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Friendly Fire: The Near-Death of the Transatlantic Alliance (EUSA's U.S. -Eu Relations Project) PDF

158 Pages·2003·0.71 MB·English
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F R I E N D L Y F I R E The Near-Death of the T A RANSATLANTIC LLIANCE E L I Z A B E T H P O N D E U R O P E A N U N I O N S T U D I E S A S S O C I A T I O N 00-7153-3 frontmatter 11/18/03 1:22 PM Page i FRIENDLY FIRE 00-7153-3 frontmatter 11/18/03 1:22 PM Page ii Other titles in EUSA’s U.S.-EU Relations Project series: C.Randall Henning and Pier Carlo Padoan,Transatlantic Perspectives on the Euro (2000) David Vogel,Barriers or Benefits? Regulation in Transatlantic Trade(1997) Miles Kahler,Regional Futures and Transatlantic Economic Relations(1995) Catherine McArdle Keller,A New Security Order: The United States and the European Community in the 1990s(1993) 00-7153-3 frontmatter 11/18/03 1:22 PM Page iii F R I E N D L Y F I R E The Near-Death of the TRANSATLANTIC ALLIANCE ELIZABETH POND EUROPEAN UNION STUDIES ASSOCIATION Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania BROOKINGS INSTITUTION PRESS Washington, D.C. 00-7153-3 frontmatter 11/18/03 1:22 PM Page iv Copyright © 2004 european union studies association 415 Bellefield Hall,University ofPittsburgh Pittsburgh,PA 15260 www.eustudies.org Friendly Firemay be ordered from: Brookings Institution Press 1775 Massachusetts Avenue,N.W., Washington,D.C.20036 Tel.1-800/275-1447 or 202/797-6258 Fax:202/797-2960 www.brookings.edu All rights reserved.No part ofthis publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means without permission in writing from the Brookings Institution Press. Library ofCongress Cataloging-in-Publication data Pond,Elizabeth. Friendly fire :the near-death ofthe transatlantic alliance / Elizabeth Pond. p. cm. Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN 0-8157-7153-3 (pbk.:alk.paper) 1.United States—Military relations—Europe.2.Europe—Military relations—United States.3.United States—Foreign relations—Europe. 4.Europe—Foreign relations—United States.5.United States— Military policy.6.United States—Foreign relations—2001– 7.World politics—1995–2005. I.Title. UA23.P549 2003 327.7304—dc22 2003019910 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 The paper used in this publication meets minimum requirements ofthe American National Standard for Information Sciences—Permanence ofPaper for Printed Library Materials:ANSI Z39.48-1992. Typeset in Minion Composition by OSP,Arlington,Virginia Printed by R.R.Donnelley,Harrisonburg,Virginia 00-7153-3 frontmatter 11/18/03 1:22 PM Page v Contents Foreword vii Preface ix one Pax Americana The Shock of9/11 1 two Pox Americana? 2002 Polemics 21 three The Franco-German-American War Fall 2002 to Spring 2003 45 four Postwar Europe 75 Notes 97 Persons Interviewed 119 Suggestions for Further Reading 123 Index 131 v 00-7153-3 frontmatter 11/18/03 1:22 PM Page vi 00-7153-3 frontmatter 11/18/03 1:22 PM Page vii Foreword This is the fifthmonograph in the European Union Studies Associ- ation’s U.S.-EU Relations Project series, and it comes at a time of continuing crisis.Elizabeth Pond began this book during the buildup to the war in Iraq.She presented the first draft at a roundtable at the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington,D.C.,on January 24,2003,a moment when relations between the United States and France and Germany had taken a particularly bad turn.Around the table were discussants from all ofthe major European embassies,as well as from the U.S.Departments ofState and Defense,other government agencies,aca- deme,and think tanks.On the basis ofthe rich and revealing discussion at this meeting,Pond reworked her material and presented it at the EUSA Eighth Biennial International Conference in Nashville,which took place at the height ofthe war,in March 2003.The finished volume appears at a time when transatlantic relations are clearly in need of reconstruction. Therefore, the importance of this work has grown during the period between its conception and its publication. Elizabeth Pond is ideally placed as an analyst oftransatlantic relations. An American who has lived for many years in Europe,she has been a journalist,a teacher,and a scholar.Both she and EUSA owe a considerable debt to those who have made EUSA’s fifth U.S.-EU Relations Project pos- sible.The idea originated with discussions among my colleagues on the 2001–03 EUSA Executive Committee: Karen Alter, Jeffrey Anderson, George Bermann, Donald Hancock, Mark Pollack, and George Ross. Simon Serfaty,director ofthe Europe Program,Center for Strategic and vii 00-7153-3 frontmatter 11/18/03 1:22 PM Page viii Foreword International Studies,generously hosted the Washington,D.C.,workshop. The German Marshall Fund ofthe United States gave important financial support for this workshop and the roundtable at the EUSA conference in Nashville.The membership of the European Union Studies Association helped underwrite the publication ofthe monograph through their mem- bership dues, and they receive a complimentary copy as a benefit of membership. Robert Faherty, director of Brookings Institution Press, deserves credit for his continued interest in the U.S.-EU Relations Project monographs.Finally,the project would not have been possible without the hands-on direction ofValerie Staats,executive director ofEUSA. Martin A.Schain Chair,European Union Studies Association,2001–03 viii 00-7153-3 frontmatter 11/18/03 1:22 PM Page ix Preface This book is a second draft of the bizarre history of the decay and threatened dissolution ofthe West in 2002–03.At this early date it does not aspire to completeness.It does,however,aspire to fairness in portraying the most important ofthe cumulative brawls that led to the near-death of the transatlantic alliance in 2002–03. Given the angry polemics that accompanied each twist and turn,this is no modest goal.There is as yet no generally agreed basic narrative ofprecisely what happened,how,and why.Conflicting virtual realities abound. The study was commissioned by the European Union Studies Associ- ation to examine post–9/11 security issues in the transatlantic community that the world’s sole superpower invented halfa century ago.It assumes that the process we are witnessing today is a double adjustment:to the new threats ofterrorism and proliferation ofweapons ofmass destruction on the one hand, and to the Pax Americana of a polity wielding more absolute power than any since ancient Rome on the other hand.It assumes further that relations in the transatlantic community that was formed after 1945 were in greater crisis in 2003 than ever before.This last thesis is far less contested today than when I,among others,first propounded it in the spring of2002.By early 2003 no less a judge than master diplomat Henry Kissinger,relativizing all the past fights over missile deployments, chicken exports,and even France’s imperious withdrawal from NATO’s military command in the mid-1960s,ranked the transatlantic estrange- ment as the worst in a half century.1 Secretary of State Colin Powell seconded the judgment in speaking ofthe alliance as breaking up. ix

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Elizabeth Pond examines a number of disputes - chronic trade quarrels, the International Criminal Court, the Kyoto Protocol, Israeli-Palestinian violence, and Iraq - and identifies the ways in which they reinforce and exacerbate one another. European governments have accepted a rhetorical responsibi
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