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Challenges
to the Transatlantic Relationship
Stanley
R. Sloan
The ongoing discussion
of transatlantic relations, especially as it has
unfolded in the pages of In the National Interest,
is particularly disturbing to those of us who believe
that the transatlantic relationship remains vitally
important to both the United States and to Europe. Some shortsighted Americans say France and Germany are no
longer U.S. allies, but in fact are now enemies of the
United States. Meanwhile,
some equally myopic Europeans say they have more in
common with Russia than with the United States.
On both sides of the Atlantic, observers proclaim
that NATO is dead, and paint dire projections for the
future. (See,
in particular, the contributions made by Hungarian
Foreign Minister Kovacs, at http://www.inthenationalinterest.com/Articles/vol2issue7/vol2issue7Kovacs.html,
of Bruno Tertrais, at http://www.inthenationalinterest.com/Articles/vol2issue7/vol2issue7tertrais.html,
and Nikolas Gvosdev, at http://www.inthenationalinterest.com/Articles/vol2issue6/vol2issue6gvosdev.html.)
There is a crisis in
transatlantic relations, and that crisis is the result
of careless U.S. unilateralism combined with toothless
European autonomy.
The Bush Administration has managed through its
careless unilateral behavior to throw away most of the
good will generated by the September 11, 2001 attacks on
the United States.
It has put in jeopardy the hard-won consensus to
expand NATO’s global role as agreed in Prague last
November. In
response, the government of France called for a united
EU front against the U.S. approach to Iraq, and argued
against a formal NATO role in Afghanistan, indulging in
hollow “autonomous” behavior–perhaps
understandable, but not helpful.
Which
United States?
The United States has
since World War II been the dominant force in
U.S.-European relations, but the type of power it has
projected has changed over the years.
During the Cold War, U.S. power deterred military
adventurism by the Soviet Union.
Europeans, with the notable exception of France,
tolerated the increasingly hegemonic role of the United
States. Soviet power made it clear to most European countries that
the largely benevolent U.S. hegemony was a small price
to pay for a reliable security guarantee.
The United States, for
its part, knew that democratic Europe was not only a
critical strategic asset in its superpower competition
with the Soviet Union but was also the main “prize”
in the Cold War ideological competition.
In the 1990s, the
United States had the power and prestige to exert
substantial influence on most international events or
issues, but its leaders were not sure whether they
wanted to exploit that position actively or to use it as
a shield behind which the country could retreat and deal
with its domestic issues.
Bill Clinton rode into office on a “domestic
economy first” platform.
But Clinton’s administration found itself
unavoidably leading the international community in the
Balkans and, from time to time, falling into the
exceptionalism trap – for example when Secretary of
State Madeleine Albright proclaimed that the United
States “stands taller and therefore can see further”
than other countries.
It was with the advent
of the Bush Administration, however, that the United
States began more actively to assert its hegemonic
position. Candidate
Bush had cautioned that the United States should pursue
a “modest” foreign policy.
Once in office, however, his administration moved
unilaterally with a vengeance.
On a wide range of issues, from ballistic missile
defense to ecological protection, it boldly rejected
international agreements when they did not fit
administration interpretations of U.S. interests.
Following the
terrorist attacks on the United States in September
2001, the administration appreciated the outpouring of
international sympathy and support but then adopted a
strongly unilateral posture, telling the rest of the
world “you are either with us or against us” in the
war on terror. In 2002, the administration began marching alone down the
road toward war against Iraq before realizing that
neither the American people nor U.S. allies would easily
embrace war against Iraq unless it were sanctioned by
the international community. It was so clear to most
observers (and to all our allies) that the
administration was going to go to war with Iraq, no
matter what. The
administration’s eventual recourse to the UN Security
Council has therefore done little to build American
international credibility.
Will the United States
– under George W. Bush or his eventual successor --
find a tolerable balance between unilateral defense of
U.S. interests on the one hand and constructive
collaboration with international friends and
institutions on the other?
Or will Washington simply push its way through
future international issues, perhaps sacrificing much of
the moral authority that George W. Bush’s father and
other presidents have worked hard to sustain.
Which Europe?
Just as there is a
question about what kind of United States will occupy
the American seat at the U.S.-European table, it is
unclear what kind of Europe will be available to sit
across the way.
