We can already say that we are not yet in a position to talk about the withdrawal of international forces from Afghanistan."
She added: "This also means a changed security situation, an increased threat for the international forces, also for our own forces. We have to prepare for this, and we will certainly discuss this."
Nato countries are desperate not to see Afghanistan slide back into chaos after the enormous cost in lives and money since operations began in the wake of the September 11 attacks.
They fear Afghanistan could once again provide sanctuary for groups like Al-Qaeda, and already ISIS has a growing presence in the country which it could use as a launchpad for attacks on the West.
"While no ally wants to stay in Afghanistan longer than necessary, we will not leave before the time is right," Nato Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg said on Monday.
Last February the US agreed to begin pulling all its troops out of Afghanistan in adeal signed with the Talibanin Doha, Qatar.
In return the Taliban agreed to stop violence and engage in talks with the Afghan government to reach a long-term peace agreement.
But violence has raged across the country after those talks broke down.
In recent months Taliban fighters launched a string of offensives against two provincial capitals, and were blamed for a wave of assassinations targeting journalists, politicians and activists.
Meanwhile, al-Qaeda is regaining power in Afghanistan under the protection of the Taliban along the border with Pakistan.
According to theMirror, the group's leader Ayman Zawahiri may have forged a close relationship with the Taliban - an Islamic fundamentalist group that is still waging war against western forces.
The US Treasury believes Taliban groups have discussed joining forces with militants funded by al-Qaeda.
The terror cult are set to become as dangerous as they were during the 9/11 attacks twenty years ago, an expert has claimed.
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A senior British terrorism expert told theDaily Mirror: Compared to Zawahiri he is likely to be a much more effective leader, at least so or more so even than bin Laden.
It comes following rumours that Zawahiri has died, prompting intelligence agencies to ready themselves for an al-Qaeda rebrand.
Zawahiri took the reins from Osama bin Laden following his death in 2011 but has not been seen for years.
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Taliban to wreak carnage across Afghanistan in new spring offensive when Nato and US troops pull out - The Irish Sun
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Is a Pacific NATO the Only Way to Counter China? – The National Interest
Posted: at 1:04 pm
What if India, Australia, Japan, and the United States formed an Asian NATO collective security alliance to improve prospects for stability and more effectively deter or counter Chinese operations in the Pacific theater?
It could happen and is already being explored by Pentagon leaders, diplomats, and politicians familiar with the threat conditions in Asia. Certainly, the countries are already closely aligned; B-1s are in India, Australia and Japan fly F-35s and both Australia and Japan are acquiring High Altitude Long Endurance drones from the U.S. such as the Global Hawk and Triton, to cite a few among many instances of collaboration. Other longstanding efforts include regular training opportunities, war preparations, joint weapons testing, and interoperability exercises.
When asked about the prospect of an Asian NATO, U.S. Air Force Global Strike Command Commander Gen. Timothy Ray did not say that was in his lane to decide, but he did make a point to articulate the importance of U.S.-allied collaborative security efforts in Asia, with a particular mind to deterring China.
Should these U.S.-aligned countries, perhaps with even the addition of Taiwan, draft up an agreement somewhat analogous to NATOs well-known Article 5, an attack against any of the countries would amount to an attack upon all of them, thus the premise of alliance-generated collective security. An alliance of this kind could introduce some interesting strategic dynamics and potentially further fortify Chinese deterrence in Asia.
For instance, would the existence of an Asian NATO diminish the likelihood of provocative Chinese maneuvers in the region? Would there be less intrusive or aggressive fighter-jet operations close to Japanese shores? Fewer amphibious warfare preparation operations in the vicinity of Taiwan? Perhaps of even greater impact, would a more solidified or formalized Japan-Australia-India-U.S. alliance in any way decrease aggressive Chinese maneuvers in the South China Sea? While an Asian NATO might not necessarily mitigate continued Chinese expansionist ambitions, it could inspire a decrease in aggressive maneuvers and therefore potentially decrease the possibility of an unintended clash or exchange of fire.
Most of all, China is listed by GlobalFirepower.com as having more than 2 million active-duty military personnel, so a combined U.S., Japanese, Australian, and Indian military force might certainly help deter China in terms of sheer numbers, not to mention coordinated air and sea operations including weapons platforms, sensor targeting networking and collaborative training exercises.
For example, the U.S. and Australia have been testing hypersonic weapons together, and drone surveillance data sharing could greatly help blanket the vast ocean areas of the Pacific, Japan collaborates with the U.S. on several crucial weapons programs to include the SM-3 interceptor, and both Japan and Australia are part of the Aegis Ballistic Missile Defense Weapons System group of allies. Radar, surveillance, missile defenses, and weapons synergies with all four countries are already underway, a circumstance that has already created a military foundation upon which to build an alliance.
Kris Osborn is the defense editor for the National Interest. Osborn previously served at the Pentagon as a Highly Qualified Expert with the Office of the Assistant Secretary of the ArmyAcquisition, Logistics & Technology. Osborn has also worked as an anchor and on-air military specialist at national TV networks. He has appeared as a guest military expert on Fox News, MSNBC, The Military Channel, and The History Channel. He also has a Master's Degree in Comparative Literature from Columbia University.
Image: Reuters.
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Is a Pacific NATO the Only Way to Counter China? - The National Interest
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