Posted on 02/01/2003 3:48:37 PM PST by MadIvan
I received yet another anti-French e-mail last week. It was part of a spoof press release. It began: Paris in a stunning reversal of policy, French President Jacques Chirac announced today that the French government will be supporting the war on terror after all.
Five hundred soldiers from the elite French Surrender Battalion of the Foreign Legion are in the process of shipping out to Iraq where they will assist the Iraqi Republican Guard in their inevitable surrender to the overwhelming might of the American armed forces.
Chirac also announced that his government will send 3,000 advisers from the French Collaboration Force to assist the Iraqis in collaborating with the Americans while pretending to be part of a non-existent resistance movement.
Brutal, non? But certainly not rare. Ive lived in the United States for almost 20 years and have rarely heard anything but condescension towards successive French governments. But now that condescension has turned to contempt.
A cover piece in the liberal online magazine Slate last week had the headline Why they hate us. It referred to France. In a recent online poll people were asked which other countries they would place next to Iran, Iraq and North Korea in the axis of evil. France won by a mile.
And then Donald Rumsfeld blurted out what many privately think: France and Germany are the old Europe, with sclerotic economies, anachronistic aspirations for world power, and terribly weak leaders, shored up by appeals to crude anti-Americanism (Schröder) or to the fact that theyre not actually neo-fascist (Chirac).
Thats why when The Wall Street Journal and The Times published a letter from eight European leaders calling for unity in facing down Saddam, it was big in the United States. The chattering classes began to talk about another kind of international coalition: not one based on power-politics, or geographic proximity, but on a shared commitment to civil society and free economies, and a determination not to appease but to confront international terrorism.
The word for this nascent international alliance is the Anglosphere. The Anglospherists have been stirring discussion among Washingtons conservative think tanks. Their vision of the future of the West is starkly different to that envisioned by the Euopean Union or even, in some respects, the United Nations.
The Anglosphere is not a revived version of the special relationship between the US and the UK. Nor is it some racist contraption uniting Anglo-Saxons or even English-speaking peoples. It is, rather, a notion of an expanding group of nations and countries that share basic principles: individualism, rule of law, honouring contracts and covenants, and the elevation of freedom to the first rank of political and cultural values.
One of the critical elements of an Anglospherist nation is a healthy and vibrant civil society; by which I mean voluntary associations, private schools and colleges, charities, sports clubs, churches and so on the little platoons of liberty that Tocqueville so admired in England and America.
Why Anglosphere? Simply because these political values by accident of history originated in England and subsequently Britain. But these values need not be restricted to English-speaking countries. High on the list of countries eager to join are those in formerly communist eastern Europe who value freedom more dearly for having been denied it for so long.
Others include centre-right governments in Italy and Spain. But countries where civil society is weak Latin America, Asia or (as yet) Russia dont make the grade. Nor do those societies where personal freedom is close to non-existent the Arab world. France and Germany are standouts against such a concept as well. Why? Because the state in each country is too powerful, scepticism about individual freedom and civil society deep, and economic rigidity is maintained at the expense of employment and growth.
Thats why the coalition to disarm Saddam is a sign of a changing world. Terrorism threatens societies that value freedom more than those that dont. Citizens of free societies have more to lose from terror more civil liberties, more personal freedom of movement and thought.
Religious terrorism is also anathema to free societies, because it threatens freedom of religion by equating it with violence and intolerance. So I dont think it is surprising that, say, China and Russia are more ambivalent about disarming Saddam than, say, America or Australia. And it is equally unsurprising that the European Eight are those countries most sympathetic to an Anglospheric worldview.
Should this mean a formal alliance? Not necessarily. After all, one of the other ingredients of an Anglospheric view of the world is that voluntary associations are often better than forced ones. Anglosphere nations should co-operate when necessary. But just as they value freedom at home, they also value it abroad.
National sovereignty is a freedom as well one that free countries are reluctant to give up without some tangible gain. So this concept will never yield something like the EU, an institution that can only make sense to a Gallic or German mind that sees the chaotic liberty of a diverse Europe in need of false coherence and discipline.
But for these reasons the Anglosphere is also durable. It springs from the values people hold, not the concepts their leaders impose upon them. As we move slowly out of a post-cold war era, the coalition emerging against Saddam today may well mark the future of international relations. Heres hoping.
And I have to agree about the French. Gravity does funny things to their military weapons.
So why, then, is Tony Blair's UK so anxious to join the EU?
I have never understood why Britains would even consider joining an organization so dedicated to blotting out national identity and sovereignty.
To "the unity of the English speaking people"(!), to quote a phrase from the great Sir Winston Churchill.
Even 60 years after that Supreme Honorary American, Churchill, transferred the British Empire (and most else too) to the US, there still remains a large body of fossils and adolescents, who won't allow themselves to believe it, either for fear of sinking into oblivion or for fear of growing up.
Ivan
Not true, unless you equate the Brit Empire with freedom and a way of government, which is the point of the article. If anything, it is an American Empire, but even that does not fit the premise of the article. Your comment does not track with the article at all, but obviously you have another agenda.
Perhaps they dream of a huge tide from the North Sea severing the Chunnel and throwing Britannia, like the Mayflower, across the Atlantic to dock somewhere off the coast of Maine?
Or maybe they dream of an Anglo-American revolution in the US, where the former insurrectionists see the light; acknowledge the errors of their forefathers, and write a new Constitution to become part of Greater Canada?
Such are the beer-soaked fantasies of grade school failures who can be regularly seen on the terraces of English soccer stadia, and the writer of the above article wants to persuade his readers to take them seriously?
The fact is England is already part of the Anglosphere - insofar as it is nothing more than a US satellite off the coast of Europe. At present, England is a floating aircraft carrier; a base for surveillance and espionage operations such as Echelon, as well as a proxy by which to create political discord in the EU - if not destroy the Union altogether.
All of which is exactly what that First American, Winston Churchill, wanted England to be.
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