British Prime Minister Gordon Brown will be the first European
leader to meet with President Barack Obama when he visits the White
House on March 3. The two world leaders are expected to discuss a
range of issues, including the war in Afghanistan, the Iranian
nuclear threat, and the global financial crisis, as well as the
upcoming G-20 talks in London and the NATO 60thanniversary summit
in Strasbourg/Kehl.
In addition to meeting with the President, Brown will address a
joint session of Congress on March 4, making him only the fifth
British prime minister to be given the honor.
A Shift Away from Britain?
The Brown-Obama meeting will be overshadowed by growing concerns
about a possible weakening of the U.S.-U.K. Special Relationship,
tensions over strategy in the war in Afghanistan, and the threat of
a renewed American protectionism.
The Anglo-American alliance is being eroded on several fronts,
from falling levels of U.K. defense spending and the gutting of
Britain's armed forces by the Labour government to the gradual
erosion of British sovereignty in Europe and the rise of a European
Union defense identity now being backed by Washington. It is also
threatened by the new U.S. Administration's apathy and indifference
toward the U.K.[1]
President Obama's surprise decision to remove a bust of Sir
Winston Churchill from the Oval Office and return it to the British
government sent an early signal to London that the new
Administration will adopt a far less robust approach toward the
historic Anglo-American alliance. The White House is already
recalibrating the alliance as a "special partnership,"[2]-not a
"special relationship"-a subtle play on words indicating a
potential shift away from a decades-long policy of according
Britain a unique status as America's most important ally.
U.S. Overtures to Europe
The Obama White House is keen to significantly strengthen
America's relationship with both France and Germany, continental
Europe's biggest powers, as well as with Brussels, the
institutional heart of the European Union. This approach is partly
the product of a distinctly pro-European outlook on the part of the
new Administration following transatlantic tensions during the Bush
Administration. It is also based on a naive belief that major
European allies will actually increase defense spending and reduce
the burden on America and that the EU will play a more supportive
role in world affairs alongside the United States.
Washington is already making major concessions to France in the
NATO alliance,[3] with French officers reportedly in line to
take two senior NATO command positions: Allied Command
Transformation (one of NATO's two supreme commands, based in
Norfolk, Virginia) and Joint Command Lisbon (one of NATO's three
main operations headquarters, which also commands the NATO Rapid
Reaction Force).[4]
The White House is also sending clear signals that it supports a
greater military and defense role for the European Union. In his
speech at the Munich Security Conference in early February, Vice
President Joe Biden made it clear that the United States will
"support the further strengthening of European defense, an
increased role for the European Union in preserving peace and
security, [and] a fundamentally stronger NATO-EU partnership."[5]
Anglo-American Leadership Is
Needed
Since the Second World War, there has scarcely been a more
important period for joint U.S.-British leadership. The
Anglo-American Special Relationship would be imperiled if the new
U.S. Administration looks to Brussels instead of London for its
most important strategic partnership. Jeopardizing this
relationship would be a huge mistake. The EU is obsessed with
challenging American global leadership rather than working with it,
and the European Project is ultimately all about building a
counterweight to American power.
The Obama-Brown White House meeting will be an important
opportunity for the President and the Prime Minister to establish a
stronger framework for Anglo-American cooperation on the world
stage, particularly in regard to key issues such as Afghanistan,
the future of NATO, and the Iranian nuclear crisis.
The War in Afghanistan
Despite all the fashionable rhetoric in European capitals about
Iraq being a distraction from the war against the Taliban, on the
battlefields of Afghanistan almost two-thirds of the 47,000 troops
currently serving as part of the 40-nation NATO-led International
Security Assistance Force are from the English-speaking countries
of the U.S., the U.K., Canada, and Australia. These nations have
also taken roughly 85 percent of the casualties. Britain has nearly
as many troops in the country as all the other major European Union
powers combined, some of whom, like Germany, cower under dozens of
"caveats" aimed at keeping their troops out of harm's way. The
United States has pledged to send an additional 17,000 troops, and
the U.K. is also considering the deployment of further forces to
boost the nearly 9,000 British soldiers already serving in Helmand
province.
