|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Europe
European Union summit: France, Germany seek rapprochement
with US
By Chris Marsden and Julie Hyland
19 April 2003
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email the
author
Europes heads of state are continuing their policy of
conciliation with the Bush administration in the aftermath of
the US invasion of Iraq. A statement by the European Union (EU)
issued at its Athens summit on April 17 in effect legitimizes
Washingtons war.
The EU resolution says nothing about the war having been conducted
without the authorisation of the United Nations and therefore
in violation of international law. Nor does it mention the deaths
of thousands of civilians and the injuries inflicted by the use
of illegal weapons such as cluster bombs. There is, moreover,
no reference to the failure of the American occupation force,
following the collapse of the Baathist regime, to defend the population
from looters and criminal elements, or halt the destruction of
Iraqi cultural treasures of immense world importance, such as
the national museums and library.
Indeed, the resolution contains not a single word of criticism
of US actions in the wars aftermath, despite incidents of
US troops firing into crowds of unarmed civilians and the process
under way of establishing a colonial-style regime under US General
Tommy Franks and ex-general Jay Garner.
Instead, the EU accepts that in the immediate period Iraq must
be governed by coalition forces, i.e., the US, with
the assistance of Britain. They are to take responsibility for
ensuring a secure environment, presumably by shooting
anyone who opposes the occupation of Iraq. The EU makes the absurd
claim that this is compatible with providing the people
of Iraq with the chance to shape a new future for
their country.
The central concern of the European powers is that the United
Nations get a foot in the door as a stalking horse for advancing
their own economic and geopolitical interests in the Middle East.
Much of the discussion on the resolution took the form of haggling
between Britain, on one side, and France, on the other, over whether
the UNs role would be described as central or
important. Britains Prime Minister Tony Blair
favoured important, whilst Frances President
Jacques Chirac insisted on central. Chirac got his
way, though even then British spokesmen noted that the resolution
proposed the UN be given a central role, not the
central role.
The EU accepted that initially the UNs central
role would merely be to help provide humanitarian assistance.
Only with the say-so of the Bush administration would its role
be expanded to reflect its unique capacity and experience
in post-conflict nation building.
The resolution was passed with the collaboration of UN Secretary
General Kofi Annan.
Chiracs terminological victory is entirely pyrrhic. None
of Europes leaders are in any doubt that the Bush administration
intends to transform Iraq into a US protectorate and will block
any attempt to place the country under the authority of the UN.
Britain, Italy and Spain have up to now supported Washingtons
war drive and its colonialist aims in Iraq, hoping thereby to
get a share of the war spoils. Now France and Germany are abandoning
their previous tactical opposition to the war. By doing so they
hope to mend fences with the US, placate the more bellicose anti-European
voices within the Bush administration and protect their own economic
interests in oil-rich Iraq.
Even before the EU summit, Paris, Berlin and Moscow had been
scrambling to effect a rapprochement with Washington. As soon
as military victory seemed assured, frantic efforts began to rebuild
bridges to the US. German Chancellor Gerhard Schröder met
with Blair en route to the summit as a means of opening dialogue
with Bush, whilst Chirac phoned the US president for the first
time in six weeks, pledging to act pragmatically and case
by case on matters relating to Iraq.
The prostration of the European powers before the war cabal
in Washington will only encourage the global hegemonic ambitions
of US imperialism. Already the Bush administration is making threats
against Syria that raise the possibility of a military attack.
France, Germany and Russia are likely to get short shrift for
their efforts to ingratiate themselves. Leading hawks within the
Bush administration are gloating over their humbling of Europe
and are opposed to any concessions to Americas rivals. In
recent days US Deputy Defense Secretary Paul Wolfowitz and US
Treasury Secretary John Snow have said that the main role which
France, Germany and Russia can play in securing Iraqs future
is to forgive billions of dollars in loans that they are owed.
Given that Iraqs oil revenues are to be used to pay for
the cost of the war, this would represent an indirect payment
by Europe to America.
The contempt in which Europe is held is epitomized by an April
14 Washington Post article that declares the UN could be
invited to help with certain brief relief and civil administration
chores and goes on to say that France was made a permanent
member of the Security Council in 1945 as psychotherapy
for a crisis of self-esteem brought on by bad behavior.
The article continues: There is no entitlement for France,
Germany, Russia and the United Nations. They did all in their
power to keep Saddam Hussein in power, which makes them accessories
to tyranny and war crimes.
By legitimizing, after the fact, the illegal and predatory
war waged by the US, the bourgeois governments of Europe are rendering
a critical service to the Bush administration, which is much in
need of international credibility. These governments are well
aware of the massive antiwar sentiment within their own countries
and around the world, including within the US. By now suggesting
that the conquest of Iraq was justified by the overthrow of the
regime of Saddam Hussein, and that democracy and progress can
be established through aggressive war and military occupation
under the aegis of American imperialism, they are sowing political
confusion and helping Washington condition public opinion, especially
within the US itself, to future and even more brutal military
adventures.
The Bush presidency faces a mounting domestic crisis, which
has led to press speculation over whether Bush will follow in
his fathers footsteps by winning the war but losing the
election. The White House is seeking to impose unpopular cuts
in vital services at a time when the economy is in severe difficulties
and many US states are effectively bankrupt. At the same time
it is carrying out a war policy that does not have the support
of the majority of the population.
The EU summit in Athens underscores the political dangers inherent
in the position of those tendencies within the antiwar movement
that look to Germany, France or Russia to act as a counterweight
to US militarism. Chirac, Schröder and Russian President
Vladimir Putin are the political representatives of their own
bourgeoisies and are incapable of seriously opposing the drive
to war. Their governments refused to endorse Americas war
plans essentially because their own interests in the region were
threatened, and because US militarism and unilateralism cut across
the global interests of the European powers.
They were prepared to make limited use of popular antiwar sentiment
in an attempt to gain leverage with Washington, but they were
always hostile to what was an initial expression of an anti-imperialist
movement of global proportions, out of fear that this would get
out of control and threaten their own vital interests.
This popular antiwar sentiment remains. The Athens summit was
besieged by thousands of protesters who launched attacks on the
British Embassy and British Airways.
The drive towards war is not merely the product of the subjective
intentions of the right-wing cabal that holds power in the United
States. It is rooted in the crisis of world capitalism, which
finds its most explosive and malignant expression in the social
and political crisis of American capitalism.
Presently the US enjoys a massive military advantage over its
European rivals, which accounts in part for the current emphasis
on appeasing Washington. However, this will only spur ongoing
efforts to transform Europe into a military power able to successfully
challenge the USa policy that can only be carried through
on the basis of attacking the living standards and democratic
rights of the European working class.
Prior to the Athens summit, France, Germany and Russia met
in St. Petersburg to discuss a common strategy, and the European
parliament voted to set up a common defence procurement policy
for Europes armed forces. Belgium has called a summit on
European defence for April 29, with the support of France and
Germany.
Thus, to the extent that they seek to develop an independent
position from Washington, Europes ruling classes offer only
an alternative form of militarism, bringing with it the spectre
of a new arms race and a descent towards World War Three.
See Also:
Political lessons of the war in Iraq
[11 April 2003]
Liberation by murder: Baghdad falls to
American invasion
[10 April 2003]
How to deal with America?
The European dilemma
[25 January 2003]
Europe on rations: the
Afghan war and the dilemma of European capitalism
[19 March 2002]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |