Yves here. Yet another example of European values in action! A corruption scandal in Aisle 5!
While this procurement abuse is not all that big an impediment to European NATO members bulking up their armed forces, say compared to voters not being on board with baked-in social spending cuts, the lack of an industrial base, and high energy costs, the last thing NATO needs is more problems. It is, or soon will be, taking a reputational hit for throwing all that money into the Project Ukraine burn pit. Corruption will be yet another ding in its once-vaunted reputation. And that in turn gives voters another talking point in their effort to contest this wasteful scheme.
Mind you, as Korybko makes clear, this embarrassment is not fatal, but it may throw some sand in the gears.
By Andrew Korybko, a Moscow-based American political analyst who specializes in the global systemic transition to multipolarity in the New Cold War. He has a PhD from MGIMO, which is under the umbrella of the Russian Foreign Ministry. Originally published at his website
Member states might eschew the NATO Support and Procurement Agency’s services, thus delaying their military purchases, which could delay the bloc’s rapid militarization plans if enough of them do this so as to avoid having to pay more if they’re unlucky enough to be serviced by corrupt employees.
NATO’s next summit will be held from 24-25 June at The Hague and almost certainly see the bloc expand upon its preexisting rapid militarization plans. Trump is demanding that all members spend 5% of GDP on defense as soon as possible, which Politico recently reminded everyone in their article about this is divided between 3.5% on “hard military spending” and 1.5% on defense-related issues like cybersecurity. Here are three background briefings on NATO’s rapid militarization plans to bring readers up to speed:
* 19 July 2024: “The EU’s Planned Transformation Into A Military Union Is A Federalist Power Play”
* 24 October 2024: “NATO’s Military Schengen”
* 7 March 2025: “The ‘ReArm Europe Plan’ Will Probably Fall Far Short Of The Bloc’s Lofty Expectations”
In short, the EU wants to exploit false fears of a future Russian invasion to further centralize the bloc under that pretext, with the “military Schengen” (for facilitating the free flow of troops and equipment between member states) and the €800 billion “ReArm Europe Plan” being its tangible manifestations. The first will create the desired military union while the second will then result in there being an urgent need for some mechanism to organize the division of defense investments between all members.
It’s here where the NATO Support and Procurement Agency (NSPA) is expected to play a major role owing to the lack of any alternatives and the difficulty in getting members to agree on creating a new EU-wide one due to some states’ sovereignty concerns. Per the NSPA’s website, “[its] objective is to obtain the best service or equipment at the best price for the customer by consolidating requirements from multiple nations in a cost-efficient way through its turnkey multinational acquisition framework.”
The problem though is that the NSPA has been embroiled in a procurement scandal over the past month. To their credit, Deutsche Welle published a fair and detailed report about what happened, which can be summarized as employees passing along information to defense contractors in exchange for funds that were partly laundered to them through consultancy companies. The NSPA reportedly initiated the investigation itself, but that might not be sufficient for controlling the damage from this scandal.
While it’ll continue functioning, some member states might now be hesitant to rely more on its services than is absolutely necessary to avoid having to pay more for whatever it is that they’re looking to buy if more corrupt employees unluckily happen to service their request. Of course, the NSPA’s initiative to investigate itself – which led to three arrests thus far and has spread to several countries, including the US – might reassure some states, but few will likely take any more chances than they have to.
If enough NATO members practice this approach in understandable pursuit of their financial self-interest, especially if segments of the public pressure them to do so in order to not risk wasting taxpayers’ hard-earned funds, then this could collectively complicate NATO’s rapid militarization plans. It remains to be seen what effect it’ll ultimately have, but the NSPA’s procurement corruption scandal couldn’t have come at a worse time, and it’s important not to let the elite sweep it under the rug for convenience.
This is all very well, but western mainstream media will sweep it all under the carpet. They are all in on the Russia fearmongering and if a few people wet their beak along the way, well that helps oil the wheels to thwart the evil scheming ultra aggressive Putin and his plans to recreate a greater Russian empire.
The mass media mantra used to be if it bleeds it leads. These days the mantra is more along the lines of if it’s corruption it’s concealed. And if not totally concealed, kicked far into the long grass.
This will help Sánchez who does not want to rise military spending to 5% and is attracting Trump’s ires. This has potential for much conflict. To my knowledge NATO has 0 legal leverage to oblige to such spending, less so in corrupt schemes.
Well, you can’t militarise an organisation which is already military.
The EU Commission has been trying to muscle its way into defence procurement for the last thirty-five years. Nations have been shall we say sceptical. Anyway the European Defence Agency has been trying to harmonise requirements for the last twenty years already.
The « military Schengen » plan is just intended to reduce the bureaucracy and diplomacy required for the armed forces of one country to travel through another in peacetime. It has nothing to do with procurement.
Finally, the overwhelming proportion of NATO procurement is done nationally or through existing multinational projects and this is locked in for decades. Support already exists for common purchases like the F35.