April 6, 2005
REINFANTILIZED EUROPE:
Bloody Necessary: Europeans won't admit it but America's violent messianism isn't all bad. (Michael Hirsh, April 2005, Washington Monthly)
Listening to European intellectuals debate American power these days, I'm often reminded of one of my favorite scenes in Anna Karenina. It comes toward the end of the novel, when Tolstoy's other protagonist, the self-doubting Constantine Levin, has his climactic epiphany about faith and God. Levin recalls a moment when his nieces and nephews had been playing games with their milk and raspberries as their mother admonishes them for wastefulness: If they turn their food into a toy, she says, then they will not have anything to eat. Reflecting on her children's bewilderment, Levin realizes that they “could not conceive that what they were destroying was the very thing they lived by.” To the children, food had always just been there: “There is no need for us to think about that, it's all ready for us. We want to think out something of our own invention.”When it comes to grappling with the giant across the Atlantic, European thinkers of this generation tend to behave like Tolstoy's children. They toy intellectually with American power, lamenting its excesses, warning of its evils, advising endlessly on its better uses—usually without acknowledging that it is the very thing that has kept them free to have these discussions in the first place, and that today it continues to be the backbone of the international system that sustains them. Tolstoy, of course, was giving us a parable about how human beings take their faith in God and his works for granted. No one, not even the most fervid neoconservative in George W. Bush's Washington, would mistake America for the Almighty (at least one hopes not). But too often America's works, and their profound influence on the modern world, do go underappreciated (not least by Americans themselves, which is one reason the current international system still seems alien to them rather than what it is: their own creation).
Consider the French, our most persistent critics. Seeking to curb the excesses of the self-righteous, God-obsessed Bush, French officials regularly invoke U.N. resolutions and international law like holy writ. Rarely do they acknowledge that it was another self-righteous, God-obsessed American president, Woodrow Wilson, who forced the proto-United Nations, the League of Nations, on them nearly a century ago; and two other equally self-assured presidents, Franklin Roosevelt and Harry Truman, who made the next-generation iteration of the failed League work. There are some exceptions in Europe today, like the small band of “anti-anti-Americans” who tentatively defend Bush. But on the whole the Europeans, having known three generations now without war—and earnestly desiring to become “postmodern states” that never again wage war—tend to forget that it is principally the U.S. defense umbrella that has made this dream possible.
Set aside for the moment the precipitous invasion of Iraq. America spends more on defense than the rest of the industrialized world combined not because it is inherently belligerent or militaristic but mainly because America is today more than just the “lone superpower.” It is the stabilizer of the international system. American power overlays every region of the planet, and it supplies the control rods that restrain belligerents and arms races from East Asia to Latin America, enabling globalization to proceed apace. With the exception of Iraq, this hidden infrastructure of U.S. power emerges into public view only occasionally, in tsunami relief or in America's unique ability to supply airlift and logistical support to hotspots from East Timor to Sudan. Since 9/11, U.S. special forces have been increasingly operating as global SWAT teams, slipping silently across borders to take out terror cells—systematically, if sometimes savagely, clearing the mean back alleys of the global village (controversial, yes, but most governments don't seem to mind.) Even in Afghanistan, despite considerable European help on the ground, it is “B-52 peacekeeping” in the skies—as a warlord once described it to me—that keeps Hamid Karzai in power, civil war from breaking out, and the Taliban lying low.
Yet, for too many post-Cold War Europeans, this stabilizing structure of American power has been so hidden as not to be worthy of note. Why exactly do they think their governments can afford to spend so little on defense (thereby subsidizing the European welfare state)? As with the children in Anna Karenina, “there is no need for us to think about that, it's all ready for us.”
Bad enough the Right says they're from Venus, having the Left say they're childish? Posted by Orrin Judd at April 6, 2005 11:12 AM
Basically correct. However, the Euros actually think they do not need to spend on defense because they believe that they have no enemies because they are so nice to the oppressed of the earth. When this delusion is finally burst, it's going to be ugly.
Posted by: JAB at April 6, 2005 1:15 PMIt's already bursting on the home front.
Posted by: bart at April 6, 2005 1:36 PMIt will still be a while before the "smartest" among the European rulling class realize there are people out there who hate them for who they are and what they believe, or don't believe.
Right now, they're still under the delusional notion that anyone who hates them really hates the United States or Israel, and is just projecting any excess hatred onto Europe because they're perceived as being too close to the U.S. But once that drooling chimp is out of the White House, everything will be OK again.
Posted by: John at April 6, 2005 1:59 PMA lot of people I know got their attitudes adjusted when Theo vanGogh was killed. He was a card-carrying member of the chattering classes just like them. It's one thing for the Muslims to gangrape an underdressed working class 15 year old French girl who strolls down the wrong street in the banlieue, but it's quite another for one of Europe's 'best and brightest'(TM) to get killed by a Jihadnik. G-d only knows what the Muslims could do to a wine festival in Bordeaux.
Posted by: at April 6, 2005 2:16 PMA lot of people I know got their attitudes adjusted when Theo vanGogh was killed. He was a card-carrying member of the chattering classes just like them. It's one thing for the Muslims to gangrape an underdressed working class 15 year old French girl who strolls down the wrong street in the banlieue, but it's quite another for one of Europe's 'best and brightest'(TM) to get killed by a Jihadnik. G-d only knows what the Muslims could do to a wine festival in Bordeaux.
Posted by: bart at April 6, 2005 2:16 PMI've been saying this for years. The modern left takes our complex society as a given to which arbitrary features can be added at will.
Posted by: Annoying Old Guy at April 6, 2005 11:28 PM