Russian Expectations for Post-Sanctions Iran

by Huseyn Panahov | Feb 19, 2016

Published by The Washington Institute for Near East Policy

Also available العربية

Joint support of Basher al-Assad’s regime has highlighted Moscow and Tehran’s developing political alliance. In contrast, the level of economic cooperation between the two states has historically been very modest: 2014 trade between the two countries amounted to $1.68 billion and was just 0.2% of all Russian foreign trade. Yet now that Iran’s nuclear sanctions have been lifted and Russia has lost many of its trade partners, Moscow is demonstrating a markedly increased interest in economic cooperation with Tehran.

One element driving this interest is Russia’s increasingly restricted trade options in the past few years. Putin’s 2014 military intervention in Ukraine resulted in trade restrictions between Russia and a substantial list of countries that included the European Union, the United States, Japan, Canada, Norway, and Australia. Despite the ensuing economic recession in Russia and the harmful drop in oil prices, the Kremlin also recently cut off economic relations with historic trade partners Ukraine and Turkey. Instead, Russia has begun to offer special trade privileges to Iran.

After meeting with his Iranian counterpart, the Russian minister of agriculture emphasized this new economic interest, stating that, “We need to establish modern logistics [for transportation] of Iranian goods to Russia, to create a ‘green corridor’ on the Russian border for Iranian goods and to ease customs formalities to speed up clearance of Iranian cargoes.” Iranian businessmen may even begin to receive the same tariff-free privileges that are offered to the members of the Kremlin-backed Eurasian Customs Union.

In another effort to foster an economic relationship, Russia organized the largest business exhibition in the history of the countries’ bilateral relations during December 2015. Representatives from over eighty leading Russian companies from defense, energy, and other industries attended the conference in Iran. According to Iranian Press TV, Russian Energy Minister Alexander Novak attended the event and referred to Tehran as Moscow’s “most important economic and trade partner,” adding that the two countries have devised a new trade bundle worth $35 to $40 billion.

The largest element of this package is the agreement that the Russian company Rosatom will construct a new nuclear power plant in Bushehr, Iran, an agreement worth $11 billion. The package also reportedly includes Russian produced satellite-operation equipment and Sukhoi-100 passenger jets, which are jointly worth $21 billion.

A significant part of other recent economic agreements between the two states have related to the defense sector. Months before the nuclear agreement was signed, Moscow resumed its 2007 agreement to deliver five S-300 missile systems to Iran. It had previously reneged on this agreement after the adoption of the United Nations Security Council arms embargo against Iran in 2010. Iran is also planning to purchase Russian Sukhoi-30 fighter jets, which are similar to the American F-15E fighter bomber.

However, the current spate of economic activity between the two states belies the considerable friction that remains between the two countries. When Moscow withheld delivery of the S-300 systems, Tehran filed a lawsuit in International Court against Russia. Iran has agreed to drop the case, but only after Russia delivers the first regiment of the missile systems. Iran has also lost interest in purchasing Russian T90 battle tanks, since according to Ground Force Commander Ahmad Reza Pourdastan, “We were once interested in buying the Russian tanks. But since we can manufacture similar models within the country and we plan to do so in the near future, the deal is now off.”

Relations are further hindered by the fact that conservative and traditionalist Iranian politicians do not consider Russia to be a partner that can be trusted. Iran has a long track record of attacking foreign embassies on its soil, but the Russian diplomatic mission to Tehran is the only one that has been attacked multiple times. An angry mob first attacked the Russian embassy in Tehran in response to the Turkmenchay treaty that ended Russo-Persian war of 1826-1828.  The mob killed the ambassador, who played a key role in negotiating the treaty that had conceded control over the South Caucasus from Persian to the Russian empire. Even today, many Iranians use the term Turkmenchay Treaty to refer to an unfair settlement.

Iranians also attacked the Soviet embassy over a century later in 1988 during the Iran-Iraq war, responding to the Soviet army provision of missiles to Saddam Hussein. Moreover, Iran’s religious leaders found the communists’ atheistic views incompatible with Islam. Soviet intervention in Afghanistan only made matters worse, since the move drove almost a million Afghan refugees to relocate to Iran.

