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SOCIAL
SCIENCE RESEARCH COUNCIL / AFTER SEPT. 11
Living with the Hegemon: European Dilemmas
William Wallace, Professor of International
Relations, London School of Economics
The tragedy of September 11th 2001 demonstrated that the United
States was not invulnerable. The American response - the skilful
application of military power, backed by active diplomacy,
leading to the rapid collapse of the Taliban regime - demonstrated
that America nevertheless remains the dominant global power,
militarily, economically, diplomatically. The immediate impact
of the American success in Afghanistan - achieved without
significant assistance from other states, through carefully-calibrated
projection of force from the continental USA - has, indeed,
strengthened the perception of global American supremacy,
both inside and outside the USA.
West European states, the closest allies and formal 'partners'
of the United States in the Western international order established
after 1945, are thus faced with a range of strategic and tactical
choices. Do they assume that American dominance within the
post-cold war global order is likely to remain unchallengeable
for the foreseeable future? Do they accept, and work within,
a global framework of American hegemony, to bandwagon
as far as they can on established ties to the USA through
pursuing influence at the margin; or should they seek to balance
American dominance by building up European institutions as
a competing centre of power? In either case, do their relations
with the USA depend on the provision of particular types of
power - military, as well as economic - or is it possible
(and acceptable to their American ally) to maintain mutual
trust and cooperation between the self-consciously 'civilian
power' of institutionalised Europe and the militarily-dominant
USA? Is 'partnership' within the framework of multilateral
institutions established over the past half-century - in almost
all cases on American initiative, and with active American
support - still meaningful, when the historical circumstances
that underpinned these transatlantic institutions have now
disappeared?
Hegemony - and Liberal Hegemony
Antonio Gramsci's concept of 'hegemony', now widely accepted
in conventional political discourse, emphasized the combination
of coercion and consent which maintains structures of dominance,
both within states and within systems of states. Stable structures
of power depend on both material resources and ideology -
dominant systems of belief. States can secure temporary supremacy
over their neighbours through the use of overwhelming force
and the utilization of superior technology, underpinned by
the expenditure of the necessary economic resources; longer-term
supremacy however depends upon at least a degree of acceptance
of the legitimacy of the dominant power from those dominated.
All formal or informal empires have proclaimed legitimising
ideologies, with greater or lesser degrees of success. Islam
provided the motivating force and rationale for Arab conquest
of North Africa, Persia, and Central Asia, and maintained
a succession of regional orders over the centuries that followed.
Napoleon Bonaparte's modification of the ideology of the French
revolution into a doctrine of popular mobilization and administrative
modernization provided the legitimacy which recruited divisions
of German, Polish and Dutch troops to march with the Grand
Army to Moscow in 1812. The absence of a broader rationale
for German hegemony was a crucial weakness in the Nazi regime:
it could depend only on coercion outside its borders, apart
from a handful of would-be collaborators, provoking resistance
which tied down its forces and dissipated its resources.
Theories of liberal hegemony - from Arnold Toynbee, Charles
Kindleberger, Robert Gilpin and others - have provided a rationale
for American engagement in the construction and maintenance
of global order since 1945. Toynbee looked back to a succession
of previous international orders, in which dominant powers
had established structures of custom, law and institutionalised
diplomacy which prolonged dominance and enabled the dominant
power to maintain its position through prestige and authority
as well as through the distribution of resources and the threat
- and use - of force. Kindleberger and Gilpin focused more
directly on the 19th century period of British dominance,
as historical precursor for the American role post-World War
Two. The English-defined gold standard and the English doctrine
of free trade briefly nurtured global (or at least European)
economic expansion, while the British navy suppressed piracy
and the slave trade and British political leaders and lawyers
laid down rules for international diplomacy and crisis management.
