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A Convenient Myth Through the Filter of Reality

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  • A Convenient Myth Through the Filter of Reality

    A Convenient Myth Through the Filter of Reality
    by George de Poor Handlery

    Intellectual Conservative, AZ
    June 15 2005

    America's myth of convenience is that the "new Europe" is on her
    side, while America is being deserted by "old Europe" that the US
    alienated by saving it repeatedly.

    Let this begin with an admission. The subject pains the writer and
    therefore, he would prefer not to have to write the essay. Generally
    a topic one elaborates elicits pleasure as it takes shape. In this
    case the sensation is vinegary. Thus only the intellectual commitment
    to causes that by definition transcend personal preferences, furnish
    the energy to proceed.

    The recent experience that triggered this piece had its venue in
    Hungary. In many ways the locale is not decisive in determining the
    content and the conclusions that issue from it. What happened could
    have occurred anywhere in the "West's" new "East." Here the term
    "Europe" has been consciously avoided. In what most Americans still
    mean under the word, namely Western Europe, the barbs connected to
    the arguments reconstructed would have been more poisonous and the
    arrows carrying them laden with supplementary energy.

    Let us begin with what the title refers to as the "myth." America's
    myth of convenience is that the "new Europe" is on her side while the
    country is being deserted by "old Europe" that the US alienated by
    saving it repeatedly. While it would be comforting if it would be so,
    the sad fact is that on the whole, the "new Europe" is not so
    inclined when the going gets tough with the US. This gap between the
    desired and the actual is no accident. The "filter of reality" is,
    therefore, essential.

    For the purpose of a discussion, a (science) Ph.D. friend, who lives
    in the West, brought a group together in his vacation home. The truly
    native participants need introduction. They consisted of another
    science Ph.D. and of a Professor, who is a hospital director and
    heart specialist of repute. Both share the honor of membership in the
    National Academy. The latter's wife, an MD, also participated. The
    Ph.D. had extensive living experience abroad. It began when as an
    eleven-year-old he was a POW in US custody. Then he spent years
    outside the "Socialist Block," for he was delegated to serve as an
    expert, mainly in Geneva, in an UN-affiliated body. Describing the MD
    it is to be noted that the man is strongly religious.

    Triggered by the crisis of her Red-Green coalition, the foreseen
    topic was Germany. Within seconds this subject got side-lined and the
    focus fell on the USA. That was the point where I chose to become a
    silent observer intent to suck up uncensored views for subsequent
    use. It is to be assumed that only my host -- who shares my
    world-view and knows my vocation -- understood the strategic concept
    behind my tactical comportment as a grey mouse.

    In some ways the surprising thing about the lively exchange of
    perceptions was that there was no overriding local color to it.
    Except for a few asides and referrals to past events, the very
    cosmopolitan "locals" -- interrupted by the skeptical questions of my
    host -- sounded much like the fashionable America-bashers of Western
    Europe. This should be something of a surprise. What used to be the
    Outer Empire of the USSR was, except for geography, in everything
    that determines life, further from "Europe" than Tasmania is
    geographically. Nothing is revenged more vociferously than good
    deeds. However, Hungary's region never got American help. One would,
    therefore, assume it not to have developed the resentment that fuels
    the desire to retaliate as in the case of the French after '45 and
    lately the Germans.

    The prejudices voiced were "standard." That suited them for
    evaluation without needing reconstruction prior to an evaluation.
    Only one outrageous point departed from the mold cast by local PC. It
    came from the MD who revealed, with others seconding her that, she
    would have voted for Kerry. For this the reason given was that he had
    a European background which furnished a civilizing influence. His
    ancestors' recent immigration makes him "sympathetic" and could be
    taken as a sign of culture lacked by Bush the bloke. This was the
    point where I briefly fell out of my role. I proved to be unable to
    withhold that by this standard Szalasi, Hungary's Hitler, should also
    find approval, having been of (Armenian) immigrant stock.

    Such views my reader might take as pertaining to a marginal issue
    that inadvertently degenerates into the ridiculous. Let me submit
    that, while we are talking about marginal symptoms, these harken back
    to roots that are significant.

    The distorted image depicting the US has several sources. One issues
    from the current weakness of Europe. Originally the feebleness was
    only military to which, currently, an economic dimension is being
    added. Europe is not only wanting in power-terms, the reaction to the
    new economy of globalization is equally feeble. Overcoming these gaps
    is currently unlikely, as the will to do so is lacking. Therefore
    American successes are not an example to follow, but due to their
    accomplishments, a humiliating provocation. A further component of
    the hostility is that, instead of making the effort to cope with the
    US by catching up to surpass her, hammering America into the ground
    gains favor. In Hungary and her likes, the very fact of the US'
    leading position is, regardless of all the evidence to the contrary,
    a proof of an intent to dominate and to exploit. The fact-defying
    assumption finds support in a very real but subjectively interpreted
    past. The small countries of the zone in which Hungary is located
    have during the past been under the domination of major powers. All
    have used their muscle to squeeze the peoples that fell in their
    sphere of influence. This activates a Pavlovian reflex. The US, being
    "top nation," is in a position to do whatever the Germans and the
    Russians have done. In the light of local experience, if the
    Americans can oppress they must be bullies, because all others powers
    in a comparable position have been oppressors.

