Why Europe Needs
Britain
From http://www.policyreview.org/AUG01/gonzalez.html
By Michael Gonzalez
The transatlantic alliance the springboard of Americas
global involvement, in Zbigniew Brzezinskys words
will change dramatically in the first decade of this century.
Americans would be prudent to prepare for the possibility of
estrangement in the relationship, stemming not just from differences
in economic outlook between a given U.S. administration and
the leading European governments of the day, but also from a
secular desire by some in Europe to vie for global political
leadership. It should hardly need mentioning that such an outcome
would have adverse consequences for the way the United States
projects its power throughout the globe; we would have to learn,
for one thing, to do without our European partner.
But none of this needs to happen. The United States and Europe
could develop an even deeper alliance as better-defined common
interests draw us closer together perhaps a happier result.
In between these two outcomes falls a range of possibilities,
largely unforeseeable in their particulars.
What can be foreseen about the only certainty we have
is that the European Union will have played the key role
in the result, whatever it is. If the United States wants to
have influence over the direction the alliance ultimately takes,
it cannot ignore the EU as a principal interlocutor.
Indeed, one thing that became clear during the first year of
the new administration in Washington is that attempts to bypass
the EU by President George W. Bushs policy advisors
or by executives of private companies, for that matter
paid fewer dividends than at first thought. More often it would
have been better to pave the way for initiatives by gaining
allies who agreed with policy positions or investment decisions.
This was the case in a variety of issues, from scrapping the
Kyoto protocol on climate change to the failed GE/Honeywell
merger the lost seat at the U.N. Human Rights Commission, and
missile defense. To make this observation is hardly to call
for a mushy multilateralism. GE and Honeywell could
have flouted EU Commissioner Mario Montis decision and
gone ahead with their merger, but decided to abide by it because
the price leaving Europe was higher. In other
words, this is the way the world works.
As far as the Bush administration is concerned, it was obvious
even before the election that the Old Continent was not high
on the agenda of its potential senior officials. National Security
Advisor Condoleezza Rice gave every indication that she had
a healthy respect for giants such as Russia and China
powers which, in her apposite words, can ruin your whole
day. For Secretary of State Colin Powell, the accent from
the start was on the Middle East, the region where he earned
his spurs as the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff during
the Gulf War, and where the new administration was most in need
of making a visible departure from the direction of the previous
one. For Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, the emphasis was
on Asia and on space; in fact, he voiced a desire to withdraw
troops from Europe. For Bush himself, Mexico and the rest of
Latin America seemed to take first place; thus his bold call
for a Western hemispheric trade bloc at Quebec and the exchange
of visits with President Vicente Fox.
All these are areas worthy of attention. But the trouble with
an insufficient focus on Europe is that it leaves the transatlantic
relationship adrift, vulnerable to the vagaries of day-to-day
events, to the ad-hoc management of disputes over trade, the
environment, Airbus subsidies, and such. The only European vision
would then come from the other side of Pennsylvania Avenue.
And in Congress these days, most of the people thinking about
the EU at all either are resolute about the fact that they dont
like what they see (the Republicans) or want to find support
in Europe for opposition to Bush administration initiatives
(the Democrats). The latter is perhaps unavoidable, given the
nature of partisan opposition. But the former, the GOPs
euroskepticism, takes a number of forms, one of the more prevalent
of which could do serious damage to American relations with
Europe in general bringing that specter of long-run disengagement
to life.
For some members of the presidents party, the only truly
trustworthy European country is Americas old ally, Britain.
And the only action available is to help Britons in an ephemeral
struggle with Brussels over sovereignty to help them,
in effect, disengage as much as possible from the EU.
Caution of course is required of those, like me, who propose
to argue that the EU can be made to work for libertarian ends.
Many who apparently think otherwise, influential senators such
as Phil Gramm and Jesse Helms and members of their staffs, can
hardly be challenged on the depth of their commitment to such
conservative or libertarian ends as free markets, political
liberties, and a limited public sector. Indeed, one can go further
and say that the majority of American europhiles probably dream
of one day importing the EUs socialist-leaning pretensions.
