|
Energy and NATO
Senator Lugar's keynote speech to the German Marshall
Fund conference on Monday, November 27, 2006 in Riga, Latvia, in
advance of the NATO Summit.
Read news articles in
reaction to Senator Lugar's speech
It
is a pleasure to be back in Riga and to deliver the keynote address
here at this important German Marshall Fund conference. This conference
and the participants it has drawn are evidence of the deep respect
the Fund merits throughout Europe and North America.
In 1991 NATO stood at a crossroads. With the collapse of the Soviet
Union and the Warsaw Pact, the Alliance could have declared victory
and disbanded. Instead, NATO chose to adapt to the new security
environment and build on its legacy of being the most successful
security and defense organization in history.
Since that time, we have welcomed ten new members into the Alliance
and have begun a dramatic transformation of our military capabilities.
We have also undertaken missions in the Balkans and Afghanistan
that have extended the purpose of the Alliance beyond the territorial
defense of its membership. However, while NATO is busier than ever,
these activities do not guarantee that the Alliance will remain
strong and relevant.
For nearly half a century, NATO was oriented toward defending against
an attack from the East by Warsaw Pact forces. Today, NATO’s
posture is influenced by emerging threats such as the proliferation
of weapons of mass destruction, rogue states, terrorism, and genocide.
The security threats of the 21st century require NATO members to
deploy forces rapidly over long distances, sustain operations for
extended periods of time, and operate jointly as trans-Atlantic
partners with the United States in high intensity conflicts. To
be fully relevant to the security and well being of the people of
its member nations, NATO must think and act globally.
The Test of Afghanistan
This is evident in the NATO mission in Afghanistan. That country
presents a difficult environment, but NATO must be resourceful,
resilient, and ultimately successful. The September 11 attacks were
planned in Afghanistan, al-Qaeda still operates there, and the fate
of the country remains inexorably tied to the Alliance. NATO’s
International Security and Assistance Force (ISAF) is responsible
for security operations throughout all of Afghanistan.
In recent months, Taliban attacks have occurred with greater frequency,
coordination, and ferocity. They have extended well beyond the South
and East, where most of the fighting has been located. Although
the hunt for al-Qaeda terrorists continues, the primary threat to
the stability of Afghanistan is Taliban insurgents who are challenging
ISAF in greater numbers, sowing dissent among Afghanis, cooperating
with the bourgeoning narcotics trade, and complicating security
efforts in ways that inhibit the rule of law and reconstruction.
If the most prominent alliance in modern history were to fail in
its first operation outside of Europe due to a lack of will by its
members, the efficacy of NATO and the ability to take joint action
against a terrorist threat would be called into question. Moreover,
Afghanistan has a legitimately elected government and a long-suffering
people, both of which deserve a chance to succeed without the threat
of violent upheaval.
It is imperative that NATO fulfills its commitments to Afghanistan.
The Alliance has found it difficult to generate the political will
to meet NATO objectives. The reluctance in capitals to grant NATO
requests for troops and resources have complicated this process.
Despite months of intensive discussions, Supreme Allied Commander/Europe,
General Jim Jones, disclosed in September that NATO was 2,500 troops
short of the minimal commitment requested for ISAF. These troops
did not materialize until General Jones and other NATO leaders publicly
put Alliance nations on the spot for these shortfalls.
Afghanistan has become a test case for whether we can overcome
the growing discrepancy between NATO’s expanding missions
and its lagging capabilities. NATO commanders must have the resources
to provide security, and they must have the flexibility to use troops
to meet Afghanistan’s most critical security needs. Unfortunately,
NATO capitals are making the military mission even more difficult
by placing national caveats on the use of their forces. These restrictions,
coupled with troop shortages, are making ISAF a less cohesive and
capable force.
Similar problems are plaguing the NATO Response Force (NRF), which
is slated to be NATO’s expeditionary fighting unit. As is
often the case, the lack of transport capabilities is a glaring
deficiency. I am hopeful that the plan to establish a fleet of C-17s
under the command and control of NATO succeeds. To overcome these
challenges and similar ones, we must reverse the downward spiral
of defense budgets. Only a handful of members spend more than 2
percent of their gross domestic product on defense. Good intentions
can only carry a military force so far -- the NRF and other NATO
assets must have the equipment, training, and resources to fulfill
their mission.
I believe strongly that NATO is capable of meeting the challenge
in Afghanistan. NATO commanders have demonstrated that they understand
the complexity of the mission. They know that success in Afghanistan
depends on the attitudes of the people, the progress of reconstruction,
the development of the economy and the building of civil institutions
that can deal with the narcotics trade, as much as it depends on
battlefield victories.