    Thus, ignoring experience, it is no surprise that in both Europes the
    view that the US (and Israel) is the major threat to world peace
    prevails. No change in American foreign policy will make this
    impression fade. Europe happens to find the thesis of America's
    threat to global security a convenient dogma. Accepting the notion
    enables her to see threats, such as North Korea and a nuclear Iran,
    through the filter of equivalency. These regimes might be up to no
    good. But so is America in case it undertakes to mobilize against
    them, while it rates as unreliable if it desists from acting.
    Naturally, should containment fail, the US' ineffectiveness will be
    the cause. The pleasant upshot: Europe needs to do nothing. Take the
    case of the EU's own mild sanctions in 2003 against Cuba for its hard
    line towards its dissidents. Socialist Spain removed Europe from even
    appearing to be close to the US in the firefight between Castro and
    Washington by suspending the implementation of her sanctions in the
    interest of a "constructive dialogue." Since then -- what a shock! --
    persecution continues. So does the suspension. No surprise. All
    considered, not a bad situation: nothing is done and the independence
    from cowboy America is maintained.

    Listening to Europeans it quickly dawns on you that much of the
    problem is compounded by ignorance of the US' modus operandi and by a
    tendency to misinterpret much that is connected to her. A case in
    point came about when the group voiced the idea that America's
    barefootedness is natural as it is a young country. Whether a long
    history and wise, proper and decent comportment on the world scene
    correlate, is open to debate. As a secret observer the writer
    refrained from provoking it. The same is true regarding the
    consideration that if you take measures by comparing unbroken
    political traditions, the US wins easily. She happens to have, since
    the acceptance of her constitution, by far the oldest system of them
    all.

    Misunderstanding -- being a category separate from "not knowing" --
    reinforces pre-conceived images. When the discussion shifted to
    America's desire to grab the world's resources, the former pre-teen
    POW found confirmation in the American soldiers' who took his cap.
    You and I might surmise that the motive was not pecuniary gain but
    the collection of memorabilia. Within that category, parts of a
    child's adult uniform are likely to score high. Also from this Gent
    came the observation that at the UN, by innuendo due to Washington's
    efforts, there are too many Americans. Here obviously a Soviet block
    effort, to infiltrate with politically screened personnel, who de
    facto represented the Kremlin's interests, is applied, assuming
    equivalence, to the US. What a field-day it would be for the media
    from the NYT to PBS, if Washington's efforts to inject its agents in
    the world organization's civil service could be unmasked! A society
    contributing 22% of the UN's budget and generating about a quarter of
    global GNP, and one that also produces excellent post-graduates, is
    naturally likely to fill a lot of slots without its government's
    octopus arms heaving its citizens into openings. Actually, America's
    threat to the UN is not kidnapping it to be used as an instrument,
    but in abandoning it.

    As disappointing as opinions such as those regurgitated here might
    be, their main impact on American and Atlantic security does not end
    with the current shaky state of the alliance. Assuredly, the matter
    is serious, it acts as a brake on the conduct of foreign affairs, and
    it demands that those relationships that by now have only tradition
    to recommend them, be reassessed. However, the thought that emerged
    in the course of the discussion took a turn in an entirely different
    direction. My insight had been that the main problem is not the tone
    and the content of talks such as the one I was involved in.
    Ultimately, the efficacy of US policy serving the national interest
    and protecting the freer part of the world is decided on her home
    front. That is why I imagined the presence of a largely apolitical
    American at the table. How would he react? The US must be doing
    something perennially and knowingly wrong to provoke hostile
    reactions. This is also the wide-spread logic behind the idea that
    the outrage of 9/11 must have its roots in an even greater inequity.
    "Cleaning up America's act," stroking those who snap at her hand
    might just be the solution. Precisely this "Europeanizing" of US
    policy constitutes the major danger. America can easily overbid
    Europe with concessions aimed at buying cooperation. If, however, the
    reaction is contempt -- as in Pyongyang's armament program -- the
    threatening question is this: who will defend the US the way America
    is ultimately likely to cover her allies, once conciliation leads to
    confrontation?

    George Handlery is an historian. He has lived and taught in Europe
    since 1976.

    http://www.intellectualconservative.com/article4403.html

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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