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It is opportune to outline in one despatch the significant points in the situation now
confronting NATO. Next month General Norstad, the Supreme Allied Commander Europe
(SACEUR), is paying his first official visit to Canada since assuming his command last
November. A month later three members of the present Canadian Government will be
participating for the first time in a ministerial meeting of the NATO Council.
SACEUR on his visit to Ottawa will refrain from taking up any points of direct concern to
Canada unless any of these points are raised by one of the Canadian Ministers. He will confine
himself to sketching the broad outlines of NATO defence policy and the basic strategy for the
defence of Europe. This is what he has done on each of the first official visits he has paid to the
capitals of other countries contributing forces to his command.
At the ministerial meeting in December the Council will be asked to approve the
recommendations arising out of the 1957 Annual Review. Mr.Spaak is preparing a paper on the
main problems confronting the Alliance. These are likely to be mainly political and his purpose
no doubt will be to focus attention on steps necessary to reinforce the Alliance. In addition
Ministers will be afforded an opportunity of reviewing the current international situation in the
light of recent Soviet moves. Finally, the Ministers will have before them a report of an
important Committee concerned with civil emergency planning.
For some months NATO has been going through an agonizing reappraisal of its policy for
the defence of Europe, such as seems to occur at regular intervals of every three years. These
reappraisals are concerned with the best means of countering the overwhelming superiority in
conventional forces possessed by the Soviet Union. In order to explain the present crisis in
NATO defence policy, it is desirable first of all to give a brief account of previous reappraisals.
In the early days of NATO, following the signature of the Treaty in 1949, efforts in the
military field were directed towards raising conventional forces that could withstand the shock of
a Soviet attack. Even then defence was based on the line of the Rhine. This left a large part of the
Netherlands undefended and gave rise to the suspicion in the minds of Frenchmen, Italians and
others that the United States were contemplating a peripheral strategy based on withdrawal to
behind the Pyrenees with the final stand on that line. They did not relish the prospect of Soviet
occupation to be followed by liberation. These misgivings became more pronounced as it was
seen that the requirements drawn up by the military were quite unrealistic in the light of political
and economic capabilities.
In 1950, without previous diplomatic preparation, the United States proposed the
participation of the Germans in European defence, pointing out that this alone would permit a
forward strategy based on a line east of the Rhine. Since a forward strategy implied defence of
German territory they argued it was right that Germans should participate in that defence. This
proposal shocked and alarmed the French who were only brought around by the initiation of
negotiations for a European army to which the six countries (Belgium, France, Germany, Italy,
Luxembourg and the Netherlands) comprising the European Defence Community (EDC) would
contribute forces.
There still remained the problem of the gap or the difference between what the military
considered necessary and what the nations could afford to contribute. An attack on this problem
was begun at the Council meeting held in Ottawa in 1951, when the so-called TCC (Temporary
Council Committee) exercise was initiated. This consisted of a thorough and comprehensive
enquiry into the capabilities of each NATO country to contribute forces which would make
possible the forward strategy. The result was the acceptance of force goals at the Lisbon meeting
of the Council in February, 1952. These provided for a shield of approximately 65 first line
divisions. At Lisbon the decision was also reached for a regular Annual Review which would
seek to accomplish annually what the TCC had done on a shock basis, i.e. equate military
requirements with national politico-economic capabilities.
In the following years it became apparent that even the more scientifically based Lisbon goals
were beyond the capacity of the NATO nations. This led to another reappraisal and the adoption
at the December, 1954 meeting of the Council of a new strategy based on the use of tactical
nuclear weapons to counter an all-out attack by the Soviet Union. Under this new concept it
was found possible to reduce the shield forces to the more manageable total of around thirty
divisions.
