America Needs to Give Europe Some Tough Love

COMMENTARY Europe

America Needs to Give Europe Some Tough Love

Apr 2, 2019 9 min read
COMMENTARY BY
James Jay Carafano

Senior Counselor to the President and E.W. Richardson Fellow

James Jay Carafano is a leading expert in national security and foreign policy challenges.
The United States is a global power with global interests and responsibilities. Looking after America requires a global perspective. moodboard/Getty Images

Key Takeaways

The three crucial pieces that link America to the world are Europe, the Middle East and Indo-Pacific.

The gravest national security threats are well known: Russia, China, Iran, and North Korea.

For practical purposes, the U.S. abandonment of Europe accompanying Obama’s pivot to Asia has ended. The question now is: What next?

There is nothing wrong with the transatlantic community that a little tough love cannot solve. The biggest threat to that community’s future won’t come from the Russians, the Middle East, or even Brussels. It’s places like Berlin and Paris that are the real problem.

Unless these capitals start exercising sensible leadership, they only enable Vladimir Putin’s scheme to dismantle the transatlantic community, undermining the cohesion and future prosperity of the continent. Here is a plan for 2020 and beyond to fix this mess.

America Alone is No Option

The United States is a global power with global interests and responsibilities. Looking after America requires a global perspective. The three crucial pieces that link America to the world are Europe, the Middle East and Indo-Pacific. Preserving regional stability and the freedom of the commons (air, sea, space, cyber) that link America to the world is a vital interest.

The gravest national security threats are well known: Russia, China, Iran, and North Korea. That’s a bipartisan list of bad guys, agreed upon by the last three administrations—Bush, Obama and Trump.

China, Russia and Iran represent more than military, security and diplomatic dangers. All engage in “new imperialism,” seeking malevolent control over other nations. Tehran does this by enlisting surrogates (like Hezbollah, the Houthis and Shia militia) to do their bidding. Beijing and Moscow use corrosive economic practices, disinformation and other active measures. In each case, the United States must be present and engaged to combat malicious threats to regional stability and freedom of the commons.

Freedom’s Frontier

In terms of U.S. vital interests, the peace, stability and expanding prosperity in Europe are every bit as important as the Middle East and the Indo-Pacific. The most significant external threats are Russia and destabilizing influences from the Middle East (terrorism, refuges, and conflict) spilling over into Europe. The encroaching influence of China is also a concern.

All these challenges were recognized in the administration’s national security strategy. A candid assessment that focuses on the actual policies put in place would conclude that the administration has largely followed through, pushing back on all of them. America continues to: support European energy security; lead in sanctioning Russia; support threatened states like Georgia and Ukraine; invest in the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) and advocate for its enlargement. The U.S. administration has also called out Russian cheating and withdrawn from the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces (INF) treaty. Moreover, Washington has upped engagement in the Baltic and Balkans states that had heightened concerns over destabilizing Russian meddling.

Donald Trump addressed other dangers as well. The United States helped eliminate the terrorist caliphate (the precipitating cause for millions of refugees to flee to Europe) and led in containing the expansion of Iranian influence.

America has also been more active in alerting Europeans to the dangers of Chinese influence. Washington, for example, recently raised concerns about continuing to share intelligence with countries that adopt telecom infrastructure built by the state-controlled Chinese tech giant Huawei.

Building a Better Europe

For practical purposes, the U.S. abandonment of Europe accompanying Obama’s pivot to Asia has ended. The question now is: What next?

The most persistent problem is Putin. He isn’t going anywhere. The Russian economy isn’t going to collapse anytime soon. The Russian military isn’t going to stop its build-up. There are no signs that Moscow looks to change its strategy—constantly looking for gaps and opportunities to expand its influence and sphere of control, with the top priority being Russia’s near abroad.

With the U.S. presidential elections on the horizon, there is no shortage of advice now being offered on how to deal with Russia after 2020. Much of that advice is wrongheaded, based on the premise that what the United States is doing is not working and that Washington should do something different or, even worse, start over with yet another Russian reset. The faulty premise with all these plans is thinking they would serve any better to influence Russia than current policy.

To get a different outcome with Russia would require a different Russia, that’s not likely to happen anytime soon. We have to deal with the Putin we have, not the Moscow we want. We are not going to change Russia from the inside out, let alone from the outside in.

Trump was right to offer Putin an “off-ramp” to transatlantic competition. Indeed, virtually every European leader would love to see that happen. Maybe it makes sense to always keep that door open. It is folly, however, to think Putin is going to walk through any time soon.

That said, the biggest mistake in crafting the next steps in Russia strategy is thinking it is all about Russia. What it is really about is what we do with our friends.

Putin’s greatest successes right now are not scratching away at the frontier of NATO. If anything, that’s where NATO’s spine is the stiffest. Where Putin’s corrosive influence is most effective is in the capitals of Europe where he can sow discord by exploiting virulent anti-Trumpism, European populism, immigration, economic stagnation and other tensions within the European community. When European leaders publically attack each other, rebuke Trump, and fantasize about European strategic autonomy, they are doing Putin’s work for him.

There is no easy answer as to why any European leader would be Putin’s willing executioner of Europe’s future. Some are indifferent to the physical danger Putin poses to their European neighbors. Some are seduced by money, susceptible to pressure groups secretly funded or manipulated by the Russians, terrified of Trump or consumed by their own national politics. It doesn’t matter. The result is the same: a weaker Europe.