Competing imperialist ideologies - Russian, French, German,
Italian, Japanese - brought a reversion to economic protection
and international rivalry; Germany's rapid growth to industrial
and scientific leadership in the final decades of the 19th
century, followed by a military and naval expansion which
was a clear challenge to Anglo-Saxon pre-eminence, brought
the long peace of 19th century Europe to a catastrophic end
in the Great War of 1914-18.
19th century Britain, however, was never as unchallengeable
in terms of economic or military supremacy as the United States
is today. Militarily, the collapse of the Soviet Union has
left the United States without any competitor: in terms of
investment in advanced technology or in deployable forces.
The long timescale of military research, development and deployment
implies that no serious challenger to the United States is
likely to emerge within the next 15-20 years - at least in
terms of the provision of conventional, organized forces.
'Asymmetric' warfare by state-sponsored terrorist groups remains,
of course, an active threat; but America's ability to project
military force across the globe is likely to remain unique.
There is no indication of any other state, or group of states,
willing to make the sustained investment needed to acquire
such capabilities, or with the resources to support such sustained
investment.
British hegemony was undermined partly by its loss of markets,
and of industrial and technological leadership, to Germany.
After the sustained economic growth of the 1990s, supported
by technological innovation across a range of sectors, the
USA also appears unchallengeable within the global economy,
at least within the medium term. With the USA skirting recession
in 2001-2, however, it is worth remembering the rapidity with
which economic recession has brought shifts from optimism
to pessimism in the past, and might do so again. In the late
1980s, budgetary and trade deficits, accompanied by slow growth,
provoked a succession of studies of American 'decline' and
of the dangers of imperial 'overstretch', of which Paul Kennedy's
The Rise and Fall of Great Powers (1988) was the most
widely read. The Japanese economy, widely seen as the strongest
and most technologically advanced national economy in those
years, has since then fallen back to apparent stagnation,
remarkably rapidly. There are a number of structural
weaknesses in the American economy, most notably the scale
and persistence of its trade deficit and its increasing dependence
on imports of energy. A shift in the balance of economic growth
between the USA and Europe, accompanied by a shift in the
dollar-euro exchange rate, might well bring a parallel shift
in perceptions of economic strength and weakness. European
governments would be wise not to assume that such a shift
will follow the introduction of the single currency; it may
however be noted that the last period of European optimism
and American pessimism accompanied (and in part reflected)
the surge in economic integration launched by the Single European
Act in 1986. Continued economic growth within China may also
have a cumulative impact on American economic competitiveness
and confidence. US economic hegemony is thus not as secure
as US military supremacy over the medium term.
Liberal hegemony, however, also heavily depends on the consent
that comes from acceptance of the legitimacy of systemic leadership.
The Western international system established under US leadership
after 1945 embedded political and economic values in multilateral
institutions, accepted as authoritative by America's allies
and partners. Robert Keohane's classic study, After Hegemony
(1984) was mistitled; American leadership persisted through
the 1970s and 1980s, in spite of the decline of US economic
dominance and the apparent decline (post-Vietnam) of US military
supremacy because American ideas about governance and markets
retained their authority, both within international institutions
and within other advanced democracies. Joseph Nye, in Bound
to Lead: the changing nature of American power (1990)
rightly drew attention to America's reserves of 'soft power',
reflected in the wide international acceptance of 'Western'
values and market principles, the prestige and influence of
American universities and research institutions, and the broader
cultural influence of the largely-American English-language
media. American power might be more effectively exerted indirectly
than directly, through the half-conscious acceptance by elites
within other states of American assumptions about domestic
and international order.