Most Afghanis have welcomed the advances in personal freedom, political
participation, and educational opportunities that have come during
the last five years. The recent increase in violence in Afghanistan
clearly is not evidence of a popular uprising. But to the degree
that there is discontent, disillusionment, or fear among the Afghan
people due to their security situation, trust in the Afghan government
and NATO will dissipate. Insecurity stemming from insurgent activity
by Taliban forces has also caused Afghanis in some regions to seek
the protection of tribal leaders and warlords, which in turn undercuts
the authority of the Afghan government and increases the risk of
civil conflict between tribal factions. Given these dynamics, we
must dispel any doubts about the commitment of NATO and the West
to Afghanistan’s emergence as a stable and free society.
The Centrality of Energy
NATO’s challenges continue to come in new formations. We
have to understand not only the military configuration of threats
before us, but also the likely basis for future conflict. The NATO
alliance has been successful, not because it fought wars, but because
it prevented them. If the NATO alliance is to be fully relevant
to the security of its members, it must expand beyond the mission
of military defense and begin to think about how to prevent the
conditions that will lead to war.
In the coming decades, the most likely source of armed conflict
in the European theater and the surrounding regions will be energy
scarcity and manipulation. It would be irresponsible for NATO to
decline involvement in energy security, when it is abundantly apparent
that the jobs, health, and security of our modern economies and
societies depend on the sufficiency and timely availability of diverse
energy resources.
We all hope that the economics of supply and pricing surrounding
energy transactions will be rational and transparent. We hope that
nations with abundant oil and natural gas will reliably supply these
resources in normal market transactions to those who need them.
We hope that pipelines, sea lanes, and other means of transmission
will be safe. We hope that energy cartels will not be formed to
limit available supplies and manipulate markets. We hope that energy
rich nations will not exclude or confiscate productive foreign energy
investments in the name of nationalism. And we hope that vast energy
wealth will not be a source of corruption within nations that desperately
ask their governments to develop and deliver the benefits of this
wealth broadly to society.
Unfortunately, our experiences provide little reason to be confident
that market rationality will be the governing force behind energy
policy and transactions. The majority of oil and natural gas supplies
and reserves in the world are not controlled by efficient, privately
owned companies. Geology and politics have created oil and natural
gas superpowers that nearly monopolize the world’s oil supply.
According to PFC Energy, foreign governments control up to 79 percent
of the world’s oil reserves through their national oil companies.
These governments set prices through their investment and production
decisions, and they have wide latitude to shut off the taps for
political reasons.
The vast majority of these oil assets are afflicted by at least
one of three problems: lack of investment, political manipulation,
or the threat of instability and terrorism. As recently as four
years ago, spare production capacity exceeded world oil consumption
by about ten percent. As world demand for oil has rapidly increased
in the last few years, spare capacity has declined to two percent
or less. Thus, even minor disruptions of oil supply can drive up
prices. Earlier this year, a routine inspection found corrosion
in a section of BP’s Prudhoe Bay oil pipeline that shut down
8 percent of U.S. oil output, causing a $2 spike in oil prices.
That the oil market is this vulnerable to something as mundane as
corrosion in a pipeline is evidence of the precarious conditions
in which we live.
Within the last year and a half, the international flow of oil
has been disrupted by hurricanes, unrest in Nigeria, and continued
sabotage in Iraq. Al-Qaeda and other terrorist organizations have
openly declared their intent to attack oil facilities to inflict
pain on Western economies. We should also recognize that NATO members
are transferring hundreds of billions of dollars each year to some
of the least accountable, autocratic regimes in the world. The revenues
flowing to authoritarian regimes often increase corruption in those
countries and allow them to insulate themselves from international
pressure and the democratic aspirations of their own peoples. As
large industrializing nations such as China and India seek new energy
supplies, oil and natural gas may not be abundant and accessible
enough to support continued economic growth in both the industrialized
West and in large rapidly growing economies. In these conditions,
energy supplies will become an even stronger magnet for conflict.
Under the worst case scenarios, oil and natural gas will be the
currency through which energy-rich countries leverage their interests
against import dependent nations. The use of energy as an overt
weapon is not a theoretical threat of the future; it is happening
now. Iran has repeatedly threatened to cut off oil exports to selected
nations if economic sanctions are imposed against it for its nuclear
enrichment program. Russia’s shut off of energy deliveries
to Ukraine demonstrated how tempting it is to use energy to achieve
political aims and underscored the vulnerability of consumer nations
to their energy suppliers. Russia retreated from the standoff after
a strong Western reaction, but how would NATO have responded if
Russia had maintained the embargo? The Ukrainian economy and military
could have been crippled without a shot being fired, and the dangers
and losses to several NATO member nations would have mounted significantly.
