OPINION
GUEST ESSAY
Europe Doesn’t Want to Fight America’s Battles
Anymore
Sept. 3,
2021
https://www.nytimes.com/2021/09/03/opinion/afghanistan-europe-nato.html
Christopher
Caldwell
By
Christopher Caldwell
Mr.
Caldwell is a contributing Opinion writer and the author of “Reflections on the
Revolution in Europe: Immigration, Islam and the West.”
To listen
to the debate in Europe over the chaotic retreat of United States troops from
Afghanistan is to be struck by what a huge vocabulary Europeans have developed
over the centuries for describing military calamities. What we just witnessed
has already been described as a débâcle, a débandade, a dégringolade and a
déroute, not to mention a “rout,” a “fiasco” and a “humiliation.”
The
question at the heart of these discussions is whether the botched withdrawal is
a failure serious enough to merit a rethinking of European-American defense
arrangements. The Afghan war was a NATO operation, involving the core of the
trans-Atlantic alliance system that dates from the Cold War. American
fecklessness has left European leaders infuriated. In Germany, Armin Laschet,
who is running to replace his Christian Democratic colleague Angela Merkel as
chancellor in national elections this month, speaks of “the greatest debacle
NATO has suffered since its founding.”
Mr.
Laschet’s assessment reflects more than election-season passions. It is shared
in other countries. Bidenesque incompetence comes atop four years of Trumpian
contempt. As Adrien Jaulmes, a French war correspondent, recently put it, Mr.
Trump and Mr. Biden have together sent “a message to the allies and adversaries
of the United States that Washington’s commitments are only commitments for so
long.”
There have
been moments of mistrust between America and its NATO allies before. But there
is a difference today, and it bears on how European leaders are reacting to the
Afghan mess. During the Cold War, communism was the issue that polarized
continental politics. Europe’s governing elites, in their respective countries,
were mostly anti-communist. Their instincts were to strengthen ties with the
anti-communist United States, whatever their occasional misgivings about
American incompetence, overreach or arrogance. And that meant strengthening
NATO.
Today the
issue that divides European publics is the European Union, a
superstate-in-embryo to which all but a handful of Western European countries
belong. The E.U. project has overlapped with the globalization of the economy
and has generated similar debates. Some see it as a source of prosperity and
human rights, others as a source of inequality and undemocratic highhandedness.
In pretty
much every European country, the credentialed, the educated and the empowered
want “more Europe.” They are opposed by defenders of traditional,
nation-state-based sovereignty, who want to protect the prerogatives of, say,
Berlin or Warsaw against the ambitions of the E.U.’s capital, Brussels.
Sociologically, the split is like that between Democrats and Republicans in the
United States.
Pro-European
Union politicians generally look to move governing responsibilities from
national capitals to Brussels. The more ambitious among them even seek a
measure of military autonomy for the bloc. That would require a rethinking of
NATO operating procedures and would almost inevitably bring a loosening of ties
with the United States, although E.U. leaders generally deny this when within
earshot of Americans.
But in the
wake of the Afghan debacle, E.U. leaders have begun to air such ambitions. This
week, Bernard Guetta, a member of the European Parliament from the party of
President Emmanuel Macron of France, called on Europeans to find a geostrategic
substitute for an increasingly inward-looking United States. Mr. Macron shows
signs of wanting to use recent blunders as a pretext for deploying
de-Americanized European fighting units. He told a conference in Baghdad in the
wake of the Taliban takeover of Kabul that France would keep its
terror-fighting forces in Iraq “no matter what the Americans do.”
Italy and
Germany now lean in this direction, too. Late last month, Paolo Gentiloni, a
former prime minister of Italy and the current E.U. commissioner for the
economy, said, “It’s a terrible paradox, but this debacle could be the start of
Europe’s moment.” Ms. Merkel has reportedly been part of intra-European
discussions about keeping a “strong temporary presence” in Kabul.
European
decision makers have never lacked the ambition for such projects. (In 1998,
Prime Minister Tony Blair of Britain and President Jacques Chirac of France
issued a portentous “Saint-Malo declaration” calling for an autonomous European
strike force.) What they have lacked is a popular consensus for them. Creating
an army befitting a superpower is a colossal expense. It makes sense to use the
American one as long as it is on offer, rather than bankrupting Europe on a
(perhaps quixotic) quest to duplicate it.
E.U. elites
today also face a challenge of credibility. The bloc’s interior ministers spent
the first days of this month trying to devise a common migration system to
handle a possible large flow of migrants out of Afghanistan. It is a priority,
but it was just as much of a priority when migrants were fleeing Syria in the
hundreds of thousands in 2015, and the European Union managed no durable
solution then.
At a time
when polls show that Europeans consider immigration their continent’s biggest
security threat, the European Union’s reputation for legalism and dawdling does
not spread confidence that it can follow through on even more ambitious
projects. On the contrary.
That is
what proponents of an alternative E.U. defense may have the hardest time
facing. Over the past 20 years, Europeans have watched as the United States
first led Europe into wars Europe did not want to fight, and then succumbed to
a passionate anti-elite politics that culminated in the election of Donald
Trump. Frustration is to be expected. The Afghanistan collapse will surely
sharpen it.
But the
European Union is going to find it difficult to place itself at the center of
Western defense arrangements, largely because it, too, has generated among its
citizenry a distrust for elites as intense as the one that put the United
States on its present path. In this respect, at least, Western countries are
united, more united perhaps than they would wish to be.
Christopher
Caldwell is a contributing Opinion writer for The New York Times and a
contributing editor at The Claremont Review of Books. He is the author of
“Reflections on the Revolution in Europe: Immigration, Islam and the West” and
“The Age of Entitlement: America Since the Sixties.”


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