Part of the paradox of the resurgence of American economic
and technological supremacy in the 1990s, together with the
demonstration (first in the Gulf War, and then again in the
intervention in Afghanistan) of American military dominance,
is that these have been accompanied by a weakening of American
'soft power'. American prestige, both abroad and at home,
has suffered from domestic political and economic scandals
(as in the 1970s). The disappearance of the Soviet Union deprived
the USA of its most-easily accepted rationale for global engagement,
which also legitimized American leadership of the Atlantic
Alliance and the broader 'free world'. Between the Gulf War
of 1991 and the Afghan intervention of 2001, the visible hesitancy
with which American policy-makers approached the deployment
of US power, in Somalia, Bosnia, Kosovo, and the preoccupation
with 'exit strategies' from the point of entry on, weakened
the respect of America's allies for its military and political
leadership. A further paradox of American supremacy is that
what is perceived within the USA as 'resentment' at its liberty
and prosperity, as 'anti-Americanism' from hostile outsiders,
has partly flowed from the spillover of domestic controversies
onto the international stage. The 'global' NGOs which demonstrated
against US domination of the global economy at the WTO meeting
in Seattle were largely American-led. The narratives of anti-globalization
and the corruption of free market capitalism have drawn upon
American critiques as well as on diatribes from other countries,
and have been disseminated across the world through English-language
media.
A yet further paradox is that the collapse of state socialism,
with the apparent 'victory' of market democracy as the model
for political and economic order, has led not to the 'end
of history' that Francis Fukuyama proclaimed but to a greater
emphasis on the differences among approaches to market democracy.
The Malaysian Prime Minister and others laid great stress
in the immediate post-cold war period on the claimed superiorities
of the 'Asian model'. The most delicate and difficult dialogue
on the values which underpin market democracy has, however,
been across the Atlantic: between an American model which
emphasises free markets and a limited role for government
in social welfare and European 'social market' models which
- in differing ways - lay greater stress on the regulation
of employment and on the provision of welfare. American charges
that European social democracy has led to 'Eurosclerosis'
have been met by European charges that American-style capitalism
carries unacceptable social costs. The symbolic importance
of capital punishment as an issue in transatlantic relations
is that it encapsulates the differences of approach: the American
belief in a more vigorous culture of success and failure,
of reward and punishment, against the European concern with
social harmony and community as necessary components of a
liberal economy. Here again, the division of opinion is partly
a reflection of differences within the United States,
as well as between the USA and other democratic states. The
Republican attack on 'big government', which has in many ways
defined the issues of American politics during the 1990s,
attracted limited support within Europe. Most European right-wing
parties remained closer to the traditions of Christian Democracy
and state-centred conservatism; from the mid-1990s onwards,
furthermore, the majority of European governments were centre-left
rather than centre-right. The international spillover of the
Republican attack on Democratic 'big government and Democratic
'internationalism' was that American 'values' have come to
be rhetorically presented - by leading Senators and Congressmen,
as well as by the Washington intellectuals who dominate the
op-ed pages - as distinctive from those of America's partners
and allies, rather than as universal.
Geir Lundestad has described the US-led Atlantic 'community'
of the past half-century as Empire by Invitation (1998).
The United States, as a self-consciously liberal hegemon,
operated through multilateral institutions which disguised,
legitimised and moderated its dominance, and provided a narrative
(or rationale) of common values shared by the 'free world'
which were declared to be universal in their application.
A central difficulty for the USA's European partners, in responding
to the current re-establishment of American military and economic
dominance, is that the rhetorical justification for this dominant
position is more often couched in Realist than in Liberal
terms: with reference to US national interests rather than
to shared global values and concerns, with self-conscious
unilateralism rather than US- orchestrated multilateralism.
Bandwagon or Balance?
European governments are therefore faced with a harsher choice
in responding to the reassertion of American leadership than
their predecessors were in responding to President Truman's
formulation of shared values across the 'free world', or to
President Kennedy's grand design for 'Atlantic partnership',
or even to President George Bush's 1991 evocation of shared
values within a 'new world order'. The current rhetoric of
'American values' and 'national interest' is far less inclusive.
European governments are offered a choice between 'followership'
behind assertive American leadership, or resistance to American
leadership - which necessarily implies a search for an alternative
focus for power and influence sufficiently strong to demand
American attention.