But on this issue, Helms and Gramm, and their friends in various
think tanks in Washington, London, and elsewhere, are wrong,
and perhaps calamitously so.
Especially because the EU has the potential to become a spoiler
in the Atlantic relationship to, lets be frank,
become the agent of those with designs to break up the alliance,
force the United States to leave military bases in Europe, and
diminish the American economic presence there America
the superpower needs to do everything it can to prevent a decoupling.
It may find the EU an unlikely partner, but the United States
needs regularly to remind Europeans of our common aspirations.
This should not be too difficult. As President Bushs trip
to Europe in June made clear, the main differences do not separate
one side of the Atlantic from the other, but two groups within
all postindustrial, technologized societies: One trusts the
state to provide answers to problems, the other one does not.
This means that an administration such as Bushs should
forge links with those European governments that share its vision
of freer economic competition, of the use of antitrust legislation
to serve consumers rather than threatened competitors, and of
a general rollback in the role of the state. This is the best
way toward an EU the United States can live and prosper with.
In the first year of the Bush administration, these politicians
are Italys Silvio Berlusconi and Spains Jose Maria
Aznar (and not for nothing did Bush begin his European tour
in Madrid). But Democrats in Congress who accept the market
but are leery of too much Hayekian-style competition (true New
Democrats) should also realize that they too have allies in
Europe, most notably Britains Tony Blair and his intellectual
Chancellor of the Exchequer Gordon Brown, and probably also
Germanys Gerhard Schröder. These men may harbor a
desire to manage capitalism but are fascinated by
its potential nonetheless, and they likewise do not want to
see America and Europe decouple, realizing that both sides would
be losers for it. None of the leftists in government in France
today really identifies with anyone in America, but it is still
an open question who will gain power next year in legislative
and presidential elections.
Allies in national governments have the ability to change the
EU, since they own it. The bureaucrats at the Brussels institutions,
being more influenced by the French bureaucratic model, undoubtedly
have the ability to turn the EU into a centralized monolith
that Americans and Britons would despise. Many of them might
also prefer to drive a transatlantic wedge. But the EU is not
institutionally an enemy of the United States. It equally has
the potential to disperse power away from national capitals
and send it closer to the regions and, therefore, to the individual.
This is exactly the type of evolution that would please Republicans,
especially the former governor who often said during the campaign,
Texans can run Texas.
But either way, to get results of this kind we need a more
powerful Britain inside the EU, not one that has disengaged.
Rather than freeing our ally Britain from the clutches
of Brussels, we need Britain to play a strong role in the EU.
Tory Euroskeptics
For George W. Bush, the danger is that Republicans risk allowing
themselves to be unduly swayed by the euroskeptical wing of
Britains Conservative Party. This is the European political
party closest to the Republicans it is the party of Margaret
Thatcher, after all and the most important plank in its
last manifesto is to save the pound. At least one member of
the last shadow Cabinet, and several of its front benchers,
wanted to pull out of the EU altogether, or at least to renegotiate
the relationship, by which they mean more or less casting the
Continent adrift from Britain. These Tories are calling on Republicans
to help them fight Brussels on grounds that appeal
to the GOP soul arguing that its institutions seek to
weaken British sovereignty and its commitment to free markets.
Though many are probably motivated by noble instincts
pro-American sympathies and/or a fear of seeing an erosion of
the nation-state, which they see as the only political institution
that can make democracy and civil liberties possible for citizens
they sometimes engage in rhetorical legerdemain: They
point out to their American friends that the majority of Britons
are ambivalent about the euro and about deeper European integration,
but they leave out the inconvenient fact that an even larger
majority of Britons tell pollsters that they do not want to
leave the EU.
