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Stephen Haseler: Re-thinking NATO - a European
declaration of independence
The acute crisis in the Atlantic Alliance over Iraq
that burst upon the scene in early 2003 had been building for over a decade.
And could have been predicted. The key to the current crisis is not to
be found in the events of 11 September 2001; rather, they are the product
of events some 12 years earlier when the collapse of the Soviet Union
removed the Soviet threat to Western Europe. It was this threat which
had cemented post war American-West European relations, had created and
sustained NATO, and caused most Europeans to willingly acquiesce in American
leadership of the alliance. If 9/11 "changed everything" for
Americans, then, some 12 years earlier, the end of the Berlin Wall had
"changed everything" for Europeans. For, with the Soviet threat
removed, the cold war pattern of the European-American relationship was
bound, sooner or later, to be re-assessed, and altered.
This fundamental re-assessment was, though, to be set
aside almost as soon as it started. For the whole post cold war NATO debate
was submerged following the eruption of the Gulf war. All the leading
European governments, as part of an impressive international coalition,
supported the US in expelling Iraq from Kuwait - and the war amply displayed
how American military leadership was highly beneficial to Europe when
European and American interests coincided. In this environment few in
Europe, outside of France, were prepared to question the underlying rationale
for NATO. And NATO also received a last minute reprieve as the Yugoslav
imbroglio seriously dented the claims of those who sought an independent
European security policy.
From Washington's perspective, NATO was now seen in
a totally different light. As long as it remained American-led it remained
highly worthwhile. During the cold war years the alliance had often caused
irritation in Washington. Powerful voices in the US Congress regularly
argued that the US was spending too high a proportion of the US defence
budget on 'NATO related' expenditure and that US tax-payers were bearing
too much of the NATO burden. And successive US administrations became
frustrated with the regular refusal of the European members of NATO to
engage the alliance in 'out of area' (that is, out of Europe) operations.
During the 1990s, throughout their opposition years
during the Clinton Presidency, strategic thinking in Republican, conservative
and neo-conservative circles was attempting to redefine the role of the
USA. In Washington think-tanks like the conservative Heritage Foundation,
the neo-conservative American Enterprise Institute and foreign policy
institutes like the Georgetown Centre for Strategic and International
Studies, strategists were developing new geo-strategic ideas - and they
were clustering around the over-all concept of 'US hegemony'. This stark
idea took root in the belief that following the collapse of Soviet power
the US had graduated from being the leader of the west in a bi-polar system
to the world's only superpower - a notion given extra life when the French
Foreign Minister, Hubert Védrine, described the US as the world's
"hyper-power".
This developing vision of the US as the world's policeman
was still a minority interest, contained and held at the margins of Washington
life, when the terrorists struck the Twin Towers in New York and the Pentagon
on 11 September. And, then, in the then current usage, "everything
changed". What in fact changed was the historic popular sense of
the invulnerability of America. This new vulnerability to terrorism, together
with the sensationalism of the powerful and permeating US news media,
only increased the sense of fear. In this new domestic environment, Americans
were prepared to vest authority to deal with the crisis in the President,
and the conservatives and neo-conservatives around George W Bush were
able to convince him to adopt a radically new geo-strategic course.
But, although for some time it has been clear that Europe
and America have different, often divergent, interests, there still remains
a strong, residual belief (or instinct) : that Europe needs America as
its ultimate security guarantor. (This is an instinct still strongly held
amongst the British elites, but also amongst other Europeans too.) This
instinct remained even though the post cold war threats to Europe were
completely different from those of the Soviet era. During the cold war
the overwhelming threat was from the Soviet Union; but in the post cold
war environment the security threats are primarily terrorist threats and,
potentially, threats from anti-western 'rogue states'. The major difference
between these new threats and the cold war threat is that a prosperous
and increasingly united Europe has the resources and the ability to handle
them itself. Indeed, we cannot, and should not, expect the US to handle
them for us. Apart from the question of dignity, US tax-payers will simply
not be prepared (with their coming serious deficits and their global mission)
to add to their burdens by funding the security of equally prosperous
Europe.
