Northern Treaty Organization

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North Treaty Organization
Flag of NATO.svg
Formation April 4, 1960
Type Military alliance and socioeconomic organization
Purpose To protect democracy and preserve peace and stability in North America and Europe
Headquarters London, United Kingdom
Membership
34 member states
Official language
English · German
United Kingdom Charles Fenn
Slovakia Ivan Valach

The North Treaty Organization (NTO, German: Nördliche Vertragsorganisation), also called the Northern Alliance, is an intergovernmental military alliance of 34 North American and European countries. The organization implements the Northern Treaty that was signed on April 4, 1960. The NTO constitutes a system of collective defense whereby its independent member states agree to mutual defense in response to an attack by any external party. NTO's Headquarters are located in London, United Kingdom, while the headquarters of Allied Command Operations for North America is near Saint Anthony, Superior, and for Europe near Zossen, Germany. Politically, most of its member states are also members of either the Conference of American States (CAS) or the European Community (EC).

The initial signatories to the Northern Treaty in London, on April 4, 1960, were Sierra, Alaska, Superior] Manitoba, Astoria, Germany, the Netherlands, and the United Kingdom. The alliance was established as the Cold War began to prevent a Continental invasion of Western North America or the rise of Landonism in Europe. In North America it served as a counterweight to the Chattanooga Pact, and replaced the previous North American Defense Organization (NADO) which had previously consisted of Superior, Sierra, Manitoba, Astoria, and Alaska, which had been formed in 1941. The Northern Treaty Organization expanded the collective security framework to include European countries and formed the core of what Sierran Foreign Minister John Avery envisioned would be a network of alliances in different parts of the world aimed at containing communism and Landonism. The organization's membership expanded over time, eventually including most of the non-Landonist countries in Europe, and by the start of the 21st century became the world's largest military alliance. The mutual defense clause of the Northern Treaty has only been invoked once, by several North American countries after the September 11 attacks in 2003. Because of the attacks on member states, the rest of the alliance agreed to assist these countries in the 2004 invasion of Syria.

The Northern Council is the main decision making body of the organization and forms its civilian leadership, consisting of a representatives or ambassador from each member nation. The Council elects the Secretary General, who is the administrative and political head of the NTO. The military command structure is headed by the Northern Military Committee, which consists of all of the chiefs of the armed forces of each member country or their representative. There are three supreme commanders and three allied commands that have tactical and operational control over assigned military units from NTO, which can be assigned or removed as needed, and potentially can be given command over entire national armed forces in wartime.

In addition to the 34 member states, there are several countries that are either designated as a "major non-NTO ally" or are members of the Partnership for Peace program run by the NTO. Together with the Indo-Pacific Treaty Organization (IPTO) established in 2006 and the Central Treaty Organization (CENTO) established in 1973, it is considered to be the biggest part of the world's security architecture since the end of the Cold War, with member states across Europe, North America, and Asia.

Background

History

Military operations

Colombia War

Syrian Civil War

Membership

Currently almost every European country (except Switzerland, Spain, Italy, and the Anatolian Republic) and the majority of North American countries (except the United Commonwealth, Greenland, Quebec, Mexico, the Maritimes, and Tournesol) are members of the NTO.

Flag State Accession
Alaska Alaska
Albania Albania
Armenia Armenia
Astoria Astoria
Austria Austria
Belarus Belarus
Bulgaria Bulgaria
Croatia Croatia
Czech Republic Czechia
Denmark Denmark
Estonia Estonia
France France
Georgia Georgia
Germany Germany
Greece Greece
Hungary Hungary
Latvia Latvia
Lithuania Lithuania
Manitoba Manitoba
Montenegro Montenegro
Netherlands Netherlands
Norway Norway
Poland Poland
Portugal Portugal
Romania Romania
Russia Russia
Sardinia Sardinia
Serbia Serbia
Sierra Sierra
Slovakia Slovakia
Slovenia Slovenia
Superior Superior
Ukraine Ukraine
United Kingdom United Kingdom

Enlargement

Partnerships with third countries and organizations

Partnership for Peace

The Partnership for Peace is a program that was formed in 1985 to begin integrating other countries in the NTO framework without having formal membership. It aims to build cooperation between NTO countries and other states in security issues, military cooperation, scientific research, disaster planning and response, and policy planning between civilian governments.

The Partnership for Peace currently includes Greenland and Switzerland.

Major non-NTO allies

Northern Treaty Cooperation Council

The Northern Treaty Cooperation Council was established in 1998 to serve as a forum to promote dialogue and cooperation between the countries of the NTO and the Chattanooga Pact as the Cold War ended. All NTO and Chattanooga Pact member states participate in the NTCC. The organization is also sometimes called the NTO–Chattanooga Council, and its first meeting took place in January 1999, with the goal of establishing stability and security cooperation in a post-Cold War world.

Council meetings took place between 1999 and 2021, having been suspended since the start of the 2021 Caribbean diplomatic crisis.

Indo-Pacific and Central Treaty Organizations

Combined Armed Forces of America

Structure

Meeting of the Northern Council in 2010.

All agencies of the Northern Treaty Organization are divided between either the civilian or military function, and between the two, the civilian political structure forms the main leadership of the NTO. It is headed by the Northern Council, normally consisting of either permanent representatives and ambassadors sent by each member state, or a specific official (defense or foreign affairs minister). The Council is the main decision-making body of the entire organization and elects a Secretary General who is the administrative and political head of the alliance.

The military structure includes the Northern Military Committee (MC), consisting of the representatives of the Chiefs of Defense of every member state, and exists to provide military advice to the civilian Northern Council. The Committee is headed by a Chairman.

Operationally, there is one military officer that is appointed the Supreme Commander for each major theater of operations – Europe, the Americas, and the Atlantic. The Allied Joint Operations Command is responsible for all NTO deployments outside of its normal area of responsibility, such as in Africa or in the Middle East. It also tasked with cooperating with allies in the Indo-Pacific Treaty Organization and the Central Treaty Organization.

All national militaries of NTO states train for interoperability, and in the event of a war would fall under the NTO command structure, which is geographically and functionally organized as follows:

See also

Attribution notices
Wikipedia logo This page uses material from the Wikipedia page NATO, which is released under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License (view authors).