It was not surprising, then, to see Sen. Gramm go to London
on July 4, 2000, to invite Britain to join NAFTA. The senator
went at the invitation of one of the most redoubtable British
europhobes, publisher Conrad Black. Black, who leads a vigorous
campaign against Britains participation in Europe, claimed
that hed gotten a positive reaction from Bush to the idea
of Britain in NAFTA. Even if this was just a misunderstanding,
he seems to have persuaded others. Sens. Helms and Gordon Smith,
writing in the Black-owned Daily Telegraph, warned earlier this
year that the EU is anti-American.
A bit lost in all this, perhaps, is the discomfiting fact that
it was the europhobes who led the Tory party to electoral ruin
on June 7. There seems, in fact, to exist an inverse relationship
between the impact that this wing of the Tories and their media
partners have on Britons and that which they enjoy among congressional
Republicans. Though its true that the fear of running
afoul of Black-owned publications does make many pro-EU Tories
mind what they say in public, overall, he seems to be losing
the battle. After the electoral defeat, Tories who are more
moderate on Europe showed signs of emancipation. William Hague,
who made the campaign to save the pound the central
point of the elections, quit the morning after the loss. Subsequently,
two of the top three vote getters among MPs in the race for
party leader were europhiles: former defense minister Michael
Portillo and Kenneth Clarke, who has held numerous senior government
posts. When they talk about renegotiating with Brussels,
what they mean is using British influence within the EU to change
the nature of the EU as a whole. This is something that Britons
wholly support, that the United States ought to encourage, and
which would ultimately benefit all Europeans.
An Ally That Grates
It is not difficult to see why the EU makes American policymakers,
especially Republicans, uncomfortable. The first actual threat
to U.S. defense that the new Bush administration faced as it
came into office came after all not from an enemy, but from
our European allies. Their insistence on building a rapid reaction
force, which the French want to make independent of NATO, as
well as their rejection of Bushs missile defense plans,
risks creating a split in the Alliance. I have already mentioned
the EU Commissions scrapping of the GE/Honeywell deal,
a merger between two American companies. More generally, the
EU all too often presents itself as an experiment in the social
market, if not as an outright challenger to the United
States. The euro, we have heard all too often since its inception,
will one day rival the dollar as the world reserve currency,
with adverse consequences for American borrowing rates. It was
the EU not its constituent members that refused
to buy U.S. beef and bananas. The man who carried the message
was Leon Brittan, the EU commissioner, not Sir Leon, the former
British official.
All this is true, but it ignores certain important points that
Bush administration officials ought to consider as they fashion
a European policy.
The first is the most obvious: The EU is not going to go away,
and sudden American animosity against the experiment taking
place in Europe will badly backfire in several ways. Those within
the European Union who want a transatlantic divide would seize
upon such opposition as evidence that the U.S. is not interested
in a partnership between allies, and as further reason for erecting
a superstate that can stand up to the Americans.
More important, the description of the European Union as a
troublesome Leviathan-in-waiting purposefully ignores the fact
that the EU has struck a blow for classical liberalism that
no other existent organization can rival: 350 million people
can now transport themselves, their capital, their goods, and
their services unmolested across the borders of 15 nations.
Protectionism may not have entirely disappeared among members,
but it has been made very difficult. The euro itself represents
a major step toward global exchange-rate stability. Already
12 different currencies have ceased floating against each other
according to the whims of currency speculators or, worse, to
those of panicking politicians trying to gain an illusory economic
advantage over their neighbors through depreciation.
The europhobes rejection of the EU can, in fact, often
(though not always) be best understood not as the reaction of
free-marketers aghast at a social democratic Leviathan, but
as the uneasiness European conservatives-cum-nationalists feel
about classical liberalism. More than once Ive noticed
the whiff of something akin to nineteenth century German romanticism
in the fulminations of euroskeptics against this institution
for making borders and different exchanges disappear.
