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Regime Change in the Transatlantic Relationship:
Part
I: Making Sense of French Foreign Policy
Justin Vaisse
The
crisis over
Iraq
has not created a new transatlantic relationship. It has
revealed gradual changes that had long been under way
but had not been apparent until now. And it has updated
perceptions. The best way to understand the crisis is
not to assign blame to the U.S. or France or to any
particular country, pretending in effect that the old
regime of transatlantic relations still determines
behavior, but rather to analyze the new system of rules,
the new transatlantic regime that has resulted from
recent historical events such as the disappearance of
the Soviet threat, the growing relative military power
of the United States and the September 11 terrorist
attacks. "
A
perfect illustration of this tectonic shift from the old
to the new regime is the French-U.S. relationship, for
it did not, during the crisis over Iraq, conform to
familiar patterns. As a result, nearly all of the
experts failed to anticipate that the U.S. and France
would ultimately reach an impasse over
Iraq.
This week, I will offer an analysis of recent French
foreign policy, trying to sort out what motivated policy
during the Iraqi crisis and, perhaps more importantly,
what did not. Next week, I will focus on the bigger
picture, the "regime change" in the transatlantic
relationship, and on the new regime itself.
Let's
begin with the most commonly alleged sources of the
French position vis-à-vis Washington during the Iraq
crisis.
Did
French policy derive from a defense of commercial
interests? No. Trade with Iraq was somewhere between 0.2
percent and 0.3 percent of French trade, and if this had
been a factor, the appropriate strategy for France and
Germany would have been to join the coalition, and to
insist on getting a fair share of oil and other
contracts afterwards.
Did the
French policy derive from reflexive anti-Americanism?
Even less so – President Chirac is probably the least
anti-American of all recent French presidents, and
anti-Americanism, from a historical point of view, has
been receding in French society since its high water
marks in the 1950s, 1960s and 1970s. The French public
was strongly against this particular war, but its
attitude was anti-Bush, not anti-American. A recent poll
by the Pew Center, released in June 2003, confirms this
view: 74 percent of French people polled think that the
problem ("with the
U.S.")
is with the Bush Administration. This is the highest
rate among the 20 countries surveyed. Only 21 percent
think the problem rests "with America in general", a
more delicate way of expressing anti-Americanism. This
is the third lowest rate of the 20 countries surveyed.
Was
French policy determined by France’s large Muslim
minority? There is no doubt that President Chirac
welcomed the renewed bond between the Muslim community
and the rest of the French population that resulted from
a common opposition to the war in Iraq--not to mention
the personal popularity he gained among French Muslims
for his stance. Nonetheless, those very real effects
were not a motivating factor in the first place. Chirac
was ready to join the U.S.-led coalition and to send
troops into the region as late as January 7. He sent an
emissary in December to coordinate possible French
participation with the Pentagon. Had he felt that French
participation was justified, he would not have hesitated
to go against the preference of a majority of French
Muslims, as President Mitterrand did in deciding upon
French participation in the 1991 Gulf War. The cost,
here, is not significantly different from the one
incurred by going against a majority of French public
opinion in general. And Iraq is not as sensitive an
issue for French Muslims as the Israel – Palestine
issue.
Did the
policy result from a French quest for multipolarity? The
preference for a multipolar world does color French
policy but only as a secondary and mostly rhetorical
factor. It is not a primary source of French foreign
policy, and Chirac's talk about multipolarity is more
about multilateralism – deciding together about issues
that concern us all – rather than about constraining
American power. A good point in case is the French
reaction to the American actions in Afghanistan in
2001–2002. There was no talk about multipolarity,
because the United States and Europe formerly agreed on
the necessity of rooting out the Taliban as a key part
of the war on terrorism. France sent troops, fighter
jets, an aircraft carrier battle group, and 73 percent
of French public opinion approved of this American-led
war–another demonstration that France is neither
pacifist nor massively anti-American. The intervention
in Kosovo provides another interesting example in this
respect.
On the
contrary, when
France
disagrees strongly with the United States government on
some particular issue and when it feels is in the
mainstream of world public opinion, the idea that the
U.S.
would decide to go against the will of most other
countries naturally creates talk about multipolarity--not
the other way around.