It took the collapse of the Soviet Union for comparatively warm relations to develop between Moscow and Tehran. Shared political animosity against the West and joint support for Assad has brought Russia and Iran closer together. Russia also played a constructive role during Iran’s nuclear negotiations, making no attempts to compromise the negotiation process and helping Iran facilitate the terms of the agreement. On  December 28,  the Russian ship Mikhail Dudin carried 11,000 kilograms of low-enriched uranium material from Iran to Russia via Caspian Sea in order to fulfill one of the key provisions of the nuclear agreement, since Iran could not dilute the uranium domestically. In turn, sanctions relief made Iran a more attractive economic partner, as Iran received $56 billion in unfrozen foreign assets and set the country on a new path towards economic rehabilitation.

Now, Russia wants to convert its recently developed political friendship with Iran into economic benefits. An expert on Iran at the Moscow-based PIR Center think tank, Andrei Baklitskly, explained that, “There is a feeling in Russia that, “We’ve been your friends for all this time and now you should give something to your friends.” However, other experts believe that Russia has already missed its opportunity for a sturdy economic partnership. Prominent Russian expert on Iran Rajab Safarov commented that, “Prior to sanctions relief Russia could be a real queen in Iran, since at the time there was no one else and Iranians were ready to let Russians into their projects without competition.” Now, Iranians may be more discerning since their diplomatic and economic options have widened.

Many Russian economists have also expressed concerns over Iran’s return to the international energy market and its consequences for Russia, a sector where Russia and Iran are natural competitors. Currently, Russia exports around 3.5 million barrels of oil per day to Europe and 988,000 barrels to China. Under sanctions, Iran supplied 992,000 barrels to China and none to Europe, but both numbers are expected to increase substantially through Iran’s post-sanctions oil exports. Considering that neither Europe nor China’s energy market is likely to grow significantly in the near future, Iran’s reentry into the field will shrink Russian shares in both markets.

Tehran has offered a $6.55 discount on oil for European customers in an attempt to regain its share of the market. And in China, Iran has already made considerable headway: during Chinese President Xi Jinping’s official visit to Iran, both sides agreed to increase the bilateral trade tenfold to $600 billion in the next decade. Right after, President Rouhani left for a four-day tour of Europe, where he spoke about a “New Spring” in the relations with the European Union. President Rouhani returned to Iran with dozens of new contracts and memorandums that will help promote Iran’s return to the international market.

Between signing of the JCPOA in July 2015 and lifting of the sanctions in January 2016, Moscow had a special window of opportunity to gain economic benefits from its politico-military friendship with Tehran that may bear fruit in the future. But in return, Russia must now prepare itself for competition: Russia will compete with Iran in the international energy markets while also competing with European, Chinese, and American investors for a slice of the newly opened Iranian market. This will be an especially challenging task in light of the domestic economic challenges that Russia currently faces, but the payoff may be worth it.

Will Iran Keep Its Promises?

by Huseyn Panahov | 2016, February 02

Published on the The Diplomat magazine

When the P5+1 struck a deal with Iran on its nuclear program in July 2015, general expectations were that the sanctions could be lifted as early as spring 2016. Within the agreed Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA), the Iranian Foreign Ministry signed several obligations that needed time for legislative approval and final implementation. However, on January 16, the IAEA experts reported that Iran had already fulfilled all of its obligations; the sanctions were lifted the same day. This was a breakthrough for the Rouhani administration, which needed to complete the deal before elections slated for late this month. The elections will be crucial to determining whether Iran will adhere to the commitments it made under the deal.

The JCPOA does not envisage lifting all sanctions against Tehran, only those tied to the nuclear enrichment program. As noted in the White House summary of the agreement “U.S. statutory sanctions focused on Iran’s support for terrorism, human rights abuses, and missile activities will remain in effect and continue to be enforced.” That means the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), which bears the primary responsibility for the crackdown on civil society groups in Iran and supports military proxies across the Middle East, will largely remain under the sanctions.

The IRGC, also known as Pasdaran, was established following Iran’s 1979 Revolution, and was charged with protecting the Islamic system of governance. Nowadays, through its Special Forces branch, known as the Quds Force, the IRGC supports militant groups such as Hezbollah, Hamas, Houthis forces in Yemen and Shiite militias in Iraq. Pasdaran is also the main benefactor of the Assad regime in Syria.

Besides the Special Forces branch, ground, aerospace and naval forces, as well as a 90,000-strong militia, IRGC also owns much of the business sector in Iran. Considering that many high-level officials are former officers of the Revolutionary Guard Corps and through control of major news outlets in Iran (such as Fars News and Tasnim), Pasdaran exerts extensive influence over Iran’s politics. Generally, senior officials affiliated with the IRGC are known as hardliners, opposed to any kind of foreign policy compromise.