Following Tory anti-EU urgings would therefore make matters
worse. Britain is our strongest ally in the EU, the one that
most stands up for values that we hold dear. It is also the
member state most likely to rally others to use EU institutions
to push a free-market agenda. U.S. policymakers should therefore
try to do all they can to raise Britains voice inside
EU councils, not encourage its departure. A worthy goal for
a free-market administration would be to effect a linkup with
the euro and the yen that would allow investors and traders
to plan ahead without the risk of currency instability rather
than chasing some neomercantilist chimera by trying to retain
the dollars status as sole world reserve currency (it
will remain so as long as America is the worlds superpower,
not the other way around). Likewise, the administration should
not pursue a destructive policy of tit-for-tat retaliation against
an EU that drags its feet on trade, but quietly work for a gradual
elimination of tariffs between NAFTA and the EU in order to
pave the way for a Trans-Atlantic Single Market.
U.S. Trade Representative Robert Zoellick has already shown
the way by getting rid of one of the stupidest irritants in
the relationship, the battle over banana subsidies. Indeed,
from the beginning of the administration, Zoellick has been
the senior official who seems to have best understood the need
to deal with the EU head-on.
The Bush administration could not have a more opportune moment
to influence matters on all these fronts, as EU countries are
now on the cusp of tremendous change. In less than a year, euro
notes and coins will be introduced in other words, what
has until now been mostly a matter for central bankers and investment
professionals will be part of the everyday life of over 300
million Europeans. The European Union will also soon be expanding
to take in East European candidates, and the former Iron Curtain
captives will bring with them a more skeptical view of the supposedly
benevolent state, a view mainly missing in EU councils.
More important, a struggle is being waged at the center of the
EU itself sometimes quietly, often publicly between
the forces of control and centralization on one hand and those
of pluralism, devolution, and liberalization on the other. The
decisions Europeans make about their currency, their armed forces,
and their political institutions are important in their own
right and by themselves will affect their relationship with
the United States for years to come. But the outcome of the
struggle for the heart of the EU will set the Union on a course
not easily reversible for even longer. An Inter-Governmental
Conference to be concluded by 2004 will define which competencies
properly belong to the EU, which to the nation-state, which
to the regions. No conference can impose changes that only take
place organically, but calling an IGC shows that the question
of regionalism is being debated. Berlusconis government
is pro-devolution, copying the work that Spain has done and
that Blair has begun with Scotland, Wales, and Northern Ireland.
A War Child
It is perhaps worth remembering that men who share Americas
libertarian instincts have been in charge of the EU before.
Indeed, the Union had classical liberal beginnings, as even
its biggest detractors readily admit. It was a post-World War
II attempt at stopping government interference in the lives
of Europeans. The machinery is still in place.
The past two centuries have belonged to the nation-state and
the last century increasingly to its corollary, the welfare
state. Napoleons armies provided the initial impetus for
the creation of two large unified countries out of the scores
of principalities, duchies, bishoprics, and republics that straddled
the Continent between the Mediterranean and Scandinavia. The
spread of the Industrial Revolution through Europe strengthened
that process, both by making the case for economies of scale
and by requiring government intervention to cope with the dislocations
and turbulence of rapid industrialization. Later still, major
wars had the same effect.
The last one caused such devastation that the survivors realized
something radical had to be done. The EUs founding fathers
and early supporters, men like the Franco-Luxembourgeois Robert
Schuman and the Rhinelander Konrad Adanauer, had witnessed the
worst ravages of state power, and what they wanted most was
to master it. Churchill, no socialist he, spoke of the need
for a kind of United States of Europe. These statesmen
sought a lasting reconciliation between Germany and France,
yes, but they had other things in mind as well. As even the
europhobic Belgian writer Paul Belien recognized in a Centre
for the New Europe pamphlet:
The EEC of the Treaty of Rome was set up as an instrument for
economic liberalization. The aim of transferring national sovereignty
to the supranational level was to prevent the national levels
from becoming too interventionist. The net result should be
less government interference.