In the period which has intervened between the 1954 decision and the present crisis, two
developments occurred to delay the realization of the objective of 30 divisions for the shield
forces. One of these was the progressive withdrawal of French forces to deal with the situation in
Algeria. The other was the slowness in the build-up of German forces, although after the
collapse of EDC in 1954 the Federal Republic of Germany had been admitted as a full member
of NATO participating on an equal basis in its own right and not indirectly as a contributor to the
European army under EDC. There was also an over-all relaxation of tension following the death
of Stalin in 1953 and resulting from the cumulative effects of the Soviet peace campaign, a
campaign which received a rude shock through the events in Hungary last November.
Overshadowing all these doubts about the ability of NATO to realize an adequate defence
came a discussion over the basic strategy which had placed main reliance for the avoidance of a
world war on the nuclear deterrent represented by the bombing capacities of the United States
Strategic Air Force (SAC) and the United Kingdom Bomber Command. This arose out of
growing concern that the Soviet Union may be catching up in the race for means of delivery of
the A and H bombs. This concern can be traced back to the famous massive retaliation
speech of Mr.Dulles in January, 1954.1 Looked at in retrospect this statement did not announce a
new doctrine but rather a return to a pre-1950 doctrine when the United States had a monopoly
of the atomic weapon. An adviser to the former Democratic Administration, Mr.Paul Nitze,
wrote in a recent article (The Reporter September 5 , 1957): It was not a step forward; it was a
step backward a step back dictated not by new strategic considerations but by domestic
political and budgetary considerations. As we shall see later on this is not the only occasion
when a NATO nation has sought to cover up domestic political and budgetary considerations by
resort to strategic doctrine.
In the meantime the increasing threat of creeping inflation to the economies of all the NATO
countries gave rise to a restlessness over the existing levels of defence expenditures. Throughout
NATO defence expenditures were frozen at existing levels until in the United States and the
United Kingdom efforts were made to reduce these expenditures below the current level. Since
the gross national product of almost every NATO country has been increasing, this meant a
progressive decline in the proportion of the gross national product devoted to defence.
There was a searching in some of the NATO countries for strategic justification of a reduced
level of defence expenditures. The Dulles doctrine of massive retaliation began to take hold in
the United Kingdom, where pressure on the balance of payments was compelling the choice
between the continuation of nuclear armament and the maintenance of conventional forces for
the traditional British world-wide police role. The trip-wire concept was conceived. Under this
concept only a thin shield was necessary in Europe because an attack on the shield or a tripping
of this wire would set off the massive retaliation which was the real deterrent to all-out war.
For economic reasons but under the influence of this trip-wire concept the United Kingdom
Government introduced last winter their White Paper on Defence. At the same time they
unilaterally announced their intention to reduce their forces on the Continent from a total of
77,000 to 50,000 men or in effect from four to three divisions. Since under the Paris Agreement
of 1954 they had undertaken to maintain four divisions on the Continent, the concurrence of the
Council of the Western European Union (WEU) (the Six EDC countries plus the United
Kingdom) was necessary before the United Kingdom could give effect to this reduction. A most
acrimonious debate ensued in WEU. The final result was a compromise, whereby the United
Kingdom were permitted to effect half of the proposed reduction, or 13,500 men, in this fiscal
year, largely in the form of non-combatant troops. The decision as to the other half was deferred
until another meeting of the WEU Council, tentatively fixed for October of this year. In the
meantime SACEUR was asked for his advice on the military aspects of the proposed reductions
and the NATO Council for advice on certain economic and currency aspects. The countries on
the Continent made it unmistakably clear that, unless more justification was forthcoming, they
could not agree to the withdrawal of a further 13,500 United Kingdom troops from Germany.
The basic reasons for the United Kingdom White Paper were economic and financial. The
country could no longer stand the strain of being a world power ready at all times to intervene
wherever British interests were in jeopardy. When the United Kingdom Minister of Defence
went to Washington he was advised by the American Chiefs of Staff to leave the nuclear role
chiefly to the United States and to maintain their conventional forces with the financial savings
that would thereby ensue. This the United Kingdom refused to do because they feared that in an
emergency affecting vital British interests the United States might hesitate to entail the risk of
using the ultimate weapon or might not use it in the manner best designed to protect vital British
interests. In short they concluded that their position as a great power was more assured by being
one of the nuclear powers than by having forces capable of policing large areas of the globe.