We are used to thinking in terms of conventional warfare between
nations, but energy could become the weapon of choice for those
who possess it. It may seem to be a less lethal weapon than military
force, but a natural gas shutdown to a European country in the middle
of winter could cause death and economic loss on the scale of a
military attack. Moreover, in such circumstances, nations would
become desperate, increasing the chances of armed conflict and terrorism.
The potential use of energy as a weapon requires NATO to review
what Alliance obligations would be in such cases.
Energy as an Article Five Commitment
We must move now to address our energy vulnerability. Sufficient
investment and planning cannot happen overnight, and it will take
years to change behavior, construct successful strategies, and build
supporting infrastructure.
NATO must determine what steps it is willing to take if Poland,
Germany, Hungary, Latvia or another member state is threatened as
Ukraine was. Because an attack using energy as a weapon can devastate
a nation’s economy and yield hundreds or even thousands of
casualties, the Alliance must avow that defending against such attacks
is an Article Five commitment. This does not mean that attempts
to manipulate energy for international political gain would require
a NATO military response. Rather, it means that the Alliance must
commit itself to preparing for and responding to attempts to use
the energy weapon against its fellow members. NATO must become a
reliable refuge for members against threats stemming from their
energy insecurity. If this does not happen, the Alliance is likely
to become badly divided as vulnerable members seek to placate their
energy suppliers. In fact, no issue in the history of NATO is so
likely to divide the alliance in the absence of concerted action.
Article Five of the NATO Charter identifies an attack on one member
as an attack on all. Originally envisioned to respond to an armed
invasion, this commitment was the bedrock of our Cold War alliance
and a powerful symbol of unity that deterred Warsaw Pact aggression
for nearly fifty years. It was also designed to prevent coercion
of a NATO member by a non-member state. We should recognize that
there is little ultimate difference between a member being forced
to submit to foreign coercion because of an energy cutoff and a
member facing a military blockade or other military demonstration
on its borders.
In preparing for such a commitment, NATO leaders should develop
a strategy that includes the re-supply of a victim of an aggressive
energy suspension. How would the Alliance shift energy supplies
and services to a member under such an attack? What steps can NATO
take now to ensure that we have the infrastructure in place to respond
to such an attack? What steps are needed to diversify our energy
sources and supply routes to deter the use of energy as a weapon?
Alternatives to existing pipeline routes must be identified and
financial and political support for the development of alternative
energy sources is crucial. A coordinated and well-publicized Alliance
response would be a deterrent that would reduce the chances of miscalculation
or military conflict. It would also provide a powerful incentive
for Member states to remain in the Alliance and for prospective
members to accelerate reforms necessary to qualify for membership.
The energy threat is more difficult to prepare for than a ground
war in Central Europe. Troops, equipment, and supplies can move
along highways and over difficult terrain. Energy supplies do not
enjoy the same freedom of movement. Developing a logistical response
to an energy cutoff will prove a complex challenge.
My friend, Mark Grossman, the former U.S. Under Secretary of State
for Policy, has proposed reviving the REFORGER exercises of the
Cold War. These exercises were carried out to prepare for the massive
troop and equipment re-supply mission that would be required to
thwart a Soviet attack. A new REFORGER should focus on how the Alliance
would supply a beleaguered member with the energy resources needed
to withstand geo-strategic blackmail. This will not be easy or comfortable
for the Alliance. Members will be required to tighten their belts
and make hard choices. But, if we fail to prepare, we will intensify
our predicament.
Beyond constructing strong alliance commitments related to energy,
NATO must engage Russia and other energy rich nations. I advocate
establishing regular high-level consultations between Russia and
NATO on energy security. The economic and political situation in
Russia is intensely influenced by the price of energy. Moscow is
banking on big returns from its energy sector indefinitely into
the future. But the fickleness of energy markets affects not only
consumers, but producers.
I believe that Russia has a long-term interest in achieving a more
prosperous stability that comes with greater investment in its energy
sector and the development of a reputation as a trusted supplier.
But its recent actions to temporarily reduce gas supplies to the
West, confiscate some foreign energy investments, and create further
barriers to new investment are undermining confidence in Moscow’s
reliability. This trend is likely to have unintended repercussions
for Russia. Even now, Russians are feeling the effects of inadequate
investment in their energy sector. Russia boasts the world’s
largest reserves of natural gas, but this winter it could face gas
shortages of its own. Russia has not contended with investment problems
in its natural gas industry, and its artificially low domestic gas
prices have undermined the development of efficiency measures that
are commonplace in the West. Russia now requires gas imports from
Central Asia, which it sells at a premium to Europe. Yet if growing
domestic demand in Russia outstrips stagnating production and Central
Asian imports, as some commentators predict, the Kremlin will face
the difficult choice between letting some of its people go cold
or not meeting its commitments to Europe.
