US - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 64
About This Presentation
Title:

US

Description:

US EU Transatlantic Relations Overview European North American Relations: Historic Overview The Evolution of the European Union Current Issues in US EU ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:239
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 65
Provided by: Patrick515
Category:
Tags: iraqi | navy

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: US


1
US EU Transatlantic Relations
  • Overview
  • European North American Relations
  • Historic Overview
  • The Evolution of the European Union
  • Current Issues in US EU Relations

2
Historical Development of Atlantic Relations
  • Columbus (1492)
  • Geographical expansion of European States
    overseas, lure of seemingly endless land
  • Britain (North-east)
  • France (Mid-West)
  • Spain (South-West)
  • Dutch (East Cost)

3
Colonial Pathways (1513 1783)
Britain (1607 1783)
Dutch (1611- 1674)
France (1523-1763)
Spain (1513 - 1821)
4
European Powers in the New World (1713)
England
Dutch (1611- 1674)
France
Spain
5
Atlantic Relations After Columbus
  • Discovery of America ?
  • Encounter between two civilizations ?
  • Colonialism, exploitation, submission ?

6
Toward the US Independence
  • Westphalia Treaty (1648), European Nation-States
    emerge
  • In 1600s, English colonizers predominate in North
    America (annexed Dutch possessions)
  • Dual sovereignty King/parliament vs. settlers
  • Loyalty to the king or independence?
  • Successful Rebellion against British colonial
    rule
  • 1776 Declaration of Independence
  • Transatlantic interstate relations initiate

7
The Westward Expansion of the Federation
(17891849)
  • 1796 President Washington warned against foreign
    alliances (isolationism)
  • 1803 the Louisiana purchase (trade) French
    presence removed
  • 1823 The Monroe Doctrine proclaimed the idea
    that European powers should no longer colonize or
    interfere in the Americas and viceversa
  • 1827 President Adams statement reinforce
    isolationism America does not go abroad in
    search of monsters to destroy. She is the
    well-wisher to freedom and independence of all.
    She is the champion and vindicator only of her
    own

8
US in the 19th century
  • 1846 - 1848 The US win Mexican war (former
    Spanish colony)
  • Civil war (1861-5) between northern Unionist and
    southern Confederates, America focused on
    domestic issues and territorial expansion
  • 1898 the SpanishAmerican War refers to the
    US-sponsored punctuation to the
    late-nineteenth-century turmoil in the Spanish
    colonies (Cuba, Portorico) seen as a danger for
    national security
  • 1905 Roosevelt issued a corollary to the Monroe
    Doctrine, which allows the United States to
    "exercise international policy power" so they can
    intervene and keep smaller countries on their
    feet.

9
Europe in the 19th century
  • Collapse of the Spanish, Portuguese, Holy Roman
    empires.
  • Growing influence of the British Empire, the
    German Empire
  • Link to a series of 21 animated maps showing the
    history of Europe during the 19th century from
    the Congress of Vienna to the onset of World War
    I in 1914.
  • http//www.the-map-as-history.com/maps/1_history-
    europe-XIX-congress-vienna.php

10
US and WWI
  • At the end of 1800s, US economy is the biggest in
    the world
  • Attracted immigrants from Europe reinforcing
    cultural affinities
  • US was reluctantly dragged into the First World
    War as a result of German submarine attacks on
    freight and passenger ships. It emerged from that
    war stronger rather weaker
  • 1918 For the first time in history, US troops
    land in Europe for military operations
  • Drafted four million men, participated in navy
    operations

11
US and WWII
  • But US behavior between WWI and WWII is often
    described as isolationist because of its lack
    of involvement in international diplomacy
  • League of Nations created to delegate to a
    third party diplomatic negotiations
  • Once again US was a late entrant into WWII after
    the significant Japanese military attack on Pearl
    Harbor in Hawaii in 1941
  • US troops landed again in European soil, crucial
    to determine wars end and subsequent post-war
    equilibrium

12
Allied Operations in WWII
13
After WWII Marshall Plan
  • US isolationism ended
  • New bipolar order, US leading Western Hemisphere,
    URSS hemisphere, some socialist non-aligned
    countries (Yugoslavia, China)
  • Interventionism in economic issues
  • 1947 Marshall Plan, long term American
    assistance program for Europe aimed to win the
    hearts and minds of Western Europeans
  • Humanitarian, social, economic, security issues
    after terrible war and destruction
  • Contain Communist expansion in Europe
  • Based on the idea of European ownership, paved
    the way for European integration

