The Atlantic Alliance, NATO, and the Post-Arab Springs Mediterranean: The Quest for a New Strategic Relevance

The geographic dimension lies at the very heart of the Atlantic Alliance: this is why the extension of the Alliance’s scope has often been a divisive issue. Between the late 1980s and the early 1990s, when the Soviet Union dissolved, there were efforts to develop a new Mediterranean strategy, more...

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Main Author: Gianluca Pastori
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Università degli Studi di Torino 2021-06-01
Series:De Europa
Online Access:https://www.ojs.unito.it/index.php/deeuropa/article/view/5615
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spelling doaj-1c8f0610b15b48e99d65a49a8f62b8d82021-09-13T18:37:31ZengUniversità degli Studi di TorinoDe Europa2611-853X2021-06-014110.13135/2611-853X/5615The Atlantic Alliance, NATO, and the Post-Arab Springs Mediterranean: The Quest for a New Strategic RelevanceGianluca Pastori0Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore The geographic dimension lies at the very heart of the Atlantic Alliance: this is why the extension of the Alliance’s scope has often been a divisive issue. Between the late 1980s and the early 1990s, when the Soviet Union dissolved, there were efforts to develop a new Mediterranean strategy, more attentive to the emerging threats. The Mediterranean Dialogue (1994) and the Istanbul Cooperation Initiative (2004) were the two most important tools developed to this end. None of these programs was successful. The emphasis that NATO placed on technical cooperation triggered criticism, while the partners’ aloofness cooled down NATO’s initial expectations. The weight of the Eastern European members and their fear of the new Russian activism favoured a return to the old “deterrence and defence” posture, which – according to the Mediterranean members – underestimates their needs and makes NATO more vulnerable. The Arab Springs and their results emphasised the weakness of NATO position and the limits of a purely military approach to regional security. The efforts started in 2016 to rebalance the Alliance have led to few results. Lacking an overall vision on the transformations affecting the MENA region, the Alliance is currently losing relevance vis-à-vis other subjects, returning to a posture that sees the Mediterranean as an appendix of the traditional central theatre. Keywords: Atlantic Alliance; NATO; Arab Springs; Mediterranean Policy; European Security and Defence https://www.ojs.unito.it/index.php/deeuropa/article/view/5615
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Gianluca Pastori
spellingShingle Gianluca Pastori
The Atlantic Alliance, NATO, and the Post-Arab Springs Mediterranean: The Quest for a New Strategic Relevance
De Europa
author_facet Gianluca Pastori
author_sort Gianluca Pastori
title The Atlantic Alliance, NATO, and the Post-Arab Springs Mediterranean: The Quest for a New Strategic Relevance
title_short The Atlantic Alliance, NATO, and the Post-Arab Springs Mediterranean: The Quest for a New Strategic Relevance
title_full The Atlantic Alliance, NATO, and the Post-Arab Springs Mediterranean: The Quest for a New Strategic Relevance
title_fullStr The Atlantic Alliance, NATO, and the Post-Arab Springs Mediterranean: The Quest for a New Strategic Relevance
title_full_unstemmed The Atlantic Alliance, NATO, and the Post-Arab Springs Mediterranean: The Quest for a New Strategic Relevance
title_sort atlantic alliance, nato, and the post-arab springs mediterranean: the quest for a new strategic relevance
publisher Università degli Studi di Torino
series De Europa
issn 2611-853X
publishDate 2021-06-01
description The geographic dimension lies at the very heart of the Atlantic Alliance: this is why the extension of the Alliance’s scope has often been a divisive issue. Between the late 1980s and the early 1990s, when the Soviet Union dissolved, there were efforts to develop a new Mediterranean strategy, more attentive to the emerging threats. The Mediterranean Dialogue (1994) and the Istanbul Cooperation Initiative (2004) were the two most important tools developed to this end. None of these programs was successful. The emphasis that NATO placed on technical cooperation triggered criticism, while the partners’ aloofness cooled down NATO’s initial expectations. The weight of the Eastern European members and their fear of the new Russian activism favoured a return to the old “deterrence and defence” posture, which – according to the Mediterranean members – underestimates their needs and makes NATO more vulnerable. The Arab Springs and their results emphasised the weakness of NATO position and the limits of a purely military approach to regional security. The efforts started in 2016 to rebalance the Alliance have led to few results. Lacking an overall vision on the transformations affecting the MENA region, the Alliance is currently losing relevance vis-à-vis other subjects, returning to a posture that sees the Mediterranean as an appendix of the traditional central theatre. Keywords: Atlantic Alliance; NATO; Arab Springs; Mediterranean Policy; European Security and Defence
url https://www.ojs.unito.it/index.php/deeuropa/article/view/5615
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