We do not wish these difficulties on anyone. But we should speak
clearly with Russia about our concerns and our determination to
protect our economies and our peoples. We should outline the differences
between a future in which Russia tries to leverage for political
advantage the energy vulnerabilities of its neighbors and a future
in which Russia solidifies consumer-producer trust with the West
and respects energy investments that help expand and maintain Russia’s
production capacity. Energy is a two-way relationship and will remain
so even as Europe and the United States diversify their energy resource
base. Both NATO and Russia need a sustained discussion on the rule
of law, the status of foreign investment, bi-national and multinational
agreements, and steps to implement the principles agreed to at the
G-8 Summit in July.
Expanding NATO’s Partners
One critical element in strengthening the alliance’s energy
security is developing new relationships and admitting new members
who will contribute to NATO’s efforts in this area. I applaud
Alliance efforts to develop special relationships with states around
the world. At the Riga Summit, NATO should authorize the creation
of partnerships with like-minded countries such as Japan, Australia,
South Korea, Finland, and Sweden.
An effective energy strategy should also include new strategic
relationships with energy exporters. I urge Alliance leaders to
look to the Caucasus and Central Asia for new partnerships. These
states are critically located and important sources of oil and natural
gas. Substantial improvement is needed in the region in areas such
as democracy, the rule of law, and civil society. A closer relationship
with NATO will promote these values and contribute to our mutual
security. I recommend that NATO focus especially on its relationships
with Azerbajian and Kazakhstan. While both countries have considerable
work to do, eventual NATO membership must be on the table.
I believe that some aspirant states are prepared to assume membership
responsibilities. Croatia, Albania, and Macedonia should be invited
to join NATO as soon as they meet Alliance requirements. Each has
expressed a strong desire to join the Alliance, and each is capable
of making important contributions. While I am disappointed that
invitations will not be extended here at Riga, we must increase
the tempo of cooperation between the Alliance and those states.
NATO should also invite Georgia to join the Alliance. Tbilisi is
a young democratic government, resisting pressure from breakaway
republics backed by Moscow and Russian troops on Georgian soil.
Georgia has been a superb role model for the region, and it is host
to critical segments of the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan oil pipeline and
the Southern Caucuses natural gas pipeline. Two months ago, the
NATO Secretary General announced that the Alliance had launched
an Intensified Dialogue with Georgia. While this is an important
step, NATO must grant a Membership Action Plan as soon as possible.
After recovering from recent political instability, Ukraine has
indicated that it wants to move more slowly toward NATO membership.
I am pleased that Kiev has acknowledged the important work needed
to accurately convey to its population what NATO membership would
mean. While I hope this process might move more quickly, I urge
the Alliance, when all applicable criteria are satisfied, to support
efforts for Ukraine to join NATO.
The Alliance must also continue to encourage Belgrade to meet its
international obligations, which include full cooperation with the
International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia. With
additional progress on war criminals and other important reforms,
Serbia would be a valuable member of the Alliance.
Conclusion
By their nature, alliances require constant study and revision
if they are to be resilient and relevant. They must examine the
needs of their members and determine how the alliance can safeguard
the freedom, prosperity, and security of each member. NATO has survived
and prospered because it has been able to do this repeatedly. We
have met the threat of Soviet aggression, expanded the zone of peace
and security across Europe, guarded against the risks posed by terrorism
and weapons of mass destruction, and improved our ability to project
power over long distances. We are meeting threats in Afghanistan,
the African continent, and other locations outside Europe. But if
we fail to reorient the Alliance to address energy security, we
will be ignoring the dynamic that is most likely to spur conflict
and threaten the well-being of alliance members.
I understand that adopting energy security as a mission is a major
advancement from NATO’s origins. But it represents an historic
opportunity to change the circumstances of geopolitics to the benefit
of all members. At this summit, we should engage in a broad, strategic
debate on how we can ensure progress in Afghanistan, strengthen
NATO through new members, and face the energy security threats of
the 21st century together. Although Riga may not produce definitive
answers to these questions, it must be the summit that starts the
crucial discussion that will lead to consensus.
The stakes are such that if we wait even a few years, we are likely
to find that our alliance is in jeopardy. We will look back at this
point in time and see it as a critical juncture that required bold
vision and leadership. I look forward to working together with each
of you to provide this leadership.
Thank you.
|