14
After WWII NATO
  • Interventionism in military affairs
  • 1949 Creation of NATO
  • Avoid that Europe develop autonomous military
    capabilities
  • Broadly speaking, the US was the main actor of
    the Western hemisphere (democracy, rule of law,
    free market economy, international organizations
    such as IMF, GATT/WTO, UN, and the European
    Community

15
Forming NATO
  • Created in1949 by the United States, Canada,
    Belgium, Netherlands, Luxembourg, France,
    Iceland, Italy, Norway, Denmark, Portugal, and
    United Kingdom
  • To counterbalance URSS international activism on
    Eastern Europe (Berlin Blockade)
  • 1954 the Soviet Union suggested that it should
    join NATO to preserve peace in Europemembership
    denied
  • 1955 West Germany joined NATO
  • Keep the Russians out, The Americans in,
  • and the Germans down

16
NATOs Pillars
  • Solidarity
  • The Parties of NATO agreed that an armed
    attack against one or more of them in Europe or
    North America shall be considered an attack
    against them all. Consequently they agree that,
    if such an armed attack occurs, each of them, in
    exercise of the right of individual or collective
    self-defense will assist the Party or Parties
    being attacked individually and in concert with
    the other Parties, such action as it deems
    necessary, including the use of armed force, to
    restore and maintain the security of the North
    Atlantic area.

17
NATOs Pillars
  • Freedom
  • safeguard the freedom and security of its

    members by political and military means
  • Security
  • Members safeguard their common values of
    democracy, individual liberty, the rule of law,
    and the pursuit of peaceful resolutions of
    disputes
  • Transatlantic Link
  • NATO embodies common values and ideals between
    every member country that exist before NATO, but
    permanently tied them together

18
Structures of NATO
NATO
Political Structures
Military Structures
Agencies Organizations
19
NATOs Evolution
  • After the end of Cold War, NATO was present
    during the break up of former Yugoslavia, and did
    take an active role in the Bosnian Civil War.
  • Expanded in Eastern Europe, Central Asia
  • NATO keeps relations with non-NATO states that
    share the same ideals and beliefs Australia,
    Japan, South Korea, and New Zealand.
  • After 9/11 NATO has taken an active role in
    helping Afghanistan make the move to a democratic
    government.
  • NATO sent aid to Pakistan and other countries
    affected by natural disasters.

20
NATOS MEMBERS TODAY
Partner States (in brackets non-European
partners)
21
US Interventionism in European Affairs
  • Why the European Community after WWII?
  • Security reasons novel structure of European
    governance capable to eradicate the very roots of
    intra-European conflicts after the horrors of
    WWII.
  • ? European Coal and Steel Community
  • ? Euroatom
  • Economic reasons to rebuild Europe after the
    immense destructions caused by WWII
  • ? European Economic Community
  • Cultural reasons transcend dangerous
    narrow-mindedness of extreme nationalisms and
    economic autarchy

22
The Widening of the EC/EU
  • In 1952, Germany, France, Italy, Belgium,
    Luxemburg, and the Netherlands established the
    European Coal and Steel Community.
  • In 1957 the Treaty of Rome created the European
    Economic Community (EEC, referred as EC) and the
    European Atomic Energy Community (Euroatom).
  • 1973 first enlargement with Great Britain,
    Denmark and Ireland
  • 1981 Greece joined
  • 1986 Spain, Portugal (EC-12)
  • 1995 Sweden, Finland and Austria in the EU
    (EU-15)
  • 2004 10 new countries from Central, Eastern
    Europe (EU-25)
  • 2006 Romania and Bulgaria enter (EU-27)
  • Almost 500.000.000 citizens
  • Current candidates Turkey, Croatia, Macedonia,
    Iceland
  • Potential candidates Bosnia, Serbia, Albania,
    Montenegro
  • Switzerland, Norway denied membership

23
The Deepening of the EC
  • In 1952, the European Coal and Steel Community
    was established
  • In 1957 creation of the European Economic
    Community (EEC, referred as EC) and the European
    Atomic Energy Community (Euroatom)
  • 1960s stagnation of the integration due to
  • Concurrent projects (EFTA)
  • Nationalist leaders (de Gaulle)
  • 1970s relaunch of the integration
  • 1979 European Monetary System (EMS)
  • 1987 Single European Act (SEA) rationale for
  • Political cooperation
  • Single market road plan
  • Common currency as a goal
  • Social Europe

