In Pictures
Published On 10 Jul 202410 Jul 2024
History Illustrated is a weekly series of insightful perspectives that puts news events and current affairs into historical context using graphics generated with artificial intelligence.
As a concept, “us against them” is learned in childhood but endures on the adult stage of geopolitics, where military alliances like NATO cast themselves as defenders of “freedom and democracy”.Alignment will be what NATO has in mind when it convenes in Washington, DC, July 9-11, to commemorate 75 years of defending its Western agenda, but more importantly, to grapple with the Russian war in Ukraine.The Russians were also the concern in 1949, when the North Atlantic Treaty Organization was created to counter the Soviets, who controlled Central and Eastern Europe – a political divide known as the Iron Curtain.Over the years, NATO has often intervened on the global stage, including in the Kosovo war in 1999, post-9/11 Afghanistan and Libya during the civil war in 2011.The Russians have regularly cited the alliance’s expansion as a threat to security, a notion reinforced by the NATO ascension of three former Soviet republics – Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania – in 2004.Prior to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in 2022, President Putin had repeatedly demanded that Western nations promise to never admit Ukraine into NATO.If Putin had hoped to limit NATO expansion with his invasion, his plan arguably failed, with Finland and Sweden joining the alliance as a result of the Russian aggression.In his recent call for unity, NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg had in mind the threat posed by Russia and North Korea, an alliance that sees Pyongyang supply Moscow with ammunition for the war in Ukraine.In childhood, an “us against them” approach could often end with a bloody nose. But in geopolitics, the consequences of confrontation are exponentially higher, a reality that NATO member states will no doubt want to carefully weigh before picking a fight with Putin.