Subscribe free to our newsletters via your
. Military Space News .




DEMOCRACY
Walker's World: Europe wants Obama- Why?
by Martin Walker
Zurich, Switzerland (UPI) Oct 29, 2012


disclaimer: image is for illustration purposes only

It should come as no surprise to Americans that most Europeans are hoping that U.S. President Barack Obama wins re-election. This isn't because he has been good for Europe.

Obama's interactions with Europe have been clumsy and ineffective where they haven't been petulant. The British, the only European power on which Americans can rely through thick and thin, have been left with the impression that he sees them as the yesterday land, the dreadful old colonialists of his father's Kenya. Sending back the bust of Winston Churchill to the British Embassy in his first week was a symbol so petty it should have been beneath him.

Obama appears to see the French in much the same way except he knows they are unreliable. He has tried to forge a close relationship with Germany's Angela Merkel but she is a chancellor who sees everything through the prism of German politics. She has listened courteously to his repeated appeals to sort out the euro crisis in a way that doesn't plunge most of Europe into recession (and doesn't damage U.S. financial interests) but has then ignored him and pursued short-term German political and financial interests.

Above all, Obama has launched a strategic shift of U.S. power and interest to the Asia-Pacific region, downgrading Europe in American priorities and bruising an already battered European self-esteem. This would be no bad thing, if it could influence the Europeans (French and British partly excepted) to take their own defense and foreign policies seriously. But don't expect Europeans to like it.

Nonetheless, the fond memories endure of the charismatic Obama of the 2008 campaign. There is also a lingering political correctness, which thrills to the thought of a man of color in the White House. His speeches on Islam have been well-received.

And the British were somewhat mollified by his successful 2-day state visit last year, despite his gaffe at starting his toast to the Queen before the national anthem had finished playing. Nobody else raised a glass until the Queen did so when the music stopped.

So in what might be seen as a triumph of hope over experience, Europe wants Obama to win. Part of this is fear of the unknown Mitt Romney, a bemusement at his Mormon faith and bafflement at his shape-shifting from Massachusetts moderate to Tea Party fire-eater and back to moderation again. Another part of it is alarm at the fundamentalist economics of his running mate Paul Ryan and Romney's own background in private equity.

Most of the alarm is based on some of Romney's statements, that he would on his first day in the White House denounce China as a currency manipulator, block U.S. funds from going to international family planning organizations that provide abortions and start dismantling Obamacare. Europeans also fear that Romney's passionate pro-Israel and anti-Iran stance could lead to a war that would send energy prices soaring and plunge Europe into a deep recession.

More thoughtful Europeans, and those who have some understanding of the complexities of the U.S. political system, have concluded from the opinion polls that we are close to a dead heat in this election. That means that the U.S. Senate will retain its Democratic majority, frustrating a Romney presidency, and the House of Representatives will remain Republican, frustrating an Obama second term.

In short, whoever wins this election, political gridlock is likely to continue in Washington, with a great deal of posturing from both left and right and very little room in the center for compromise.

In the short term, Europeans dread this fundamentalism in U.S. politics leading to a lemming-like collective plunge over the fiscal cliff at the end of the year. This ignores the proven capacity of even this congressional generation to concoct fiscal fudges that fend off disaster, at least for a while.

In the longer term, Europeans fear an American self-incarceration, a United States so hemmed in by debt and political gridlock and domestic squabbles that it becomes increasingly isolationist in practice, if not in rhetoric.

"This is not Clinton's America, nor it is Reagan's or Kennedy's or Eisenhower's," an eminent Swiss banker told this columnist over the weekend. "It is an American we have not seen since the days before Roosevelt."

"It's worse than that, it's back to Jimmy Carter with no Cold War to focus their minds," commented a leading German financier with strong connections to the Berlin government.

But having made their quips, the two men then agreed that the dominant American reality of the next presidency is likely to be a very strong U.S. economic recovery starting in 2014. They saw it driven by the long-delayed recovery in housing, by the shale natural gas boom that is putting the country on the path to self-sufficiency in energy and revitalizing the U.S. petrochemical industry.

Whoever wins the election, they concluded, will be riding a buoyant tide of economic growth. And if it is to be President Romney, than his re-election in 2016 would be a very good bet indeed. If Obama gets re-elected, then the Democrats will quickly launch a bruising internal contest over the choice of his successor.

.


Related Links
Democracy in the 21st century at TerraDaily.com






Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle








DEMOCRACY
Hurricane 'havoc' hits US election endgame
Washington (AFP) Oct 29, 2012
Hurricane Sandy, bringing Monday a dangerous "October Surprise," has shredded candidates' endgame plans for next week's toss-up US election in a new test of nerve for Barack Obama and Mitt Romney. The US President and his Republican foe dumped planned rallies in swing states in the path of the monster storm, upending strategies months in the making designed to eke out every last vote a week ... read more


DEMOCRACY
Integrated Missile Defense System Test Sees Multiple Targets Engaged

U.S. Air Force Awards Lockheed Martin Initial Contract for Next Set of Missile Warning Satellites

Patriot, SM-2 engage ballistic and cruise missile targets in sophisticated test scenario

Biggest anti-missile drill for Israel, U.S

DEMOCRACY
Raytheon's Excalibur Ib demonstrates accuracy during flight tests

Syria rebels have US-made Stinger missiles: Russia

New TOW missile achieves 100th direct hit in latest testing

Lockheed Martin Introduces Advanced Air and Missile C2 System

DEMOCRACY
Israel doubts Iran has drone data: defence official

China speeds up the Dragon's Flight program

Iran has Israel drone data: defence official

Northrop Grumman Delivers New BACN-Equipped Global Hawk to USAF Ahead of Schedule

DEMOCRACY
Completion of FCSA Demonstrates Shift In Government Thinking for SATCOM Procurement

Raytheon awarded contract from US Army to produce and upgrade airborne radios

ONR to Dial Up Faster Data for the Marines

$15M order for Harris tactical radios

DEMOCRACY
Elbit To Supply Brazil Remote Controlled Weapon Stations

Northrop Grumman Employs FACE Standards to Bring Enhanced Avionics to the Warfighter

Lockheed Martin Demonstrates JAGM Dual-Mode Seeker in High-Speed Captive Flight Tests

Lockheed Martin Wins Contract To Increase Tactical Vehicle Safety With Autonomous Technology

DEMOCRACY
Panetta asks Congress to act on US defense budget

Russian defence ministry firm searched in fraud case

Putin slams dictation to Russia on arms trade

China leads rise in Asia military spending: study

DEMOCRACY
China blocks discussion of report on premier Wen

Being Pentagon chief had its downsides: Gates

Japan PM to boost coast security amid China row

China watches US democracy avidly, but without envy

DEMOCRACY
Strengthening fragile forests of carbon nanotubes for new MEMS applications

A 'nanoscale landscape' controls flow of surface electrons on a topological insulator

Nanotechnology helps scientists keep silver shiny

Scientists use molecular layers to study nanoscale heat transfer




The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2014 - Space Media Network. AFP, UPI and IANS news wire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement