NATO leaders' focus could be split between ISIS and Russia - Action News
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NATO leaders' focus could be split between ISIS and Russia

NATO's leaders are set to talk about the Ukraine crisis this week in Wales, but the growing threat in the Middle East could take up much of the oxygen at the 60-country summit.

British PM wants to look at threat in Mideast as leaders meet to consider Ukraine crisis

NATO, led by Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen, and the leaders of its 28 member countries are set to talk about the Ukraine crisis this week in Wales, but the growing ISIS threat could take up much of the oxygen. (Yves Logghe/Associated Press)

NATO's leaders are set to talk about the Ukraine crisis this week in Wales, but the growing threat of the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria could take up much of the oxygen at the 60-country summit.

The agenda for the two-day NATO leaders meeting includes "current security risks in the east and to the south," but the stars of the show were supposed to be Afghanistan, where NATO is ending its combat mission, and Ukraine-NATO co-operation.

Ukraine is not a full member of NATO, but has asked to join the alliancein the midst of a major armed conflict with Russia.Ukraine President PetroPoroshenko has been invited to attend this week's summit.

British Prime Minister David Cameron has already said he wants to discuss whether military measures are needed against the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria(ISIS),whose brutal attacks on civilians and journalists have seized attention from around theworld.

Former Canadianambassador Derek Burney, who's now a senior strategic adviser at law firm Norton Rose Fulbright, saidNATO likely has more on its hands than it wants to handle. Burney saidISIS is likely to take up more time than planned, in part because journalists will be asking about it.

"The problem with meetings of leaders of any kind is that what happened today is more important than what happened yesterday," he said.

"Theleaderswill be obliged to focus on whatever the major [news] story of the day is. And... the actions of ISIS in the Middle East could very well distract the leaders from the real focus."

FewNATO tools to deal with ISIS

At the same time, NATO "doesn't really have a lot of tools in its toolbox for trying to buildmilitarieson the fly in Iraq," CarletonUniversity's Stephen Saideman said.

"I think in the long run, ISIS will overplay its hand and the question is whether the Iraqi government will be sufficiently compromising as to be a lesser threat to the Sunni population," saidSaideman, the Paterson chair in internationalaffairs atCarleton.

"That's something the countries can abet through advising, through encouragement, but it's ultimately an Iraqi domestic political problem, which NATO's proven through Afghanistan it's not so good at."

NATO and its member countries haveto make choices about where to direct their energy and capability, Saideman said. Hepredicts most countries that lend a hand will agreeindividuallyto assist in the battle against ISIS.

"That's one of the problems that Canada certainly faces, is it doesn't have unlimited capability. But even the United States can't be everywhere at once and has pretty much decided that it won't be going to war if it can avoid it," he said.

Location, location, location

When it comes to deciding where to put its efforts, NATO will likely consider proximity: Russia is the immediate threat to NATO and its member countries,Burneysaid.

"The situation in the MiddleEast is very troubling in many ways, but it's not one that NATO directly has a responsibility for. They have been involved in places like Afghanistan and Libya, and they haven't had a great track record there," he said.

"The dispute between Ukraine and Russia,that is right in NATO's bailiwick.And so the first test is going to be, what are they going to do about that?"

Saideman saidhe doesn't expect NATO to send troops into Ukraine, but does expect the alliance to "ramp up its activity in the region to make sure that those countriesthat are in NATO feel a little bit better about their protection."

About 100 Canadian Armed Forces personnel are participating this week in a1,000-soldier NATO exercise in Germany, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania and Poland. A news release from the Department of National Defence says the goal is "to develop and enhance inter-operability, readiness, joint operations capabilitiesand multinational responses to potential crises."

"NATO was built tocontain the Soviet Union. Russia isn't the Soviet Union,but it's pretty similar in some ways, and right now the threat facing Eastern Europe is coming from Russia," Saideman said.

with files from Catherine Cullen