By Jeffrey Gedmin on 5.11.04 @ 12:04AM
In the view of many Germans, the U.S. is now post-Weimar. A letter from Europe.
I recently hosted Bianca Jagger for a debate in Berlin. (More
about her in a moment.) We convened in a back room at Max Moritz, a
smoky pub in Kreutzberg, a neighborhood in Berlin known mostly for
Turkish guest workers and left-wing anarchists. Crossing swords
with Bianca was Gen. (ret.) Joerg Schoenbohm, the center-right
interior minister from the nearby state of Brandenburg. The issue:
"Human Rights -- Victim in the War on Terror?" Joerg Lau, the
culture editor of the weekly Die Zeit, rounded off the
panel. The room was packed. Diplomats, think tankers, students,
taxi drivers, and locals sipped on their beer and peppered the
speakers with questions.
Now, I had wanted to discuss subjects like whether we are
turning a blind eye on Chechnya. Or what about Qaddafi's Libya? Or
the president's commitment to democracy in the Middle East? This
isn't what the audience had in mind. A gentleman who works for
German television provided the most crowd-pleasing question. Herr
Niles wanted to know why no one seems concerned with the absence of
political debate in George W. Bush's America, where a chilling
conformity and group think has taken hold. Herr Niles evidently
missed the 9-11 Commission and Dick Clarke's testimony in late
March. Or bestsellers like Al Franken's Lies and the Lying
Liars Who Tell Them; Molly Irvin's Bushwhacked; David
Corn's The Lies of George W. Bush; Eric Alterman's The
Book on Bush: How George W. (Mis)leads America. Or for that
matter the writings of Paul Krugman, Maureen Dowd, Susan Sontag,
and a few other brave dissenters. Ah, that stifling politburo in
Washington. Poor Paul O'Neill, silenced in Siberia.
Herr Niles, alas, was pushing an idea that has become very
popular in Europe. An American expat sent me a note recently,
fretting about the growth of totalitarianism in the U.S. I had a
German tell me in a letter that her son, who is now studying in the
U.S., experiences an atmosphere so repressive that it cannot hold a
candle to what the Stasi did in old East Germany. I'm not kidding.
Educated people really say these things and apparently believe
them. A senior foreign ministry official here in Berlin got into
trouble last year when colleagues leaked to the press that he had
referred to the U.S. in an in-house meeting as a "police
state."
BACK TO BIANCA. I LIKE her. I worked with her on Bosnia and Kosovo
(when we were on the same side). I admired her courage when she
stood up to Serbs, Clintonites, and Bush Realpolitik which held
that the U.S. did not have a dog in those fights. She kicked the
hell out of the European Union when the feckless Europeans failed
to act. And praised us Americans when we did. That was then.
Now Bianca was taking the side of Herr Niles. The audience
swooned and I considered, not for the first time, the real
character of this indiscriminate America bashing. It's like what
Michael Moore dishes up -- comfort food for people who want to feel
good about feeling bad toward America. Droves of Europeans seem to
be craving this junk. A writer for the German weekly Der
Spiegel told me during the Iraq debate not to take offense at
the crude anti-American covers of the magazine such as the ugly,
bearded, drooling Rambo figure it used to show the typical GI in
Iraq. "We're just trying to please our million readers," he
explained.
People lap it up and an army of teachers, editors, politicians,
and writers keep delivering the goods. Last year, French scholar
Emmanuel Todd stood atop bestseller lists and toured the continent
as the king of the interview shows. His book, The American
Empire: An Obituary (the U.S. edition is entitled After
the Empire: The Breakdown of the American Order), is best
described as something between warmed up Paul Kennedy and Michael
Moore with footnotes. This stuff keeps coming.
Noam Chomsky's book, Power and Terror, is quoted here
these days. It reads like a mix of Soviet-era Pravda
commentary of Soviet times and a PLO communiqué. One of my
recent personal favorites, Schwarzbuch USA -- "The Black
Book USA" -- is a 497-page catalogue of America's crimes throughout
history. Charts, factoids, and statistics tell the reader that the
inside jacket was not spoofing when it noted that Eric Frey, the
book's Austrian author, is an established scholar, who once studied
at Princeton.
Frey's chapter titles tell the story: "The Genocide Against
Indians"; "Blood, Lies and Dominos -- the Vietnam War"; "Whites
Have It Better"; "The Land of the Executioner -- the Popularity of
the Death Penalty"; "Bushonomics -- Politics as a Self-Service Shop
for the Wealthy"; "The New Witchhunt: The Campaign Against
Smokers"; "One Nation Under God -- Bigotry and the Puritans";
"Parasite of the World Economy."
IT DOES NOT end here. Elmar Thevessen, a recent Washington
correspondent for ZDF German television -- the more conservative
German network! -- has now dipped his own oar in the water with
The Bush Report: How the U.S. President Betrayed his Country
and the World. Okay, nothing new you say. True, check the
footnotes and you'll find illuminating works like The Emergence
of the Fascist American Theocratic State, which the author
recommends as a "pamphlet easy to find in an Internet search."
There is deep and profound analysis such as: "The Bush
Doctrine…can be summarized in two words: preemptive and
unilateral"; or before September 11th, the President did nothing
but "play golf and fish." Even Dick Clarke hasn't claimed that.
But I've saved the best for last. When Elmar Thevessen was
living in Washington he had a neighbor named Byron York, who worked
for The American Spectator, "a weekly [sic] magazine with
extreme right-wing views." Byron York "was actually quite nice,"
the author concedes, "although we only talked about the garden and
the weather." Sounds like Mr. Thevessen may have been operating
under cover. TAS workers and readers: Do you know who your
neighbors are?
Jeffrey Gedmin is director of the Aspen Institute
Berlin. His Letter From Europe appears each month in The
American Spectator. This excerpt appears in its May
issue.
topics:
Television, Iraq, European Union