1. Strategic Shifts and NATO’s new Strategic Concept
- Author:
- Thierry Tardy
- Publication Date:
- 06-2022
- Content Type:
- Research Paper
- Institution:
- NATO Defense College
- Abstract:
- NATO currently faces a fundamental challenge. Following the collapse of the Soviet Union, NATO adopted a de facto strategy of political, geographical and functional extension, welcoming new members, launching operations in new regions and multiplying its activities to address new low-intensity security threats.1 However, the pillars on which this strategy rested are now weakening. Today, strategic competition has returned and NATO’s military primacy is eroding, as much due to China’s impressive military modernization as because of the diffusion of military power enabled by globalization.2 Likewise, the liberal international order which allowed NATO to endure an uncertain military balance and a competitive international system during the Cold War is also under pressure. Free trade is under attack, democracy is receding, financial stability is harder to maintain and, last but not least, a seismic redistribution of wealth and power away from the Euro-Atlantic area and towards the Asia-Pacific is underway.3 Lastly, the non-traditional security threats which characterized the post-Cold War era remain, having even expanded in number and intensity.4
- Topic:
- Security, Defense Policy, NATO, International Cooperation, Military Strategy, and Alliance
- Political Geography:
- Europe and North America