France-Turkey spat over Libya arms exposes NATO's limits

The festering dispute between France and Turkey over
a naval standoff in the Mediterranean Sea has shone a glaring searchlight on
NATO’s struggle to keep order among its ranks and exposed weaknesses in a
military alliance that can only take action by consensus.
The dispute has also revealed NATO’s limits when its
allies are or are perceived to be on different sides of a conflict — in this
case in Libya — especially when a major nuclear ally like France has lamented
the “brain death” at the world’s biggest security organization due to a lack of
American leadership.
According to French accounts of the June 10 incident
in the Mediterranean, the French frigate Courbet was illuminated by the
targeting radar of a Turkish warship that was escorting a Tanzanian-flagged
cargo ship when the French vessel approached.
France said it was acting on intelligence from NATO
that the civilian ship could be involved in trafficking arms to Libya. The
Courbet was part of the alliance’s operation Sea Guardian, which helps provide
maritime security in the Mediterranean.
In a power-point presentation to French senators on
Wednesday, which angered the French officials, Turkey’s ambassador to Paris,
Ismail Hakki Musa, denied that the Courbet had been “lit up” by targeting radar
and accused the French navy of harassing the Turkish convoy.
He also suggested that a NATO probe into the
incident was “inconclusive” and that France had pulled out of Sea Guardian. The
French defense ministry rushed to release its version of events and underline
that it would not take part in the operation until the allies had recommitted
to the arms embargo on Libya, among other demands.
NATO headquarters refused to provide details saying
the report is “classified,” and it’s unlikely that its findings will be made
public. A French diplomat said the investigators probably did the best they
could, given that they were provided with two very different versions of what
happened.
On Thursday, Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut
Cavusoglu accused France of lying.
“We have proven this with reports and documents and
gave them to NATO. NATO saw the truth,” Cavusoglu said. “Our expectation from
France at the moment is for it to apologize in a clear fashion, without ifs or
buts, for not providing the correct information.”
On Monday, French President Emmanuel Macron had
accused Turkey of flouting its commitments by ramping up its military presence
in Libya and bringing in jihadi fighters from Syria.
“I think that it’s a historic and criminal
responsibility for a country that claims to be a member of NATO,” Macron said.
“We have the right to expect more from Turkey than from Russia, given that it
is a member of NATO.”
It’s not the first time Turkey has been at the
center of controversy at NATO. Ankara’s invasion of northern Syria last year
angered its allies, while its purchase of Russian-made missiles, which NATO
says would compromise allied defense systems, got Turkey kicked out of the F-35
stealth fighter program.
Despite concerns about its direction and close ties
with Russia — NATO’s historic rival — Turkey can't be ejected from the military
organization. Legally, there is no mechanism, and decisions require the
unanimous agreement of all 30 member nations. In any case, NATO insists that
Turkey is too strategically important to lose.
In normal times, the United States — by far the most
powerful and influential of the allies — could be expected to bring its
partners into line. But the last four years, with President Donald Trump at the
helm in the U.S. have been extraordinary times for NATO.
Trump has publicly berated European allies and
Canada for not spending enough on defense budgets. He has pulled out of the
Iran nuclear agreement, the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty and the
Open Skies aerial surveillance pact, which the Europeans regard as important to
their security.
Just after Turkey invaded Syria, Trump announced
that he was pulling U.S. troops out, surprising and angering his allies. In
recent weeks, he’s threatened to take American troops out of Germany, again
without consultation.
At the heart of the France-Turkey quarrel is the
question of whether NATO allies should respect the U.N. arms embargo for Libya.
NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg said last month that the alliance “of
course supports the implementation of U.N. decisions, including U.N. arms
embargoes.”
But in a interview on Tuesday, former U.N. Libya
envoy Ghassan Salame said just after a Berlin conference in January where
countries again backed the Libyan arms embargo, he saw pictures of weapons
shipments showing that even Security Council members were sending “ships,
planes and mercenaries” there.
With no firm U.S. guiding hand, divisions among the
allies over how Libya should be handled, and a decision-making process that
requires everyone to agree — even on what they should talk about — it’s
difficult to see when NATO might debate the embargo question in earnest.