Here is Europe’s security dilemma in a nutshell. Europe doesn’t have the capacity to deal with the real external threats to European security alone. Europe’s only guarantee of security is as part of the transatlantic community.

Here is the U.S. dilemma. America needs Europe, but even if it tried really hard the United States couldn’t placate all the inter-European squabbling. It’s not a matter of Trumpian rhetoric. Trump could start acting like Obama tomorrow, but the underlying rot eating at Europe would still be there. The Europeans would just find another excuse to blame others for their lack of real transatlantic leadership.

Key Next Steps

America has no choice but to continue to lead and resign itself to the reality that everybody isn’t going to be happy.

Step 1: Keep the Pedal to the Metal

Don’t shift U.S. strategy towards Russia—at all. Don’t offer a single conciliatory gesture. Don’t go wobbly on NATO enlargement, European energy security, or sanctions. Forward deploy U.S. forces in Poland. Support Ukraine, Georgia and Moldova—nations with territory occupied by Russia. On the strategic front, keep the momentum started by the INF pull-out rolling. Step up engagement in the Balkans. All of this is vital, not just to show Putin that America is on watch, but to show Europeans we will walk the walk when it comes to being tough on Putin.

Step 2: Double Down on the Special Relationship

The UK has always been the American anchor into the transatlantic community. That link is more important than ever. If it can succeed in slipping from the noose of the European Union, London could well become the new economic powerhouse of Europe. God knows Europe needs a jumpstart in economic growth.

According to the Department for International Trade, U.S. foreign direct investment (FDI) into the United Kingdom has already soared, jumping by 19.5 percent in 2017 alone. British FDI into the United States rose 8.4 percent during the same period. Total U.S.-UK trade in 2017 amounted to $235.9 billion. Britain will thrive and prosper in the Brexit era, and America poised to do a trade deal with the UK. Having an independent security voice in Europe will likely help as well. It is expected, for example, that a Britain out of the EU will be tougher on both Russia and Iran.

Step 3: Accelerate Building Ties to North, Central and Southern Europe

NATO is the cornerstone of the transatlantic political-security alliance, but the best way to sustain a strong base is from the bottom up. The foundation of transatlantic security underlies the bilateral alliances and partnerships that starts with Iceland in the mid-Atlantic and runs from the UK across the Western frontier from the Baltic Sea to the Adriatic. Essential efforts include bilateral military planning, exercises, deployment and forward basing, energy cooperation and promoting foreign direct investment.

Step 4: Keep the Middle East from Melting Down

Europe can deal with Putin and China if it isn’t distracted by grave threats from down below. U.S. regional strategies for Europe and the Middle East must be interlocked. U.S. contributions toward a more stable prosperous and peaceful Middle East have a direct, salutary impact on European security. America already does a lot, and it can do more. The Europeans can help. Libya is a prime example.

A stable Libya would be a boon to regional security and expand energy resources available on the world market. The Europeans are squabbling over Libya policy. A little more diplomatic leadership from America would benefit both sides of the Atlantic.

Then, there is Turkey, perhaps the thorniest issue to be dealt with. Many of Ankara’s choices are problematic, including insisting on deploying the Russian S-400 air defense system which would thoroughly compromise its position in NATO and its role in fielding and deploying the F-35 fighter aircraft. The United States was right to draw the line on this issue. Sticking with S-400 would be a disastrous decision. Yet, there is no easy resolution here, other than to continue to try to muddle through the myriad of issues. Ankara has lost trust and confidence in America and Europe. Its best strategic option is to try and rebuild the relationship. Washington has to offer that opportunity.

Step 5: Straight Talk with Major European Capitals

This is perhaps the most important step to moving the region forward. To undercut the insidious European squabbling, the United States must have clear and unambiguous policies on the issues most vital to transatlantic security. Powerful U.S. opposition and strong leadership against bad ideas will eventually sink into the most powerful places in Europe. Further, an unambiguous U.S. stance on transatlantic issues would likely embolden others to stand with us.

In addition, we should remain resolute in what the allies need to bring to the table. That includes: hitting defense spending targets; improving infrastructure to support the forward defense of NATO and enhancing deployment and mobility of defense assets. Most of all, America and Europe must show solidarity against Russian meddling. To be fair, the nations that live next to Russia have to live with their neighbor. That said, no nation should enable or make excuses for Russia undermining other NATO nations or tolerate Russian corruptive influences.

Tough love is decidedly not an anti-EU agenda. The United States and EU can work on many issues—China, trade, the Balkans, and energy, to name but a few. As to the problems of the EU, they are for Europeans to sort out. Clearing the air on the tough issues in the transatlantic community can only help create better conditions for the Europeans to deal with Europe’s problems. America, for example, should just flat-out pour cold water on the notion of independent-led European force. Such initiatives directly compete with NATO for already scarce resources.

Some in Europe believe the answer is to just wait Trump out. Some in America agree. But simply pining for a more pliant American leader, a cheerleader for the European project, it no answer at all. It’s just whistling past Europe’s graveyard of troubles.

Both Europeans and Americans who have nothing but disdain for Trump need to look beyond their distaste. It is in their self-interest that the next steps in U.S. policies focus on the very real threats facing Europe and build on the significant accomplishments of the last two years.

This piece originally appeared in The National Interest