http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A20343-2002Sep29.html 

New U.S. Doctrine Worries Europeans 
 
Decades of Coalition-Building Seen at Risk 

By Glenn Frankel

Washington Post Foreign Service

Monday, September 30, 2002; Page A01 

BRUSSELS -- Here in the capital of the new Europe, officials are
expressing emotions ranging from concern to alarm to anger as they
contemplate the growing gap between themselves and the Bush
administration.
The immediate cause is the administration's newly declared preemption
doctrine, reserving for the United States the right to attack potential
enemies before they strike, and its determination to deal with Iraq with
or without international support. One senior European official said the
new U.S. message to Europe was: "You have become irrelevant, and unless
you do something dramatic to raise your defense expenditure, this is the
end. The phone is not ringing."
But officials and analysts here say their problems with Washington go
much deeper than the current crisis. They fear that the Bush
administration, in the name of countering threats from terrorists and
from rogue states since the Sept. 11 attacks last year, is jettisoning
the post-World War II system of multilateral institutions and coalitions
-- such as the U.N. Security Council and the NATO alliance -- that the
United States helped build, and which helped preserve peace and
stability for nearly 60 years.
"The mixture of containment and establishing an international rule book
by and large encouraged democracy, the rule of law and open markets
throughout the world," Chris Patten, the European Union's external
affairs minister, said in an interview Friday. "Why should anyone think
that that approach was somehow less relevant after September 11th? I
think it's more relevant."
Rallies by tens of thousands of anti-war demonstrators in London and
Rome on Saturday were reminiscent of the protests of the early 1980s in
favor of nuclear disarmament and against President Ronald Reagan's tough
stance on the Soviet Union. But here in Brussels, opposition to what is
seen as the administration's emerging unilateralism comes not just from
the left but from across the board, and includes the highest levels of
the EU.
"There's a lot of concern, and it's growing and it's not just the usual
suspects, it's across the spectrum," said John Palmer, director of the
European Policy Center, a prominent Brussels research group.
Officials concede that one of their problems is that they do not speak
with one voice. The views of European leaders range from British Prime
Minister Tony Blair's spirited endorsement of the Bush administration's
Iraq policy to German Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder's equally spirited
criticism, with French President Jacques Chirac somewhere in between.
"It's our weakness, not America's strength, that is the problem," said
Elmar Brok, chairman of the European Parliament's foreign affairs
committee. "We have no influence because we have no common European
approach."
Although the European Union is a baroque collection of institutions,
regulations and formalism designed to transform narrow national
interests into collective policies, feelings still count -- and European
feelings have been badly bruised in recent months. The Europeans say the
administration views them as "Euro wimps" who don't pull their weight
militarily, and who prefer prevarication to plain-speaking and
appeasement to action. Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld's recent
appearance at a NATO meeting in Warsaw, during which he snubbed the
German defense minister because of Schroeder's strong opposition to
military action against Iraq, was the latest insult.
"There's a tone of contempt that people here deeply resent," said John
Wyles, a journalist and policy strategist who works for GPlus Europe, a
consulting firm.
Many officials regret that Schroeder took his stance, which helped him
win a narrow reelection victory last week, without consulting his
European partners. But they say that Schroeder was reflecting the views
not just of the German electorate, but of people throughout the
continent. "President Bush would not be able to walk the streets of
Berlin shaking hands right now," a senior official said, "or the streets
of Madrid."
Europeans also resent U.S. predictions that they will inevitably go
along with military action against Iraq, whether it is sanctioned by the
United Nations or not. "The consequences of allowing America to go in
alone would be too severe," conceded another senior official. But not
every European leader would go along, he said. "A lot of Europeans would
feel they'd been put in an intolerable position." For those who would
agree to participate militarily, "it would be less a coalition of the
willing than of the dragooned."
Relations with the Bush administration were icy even before the Sept. 11
attacks. Washington's opposition to the Kyoto treaty on global warming,
its demand to be exempted from the reach of the new International
Criminal Court and its staunch support of Israel's hard-line prime
minister, Ariel Sharon, have caused anger and consternation here. U.S.