24
The Deepening of the EU
  • The Maastricht Treaty (1991) from the EC to the
    EU
  • Euro road plan
  • How to manage the single market
  • European Parliament became more important
  • Three pillars structure
  • Economic Community (EC)
  • Common Foreign and Security Policy (CFSP)
  • Justice and Home Affairs (JHA)
  • Copenhagen criteria (1997) for accession into EU
    of new member
  • Amsterdam (1999) and Nice (2002) treaties
    attempts to reform the institutions in advance of
    a significant enlargement
  • Constitution failure (2005) because France and
    the Netherlands rejected it
  • Result from economic to political, monetary,
    juridical and eventually constitutional
    integration

25
The Deepening of the EU
  • Lisbon Treaty signed in 2007, effective December
    1st, 2009
  • (Proposed after the failure to ratify the EU
    Constitution in 2005)
  • Re-engineering of EU institutions and
    constitutional framework particularly after of
    the accession of ten new Member States in 2004
  • Further involvement of the European Parliament in
    the legislative process
  • Where the EU do not have competences taxation,
    domestic legal systems

26
The Deepening of the EU
  • Foreign, security, and military policy
    coordinated by intergovernmental negotiations,
    not EU prerogative
  • But Lisbon Treaty created a High Representative
    of the EU for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy
    to present a united position on EU policies
    (incumbent Catherine Ashton since December 2009)
  • Common Foreign and Security Policy (CFSP),
    Minister of Foreign affairs recently appointed
    for the first time
  • No military power but European Security and
    Defense Policy (ESDP) interlinked with NATO
  • ESDP no decoupling from NATO, no duplication of
    capabilities, no discrimination of non-EU NATO
    members

27
Defining European Integration
  • Voluntary linking in one or more domain(s) of two
    or more formerly independent nation-states
    (countries) with the result that sovereignty over
    key areas of national policy is shifted towards
    the supranational level.
  • Domains economic, security, cultural, legal,
    and/or political
  • Formerly independent countries because
    member-states lose a certain degree of
    sovereignty
  • ? Different than US integration

28
Regional Integration
When Countries (Nation States) integrate
People Institutions Territories
integrate
29
From Nation-States to Regional Integration 3
Theories
  • Inter-governmentalism
  • Integration driven by the interests of
    member-states (EU as an international
    organization)
  • National self-reliance prevail in topic areas
    sovereignty largely preserved
  • Members are independent actors, the EU is the
    dependent one
  • Supra-nationalism
  • Integration as a delegation of competencies to EU
    institutions
  • National governments do not detain full
    policy-control, significant shift of sovereignty
  • EU institutions exert a significant independent
    influence on members
  • Multi-Level Governance (MLG)
  • Multiplication of decisional levels
    supranational, national, regional, and local
  • Decision-making stands at any level of government
  • Positive-sum game among multiple levels
  • Shared sovereignty

30
Defining the European Integration
  • From the EC to the EU
  • The process of merging European countries into
  • (1) One economy
  • from the custom union to an economic union
  • common currency
  • (2) A stable polity
  • more trust of the citizens toward the EU
    institutions
  • more accountability of the institutions toward
    the citizenry

31
Defining the European Integration
  • (3) Policy convergence
  • Regulation of the single market
  • Expenditure
  • Monetary union
  • Citizen freedom
  • Security policies
  • Foreign policy (not yet!)
  • (4) Regime homogeneity
  • democracy
  • MLG governance

32
Economic Conditions of EU members
  • Heterogeneous from the third economy of the
    world (Germany) to developing economies of new
    Central and Eastern members
  • Some countries industrialized, others more
    agricultural
  • Small and big countries
  • Specialization among countries or risk of
    centre/periphery within the EU
  • ? Internal frictions could affect transatlantic
    relations, return to bilateralism
  • ? Or, through the EU, improve relationship btwn
    US and new members from Central and Eastern
    Europe (after long separation during Cold War)

33
Political Conditions of EU members
  • All democracies (prerequisite for accession)
  • All had to reform in various degrees to meet EU
    criteria
  • Some are liberal democracies, others are
    social-democracies, others are recent democracies
    (post-communist)
  • Policy leaders versus laggards
  • ? Internal differences could affect
    transatlantic relations
  • ? But democratic stability in Europe is a US
    foreign policy goal since WWII

34
The Institutions of the EU
  • Communitarian institutions represent and defend
    the interests of the EU
  • The European Commission
  • The European Court of Justice
  • Other institutions represent and defend the
    interests of the member states
  • European Council (intergovernmental meeting
    among prime ministers)
  • Council of the EU or Council of the Ministers
    (intergovernmental meeting among cabinet
    ministers, foreign policy decided here)
  • The European Parliament represents the interests
    of the citizens

