Justin Vaisse, Visiting Fellow, Center on the U.S. and France
America
and Multilateralism: Why George W. Bush is No Different
Handelsblatt, July 26, 2001
At the G-8 summit in
Genoa, George W. Bush stood firm on its refusal of the Kyoto protocol on global
warming and on its missile defense plan. The first is regarded as bad for the
U.S. economy; the second is deemed indispensable for American security,
whatever the problems for other countries or for the world as a whole. In New
York, U.S. negotiator John Bolton created a significant impediment to talks
aiming at curbing the sales and trafficking of small arms, stating "The
United States will not join consensus on a final document that contains
measures contrary to our constitutional right to keep and bear arms." In a
recent letter to the European Union about the use of the global fund to fight
AIDS, Robert Zoellick, the United States Trade Representative, expressed
skepticism of the EU plan for drug pricing, listing among other problems that
"the sharing of drug pricing information can at times present problems
under U.S. antitrust laws."
The common point between
these recent moves is American reluctance to accommodate the drive towards more
cooperative institutions and more international coordination at the expense of
domestic practices. Indeed, Washington has often been viewed in recent years as
unwilling to pay any price for the progress of multilateralism—whether the
International Criminal Court, the Landmine treaty, or the Comprehensive Test
Ban Treaty (CTBT) which was rejected by the Senate in October 1999. The
priority of domestic concerns over the need for international cooperation and
even international law has become more prominent with the adoption of
extraterritorial legislation (the Helms-Burton and D'Amato-Kennedy laws) and
hard-ball policies vis-à-vis the UN.
U.S. sovereignty first,
cooperative diplomacy second: is this anything new? In Europe, this tendency
has been perceived as a sudden drift towards unilateralism, and has recently
been dubbed "cowboy diplomacy"—a reference to George W. Bush's Texan
origins. Now that the U.S. is the only superpower, it is assumed, it can do
away with treaties and international cooperation and get its way through
influence, diplomatic pressure, or sheer power.
While this view is not
entirely wrong, it tends both to overestimate George W. Bush's personal role
and to underestimate America's historic pattern in this respect. The question
Europeans should ask, to understand the present and predict the future, is this
one: was America ever a genuine multilateral power? Has it ever been ready to
sacrifice domestic practices (especially when its Constitution is involved) or
its perception of what its own security requires for the sake of international
cooperation?
A quick look at history
confirms that the answer is no. At times, America did cooperate and create new
structures in which its own power was somewhat constrained. But in effect
Washington dominated the UN, the IMF, the World Bank and NATO in the 1940's and
the 1950's. It has retained a veto power in each of these organization since
then, so that domestic costs have always been minimal. The GATT was a loose
agreement, not a binding treaty with a supranational organization; the WTO did
not really change this since no country can be made to alter its domestic
legislation if it doesn't wish to do so. True, in the aftermath of the Cold
War, America seemed to be heading towards genuine multilateralism. But the
first Bush administration would have waged the Gulf war without the UN, and the
Clinton administration quickly retreated from UN peacekeeping operations under
domestic pressure. And other administrations in history exhibit even worse
records, from Nixon unilaterally retreating from the Bretton Woods monetary
framework to Ronald Reagan terminating U.S. participation in UNESCO and
withdrawing U.S. acceptance of the World Court permanent jurisdiction—even if
there might have been some valid reasons in each case.
This is why George W.
Bush is no exception. Rather, the creation of the UN and of the Bretton Woods
institutions can be regarded today as the historical exception, measured
against the rejection of the Treaty of Versailles (1920) and of the CTBT
(1999).
Two conflicting trends
collided in Genoa, as they collided in Toronto for the Landmine Treaty, in Rome
for the International Criminal Court or in Kyoto for global warming. First, the
long-standing American reluctance to accept any infringement on its sovereignty
or any significant change of its domestic practices or way of life, for the
sake of international cooperation. Second, the recent proliferation of
transnational campaigns and initiatives, many of them coming from Europe and
from American civil society itself, aiming at strengthening treaties and
institutions to cope with global challenges.
What happened in Bonn on
Monday, when countries rescued the Kyoto protocol by agreeing to mandatory
reductions of greenhouse gases, showed that the world had changed. These
countries, including non-European ones, are ready to make painful decisions for
addressing global problems. But America has stayed its course, refusing to join
the rest of the world.
Will America,
increasingly out of touch with the international community and losing the moral
high ground, gradually shed its exception and cooperate? Or will every new
international agreement have to be on America's terms and accommodate America's
domestic interests? The future of global cooperation will be largely decided by
the answer to this question.
© Copyright 2001 Handelsblatt