In the case of the nuclear deal, the IRGC had several pragmatic reasons to oppose it. First, the nuclear development program in Iran was under the control of the Revolutionary Guards, and it gave them a special edge in Iranian politics. Now they had to give up much of their hard earned achievements: all of the medium-enriched uranium, and 98% of the low-enriched uranium stockpile.

Second, under the sanctions regime the IRGC made billions of dollars on the black markets of Iran. In a 2010 article for Newsweek, Iranian reporter, Babak Dehghanpisheh writes that “the trouble with sanctions is that they squeeze out legitimate businesses and leave the field wide open for the IRGC.” He adds that “the size of Iran’s smuggling industry has been estimated at $12 billion a year, and the IRGC is believed to control much, if not all, of it.”

Third, many of the senior officers and affiliated businesses of the Pasdaran will remain under the sanctions. And last, but not least, even the IRGC entities that do not fall under the sanctions and are engaged in legal businesses in Iran will now have to compete with foreign companies. During the sanctions Revolutionary Guards earned huge revenues by monopolizing almost all major industries in Iran: energy, construction, car manufacturing and telecommunications. So, while repealing the nuclear sanctions will contribute to the overall development of Iran, they will diminish the relative power of the Pasdaran within the country.

That’s why the reformists in Iran, led by President Hassan Rouhani, had to work very hard to avoid the IRGC blocking of the nuclear deal. During his address to the 21st National Assembly of IRGC commanders in September 2015, Rouhani stressed the need for national unity and said that “Today the enemy is not only the Zionists, the Americans and terrorists, but today the enemy is also dust [pollution], unemployment, recession, inflation and loosening of morals and faith in society, which are all dangerous.” Nonetheless, approval of the nuclear deal by the Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei was the only reason IRGC was unable to block it.

The Revolutionary Guards are directly subordinate to the Supreme Leader, whose decision proved vital for the implementation of the agreement. However, in their own way, the IRGC commanders have still tried to compromise the deal. On October 8, 2015, five days before the Iranian parliament voted on the nuclear agreement, the IRGC Commander, Major General Mohammad Ali Jafari, made a public statement warning about a secret U.S. plot. He claimed that “the adoption of the nuclear deal by the Iranian parliament would create a “new atmosphere” that would give Iran’s external and internal enemies more fuel to lead the country away from revolutionary ideals.”

On October 10, the IRGC test-fired a ballistic guided missile, drawing condemnation in the international media. Yet, on October 13, the Iranian Parliament passed the nuclear deal, following the approval of the U.S. Congress a month earlier. It is also hardly a coincidence that a month before Congress was to vote on the nuclear agreement, the Revolutionary Guards announced plans to hold “huge ballistic missile exercises.” The news certainly helped to stir debate in Congress and gave fuel to the arguments of those who opposed the deal.

To date, the IRGC’s efforts to derail the deal have backfired, because a day after the nuclear sanctions were lifted, the U.S. Treasury imposed new sanctions targeting 11 companies and individuals involved in Iran’s ballistic missile program. Meanwhile, the nuclear deal is a loss for the Revolutionary Guards of the Iran, though it’s a major victory for the country as a whole.

It was essential that Rouhani implement the deal before the upcoming elections: This month Iranians will be voting for seats in two major government institutions: parliament and the Assembly of Experts (the supreme council of clerics). An intense power struggle is underway between the reformists and hardliners over the seats in these bodies. On January 21, Iranian reformists called on the Guardian’s Council of Iran to reverse its decision disqualifying 99 percent of the moderate candidates from running for the parliament.

The Assembly of Experts are elected for eight years, and will have the authority to select a successor to the 76-year-old Supreme Leader, in case the latter steps down or is unable to fulfill his duties due to ill health. In short, this month’s elections will largely determine whether Iran will adhere to the commitments it made to the P5+1.

Where Does the Caspian Sea Figure in Russia’s Strategic Calculus?

by Huseyn Panahov | 2015, Oct 23

Published on Eurasianet.org

Russian Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu announced in early October that Russian warships in the Caspian Sea launched 26 missiles against targets in Syria. The revelation caught Western analysts off guard, and demonstrated that the Kremlin has developed in recent years a significantly enhanced ability to project force.
 