Over the past forty years, British governments have characteristically
adopted a bandwagonning stance: declaring their firm support
for American strategic goals, while attempting from within
that overall stance to influence American policy at the margin.
French governments, on the other hand, have characteristically
resisted American strategy, while at the same time attempting
to persuade their European partners to combine in a caucus
which could collectively hope to counterbalance American dominance
of Western diplomacy. The dependence of West European states
on American military commitment, during the cold war, limited
the attractions of this balancing strategy to other states,
the German government most of all. Over Middle East policy,
in 1973-4 and again in 1981, European governments deliberately
diverged from the line set by American leadership, provoking
sharp transatlantic disagreements and a retreat from the autonomous
approaches briefly adopted. Even before the outbreak of transatlantic
differences on the Middle East in 1973, Henry Kissinger's
'Year of Europe' speech had spelt out to America's European
allies the Realist doctrine that military power and economic
cooperation were intrinsically linked, and that Western Europe's
continuing dependence on the USA to extend security required
its governments to bend their international economic policies
to American preferences.
British and French approaches have to some extent converged
since the end of the cold war. Both were for example determined
to provide ground, air and naval forces to support the US-led
coalition to expel Iraq from Kuwait in 1991, to demonstrate
their significance as American allies. The experience of Bosnia,
however, demonstrated both to British and to French policy-makers
that a greater capacity for autonomous military operation
was needed to avoid being forced to follow US policy without
gaining significant influence over its direction: that a balancing
caucus was needed to counter US domination. This led to the
1998 Franco-British initiative on European defence, which
set out the objective of achieving not only a much greater
degree of integration among European military forces but also
of establishing a degree of 'autonomy' for EU member states
within NATO - an objective which successive US Administrations
had firmly resisted. At the Helsinki European Council in December
1999 the EU heads of government committed themselves to a
series of 'Headline Goals' for deployable military forces,
to be operational by 2003. By the end of 2001, however, the
progress towards achieving these goals in practice appeared
very modest.
In the wake of the attacks of September 2001, not only the
British but also the French and German governments chose explicitly
to bandwagon rather than to balance: to declare their active
support for the American response, and to offer military contributions
towards it. (It should be noted that the French government,
in particular, took this stance in the face of considerable
opposition in the domestic media.) Tony Blair, the British
Prime Minister, went furthest in declaring active sympathy
for the American predicament and support for the American
response; from which he gained considerable popularity within
the USA, although it remains unclear how far he gained any
significant influence over aspects of American policy. All
three European governments appear to have chosen explicit
support for current US policy in the hope of gaining some
degree of constraint over future American options. Their calculation
has been that the threat of withdrawal of support from the
USA's most active allies might serve to tip the balance among
Washington policy-makers considering the range of possibilities
- over further military action against Iraq for example: bandwagonning
now in the hope of improving the chances of successful balancing
later.
Transatlantic economic relations have of course been for many
years much more a matter of balance among relatively equal
powers than of leadership and followership. The EU is an effective
force in global trade negotiations, a standard setter in international
regulation, and a challenge to the extra-territorial reach
of American anti-trust policy towards multinational companies
- and therefore a necessary partner in developing global competition
policies. World trade negotiations through successive trade
rounds have revolved around transatlantic bargains between
the EU and the USA, to rising discontent from other parties
to the negotiations. The supremacy of the dollar - and the
close links between the Washington-based international financial
institutions and the US Treasury - have however maintained
American dominance over crucial areas of global economic management.
In the shadow of the attacks on the World Trade Center and
the Pentagon, it is possible that the successful launch of
the Euro as a tangible currency across 12 of the 15 EU member
states, now visibly available as an alternative reserve currency
and store of value, may prove in the long term to have given
the EU the capacity to balance the USA in another major area
of global public policy.
