By Parag Khanna
Friday, 2008-05-23
The relationship between the European Union and the United States is rapidly changing. In his book "The Second World — Empires and Influence in the New Global Order," Parag Khanna argues that the EU has surpassed the United States in the areas of humanitarian aid, economic revival, environmental standards and international stability.
What was one of the most surprising findings in the process of writing the book?
“The EU is now the most confident economic power in the world. With superior commercial and environmental standards, the European nations have assumed global leadership.
"That is only further borne out by the current U.S. credit crisis, which certainly also affects the Europeans — but points to significant weaknesses in the U.S. regulatory system.”
How do Europeans generally view the United States today?
“Many Europeans view America’s current way of life as deeply corrupt, built on borrowed money, risky and heartless in its lack of social protections — and ecologically catastrophic. Those are sentiments that won’t just vanish with a new administration coming to office in the Untied States.”
How did the Europeans pull off their own economic revival?
“EU expansion has become a virtuous circle of tapping new markets. That, in turn, has helped to decrease dependence on exports to the United States — a crucial step in building an independent superpower.
"The fresh blood of the EU’s new members has generated a competitive federalism that boosts the European economy as a whole.” For many Europeans, the U.S.-led war in Iraq validated their view that war is not an instrument of policy — rather, a sign of its failure.
What is particularly remarkable about the EU's approach to world affairs?
“In an intriguing way — and one that must be galling to many U.S. strategists — the EU is easily the most popular and successful empire in history.
"Why? Because it does not dominate, it disciplines. The incentives of Europeanization — subsidies from Brussels, unfettered mobility and the adoption of the Euro currency — are too great not to want.”
How did the EU go about strengthening its influence in other continents?
And how does that compare to the efforts of the United States?
“The EU is a far larger humanitarian aid donor than the United States. South America, East Asia and other regions actually prefer to emulate the 'European Dream' rather than the American variant.
"And let’s remember, the London-based Financial Times is the world’s most widely circulated newspaper — not The New York Times.” "
And the EU is metric. Anything Imperial touches is doomed to failure.
For more:
http://www.theglobalist.com/DBWeb/Story ... oryId=6886