President Obama and Prime Minister Brown should directly
challenge European complacency and indifference over Afghanistan
and issue a strong statement calling on European allies to pull
their weight in the conflict by sending more combat troops to the
south of the country. NATO is a war-fighting alliance, not a
peacekeeping organization. The stakes are extremely high, and there
is a danger that the brutal Taliban, backed by al-Qaeda, will
reassert control over vast swathes of the country.
Europe's NATO members must make a no-strings attached commitment
to step up to the plate and bear a bigger part of the burden. If
this does not happen, the consequences for the future of the
alliance will be dire. European apathy over Afghanistan threatens
to tear NATO apart, and an institution that has for decades
succeeded as the most effective international organization of its
time could become irrelevant. It is time for French President
Nicolas Sarkozy, German Chancellor Angela Merkel, and other
European leaders to roll up their sleeves and commit their troops
and resources to winning the war against the Taliban.
The Future of NATO
In the lead-up to the NATO 60th anniversary summit, both the
United States and Great Britain must take a step back and launch a
fundamental, wide-ranging review of the long-term implications of
French demands for the future of the alliance.
It would be a huge strategic error of judgment by the new U.S.
Administration and the British government to support French
ambitions for restructuring Europe's security architecture. This
would ultimately weaken the Anglo-American Special Relationship as
the engine of the transatlantic alliance and pave the way for the
development of a separate European Union defense identity, which
will ultimately undermine NATO.
Washington and London must also commit to advancing the
expansion of the NATO alliance-specifically the inclusion of
Georgia and Ukraine in the Membership Action Plan. The new U.S.
Administration, together with Britain, should send a clear signal
to Moscow that NATO expansion is an internal matter for the
alliance and not open to Russian veto. A firm commitment must also
be made by the Obama Administration to establish a third site
missile defense system in Eastern and Central Europe, a vital part
of a global defense shield that is needed to protect the West from
rogue regimes such as Iran.
The Iranian Nuclear Threat
President Obama and Prime Minister Brown should issue a strong
statement calling for the strengthening of both U.N. Security
Council and European sanctions against Tehran. The U.S. and British
leaders must push for European countries to support a complete
investment freeze-including a ban on investment in Iranian
liquefied natural gas operations-and the possible use of military
force as a last resort against Iran's nuclear facilities.
They should reject the idea of direct negotiations with a
tyranny that has threatened to wipe a key ally, Israel, off the
face of the earth. This is a time for tough resolve in the face of
an extremely dangerous foe-a rogue state close to nuclear
capability ruled by fanatical Islamists that will have no qualms
about using their power to dominate the Middle East or to arm a
wide array of proxy international terrorist groups.
The EU has tried to negotiate with Tehran for several years
under the guise of "constructive engagement," an approach that has
resulted in an emboldened Iran that grows closer by the day to
building a nuclear weapon. The EU's policy toward Iran has been all
carrot and no stick-a futile exercise that has achieved nothing but
failure.
Great Britain Is America's Most
Reliable Friend
The Special Relationship is vital to American and British
interests on many levels, from military, diplomatic, and
intelligence cooperation to transatlantic trading ties. If
President Obama does not invest in its preservation, the end result
will be a weaker United States that is less able to stand up to
terrorism and tyranny, and project power and influence on the world
stage.
Whether waging war against the Taliban and al-Qaeda, standing up
to the Russian bear, or halting Iran's nuclear ambitions, President
Obama should maintain the Anglo-American Special Relationship as
the centerpiece of the transatlantic alliance. As nearly every
post-war President has found, when it comes to securing the free
world, there is simply no alternative to U.S.-British
leadership
Nile
Gardiner is the Director of the Margaret Thatcher
Center for Freedom at the Heritage Foundation. Erica Munkwitz
assisted with research for this paper.