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European sniping at America is overdone
International Herald Tribune ^ | 21 february 2002 | Friedbert Pflüger

Posted on 02/21/2002 1:26:25 PM PST by knighthawk

BERLIN Leading European politicians have criticized the United States in unusually clear terms. The style and substance of their remarks are unacceptable.

No one can deny Europeans the fundamental right to contradict the American president. We are an alliance of free states. Criticism must be allowed among friends. Solidarity does not mean obedience. But the form and timing of criticism among friends are another matter.

After Sept. 11 we invoked Article V of the North Atlantic Treaty for the first time in the history of NATO. We are now fighting side by side against the global challenge of terrorism. If necessary, European and American soldiers may have to risk their lives for each other. Is it then appropriate to publicly pillory our most important ally?

The United States is bearing the main burden in the fight against terror, which, as the German federal government also believes, threatens our entire civilization. Understandably, the United States has been particularly sensitive since Sept. 11. Is it wise for the German minister of foreign affairs, Joschka Fischer, to choose this moment to warn against investing in advanced defense technology, which is seen in America as essential to the defense of the nation?

And what gives Europeans the right to criticize when their own deficiencies are so obvious? A country like Germany, for example, which is militarily so weak that it has to borrow Uzbek Ilyushins to transport supplies to Afghanistan, should be more reserved about lecturing its allies. The substance of the European criticisms is also incorrect. What justifies the assertion that the United States is planning unilateral military action against Iraq? So far, despite some strong words, America's actions since Sept. 11 have demonstrated how responsibly Washington has approached the fight against the terrorists and the Taliban.

Building the anti-terror coalition was a magnificent achievement. And Vice President Dick Cheney will soon be traveling to Central Asia to cultivate this partnership. What then justifies the accusation that America is wantonly risking the cohesion of the coalition? It is true that some unilateral voices are to be heard in Washington, but does that justify this suspicion of the whole administration?

We know that Iraq possesses weapons of mass destruction and delivery systems. August Hanning, head of the German Federal Intelligence Service, recently referred to information that proves this. For example, Iraq has unmanned drones (L-29s) with a range of 600 kilometers that can carry 600 kilograms of biological agents. It is therefore a good thing for European politicians to call on Saddam Hussein to allow the United Nations inspectors back into his country. But why should he do this if we exclude all military options against him from the very beginning? He does not deserve carte blanche to do as he wishes. Only military pressure will make him willing to allow the United Nations into Iraq again. Certainly not the friendly appeals of European foreign ministers.

The necessary transformation of defense policy has not taken place in Europe. This is especially true of Germany, which has allowed the purchase of the Airbus A 400 M to degenerate into an irresponsible farce.

On the whole, the Europeans have not played a particularly happy role since Sept. 11. Instead of joining forces to bring their whole weight to bear at America's side, they embarked on a kind of international beauty competition to find out who was America's best ally. In truth, the European states have marginalized themselves, while their weakness has strengthened the unilateralists in America, who are fortunately still in a minority. And what are the Americans supposed to think when certain people in Europe show little pleasure at the liberation of the Afghan people from the yoke of Taliban terror, but expatiate on the conditions faced by the criminals detained in Guantánamo? No one who has been following the debate in Europe will be able to avoid the question: Did Sept. 11 ever happen? A number of leading politicians in Europe have evidently slept through the wake-up call that went around the world then.

The writer is chairman of the Committee on European Union Affairs of the German Bundestag and a member of the Federal Executive Committee of the Christian Democratic Union. He contributed this comment to the International Herald Tribune.


TOPICS: Foreign Affairs; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS:

1 posted on 02/21/2002 1:26:25 PM PST by knighthawk (knighthawk@wish.nl)
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To: golitely; rebdov; Nix 2; Shermy; EU=4th Reich
Ping
2 posted on 02/21/2002 1:26:54 PM PST by knighthawk
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To: knighthawk
Lefties in Britain, Germany, France: "The Axis of Weasels."
3 posted on 02/21/2002 1:29:40 PM PST by paddles
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To: paddles
HELLO!

