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Politics : Foreign Affairs Discussion Group -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: JohnM who wrote (71068)2/3/2003 4:42:27 AM
From: LindyBill  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 281500
 
Good column from "Reason" on the Euros.

Europopped
What does the New Europe letter mean for France, Germany and the United States?
By Charles Paul Freund

Tony Blair arrives in Washington today, having just delivered what even Le Monde calls "un joli coup." The paper of record for the Parisian left thus salutes Blair's role in producing Thursday's open letter from eight European governments, a statement published in 12 newspapers around the world including The Wall Street Journal.

The letter was indeed a deft blow, suddenly changing what had been a building news narrative of an isolated, bellicose America into a very different story, one about a French-German axis of appeasement that had overplayed its diplomatic hand. French TV actually buried the story Thursday; France2's evening news reported it midway through a broadcast whose lead story concerned a local snowstorm that had failed to materialize.

"Thanks in large part to American bravery, generosity and farsightedness," the letter reads, "Europe was set free from the two forms of tyranny that devastated our continent in the 20th century: Nazism and communism." According to Great Britain, Spain, Italy, Portugal, Poland, Denmark, Hungary, and the Czech Republic, "The trans-Atlantic relationship must not become a casualty of the current Iraqi regime's persistent attempts to threaten world security."

As if that were not outspoken enough, Poland's former deputy defense minister and deputy foreign minister, Radek Sikorski, appeared on PBS's Newshour to make the letter's meaning plainer yet. "We remember a previous leader who was denounced by Europe's chattering classes," he said. "That was Ronald Reagan, and he was vindicated and he helped to bring about our freedom, our liberation from communism, so we feel instinctive sympathy with America."

"We may have our doubts" about U.S. policy in the Middle East, added Sikorski, currently with the American Enterprise Institute's Atlantic Initiative. "But we are comfortable with American leadership of the free world. You need friends in need. And America needs our help now."

Thus has France lost its bet?for now at any rate?that it could outflank American influence by attaching itself to Germany. That wager has been a long-term strategy, dating back nearly half a century. Writing earlier this week in Britain's Independent (link via Glenn Reynolds), Bruce Anderson offered an insightful analysis of both British and French diplomacy in the wake of WWII, when "both nations had to devise strategies to deal with imperial decline."

According to Anderson, the two former empires have pursued differing strategies since the 1956 Suez crisis. "After that humiliation," he argues, "the two countries drew different conclusions. We decided we would never again find ourselves on the wrong side of America." As for the French, "They hoped to obtain a surrogate for empire in the EU, by harnessing its economic power to French purposes: a French jockey on a German horse."

It hasn't worked because history appears to have outpaced the strategy: Europe has changed profoundly, largely thanks to the U.S. Nor was it lost on the emerging nations of eastern Europe that American-dominated NATO was more welcoming to them than was the European Union. While some western European signatories to Thursday's open letter have signed on despite widespread anti-American feeling among their citizens (Italy stands out as such a case), eastern Europeans appear to feel quite positively toward the U.S. As Sikorski put it, "The Polish public is the most pro-American in Europe."

But there may be an even more striking reason for the failure of France's strategy. Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld's "New Europe" (as opposed to the presumably decrepit "Old Europe" Rumsfeld dismissed) may actually exist. In a prescient essay published before the release of the open letter, Anne Applebaum cited the support of seven European countries (all of whom were to sign the letter) for U.S. Mideast policy.

"Perhaps not coincidentally," she wrote, "these are all countries that have recently undergone (or are undergoing) economic liberalization, privatization and labor-market reforms that have brought their economies at least marginally closer to ours. These are also countries that have, over the years, felt resentful of French and especially German domination of the European continent."

Applebaum notes that in the 1950s, France and Germany really did dominate Europe's continental politics. By next year, however, the European Union will contain 25 member states, and the two former giants can be easily outvoted. "Sometimes," concludes Applebaum, "strident language is a sign of waning influence, not growing strength."



To: JohnM who wrote (71068)2/3/2003 5:56:22 AM
From: LindyBill  Respond to of 281500
 
Peggy Noonan had a good WSJ.com column today on Bush. The WSJ is having fun with the fallout from their scoop of the world on the statement by the Euro leaders.

>>>Back to Iraq. The Democrats seem to be flailing around in their search for attack points on Mr. Bush's policies, don't they?

Yeah, I think he's tying them in knots. They say he's a lone cowboy but he goes with Colin Powell and approaches the U.N. and asks for its help. They say he's a unilateralist so he shocks them the other day with an unexpected statement of support from eight European leaders--including a great man and idealist named Vaclav Havel. They say they need more detail so he announces Mr. Powell will go to the U.N. Security Council with a full brief. They say Mr. Powell is a lone voice of sanity in the administration and Mr. Powell comes out powerfully to back the president. They say they need proof of "imminence" of Iraqi attack, and Mr. Bush counters that, um, terrorists and dictators don't send notes announcing they'll be coming to visit.

But really it's the new eight, the new coalition come together with one voice, that is so impressive. The declaration, coming just after the State of the Union address, looked like a small diplomatic masterpiece, and it may be one. It got a major assist from The Wall Street Journal, which had asked Italy's Silvio Berlusconi and Spain's Jose Maria Aznar for an opinion piece setting out their reasons for supporting America in Iraq. The two leaders apparently contacted a few more leaders, and the result was the public letter carrying all eight signatures.

And here's a funny thing. George Bush the elder was masterly in putting together his Gulf War coalition. Everyone knows he was sensitive to the subtleties and requirements of high diplomacy, and he came through. George W. Bush isn't known for diplomatic expertise. And yet he appears to be achieving what his father achieved, and more. Bush the elder had an Iraqi invasion that had already done in Kuwait as his main arguing point. Bush the younger has mostly the potential, or the likelihood, of grave misdeeds involving weapons of mass destruction, but not the present reality of them, to use in argument. So the bar was higher for this Bush.

Anyway, I think the Democrats have been tied in knots, and they're showing their desperation with their latest talking point, body bags. American invasions mean dead Americans. This is a matter of the utmost seriousness, of course, and yet it dodges the issue. American invasion means dead Americans, but if Mr. Bush is right then refusing to confront Saddam and his weapons now may well mean a future Iraqi- supported or Iraqi-executed attack on our soil. Which could result in hundreds of thousands of dead American civilians. And body bags<<<<<<
opinionjournal.com