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With Us or Against Us

Page 13

by Tony Judt


  the Iraq crisis has brought Britain closer to the United States. In 2002,

  when the British were asked what country was the most important to

  Britain—Europe, the Commonwealth, or the United States—50 percent

  replied Europe, 19 percent the Commonwealth, and 29 percent the

  United States. In 2003, when the Iraq war was winding down, the pro-

  portions were 42, 16, and 34 percent, respectively. And when asked

  which country was the most reliable ally and which country the least

  * * *

  French and European Public Opinion

  71

  reliable, the answer was America as the most reliable for 73 percent and

  France the least reliable for 55 percent. It is clear that even if the

  British were at first opposed to the war, they remain faithful to their

  special relationship with the United States. As for Spain, the regional

  and local elections of May 25, 2003 did not turn into a defeat for

  Aznar’s party, contrary to what opinion polls had predicted. But

  Aznar lost the legislative election after the March 11, 2004 Madrid

  terrorist attack.

  In a wider perspective, the new survey of the Pew Global Project

  Attitudes released in June 2003 revealed that one month after the end

  of the war in Iraq, the level of anti-Americanism had dropped in

  Europe (table 3.6). But the size of the decline varied from country to

  country. It was least pronounced in the case of Russia and of France.

  Anti-Americanism appeared relatively weak in Great Britain and Italy,

  fairly strong in other countries.

  Public opinion in all European countries favored, to varying degrees,

  the evolution of diplomatic and security ties between Europe and the

  United States, and the development of a greater sense of independ-

  ence (table 3.7). The British and the Germans were more concerned

  Table 3.6

  Favorable view of the United States (in %)

  March 2003

  May 2003

  Difference

  Great Britain

  48

  70

  ⫹22

  Italy

  34

  60

  ⫹26

  Germany

  25

  45

  ⫹20

  France 31

  43

  ⫹12

  Spain

  14

  38

  ⫹24

  Russia

  26

  38

  ⫹8

  Source: Pew Global Project Attitudes.

  Table 3.7

  United States–European diplomatic and security ties (in %)

  March 2003

  Should remain close

  Should be more

  Don’t know

  independent

  U.S.

  62

  29

  9

  Britain

  40

  48

  12

  France

  30

  67

  4

  Germany

  46

  52

  3

  Italy

  30

  63

  7

  Spain

  24

  60

  16

  Source: Pew Research Center, March 2003.

  * * *

  72

  G érard Grunberg

  with maintaining close relations than were the Spanish, the French,

  and the Italians. There emerges a distinction between northern

  Europe and southern Europe—a distinction that does not correlate

  with the positions taken by the governments concerned. In addition

  to the differences between countries, there are differences within each

  country according to the political orientations of the respondents

  (table 3.8). This is particularly true of France where, anti-Americanism

  becomes more pronounced as political orientation moves further to

  the left. In addition, whereas the French electorate close to the left

  “sided” with the Iraqis as frequently as with the Americans, the elec-

  torate close to the right clearly “sided” with the United States (44

  percent as against 18 percent). Only 47 percent of the left electorate

  favored a coalition victory; on the other hand, the percentage rose to

  69 for those on the right. These differences are reflected in the level

  of support for the alliance with the United States as revealed by the

  Table 3.8

  The image of the United States according to political

  orientation

  Political orientation on

  Negative image of

  a left/right scale

  the US (%)

  Left

  65

  Center-left

  51

  Center

  48

  Center-right

  42

  Right

  38

  Table 3.9

  The French American alliance

  How strongly do you yourself support the alliance between France and the United States?

  Support the

  Total

  Political orientation

  alliance

  (%)

  Left

  Right

  (%)

  (%)

  Very strongly

  17

  15

  23

  Fairly strongly

  40

  38

  45

  Subtotal (support)

  57

  53

  68

  Not really strongly

  28

  34

  22

  Not at all

  11

  11

  7

  Subtotal (nonsupport)

  39

  45

  29

  No answer

  4

  2

  3

  Total

  100

  100

  100

  * * *

  French and European Public Opinion

  73

  BVA survey of February 2003: those on the right were more

  supportive of the alliance than those on the left. In France, the left is

  deeply split on the issue of the alliance with the United States. For

  some people on the left, the United States is not an ally but an adver-

  sary (table 3.9). It is here that radical anti-Americanism emerges most

  clearly.

