The new secretary-general of NATO is visiting the United States amid expectations
that the Bush administration will ask the alliance to make greater military commitments
in Iraq and Afghanistan. Jaap de Hoop Scheffer says the Atlantic alliance must
confront challenges together but warns that there are limits to NATO's military
capabilities.
Jaap de Hoop Scheffer, a former Dutch foreign minister, is making his first
visit to the United States since becoming NATO's secretary-general on January
5.
His two-day visit will include a White House meeting with President Bush
on Friday.
The 19-member alliance has changed a lot since the collapse of the Soviet
bloc. It is scheduled to welcome seven former Communist states from east-central
Europe as new members this year.
And NATO, once focused on the defense of Western Europe and North America,
now has troops serving in missions, in Kosovo, Afghanistan and Bosnia-Herzegovina.
In fact, administration officials are expected to ask the alliance for greater
collective involvement in Afghanistan and Iraq in coming months.
The U.S. representative to NATO, Nicholas Burns, introduced Mr. de Hoop Scheffer
at a two-day conference on the alliance's role in world affairs.
"I think what he is going to hear from our leadership over the next day-and-a-half
is that we have very ambitious goals in the United States for what NATO should
be doing in Afghanistan, by hopefully taking over all military operations within
a year or two," he said. "We have an ambitious view that NATO ought to be present
collectively in Iraq in 2004 and 2005 and we certainly hope and know that our
Secretary General will be working in that direction."
But Mr. de Hoop Scheffer reminded his audience that NATO is a consensus-based
alliance. He suggested that any decision on collective military involvement
in Iraq will have to come as a result of a decision by all its members.
"And if allies were to decide together that they wish for NATO to do more,
it will. For that to be the case, NATO must be a forum where Iraq is discussed
and where our common approaches are shaped," he said.
Mr. de Hoop Scheffer pointed out that he is well aware that the United States
has taken on heavy military burdens in Iraq, Afghanistan and other "hot spots."
But he told his American audience that other NATO countries also face military
challenges - in light of which, he said, the alliance must think about ways
in which it can better confront global security issues in the future.
"European and Canadian forces are heavily deployed as well. Germany has some
10,000 troops deployed outside of its borders, including in Afghanistan," said
Mr. de Hoop Scheffer. "France has 30,000 troops deployed, including some in
all NATO missions. And in taking over command of ISAF [the international peacekeeping
force] in Afghanistan, Canada has over 10 percent of its total army across
the oceans."
Mr. de Hoop Scheffer said he intends, as secretary-general, to help NATO
improve its overall capabilities in coming years.