NATO is theoretically a military alliance, but the Europeans
would prefer not to do anything that involves the military.
A number of states have contributed troops to Afghanistan, but
countries like Germany station their forces in areas where they
hope there will be no fighting. Moreover, most governments
restrict the use of their troops, sharply reducing the military
value of NATO's "contributions."
Reports UPI:
The outgoing NATO SACEUR, or supreme allied commander Europe,
would gladly forgo more NATO troops to fight Taliban insurgents
in Afghanistan if allied countries dropped their caveats
against their use in combat operations. Gen. John Craddock, the outgoing supremo,
says these caveats "increase the risk to every service member
deployed in Afghanistan and bring increased risk to mission
success." They are also "a detriment to effective command and
control, unity of effort and ... command."
NATO's International Security Assistance Force consists of
58,300 troops from 41 countries. But NATO's 28 member nations
provide the core of the force. Most of them labor under
operational restrictions, known as caveats, on combat imposed
by their governments or parliaments. U.S. soldiers joke that
ISAF stands for "I Saw Americans Fight."
In addition to American troops that have no combat caveats,
British, Canadian and Dutch are the only national contingents
under NATO command that are not handcuffed.
During the Cold War even the Europeans could agree that
containing the Soviet Union was an important goal. There's
no similar consensus on conflicts at the periphery of Europe, let
alone outside the continent. Which means Washington will
never be able to count on the kind of practical assistance which
it desires. The alliance will remain one in name only, in
which Washington does all the heavy lifting while
most everyone else helps "supervise."