According to Russian media reports, ships belonging to the Caspian Flotilla fired a version of 3M14 missiles on October 7 that travelled roughly 1,500 km, hitting targets in the Syrian cities of Raqqa, Idlib and Aleppo. The strategic implications of the Caspian Flotilla’s involvement in the operation are significant.
 
Russian planners clearly meant to send a signal that would reverberate well beyond Syria’s borders: the missile strike had the tactical goal of weakening rebel elements seeking to topple Bashar al-Assad’s regime in Syria. The strategic aim would seem much broader: intimidating governments across the Caucasus and Central Asia.
 
It is worth noting that Russia maintains a Mediterranean naval base at the Syrian port city of Tartus. But none of the 10 Russian warships believed to be operating in the Mediterranean are equipped with the Kalibr system that fires the 3M14 missiles.
 
So why are Russia’s military vessels in the Mediterranean not equipped with the country’s latest missile launching systems? One plausible explanation is that Russia’s Defense Ministry did not have enough time to deploy its most modern warships to the area. But many regional analysts believe the Kremlin’s primary motivation was a strategic desire to exhibit its improved offensive military capacity, which is the product of massive defense spending in recent years.
 
According to Western media reports, Russian involvement in the Syrian conflict was brokered by Qassem Soleimani, a top commander of Iran’s Revolutionary Guards, during his visit to Moscow in July 2014. Following that visit, Russia proceeded rapidly to transform an airfield in Latakia, Syria, into its operational hub for military actions there. Russia had plenty of time, then, to either equip its naval ships at Tartus with Kalibr missile systems, or deploy them at the Latakia airbase. It seems fairly clear that Russian defense planners opted not to.
 
It would have made tactical sense to deploy Kalibr systems to either Tartus or Latakia. The distance from either of those spots to intended targets inside Syria is around 300 kilometers, a much shorter distance than a Caspian Sea-based launch.
 
There is also the matter of cost. Russia could have launched shorter-range missiles from Tartus or Latakia, or tried to achieve the same result with tactical bomber raids. Either option would have had a cheaper price tag than the use of 3M14s. Russia has not disclosed the cost of its 3M14s, but the most analogous missile in the American arsenal is the Tomahawk, which costs around $1.5 million. While it is likely the 3M14s cost the Russian government less to produce, it is reasonable to assume that the 26 rockets launched from the Caspian Sea cost at least $15 million collectively.
 
The 3M14 missiles are believed to have a maximum range of 2,600 kilometers. By demonstrating that it can carry out a successful strike from the Caspian Sea against a distant target, Russia made every government in Central Asia and the Middle East take notice.

On a practical level, the Russian launch from the Caspian has forced at least one civil aviation change. The Kazakhstani carrier Air Astana announced it was altering the route of its Almaty-Baku flight to reduce the risk of a potential missile-related accident. The shoot-down of Malaysian Airlines Flight 17 over eastern Ukraine in July 2014 no doubt helped prompt Air Astana officials to take such action.
 
The political ramifications are harder to discern. Top officials in Central Asia have not publically commented on the appearance of Kalibr missile systems on the Caspian Sea.
 
Silence in this case, however, should not be construed as indifference. The show of Russian force may well have encouraged Central Asian leaders to agree to a Kremlin-backed military cooperation agreement  that was signed during a meeting of CIS leaders in Kazakhstan on October 16. At the summit, Russian President Vladimir Putin warned ominously that the cooperation pact was needed to contain Islamic militants in Afghanistan. “The situation [in Afghanistan] is close to becoming critical,” Putin told a news conference, adding that Islamic militants were aiming “to penetrate the Central Asian region.”
 
Regional media outlets have offered other reasons why Russia decided to launch the missiles from the Caspian Sea. Some see it as a marketing opportunity intended to make 3M14 missiles more attractive to potential foreign buyers. Others suggest it was a domestic propaganda exercise designed to reinforce popular support for the Kremlin’s massive defense expenditures amid generally hard times for the Russian economy. Yet another hypothesis attributes it to vanity: Shoigu, the defense minister, ordered up the raid to please President Putin, who celebrated his 63rd birthday on October 7, the same day as the missile strike.
 
Whatever the reason, or combination of reasons, it is clear that Russia is trying to position itself not only as a political alternative to the United States and European Union, but also as a military rival and counterweight. The main unanswered question at this point is whether Putin’s Russia has a purse large enough to successfully implement that goal.

Data explains: who’s to blame for the Syrian Crisis?

