
Here’s what defines the original NATO:
- Formed after World War II;
- A directly US-led military alliance;
- Unprecedented at the time;
- A common/central operational command;
- A “captured market” for US arms.
- Forming without a regional war having taken place;
- Modelled off of the “Lead From Behind” strategy of back-end, indirect US support;
- Built upon the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC);
- Divided between Saudi Arabia and the UAE;
- Military diversification after recent deals with Russia and China.
- Predominant American strategic influence;
- Common foes (USSR/Russia and Iran, respectively);
- Key component of larger geopolitical containment strategies;
- Based along the Eurasian Rimland;
- Multilateral military integration between regional partners.
Unlike NATO at the moment of its inception, the “Arab NATO” is doubly redundant because two interconnected military structures already exist that preceded it. The GCC has gradually been transitioning from an economic group to a military one over the past few decades, but then Saudi Arabia unveiled its transregional Islamic Military Counter Terrorism Coalition (IMCTC) in 2015 stretching from West Africa to Southeast Asia. The latter entity is comprised of Saudi-friendly countries all across the Eastern Hemisphere’s strategically positioned “Islamic Belt”, but it has thus far appeared to be more of a symbolic creation than anything substantive. In any case, the GCC and IMCTC already exist and make one wonder what exactly it is that the US wants to achieve with the “Arab NATO”.
It can’t be known for certain, but it seems like the US intends for the GCC to simply rebrand as the “Arab NATO”, whether officially or not, since the countries that are usually included in this plan are oftentimes the same ones. This suggests that the US wants to strengthen the IMCTC’s core and hopefully one day turn that larger aforementioned organization into a gigantic proxy against Iran and other Muslim targets all across the Eastern Hemisphere, though this is much easier said than done for several reasons. Here are the most basic challenges facing the US’ strategic efforts to transform the GCC into an “Arab NATO” and then expand that entity all throughout the IMCTC’s member states:
- Saudi Arabia and the UAE, the “core of the core”, are in a “friendly competition” with one another;
- “Peripheral members” of the “GCC+” like Egypt and Jordan would first have to officially join the GCC;
- Israel’s behind-the-scenes support of the “Arab NATO” is controversial without peace in Palestine;
- Some of the IMCTC’s members such as Pakistan don’t want to be “contract soldiers” for the US;
- It takes years of training, coordination, and trust-building to form an effective multinational alliance.
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This article was originally published on InfoRos.
Andrew Korybko is an
American Moscow-based political analyst specializing in the relationship
between the US strategy in Afro-Eurasia, China’s One Belt One Road
global vision of New Silk Road connectivity, and Hybrid Warfare. He is a
frequent contributor to Global Research.
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The original source of this article is Global Research
Copyright © Andrew Korybko, Global Research, 2019