35
The Separation of Powers
  • The triple executive
  • The European Commission
  • European Council
  • Council of the EU
  • Legislative
  • European Parliament
  • Judiciary
  • The European Court of Justice

36
The decisional process of the EU
  • Uploading European integration
  • through intergovernmental negotiations
  • The setting of the rule of the game
  • States are the prominent actors deciding EU
    rules, procedures and institutions
  • Downloading Europeanization
  • In policy areas managed by EU, the Commission
    dictates rules and the Court of Justice monitors
  • To play the EU game
  • Able to stimulate domestic changes

37
European Integration and Europeanization
The EU
38
US EU Relationship since the End of the Cold War
  • Collapse of the Berlin Wall
  • Dismantling of the Warsaw Pact
  • The dissolution of Soviet Union
  • Unipolar system the US is the actor with the
    most extensive structural power in IR
  • Europe domestically focused on widening and
    deepening the EU (see above)

39
US Perspectives after the Cold War
  • What to do? Three legitimate options
  • Focus on domestic issues, retrenchment of foreign
    policy (neo-isolationists)
  • Multilateralism, seeking international
    collaboration to reduce costs, search for
    collective security and avoid imperialistic
    impulse
  • Hegemonic imperative, global responsibility,
    leadership abroad (unilateral if necessary)

40
US EU Relationship during the Clinton Era
  • Clinton inherently multilateral, but Congress
    uninterested in foreign policy
  • US reduced his strategic interest in Europe
  • Initial non-engagement on Balkan crisis, later US
    intervention needed because the EU unable to
    manage a crisis on its surroundings
  • Bilateral negotiations still important (US-UK)
  • Different positions on International treaties
  • Comprehensive Nuclear Test Ban (1996)
  • Kyoto Protocol on Climate Change (1997)
  • International Criminal Court (1998)

41
US EU Relationship during the Clinton Era
  • 1995 US, EU signed New Transatlantic agenda,
    joint actions for
  • Closer economic relations
  • Face global challenges
  • Promoting democracy, peace

42
Bush Doctrine, War on Terror, and the Iraqi War
  • 9/11 terrorism replaced Soviet Union as main
    security threat
  • High profile clash over Iraq in 2003
  • Coalition of the willing preferred to NATO or
    UN channels
  • Europe unable to speak with one voice
  • Western European countries split the UK, Italy
    and Spain sent troops (later Spain and Italy
    withdrew)
  • Germany, France opposed
  • For the first time, deployment of troops from
    Eastern Europe

43
Bush Doctrine, War on Terror, and the Iraqi War
  • The Bush doctrine revitalized the Grand
    American strategy
  • Political unilateralism
  • Juridical exceptionalism (Guantanamo, rendition)
  • Economic imperialism (war for oil?)
  • Cultural hegemony
  • Boosted Anti-Americanism in Europe
  • But transatlantic frictions did not start with
    Bush

44
The Rise of Anti-Americanism in Europe
  • Growing in the 1990s, weakened after 9/11,
    culminated with the Iraqi War
  • Aprioristic, irrational and prejudicial criticism
    of America
  • US considered responsible for most things that
    are wrong in todays world
  • But the US does not have a monopoly on power
    seeking, many international problems have local
    roots and causes, and the US itself has regional
    diversity and cultural variety
  • Obama reversing the route? 200.000 Germans
    listening his speech in Berlin (2008)

45
February 15, 2003 500.000 protestors marched
through the Brandenburg Gate in Berlin to
demonstrate against the impending U.S. invasion
of Iraq. Meanwhile, millions of people protested
around the world.
46
July 2008 Presidential candidate Obama
addresses a speech in front of 200.000 people at
the Brandenburg Gate in Berlin
47
US Attitudes Toward Europe
  • The UK perceived more affordable than France and
    Germany
  • Americans wants to see a stronger EU
  • Rumsfeld criticized old Europe (critically on US
    policy on Iraq) and new Europe (supportive)
  • Obama at Berlin re-launched multilateralism and
    one-world idea
  • Will the EU role in tackling terrorism increase?