Currencies of Power
One of the most difficult issues for America's European partners
to address is that of the balance to be struck between military
power, diplomatic activity and economic influence - and how
to respond to the greater emphasis American policy-makers
characteristically place on military power. West European
governments depended on the United States for security throughout
the cold war. The US maintained 12 divisions, two fleets and
substantial air forces in and around the European theatre,
backed by strategic and tactical nuclear weapons. Institutionalized
European integration developed, within this Atlantic security
framework, as a self-consciously 'civilian' power, using the
instruments of financial assistance and trade concessions
to persuade its neighbours and partners to cooperate.
The enlightened self-interest which led US administrations
to underwrite the economic and political recovery of Western
Europe after 1945, and to extend an American security guarantee,
partly lay in the expectation that the rebuilding of European
state structures and economies would in time enable those
states to shoulder a larger share of the 'burden' of global
order and global development. American policy-makers saw burden-sharing
both in military and in economic terms: anticipating that
within NATO the European allies would progressively replace
the conventional US contribution to the common defence, and
that within the UN system and through bilateral economic assistance
they would provide a progressively larger financial contribution
to the pursuit of shared Western objectives. The question
of potential linkages between burden-sharing and policy-sharing
remained unexplored; US policy-makers appear to have assumed
that their European partners would continue to accept the
rationales for American policy, and thus to follow American
leadership, even as they shouldered a larger and larger proportion
of the costs of the defence and promotion of Western values.
In practice, the USA continued to provide by far the largest
contribution to Western defence throughout the 1970s and 1980s,
while becoming more and more discontented with its national
contributions to economic development in other countries and
to international institutions. Since then the continuing shrinkage
of US aid programs, Congressional resistance to contributions
to multilateral institutions, while actively supporting high
levels of military expenditure even after the Soviet threat
had disappeared, has tipped the budget for American foreign
policy heavily towards military power rather than instruments
for economic influence. European governments, in contrast,
took their 'peace dividend' in the form of deep cuts in military
expenditure, while largely maintaining expenditure on non-military
aspects of foreign policy. As a result the United States now
accounts for some 40% of global military expenditure, while
the EU collectively accounts for 25%; while the USA is battling
to reduce its 25% contribution to the budgets of the United
Nations and UN agencies, to which EU states collectively contribute
nearly 40%.
There is, however, no basis for mutual understanding across
the Atlantic on the appropriate exchange rate between these
different currencies of power and influence. The Realist conception
of foreign policy which underpins the Bush Administration
emphasizes the determining importance of military power, effectively
demonstrated once again in its projection over Afghanistan.
The logic of this position is that European states must invest
a great deal more in deployable military forces if they wish
either to balance American dominance or to exert greater influence
over the direction of American policy; that the instruments
of 'civilian power' are the small change of global influence.
There is however little domestic support within any European
state for significant increases in defence spending - combined
with frustration among political elites that substantial expenditure
on international economic development, even when (as in Palestine)
in support of declared US objectives, does not gain significant
influence over the policies which the hegemon pursues.
Is Partnership Possible?
American rhetoric about transatlantic partnership was always
a little disingenuous: offering junior partnership within
an American-led community, rather than an effective partnership
of equals. Multilateral rhetoric, and multilateral institutions,
nevertheless made it easier for European governments to accept
American leadership, and to persuade their domestic publics
that they had gained a degree of influence over American policy
in return. The United States resisted any moves towards an
autonomous European group within NATO, from the 1960s through
to the 1990s; but successive US Presidents paid lip service
to the multilateral quality of NATO, participating in regular
summits and bilateral consultations of a quality which persuaded
all but Gaullist France that the consultative partnership
offered was a bargain worth maintaining. Partnership in global
economic policy has become much more substantial - with the
partial exception of global financial regulation, where US
administrations have remained determined to maintain their
key role within the IMF. The most difficult test for continuing
hegemony - that is, for continuing acceptance by America's
dependent partners of the legitimacy of its dominant role
- thus lies in the politico-military domain.