Can you show me where in the report, that it comments on sniping by 'British lefties', or even French for that matter.

4 posted on 02/21/2002 1:39:36 PM PST by dennybabyboy-fitzy
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To: tony cavanagh
take a read!
5 posted on 02/21/2002 1:40:49 PM PST by dennybabyboy-fitzy
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To: knighthawk
Reading the report, anyone woulda thought that terrorism only started on 11 september.
6 posted on 02/21/2002 1:44:50 PM PST by dennybabyboy-fitzy
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To: paddles
Ha ha! "The Axis of Weasles"!!! That's a good one! Anyone keep up with the articles coming out of www.jewishworldreview.com. Can't remember who wrote this article last week, but they were comparing the European alies to the fat kid who moans and whines because he wants to play quarterback on the high school team . . .or something like that.
7 posted on 02/21/2002 1:54:28 PM PST by Sally II
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To: paddles; John Huang2
paddles this great: Lefties in Britain, Germany, France: "The Axis of Weasels."

John, I nominate paddles quote, b>Lefties in Britain, Germany, France: "The Axis of Weasels.", as the quote of the day.

Paddles, I have just stolen this from you!

8 posted on 02/21/2002 2:06:47 PM PST by Grampa Dave
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Comment #9 Removed by Moderator

To: knighthawk
"The United States is bearing the main burden in the fight against terror..."

We are now and have been paying with our lives, and will in the future. Furthermore, every tax dollar is paid in blood. Truckers fall asleep from fatigue, fishermen drown, construction workers fall and die, small buisnessmen's harts blow out. This has been going on for decades. Frig the euro's>

10 posted on 02/21/2002 2:40:04 PM PST by Leisler
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To: dennybabyboy-fitzy
[CRS Report to Congress]

97-717 F
July 17, 1997

NATO: Article V and Collective Defense


CRS Report for Congress
Congressional Research Service
The Library of Congress


By Paul E. Gallis

Specialist in European Affairs
Foreign Affairs and National Defense Division
Congressional Research Service
Library of Congress


11 posted on 02/21/2002 2:45:47 PM PST by vannrox
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To: paddles

SUMMARY




Article V of the North Atlantic Treaty does not guarantee the use of force to assist an ally under attack. Nonetheless, the U.S. pledge to assist an ally under attack has been the core of the alliance. Despite growing political functions, the NATO views collective defense, and not collective security, as its core function.


ARTICLE V




A collective security organization settles disputes among its members. In contrast, a collective defense organization assists a member state under attack by an outside country. NATO is a collective defense organization. Article V states that NATO members must consider coming to the aid of an ally under attack. However, it does not guarantee assistance. Article V is the Treaty's key provision and the linchpin binding the United States to its NATO allies. It states, in part, that "an armed attack against one or more [allies] shall be considered an attack against them all." Additional language makes clear that the commitment to assist an ally is not unconditional. Rather, each signatory will assist the ally under attack with "such action as it deems necessary, including the use of armed force ......"(1) Since the early 1990s, NATO has begun to adopt "new missions," such as crisis management and peacekeeping, sometimes referred to as "non-Article V missions." Current members and candidate states, however, believe collective defense, as expressed in Article V, remains the core of the alliance, a view likely to endure as long as the possibility of a nationalistic, aggressive Russia remains.

12 posted on 02/21/2002 2:48:59 PM PST by vannrox
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To: vannrox
Thanks for the post, much appreciated, but didn't answer the question I posed, which was basically why associate Britain with the rest of the Euro socialist scum. Having lived in Britain up till April last year, and going back June this year. I can say that, although there may be a 'noisy' leftie voice in the UK, the vast majority take a 'middle of the road' view. And just to add, most brits don't read the 'Guardian', reading most posts on FR, you woulda thought that Brits read from, eat from and wiped there arse on it.

Thanks

13 posted on 02/21/2002 5:03:00 PM PST by dennybabyboy-fitzy
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