In this new strategic environment, Europe needs a close
European-American relationship in a Trans-Atlantic Community in which
equal partners ensure good trade relations, close intelligence sharing
and anti-terrorist co-operation, and, when agreed, even military interventions
abroad. Quite simply, Europe does not need America - anymore than America
needs Europe - for its fundamental defence and security. Indeed, because
the US is pursuing a new global mission it may need Europe rather more
than Europe needs the US, as Washington may want European resources to
help out, and would certainly need Europe as a launching pad for global
military operations.
It now seems likely that with or without Britain, a new European security
system, either as a refinement of NATO or a replacement for it, will eventually
come into being. And as it emerges - rather like the euro - it will face
Britain with a simple choice: to enter, and to help mould and determine
its development, or to stand off from it, and make its way in an uncertain
world.
Richard Laming: we should not rely on Richard
Perle's view of the world
Richard Perle argued recently that the future of the
United Nations was being threatened not by the United States but by the
European opponents of war. He compared it with the League of Nations which,
he said, had failed to act against aggression and had therefore lost credibility.
In the last few weeks, I have been reading (or in some
cases, re-reading) various books on the 1930s, and the most perceptive
analysis of the failure of the League of Nations that I have found was
in "Why war?" by C E M Joad. He was a leading member of Federal
Union in the 1930s and 40s, and in this book he lays out a powerful case
for federalism. On the league of Nations, he says, it should not be thought
of as an impartial world body, impartial that is as to the competing demands
of different countries, but rather as a part of the post-first world war
settlement, devoted to maintaining and enforcing the terms of the Versailles
treaty. That treaty, of course, had been widely discredited by the time
of the 1930s - only two countries, Britain and France, still stood by
it. (They were, probably not coincidentally, the two biggest beneficiaries
of it.) So, by the time that the Japanese invaded Manchuria or the Italians
invaded Abyssinia, the League of Nations had lost credibility and was
therefore unable to act. This is exactly the opposite way round from Richard
Perle's description.
Looking at the UN today, we have a very similar position.
The United States is projecting on to the UN its own interpretation of
the various resolutions and denouncing the UN because it will not act.
The other member states of the UN did not act precisely because the United
States was engaged in its own interpretations of the resolutions. We should
think twice before relying on Richard Perle's vision of the global institutions.
I think this kind of discussion is important for Federal
Union, because it takes us back to where the organisation started. There
has been a sense in the last few weeks and months of a kind of phoney
war: we know it is coming but it has not started yet. The early days of
Federal Union were lived in the same feeling: the problem moved from how
to prevent the war to what the war should be fought for once it had started.
I have included John Ryle's statement of peace aims from February 1940
in the pack for this AGM - I think it reflects the way that we should
be thinking today.
Jeremy Hargreaves spoke this morning about the extent
to which the European Union is pretty much like a federation already.
One of the problems we have had in explining the merits of federalism
to the general public is that the difference that federalism might make
has not been very clear and, even when it has been clear, it appears to
have been small. If co-decision for the European Parliament and the election
of the Commission president by the MEPs is all we are asking for, what
is all the fuss about?
The American approach to global problems has demonstrated
clearly what all the fuss is about. We now have the alternative to our
view of the world on public display. It is very sad that it has taken
the Americans, with whom the Europeans have so much in common, to show
quite important it is that Europe finally starts to act in a united manner
on the world stage, advancing its own approach to international relations
and world order.
And despite all the adverse publicity, I think that
it is very possible that Europe can do this.
It is no accident that the biggest European demonstrations
against the war have been in Spain, Italy and the UK, the three countries
that are most committed to it. I think that there is a common European
view of the Iraq crisis, but at present three national governments do
not share it. That gives me confidence that there is great scope for a
European position on issues of this sort, as long as there are both the
institutions and the will to do so. Everyone will be better off if we
do.
This article is based on talks given by the two speakers
at the Federal Union AGM on Saturday 22 March 2003. The opinions expressed
are those of the speakers and not necessarily those of Federal Union.
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