Secretary of State Mike Pompeo has hit the ground running.
After all, he had to make up for the feckless leadership of his predecessor.
On
the matter of our relations with Europe, he is shifting our alliances, away from
Western European triumvirate—May, Macron and Merkel—toward Eastern Europe. On
matters of immigration and Iran three MMMs, the three mice that
roared, have deviated from American policy toward Iran. Of course, the foreign
policy intelligentsia is up in arms about the fact that America’s relations
with MMM are deteriorating, but, for all I know, there is method in Trump’s
madness.
We note in passing that Trump has redrawn American alliances
in the Middle East. He has restored our good relations with Egypt, Saudi
Arabia, the Emirates and Israel… while rejecting the Obama effort to appease
Iran. And he seems to have improved relations with China and even North Korea.
Again, there seems to be some method in the madness.
For now the sticking point in many of these relations is
trade policy. Nearly everyone believes that Trump is overplaying his hand on
trade and that he is threatening a trade war. For my part I do not know enough
to opine on the topic, except to say that when everyone agrees on something the
chances are that it’s untrue. Everyone believed that Trump had made a mess of
North Korea policy…
One understands that Trump has deviated from
the Obama policy toward MMM by asserting American leadership. For all their
wonders Western European nations cannot defend themselves militarily without
American support and leadership. Trump seems effectively to be asserting
American pre-eminence in the Atlantic alliance. Europeans who had been used to
being treated as equals are howling in disbelief. The question is: can they do more than to howl.
Has the administration set out a coherent policy toward
Europe. Thomas Wright suggests that it has in the Atlantic. He points to a speech delivered to the Heritage
Foundation this week by Wess Mitchell, the U.S. assistant secretary of state
for Europe.
Enter
Wess Mitchell, the U.S. assistant secretary of state for Europe, who laid out
the administration’s long-anticipated Europe
strategy in a speech at the Heritage Foundation on Tuesday. Mitchell,
a well-regarded expert on central and eastern Europe, is the author of three
books on foreign policy, including a forthcoming history of the Hapsburg
Empire. The main message of his thoughtful, well-written, and strategic speech:
The United States views Europe through the lens of a strategic competition
between Western civilization and a Russian and Chinese alternative. Mitchell
effectively announced a pivot in America’s Europe policy away from western
Europe and toward the East (his natural stomping ground) and the South. In
fact, Mitchell criticized western Europe for failing to take strategic competition
seriously, particularly on defense spending and confronting Iran.
In
Mitchell’s speech, he favored engaging central and eastern Europe nations even
when disagreements arise because “criticism bereft of engagement is a recipe
for estrangement.” “Engagement,” he said, “is not just diplomatic—it is also
about winning hearts and minds of publics for whom the memory of 1989 and NATO enlargement
is increasingly distant.” Reasonable people can differ over whether such a
strategy might give countries like Hungary a free pass on democracy. Mitchell
is also hamstrung by Trump’s refusal to authorize actions to deter Russian
political warfare. But the commitment to engagement that he expressed is to be
welcomed. That section of his speech, including calls for pushing back against
China’s efforts to make eastern Europe its “playground,” was promising. The
problem, however, is in what is left behind in Mitchell’s pivot—the big three
nations of western Europe: Britain, France, and Germany.
Wright has offered a fair summary of administration policy. He
does not agree with it, so we will allow him his say:
The
United States cannot be strategically competitive in Europe without deepening
its relationship with western Europe. Mitchell’s warning, that criticism
without engagement risks estrangement and that the United States must win the
hearts and minds of generations who have forgotten 1989, applies there too. The
Trump administration would do well to cast aside ideological debates about the
nature of sovereignty and instead focus on protecting America’s strategic
interests in all of Europe—preventing the disorderly collapse of the euro zone,
countering negative Chinese influence in Europe, ensuring that Europe and the
United States work together to maintain an edge in new technologies,
facilitating a smooth and negotiated Brexit, and preparing NATO for
political and information warfare….
An
economically savvy State Department could build a common transatlantic front to
negotiate with China from a position of strength. But, with its key western
European alliances in disrepair and no positive economic agenda, the Trump
administration’s Europe strategy still does not take geopolitical competition
seriously enough.
So, we have a new policy in the State department, and some
questions about how well it will work. Since we do not know how this will work
out in the end we will await developments.
5 comments:
The eastern European countries KNOW what it's like to be under Soviet domination. The western ones don't. The eastern ones don't want Muslim immigrants, either, having seen what happened in the western countries.
Stuart: For my part I do not know enough to opine on the topic, except to say that when everyone agrees on something the chances are that it’s untrue.
Being a contrarian can be an honorable position, or at least an optimistic one when you don't know enough. But we have fables while we wait.
Should we cheer for the mice, or the lion who may soon get a thorn in his paw and need some help? For me Trump and his birtherism claim-to-fame make me think of Jeremy Irons' Scar more than James Earl Jones' Mufasa. I don't expect the allies will be there when he really needs them.
Some of those Eastern European countries also know what it’s like to be under Muslim domination. They haven’t forgotten the Ottomans.
Good point... overlooked by many people, myself included.
In a strange way, the eastern European that were under USSR domination are lucky they were. They were cut off from the West's building of the "Blue Model" of government and economics for a long and critical time. This I believe is one of the bigger reasons they seem to be more resistant to the immigrant and economic schemes of the EU. Needless to say being under communist control is a rather hard way to achieve this.
James
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