If the United Kingdom had presented their case to their WEU and NATO partners solely in
economic and financial terms, they might have obtained a better hearing, but they cloaked it with
a strategic doctrine that was a thin disguise of the trip-wire concept. This doctrine happened to
run counter to a political directive drawn up by NATO with United Kingdom concurrence and
approved by the Council at the ministerial meeting last December. Briefly, the United Kingdom
case is that there is no such thing as a limited nuclear war. Once resort is had to nuclear weapons
of any kind an all-out war is inevitable. From this it follows that the size of the shield is not
important. What is all important is the capability of immediate and devastating retaliation with
the ultimate weapon, the A or the H bomb, delivered either by means of bomber aircraft or
by guided missiles.
The reaction of the countries on the Continent of Europe to this doctrine has been profound.
Unfortunately, this reaction is not well understood in the Anglo-Saxon countries, partly because
it was slow to develop and partly
because it has not always been correctly appraised by Anglo-Saxon writers on defence subjects, most of whom have their own
preconceived ideas to
propagate. The first factor to bear in mind is that these countries are wedded to the forward
strategy. They are most sensitive to any moves that seem to represent a return to peripheral
strategy. They refuse to contemplate the possibility of liberation after occupation. The second
factor is their extreme dependence upon the United States as the possessor of the main deterrent
to aggression. They see the gradual catching up by the Soviet Union in the nuclear delivery race,
a development that has been demonstratively illustrated by the launching of the Soviet earth
satellite.2
The European case has been well put in a recent report (prepared for the Sixth Bilderberg
Conference at Fiuggi, Italy) by a retired French air force General, who was formerly at SHAPE,
General Pierre M.Gallois. The following is a translation of an extract from that report:
For each of the powers of the Alliance which do not possess nuclear weapons the question
is this: might it find itself in such a situation that an incident of major importance for its own
security or independence might be considered minor not only by guaranteeing atomic
powers, but also by the other member countries of the Alliance? This assessment of the
major or minor nature of a threat against Western countries must be estimated according to a
new criterion the size of the nuclear risk. Even if a vast airborne nuclear exchange appears
improbable, or even impossible, and if everyone knows that they were being blackmailed
with fear, it is clear that everyone would weigh the size of the stake and of the risk. And in
such a calculation it is very likely that countries not directly and immediately threatened
might consider some enemy intervention of major importance for the country against which
it is directed to be only a minor incident.
The above quotation explains why France is continuing to spend large sums on its nuclear
programme at a time when it is engaged in a costly local war in Algeria. It also makes it easy to
appreciate the force behind the appeals of European countries to the United States for an
amendment to the MacMahon Act which would permit that country to furnish its allies with
nuclear weapons. Finally it explains why there has recently developed in some European
countries an agitation for more conventional forces, notwithstanding the intolerable burdens this
would place on the economies of the countries concerned.
The proposed United Kingdom reduction of forces in Germany has been described by
writers on the Continent as tip-toeing out of Europe. This reveals a deep-seated fear that the
Anglo-Saxon countries may be disposed to leave their allies to their fate if the risk of defence on
the Continent appears too great. The European countries have suspected all along that one of the
motives the United States had in proposing German rearmament was that this eventually would
permit the withdrawal of American forces from Europe. Throughout the discussions in NATO on
the United Kingdom reduction of forces there were repeated references to the vital importance of
maintaining the continued stationing of American, British and Canadian forces on the Continent
of Europe. The Canadian contributions to SACEUR's forces are valued greatly because their
quality is relatively superior to their quantity but above all they are valued for the psychological
or political reason that they help to assure the continued presence of American and British
forces.
