In response to Instead of NATO
(January 15, 1998)
To the Editors:
While I disagree with both the premises and conclusions of Ronald Steel's argument against NATO expansion ["Instead of NATO," NYR, January 15], it is his fundamental misunderstanding of NATO's potential new members-Poland, the Czech Republic, and Hungary-that I wish to raise here.
Steel suggests repeatedly that these new (or renewed) Central European democracies are unsuited for membership in the Atlantic alliance because they are allegedly seething with ethnic hatreds and repressed territorial claims against their neighbors: letting them into NATO would presumably suck the US in to "protect them should they get into a fight with their neighbors." An expanded NATO would be dangerous should it expand to include "regimes, and ethnic groups, that hate each other and want to expand their borders . Expansion will not bring tranquillity to countries that have unstable, unrepresentative, or demagogic governments."
What in the world is Steel talking about? Poland, the Czech Republic, and Hungary are real countries with real problems, but have a track record of considerable, in fact dramatic, accomplishment since 1989 in introducing stable democratic systems, functioning and by many measures flourishing market economics, and stable or excellent relations with neighbors. None is unstable, unrepresentative, or "demagogic." Does Steel really think that Czech President Havel is plotting an attack on Slovakia or Austria? Poland, the country with which I have the most experience, has no border claim with any neighbor; no Polish government since 1989, nor any political party in government or opposition, has asserted one. One of Poland's singular achievements since 1989 has been to build close friendships with neighbors Lithuania and Ukraine, dramatically reversing the tensions of the 1930s. Indeed, Poland is providing modest but valuable assistance to its new friends in the former Communist world, in some cases working directly with the United States. This achievement is much in the American interest.
Steel's argument might be termed the "Bosnianization" of Central Europe: the baseless projection of the most salient failure in the post-Communist world on the most successful new democracies. Happily, the record of these new democracies since 1989 has been fairly successful. West Europe's record when NATO was founded in 1949 was scarcely better. Has Steel forgotten "age old" French-German rivalry? Germany's relations with its neighbors? How stable was Italy when it joined NATO? (The US debated whether Italy should be let into NATO and opponents' arguments were very close to Steel's.) NATO membership had a stabilizing effect on Western Europe's "ethnic rivalries" and the prospect of membership in "the West" has strengthened political moderates and weakened nationalists throughout Central Europe, to US benefit.
I invite Mr. Steel to visit Poland and to meet the people-whom he suggests are seized with "hatred" toward their neighbors.
Daniel Fried
US Ambassador to Poland
US Department of State
Washington, D.C.