officials, in turn, complained that Europe thrived because it was
nestled under a security umbrella provided and paid for by the United
States, and that if it wanted more influence, it needed to contribute
more to its own defense. The United States spends about twice as much on
defense as do all of its 18 NATO partners combined.
The terrorist attacks on New York and the Pentagon momentarily
overshadowed those disputes and created a wave of sympathy and support
for the United States. "We're All Americans Now," declared the front
page of Le Monde, the left-of-center Paris daily that usually takes
pleasure in America-bashing.
But that sentiment quickly faded. European officials now concede that
they were slow to recognize the depth of the wound and shock to
Americans -- and the degree to which Americans would take literally the
concept of a war on terrorism. "For you, it's not symbolic, it's a real
term," one official said. "From that moment, you decided it's your
problem and you have to solve it and the rest of the world can either
help, or, if not, to hell with them."
Europeans, who have experienced terrorism in such places as Northern
Ireland and the Basque region of Spain, resent being dictated to. Many
people contend that the Americans have put too much emphasis on a
military approach to attacking terrorism and not enough on dealing with
what they identify as root causes, such as poverty and lack of freedoms.
"None of this in any way justifies or explains what happened on
September 11th," Patten said, "but perhaps it means we have a slightly
more nuanced idea of how you deal with terrorism."
Worse, many believe that Washington has adopted a militarized foreign
policy that divides the world too simply into friends and enemies.
Bush's "axis of evil" characterization, lumping North Korea and Iran
with Iraq, disturbed many here -- including Britain, the United States'
most loyal European partner, which was engaged in trying to build
bridges to moderates in Iran when Bush's rhetorical hammer fell.
The conflict over Iraq has crystallized many European fears. After the
hawkish statements of Vice President Cheney, national security adviser
Condoleezza Rice and Rumsfeld, many here concluded that the Bush
administration had no genuine interest in seeking to disarm Iraq of
weapons of mass destruction, but was using the issue as a ploy to topple
Saddam Hussein under any circumstances. While they welcomed Bush's
decision to seek a new U.N. Security Council resolution on weapons
inspections -- and give Britain's Blair credit for helping guide Bush in
that direction -- they fear that the administration is only using the
council as justification for military action, and will go ahead even
without U.N. assent.
"It was wholly legitimate for President Bush to go to the United Nations
and to challenge the international community to make good on what it
says it believes," said Patten. "But that's just not for one day. It's
got to be for real."
Bush's new strategic doctrine formalizes some of the trends Europeans
find most troubling. "Preemption says to us, 'This is an empire and we
will not allow anybody to get close to our capabilities and we are ready
to act to prevent that from happening,' " a senior official said.
Another official said the doctrine set a bad precedent -- if it is all
right for the United States to attack another country preemptively for
supporting terrorism, he asked, then what is to prevent India from
dropping a nuclear bomb on Islamabad, the capital of Pakistan, in
retaliation for Pakistani support for separatists in Kashmir?
European officials search for signs that the American public is less
hard-line than the administration. Every one of a half-dozen officials
interviewed last week cited the recent opinion survey sponsored by the
U.S. German Marshall Fund and Chicago Council of Foreign Relations
indicating a convergence in views on security issues between Americans
and Europeans and a solid American majority in favor of obtaining
Security Council support for any attack on Iraq. Most cited with
approval former vice president Al Gore's attack on administration policy
last week, although one official added, "If we'd said that here, we'd be
immediately branded as anti-American."
U.S. diplomats contend European fears are overwrought.
"Part of it [their fear] is European old-think -- the old balance of
power instincts," said a senior U.S. diplomat, referring to the Cold War
model in which strong nations balanced each other and effectively
maintained world stability. "And I think part of it is that the
Europeans see lots of reasons to interpret America's terrorism war as
America trying to bend Europe to its own will."
Some Europeans agree that officials need to calm themselves and remember
what they have in common with the United States. "There are so many
areas where we have joint interests and so many similarities between
us," said Pascal Lamy, the EU's trade commissioner. "Any good negotiator
will tell you that Lesson One is having a clear view of each side's
starting positions. Just getting there is a good start for living
together because we have to live together." 
C 2002 The Washington Post Company

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