The theory of reliance on the deterrence of the ultimate weapons was attacked in a book
published last summer by a young American, Mr.Henry A. Kissinger. This book is entitled
Nuclear Weapons and Foreign Policy and has attracted much attention. Kissinger's thesis is that
resort to the ultimate weapon involves such mutual destruction that it is not feasible politically
and that both sides will refrain from its use even if one or the other resorts to tactical nuclear
weapons. He, therefore, propounds the doctrine of limited nuclear war. He spoilt this thesis by
padding his book with concrete examples of how such wars might be conducted, but there is no
doubt that the appearance of this book has had an impact on thinking on both sides of the
Atlantic.
That a change of thinking is taking place in Washington along the lines of Kissinger's thesis
may be seen from an interesting article by Mr.Dulles which appeared in the October issue of Foreign Affairs.3 After pointing out that recent tests point to the possibility of possessing nuclear
weapons the destructiveness and radiation effects of which can be confined substantially to
predetermined targets, Mr.Dulles concludes that: In the future it may thus be feasible to place
less reliance upon deterrence of vast retaliatory power. It may be possible to defend countries by
nuclear weapons so mobile, or so placed, as to make military invasion with conventional forces a
hazardous attempt.
That some of Kissinger's ideas are shared on the Continent of Europe may be seen by
quoting the following extracts from the report of General Gallois referred to above:
"Western Europe is still guaranteed by the airborne nuclear power of the United States. We
think that the growth of Soviet nuclear capacity, the quality or even the superiority of this
capacity over that of the West, is not of such a nature as to change fundamentally the military
aspect of the permanent test of force, which is characteristic of this period. On the other
hand, it seems that the political aspect of the problem of common defence may be completely
changed. For as long as an airborne nuclear monopoly existed the concept of guarantee had
some sense, the risk taken in granting this guarantee was a minor one. This is no longer true".
"This reasoning could lead to the safety of Western continental European countries being
based on the individual possession (or the possession by groups of nations with very closely
connected interests) of quantitatively limited nuclear armament, and on their conventional
contribution to a collective defence system. The first of these two categories of forces would
bring the deterrent to the national level. The second would discourage minor action against
one or several allies, and allow the level of the stake to be sufficiently raised to be able to
pass gradually to the national, regional, or collective nuclear deterrent."
It has been in this charged atmosphere that General Norstad has been preparing all summer
his report that would respond to the request of the WEU Council for advice on the military
aspects of the proposed United Kingdom reduction of forces on the Continent of Europe. He
very wisely decided not to reply directly to the questions put to him by the WEU Council but to
let the answers come out of another report he was preparing. This is a document known as
MC70 and is entitled Minimum Force Requirements.4 It covers the period up to the end of
1963. SACEUR's contribution will be combined with those of the other two Supreme
Commanders, SACLANT (Atlantic) and CINCHAN (English Channel), and then vetted by the
Standing Group and the Military Committee before submission to the Council. Since both
SACEUR's and SACLANT's contributions contain some revolutionary ideas it is not expected
that this procedure can be completed in time for submission of the document to the ministerial
meeting of the Council in December. There will, however, be a discussion at that meeting on the
procedure for dealing with the document.
SACEUR's contribution to MC70 was given a preview first of all at a presentation to
national Chiefs of Staff on September 18th and secondly at a presentation to the NATO
Ambassadors on October 2nd. The latter presentation was rendered necessary by the exigencies
of the WEU time-table. The presentation consisted of briefings by General Norstad and his
senior officers. Normally nothing is revealed officially to the Council of papers prepared by the
Supreme Commanders until they are approved by the Military Committee.
We have seen that there are three schools of thought. First that represented by the British
who place main reliance on deterrence by the ultimate weapon and who advocate a thin shield.
The second school is that of those who question reliance on the deterrent under existing
conditions and favour a return to large conventional forces in order to assume the integrity of
national territories against political blackmail or piecemeal nibbling. The third school is that
which lies between the other two and is represented by the doctrine accepted by NATO since
1954.
In his contribution to MC70 General Norstad has confirmed and further elaborated this
accepted NATO doctrine. Without minimizing in any way the deterrent effect of the ultimate
weapon he designates the shield as an essential part of the deterrent. He continues to require a
shield of around 30 divisions. These shield forces are to have both nuclear and conventional
capabilities. They have to be prepared to fight either type of warfare using that degree of force
required to deal with the situation. To make possible the provision of the forces he needs,
General Norstad proposes economies through the abolition of forces he does not need. The
emphasis is still on the first thirty days. Hence he proposes drastic cuts in second echelon forces
that cannot be available within this period. He proposes reductions in the number of aircraft but
this is more than compensated for by an overall increase in strike power.
It is becoming clear that with the complexity of modern weapons the emphasis is being
placed more and more on highly trained regular troops. Field Marshal Montgomery has affirmed
that the day of the levy en masse of men to fight a war is over. General Norstad says as much by
relegating reserve forces to a very low priority and not requiring them to be assigned to him. He
does not go so far, however, as to recommend the abolition of national service because this is the
only way some NATO countries can raise forces economically. He puts forward the
revolutionary suggestion of an international division under his command ready to be airborne to
any part of the NATO area.
Hitherto SACLANT has been accused of preparing for war under a concept opposite to that
on which SACEUR bases his strategy. His duty is to keep the sea-lanes open and this has
presupposed a war of longer than thirty days duration. SACLANT's contribution to MC70 is
reported to be based on a forward defence. Under this strategic concept there would be
concentration on keeping the Soviet submarines out of the Atlantic instead of concentrating on
destroying them after they have got into the Atlantic. This would assume naval forces in being,
whereas at present SACLANT has no forces assigned to him but only forces ear-marked for him.
This revised concept would enable SACLANT to pay more attention to the early stages of a
nuclear war. It is reported that the Standing Group are questioning the concept and this is one of
the factors which will contribute to the delay in presenting MC70 formally to the Council.
The United Kingdom Government are in a quandary as a result of SACEUR's presentation
of his contribution to MC70. General Norstad has confirmed the necessity for a strong shield
and hence supports the arguments advanced by the countries on the Continent of Europe against
the proposed withdrawal of further United Kingdom forces from Germany. There is now little
hope that these countries will agree to the further withdrawal of 13,500 men in the next fiscal
year. The United Kingdom wish to avoid another heated debate in the WEU Council with all the
damage this would cause to their prestige. In particular, they fear the effect this might have on
the difficult negotiations for the association of a Free Trade Area with the Common Market
comprised of their six partners in WEU. General Norstad paid a private visit to London on
October 9th and had talks with Mr.Selwyn Lloyd and Mr.Duncan Sandys. They asked him for
his advice. He advised they adopt a proposal he made earlier in the year and agree to leave on the
Continent the strategic reserve of 5,000 men. This would reduce the number of United Kingdom
troops to be withdrawn in the next fiscal year to 8,500 men. At the same time the United
Kingdom could point out that there remains unsolved the currency question relating to the strain
on their balance of payments from maintaining troops in Germany. There is a clause in the Paris
Agreement of 1954 pertaining to this question, but up to now the discussions on this subject have
been abortive, partly due to the obduracy of the German Minister of Finance. It is probable that
the questions which have arisen in WEU over the proposed withdrawal of part of the United
Kingdom forces stationed in Germany will be settled out of court and that there will be no
discussion of these questions at the ministerial meeting of the NATO Council in December.