The unfolding crisis in Syria is a subject of intense scrutiny in the global media landscape, yet its root causes remain poorly understood by the public. The narrative pushed by the Assad regime and its allies, accuses vaguely defined Western forces and distracts from the more substantive issues at play. A detailed examination of three statistical trends: demographic shifts, climate change, and growing unemployment rate, yield an evidence-based explanation for the triggers of the spiraling crisis in Syria.

Officially, the ruling party in Syria is still the Arab Socialist Ba’ath Party, which came to power through a coup d’état in 1963. From an economic standpoint, the first years of the Ba’ath party rule were quite successful, due to the close ties of the socialist government with the Soviet Union. In the 1960s, Syrian GDP per capita grew 80% and then peaked during the 1970s with 336% of total GDP growth.[1] The Soviet Union became the  biggest export destination for Syrian agricultural products, oil, and minerals such as phosphate rock. 

Economic prosperity paralleled with global improvements in public health care led to a  population boom in Syria. Traditional Syrian families had 4-5 children, who were seen as extra working hands in the family farmhouses. Agriculture accounted for almost one-third of the Syrian GDP, thus many Syrians were motivated to have more children. Consequently, the population of Syria grew from 4 million in 1950 to 22 million in 2010, which turned into a heavy burden for a socialist government to accommodate, especially as the economy started to slow down.  

The number of Syrians who belong to the age group of 15-24 grew from 2.5 million in 1990 to 4,6 million in 2010, which meant that every year during this period there was a demand for 400 thousand new workplaces.[2] It was a very challenging task for the government that suffered from rampant corruption and lack of proper free-market mechanisms. The honeymoon phase of an economic model that relied mainly on extractive industries was coming to an end, but the population growth was not. Traditional and conservative Syrians look down on either using contraception or generally any attempts to limit family size.[3]

This became an especially heavy burden for the Assad regime, during the drought of 2006 – 2010 in Syria.[4] According to meteorologists the drought and high temperatures during this period were unprecedented in the recorded history of Syria, where winter rainfall decreased by at least a third. In a country where almost 90 percent of fresh water is used for agricultural harvests, such drought devastated the economy. Close to 800 000 farm households were left out of business and nearly 1,5 million Syrians migrated from agricultural regions to the cities.

In March 2011, economically devastated, and politically oppressed, but stimulated by popular revolts in the neighboring countries Syrian citizens in big cities went out on the streets to demand political and economic reforms. Unfortunately, instead of trying to address the problems of Syrian citizens, the Assad regime retaliated by shooting at its people, and the events snowballed into a Civil War from there. 

So, contrary to various narratives promoted by the ousted Assad regime and its sympathizers, the Syrian crisis is not a conspiracy plot of external forces. Syria was impacted by the global technological evolution, decentralized media space, and uprisings in the broader Middle East region. Additionally, the lack of international consensus contributed to the protraction and even escalation of the conflict. As Assad’s army continued to kill its people many countries around the world called for his resignation, but others like Russia and Iran supported the Assad regime, as they did not want to lose an ally in Damascus. However, at the bottom of it all, the root causes of the Syrian crisis are tied to domestic issues: population trends, climate factors and most importantly government mismanagement.


[1] Syria, Country Study Guide: Strategic Information and Developments. Vol. I. Washington DC: International Business Publications, 2013. p. 124

[2] Бологов, Петр. “Война на перекрестке цивилизаций. 10 причин, почему именно Сирия.” 

Slon Magazine, 18 Sept. 2015. https://slon.ru/posts/56638 

[3] Sands, Phil. “Population Surge in Syria Hampers Country’s Progress.” The National. March 6, 2011. Accessed October 1, 2015. http://www.thenational.ae/news/world/middle-east/population-surge-in-syria-hampers-countrys-progress. 

[4] “Did Climate Change Help Spark The Syrian War?” Columbia University: Earth Institute. March 2, 2015. http://www.ldeo.columbia.edu/news-events/did-climate-change-help-spark-syrian-war.

NATO Needs an Emergency Council for Timely Crisis Management 

Authored by Daniel Bennett and Huseyn Panahov

Published on the NATO Source blog of the Atlantic Council

September 24, 2015

At the 2014 NATO Summit and as a response to the Russian invasion of Ukraine, the leaders of the Alliance agreed on a Readiness Action Plan (RAP) to improve NATO’s ability to deal with immediate security threats. The RAP includes a Very High Readiness Joint Task Force (VJTF) of 3,000 – 5,000 troops that can be deployed within 2-7 days. Considering the volatile nature of the current security environment, NATO’s new plan is a timely initiative. However, the RAP leaves open a question about the decision-making mechanism that threatens to undermine its overall efficacy: who authorizes the VJTF to deploy and engage?

