United States: Sympathy, Solidarity With U.S. After
11 September Turning To Resentment
Jeremy Bransten -
Radio
Free Europe
Following
the 11 September attacks against the United States,
America met with an outpouring of sympathy and
solidarity from much of the rest of the world.
But a year later, the situation has changed, and
anti-Americanism appears again to be on the rise,
even in Europe, a continent filled with countries
Washington counts as its friends. What happened?
RFE/RL interviews two European political analysts
on the reasons behind this phenomenon.
Prague,
10 Sept. 2002 (RFE/RL) -- The
United States bears at least some responsibility
for the terrorist attacks it suffered last 11 September
-- agree or disagree? That
was the question put by pollsters to a representative
sample of citizens in a country considered to be
among the United States' closest strategic allies.
The result? Sixty-nine percent of respondents agreed
that the United States partly brought on the attacks
itself, as a consequence of its policies. A shocking
result to most Americans. Even more shocking was
that the poll was conducted not in Saudi Arabia,
not in Indonesia, but in Canada, by "The Globe
and Mail" newspaper and Canadian television.
In
Europe, too, newspaper editorial pages are full
of opposition to U.S. policies on everything from
the environment to the war on terrorism.
Riches
and power often breed envy and resentment, especially
when they are flaunted. The United States has both,
and so it should come as little surprise that some
in the world perceive the country with a measure
of hostility. But what has taken Americans aback
recently has been the degree of resentment coming
from those Americans count as their friends and
allies, namely Europeans.
Dario
Fo, the Italian playwright who won the Nobel Prize
for Literature in 1997 -- expressing a more extreme
point of view -- wrote soon after 11 September that
violence against the United States is "the
legitimate daughter of the culture of violence,
hunger and human exploitation," which he alleges
Washington helps to foster around the world.
Why
have U.S.-European ties been worsening lately, and
what accounts for the continuing expressions of
anti-Americanism on the continent and elsewhere,
where the United States claims allies?
To
this end, the administration of U.S. President George
W. Bush even convoked a closed-door, international
conference in Washington last week devoted to the
issue of anti-Americanism.
Petr
Drulak, a political scientist at the Prague-based
Czech Institute of International Relations, told
RFE/RL that some resentment of the United States
is natural and even unavoidable. "I would say
that anti-Americanism, to a certain degree, is unavoidable.
It has to do with the fact that the United States
is close to becoming what is usually defined in
international relations as a hegemonist [a state
expanding its influence over other states]. It is
the strongest country, which guarantees the stability
of the international system, and this hegemonist
often does not have a natural partner because all
the others are significantly weaker. So the hegemonist
often acts as it wishes, frequently without regard
for the interests of others. In this way, it's almost
unavoidable that the hegemonist is going to elicit
some negative reactions. I think the United States
cannot get around this," Drulak said.
But
Drulak said the tendency by U.S. leaders to explain
their policies using universalist language -- to
couch what is often a national interest in internationalist
language -- is what especially irks foreign countries.
"American universalism represents a certain
trap because, of course, American foreign policy
has a tendency to justify its aims, its interests,
through universalist principles. From the European
-- Western European -- point of view, or indeed
the point of view of other parts of the world, people
are sensitive to what is a specific American interest
and what is truly a universal principle. And they
often see these universalist proclamations about
the good of mankind, about world democracy, about
global prosperity, only as a pretext to serve the
American national interest," Drulak said.
There
are and have always been deep philosophical differences
on specific issues dividing Europe and the United
States, among them gun control, capital punishment,
global warming, Mideast policy, and national missile
defense.
But
the perception in much of the world, including Europe,
is that Washington is not interested in bridging
those differences.
Jacques
Beltram, an analyst at the Paris-based French Institute
of International Relations (IFRI), told RFE/RL that
the Bush administration's opposition to international
treaties and institutions, such as the Kyoto protocol
and the International Criminal Court, has reinforced
this view and led to a renewed wave of anti-Americanism.
"The difference between the [former President
Bill] Clinton and the [current President George
W.] Bush administration is that with this administration,
unilateralism is basically a policy," Beltram
said.
Even
before the terrorist attacks against the United
States, this unilateralist attitude was a topic
of frequent discussion and concern among many editorial
writers in America.
Martin
Kettle, in a commentary published last year in "The
Washington Post" -- months before the 11 September
attacks -- perhaps put his finger on the root cause
when he wrote: "A lot of Europeans simply believe
that Americans are too self-absorbed to either know
what is happening or to care how the rest of the
world sees them. Underlying this refusal seems to
be an American belief that human rights abuses are
committed only by other nationals, not by Americans
and not by the uncriticizable American military.
