Al Mayadeen English

  • Ar
  • Es
  • x
Al Mayadeen English

Slogan

  • News
    • Politics
    • Economy
    • Sports
    • Arts&Culture
    • Health
    • Miscellaneous
    • Technology
    • Environment
  • Articles
    • Opinion
    • Analysis
    • Blog
    • Features
  • Videos
    • NewsFeed
    • Video Features
    • Explainers
    • TV
    • Digital Series
  • Infographs
  • In Pictures
  • • LIVE
News
  • Politics
  • Economy
  • Sports
  • Arts&Culture
  • Health
  • Miscellaneous
  • Technology
  • Environment
Articles
  • Opinion
  • Analysis
  • Blog
  • Features
Videos
  • NewsFeed
  • Video Features
  • Explainers
  • TV
  • Digital Series
Infographs
In Pictures
  • Africa
  • Asia
  • Asia-Pacific
  • Europe
  • Latin America
  • MENA
  • Palestine
  • US & Canada
BREAKING
Local sources: An explosive device detonated in Bir Hasna, east of Al-Abbasiya in the Palmyra countryside, Syria, causing injuries and material damage.
Palestinian resistance to hand over Israeli captive body at 9 pm local time.
Syrian media: Israeli occupation forces entered the Quneitra countryside and set up a checkpoint between the village of Ufania and Khan Arnabeh to inspect civilian vehicles.
Palestinian Ministry of Health: Two children killed by the gunfire of Israeli occupation forces in the town of al-Judeira, occupied al-Quds, and their bodies are being withheld
Iranian Foreign Ministry: We express our solidarity with the Lebanese government and people in the face of these criminal attacks and our support for the legitimate resistance
The Iranian Foreign Ministry stressed that the United Nations, the international community, and regional countries bear responsibility for confronting what it described as "Israel’s" growing tendency to ignite wars
Iranian Foreign Ministry: We strongly condemn the Israeli entity's extensive military aggression against Lebanon
Japanese Prime Minister: No confirmations regarding damage caused by the North Korean missile
Japanese Prime Minister: North Korean missile likely landed outside Japan's exclusive economic zone
Japan Coast Guard reports North Korea fired a ballistic missile

Collapsing Empire: ‘NATO is Dead’

  • Kit Klarenberg Kit Klarenberg
  • Source: Al Mayadeen English
  • 12 Mar 2025 00:26
  • 4 Shares
8 Min Read

Timothy Ash’s comments on NATO’s demise highlight growing European concerns over US security commitments, as leaders scramble to bolster their own defenses amid uncertainty about continued American military support.

Listen
  • x
  • Collapsing Empire: ‘NATO is Dead’
    The unipolar world was forged in an incendiary baptism of airstrikes and atrocity propaganda in Yugoslavia, March - June 1999 (Illustrated by Mahdi Rteil to Al Mayadeen English)

On March 3rd, Timothy Ash of elite British state-connected ‘defence’ think tank Chatham House made a series of startling proclamations in an interview with Bloomberg. His topline message was stark - “NATO is dead.” He spoke following the very public February 28th Oval Office fallout between Volodomyr Zelensky and Donald Trump. The impact of that debacle reverberates today, with most US aid and intelligence sharing with Kiev now paused, pending the Ukrainian leader’s signoff on a White House-endorsed minerals for security agreements deal.

Branding the catastrophic summit an “ambush”, Ash declared that Trump and his deputy J.D. Vance had “laid out very clearly” that the military alliance was to all intents and purposes moribund, with no hope of recovery. He noted other comments made by the US President at the Oval Office meeting indicated a clearly reticence by Washington to intervene military to protect the Baltic states should they end up at war with Russia, in seeming breach of NATO’s Article 5:

“It should be crystal clear now to European leaders that NATO is dead, we can’t rely on US security guarantees, they’ve come and spelled it out to us…NATO is more or less dead already…Even raising doubts about whether America would stand behind some NATO states says it all…We cannot rely on the Americans any more. We have to move on, we have to think about our own national interests, our own security, we have a very difficult transition period.”

