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Strategies & Market Trends : Strictly: Drilling II

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To: Frank Pembleton who started this subject2/9/2002 3:13:22 PM
From: Crimson Ghost  Read Replies (3) of 36161
 
Bush fans will not like this. But it is potentially very bullish for POG:

Fury at president's 'axis of evil' speech

Jonathan Freedland in Brussels
Saturday February 9, 2002
The Guardian

Chris Patten, the EU commissioner in charge of Europe's international relations, has launched a scathing
attack on American foreign policy - accusing the Bush administration of a dangerously 'absolutist and
simplistic' stance towards the rest of the world.
As EU officials warned of a rift opening up between Europe and the US wider than at any time for half a
century, Mr Patten tells the Guardian it is time European governments spoke up and stopped
Washington before it goes into 'unilateralist overdrive'.

'Gulliver can't go it alone, and I don't think it's helpful if we regard ourselves as so Lilliputian that we
can't speak up and say it,' he says in today's interview.

Mr Patten's broadside came as the French prime minister, Lionel Jospin, warned the US yesterday not to
give in to 'the strong temptation of unilateralism'.

Like France, Mr Patten singled out Mr Bush's branding of Iraq, Iran and North Korea as 'an axis of evil'.

'I find it hard to believe that's a thought-through policy,' he says, adding that the phrase was deeply
'unhelpful'.

EU officials concede that the US and Europe could now be on a collision course over Iran, with the EU
determined to forge a trade and cooperation agreement with Tehran just as Washington has deemed it
an 'evil' sponsor of terror.

Mr Patten insists that the European policy of 'constructive engagement' with Iranian moderates and
North Korea is much more likely to bring results than a US policy which so far consists of 'more rhetoric
than substance'.

The commissioner's remarks represent the most public statement yet of what has become a growing
sense of alarm in Europe's capitals at the increasingly belligerent tone adopted by Washington.

One senior EU official said: 'It is humiliating and demeaning if we feel we have to go and get our
homework marked by Dick Cheney and Condi Rice. We've got to stop thinking that the only policy we
can have is one that doesn't get vetoed by the United States.'

Publicly, the British government continues to stand 'shoulder to shoulder' with Mr Bush. But senior
Labour figures admit they are deeply troubled by the newly aggressive thrust of US thinking - especially
the hints that America could widen the war against terrorism to a clutch of new countries. They are likely
to seize on Mr Patten's remarks as they press their case with Tony Blair.

In the interview the former Conservative party chairman delivers a devastatingly comprehensive critique
of US strategy. He upbraids Washington for showing much more interest in stamping out terrorism than
in tackling terror's root causes.

'When you're addressing that agenda, frankly, smart bombs have their place but smart development
assistance seems to me even more significant,' he said.

That view is widely held in Europe, typified by Mr Blair's much-quoted 'heal the world' speech last year in
Brighton. But it barely gets a hearing in today's Washington, Mr Patten concedes, especially since the
dramatic success of the US-led military operation in Afghanistan. That has fed a new US mood of
'intense triumphalism', according to EU officials, with secretary of state Colin Powell regarded as 'a lone
voice of reason'.

Mr Bush's 'axis of evil' speech appears to have been the last straw for EU policymakers. In today's
interview, Mr Patten offers withering condemnation of the phrase.

Besides balking at the word 'evil', he disputes whether the three countries named are an axis at all,
insisting there is no evidence that they are working together on weapons of mass destruction. But Mr
Patten also expresses great irritation with Washington for undermining long-established EU efforts to
reach out to Tehran and Pyongyang.

'There is more to be said for trying to engage and to draw these societies into the international
community than to cut them off,' he says.

But Mr Patten's greatest ire is reserved for America's go-it-alone approach to international relations.
'However mighty you are, even if you're the greatest superpower in the world, you cannot do it all on
your own.'

He calls on Europe's 15 member states to put aside their traditional wariness of angering the US and to
speak up, forging an international stance of their own on issues ranging from the Middle East to global
warming.
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