Georgia–NATO relations Commentary

Blackball Georgia

NATO is encouraging membership bids left and right, for countries not even part of Europe. But is this in line with its original aims or good defense policy for America?

Georgia on Our Mind

It’s not over yet—the Georgian conflict has pressing consequences for energy security, NATO and the European Union.

Playing with Fire

Now that war has broken out between Georgia and Russia, some are saying that granting NATO membership to Tbilisi would have averted the crisis. How wrong they are.

Can You Handle the Truth?

Missile defense is on the agenda again, this time at the G8. The United States has just signed a deal with the Czechs, to Russian protests. At The Nixon Center, Russian Ambassador to NATO Dmitry Rogozin explained Moscow’s concerns.

Lost Without a MAP

Europe was wrong to reject Georgia’s NATO bid at the Bucharest summit earlier this month. Though far from perfect, Tbilisi is ready to join—and alliance members should take notice.

Bucharest's Aftermath

Despite protests by the United States, European NATO members made the right decision by not extending membership action plans to Ukraine and Georgia.

A Successful NATO Summit

Georgia’s and Ukraine’s plans to join NATO hit a roadblock on Thursday. But that doesn’t make the Bucharest summit a failure for the United States—far from it.

Bucharest on My Mind: Experts React to the NATO Summit

The allies are sending more troops to Afghanistan and behind U.S. missile-defense plans, but less than thrilled about expanding NATO into Russia’s backyard.

Three Faces of Infantilism: NATO's Bucharest Summit

Leaders that continually try to add new members to the NATO alliance, American and European, are ignoring reality—at their own peril.

Realpolitik Resurgent?

America’s heart tells it to defend small Eastern European states at all costs, but policy makers would come to a different conclusion if they used their heads.

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May 26, 2012