*He may bring fresh hope and cheer, but the world won't stop hating America*

Two months ago I brought out a book called *In Defence of America*. A short
book, perhaps I should say. I did not want or try to defend George W. Bush's
invasion of Iraq, or his creation of the prison camp at Guantanamo Bay,
which stand as an offence against intelligence, humanity and the rule of
law. But I did take issue with the *antiAmericanis*m that I felt had
blossomed in Europe since the fall of the Soviet Union, had taken root
during the Bush years and seemed likely to outlast him.

* Does Barack Obama's victory make that case redundant? When crowds are
celebrating across Europe, when columnists are heralding the rebirth of
America, is there no need any more for that argument? Unfortunately not. Mr
Obama's triumph makes the case easier to argue; it does not get rid of the
reasons for making it.*
I would agree entirely with Mr Obama's champions that his success is
momentous. The image of Barack, Michelle and their daughters, waving high,
over the caption "President-elect", changed the role of the US in the world.
It showed that the US can confront the worst shadow over its claim to be
united by ideals of equality and freedom: the rifts and prejudices which are
the legacy of slavery and institutional racism. Americans' overwhelming vote
for the son of a Muslim confounded the charge that the US is on a crusade
against that religion. After years in which, critics say, the US was
hypocritical (and unsuccessful) in promoting democracy, the election showed
that it can live up to its own ideals of democratic change.

* That does not get rid of the deep opposition that now exists to the US
taking a leading role in the world, and the suspicion of its motives. It
does not get rid of the filter of prejudice that takes for granted the best
that the US achieves, and exaggerates the worst.

Expectations of Mr Obama around the world have moved from the vocabulary of
politics into magic*. To hear some claims that this is a giant step for
mankind, you would think that people had found a universal saviour. Despite
the determination of Mr Obama to rebuild ties with the world he is bound to
disappoint those hopes.* He may run into the usual limits of US influence,
force or money. Or he may, with every justification, pursue the interests of
300 million Americans, not those of six billion other people. The old
resentment of the US may then be laid at his door.

* On Sunday I took part in a debate on the role of the US as the world's
policeman as part of the Battle of Ideas, a weekend of talks in London
sponsored by *The Times*. The audience – urban , educated, moderate in
choice of words – was critical of the US, as were the other panellists (an
academic and a blogger). The US was lawless, guided only by self-interest,
they said – and they were not just talking about the Bush years. Many
derided the actions of the US in Central and Eastern Europe, denying that it
gave those countries much support.

One man said quietly to me afterwards that he felt at odds with much of the
audience and thought that it was a generational division. "If you grew up in
the Cold War, you remember thinking that the bomb might drop, you remember
the Marshall Plan. But I think many younger people just say, 'That was then,
now is different'."

I agree with him. You cannot dismiss the huge building blocks of the US's
postwar achievement in reconstructing Europe and in setting up the United
Nations as irrelevant to the present. *The foreign policy of the US has
always been a mixture of self-interest and idealism, never as pure as
admirers would like, rarely as venal as critics maintain. In the past 20
years its support of central and eastern European countries, financially and
diplomatically, has been crucial to the smoothness with which many moved
from the Soviet Union to the European Union. *

Of course, the US has been high-handed in its manner from its birth. The
fall of the Soviet Union, in making it the world's superpower, added
triumphalism. The national shock of September 11, 2001, injected paranoia
and an ugly version of its historic sense of manifest destiny to its
confused attempt to identify its enemies. The Bush Administration
specialised in handcrafted insults of old allies.

It would be wrong to pretend that Mr Bush was entirely an oddity in his
foreign policy. You cannot reject the worst of the US's actions without
throwing out the idealism and the willingness to intervene in others'
problems, which inspired its best. If it were not for Iraq, Bush would have
won more credit for the past two years, in which he has done much of what is
reasonable for the world to ask of a US president. He has worked with other
countries through the United Nations, tried to engage the Middle East and
taken the great share of military burdens in joint conflicts.

Mr Obama said that he wanted to restore the US's standing in the world.
Already, he has done so. He will be incomparably better than Mr Bush. But
his foreign champions seem to want from him a vast commitment of time, money
and lives of US soldiers – and in their interests, as much as the US's own.
That is to set for him a standard that no US president has tried to meet. It
is to construct a pretext to let loose again, at some point, the
antiAmerican sentiment that has certainly not gone away.

Of course, the US has been high-handed in its manner from its birth. The
fall of the Soviet Union, in making it the world's superpower, added
triumphalism. T*he national shock of September 11, 2001, injected paranoia
and an ugly version of its historic sense of manifest destiny to its
confused attempt to identify its enemies.* The Bush Administration
specialised in handcrafted insults of old allies.

It would be wrong to pretend that Mr Bush was entirely an oddity in his
foreign policy. You cannot reject the worst of the US's actions without
throwing out the idealism and the willingness to intervene in others'
problems, which inspired its best. If it were not for Iraq, Bush would have
won more credit for the past two years, in which he has done much of what is
reasonable for the world to ask of a US president. He has worked with other
countries through the United Nations, tried to engage the Middle East and
taken the great share of military burdens in joint conflicts.

Mr Obama said that he wanted to restore the US's standing in the world.
Already, he has done so. He will be incomparably better than Mr Bush. But
his foreign champions seem to want from him a vast commitment of time, money
and lives of US soldiers – and in their interests, as much as the US's own.
That is to set for him a standard that no US president has tried to meet. It
is to construct a pretext to let loose again, at some point, the
antiAmerican sentiment that has certainly not gone away.

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