  The data that have been presented indicate that even if the Iraq

  crisis constituted a unique event that of itself precipitated a steep rise

  in anti-Americanism—the crisis served essentially to bring to the sur-

  face and reinforce an underlying level of anti-American sentiment. The

  foundations of the transatlantic alliance would appear, except in the

  case of Great Britain, to be fragile as far as European public opinion is

  concerned. The American superpower is a source of anxiety and U.S.

  policies are suspect. Europeans sense the gap to be widening between

  their societies and the United States. And the new foreign and military

  policies adopted by America run into strong objections because of its

  excessive reliance on military force and unilateralism. The Europeans

  are no longer certain that they defend the same causes and strive for

  the same objectives as the Americans. They fear that the American

  model of society will be forced upon them. In short, they feel that

  they are different. />
  * * *

  4

  I s There a New

  A nti-Americanism?

  R eflections on Germany in

  T imes of Global Simultaneity

  Detlev Claussen

  With the Iraqi campaign of 2003, America has once again become

  the focus of world debate. Since 9/11, there has been a heated debate

  in Germany over its relationship with the leading power in the West—

  the United States. Though much has already been said against U.S.

  policies, the question now is whether there is a new anti-Americanism,

  one that has intensified since 1989 in the aftermath of the collapse of

  the Cold War’s bipolar world order. Is this even anti-Americanism at

  all? This question cannot be answered if the situation in Germany is

  viewed in isolation. Like the devil and holy water, most participants

  in this discussion shy away from a more precise definition of anti-

  Americanism, the reason being that a closer examination would force

  the public parlor game of mutual accusation to give way to a serious

  analysis of the current global situation. Even those who argue in favor of

  the anti-American side do not want to be considered anti-American,

  at least not in the West anyway. While the manifest anti-Americanism

  preached by the group that surrounds bin Laden cannot be denied, it

  must be remembered that it is only since the 1980s—when Afghanistan’s

  war with the Soviet Union ended—that this group’s ideology turned

  against America. During the Cold War, bin Laden, like a magician’s

  apprentice to the field of politics, fought with American support

  against the unbelievers of the Soviet Union. To him and his cohorts,

  the Soviet Union appeared to be the main secular enemy of the Arab

  world—the world from which they came and which shaped their

  * * *

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  D etlev Cl aussen

  motives. It was only after the Gulf War, in which one of the last

  representatives of Arab political nationalism, Saddam Hussein, styled

  himself in vain as the political leader of the Arab world, that the

  anti-American aspect of their worldview emerged. Manifest anti-

  Americanism in the Arab world has been well suited for its ongoing

  role of identifying guilty parties for the disaster of decolonization. As

  a cipher and symbol for the Arab world’s failed liberation from colonial

  dependence, the state of Israel also continues to fulfill this function.

  Rather than recognizing that Israel’s powerful position in the middle

  of the Arab world is related to the Arab world’s own inability to create

  a peaceful, future-oriented social order, Israel’s status has been attrib-

  uted solely to the allegedly one-sided support by the United States.

  Since the 1920s, Arab nationalism in the form of Nasserism and

  Baathism has competed with the “corrupt regimes” that were held

  responsible for the failed modernization of the Arab world. Increasing

  in strength after the defeat of Nasser in the Six-Day War of 1967,

  political Islam, by contrast, declared both paths into the modern world

  equally corrupt. From nationalism, these Islamists inherited manifest

  anti-Americanism as a weapon in the Arab power struggle. After the

  victory of the Ayatollah Khomeini, with whom they had been com-

  peting, and after the fatwah against Salman Rushdie in 1989, the

  Islamists then integrated this weapon into their own worldview. The

  attacks of 9/11 constitute the previously unimaginable pinnacle of

  these activities. Though the attacks were meant to embarrass Arab

  regimes of all colors—modern and traditional alike—this struggle is

  no longer justified politically. Instead, it is justified in religious and

  cultural terms. It is in this respect that bin Laden’s terrorism can

  be understood as a new anti-Americanism, even when it is put in the

  service of many old resentments.

  Not the acts themselves, but aspects of their justification could

  count on a surprisingly worldwide sympathy. In the initial aftermath

  of 9/11, this sympathy was heard only in conversations at parties,

  then in public spaces, at universities, and on television and radio out-

  lets. Then increasingly, these sympathies started to appear in print,

  first in feuilletons, and until finally they reached the editorial pages.