48
European Attitudes Toward the US
  • Many member-states consider they have a special
    relationship with the US
  • The UK,
  • Others consider it a potential threat
  • France? Others?
  • Similar analysis of threats, but different views
    on how to tackle such treats

49
The EU Fight against Terrorism
  • Europe suffered attacks too (Madrid 2004, London
    2005)
  • Terrorism has propelled EU Justice and Home
    Affairs (JHA)
  • Agenda based on
  • Prevention, tackling money-laundering
  • Protection (Europol, Eurojust)
  • Prosecution, judicial cooperation
  • Consequence management, minimizing consequence of
    an attack
  • After 9/11, action plan with 70 measures
  • After Madrid Attacks, plan revised

50
The EU Fight against Terrorism
  • Principle of mutual assistance in case of attack
  • Creation of a European Borders Agency
  • Closer cooperation with NATO
  • Obstacles to closer intelligence cooperation
  • Provides technical assistance to 80 countries
  • Appointed counter-terrorist coordinator
  • Concerns about possible abuses of human rights in
    tackling terrorism
  • Avoid penetration of terrorism in Islamic
    communities in Europe
  • In some states there is not perception of
    terrorism as pan-European threat

51
War on Terror Multilateral or Unilateral
strategy?
  • Multilateralism Pros
  • Terrorism is an inherent challenge to
    civilization
  • Terrorism is ubiquitous - global approach needed
  • US relative newcomer in fighting terrorism, while
    other countries have some expertise (the UK,
    Italy, Spain)
  • Unilateralism Pros
  • 9/11 is a US issue, no need of worlds support
  • Projection of force abroad is a US prerogative
  • International collaboration is dangerous with
    states ambivalent on terrorism

52
US- EU Current Economic Relations
  • Together, EU and US are each others primary
    economic partners
  • US-EU relationship is arguably the most important
    geopolitical relationship in the world

53
US and EU25 Major Powers in World Trade
54
The EU25 trade in goods - Exports by Region
(2002, million euro)
55
The EU25 trade in goods - Imports by Region
(2002, million euro)
56
US EU Trade Policy
4 dimensions
57
US EU Trade Policy
  • Multilateral WTO arena
  • Regional between US and EU institutions
  • Bilateral US and a European Country
  • Unilateral US versus EU or viceversa

58
Other US EU Economic Relationship
  • EU US investment engagement of both parties in
    their counterparts economy
  • Each others main foreign assets locations
  • 2002 the UK (1), the Netherlands (3),
    Switzerland (4), Germany (6), Belgium/Luxembourg
    (8), France (10) top destinations of US
    investments
  • Since the end of Cold War, investment volume of
    EU corporation in the US rose ten times (from
    4.4 billion to 46 billion)
  • Economic ties relatively immune from political
    frictions

59
US EU Common Economic Goals
  • Trade expansion, no protectionism
  • Reduction of trade barriers (tariff, quotas,
    subsidies)
  • Pushed for creation of WTO (from GATT)
  • Integrating more countries in world trade
  • Fighting illicit practices (dumping - selling
    goods below the cost of production)
  • Multilateral rules-making in the context of
    effective global governance and institutions
  • Rules on investment, intellectual property,
    public procurement
  • Enforce control by Dispute Settlement Mechanism

60
But US EU Economic Disputes
  • Genetically modified foodstuff, agricultural
    issue provoked political animosity
  • American Foreign Sales Corporation Act (2004)
    providing tax subsidies, export rebates abolished
    after EU complaint
  • Helms-Burton Act seeking to punish non-US
    companies trading with Cuba contrary to the
    principles of international trade and sovereignty
  • Boeing-Airbus govt subsidies dispute
  • Us accused lack of a single EU customs
    administration delays US exports
  • EU vs Microsoft decade-long dispute (1999-2009)
    on violation of competition policy (link)

61
So what? Different views or working together?
  • Neither side wants to impose concessions on the
    other - competition matters!
  • Clashes among domestic values, policy priorities,
    regulatory systems international rules cannot
    help much
  • 2005 summit A US-EU Initiative to Enhance
    Economic Integration and Growth
  • 2005 summit A US-EU partnership for a More Open
    Market in 21st century
  • Regulatory cooperation, capital markets,
    innovation and technology, trade, security,
    intellectual property rights, investment,
    competition

62
Current Military Relations
  • Now US and EU account for 70 of global
    expenditure in defense
  • However the US spend three times more than the EU
    Europe kept demilitarized
  • US dominance in defence is overwhelming (and the
    US defence budget could be expanded) 
  • Presently the US spends just under 3 of its
    GNP on defence (it used to be an average of 6.8
    between 1948-1998)
  • Not counting Bosnia or Kosovo, currently the US
    has about 90,000 personnel in Europe (57,000 in
    Germany, 9,825 in the UK, 9800 in Italy, 1600 in
    Turkey, and other countries)

63
Toward a Tri-polar System?
Powers Units Economic Political Military Cultural
US
EU
China
64
Toward a Tri-polar System?
Powers Units Economic Political Military Cultural
US v v v v
EU v v ?
China v ?
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com