[Salon] the history of NATO debates, beginning at the beginning



Hi! Afghanistan war veteran and scholar Brandan Buck has an interesting piece up at RS today trying to cut through the mainstream's transparent attempt at obscuring the real debate over NATO and European alliances by focusing everything on Trump. 

During the early Cold War, the nature of American involvement in the alliance and its commitment to staff Europe with a permanent garrison were not seen as beyond question, even by American officials in positions of authority. In fact, American Cold War architects sold an American garrison in Europe as a temporary measure meant to shore up allies still licking their wounds from the Second World War. In congressional testimony concerning the ratification of the NATO treaty, Sen. Bourke B. Hickenlooper (R-Iowa) pressed Secretary of State Dean Acheson if he thought the treaty meant that the U.S. would leave "substantial numbers of troops over there." An indignant Acheson responded, "[t]he answer to that question, Senator, is a clear and absolute 'No.'"

Please read the whole article and share if you can!

https://responsiblestatecraft.org/trump-nato/?utm_campaign=post-teaser&utm_content=qfgo7zok

best
Kelley


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