The Euro-Atlantic Security Initiative (EASI) was launched in 2009 as a forum to work toward incorporating Russia, Europe, and the United States into a shared security community. The recent NATO summit and the upcoming Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) summit provide important opportunities for the Initiative to engage with and influence the formation of policy that will define relations in the Euro-Atlantic sphere for years to come.
EASI co-chairs, Former Senator Sam Nunn of Georgia, Former German Deputy Foreign Minister and Ambassador Wolfgang Ischinger, and Former Russian Minister of Foreign Affairs Igor Ivanov, met via live video conference to discuss EASI’s agenda and vision for a Euro-Atlantic security community. Former Ambassador and Deputy Foreign Minister Oleksandr Chalyi of Ukraine and Carnegie’s Matthew Rojansky joined from Brussels. EASI’s Director, Professor Emeritus Robert Levgold of Columbia University, moderated the discussion from Washington, D.C.
Nations still construct their military doctrines to guard against the relatively obsolete twentieth-century threat of invasion by a foreign state. Yet international understandings of security have shifted. The EASI co-chairs argued that paradigms for pursuing security ought to shift as well. They outlined some of the nebulous, unconventional threats that face the Euro-Atlantic region, including energy security, narcotics and human trafficking, infectious disease, organized crime, terrorism, bioterrorism, protection of critical infrastructure, and cybersecurity.
The co-chairs concluded that such threats are best combated collaboratively,. Threats stemming from weak and failing states – states that cannot protect their citizens or meaningfully secure their borders – have become the norm, and confronting them will require coordination and cooperation between the United States, Europe, and Russia.
As Nunn observed, “There can be no coherent effective global security strategy that does not take Russia into account.” EASI aims to generate a Euro-Atlantic security community that operates as a single entity. This will increase warning of potential threats for NATO and Russia, reduce the risk of accidental nuclear exchange, and provide a sturdy foundation of transparency and multilateral confidence. The militarized framework of NATO-Russia relations should give way to an “umbrella of mutual trust,” contended Nunn.
The co-chairs stressed that the NATO summit in Lisbon and the OSCE summit in Astana are important opportunities to build the trust necessary to establish a viable security framework. They also described some of the problems facing the creation of a real security community:
Forming an effective Euro-Atlantic partnership is a significant undertaking, the co-chairs concluded. By outlining and adhering to concrete steps, EASI is optimistic about its capacity to build a more cooperative and secure system.
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