There is a great deal of "heavy lifting" facing the new
administration on its foreign policy accounts. The general
euphoria or "honeymoon" which followed the end of the
Cold War is over and eight years of on and off concentration on
various foreign policy issues have taken their toll. Despite some
clear successes, foreign policy problems have begun piling up
around the world to a worrisome degree.
Among the more important but less dramatic of
these many problems has been the gradual souring of U.S.- European
(in particular European Union [EU]) relations. Differences and
irritants have accreted almost imperceptibly; there is no crisis.
It is an insidious problem, undramatic and corrosive rather than
explosive. But, if left unchecked, the slide toward estrangement
could result in the relationship becoming one of the most serious
in a series of troublesome issues confronting the United States.
If the United States is to continue to thrive
in the 21st century, it will be, in part, because the
United States and Europe are cooperating closely. The Atlantic
Community is a central repository of the values most of the world
now seeks, and the economic and military power on which global
stability and prosperity rest. United it can be a powerful force
for global progress. But we can no longer count on that. If we and
Europe evolve into hostile political, economic, and social
competitors, the next 50 years could be sorry indeed.
There are three areas which, mostly by
accident, have become most difficult. The first relates to
U.S.-European defense capabilities and preparedness. Both the U.S.
and the EU cut military expenditures sharply after the Cold War,
but the EU cuts have been much more extensive. The
consequence–as was vividly demonstrated in Kosovo-- has been a
growing difficulty for European forces to operate in NATO in an
integrated fashion with U.S. forces. At the same time, European
desire for an EU defense capability, and resentment at
heavy-handed U.S. behavior on security issues, has led to the
creation of the European Security and Defense Program (ESDP), a
plan to develop a capability to operate militarily independent of
NATO, that is, when the U.S. chooses not to participate. Whether
this program as it develops will turn out to be beneficial to NATO
or severely disruptive remains to be seen.
The second issue relates to the almost
miraculous amalgamation of Western Europe into the EU. It is now
emerging as a single trading area, with enormous benefits for all.
But the process of integration itself has often been difficult,
sometimes acrimonious. Partly as a result, there has occasionally
been a tendency to surmount internal friction by calling for unity
against the U.S. This has led to a number of often petty disputes,
especially in the economic and trade areas, and stands in the way
of a conceptual dialogue over how the United States and an
integrating and enlarging EU should relate to each other.
The final area relates to decisions at the end
of the Cold War about the shape of Europe. At that time, there
were perceived to be two big problems. The first was what to do
about Russia. The second was what to do about Central/East Europe,
the states lying between historic Germany and Russia which had for
centuries been a periodic source of instability and conflict. The
decision that was ultimately reached was to solve this latter
problem at the expense of the Russian issue by expanding NATO. The
Russians perceived–and continue to perceive–this as a hostile
act. Attempts to ease Russian resentment through the creation of a
Permanent Joint Council through which to consult with NATO only
served to underscore their sense of isolation. Most additional
candidates for NATO membership are increasingly neuralgic to
Russia. The Russians could be excused for concluding we are trying
to close the door permanently on their ever truly becoming a part
of Europe, especially since they cannot hope for membership in the
two institutions which at present tend to define Europe: NATO and
the EU.
These and other contemporaneous irritants
combine to threaten the unity of the Atlantic Community, a unity
which has preserved Western values in the face of a forty-year
assault by a hostile ideology. We should act now to reverse the
negative current trends before irritation becomes estrangement.
There are several positive steps which could be considered.
One such step relates to the defense industry
consolidation which has been taking place on both sides of the
Atlantic. If it is not already too late, that integration could be
expanded to include cross-Atlantic combinations. Such a move would
avoid the creation of two independent, competing defense industry
pillars, which would increase costs, decrease capability and
deepen the military and political fractures already noted. Rather,
it would instill cooperation, maximize efficiency, broaden the
market and spread costs. To move in this direction would require
the U.S. to change its "buy America" preference bias and
its regulations on technology transfer. Both of these restrictive
practices are already becoming relics of a very different past.
With the rapid changes in commercial, especially information,
technology, and the world-wide sourcing of manufacture, it is
becoming more and more difficult to assure secure, U.S.-only
sources of supply in crisis and to deny permanently technology
advances in technology to others. Technology policy instead should
be to strive to stay ahead of the pack. For their part, the
Europeans would have to drop their own "buy European"
preferences and enforce effective export controls to prevent the
global "bad actors" from acquiring the latest in weapons
and technology.
Another step to consider would be the
negotiation of a free trade agreement (FTA) between the EU and the
U.S. While this would be a significant undertaking, particularly
in the agriculture sector, the result, both in the economic and
the political fields, would be a major strengthening of
transatlantic bonds. It could as well serve as a point of
departure, establishing a framework for the next global round of
world trade negotiations. It might also make possible more rapid
accession of Central/East European countries to the EU, were the
U.S. in this way to be indirectly a party to their negotiations.
Finally, some way should be found to deal with
the seemingly conflicting objectives of the integration of Russia
into Europe and stability in Central/East Europe. As noted, the
approach to NATO expansion has to date addressed the latter at the
expense of the former. But there are steps which could help to
engage Russia in the broad architecture of security in the
Eurasian land mass. It might be possible, for example, to employ
the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) for
that purpose. In the early ‘90's, the U.S. resisted giving OSCE
a security role, out of concern that it might appear attractive as
an alternative to NATO after the Cold War. That is no longer a
live issue, and it might be time to invest OSCE with a modest
security role, perhaps beginning as a consultative group. A
directoire could be formed–consisting of the EU, Russia, the
U.S. and a representative of the neutral or non-aligned OSCE
members–to focus the larger issues of security. This, plus the
incorporation of Central/East Europe in the EU, could permit a
lengthy pause and perhaps even a de facto halt to NATO expansion,
thus terminating a major source of tension between east and west
in Europe.
These suggestions are illustrative. Whether or
not they are the precise steps which should be taken to turn
U.S.-European relations in a positive direction is a reasonable
subject for policy debate. The primary objective must be to
reverse trends now operating before they permanently disrupt what
is still the world’s most important relationship.