Ocnus.Net
‘A Stupid Conversation’
By Daniel Drezner, Newsweek 20/3/08
Mar 22, 2008 - 2:51:59 PM
Reports of the death of American hegemony
have been greatly exaggerated, as I argued in my last column. But this does not
mean all is well. The fall of the dollar is one obvious indicator of relative
decline; Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's celebratory visit to Baghdad
is another. Last week, French Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner told the
International Herald Tribune's Roger Cohen that "the magic is over."
America and Europe face political, economic
and demographic challenges to their longstanding primacy. This is a delicate
moment for a power transition, given the host of emerging global threats:
global warming, nuclear proliferation, macroeconomic imbalances, terrorism, the
need to reform global governance and so on. The question is, can the United
States and the European Union continue to exercise leadership on these issues?
The answer, at best, is, "not for long."
The signals of a decline in Western influence
are getting hard to ignore. The Center for Transatlantic Relations reports a
mixed bag. On the one hand, in 2006 the United States and European Union were
responsible for less than 30 percent of world exports. On the other hand, the
two regions accounted for more than 75 percent of outward foreign direct
investment. As Polish Foreign Minister Radoslaw Sikorski recently put it,
"talk of decline of the West is as old as the West itself."
To assess the strength of the transatlantic
relationship, I attended the Brussels Forum, an all-star confab orchestrated by
the German Marshall Fund (GMF). The conference made it clear that relations
between America and Europe have recovered significantly from the trough of
2002-2003. This accords with public opinion. A just-
released
British Council poll found that strong majorities in America and Europe want a
closer partnership. Both the United States and the European Union have been
humbled in recent years by missteps in the application of hard power and soft
power, as Constanze Stelzenmüller pointed out in a GMF briefing paper. The rise
of new state threats (Russia, Iran) and nonstate threats (see above) have led the
transatlantic neighborhood to recognize that they have more common than
divergent interests.
That's the good news. The bad news is that it is far from clear whether
Washington and Brussels are truly focused on external challenges and threats.
The same poll revealed that both Americans and Europeans were unimpressed with
transatlantic cooperation on peacekeeping, global warming, human rights,
poverty reduction and counterterrorism. The elites attending the Brussels Forum
seem to share this skepticism. When panelists at one meeting devoted the bulk
of their time to carping about past disputes (like NATO expansion) and
second-tier issues (like Kosovo), former U.S. ambassador to the United Nations
Richard Holbrooke complained: "We're having a really stupid conversation."
Unfortunately, this trope repeated itself
throughout the conference. At dinner one evening, I was sandwiched between a
Bundestag representative and an Austrian ambassador. Conversation was lacking
until the question of Turkish admission to the European Union came up. Both
guests remarked that it was a mistake to have offered the Ankara accession
negotiations to admit Turkey to the EU. They agreed that Russia was more a part
of Europe than Turkey. At the same time, rumors were flying of a secret plan to
sneak Turkey into the Union. This symbolizes a chronic problem that plagues the
EU: any effort to present a common external front gets sidetracked by
persistent questions about defining Europe's borders.
The United States is just as incapable of action.
Lt. Gen. Karl Eikenberry said that for state-building to proceed in
Afghanistan, military efforts need to be augmented with civilian efforts. NATO
Secretary-General Jaap de Hoop Scheffer concurred, noting that there was
"a substantial gap" between military and civilian capacities for
crisis management. This echoed a theme that Secretary of Defense Robert Gates
stressed late last year: the State Department needs more money and resources to
advance American interests in the Middle East. When one cabinet secretary
lobbies for more money for a different cabinet agency, it's a sign that
America's foreign-policy budget is way out of whack.
On issues where the transatlantic partnership
really does have the lead, it's hard to see forward progress. In Afghanistan,
NATO is paralyzed by the fact that only the Canadians are willing to send
troops to the Kandahar region. If the alliance cannot scrape together another
battalion to send to the region before NATO's Bucharest summit next month, then
the Canadians will withdraw.
On trade, no one at the conference sees any
forward progress on the Doha Round; experts were advocating a "pause"
in those talks. Trade liberalization is a negotiation process in which the
parties ostensibly see a win-win. If the United States and European Union
cannot agree on reducing agricultural subsidies, how can they possibly agree on
how to reduce global warming?
Perhaps the West's difficulties are
overstated. Perhaps conferences like the Brussels Forum allow Americans and
Europeans to vent their frustrations as a first step toward problem solving.
Nevertheless, both the Bush administration and the Barroso Commission are in
their lame-duck years. At a time when urgent action is needed, status-quo
policies are likely until 2009.
Perhaps the magic is still there, but as
Kouchner gloomily concluded, "I knew what was the West, and I don't know
what the West is now."
Source: Ocnus.net 2008