FROM THE NATIONAL INTEREST
Summer 2003
The Balancing Act:
America and Europe
July 2,
2003
By Christopher Layne
Forty years later,
the United States and Europe still are playing the same game. America still
asserts its hegemony, and France and Germany still seek (so far without much
success) to create a European counterweight. Washington is employing a
number of strategies to keep Europe apart.
First, the United
States has actively discouraged Europe from either collective, or national,
efforts to acquire the full-spectrum of advanced military capabilities.
Specifically, the United States has opposed the
eu’s Rapid Reaction Force (the
nucleus of a future eu army),
insisting that any European efforts must not duplicate
nato capabilities and must be part of an effort to strengthen the
Alliance’s “European pillar.” The United States is also encouraging European
nato members to concentrate individually on carving-out “niche”
capabilities that will complement U.S. power rather than potentially
challenge it.
Second, Washington
is engaged in a game of divide and rule in a bid to thwart the
eu’s political unification
process. The United States is pushing hard for the enlargement of the
eu—and especially the
admission of Turkey—in the expectation that a bigger
eu will prove unmanageable and hence unable to emerge as a
politically unified actor in international politics. The United States also
has encouraged nato expansion
in a similar vein, in the hope that the “new Europe” (Poland, Hungary, the
Czech Republic and Romania)—which, with the exception of Romania, will join
the eu in 2004—will side with
Washington against France and Germany on most issues of significance. For
the United States, a Europe that speaks with many voices is optimal, which
is why the United States is trying to ensure that the
eu’s “state-building” process
fails—thereby heading off the emergence of a united Europe that could become
an independent pole of power in the international system.
Finally, the United
States has continued to remind the rest of Europe, sometimes delicately,
sometimes in a heavy-handed fashion, that they still need an American
presence to "keep the Germans down."
Washington’s aim of
keeping Europe apart paid apparent dividends when, at the end of January,
the leaders of Britain, Spain, Italy, Portugal, Denmark, Poland, Hungary and
the Czech Republic signed a letter urging Europe and the international
community to unite behind Washington’s Iraq policy. This letter was notable
especially because it illustrated that indeed the United States is having
some success in using the “New Europe” (the east central European members of
nato) to balance against the
Franco-German core. Clearly, Washington hopes that states such as Poland,
Hungary, the Czech Republic and Romania will not only line-up behind the
United States within nato, but
will also represent Atlanticist interests over European ones within the
eu itself. In other words, U.S. policy seeks to encourage an
intra-European counterweight that will block French and German aspirations
to create a united Europe counterweight to American hegemony. Indeed, in the
wake of the Iraq War, Transatlantic relations are characterized by a new
form of “double containment” in Europe: the hard core of Old Europe
(centered around France and Germany, and possibly supported by Russia) seeks
to brake America’s aspirations for global hegemony, while the United States
and its “New European” allies in Central and Eastern Europe seeks to contain
Franco-German power on the Continent.
Christopher Layne
is Visiting Fellow in Foreign Policy Studies at the Cato Institute.
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