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A review of "Paradise and power: America and
Europe in the new world order", by Robert Kagan (Atlantic Books,
2003 £10)
Most reviews of Robert Kagan's brief yet seminal
analysis of transatlantic relations occurred just before the Anglo-American
intervention in Iraq. In consequence, they predominantly focused upon
the military dimension of such relations. Being done whilst the politically
inept consequences of the military intervention are in the process of
revealing themselves, this review finds itself focusing upon the global
balance-of-power ramifications whilst observing the processes of that
political ineptitude taking place.
Crudely, Kagan's thesis is that, whereas the American
Mars clings to military power as its ultimate political tool, the European
Venus rejects it as such. The United States relies on coercion; Europe
relies on persuasion. Valid from the perspective of the twentieth-century,
the thesis is questionable, not least from a longer term historical perspective.
Nevertheless, in strictly twentieth-century, cold-war terms, the thesis
has apparent viability. Pinpointing Western Europe's dependency upon the
United States nuclear umbrella during the cold-war era, the thesis explains
the European political establishment's psychological dependency upon the
US that perpetuates itself into the post-cold-war era.
Kagan perceives the 1990s Balkans crises as a missed
watershed in transatlantic relations. These crises provided Europe with
the opportunity to gain its independence that it failed to grasp. As Kagan
observes:
'The Nato alliance appeared to have found a new, post-cold-war
mission in bringing peace to that part of the Continent still prone to
violent ethnic conflict
.The enlargement of the Nato alliance to
include former members of the Soviet block
..was another grand project
that kept Europe in the forefront of American political and strategic
thinking.'
An accurate summary of the perceptions underlying the
European political establishment's psychological dependency upon Washington,
this observation embarrassingly also encapsulates the collective response
of Euro-federalists to the Balkans fiasco as well as their illogical acceptance
of Nato's enlargement. Thus, questionable though Kagan's basic thesis
is, his analysis highlights schizophrenia within the emerging, broader
spectrum of collective European political psyche that prevents it from
asserting its political will to the fullest extent that geo-political
logic dictates.
By highlighting this schizophrenia, Kagan doesn't so
much pinpoint its causes as illustrate its symptoms. The most obvious
symptom was the European acceptance of the Clinton Administration's conduct
of Nato's intervention in Kosovo. Rather than being implemented through
the use of massive ground troops, maximising the use of explicitly political
means to achieve the required solution within the territory, it was an
intervention implemented predominantly by the use of air strikes. In terms
of American domestic politics, this made complete sense; in terms of the
crisis's impact upon European civil society, it merely generated chaos.
In other words, Nato's intervention in Kosovo was symptomatic of Europe
prioritising transatlantic unity over European security.
To the extent that Kagan pinpoints the causes of this
European political schizophrenia, he does so by arguing that American
military presence in cold-war Europe acted as a stimulus for European
political integration. This analysis reflects Kagan's assumption that
the cold war was as objective a phenomenon as possible, and that the American
presence was therefore an objective necessity. The assumption ignores
the second-world-war's traumatic input into Europe's drive towards political
integration. In other words, it is an assumption that can just as easily
seen as symptomatic of America's psychological need for Europe. Given
that Kagan served in the US State Department from 1984 to 1998, this has
a personalised logic to it indeed.
Kagan's commitment to Europe is a cold-war commitment
to "The West" as a so-called objective political entity. Problem.
If the objective viability of the cold war is questioned, which it legitimately
can, so too can the objective viability of "The West" be questioned.
Accepting the objective viability of the cold war in the final analysis,
Kagan nevertheless questions "The West" as an objective term
by questioning the geo-political logic of the cold-war for the sake of
argument. Paraphrasing Kagan arguing against himself, he muses:
'It was American economic strategy to raise up [post-second-world-war]
economic competitors in Europe [despite itself being in a state of relative
economic decline]. It was American military logic to risk nuclear attack
upon its otherwise unthreatened homeland in order to deter both nuclear
and conventional attacks on its European
allies.'
Removed from political convention, it is hard to deny
that such musings are more convincing than Kagan's genuine beliefs. This
becomes the more so when the cold-war rationale of Atlanticism is placed
in the context of the post-cold-war era.
In fact such musings are integral to Kagan's analysis,
concluding as he does that the hegemonic manifestations in current United
States foreign policy are rooted in the historical development of the
US itself. This makes both historical and psychological sense. Being a
nation of immigrants, inherently insecure, such an analysis explains the
compulsive element, that element seeking to dominate in order to compensate
for an inner insecurity, which is a basic characteristic of US foreign
policy.
Placing this conclusion in the context of the current
transatlantic crisis over Iraq, Kagan predicts that, although there will
be other transatlantic crises, they will be of lesser severity. Ignoring
the pivotal issues concerning the future international order that the
political aftermath of the Anglo-American military intervention in Iraq
will inevitably pose, the prediction is quaintly American in seeking wish
fulfilment. Seeking the same wish fulfilment as that of the European political
establishment, the achievement of such a wish would prove fatal to prospects
of an international order based on a democratic global balance-of-power.
This article was contributed by John Williams,
member of the Federal Union committee, who may be contacted at j.hw@btopenworld.com.
The opinions expressed at those of the author and not necessarily those
of Federal Union. Last updated 31/03/03.
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