March 29, 2021
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NorthDoes America Still Need to Worry So Much About Europe?
Europe will
always remain an important part of the world for U.S. foreign policy, but its
centrality to American national and economic security is drawing to a close.
How this rebalancing will happen during the 2020s will become the most critical
geopolitical challenge facing the U.S. national security establishment.
During his March 2021 visit to Europe—the first major trans-Atlantic dialogue since the Biden administration was inaugurated, Secretary of State Tony Blinken re-emphasized (in his bilateral with European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen) that Europe is America’s “partner of first resort.” After concluding his meeting with the EU High Representative for Foreign Affairs Josep Borrell, he again stressed that Europe and the United States “are the closest of partners, including on issues beyond our borders.”
Blinken’s reaffirmation of the
priority of Europe in American national strategy and the pre-eminence of the
Euro-Atlantic community, even at a time when growing attention is being focused
on the challenge posed by China and the importance of the Indo-Pacific basin,
seems to replicate, in 2021, what academic Joseph Roucek, in a series of 1955
essays in the American Journal of Economics and Sociology, defined
as the American understanding of geopolitics:
“American foreign policy since World War
II has viewed the Far East as a secondary theatre of action.
The Western European area is considered the main region for the concentration
of American efforts . . . This decision is due to the reasoning that the power
potential of Western Europe, at least now, is far greater than that of East
Asia and that the degree of stability and the community of interests in Western
Europe and the North Atlantic outweigh those of the Far East.”
But is this a fixed constant for
American national security?
For more than a century after
achieving its independence, the overriding U.S. geopolitical imperative was
separation from Europe and its conflicts (while retaining commercial
connections). Defined by George Washington himself as the avoidance of
entangling alliances, historian John Garraty encapsulated this process as
“America escapes from Europe,” especially as codified in the Monroe Doctrine of
1823. As Paul Glastris has noted:
“The Monroe Doctrine declared
that the United States would consider any attempt by a European state to
oppress or control any country in the Western Hemisphere a hostile act. It was
intended as a warning to the colonial powers not to restrict the potential
spread of democracy in Central and South America nor press any claims on North
American territory, thereby clearing the way for U.S. westward expansion. The doctrine
also stated that, in return, the United States would not involve itself
in the affairs of Europe—a vow meant to protect the ability of
American merchants to trade freely on an equal footing without being caught up
in Europe’s endless commercial intrigues.”
And as the United States
began to define for itself a more global role, at the end of the nineteenth
century, the initial areas of interest were the Caribbean and the Pacific
oceans, while maintaining the Atlantic as America’s line of defense from any
European spillover. Geostrategic thinkers like Alfred Mahan and Halford
Mackinder, however, raised a critical point: American homeland security and the
freedom of the seas that nourished America’s economic rise, could be endangered
if a hostile power or bloc was able to consolidate control over most of the
power centers of Eurasia. Mahan, in his book, The Interest of America in International Conditions,
warned of the dangers that a dominant European hegemon, combining the
industrial might and human capital of the continent with a sufficient
instrument of maritime power projection, would pose to the United States.
Mackinder, for his part, warned that a hegemonic power that dominated the
“world island” of the Old World, especially the industrial centers of Europe
and East Asia along with the vast material resource base of Central Eurasia and
the Middle East, would pose an existential threat to the outer crescent powers
such as the United States because of its ability to tap into economic and
military advantages that could end up overwhelming the British Empire and the
United States.
The outbreak of World War I
seemed to validate these concerns. As Roucek argued, “The United States could
not afford domination of Eurasia by Germany, or the elimination of Great
Britain as a great power standing between Europe and the United States in the
Atlantic Ocean.” America’s escape from Europe was over.
The lesson of
World War II and the start of the Cold War was
that the United States could not merely intervene in European affairs to defeat
a challenger and then return home; it would have to play a more active role in
shaping the political and economic balances of Europe favorable to U.S.
interests. For its own protection and to further its own geostrategic
interests, the United States decided to create the Euro-Atlantic community.
Faced with the possibility of Soviet dominance of Europe, the United States
moved from eschewing entangling alliances to, in Roucek’s formulation, becoming
the “most entangled” nation in the world. Within a few short years, after the
conclusion of World War II, “The United States shifted to a policy of
"containing" Soviet expansion and of countering Communist activities.
The Marshall Plan offered economic assistance to Europe, contingent on the
initiative and cooperation of the European States in drawing up a joint
recovery program. Then came the Brussels Pact, the Berlin blockade, the North
Atlantic Treaty, and the Mutual Defense Assistance Pact.” All of this lives on
in the twenty-first century in the formal institutions and informal
interconnections that define the trans-Atlantic relationship.
The collapse of the Soviet Union
in 1991, however, removed the overriding geopolitical impulse for close
American engagement with Europe. The “heartland” that so worried Mackinder and
his intellectual successor, Nicholas Spykman, is now divided among a group of
great and middle powers.
As the American effort to promote integration and cohesion in Europe is now largely complete—with a Europe that is capable of holding the line if that’s what it wants to do. Europe united under the banner of NATO now serves the role Great Britain did in the nineteenth century—ensuring that no security threat can break through that littoral barrier on Eurasia’s western peninsula to threaten the eastern shore of the United States.
Post-Soviet Russia remains one of
the world’s major players but, unlike the USSR in 1945, it is “hemmed
in” all around its borders. To the extent that the United States faces a
challenge--and, as Colin Dueck warns about the rise of China—“the U.S.
faces a near-peer competitor with the potential ability to dominate the
Eurasian Rimland through previously unexpected means,” the geographic locus has shifted from the
Euro-Atlantic to the Indo-Pacific basin.
At the same time, the
geo-economic picture has shifted. Fifty years ago, the Euro-Atlantic community
dominated the global economy and was the most robust trading space. Today, the
balances are shifting. Crunching the trade balance data, Parag Khanna concludes:
“Europe’s overall trade in goods with Asia--including China, ASEAN, Japan
and India—stands at $1.6 trillion annually, far larger than even Europe’s
trade with North America. This is one of the strongest indicators of the
irreversible shift in the global economic center of gravity eastward, from
trans-Atlantic to Eurasia.” North American trade with greater Asia also exceeds the value
of goods shipped across the Atlantic. To be sure, the Euro-Atlantic trading
area remains quite critical—but it is being balanced out by the
trans-Pacific and the trans-Eurasian economic linkages.
And as geoeconomics shift, so do
geopolitics. Twenty years ago, Ivo Daalder and James Lindsay assumed that the
next stage of what they termed the “globalization” of U.S. foreign policy would
be the extension of the Euro-Atlantic community into other parts of the world.
That remains a strategic possibility, but as Europe’s economic ties with
the United States diminish, European strategic interests are also affected. In
responding to comments about the need for a “united” U.S.-European alignment
vis-a-vis a rising China, former French ambassador to the United States Gérard
Araud responded that Europe “doesn’t have to choose” and would need to
avoid either maintaining equidistance between the United States and China or
alignment with one against the other, noting that European interests are
“closer to the US but their interests while overlapping are not similar.” At
the same time, as Khanna notes, the implications of this shift are clear for U.S.
policy: to engage more with Asia.
Europe will always remain an
important part of the world for U.S. foreign policy, but its centrality to
American national and economic security is drawing to a close. How this
rebalancing will happen during the 2020s will become the most critical geopolitical
challenge facing the U.S. national security establishment.
Nikolas K. Gvosdev
is a contributing editor at the National Interest.
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