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Rationally
Speaking
N. 34, March 2003
America, Europe, and the rest of the world
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Quote of the
month:
"It has been said that democracy is the worst form of government
except all the others that have been tried." -Winston
Churchill
Further
readings:
The Culture of Fear: Why Americans Are Afraid of the
Wrong Things, by Barry Glassner.
Web
links:
The Chicago Council on Foreign Relations' complete
survey..
 Massimo's Tales of the Rational: Essays About Nature and Science

Visit
Massimo's Skeptic & Humanist Web
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How deep is the current
divide between Europe and the United States in terms of how to
conduct international affairs? Alarming notes have been sounded on
both sides of the Pond to the effect that the rift risks breaking up
NATO and rendering the United Nations “irrelevant” (to use the
rhetoric of the Bush administration. Usually, the French are being
singled out for leading the rebellion against the US hegemony, even
though an overwhelming majority of European citizens have been
voicing their opposition to the current US policy on Iraq, even in
“pro-American” countries such as Britain and Italy.
As it is often the case in complex matters, one cannot form a
reasonable opinion just by listening to alternative ways of spinning
the same stories in the media (assuming that one bothers to check
directly what the French or British press say, since American media
are becoming more and more homogeneous thanks to their ownership by
an increasingly smaller number of multinationals). It was therefore
refreshing to see actual data from a large survey of American and
European attitudes conducted by the Chicago Council on Foreign
Relations (CCFR). The picture emerging from the study is more
complex and nuanced than what we tend to hear trumpeted by talking
heads and media pundits.
It comes down to the following: Europeans are inclined to agree
with Americans on more issues than either of them agrees with the
rest of the world (this is good news for people who are worried
about the collapse of the West). However, there are major areas of
disagreement that might make for a very interesting upcoming decade
in geopolitics (and this is the good news for those who are
interested in a more open discussion of international issues). Let’s
take a look at some of the details.
First off, Americans and Europeans really like each other, and
this goes even for the French. On a scale of 0 to 100, Americans
rate European countries between 61 (Germany) and 76 (Great Britain),
which is much higher than they rate any other country except Canada.
Conversely, the Brits rate the US at 68, and the rest of Europe
doesn’t go any lower than the Dutch’s 59. Furthermore, Europeans and
Americans see the same threats in the world, with terrorism and
Islamic fundamentalism ranking the highest. And, both sides agree
that war on Iraq would be justified, if backed by the United Nations
(complete opposition to the war run at only 13% in the US and 26% in
Europe at the time the survey was conducted).
However, worldviews start to diverge when one digs a bit deeper.
Generally speaking, Americans find the world a much more threatening
place than Europeans do. Most importantly, the two also differ on
their analysis of why some threats are there to begin with. For
example, 55% of Europeans think that US foreign policies have
directly contributed to the terrorist attacks on September 11, 2001
(and I would add that a good case can be made that they are not far
off the mark).
Americans and Europeans also sharply disagree on how to fix the
problems they face. Only 19% of Europeans would like to increase
their country’s military spending, as opposed to 44% of Americans
(and one need to notice that the US already allocates significantly
more money to the military than European countries do). On the other
hand, Europeans are much more willing to spend their resources on
foreign aid, since a large majority of them sees that as a much more
effective key to long-term planetary peace and prosperity. This
divergence has major consequences for the whole concept of
“superpower”: Americans think that the key to superpower status is a
strong military, while many Europeans want a united Europe to become
a superpower in the sense of cultural and economic interaction with
the rest of the world, opposing more military spending by either
their own countries or the European Community as a whole.
If one broadens the horizon beyond the immediate concerns of war
and terrorism, other interesting similarities and differences
emerge: Americans are only slightly more supportive of globalization
than Europeans, and about half of both Americans and Europeans think
that global warming is a high-priority threat. However, 66% of
Europeans are opposed to some degree to biotechnology, against only
45% of Americans. Perhaps the largest divergence of opinions
manifests itself on immigration: 66% of Americans consider it a
threat of the highest level, while only 38% of Europeans agree with
that assessment (of course, there are differences among European
nations themselves, with Italy being on the most worried about
immigration).
What are we to make of all this? On the one hand, declarations of
an insurmountable divide between the US and Europe are obviously
blown out of proportion: we are not witnessing the big schism of
Western culture just yet. On the other hand, it would be foolish for
anybody (and especially for rather single-minded American
politicians) to underestimate the areas of divergence between the
two major blocks of world democracies. And please, stop telling the
Europeans that they should get in line because America saved them
during World War II: gratitude is an important value, but wishing to
translate it into perennial and unquestioning allegiance is a bit
insulting. And one thing nobody needs is to add any additional
insult to the dialogue between the two major democratic blocks of
the world. |