Low Graphics Site
White bar
Daily SectionMarker

Misc SectionMarker

Horoscope Recipes Weekly SectionMarker

Weekly SectionMarker

Pakistan's Internet Magazine
Herald
Dawn GroupMarker

Archive, Search, Feedback & HelpMarker

Dawn Classified



FrontPage National International Local Business KSE Forex Sports Editorial Opinion Letters Features Today's Cartoon TV Guide Cowasjee Ayaz Irfan Hussain Review Dawn Magazine Young World Images Dawn Group Subscription To Advertise

DINA
Previous Story DAWN - the Internet Edition Next Story

February 6, 2003 Thursday Zul Hijjah 4,1423


‘Anglo sentiment’ in US foreign policy



By Jim Mann


LOS ANGELES: In recent months, a curious notion has gradually begun to take hold in the United States, a vague idea for a new basis on which American foreign policy can be conducted.

We might call it the ‘Anglo Illusion’.

The Anglo Illusion goes like this: Washington’s military alliances are less important than they used to be. Instead of these formal alliances, the United States should from now on deal with the world in partnership with its true friends, the British and Australians.

Working as a triumvirate, so the illusion goes, these English- speaking nations can, where necessary, conduct military operations in dangerous parts of the world. Moreover, the United States can join with Britain to deal with Europe and use Australia to carry out its policies in East Asia. (And perhaps, so the Anglo Illusionists believe, Canada and New Zealand may sometimes help us out, too.)

Speaking on PBS’ “NewsHour” recently, a former Pentagon official, Jed Babbin, gave voice to a form of the Anglo Illusion. Asked whether Britain was the last ally of the United States, he replied: “Britain is a very staunch ally. They are really the only country ... well, I shouldn’t say that. There are others _ Australia, New Zealand, Canada, basically the old Commonwealth countries _ that are still willing to go pay a price in blood and treasure for freedom.”

We’re seeing the first clear demonstration of a new Anglo- based foreign policy in the current Iraq crisis. To be sure, eight European leaders last week signed a joint statement endorsing American policy. Yet when it comes to more tangible support, Britain and Australia have emerged as by far the strongest and most prominent partners.

The British are expected to contribute 30,000 troops to a Persian Gulf war, and Australia has dispatched 2,000 personnel along with F-18 warplanes.

When the United States held talks last month on postwar reconstruction of Iraq, the two other lead participants were Britain and Australia.

All of this extends beyond the historical “special relationship” between the United States and Britain. What we have, for the moment, is a new linkup, with military overtones, among three countries on three continents that share the English language.

The problem with an Anglo approach is that it’s both a little sad and extremely unwise. An Anglo-based foreign policy suggests that we Americans are obsessed with our own language. (If so, then perhaps we’re becoming more like the French.)

In the past, the United States has vehemently opposed the idea of dividing up the world in this fashion. During the first Bush administration, some Asian leaders wanted to form an organization for the Pacific that would have included only Asian governments and not the United States, Australia, New Zealand or Canada. The United States and the other Anglo governments successfully fought off the proposal as implicitly racist.

As a matter of strategy, an Anglo approach to dealing with the world is shortsighted and unsustainable. Britain and Australia each has its own geography and its own interests. Whatever Britain’s future relationship to Europe or Australia’s to East Asia, both countries will be subject to a strong and growing tug from their neighbors. Indeed, they already are. The antiwar sentiments in London and Sydney today are far stronger than they are in Washington. Britain’s close identification with the United States could diminish once Prime Minister Tony Blair is no longer in power.

The reality is that if the United States were to have increasingly antagonistic relations with other leading countries of Europe and East Asia, then it might well eventually find itself also at odds with Britain and Australia.

Twelve years ago, at the time of the Persian Gulf War, American policy toward Iraq enjoyed widespread international support. If this time Washington’s main partners are Britain and Australia, then a few years from now these two nations may not be with the United States either.

This is not automatically an argument against going to war against Iraq with Britain and Australia as our principal partners. It is, however, a warning against self-deception. Britain and Australia are, of course, wonderful nations, but we can’t rely on them as a stable, long-term solution to our search for allies overseas.

In the long run, a US foreign policy that relies primarily on our Anglo partners would really be only a way station on the road toward going it alone in the world. If we want to choose unilateralism, we should at least do so openly and honestly.

(Mann is a senior writer-in-residence at the Center for Strategic and International Studies) —Dawn/LAT-WP News Service (c) Los Angeles Times



Click to learn more...
Please Visit our Sponsor (Ads open in separate window)

Previous Story Top of Page Next Story

Seprater
Contributions
Privacy Policy
© DAWN Group of Newspapers, 2005