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Globalist Perspective > Global Politics
Rethinking the United States — A European Perspective
 

By Helmut Schmidt | Tuesday, March 23, 2004
 

Some people in the United States believe that 9/11 changed the world. But that's not quite true, says former German Chancellor Helmut Schmidt. Rather, it deeply changed the way in which Americans perceive the outside world. His analysis is all the more relevant one year after the start of the Iraq War.


n September 11, 2001, despite all of their power —and for the first time in many generations — Americans suffered from a violent attack on its own soil. This experience led the U.S. leadership to use their enormous military power to fight the so-called “war on terrorism.”

The United States Empire

As a result, tendencies toward hegemonic behavior vis-à-vis other nations appear to have come to the forefront.

This century will present mankind with dangers and challenges that no state or nation — not even the most powerful — can face on its own.

An imperialist element within the foreign policy of the United States has always co-existed with isolationism, and also with internationalist idealism (which is nowadays called “multilateralism”). Sometimes, one of these elements prevailed — and sometimes another.

The history of imperialist tendencies goes back to the middle of the 19th century — back to Commodore Matthew Calbraith Perry in the Bay of Tokyo, back to the wars against Mexico and Spain and back to Teddy Roosevelt, who was called an “imperialist” by his contemporaries — which was not a negative word at that time.

A violator of the law

In modern times, we have heard catchwords like "rogue state," or “axis of evil.” We also saw Presidents Reagan and Clinton bombing Grenada and Belgrade and Sudan — without a decision by the UN Security Council.

Of course, the United States is not, by far, the only state that has violated the Charter of the United Nations. And U.S. leaders are not, by far, the only ones who forcefully try to spread their own ideologies beyond their borders.

Freedom of action

The sense of mission has been an element of American strategy for a long time. Think, for instance, of Woodrow Wilson, Franklin Roosevelt, George Marshall — and Harry Truman.

What is the U.S. policy vis-à-vis the more than one billion Muslims in Africa, Asia and Europe? Is it actually realistic to believe in America’s capability to guide them to create democracy in their 50-odd states?

Right now, a European might characterize the United States’ strategy by two principles. Number one: freedom of action not to be impeded by “entangling alliances.” And number two: The will to wage preventive wars.

Many Europeans interpret these guidelines to be democratic imperialism. It seems thinkable that these guidelines will persist for a longer time than the period of President George W. Bush in office.

Most people, particularly in Europe, would prefer the United States to act as a leader in international multilateralism. They try to influence America in that direction.

Change of attitude

My own guess is that, for a while, the world will have to live with a considerable degree of U.S. unilateralism. But such a situation will not necessarily entice other nations and governments to voluntarily engage themselves.

In my view, it would be helpful for Americans today to analyze the reason for the rather quick — but totally unforeseen — disappearance of sympathy and solidarity that after 9/11 had overwhelmingly characterized public opinion all over Europe, including France and Germany.

What comes next?

Why has it disappeared? Why has that changed happened?

It is the imperfect United Nations and its imperfect charter upon which the rule of law in international affairs is based. This imperfect world has no other globally binding constitution.

The several possible answers to these questions easily lead to the basic question, which many leaders outside the United States ask themselves.

Namely, will the United States stick to the Charter of the United Nations? Or is it thinkable that unilateralism will for decades prevail upon America's geostrategy?

Later on, the historians may come to understand whether the early years of the 21st century were a watershed.

Don’t go it alone

My private guess is this: Not quite soon, but somewhat later, Americans will once again become conscious of the fact that this century will certainly present mankind with dangers and challenges that no state or nation — not even the most powerful United States — is capable of standing up against just on its own.

Many challenges

Whether these challenges take the form of the global population explosion or global warming?

The United States is not the only state that has violated the Charter of the United Nations — and U.S. leaders are not the only ones to forcefully spread their own ideologies beyond their borders.

Whether mankind is confronted with global environmental decay or global epidemics, global crime, a globally operating terrorist organization or organizations, or global monetary disorder?

In none of these fields will the United States or any other great nation be able to unilaterally impose the answers, provide means — nor even to unilaterally provide shelter for herself.

And, of course, the same goes for every less powerful nation. And it goes for the European Union.

A perfect world?

After all, it is the non-perfect United Nations — and its non-perfect charter — on which the rule of law in international affairs is based.

This non-perfect world has no other globally binding constitution.


This text was adapted from a speech Helmut Schmidt gave at the German Historic Institute in Washington, D.C. on September 17, 2003.




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