Is Europe
a friend or foe?
Former ambassador to E.U. addresses
conference in Sun Valley
by Gregory Foley
published August 24, 2005
The age of the European superpower is upon us, but we need not fear.
That was the essence of the message delivered Monday in a speech by
Rockwell Schnabel, a part-time Ketchum resident who served the last four
years as the U.S. ambassador to the European Union.
In an hour-long address to hundreds of writers and publishing-industry
professionals gathered at Sun Valley Resort, Schnabel said the European
Union is a surging economic and political force in the world, despite
recent rejections of the proposed E.U. constitution by voters in France
and the Netherlands.
Schnabel served as the chief U.S. representative to the E.U., based
in Brussels, Belgium, from October 2001 to this year. In July, President
George W. Bush nominated lawyer C. Boyden Gray as his replacement.
The speech at the annual Sun Valley Writers' Conference was in part
an introduction to Schnabel's new book, "The Next Superpower? The
Rise of Europe and its Challenges to the United States," which he
co-authored with journalist Francis X. Rocca.
"They are a superpower today, based on the definition today," Schnabel
said.
Indeed, the E.U. today has an economy that is the same size as that
of the United States, he said. The number of its member nations—now
25—is growing and will likely reach 30. Romania and Bulgaria will
be joining the union and the admission of Turkey is on the horizon. The
common currency of the E.U., the euro, "is used by 300 million of
the wealthiest people in the world" and is "here to stay," he
said.
However, the Netherlands-born diplomat said it is still unclear whether
the E.U. will match the power of the United States on the world stage.
There are 20 million unemployed people in Europe, Schnabel said. The
leaders of two prominent E.U. nations, Germany and Italy, are facing
challenges in the political arena. And voters in some countries are widely
dissatisfied with the status quo—as was indicated when French and
Dutch citizens earlier this year rejected the proposed E.U. constitution.
In France, "the vote, essentially was a referendum on the economy," mainly
the country's lack of jobs, Schnabel said. In the Netherlands, where
Schnabel attended Trinity College, "the vote ... was an anti-immigration
vote," he said. Many Dutch are outraged over the 2004 murder of
film director Theo van Gogh by Islamic extremists.
Although the challenges for the E.U. are many, Schnabel said, he is "positive" about
the outlook for the union and its relationship with the United States.
"In every crisis, there is an opportunity."
He suggested that regulatory reforms, tax cuts and the elimination of
trade barriers could vastly improve the economic situation of European
nations that are struggling.
"That will dramatically increase the (gross domestic product) in
Europe."
In addition, if Europeans start to spend their savings—they save
six times more than Americans do—the overall E.U. economy "really
could be big," he said.
Ireland, he noted, has bucked the trend of some major continental E.U.
nations, taking an "offensive" approach to economics. France
and Germany, meanwhile, have been "defensive."
"The more they try to protect the old jobs, the fewer new ones
come in ... We are risk takers, we are entrepreneurs. The Europeans are
risk-averse."
One setback in several European nations has been the fact that Europeans
work less than Americans do, Schnabel said.
"Can you afford to continue to do that. Probably not."
Change will come to Europe, Schnabel concluded, and the odds are that
the E.U. will eventually become a force equal to that of the United States.
And, he said, because Americans and Europeans "have the same kind
of thinking," opportunities to tackle social, political and health-related
problems on a global scale will come about.
Certainly, China and India will increasingly hold a presence on the
world stage, but the Chinese have "totally different sets of values
and ideas."
In the end, Schnabel suggested that recently "troubled" relations
between the United States and Europe—marked by disagreements over
foreign policies in Iraq—could blossom into an era of unprecedented
collaboration.
"We together can fight poverty and disease. We can fight terrorism."
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