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Thursday, Feb 9, 2012

Editorial»

The end of West ?

Thomas L Friedman

NOV 04 - The numbers are in and the numbers don’t lie. At the Madrid conference, Saudi Arabia pledged $1 billion in new loans and credits for Iraq and Germany and France pledged zero new dollars. The bottom line is clear: Saudi Arabia cares more about nurturing democracy in Iraq than Germany and France.
Ah, you say, that is unfair. Germany and France opposed the war, so why should they pay more than their share of the paltry EU contribution? Actually, it’s not unfair, when you remember that before the war France and Germany were obsessed with the lifting of UN sanctions on Saddam’s regime in the name of easing the suffering of the Iraqi people.
Well, the United States has removed Saddam, the source of Iraqi suffering, and yet that seems to be worth nothing to Germany and France. So there we have it: Pretending to ease the suffering of the Iraqi people by calling for the removal of sanctions but keeping Saddam in power so he can buy lots of stuff from Germany and France is priceless to them. But easing the suffering of the Iraqi people by removing Saddam’s regime is worthless to them.
Ah, you say, but that’s unfair. The leaders of France and Germany have a principled position. They honestly believe that democracy is not possible in Iraq, and trying to deliver it will just make things worse. Now, that’s an honest argument. But they never say that out loud they simply complain at the United Nations that America has not transferred sovereignty to the Iraqi people more quickly. If their real concern was empowering Iraqis to run their own lives, would not they be in there helping Iraqis get their act together faster?
What I m getting at here is that when an American finds himself in an argument with Europeans over Iraq, they try to present it as if we both want the same thing, but we just have different approaches. And had the Bush team not been so dishonest and unilateral, we could have worked together. I wish the Bush team had behaved differently, but that would not have been a cure-all because if you look under the European position you see we have two different visions, not just tactical differences. Many Europeans really do believe that a dominant America is more threatening to global stability than Saddam’s tyranny.
The more I hear this, the more I wonder whether we are witnessing something much larger than a passing storm over Iraq. Are we witnessing the beginning of the end of the West a coalition of U.S.-led, like-minded allies, bound by core shared values and strategic threats? .I am not alone in thinking this. Carl Bildt, the former Swedish prime minister, noted to me in Brussels the other day that for a generation Americans and Europeans shared the same date: 1945. A whole trans-Atlantic alliance flowed from that post-war shared commitment to democratic government, free markets and the necessity of deterring the Soviet Union. America saw the strength of Europe as part of its own front line and vice versa.
Today, however, we are motivated by different dates. Our defining date is now 1989 and yours is 2001, Bildt said. Every European prime minister wakes up thinking about how to share sovereignty, as Europe takes advantage of the collapse of communism to consolidate economically, politically and militarily. The U.S. president wakes up thinking about where the next terror attack might come from and how to respond most likely alone.
While we talk of peace, they talk of security, Bildt said. We talk of sharing sovereignty, they talk about exercising sovereign power. ... No longer united primarily by a common threat, we have also failed to develop a common vision for where we want to go on global issues confronting us.
Just as we once had US-Soviet summits to ease the tensions of the cold war, maybe it’s time for a US-French-German summit to ease the tensions of the post-cold war. Leaders of all three nations have behaved badly and have weakened the West, even if they have not ended it. It’s time to chart a new Atlantic alliance, but not one that is based on nostalgia for 1945 one that really bridges the differences between 1989 and 2001.Posted on: 2003-11-03 09:34

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