The USA has now demonstrated, in Afghanistan, that it can
go it alone in managing a crisis and defeating a distant but
weakly-armed opponent. American policy-makers were determined
to avoid their Afghan operations becoming entangled in the
multilateral coils of NATO, permitting only a handful of forces
from a small number of allies to assist the American-led effort.
But it has not yet demonstrated that it can build a stable
peace within West, Central and Southern Asia without a broader
coalition to sustain a longer-term strategy. The implication
of Administration rhetoric and requests for assistance from
allies has been that the long-term process of rebuilding domestic
order and a working economy can be shouldered primarily by
others, after the United States has defeated the immediate
threat. Such a division of responsibilities is unlikely to
be welcome or acceptable, however, without both some appearance
of continuing consultation and some definition of shared objectives
and values sufficient to legitimize the demands the US wishes
to make. A world in which American policy-makers proclaim
that 'superpowers don't do windows', or that 'it is not the
job of the 101st Airborne to help children across the road',
while expecting their allies to shoulder the burden of these
essential but subordinate nation-building tasks, is one in
which American power is likely to be increasingly resisted
rather than welcomed. US power can be successfully exerted
in a crisis without waiting for the consent of other friendly
states; but if the consent of those friendly states is taken
for granted over an extended period it will cease to be offered
so willingly, and may in time be withdrawn.
The dilemmas European governments face in the aftermath of
Sept.11th 2001 in responding to the expectations of their
American hegemon are acute. They have to recognize that Europe
as a region now matters far less to the United States than
over the previous half-century, as American attention has
turned to the Western hemisphere and Asia. They have to weigh
up the arguments for greater investment in military power,
partly in response to US expectations and partly as a means
of counterbalancing US power. They have to pursue opportunities
to influence the direction of US policy, in circumstances
in which American tolerance for multilateral channels of consultation
have declined. They have to respond to American requests for
support and assistance, without having had the opportunity
to share in formulating the policy which has set the context
within which those requests are made.
There are, however, dilemmas for the USA as well. Hegemony
rests on consent as well as on coercion, as has been argued
above; and consent has to be generated and maintained, through
the provision of persuasive leadership and through reference
to a universal set of values. Liberal hegemony requires dominant
powers to present the pursuit of their enlightened self-interest
as being in the common interests of civilization as a whole.
Explicit references to direct and immediate national interests,
a rationale for foreign policy which stresses the exceptional
and exclusive interests of the United States compared to those
of its partners, resistance to multilateral regimes which
diffuse American leadership within frameworks of shared rules
and obligations, all weaken the 'soft power' of American prestige
and reputation on which the informal empire of this hegemonic
world order depends.
The founding fathers recognized that 'a decent respect for
the opinions of men' outside the North American continent
required them to frame the rationale for independence in terms
which foreign as well as domestic audiences might accept.
In providing a framework for foreign policy, US political
leaders and intellectual elites in the post-cold war world
have found it easier to address their domestic audience than
their partners and allies beyond North America - not recognizing
that in the long-term this may threaten the ability of the
US to generate the 'coalitions of the willing' needed to support
US objectives across the globe. Where economic and financial
instruments are required, America's European partners are
essential to such coalitions; where peacemaking and nation-building
operations follow the resolution of immediate crises, they
have greater resources and skills than any other group of
states. Those instruments and resources will continue to be
readily available in support of American interests only if
American policy-makers continue to invest in a multilateral
rationale for US dominance, rather than to assert that dominance
as a reality which other states must - willingly or unwillingly
- accept. Hegemony rests upon a range of resources, of hard
military power, economic weight, financial commitments, and
the soft currency of hegemonic values, cultural influence
and prestige. Soft power costs political time and investment,
rather than massive expenditure of budgetary resources: imaginative
leadership, to persuade those states in the shadow of the
hegemon that they share in a common enterprise, rather than
being coerced to follow an agenda set over their heads.
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