There is surely a disjunction here. Universal modern
American values supposedly reign supreme alongside
American entrepreneurial dynamism. Yet while the
rest of the world is struggling to make itself answerable
to global legal standards, America is increasingly
determined to stand aloof. It's a message that says
the United States is happy with double standards."
Beltram
said that the end of the Cold War has highlighted
some of the frustration Western Europeans feel toward
U.S. policy and has freed them to speak their minds
more openly. "During the Cold War, being anti-American
was maybe dangerous for the coalition in the face
of communism. Today, the absence of the Soviet threat
allows for more free speech in Europe and even from
countries that you would not expect it to come from,
for example, Germany. Germany's opposition today
to intervention in Iraq -- total opposition, not
only the question of whether an intervention should
be made at the UN Security Council level. Germans
have said: 'No, we don't want to intervene. We don't
think it's necessary.' This kind of reaction from
the Germans is something new because they now have
a certain margin of maneuver to express their intentions,"
Beltram said.
Some
Americans counter that European opposition to American
policies is simply repressed jealousy and resentment
at Europe's own inability to punch above its weight
in international relations. Beltram said Europeans
have to admit there is some truth to this diagnosis,
but this should not allow the United States to ignore
Europe completely. "This inability of Europeans
to face a certain number of threats in the world
is maybe a factor, yes, definitely, that creates
some envy. Having said that, I think most European
political leaders know that we don't have the same
ambitions, we don't have the same strategic interests
as the United States, but this does not mean that
we don't have something to say about other strategic
interests, like relations between India and Pakistan,
like relations between China and Taiwan. And today,
for example, Iraq is a shared common strategic interest.
Europeans certainly do not have the military capability
to act alone, but this does not mean that they don't
have anything to say on the diplomatic front,"
Beltram said.
In
Prague, Drulak noted that Czechs and their postcommunist
neighbors, ironically, remain more pro-American
than many of their fellow Western Europeans. "I
would say that the [postcommunist] Central European
countries are more Atlantically oriented than Western
Europe. This comes from historical experience because
during the period of totalitarianism, America --
above all, America -- represented an alternative
to the totalitarian system. There is significant
symbolism here, and it was clear to everyone at
the time that Western Europe was a U.S. ally in
the fight against totalitarianism. But it was equally
clear that the main actor was the United States.
And I would say that this is why warm feelings towards
the United States have been carried over from this
era," Drulak said.
But
Drulak predicted that this dynamic may change, as
Central and Eastern European countries join the
European Union. "The situation in our region
is clear because the main power center which we
are headed toward is the European Union. So if the
countries in the region find themselves stuck between
a rock and a hard place, between the United States
and the European Union, they will follow the European
Union," Drulak said.
A
certain divergence of interests and views is unavoidable
between the United States and some of its closest
allies, especially in Europe. But how to ensure
that this gap does not grow into a chasm? Beltram
said both Europe and the United States could smooth
over some of the rough edges through better dialogue.
"Things could be done by both Americans and
Europeans to try [to] resolve this kind of crisis
that we have today. On both sides, it's an issue
basically of communication -- how you present things.
Both Americans and Europeans know that we have increasingly
diverging strategic interests and that we're going
to have to deal with this issue. But in the way
we discuss these issues together, there's something
that can be done. On the American side, when dealing
with a crisis like Afghanistan, the way in which
the U.S. administration rejected the offer by NATO
to provide military capabilities to help in the
war in Afghanistan was, in my opinion, a stupid
reaction because NATO could have been, at least
on paper, associated with the war in Afghanistan,
without it hampering efforts to hunt Al-Qaeda,"
Beltram said.
Beltram
said Europeans, in turn, also have their work cut
out for them. "On the European side, I think
the worst way to confront American unilateralism
is to say that Americans are crazy with their war
on terrorism, that they are exaggerating the threat,
etc....because this basically makes Americans feel
that they're alone in this world to deal with these
threats. So on the contrary, I think Europeans should
stress the importance of these threats and probably
offer alternatives, other ways to deal with this
terrorist threat than military force," Beltram
said.
In
other words, the United States should solicit its
allies' advice, and America's allies should be prepared
to take U.S. concerns to heart. Simple advice, but
is anyone in a mood to listen?
Copyright (c) 2002. RFE/RL, Inc. Reprinted with
the permission of Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty,
1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.
www.rferl.org
--
To respond to this story or post a follow up e-mail
editor@insnews.org |