The U.S. actively supported all these goals. By 1954, the EUs
predecessor, the European Coal and Steel Community, had achieved
nearly barrier-free trade in coal, steel, coke, and pig iron.
Unsurprisingly, its six members discovered that trade in these
commodities shot up.
But along came Charles De Gaulle, who did not share antisovereign
dreams but who nonetheless saw the EU as a means to control
Germany. Significantly, De Gaulle recognized the British threat
early on, vetoing Britains entry into the Union expressly
because of its special relationship with the United
States. Britain joined finally in 1973, after the general had
passed away, but little more than a decade later, in 1985, Jacques
Delors was named president of the European Commission. Delors
was far less truculent than De Gaulle, but he was an heir to
two different European traditions that emphasize secrecy and
solidarity with the less fortunate: Catholicism
and socialism. When the sense of mission of the former is added
to the latter, the result can suffocate industry.
More than any other senior EU official before him, Delors endeavored
to suffuse the Union with the philosophy of the welfare state.
It was he who introduced the social concept to the
EU, by which is meant imposing on members a (very high) minimum
level of welfare legislation. Since the EU was the tool through
which competition was being introduced into François
Mitterrands France, Delors decided he would apply jiujitsu
and use the EU to spread French socialism. The idea may have
been to protect workers from the competition brought in by internally
open borders, but the results were clogged labor markets and
double-digit unemployment. Not only did Delors set the EU on
a different path from that which it had followed before, but
his attempts to impose from Brussels unwanted social regulations
on free-market, Thatcherite Britain fanned flames of europhobia
there that still have not died. He did more than just poison
the atmosphere with regard to Britain; he also began to strain
ties with Reagans America.
To European socialists, an America that was setting an example
by succeeding economically through free-market policies and
winning the Cold War by increasing military spending rightly
loomed as a threat to their existence. The ultimate collapse
of the Soviet Union compounded the disaster by leaving America
as the sole superpower, an hyperpuissance, in the
words of French Foreign Minister Hubert Védrine. It needed
to be countered, and the EU handily provided the tools for doing
so, now that Delors had introduced the social straitjacket.
The ascendancy of centralizing forces within the EU would make
Europeans more intractable U.S. allies, especially for center-right
American governments interested in promoting free trade and
the liberal system around the world. Dirigistes, from the level
of the foreign ministry down to the shop-floor labor organizer,
are resolutely anti-American and want nothing more than to thwart
American aims.
Disappearing Sovereignty
It is not difficult, therefore, to see why many Britons and
Americans have become so concerned about the direction the EU
has taken. For the past 15 years they have seen the growth of
an organization that is increasingly doing the bidding of dirigistes
in France, Italy, and Germany by forcing other reluctant nations
to accept welfare policies or as the Tories would put
it, an unelected, Brussels-based bureaucracy that is sapping
decision-making powers from a sovereign parliament.
For historical reasons, sovereignty has always seemed more
important to Britons and Americans than to their European cousins.
Our Declaration of Independence is a concise explanation to
the rest of the world as to why the colonists sought to assume
among the powers of the earth, the separate and equal station
to which the Laws of Nature and of Natures God entitles
them. Britons, an island people, are no less enamored
of their independence. The last foreign troops to enter the
British Isles ready for action were the Dutch, in 1688, and
they were invited in by a parliamentary faction. Before that,
one would have to go back to 1066 and the Normans; no other
people on the Continent can lay claim to such a long history
of running their own affairs. It is these similarities that
have convinced many Tories that Britain would be better off
to throw its lot in with the United States and the North American
Free Trade Agreement. On one side they see a Continental institution
that increasingly wants to impose a code of welfare provisions
the truly Napoleonic Acquis Communautaire that
the majority of Britons reject, and on the other they have Americans,
with whom they share ties of language, blood, and philosophy.
It should not surprise that, on the other side of the Atlantic,
they have found Republicans willing to lend a sympathetic ear.
