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Biden calls on Europe to put its men where its mouth is
Published in Saudi Press Agency on 07 - 02 - 2009


The US policy of taking world events into its own
hands was officially buried by US Vice President Joe Biden in a major
policy speech Saturday before the Munich Security Conference, according to dpa.
Now it remains to be seen whether the United States will follow
through on its promises to consult with its allies and talk with its
enemies - and how European leaders will cope with a world where they
are expected to provide not just counsel, but also the manpower to
turn their policy proposals into reality.
"America will do more," said Biden, to the delight of most of the
European leaders present at the annual conference. "The bad news is
that America will ask for more from our partners as well."
That could mean expectations that European countries will take in
Guantanamo detainees released if US President Barrack Obama closes
the facility as promised. It could mean calls for more European
troops in UN-mandated operations in Afghanistan.
It will also certainly mean US expectations of European support
for yet more sanctions on Iran should that nation not open up its
nuclear programmes to weapons inspectors.
Any one of those issues by itself could prove a tough nut for
European politicians to crack.
Should the United States call on its European allies for help in
all of these issues - let alone for unknown threats lurking on the
world stage - some leaders might soon find a touch of nostalgia for
the days when they were neither consulted, nor expected to
contribute.
But first reactions were positive. German Chancellor Angela Merkel
welcomed the new US readiness to "work together, not only on
analysing challenges, but also in meeting decisions on
implementation."
Javier Solana, the European Union's high representative for
foreign aid and security policy, was likewise optimistic. "I don't
think it's bad news," he said. "We have to put our contributions
forward. We cannot be players and not put anything in the basket."
Nonetheless, the newfound US openness may not prove popular in all
corners. Biden made a point to reiterate the president's pledge to
extend an open hand to any nation that unclenched a fist, a by now
familiar reference to Iran.
But on Friday, the speaker of Iran's parliament, Ali Larijani,
said that Iran would only consider the new US approach if Washington
was prepared to acknowledge past wrongs against Iran.
Similarly, Biden's promise of more openness with Russia regarding
proposed missile defence facilities in Poland and the Czech Republic
- a move that had been anticipated given the Democrats' scepticism
toward missile defence - was pre-empted by comments from Russian
Deputy Prime Minister Sergei Ivanov on Friday night.
Ivanov made it clear that the only acceptable solution was a world
without those systems in Eastern Europe.
Nor did Biden's speech rule out the possibility of US
unilateralism in times of need.
"We'll work in a partnership whenever we can," he noted.
That, in itself, is not a problem, said Karsten Voigt, coordinator
for German-American cooperation with the German Foreign Ministry.
"That's the difference between a world power and a country like
Germany," Voigt told Deutsche Presse-Agentur dpa, philosophically.
Countries with limited military power, like Germany, must rely on
multilateral organizations to achieve their ends. A defence giant
like the United States will always keep the unilateral option in its
back pocket, he noted.
Voigt instead focused on the positive.
"It was a speech that showed that Europe and America will confront
the global and regional problems together," he said. "That we have a
level of balance. That there is now a give and take."
The main problem he sees is that so many of the major issues
facing the United States lie outside Europe, whereas the partners
from whom it seeks help are predominantly within Europe. That could
mean that, even if European allies are willing to lend aid, practical
considerations might limit their ability to do so.


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