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http://www.guardian.co.uk/Print/0,3858,4506469,00.html

Defending ourselves

Peter Kilfoyle Only a united Europe can counterbalance an increasingly paranoid and
hawkish America

Peter Kilfoyle
Monday September 23, 2002
The Guardian

In ancient Rome, the statesman Cato the Elder was renowned for declaiming, at the end 
of
every speech, that "Carthage must be destroyed", referring to Rome's long-standing
enemy. It is perhaps appropriate, therefore, that one of the rightwing thinktanks in 
the US
should be called the Cato Institute - except that the ultra-right of American politics 
sees
enemies everywhere.

The thinking of these ideologues is alien to most of us. So extreme is one of their 
number,
Paul Wolfowitz, that it is said that the description "hawk" does not do him justice 
("What
about velociraptor?" one of his former colleagues once remarked). Yet this world is 
cosily
comfortable for its inhabitants. They speak to each other and for each other, and their
websites are seamlessly linked.

If, for example, one accesses the website of the National Institute for Public Policy 
- largely
responsible for the current posture whereby the US is ready to attack non-nuclear 
nations
with nuclear weapons - better known organisations like the Heritage Foundation appear,
together with an eclectic collection of bodies, from the Korean Central News Agency, 
the
Government of Pakistan and the US Department of Defence's Missile Defence Agency (for
which the institute works).

Possibly the strangest pair of these factories of paranoia are the Centre for Security 
Policy,
and the Project for the New American Century. The former is run by the ultra-hawk 
Frank J
Gaffney. He calls UN inspections in Iraq "harebrained" and is very well-connected in
Washington.

Back in 1997 Gaffney was cosignatory of the principles of PNAC, along with Donald
Rumsfeld, Dick Cheney, Paul Wolfowitz and Lewis Libby (all senior officials to 
President
Bush), together with Jeb Bush, brother of the president and famed for his dimpled 
chads. It
was this organisation that wrote to President Bush last Friday saying: "Should Iran and
Syria refuse to comply with [our demands], the administration should consider 
appropriate
measures of retaliation against these known state sponsors of terrorism." War without 
end.

What does the PNAC stand for? Four things: increased defence spending; challenging
regimes "hostile to our interests and values"; the promotion of "political and economic
freedom"; and America's need to keep the world "friendly to our security, our 
prosperity
and our principles". In short, they wish to impose an imperialist Pax Americana on the
world.

The links and ideas among the far right are well-embedded in the current 
administration.
Those links are both personal and ideological, and heavily influence American 
government
policy. They are closely tied in, too, with the defence industry, oil interests, 
hawkish Israel
supporters and the fundamentalist Christian right.

Its current manifestation is the bellicose demand for a military solution to the 
problem of
Saddam Hussein. Many around the world breathed a sigh of relief when President Bush
went to the UN recently, unaware that the approach was merely a tactic. This
administration and its leading lights have been consistently hostile to the UN; and 
they
quickly made clear after Bush's address that, UN mandate or not, they will take out
Saddam. This can hardly have comforted the British government, which switched under the
pressure of public opinion to the inspections option, only to find it blocked by 
American
determination to effect regime change.

The ramifications of this hardline American policy on the US relationship with the 
world are
huge. First, no one can doubt in the short term America's ability to enforce its will 
on much
of the globe. Indeed, its defence document Joint Vision 2020 explicitly states: "The 
label 'full
spectrum dominance' implies that US forces are able to conduct prompt, sustained and
synchronised operations with combinations of forces tailored to specific situations, 
and with
access to and freedom to operate in all domains - space, sea, land, air and 
information." It
clearly intends total military domination - including missile defence - to effect such 
a
strategy.

The present administration also has the will to pursue such a course. It is both 
unilateral
and isolationist, and will act in America's immediate national interest, regardless of
international opinion and convention. Thus, the administration has unilaterally 
rejected
Kyoto, the international criminal court, the ABM treaty, the Biological Weapons 
Convention,
World Trade Organisation provisions and many more - all in favour of narrow American
interests. It openly despises any restraint on its autonomy.

For international organisations, this "might is right" approach is disastrous. What 
value is
the UN when the world's only superpower treats it with open contempt? What of the EU,
derided as "wimps"? What of the WTO, portrayed as a one-way street to American
advantage? What of Nato, wherein national armies are seen as subordinate to American
control and whim?

Here in the UK, we are in a substantially worse predicament. Successive governments 
have
deluded themselves that we have a "special relationship" with the US - special only in 
so far
as we tend to fall in with every crazed administration notion, and ask for nothing in 
return.
We end up as America's handrag, with diminished credibility within Europe and facing
increased hostility across the globe. Is this in the British national interest? I fear 
not.

A unipolar world is a dangerous place. It is like standing on one leg - one is far 
more liable
to lose balance than when one is standing on two, or even four legs. Increasingly, it 
is clear
that there needs to be an effective counterbalance to this over-powering American
hegemony, best illustrated by the tragedy of Palestine. Here, the EU invested large 
amounts
in the civilian infrastructure of the embryonic Palestinian Authority. Along came the 
Israeli
government, using massive American military aid, and with tacit American approval, to
destroy that peace-building capacity. Where is the sense, or the justice, in that? Is 
British
and European opinion of no account?

The time has surely come for the UK government, along with its European partners, to 
have
the courage, within the restraints of realpolitik, to reassess its foreign policy 
priorities in line
with our national interests and these new realities. Do those interests lie with those 
with
whom we do our trade? Do we have more to gain in a strengthened relationship with
Europe? Are we to be Europe's heartland or America's frontline? As we approach a
heightening of the debate on the euro, it would be appropriate to widen that debate to
include a full consideration of our community of interest with our European partners 
in a
world overshadowed by the rampant hawks in Washington. As recent events have shown, a
truly independent common defence and security policy for the EU is long overdue.

� Peter Kilfoyle is MP for Liverpool Walton and a former defence minister (1999-2000)

[EMAIL PROTECTED]

Guardian Unlimited � Guardian Newspapers Limited 2002

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