Ash’s analysis is evidently echoed by European leaders. A day later, EU Commission President Ursula von der Leyen outlined a €800 billion plan to “rearm” the bloc. Many member state chiefs reportedly “largely endorse” the plan, which calls for Europe to “become more sovereign, more responsible for its own defence and better equipped to act and deal autonomously with immediate and future challenges and threats.” Nonetheless, polls indicate European citizens oppose increased defence spending, and contractors warn this grand scheme will “take time” to realise.

If NATO truly is dead, it represents yet another long-overdue nail in the Empire’s coffin. It is also yet further confirmation that the US-dominated unipolar order, which has wrought untold death, destruction and misery over the past quarter century, is no more, and never to return. Residents of the Global South can breathe a collective sigh of relief - meanwhile, in a bitter irony, the same Western states that aided and abetted Washington’s unchallenged hegemony now find themselves defenceless.

‘Riot Squad’

The unipolar world was forged in an incendiary baptism of airstrikes and atrocity propaganda in Yugoslavia, March - June 1999. For 78 straight days, NATO relentlessly blitzed civilian, government, and industrial infrastructure throughout the country, killing untold innocent people - including children - and violently disrupting daily life for millions. While the US oversaw the ruinous campaign, both publicly and privately, British Prime Minister Tony Blair was an ardent advocate of even greater belligerence against non-military targets, despite the grave concerns and warnings of government legal advisors.

Related News

The new ‘donor-nomics’ in Ukraine, thanks to Western governments and their taxpayers

Declassified: CIA’s covert Ukraine invasion plan

Then again, NATO’s assault was in itself completely illegal, conducted without UN Security Council approval. Such an intervention would’ve been unthinkable during the prior decade. Throughout the 1990s, Washington carefully constructed the chimera of a world united behind US leadership by ensuring UN backing for all its overt imperial actions across the globe. The bombing of Yugoslavia represented an unprecedented, highly controversial break with this strategy, and was specifically intended to serve as a precedent thereafter.

As an eerily prescient April 1999 New Statesman article noted, NATO’s unauthorised bombing was no “one off”, but “just the beginning” of a “brave new world”, in which the military alliance acted autonomously as an international “riot squad”. In this context, whenever China and/or Russia could plausibly use their Security Council vetoes to block US intervention overseas, NATO would simply invoke the UN Charter’s self defence clause to strike wherever its members perceived a “threat”, without hindrance or any consideration for international law:

“The threat doesn’t come in the shape of main battle tanks…but from the fear of huge refugee flows, terrorism and weapons of mass destruction: bags of anthrax spores or phials of nerve gases which can’t be seen, can’t be verified and may or may not exist. But as long as there are rogue states out there with a grudge against the West and a location near the oil reserves, the US will be ready to face down the threat.”

As the New Statesman correctly prophesied, the implications of this paradigm shift were “enormous”, with “the potential to undermine the entire postwar international security system,” and fatally subvert “UN legitimacy.” The outlet went on to record how NATO’s longstanding members had been successfully railroaded into agreeing “to the principle of out-of-area operations”, due to fears “the US could unilaterally conclude its own military agreements with Eastern European states” outside the military alliance’s established “framework” if they resisted.

In return for serving as the Empire’s dependable, unquestioning international dogsbodies, protecting US economic interests wherever they may be, and purchasing all Washington’s latest, exorbitantly-priced military equipment, European governments were granted a sense of invincibility courtesy of NATO’s Article 5. In the meantime, their armies and industrial bases could be left to rot, safe in the knowledge America and newer alliance allies would come to the rescue and do the fighting and dying for them if they were ever attacked.

‘Shiny Deals’

The Ukraine proxy war has brought this suicidal upshot of the unipolar world into sharp relief. Despite the Trump administration’s determination to end the conflict, European leaders show no sign of backing down, desperately scrambling to make up the vast shortfall in financial and military assistance created by the cessation of Washington’s aid. As yet, no credible solution to this glaring deficit between rhetoric and reality has been proposed. Even Ukrainian leaders admit “nobody can replace the US when it comes to military support.”

