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With Us or Against Us

Page 18

by Tony Judt


  the Pew Research Center. On the whole, the central Europeans

  share the goals of the post-9/11 fight against terrorism but not

  U.S. unilateralism. To the proposition “the U.S. take into considera-

  tion others” in the fight against terrorism, between 60 and 70 percent

  of central Europeans answered negatively (a much higher figure

  than among E.U. member-states). To the proposition “the world

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  would be a more dangerous place if another country matched America

  militarily”, old Europe (France, 64 percent; Germany, 63 percent)

  answers positively while Czechs (53 percent) and Poles (46 percent)

  seem less worried.30 The view that “when differences occur with

  America it is because of (my country’s) different values” (considered

  a key indicator for the assessment of anti-Americanism) is shared only

  by a third of the French and German respondents but by 62 percent

  Czechs.

  In short, there is a striking difference in the response to the over-

  whelming primacy of American power on the international scene

  between Western and East-Central European governments and intellec-

  tual elites. But there seems to be a widespread transeuropean consensus

  among the peoples, thereby casting serious doubts on the depth of the

  old Europe versus new Europe divide vis-à-vis the United States.

  Globalization and America’s Social

  and Economic Model

  The second dimension of American power that the French (and a

  number of other Europeans) are uncomfortable with is economic.

  Globalization and the promotion of the free market have been central

  to the perceptions about America, at least since the Reagan presidency.

  The American liberal model with high growth rates, high degrees of

  inequality combined with low rates of unemployment and low levels

  of social protection is seen as a major challenge to the continental

  “European social model” characterized by the welfare state, high levels

  of public spending, and high rates of unemployment. This is, in

  Michel Albert’s terms, the opposition between the “Anglo-Saxon

  model” and the capitalisme rhénan31 shared since World War II by

  West European Social Democrats as well as Christian Democrats.

  After the Reagan–Thatcher challenge to it in the 1980s, came the

  Clinton–Blair version under the banner of globalization and the

  “Third Way” as the only plausible adaptation to its challenges.

  Meanwhile, the continental welfare state model is in crisis, nowhere

  more so than in Germany and France, economically the “sick men of

  Europe.” Thus, in the uneven debate between (French-led) “territo-

  rialists” and (American-led) “globalists,” the post-communist Eastern

  Europe tended, rather predictably, to support the latter. There is a

  strong correlation in Western Europe (and France in particular)

  between critics of marketization/deregulation in the 1990s, not to

  mention antiglobalization protesters, and the resentment of America’s

  economic power and influence.

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  In contrast, for the Central Europeans, the American free market

  model seemed doubly attractive in the post-communist transition.

  After half a century of state control over economic and social life, you

  do not want just to improve it but also to dismantle it. For that pur-

  pose, free market liberalism promoted by the United States and the

  myth of America as a society without a state seemed highly attractive.

  For post-1989 East-Central Europe, America had the great advan-

  tage of never having had anything to do with socialism. To be sure,

  few (if any) in Warsaw or Budapest were familiar with Sombart’s thesis

  explaining the “American exception” by the role of the frontier, and

  the impact of constant immigration flows. What they knew was

  Milton Friedman and the simple truth that, whether under Reagan or

  Clinton, America stood for the free market and got results while con-

  tinental Europe (France and Germany) were contemplating a decade

  with almost zero growth and 10 percent unemployment. Hence the

  paradox: Chicago school economic liberalism was introduced in East-

  Central Europe under the banner of a trade union called Solidarity!

  In the roll back of the post-socialist model, the American model

  appealed to economic and political liberals—to Klaus as well as to

  Havel. For the Central European free marketers in charge of the

  conversion to market economy in the immediate aftermath of the col-

  lapse of communism, the only debate was, as T. Garton Ash put it,

  between Hayekiens and Friedmanites. Most of them had American

  “gurus” to launch the “shock therapy.” For Leszek Balczerowicz in

  Poland, it was Jeffrey Sachs, for Vaclav Klaus, it was Milton Friedman

  (and Margaret Thatcher). This enthusiasm for the American model

  subsided somehow when the political pendulum swung in Warsaw

  and Prague (and when Vaclav Klaus had to resign at the end of 1997

  after it was revealed that that there was more than a “free lunch”

  worth of unaccountable party finances). But the main orientation

  remained with other countries joining in: Estonia the champion of

  free trade and post-Meciar Slovakia, inspired by George Bush’s tax

  breaks, opting for a 19 percent flat tax rate for business and individu-

  als (clearly out of step with continental Europe where the taxation

  rates are more than double).

  The second inspiration for the “roll back of the State” comes from

  the human rights movement and political liberals. The dissident redis-

  covery of a language of rights and of the concept of civil society also

  pushed, albeit less explicitly, in the direction of the Anglo-Saxon

  model. “In facing a problem of some importance you’ll find in France

  the State, in England a lord, in America a voluntary association”—

  Alexis de Tocqueville’s observation is not entirely out of place in the

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  way post-communist Central Europeans approached their “problems

  of some importance”: the State was rolled back, the gentry is no more,

  and a civil society, the only hope in town, is a long-term endeavor.

  To the extent that both economic and political liberals converged in

  considering the State as the enemy from whom freedom had to be

  conquered, they shared what Isiah Berlin called “negative freedoms”

  (to enjoy new freedoms, the State has to stop doing some of the

  things it used to do). Hence also the attraction of the American model

  of a minimalist State. An article in a Czech daily recently summed up

  the perception of the latter as follows:

  In America all that is not forbidden by law is allowed. In Germany, all

  that is not allowed by law is prohibited. In Russia, all is forbidden to the

  extent that law permits it. In France, all is allowed even when law pro-

  hibits it. In Switzerland, all that is not forbidden by law is compulsory.

  What matters here is, of course, not the accuracy of
the statement

  but what it reveals about a widespread perception: America associated

  with individual freedom while continental Europe presents variations

  of proliferating rules and regulations imposed (if not always imple-

  mented) by the State. This contrast is reinforced when related to the

  comparison between Western and East-Central European concerns

  and attitudes toward the U.S.-led process of economic globalization.

  Is the E.U. a tool of that globalization or a way to cope with it and

  shelter the newcomers against the adverse effects of globalization?

  The post-1989 modernization of East-Central Europe is partly an

  adjustment to the process of E.U. integration and partly the transfor-

  mation of economies and societies under the impact of global U.S.

  patterns. According to the Hungarian economist J.M. Kovacs: “By join-

  ing NATO, hosting multinational companies, introducing American-

  style capital markets and welfare regimes or following global trends of

  mass culture, some of the new democracies in Eastern Europe could

  become in a few important fields different from the sociological

  model(s) offered by Western Europe. All the more so because in the

  takeover of global features the danger of producing peculiar hybrids

  with communist legacies arises.”32

  The suggestion that East-Central European countries in transi-

  tion were heading toward and “American” rather than a continental

  “European” model deserves to be qualified as soon as one moves

  from rhetoric to realities, from some of the initial impulses to the

  current phase. The impact of American-style capitalism (ranging from

  issues of corporate governance to social responsibility) is to some

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  extent related to the presence of American capital. The investment

  flows to East-Central Europe show, however, a formidable imbalance

  in favor of the E.U. In 2001, FDI (foreign direct investment) in

  Poland was 6.37 billion euros (compared to less than 37 million

  from the United States); in the Czech Republic, the EU investment

  was 10 times that of the United States (2429 millions compared to

  249 millions). Similar differentials apply to the rest of East-Central

  Europe: Hungary 1247 against 10; