Trouble brewing on the European horizon
The way things are taking shape in Europe could soon result in a situation which would leave the US with no major supporter. We have repeatedly warned about the likely shift in Britain's foreign policy once Tony Blair steps down and is replaced by his heir apparent and a well—known leftist Gordon Brown, who is currently his Chancellor of Exchequer.
Next month there will be an important general election in Italy which will pit the current Prime Minister and America's close ally Silvio Berlusconi against leftwing Romano Prodi, the former President of the European Commission. Prodi is ahead in the polls and his victory would appreciably weaken America's support in Europe which is already tenuous at best. The stakes are well summed up in a piece in this week's British weekly The Business:
With Blair and Berlusconi gone, President Bush's administration would lose its two main friends in Europe. While hardly anti—American, their successors in Italy and the UK [...] would be compelled by their supporters to take a much less accommodating view towards the floundering US President, at least in the short term. Within the EU the effect will also be considerable, coming after the victory of Spain's Jose Luis Zapatero over President Bush's other main European ally, Jose Maria Aznar.
In the relatively near future, then, we could have a situation where the governments of nearly all of Europe's major powers — Great Britain, Italy, Spain, and France — are in the hands of leftwing politicians intrinsically unfriendly to the United States (I include Chirac among the left—wingers because that's what he really is).
This would leave only Angela Merkel, the moderately right—of—center German Chancellor as America's natural ally among the principal European players. Merkel's position, however, is weak, leading as she is a fragile coalition with social democrats who hold eight seats in her sixteen—seat cabinet. To keep her government together, Merkel cannot offer her wholehearted support even if she wanted to. To show her independence, she has already crossed swords with President Bush on issues such as Guant疣amo and protectionism.
There is potential trouble brewing for the United States on the European horizon. We will keep a sharp eye on these events as they unfold.
Vasko Kohlmayer 4 3 06
FOLLOW US ON
Recent Articles
- Greenland: How Trump Can Deal with the Raging Danes to America's Advantage
- Greenland at the Crossroads: Why U.S. Leadership is Crucial
- How the Death Penalty Should Work
- Mr. Schumer — You Make No Sense!
- The Price of Reciprocity: Why President Trump’s Tariffs Make Strategic Sense
- The Least Dangerous Branch No More
- Is Bipartisan Nationalism Possible?
- Sitting Down for the 'College Talk'
- Trump’s Tariffs Will Not Cause Inflation
- The Republican Off-Cycle Election Challenge
Blog Posts
- Adobe meltdown
- Smart nations lining up for tariff deals with President Trump -- and you can just tell which ones they are
- What a month of April 1968
- Tesla vandals and keeping the republic
- Florida’s opportunity to defang the property tax monster
- Iran: Israel and the USA have the same objective
- Fighting for babies while black
- America is raising feral children
- Unmanifest Destiny: Is America heading for the ash heap of history?
- A look at the vigilance we need for a safe society
- Mexico supports a terror state
- The making of an anarchist
- Tariffs: Trump, Nancy, and the chatbots (mostly) agree
- Tariffs force the world to bargain
- Washington Post falls for terrorist propaganda...again