This hazardous disconnect was writ large in Timothy Ash’s Bloomberg interview. Despite his urgent calls for European governments get to grips with the fact they “cannot rely on the Americans any more,” he contrarily acknowledged Europe suffers from acute issues around “military production”, and “we have to rely on the Americans” to stump up the materiel necessary to keep the proxy war grinding on. Ash suggested Europe simply pool its collective “cash” to purchase the requisite arms for Ukraine:

“I don’t think it’s beyond our abilities to put together a finance package…we still have $330 billion in Russian assets in our bank accounts that our governments haven’t done anything about…What we should be doing is pitching to the Americans…Trump likes big shiny deals, we should go to the Yanks and we should say ‘we want to commit over a 10 year period to buy between $500 billion to a trillion of kit from you guys’…Trump would not say no to that.”

Fond of “big shiny deals” Trump may be, but Ash assumes Washington has the ability to supply Europe anything at all, irrespective of the profits involved. As a July 2024 investigation by Pentagon-funded RAND concluded, “extraordinary” levels of “consumption and demand” for US-made ammunition, vehicles, and weapons in the proxy war have already rendered the country’s existing stockpiles threadbare. This, combined with a ravaged “defense industrial base”, means America is “unable to meet” its own “equipment, technology, and munitions needs”, let alone furnish its allies.

RAND’s dire conclusions were echoed on March 3rd by White House national security advisor Mike Waltz. In slamming Zelensky’s failure to accept Trump’s peace plan, he cautioned that “the time to talk is now,” as US “stockpiles and munitions are not unlimited.” The unambiguous message apparently remains unreceived in Brussels, Paris, and London, with cunning schemes to halt Russia’s inexorable battlefield advance continuing to issue daily. Perhaps European leaders think NATO, and the unipolar world it enforced, can be resuscitated?

The views expressed in this article are solely those of the author and do not necessarily reflect Al Mayadeen’s editorial stance.
  • Nato
  • Russia
  • US
  • UK
  • Ukraine
Kit Klarenberg

Kit Klarenberg

Investigative journalist.

Most Read

All
It is no secret that removing Russia from Syria in preparation for isolating it in Libya and Africa is a Western goal. (Al Mayadeen English; Illustrated by Zeinab el-Hajj)

Will Damascus be willing to pay the price to restore relations with Moscow?

  • Feature
  • 25 Oct 2025
The war for the Conservative mind is in full flow, but it is already showing signs of coming off the rails. (Al Mayadeen English; Illustrated by Zeinab el-Hajj)

Zionists target the US MAGA movement amid evolving 'influencer' strategy

  • Opinion
  • 5 Nov 2025
In the Zionist regime’s thinking, now is a historic opportunity to exterminate all those who resist it, eliminate Gaza entirely, and impose uncontested dominance over the region. (Al Mayadeen English; Illustrated by Batoul Chamas)

What is the Israeli strategy in Gaza?

  • Opinion
  • 28 Oct 2025
DeVore believed “ideally”, a “major national gun rights” organisation in the US, such as the National Rifle Association “or one of its rivals” would “play a coordinating role.” (Al Mayadeen English; Illustrated by Zeinab el-Hajj)

Leaked: Britain’s Ukrainian sniper training plot

  • Opinion
  • 29 Oct 2025

Coverage

All
Gaza: An Epic of Resilience and Valor

More from this writer

All
Despite much goodwill built up since 1991, in October 2003, Akayev angered Washington by inviting Moscow to open an airbase not far from Bishkek. (Al Mayadeen English; Illustrated by Batoul Chamas)

Kyrgyzstan’s forgotten colour revolution

DeVore believed “ideally”, a “major national gun rights” organisation in the US, such as the National Rifle Association “or one of its rivals” would “play a coordinating role.” (Al Mayadeen English; Illustrated by Zeinab el-Hajj)

Leaked: Britain’s Ukrainian sniper training plot

Documents submitted to the UK Foreign Office by ARK - founded by MI6's Alistair Harris - noted the FSP were “revolutionary entities who share a general ideological affinity with the Syrian rebels.” (Al Mayadeen English; Illustrated by Zeinab el-Hajj)

How MI6 built Syria’s extremist police

Declassified: MI6 support for Nazi ‘Forest Brothers’

Declassified: MI6 support for Nazi ‘Forest Brothers’

Al Mayadeen English

Al Mayadeen is an Arab Independent Media Satellite Channel.

All Rights Reserved

  • x
  • Privacy Policy
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Authors
Android
iOS