In Istanbul, Jacques Chirac, in fine French style,
gave the wet mitten to the face of the president of the United States.
After President Bush had carried out the transfer of sovereignty to Iraq, as
demanded by Old Europe, Chirac gave the "Non!" to French or NATO troops to help
train the new army. Chirac then rebuffed the Bush request for NATO troops to
protect the Afghan people, as they hold their first free elections this September.
"What Alliance?" bellowed The Wall Street Journal in its lead editorial.
"If that's all the help the U.S. can get from our partners, it may be time to
rethink the underlying premise of this 'alliance.'"
Yes, indeed, it may be time.
After demonstrating how stingy are French-German contributions to collective
security – Europe does the collecting, Uncle Sam provides the security – the
Journal rendered this summation:
"For the (last) 60 years, American taxpayers footed most of the bill to
protect Europe, most recently deploying forces to stop the Balkan wars. Somehow,
Europeans appear to believe Americans will continue doing this indefinitely,
regardless of European behavior and attitudes. They are badly mistaken."
Fine words. But the Journal is bluffing, and Chirac and Europe know
it. The U.S. military is not going to stop subsidizing NATO. U.S. generals in
Brussels enjoy playing proconsul too much. And ever since John Foster Dulles
angrily threatened an "agonizing reappraisal" of the U.S. commitment to the
continent, 50 years ago, Europeans have come to see American threats to pack
up and depart as so much bluster and bluff.
How do we know the Journal is engaged in bluster? Logic. The Journal
champions U.S. interventions to tutor the Arab and Islamic world in democracy.
It supports preemptive strikes and preventive wars on rogue states to deny them
weapons of mass destruction. It believes in an America that is the world's policeman,
who prevents, repels and punishes aggression, wherever it occurs.
You cannot play Globocop without having precinct houses all over the world.
And that is the American role the Journal supports.
Europe understands that the United States keeps troops there less for its benefit
than for our own purposes. They know we Americans want to play empire, that
we need them more than they need us, and that they can continue to get by freeloading
off U.S. defense, as most of them – the Brits and Turks excepted – have been
doing for decades.
Fifteen years ago, when the Berlin Wall came down, the great anti-communist
coalition that had persevered through the Cold War broke apart over foreign
policy. Some of us argued then as the Journal argues today.
With the "evil empire" having collapsed, Eastern Europe free, the Red Army
heading home and the Soviet Union breaking up into 15 nations, the need for
NATO or any massive U.S. presence in Europe was history. We urged Bush 41 to
close our bases, bring U.S. forces home and deed NATO over to the Europeans.
Had we done so, Old Europe would be a more manly and self-reliant continent
today.
The reasons we gave then are the reasons the Journal gives today. Only
when U.S. troops are heading home will our dependents in Europe begin to build
the forces to protect their own interests. They will be easy riders as long
as we let them.
If the United States lets lapse Article V of the NATO treaty, whereby an attack
on one member state is considered an attack on all, Europe would be forced to
look to its own security. And as Europe is as populous and rich as we, and has
two nuclear powers, why not let them go, even as parents, at some point, must
let their kids stand on their own two feet?
Indeed, the drawdown of U.S. forces from Europe since 1990, from 300,000 to
fewer than 100,000, suggests that we know there is no real threat to the continent
to justify a huge U.S. presence. As for a revanchist Russia, why would Moscow
reoccupy an Eastern Europe it had just given up as too costly to maintain and
hold?
Handing NATO over to the Europeans would not mean an abandonment of Europe,
or American isolationism. All it would mean is that we restore to ourselves
the full freedom of action to decide when, where and whether we should fight
– and we put that grave decision in the hands of the generation that would have
to do the fighting, not leave it to Acheson, Dulles and statesmen dead, lo,
these 50 years.
The sobering experience in Iraq is causing second thoughts on the right. If
these thoughts include an overdue questioning as to who benefits from U.S. commitments
to defend every nation in Europe, and who pays, we are at the beginning of wisdom.
As for the Journal editorial writers, they are welcome at the next gathering
of America First.
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