Emmanuel Macron's openness toward Russia is testing the patience of NATO allies
Paris (CNN) - Nobody likes to hear that an old friend is "brain dead," so perhaps it's not surprising that France's allies seem to be going through the seven stages of grief over Emmanuel Macron's pronouncement in the Economist last month that NATO is languishing.
- "I don't think such a sweeping judgment is appropriate," she said.
Macron wanted to provoke and he succeeded, although perhaps not initially in the way he might have hoped. France's relations with Germany have taken a hit.
- "In Germany when you say NATO is brain dead that breaks a taboo," says Thierry de Montbrial, president of the French Institute of International Relations, a Paris-based think tank, in a reference to Germany's instinctive dependence on NATO to be at the center of its foreign policy.
- "From the point of view of military cooperation, NATO functions well, but there is no political vision and no strategic vision," de Montbrial continued, in what has become a common criticism of NATO's lack of clear mission since the Cold War ended.
- "The armies are always at the service of politics and not the reverse, and that's the way you have to interpret the vision of Macron."
- It is a notion with which de Montbrial agrees. "We are in a totally different world, the shadow of the Soviet Union is no longer a risk of the same nature...the principal risk is not an invasion into Baltic countries by Russia, it's terrorism, it's the danger we have on our southern flank for which NATO has no response."
Copyright Jim Bittermann / CNN
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