By Francis X. Rocca on 1.31.03 @ 12:05AM
Discord over Iraq signals the end of Franco-German hegemony.
Correction: The article below mistakenly repeats initial
reports crediting Spanish Prime Minister Aznar with the idea for
the declaration. In fact, the statement grew out of an op-ed which
Michael Gonzalez of the Wall Street Journal Europe
solicited from Italy's Berlusconi, who contacted his Spanish
counterpart, who in turn rallied the other leaders.
There's nothing new at first glance in the joint declaration
on Iraq released yesterday by eight European leaders. The Europeans
don't call for the overthrow of Saddam Hussein, just the
elimination of his weapons of mass destruction; and they
scrupulously make their argument in terms of the U.N. Security
Council resolutions which Hussein has flouted.
But in reaffirming the "common values" of Europe and the United
States, and the Old World's debt to the New for the defeat of
20th-century totalitarianism, the statement clashes with the
anti-Americanism that's been spreading lately through Europe's
politics and press.
What's even more significant, in repeatedly calling for "unity"
and "cohesion" in facing Iraq, the statement absolves the U.S. of
ignoring the will of the international community, and effectively
lays that charge on those who oppose the use of force.
Spain's Prime Minister José María Aznar reportedly
initiated the declaration, which was also signed by Britain's Tony
Blair, Italy's Silvio Berlusconi, and the heads of state or
government of Portugal, Hungary, Poland, Denmark and the Czech
Republic.
The most conspicuous absences are of course France's Jacques
Chirac and Germany's Gerhard Schroeder, and it is to these most
prominent opponents of war that the message is clearly
addressed.
"They are the ones that are anti-European because they assumed
their position would be shared by the others," said Berlusconi's
defense minister Antonio Martino, making the same point less
diplomatically the night before the declaration was published.
After months of hearing about "cowboy" Bush's "unilateralism" on
Iraq, such talk is refreshing. In part it bespeaks the influence of
Rumsfeld's so-called "new" Europe: three of the declaration's
signers are from Eastern countries who recently joined NATO and are
slated to join the E.U. next year, and whose decades under Soviet
rule left them with a benign attitude toward American power. The
cheers that greeted Ronald Reagan on his Eastern victory tour a
dozen years ago have yet to die out.
The prospect of E.U. expansion is also emboldening older members
to buck the Franco-German axis. That's refreshing too. Aznar and
Berlusconi are economic liberals whose policies exemplify the
reforms that Europe needs in order to thrive. In this respect, as
in their support for U.S. foreign policy, Aznar and Berlusconi's
biggest ally is Tony Blair, leader of a nation whose ties to Europe
are rivaled by those to America.
In economic, political and cultural terms, Germany and France
defined post-war Europe. In this century, they will have to share
that power with nations to the east, west and south. Hopefully that
will mean a more dynamic continent and warmer transatlantic
relations. In any case, it will make Europe a far more interesting
place to watch.
topics:
Foreign Policy, Iraq, NATO