-Caveat Lector-

Article28  January 2003
The other war
by Brendan O'Neill


As the war of words between Bush, Chirac and Schroeder hots up, many
imagine that a transatlantic battle is taking place - with profound
disagreements over Iraq threatening to tear apart the Western alliance.

Anti-war protesters and liberal commentators imagine a Europe standing up
to self-

serving America. According to the Los Angeles Times, France has declared
'a war against the war' (1). Others have congratulated German leader
Gerhard Schroeder for 'pulling the plug' on President Bush's international
ambitions. 'European leaders steadfastly against going to war', says one
headline, reporting that 'political leaders in European capitals are resolved
to slow the Bush administration's drive towards military confrontation' (2).

Meanwhile, pro-war writers and US officials complain that America is
hampered by

lily-livered Europeans. Defence secretary Donald Rumsfeld denounced
France and Germany as 'old Europe' (3). In pro-war circles in the US,
European naysayers are referred to as an 'Axis of Weasels'. As for the
French, they've have been called many things in their time, but none
comes close to 'cheese-eating surrender monkeys' for their refusal to back
an attack on Saddam (4).

Behind the catfights, is there a principled clash between a pro-war
America and an

anti-war Europe? Not quite. There are certainly serious splits in the
Western alliance. France has threatened to use its position on the United
Nations Security Council to veto any decision to attack Iraq, while
Germany has made opposing US militarism into a vote-winner at home. But
the Europe v America clash is today driven less by determined policies, or
even by old-style power politics, than by cowardice and opportunism on all
sides.

Both Europe and America agree that Iraq is a threat to the world, that
Saddam

must be disciplined, and that we in the West should be the ones to do it.
Some anti-war types may have delusions about Europe's supposedly anti-
imperialist stance, but France and Germany fully accept the West's right to
determine what should and shouldn't happen in Iraq. What these states
fear, however, are the unpredictable consequences of all-out war.

German foreign minister Joschka Fischer has made a name for himself as
Germany's

anti-war-with-Iraq spokesman - but every time he says the West should
avoid a military confrontation with Iraq, he adds a rider about needing to
find other ways to 'deal with Saddam'. On 20 January 2003, Fischer
declared: 'We have no illusions about the brutal nature of Saddam Hussein's
regime, therefore we all demand that Baghdad implement the relevant UN
resolutions in full.' (5)

What worries Fischer about war is what might happen as a consequence.
'In

addition to disastrous consequences for long-term regional stability, we
also fear possible negative repercussions for the joint fight against
terrorism', he says, describing these as 'the fundamental reasons for our
rejection of military action' (6). There is no German desire seriously to
challenge an invasion of Iraq, but rather a fear of risky war, of the
unknowable and unpredictable consequences of invading Iraq.

Likewise, France has issued numerous statements calling on Baghdad to
toe the

Western line, and has even sent its only aircraft carrier to the Gulf for
'back up' (hardly an anti-war act) (7). Yet French ministers are opposed to
war with Iraq, on the grounds that it could 'destabilise the international
order'. According to one French politician: 'It could end disastrously, for
many nations. We need to ask what a military confrontation will achieve,
apart from making the region less stable and potentially more violent.' (8)

It is the twin evils of opportunism and fear that are driving French and
German

opposition to war with Iraq. Even as France and Germany's leaders take an
apparently tough stance against America's plans for Iraq, they aren't averse
to making some mileage out of the issue for themselves - whether by
calling on Saddam to implement UN resolutions or by sending military
forces 'towards the Gulf'. It is fear of unintended consequences, of what
might happen if Western forces take decisive action over Iraq, that makes
France and Germany 'anti-war'.

The disagreements between Europe and America are over how best to deal
with

Iraq - the Bush administration wants to keep the war option open, while
France and Germany prefer the UN route. But even then, German leaders
are not absolutely opposed to war. Joschka Fischer says that war, even if
led by American forces, cannot be 'ruled out'.