When
one reads about French foreign policy in the American
press, it often seems as if France’s overriding goal,
its "grand strategy," its constant obsession, is to
derail American foreign policy under any circumstances.
Maybe it would be possible to find proponents of such a
purely anti-US foreign policy in France, especially on
the extreme left. But from my personal experience,
rather than hostility to toward the U.S. one finds in
the Quai d'Orsay (the French foreign ministry) mostly
ignorance about
U.S.
foreign policy and the U.S. political system. There is a
great deal of expertise and knowledge about
Europe,
the
Middle
East,
Africa and Asia, but what might be called the "American
factor" – how will a given issue play in Washington? –
is more often overlooked than overemphasized. In other
words, there is nothing vaguely resembling an obsessive
quest to check United States power at every turn.
Now,
let's examine the real reasons behind the French
attitude toward the war in Iraq.
The war
on terrorism is the most important one. The French see
the invasion of Iraq as a step backward in the war
against terrorism, as quite a few experts do. They feel
that the invasion has made their daily life less secure
– and they know about Islamist terrorism, having been
targeted by terrorists many times since the 1980's,
including twice last year by Al Qaeda in
Karachi
and in the
Arabian
Sea.
There are many reasons for this belief: Saddam was never
convincingly linked to Al-Qaeda; terrorist recruitment
will be fueled by a war pitting the West against a
Muslim country; the show of force cannot deter terrorist
networks that have no territorial basis, and cannot
coerce the countries that are the real problem –
particularly
Saudi
Arabia and Pakistan.
Proliferation of WMD is another reason. If even a tiny
portion of the Iraqi biological weapons mentioned by
President Bush in his State of the Union address has
slipped into the hands of terrorists just before or
during the invasion, or if Iraqi chemical weapons
specialists have defected to Al-Qaeda as a result to the
fall of Saddam’s regime, then the danger of catastrophic
terrorism has increased. Moreover, there is a worry that
exaggerations about Saddam's WMD may decrease the
ability of the international community to mobilize
public opinion against proliferation in other places,
particularly Iran and North Korea.
European historical pessimism and wariness of war is
another major reason. The U.S. strategy in Iraq had many
bases, but beyond question one important basis was a
peculiarly American optimism about the ability to change
the world through the application of military power. In
France, and in Europe as a whole, the historical view is
more pessimistic. Europeans see little in their long and
sorrowful experience in the region —especially the
British and French, the Mandatory Powers for Iraq,
Syria, Lebanon, and Palestine after World War I—to
support the notion that force and occupation can bring
democracy to the Arab world. A vocal minority of French
intellectuals and politicians, however, did emphasize
that part of the agenda, and advocated supporting the
United States (including Bernard Kouchner, Alain Madelin,
Romaine Goupil, André Glucksman and Pascal Bruckner,)
because as a goal the idea of supporting democracy and
conflict resolution in the Middle East enjoys widespread
support in France. The question is the means.
And
regime change through military intervention doesn't have
much appeal in France. Having experienced military
conflict on their continent within living memory,
Europeans feel they know more about its consequences
than Americans, and their threshold for deciding when
war as a last resort becomes necessary is consequently
higher. Last but not least, this war was seen as
unnecessarily fueling a possible "clash of
civilizations" between the West and the Arab / Muslim
world.
These
are, from my perspective, the real reasons behind the
French position in the last few months. It has to be
acknowledged though that the vast majority of experts on
both sides of the Atlantic– including myself – failed to
predict that these reasons would be enough for France to
attempt to stand in the way of U.S. action in Iraq. The
surprise that resulted goes a long way in explaining the
bitterness of the aftermath. So the question remains:
why did we misunderstand what
France
would do?
My
explanation is that
France’s
actions reveal that a new transatlantic system is slowly
emerging, where old patterns are increasingly replaced
by new ones, old rules by new rules. This is what I will
focus on in the second article next week.
Justin
Vaisse is a visiting fellow at the Brooking
Institution's Center on the
US
and France. He testified on the future of the
transatlantic relationship before the Subcommittee on
Europe
of the House Committee on International Relations.
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