We have seen that MC70 will not be ready for formal presentation to the Council in time
for the December ministerial meeting. Consequently Ministers will not have to take a stand on
the proposals in this document until sometime in 1958. Enough, however, will be known, at least
of SACEUR's proposals, to permit them to be reflected in a discussion of the defence problems
facing the Alliance which is one of the items on the agenda. This may take the form of a sort of
preliminary discussion of the main lines of MC70 without leading to definite conclusions or
decisions. Enough is known also of the broad lines of MC70 to permit of an intelligent
discussion of the procedures to be followed in giving effect to the proposals in the document,
which is another item on the agenda for the December ministerial meeting. Here we have some
concern that the NATO Secretariat may be harbouring the idea of a large scale multilateral
exercise to give effect to MC70. Fortunately for us, General Norstad has already made his views
on this question known in an informal statement he made on October 2nd to some NATO
Ambassadors. He said that in his view all that is required to give effect to MC70 are bilateral
conversations between the Supreme Commanders and each of the Governments plus the
maximum possible use of the established Annual Review procedure. At the December meeting,
however, Ministers will be asked to decide whether MC70 should be discussed in the first
instance at a meeting of Defence Ministers or at a meeting attended by Foreign, Finance and
Defence Ministers. The United States are in favour of the latter course, but Ishould think a great
deal will depend upon the degree of insight into these problems the Foreign and Finance
Ministers acquire at the December meeting. A meeting of Defence Ministers only would be less
unwieldy for the purpose in view. The only substantive decision in the military field Ministers
will be asked to take at the December meeting will be to approve the Annual Review for 1957
which sets firm force goals for 1958, provisional goals for 1959 and goals for planning purposes
for 1960.
The first part of the agenda for the ministerial meeting in December is mainly political. It is
not known yet on what points Mr.Spaak will touch in his report on the Main Problems
confronting the Alliance. It is thought his object will be to reinforce NATO solidarity. He may
deal with such questions as a common policy for the Middle East, measures to bring about a
settlement of the Cyprus dispute and steps to lessen the economic dependence of Iceland on the
Soviet bloc. Mr.Spaak is a born integrator with much practical experience in European
integration. It is possible that some of his suggestions may be designed to bring about the closer
integration of the NATO countries. We should be afforded an inkling of Mr.Spaak's latest
thinking in the addresses and broadcasts he is to deliver on his visit to the United States towards
the end of this month.
The item on the agenda for the December meeting providing for a review of the current
international situation is intended to provide an opportunity for an exchange of views. It is an
item for information and not for action. No conclusions or decisions are intended to emerge from
the discussion under this item, but it is hoped that the exchange of views will enable all NATO
Governments to take into account in formulating their policies the views expressed by their
NATO partners. In this way, if not common policies, at least policies consistent with NATO
objectives can be followed by the Governments.
Finally, the agenda for the December ministerial meeting will contain an item relating to the
report of the Senior Committee on Civil Emergency Planning. This Committee is chaired by Mr.
Spaak and is composed of officials in national capitals primarily responsible for planning in this
field. They are meeting in Paris this week to finalize the report which they will submit to the
December ministerial meeting. It is possible that their report will contain recommendations
entailing increased expenditures by governments for civilian planning for an emergency. If so,
Ministers will want to consider these recommendations along with those in the purely defence
field. It has not yet been worked out how the two sets of recommendations can best be co-related.
This completes the review of the principal points with which the Canadian Ministers will be
brought in touch both during the visit of General Norstad to Ottawa on November 13th and 14th
and as a result of the participation of three Canadian Ministers in the Ministerial meeting of the
NATO Council on December 16th to 18th.
L.D. WILGRESS
1 Voir/See Volume 20,
Documents 443-445.
2 L'Union soviétique avait lancé le satellite
Spoutnik le 4 octobre1957, mettant ainsi en évidence l'état d'avancement du
programme soviétique de missiles balistiques en particulier et des capacités scientifiques
soviétiques en général.
The Soviet Union had launched the Sputnik satellite on October 4, 1957, demonstrating the advanced state of
the Soviet ballistic missile program in particular and Soviet
scientific capabilities in general.
3 Voir/See John Foster Dulles, Challenge
and Response in United States Policy, Foreign Affairs Vol.36
No.1 (1957), pp.25-43.
4 Le texte du
MC-70, qui établissait les contributions minimales en main-d'oeuvre et en matériel
pour les pays de l'OTAN entre 1958 et 1963, demeure classifié.
The text of MC-70, which mandated the minimum manpower and materiel contributions for NATO countries
between 1958 and 1963, remains classified.
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