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Europe
"European anti-Americanism looks exactly like the Democrats in the U.S."
2007-02-23
by Denis Boyles, National Review

ItÂ’s a testament to the relative political stability Italy enjoyed under the five-year premiership of Silvio Berlusconi that the fall of an Italian government makes the news. When I was a lad, you had to rake the things off the yard. But Romano ProdiÂ’s resignation this week gave the European press a certain retro flavor . . . and it gave the Democrats a good lesson in how not to govern.

The best thing about Leftists everywhere is that when they win power, they suddenly find themselves in a rope glut. The stuff is everywhere. “Wow, look at all this rope!” they say. Then they either hang their opponents, which is what we call the Chavez-Mugabe option, or they hang themselves, as they did in Rome a few days ago. Faced with the prospect of funding Italian army units participating in the NATO mission in Afghanistan, a couple of Murtha-like legislators in Prodi’s governing coalition, emboldened by anti-American demonstrations following a decision to expand the American military base in Vicenza, said they wanted the troops out now — and in doing so brought down the government and reduced their own power to nil. . . .

As the GuardianÂ’s editorial suggests, the satisfaction of voting against anything thatÂ’s pro-American is irresistible these days in Europe, where often the only way of attracting votes to candidates without plausible platforms is to exploit the continentÂ’s rising tide of anti-Americanism. As a rule, most people donÂ’t pay much attention to what their morning paper thinks, but when nearly every newspaper, TV station, radio broadcaster echoes the same anti-American line, eventually, anti-Americanism becomes a kind of small worldview. In America itself, liberals will try to convince themselves that anti-Americanism is based on a dislike of Bush, but in reality, itÂ’s a consistent and very long-running hatred that is essential to the self-understanding of European elites, as many have pointed out, including Roger Philippe in his French bestseller The American Enemy.

The thing is, European anti-Americanism looks and sounds exactly like the Democrats in the U.S. Congress. The entire continent, from the Ural Mountains to the North Sea islands, is as blue as Pelosi’s congressional district. At least superficially, there’s no difference between the anti-American positions taken by most European leftists and the anti-Bush positions taken by almost all Democrats. They both want to force the US to engage with Iran and Syria and to get out of Iraq, no matter the consequences, and they both see nothing but quagmire ahead in Afghanistan. To both, an American retreat (or “redeployment, to use the now favored euphemism) is seen as preferable to an American victory.

For years the Europeans have approached foreign policy the same way Clinton did — with pious anxiety and demands for what Madeleine Albright used to call “time outs.” The so-called European initiative that was supposed to have engaged Iran and dissuaded the mullahs from building bombs was exactly as effective as the Democrats were in dealing with North Korea and the growing threat of terrorism. The only question now is whether the Democrats in the Congress will do as leftists do in Rome and vote themselves into irrelevancy.

- Denis Boyles is author of Vile France: Fear, Duplicity, Cowardice and Cheese.
Posted by:Mike

#2  It has been pointed out that western philosphies tend toward combinations of two sets of polar opposites: idealism and realism; and optimism and pessimism.

In the US, the red States are traditionally realistic and optimistic; the blue States idealistic and pessimistic. Europe, on the other hand is realistic and pessimistic.

This means that Europe tends to reflect the cynicism and defeatism of the blue States, and is repelled by the idea that life could become better, in any way.

But unlike the starry eyed idealists of the blue States, the Europeans are cynical about any great new, pie in the sky idea.

This dislike the optimism of republican presidents, but disdain the naivete of the democrats.
Posted by: Anonymoose   2007-02-23 13:19  

#1  Well, the democrats are anti-american anyway, so the resemblance is more than passing.
Posted by: DarthVader   2007-02-23 13:00  

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