  The public was beginning to interpret the attacks of 9/11 and the

  central argument that emerged was that the world order was unjust.

  The current icon of this slant in the media is Arundhati Roy, who has

  taken on the role of spokesperson for a Third World that no longer

  exists. This post-colonial performance, which is intended for academic

  and mass media markets, has already been presented by the firebrand

  Edward Said. As both a spokesman for the Palestinian diaspora and a

  * * *

  Is There a New Anti-Americanism?

  77

  successful scholar within the American university system, Said was able

  to articulate himself in universal terms. In this way, he succeeded in

  establishing himself as a symbolic representative for people who iden-

  tify with the Third World as well as for urban oriented intellectuals.

  The 1989 collapse of the bipolar world reflected a global simultaneity,

  which is bewildering. The social contradictions between the modern

  and the traditional coexist in every corner of the world; realities through-

  out the entire globe are characterized by bizarre mixtures of progress

  and backwardness. In the midst of this chaos, America serves as a

  point of orientation. It seems to have remained the same while the

  world has changed almost beyond recognition. Even the expression,

  “the only remaining superpower,” strikes many people as a provoca-

  tion, at the same time when it has become a social fact. The phrase,

  “new world order,” already existed in 1990, even before the Gulf War,

  which came to symbolize this new world order. The half hearted way

  in which this particular notion was staged can be criticized. The coali-

  tion may have succeeded in the war but the situation in the Middle

  East was left unresolved. Criticism of U.S. foreign policy in the

  Middle East is completely justifiable. However, this criticism veers

  toward anti-Americanism when it represents the U.S. government as

  the only responsible power that should still be concerned about the

  region’s dissarray. Anti-American emotions were running high when

  the embarrassingly excessive, “No Blood For Oil,” was coined. In the

  early 1990s, Western societies did not settle this conflict either in the

  public arena or in terms of domestic policy. Saddam Hussein’s disar-

  mament hardly elicited any argument in 1991. Yet, the United States

  has dominated the last decade and in the eyes of most of its accusers,

  this makes it responsible for everything that has happened since then.

  The strongest power is always regarded as all-powerful. As a result, an

  anti-American worldview has become firmly established, a position

  that is always at hand and ready to be put to use.

  Shock over 9/11 shaped the new reality of world politics. This

  shock only lasted a few days, however, bef
ore old reflexes, unresolved

  intellectual and political issues from the recent past, returned. The

  new anti-Americanism filled the void left by the lack of a theoretical

  conception of global society that would adequately reflect the way

  the world has changed since 1989. By employing such empty concepts

  as “globalization” social scientists have preferred to label, rather than

  to understand, the post-1989 period. What is underestimated is the

  extent to which the imperative to modernize as quickly as possible

  is more than ever colliding against lingering traditions. The long,

  post–World War II boom was accompanied by an international

  * * *

  78

  D etlev Cl aussen

  revolution in education, which created a new, globally competitive

  world middle class. Those who do not identify with America as the

  most advanced society in the world, or who cannot study it without

  emotion or bias, feel neglected or cheated—a well-known phenome-

  non in twentieth-century German social psychology. Since the last

  third of the twentieth century, the return to the past as a resource has

  been an integral part of this process. In the most advanced society in

  the world, this process has led to the public acceptance, far beyond

  the academic arena, of such categories as “ethnicity” and “identity.”

  The recently formed middle classes, which had replaced the tradition-

  ally educated middle class in their cultural strongholds of schools and

  universities, founded a new, ethnic, religious, and, later, gender-based

  model of historical interpretation. This was appropriate for the United

  States, as it is a society characterized by immigration. Outside the

  United States, these very modernization processes, which had already

  found expression in the globally concurrent events of 1968, led to

  renationalized self-perceptions among the new middle classes. The

  “children of Karl Marx and Coca-Cola,” as Jean-Luc Godard called

  them, became adults who invented their own ethno-cultural identity.

  In distancing themselves from America, their past could once again be

  national.

  In other European countries, this renationalization of the past can

  happen with less restraint than in West Germany, which in contrast to

  France or Italy cannot define itself in unambiguously national terms,

  without playing down the National Socialist past. For this reason,

  heated debates over the German past constantly reoccur. Moreover,

 

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