Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
04ROME703
2004-02-25 14:36:00
CONFIDENTIAL
Embassy Rome
Cable title:  

ITALY TO PROPOSE A NATO POLITICAL STRATEGY AT

Tags:  MARR PARM IT NATO AFGHANISTAN 
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C O N F I D E N T I A L ROME 000703 

SIPDIS


E.O. 12958: DECL: 02/23/2014
TAGS: MARR PARM IT NATO AFGHANISTAN
SUBJECT: ITALY TO PROPOSE A NATO POLITICAL STRATEGY AT
MARCH 3 NAC

Classified By: POLITICAL MINISTER COUNSELOR THOMAS COUNTRYMAN FOR REASO
NS 1.5(B)(D)

C O N F I D E N T I A L ROME 000703

SIPDIS


E.O. 12958: DECL: 02/23/2014
TAGS: MARR PARM IT NATO AFGHANISTAN
SUBJECT: ITALY TO PROPOSE A NATO POLITICAL STRATEGY AT
MARCH 3 NAC

Classified By: POLITICAL MINISTER COUNSELOR THOMAS COUNTRYMAN FOR REASO
NS 1.5(B)(D)


1. (C) SUMMARY. In his speech to the NAC scheduled for March
3, Italian Foreign Minister Franco Frattini plans to present
a comprehensive set of priorities for NATO, according to MFA
contacts. Many of the points addressed in Frattini's speech,
and the Italian concept paper it is based on, are likely to
be discussed during Ambassador Burns' visit to Rome on Feb.
26-27. We also expect Frattini to urge the NAC to address
these issues in a series of informal meetings, the results of
which could then be reflected in the Istanbul Summit agenda.


2. (C) The Italians' central concept is that NATO must be the
principal forum for transatlantic consultations and political
dialogue. To fulfill that role, NATO needs a long-term
political strategy that drives its military missions and
implements NATO's Strategic Concept. In the Italians' view,
a key aspect of that political strategy should be a
comprehensive NATO approach to improving security on the
alliance's periphery (Mediterranean, Middle East, Balkans,
Black Sea/Caucuses, Afghanistan, Cental Asia). Afghanistan
will serve as a test case for future NATO stabilization
missions and should be NATO's top priority, according to the
Italians. On Iraq, the Italians urge the Alliance to define a
role for NATO forces under UN auspices to be deployed at the
invitation of the future Iraqi government. To maximize NATO's
political impact, the Italians call for greater coordination
with the EU, UN, OSCE and other partners. The Italian
concept is broad and many of the points are not new. But it
is a comprehensive approach largely consistent with our own
that reflects the priority Italy puts on defining a proactive
NATO political strategy to complement and frame NATO's
military strategy. END SUMMARY.

A POLITICAL STRATEGY
--------------


3. (C) Frattini's March 3 speech to the NAC will be based
largely on an Italian paper prepared by the MFA for the
Istanbul Summit that lays out a political strategy to
implement NATO's Strategic Concept. The Italian paper
proposes developing a broad, long-term NATO political

strategy that addresses current security challenges, such as
WMD proliferation, terrorism, failed/rogue states and illegal
migration and trafficking. The strategy would link political
action and military readiness in ways that advance the
military transformation announced at Prague. Looking at NATO
missions as parts of a single security strategy will result
in more resource contributions by allies, according to the
Italians. Where political differences remain, the strategy
would include a means for constructive dialogue.


4. (C) The Italian focus is on developing a long-term
political approach to building security along NATO's
periphery -- the Mediterranean, the Middle East, the Balkans,
the Black Sea and Caucuses, Afghanistan and Central Asia.
Stabilizing Afghanistan should be NATO's number one mission,
according to the Italians, followed by coordination with the
EU in the Balkans and an expanded "Active Endeavor" operation
that would involve more NATO partners and extend to the Black
Sea. The paper advocates launching a public information
campaign to explain NATO policies more effectively not just
to Allied publics, but also to countries on NATO's periphery
that may feel threatened by a forward-leaning political
strategy.


5. (C) Looking to NATO's future, the Italians suggest
considering a role for NATO forces in Iraq under UN auspices
(as in the Balkans and Afghanistan) that could be deployed at
the request of an Iraqi government. The Italians also
encourage NATO to consider ways to support the Quartet in
promoting Israeli-Palesinian reconciliation, including using
the Mediterranean Dialogue and NATO-Russia Council. The paper
urges the NATO International Staff (IS) and the Mediterranean
Partners to decide whether the first NATO-Med Dialogue
meeting at the political level should take place at the
Istanbul Summit. The Italians recommend putting the Med
Dialogue on a par with PfP and EAPC, in coordination with the
EU and OSCE, and suggest that NATO consider inviting
additional countries to join the Med Dialogue. As part of
the effort to bolster NATO's non-proliferation and
anti-organized crime efforts, the Italians push for
consolidated NATO support for the Proliferation Security
Initiative (of which Italy is a core member).



6. (C) In addition to enhancing the Med Dialogue, the
Italians stress better use of other existing mechanisms: PfP
should be ramped up, the NATO-Russia Council needs a more
energetic agenda, NATO's coordination with the UN and the
OSCE should be strengthen. The paper suggests using NATO and
EU cooperation in the Balkans to develop a strategic
relationship based on Berlin Plus that will maximize
coordination and comparative advantages. The EU and NATO
security strategies are fundamentally consistent, the
Italians point out: a concerted NATO-EU approach to shared
security threats will pack more punch and avoid redundancy.


7. (C) COMMENT. Many of the recommendations in the Italian
paper and, we expect, in Frattini's speech are not new.
Nonetheless, Italy's efforts to conceptualize a
forward-looking, proactive political strategy designed to
strengthen NATO's role as the central forum for
trans-Atlantic dialogue should stimulate good discussions at
the March 3 NAC and during Amb. Burns' meetings in Rome. END
COMMENT.
SEMBLER


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2004ROME00703 - Classification: CONFIDENTIAL