If this isn't a principled spat over war and intervention, then nor is it a
traditional

clash of the great powers. There is certainly an expression of conflicting
interests in the Franco-German/American divide over what to do about
Iraq, but such divisions are now expressed very differently than in the
past.

During the Cold War years, there was often tension between America and
its

European allies. Over issues from Suez in 1956 - where British and French
forces invaded Egypt to protect the Suez Canal from being nationalised,
only to be effectively ordered out by the USA - to other Middle Eastern
and African wars, what appeared as domestic squabbles or wars of national
liberation were often a struggle for influence between American and
European forces.

Such European/American tensions were contained by the broader
West/East

framework of the Cold War, where America and Western Europe were
allied against the 'Evil Empire' of the Soviet Union. But national interests
often found their expression in international clashes.

The current squabble between American and European leaders is power
clash as

pantomime. Today's divergent interests between France and Germany and
the USA are not expressed openly, in hostile declarations or in clashes
around the globe. Rather, they tend to be expressed in underhand ways -
for example, European opposition to GM technology often looks like an
undeclared trade war against US interests, rather than being driven by real
scientific concerns about GM.

Similarly, France and Germany's differences with America over Iraq, their
recognition

that there isn't much for either of them in this war, now takes the form of
being, apparently, 'anti-war'. Instead of asserting their own interests
against America's, French and German leaders adopt an anti-war approach
to the Iraqi crisis, which has the added bonus of feeding off the
generalised anti-war sentiment among European populations.

But seriously - France and Germany as anti-war? Anyone who believes that
has a

very short memory - these are states that supported the NATO bombing of
the Serbs in the late 1990s, and France continues to interfere in the
affairs of The Ivory Coast, Algeria and other African states.

France and Germany's opportunistic opposition to invading Iraq is as much
driven

by self-serving interests as is America's war talk. The French and German
anti-war stance reflects their belief that they can gain more by stopping
the war than by pushing it ahead. In our uncertain, post-Cold War times,
some European leaders feel more comfortable with walking the walk in
international affairs than with taking any determined action.

Consider the beleaguered German leader Gerhard Schroeder. Even more
than its

European counterparts, Germany's Social Democrat ruling elite feels
isolated from its population. On 25 January 2003, backing for Schroeder's
party fell to 'an historic low' of 25 percent, which, according to the
Financial Times, 'is the lowest figure in the 26 years that the [popularity]
poll has been conducted' (9). German newspaper editorials bemoan
Schroeder's 'broken election promises and perceived drift' (10).

In response, Schroeder is attempting to rein in international action that
he thinks

might threaten Germany's position in the world order - while exploiting
Germans' and Europeans' lack of enthusiasm for war with Iraq by cynically
transforming it into a domestic policy. Germany's opposition to war with
Iraq may be an underhand stand-off (rather than a heated clash) with the
USA - but it also has a certain tone to it, along the lines of: 'Stop the
world, I want to get off!' European elites' internal uncertainty and crisis of
legitimacy are making them increasingly cautious about rocking the boat
internationally - even as they conduct their own international posturing.

For Blair's Britain, the concealed clashes between America and Europe
have stoked

up big problems. Britain cannot but support America's international
strategy, however cautious it might be about doing so. At the same time,
Britain is tied to France and Germany as part of the European Union. The
current transatlantic spat over Iraq has left the UK reeling between an
uncertain USA and a standoffish Europe.

For America's part, its clashes with Europe over Iraq reflect its increasing

discomfort with holding world power. For all the American hawks' claims
about 'determined America' having to contend with cowardly Europe, in
fact America's constant to-ing and fro-ing with Europe and the UN, and its
increasingly desperate attempts to build a 'coalition of the willing', suggest
an aversion to going it alone on the international stage.

Behind the Bushies' bellicose rhetoric about the threat of Saddam,
American leaders

are cautious about taking firm unilateral action in international affairs.
Instead of telling the UN - or France and Germany - to get stuffed, Bush
officials have gone back to Europe again and again, in an attempt to shore
up multilateral support for war with Iraq. Which begs the question - if
France, Germany and the rest really are cheese-eating, cowardly
surrender monkeys, why is the USA so desperate for their backing?