In 1981, former U.S.
Secretary of State Henry Kissinger, frustrated by the
fact that nobody and yet everybody spoke for Europe,
asked half-seriously “What is Europe’s telephone
number?” Some would argue Kissinger’s question has
now been answered.
The European Union has a “High Representative
for Common Foreign and Security Policy,” Javier
Solana, who in theory is the voice and face of the EU
toward the outside world.
However, if the outside world wants to talk about
trade or economic and monetary issues, it had better not
talk to Solana. Authority
in this area is in the hands of the supranational EU
commission.
And, if you want to
influence the actions of the members of the EU, you
might make some progress dealing with the capable Mr.
Solana, but you had better also talk to the governments
of France, Great Britain, Germany, Italy and others,
without whose initiative and support the EU does
nothing.
Europe remains a mixed
media presentation, part supranational organization,
part united Europe, and very much still run by national
governments, most of whose roots and political power are
sunk deeply into their domestic power bases first and
only secondarily in the “European idea.”
Particularly since the
advent of the George W. Bush Administration, growing
numbers of Europeans have suggested that the unilateral
behavior of the United States should stimulate the
process of European political unification.
In fact, however, recent events have demonstrated
how far the European Union is from being “Europe.”
And so, just as there
are questions about whether the United States will be a
benevolent hegemon or a unilateralist bully in its
relationship with Europe, it is uncertain what mix of
supra-nationalism and nationalism will govern Europe,
and whether the “old” or “new” European
attitudes will dominate.
What now?
In these equations
both the United States and its friends and allies in
Europe face important choices.
The United States
faces the challenge of using its power in ways that
reflect U.S. values and draws on the American public's
desire to cooperate with other countries while not
inspiring opposition by being too domineering. In other words, the United States has to learn how to be a
hegemon without acting like one.
If U.S. allies still
believe that U.S. leadership is essential on many
international issues, as they apparently do, then their
challenge is to express their criticism of U.S.
leadership style in terms that are appropriate for frank
and honest discussions among friends, and in ways that
will promote U.S.-European cooperation, not make it more
difficult.
The bottom line is
that the United States and Europe still need each other.
As a U.S.-European expert study group recently
concluded, “Although the U.S. may be able to win wars
without significant allied contributions, it is unlikely
in many situations to be able to win the peace without
military (and non-military) assistance from European
allies....” (See this report at http://www.ttc.org/CESDP/index.htm.)
And, if Europeans look for allies that broadly
share European values and interests, most will conclude
that the United States, with all its flaws, will remain
the most important and reliable world partner for a more
united Europe.
Moreover,
the international community needs this “crucial
couple” to find some form of marital harmony.
Working together, the United States and Europe
have the wits and resources to deal with most
international problems.
In the absence of such cooperation – as
recently demonstrated over Iraq – the international
community simply doesn’t function very well.
The
sense of “community” among the transatlantic nations
has been the first victim of the crisis over Iraq.
On the “day after Iraq,” the United States
and Europe will need to breathe new life into the sense
of common destiny among the Atlantic community of
nations. For
those who share this belief, the time has come to start
preparing a re-awakening of transatlantic good will and
cooperation.
No
matter how the Iraq issue is resolved, we should now
begin preparation of a new Atlantic Community Treaty,
reaffirming the broad area of U.S-European shared values
and interests. The
treaty would have both political and functional goals.
Politically, such a major political act would
shift the focus of United States-European relations
toward all that we have in common and away from the
exclusive focus on what divides us.
Functionally, the treaty among all members of
NATO and the European Union would create a soft-power
framework of cooperation to complement the hard power
frameworks of NATO and the EU’s Common European
Security and Defense Policy.
This will not be easy;
attitudes on both sides of the Atlantic today make it
even more difficult.
However, without a renewed sense of common
destiny, the United States would be weaker and less
predictable and Europe would be less confident and much
less secure.
Stanley
R. Sloan is a visiting scholar at Middlebury College,
Director of the Atlantic Community Initiative (www.AtlanticCommunity.org)
and author
of NATO, the European Union and the Atlantic Community:
The Trans-Atlantic Bargain Reconsidered (Rowman and
Littlefield, 2002).
In 1999 he retired from his position as the
Congressional Research Service senior specialist in
International Security Policy after more than three
decades of government service.
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