British europhobes have a response to the argument that only
London can really make sure that the EU struggle is won by pluralists:
They say they could never get their views across in an EU they
see as dominated by the Franco-German Axis. But
while the imperative of Franco-German rapprochement after World
War II did require Germany and France to close ranks during
the early years of the EU, this is decreasingly the case. The
relationship has been characterized by a notable absence of
warmth in the post Kohl-Mitterrand era. Todays three leaders
the cohabiting Chirac and Jospin and Chancellor Gerhard
Schröder plainly do not get on. Chirac is a Gaullist
and therefore doesnt see eye to eye with the two Socialists,
while the doctrinaire Jospin cant stomach the Clintonian
absence of principle in his German counterpart. And Britain,
despite all that the British europhobes say, does have a very
significant, positive impact on the EU one that is easily
measurable. Its opposition to most forms of harmonization has
been invaluable for the cause of liberality. It frustrated the
imposition of an EU-wide withholding tax on savings, which was
a sure bet until Chancellor Brown threatened to veto it at the
EU summit in Lisbon. At the EU summit in Nice, Blair stood firm
by blocking attempts to take the national veto away. It is of
utmost important for states to keep the veto for all important
items, as majorities can sometimes be found for the most economically
irrational measures.
So it would be to Europes centralizers that an EU without
Britain would be bequeathed, notwithstanding the governments
of Berlusconi and Aznar. This would be a potentially disastrous
outcome for America. Economically, we can ill afford to give
up on attempts to improve our trade relationship with the rest
of the EU, even if what we get in exchange is tariff-free trade
with Britain. As one would expect, two-way trade with Britain
is far smaller than trade with the EU. But there is also the
damage one would see to the cross-investment America already
enjoys with the rest of the Continent, of which Daimler-Chrysler
is but the best known example. Progress on all these fronts
would be severely set back if we took Britain out
of the EU. Not only would the strongest advocate for our common
values among the four largest EU members be gone, bad as that
is in itself, but Britains departure would generate unprecedented
resentment among the other EU member states. The likelihood
that the Union would evolve over time into an entity inimical
to U.S. (and British) interests would increase very significantly.
There will always be a strong temptation for a Republican administration
to listen to the Tories, even when theyre in opposition.
The Tory shadow defense minister, Iain Duncan Smith, got an
audience with Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld before the holder
of the actual post, Geoff Hoon, got through the door. But if
the Tories dont change under new management in the next
few years, they are apt to distance themselves from Bushs
type of Republicanism more and more. Under William Hague, the
Tories emphasized the aspects of conservatism suspicion
of anything that threatens the nation-state, fear of immigrants,
etc. that the inhabitant of the White House puts least
emphasis on. And when it comes to privatization and rolling
back government, the Tories and the White House are headed in
separate directions.
Universal Values
The trouble is, the United States from its very beginning as
an independent nation has been based on universal values. This
involves much more than just Americas history as a land
of immigrants, but deals primarily with Americas founding
principles (though the principles no doubt engendered the history
that was to come). Philosophically, the American colonists could
base their resolve to break free neither on racial grounds (they
were separating from fellow Britons, after all) nor on an ancient,
uncodified constitution, as British and French parliamentarians
did, respectively, in 1688 and 1789. So they discovered the
inalienable rights that man was born with and which
applied to all, inside or outside the Volk. Europes blood-and-soil
nationalism has rarely stained American history, so the debate
gripping the Tories is less an issue with us.
The europhobes who would leave the EU to join NAFTA have, then,
tragically misunderstood America as an idea. But, much worse,
they have not grasped the exigencies of its status as a world
power. Militarily, this would spell even worse disaster. Present
French designs to make the European rapid reaction force independent
of NATO would quickly come to fruition, shattering the Alliance.
Europe all of it is the center of gravity of Americas
global power projection. America can prepare to deal with potential
hot-spots throughout the world only as long as its international
political base, the Atlantic Alliance, holds.
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