The Bush administration's response to France and Germany's dithering was
not to

write them off entirely, but almost to come down to their level. After
weeks of European leaders expressing their concern about war, Bush
officials, in the words of the New York Times, threatened to 'confront
France, Germany and other sceptics of military action against Iraq by
demanding that they agree publicly that Iraq has defied the UN Security
Council' (11). Instead of publicly hammering the French and Germans, the
US seems to be searching for something, anything, they can all agree on.

In the absence of French and German support, the USA has sought a
coalition

elsewhere. According to The Times (London): 'Despite the continued
criticism against the use of force, senior figures in the Bush administration
insist that a broad alliance is taking shape behind the scenes.' (12) US
secretary of state Colin Powell boasts that 'at least a dozen' countries are
on board (13). Who are the dodgy dozen?

So far, the Bush administration has got troop commitments from Britain,
Australia

and the Czech Republic - though British troops seem less than keen, with a
BBC report claiming that they are 'struggling to find the fighting spirit';
Australian troops have said they will 'offer support' to US forces, but are
not particularly interested in launching attacks; and when the 250 Czech
soldiers in Kuwait were offered the chance to go home if 'they did not feel
ready for war' (an attempt by the Czech defence minister to demonstrate
his nation's commitment to sorting out Saddam), 27 said yes, causing a
'severe dent' in the Czech Republic's national pride (14).

Other nations have offered only tentative support to America. According
to one

report: 'Italy was praised by the Americans for its support, although prime
minister Silvio Berlusconi has denied that the Italians will be ready to
commit troops.' (15) This is less a coalition of the willing than a coalition of
the not-so-willing, from states that are in no position to say no to America.
America's desperate search for willing supporters, anywhere it can find
them, reveals much about its uncertain approach to the Iraqi issue, its
sense of isolation on the world stage.

For all the stated differences between the American and European camps,
there is

one thing they have in common - a tendency to internationalise their
internal problems and crises. Whether it's the Bush administration asserting
authority over Iraq in an attempt to boost its domestic and international
standing, or the Schroeder government trying to offset its declining
support at home by putting a rein on risky international shifts - both sides
seem to be driven to the international arena to resolve homegrown
problems. And this looks like the most cowardly act of all - projecting
problems on to the Gulf, rather than facing up to them in the real world.

The end result is that four of the greatest powers on Earth - America,
Britain,

France and Germany - have become bogged down in clashes over what
should be done about a weak and failing state in the Middle East. Europe v
America? A plague on both their houses.

Read on:


spiked-issue: War on Iraq
(1) Move by France ups the stakes, Los Angeles Times, 22 January 2003
(2) European leaders steadfastly against going to war with Iraq, Chicago
Tribune, 20 January 2003
(3) Outrage at 'old Europe' remarks, BBC News, 23 January 2003
(4) See Anti-Europeanism in America, Timothy Garton Ash, New York Review
of Books, 13 February 2003
(5) Germany says No to Iraq involvement, Deutsche Welle, 21 January 2003
(6) Germany says No to Iraq involvement, Deutsche Welle, 21 January 2003
(7) Substantial coalition takes shape behind the scenes, The Times
(London), 27 January 2003
(8) Germany says No to Iraq involvement, Deutsche Welle, 21 January 2003
(9) Schroeder's travails, Financial Times, 25 January 2003
(10) Schroeder's travails, Financial Times, 25 January 2003
(11) US set to defy that allies agree Iraq is defying UN, Steven R Weisman,
New York Times, 23 January 2003
(12) Substantial coalition takes shape behind the scenes, The Times
(London), 27 January 2003
(13) Substantial coalition takes shape behind the scenes, The Times
(London), 27 January 2003
(14) Public shames Czechs into staying in Kuwait, Jack Fairweather, Daily
Telegraph, 24 January 2003
(15) Substantial coalition takes shape behind the scenes, The Times
(London), 27 January 2003





Reprinted from : http://www.spiked-online.com/Articles/00000006DC19.htm




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