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Merkel's Fans in Washington
by DW Staff / AFP
published September 15, 2005
Washington is watching Sunday's election and, secretly, hoping for a
Merkel victory. But the promise of better relations is off-set by areas
of potential dispute.
Should conservative Angela Merkel sweep to victory in Sunday's elections,
it could mean a fresh start for strained US-German relations, according
to analysts.
After dipping to new lows under Chancellor Gerhard Schröder and
his center-left coalition, with differences over Iraq and the partnership
linking Germany, France and Russia undermining ties, the relationship
seems to have stabilized of late. But a victory by Merkel, an Atlanticist
like her mentor Helmut Kohl, could make ties to Washington a lot friendlier.
"What is happening in Germany is a catalyst for change," said
Rockwell Schnabel, former US ambassador to the European Union and author
of a new book on the EU and its contentious relations with the United
States.
Merkel appears to be "a closer friend of the United States and
therefore would lead a policy that would be more pro-American and pro-Atlanticist," he
added.
Merkel's priorities
After riding a wave of anti-Bush sentiment to victory in 2002, Germany's
miserable economic state has forced Schröder to focus on domestic
issues in his uphill battle to re-election.
Opinion polls show that Merkel, candidate for the Christian Democrats,
has a good chance at becoming the country's first female chancellor.
But up to 30 percent of the electorate remains undecided.
Merkel, 51, has said that one of her priorities if elected would be
mending the poisoned relationship with the United States, while still
not sending troops to Iraq. Washington is also interested in her aggressive
pro-free market agenda.
Although Bush officials refuse to publicly comment on the outcome of
the Sunday vote, privately they say a Merkel victory would be a welcome
change.
A fresh start, without "leftovers"
"If the administration representatives are honest they'll tell you
'Well this is a fresh start and Merkel's victory would be a good thing'," said
Jackson Janes, director of the American Institute for Contemporary German
Studies.
"We got a lot of leftovers with the Schröder team and we'll
probably never be able to change that, so if we get a new team in Berlin
it's an opportunity."
Janes (photo) and others warned, however, that if Merkel wins on Sunday,
the Bush administration shouldn't rush to pop the champagne corks. "I
don't think that we here in Washington should escalate our expectations
that her parameters would be significantly bigger than Schröder's," Janes
said.
Dieter Dettke, executive director of Germany's Friedrich Ebert Foundation,
which is close to Schröder's SPD, in Washington, said that while
Merkel would certainly work hard to establish smoother lines of communication
with Washington, in substance there could be little change under her
administration as far as foreign policy is concerned.
The Turkey question
One likely contentious issue, Janes and Dettke noted, was Merkel's
opposition to Turkey becoming a full member of the European Union which
put her at odds with Washington.
Nonetheless, analysts say, relations under Merkel are unlikely to be
any worse than they have been with Schröder.
"I think that (if Merkel wins) there's going to be much more of
an effort to say 'let's see where we agree...'," Janes said. "In
the case of Schröder, there was a great deal of concern that they
were thinking more about differences rather than commonalities."
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