Europe, Britain and America's
Fading Primacy - America’s quest to spread its freedom, abundance and security
has ended up reducing its freedom, abundance and security
Who wants to be policeman of the world
in the twenty-first century? America has tried the role, bless it, and the
results have yielded little joy. The greatest military machine mankind has ever
seen can’t seem to win a war. The conflicts in Vietnam, Korea, Afghanistan, and
Iraq all proved to be great wastes of American treasure and blood. Even the
apparently successful U.S.-led interventions, such as in Libya in 2011, have
led to disaster. What the historian Andrew J. Bacevich calls America’s “War for the Greater Middle East” has proved to be its unmaking
as the world’s undisputed superpower. America’s quest to spread its freedom,
abundance and security has ended up reducing its freedom, abundance and
security.
The age of American primacy, as we know it
at least, is approaching its end. The “unipolar moment,” which followed the
Cold War, was always fleeting. The American super-supremacy of the 1990s and
early 2000s has faded. A strange, arguably “post-polar” world order, in which
nothing is as it seems, has emerged in its place. The United States, under the
presidency of Barack Obama, has adopted the strategy of “leading from
behind”—much to the chagrin of neoconservatives everywhere. But what Obama
really meant was America still trying to lead from the front, as before, but with
added reluctance. China the rising giant, but its economic growth international
ambitions are mysterious and opaque. Russia is often said to be a diminishing
force—its economy too reliant on outdated fossil fuels—yet it is achieving its
strategic goals where every other major power is failing. Thanks to a
sophisticated information machine, the Kremlin’s soft power is more potent than
at any time in the last thirty years.
One apparent constant is the decline of Europe. The European Union, paralyzed
by debt, is suffering a major political crisis. Populist, anti-Brussels parties
are thriving across the continent. On June 23, the British surprised
everyone—including, perhaps most of all, ourselves—by voting to leave the EU.
The Union remains, for all its problems, the second biggest economic force in
the world, but for hard power it relies almost completely on American goodwill
and military might.
How long can—or should—America continue to
favor Europe with such a benevolent hegemony? Donald Trump may be a disastrous
presidential candidate, but his position on NATO is coherent, even if it is not
a message impoverished Europeans want to hear. Like President Obama, he asks
why should Uncle Sam continue to protect Europe’s strength—when America pays
the “lion’s share” (about 75 percent) of NATO defense spending. “NATO is
unfair, economically, to us, to the United States,” says Trump.
"Because it really helps them more so than the United States, and we pay a
disproportionate share.” That's a good point. It’s not as if Europeans—or the
rest of the world—are particularly grateful for America’s generosity. Social
Democrats everywhere sneer at Uncle Sam and call him names behind his back. We
don’t jump to condemn nations that call the United States the “Great Satan.”
And yet, whenever trouble brews, anywhere, we expect the indispensable nation
to sort it out.
America could afford to put up with such
an inconstant and ungrateful allies when its primacy was beyond doubt. Now, not
so much. Rebalancing, or even abandoning, NATO would upset a lot of pundits,
special advisers, and security contracts, but it makes more sense than the
status quo. America’s relationship with Europe’s leading powers has for too
long been held together by a sentimental sense of Western progressivism, and
the “special relationship” with Great Britain which has endured, for better or
worse, since the end of the Second World War.
Now, however, Britain appears to be on its
way out of the European Union, and the EU itself is in for a tumultuous future.
Realpolitik should dictate that America, whether it is lead by Trump or indeed
Hillary Clinton, continues the Obama’s strategy of demanding more from European
powers in the worldwide defense of democracy. America might instead look to
Germany, the EU’s major economy, as its first diplomatic port of call in the
coming years. (Trump has promised Britain that we would be first in queue if he
becomes president—he meant it as a rebuff to Obama’s warning that we would be
last if we voted to leave the EU—but most people know not to believe him, and
assume that anyway he won’t be president.)
America redefining its relationship with
Europe would involve many diplomatic difficulties, but it need not mean a
substantial deterioration of relations. Here in Britain, we might grumble about
betrayal—especially since we, unlike our European partners, followed the United
States into the folly in Iraq—but we should learn to live in the twenty-first
century. America’s interests cannot be conditioned to suit British pride—or
anybody else’s.
Moreover, perhaps the British and the
Europeans might learn to stop taking America’s support for granted. That, in
turn, could lead to a renewed respect for the world’s leading power, and return
of a different and stronger American primacy.
This is the ninth in a series of essays on
the future of American primacy. You can read the previous essay, “The Era of
American Primacy Is Far From Over” by Hal Brands
Freddy Gray, deputy editor of the London Spectator, is a regular contributor to the National Interest.
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