North Atlantic Treaty Organization
NATO countries shown in green |
Flag of NATO |
The North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO; /ˈneɪtoʊ/
nay-toh; French: Organisation du traité de l'Atlantique Nord (OTAN)), also
called the (North) Atlantic Alliance, is an intergovernmental military alliance
based on the North Atlantic Treaty which was signed on 4 April 1949. The
organization constitutes a system of collective defence whereby its member
states agree to mutual defense in response to an attack by any external party.
NATO's headquarters are in Brussels, Belgium, one of the 28 member states
across North America and Europe, the newest of which, Albania and Croatia,
joined in April 2009. An additional 22 countries participate in NATO's
Partnership for Peace program, with 15 other countries involved in
institutionalized dialogue programmes. The combined military spending of all
NATO members constitutes over 70% of the world's defence spending.
NATO was little more than a political association until the
Korean War galvanized the organization's member states, and an integrated
military structure was built up under the direction of two U.S. supreme
commanders. The course of the Cold War led to a rivalry with nations of the
Warsaw Pact, which formed in 1955. Doubts over the strength of the relationship
between the European states and the United States ebbed and flowed, along with
doubts over the credibility of the NATO defence against a prospective Soviet
invasion—doubts that led to the development of the independent French nuclear
deterrent and the withdrawal of the French from NATO's military structure in
1966 for 30 years. After the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989, the organization
was drawn into the breakup of Yugoslavia, and conducted its first military
interventions in Bosnia from 1992 to 1995 and later Yugoslavia in 1999.
Politically, the organization sought better relations with former Warsaw Pact
countries, several of which joined the alliance in 1999 and 2004.
Article 5 of the North Atlantic treaty, requiring member
states to come to the aid of any member state subject to an armed attack, was
invoked for the first and only time after the 11 September 2001 attacks,[5]
after which troops were deployed to Afghanistan under the NATO-led ISAF. The
organization has operated a range of additional roles since then, including
sending trainers to Iraq, assisting in counter-piracy operations and in 2011
enforcing a no-fly zone over Libya in accordance with U.N. Security Council
Resolution 1973. The less potent Article 4, which merely invokes consultation
among NATO members, has been invoked four times: by Turkey in 2003 over the
Iraq War, twice in 2012 by Turkey over the Syrian Civil War after the downing
of an unarmed Turkish F-4 reconnaissance jet and after a mortar was fired at
Turkey from Syria and by Poland in 2014 following the Russian intervention in
Crimea.
No comments:
Post a Comment