In other words, the RAP will enable the Alliance, at the operational level, to rapidly deploy troops in crisis situations, but it lacks the political level decision-making mechanism needed to rapidly initiate the process. Based on current rules and regulations, this decision still rests with the North Atlantic Council (NAC). The NAC is the primary decision-making body of NATO, where high-level representatives of 28 member states hold regular consultations. The NAC holds emergency meetings on occasion, including consultations under Article 4 of the NATO treaty whenever “the territorial integrity, political independence or security of any of the parties is threatened.” Reaching a decision in the NAC is a lengthy process, since every decision needs a unanimous consensus of all member states. Subjecting NATO’s high readiness units to the political lethargy of the NAC’s unwieldy 28-member consensus model undermines its ability to deter incursions in the first place and respond rapidly when they do occur. 

One could argue that tying the VJTF to the NAC may actually create a greater political advantage for aggressors, such as Russia, who deftly calculate their actions to intentionally create discord and paralysis within the NAC. For adversaries planning to use such hybrid strategies, the insertion of one more decision-point requiring NAC debate increases the time between when their incursion takes place and the eventual response, allowing more latitude for aggressors to consolidate gains while NATO debates the appropriate course of action. This encourages further aggression. 

NATO is aware of this challenge. At the last Defense Ministerial, members collectively recommended that special powers be granted to the Supreme Allied Commander Europe (SACEUR) to streamline the decision making process by readying the VJTF without NAC approval. While a step in the right direction, this does not eliminate the proverbial “chokepoint” of requiring complete agreement at the NAC for the decision to actually deploy the VJTF. 

To resolve this problem, NATO members should agree on a mechanism that respects the overall authority of the NAC, while delegating the decision to deploy at least part of the VJTF to an “Emergency Council” (EC). The EC should consist of three parties – a representative of the VJTF lead country (these rotate every year), the NATO Secretary General, and NATO military commander, SACEUR. The EC would greatly streamline NATO’s decision making process during times of crisis, so VJTF troops can actually be deployed within hours, instead of days. 

Considering the magnitude of this responsibility, the EC would need detailed procedural guidelines. The NAC would retain overall control by reviewing the decision of the EC and ultimately deciding if deployment should be recalled. The NAC would also decide the duration of the VJTF’s deployment. The NAC would review the EC decision to deploy as soon as possible after it was made. 

If we compare the EC to the internal decision-making process of a country, in some NATO members the head of state can deploy troops and initiate a war for limited periods of time. However, long-term military engagements often also require the approval of legislative institutions. The reasoning behind granting such authority to one person is to ensure the state responds to national security threats as quickly as possible. 

A similar precedent also exists in NATO itself. On January 30, 1999, amid a rapidly deteriorating crisis in Kosovo, the NAC empowered Secretary General Javier Solana to authorize airstrikes against targets in Yugoslavian territory at his own discretion if he deemed them necessary to halt the crisis, without the need to further consult the NAC. In March, further authority was granted for the Secretary General to authorize a broader range of air operations in Yugoslavia. These decisions by the NAC were explicitly taken to “contribute to creating the conditions for a rapid and successful negotiation on an interim political settlement.” Such a precedent establishes the feasibility of the NAC granting limited deployment decision-making authority to individual alliance leaders specifically to allow for rapid military reaction in time-sensitive situations, whether to expedite a political agreement, halt the ongoing military actions of an opponent, or deter future aggression. 

In a similar fashion, the EC would allow NATO to become more united and agile in response to contemporary time-sensitive threats. We live at a time when various non-state actors, self-proclaimed states, terrorist organizations, and authoritarian regimes demonstrate undeterred aggression and are ready to exploit any vulnerability to achieve their ambitions. As Russian hybrid tactics demonstrate, this includes vulnerabilities in NATO’s political decision-making structure.

Today, NATO remains the largest military alliance in history. However, it’s not only sheer size that matters, but also the agility and speed of forces to respond to rapid changes in the security dynamic. Given the volatile nature of the security environment in Europe, even a one-day delay could come at a high cost. For this reason, NATO should consider developing an Emergency Council that can trigger a defensive deployment when a threat requires an immediate response.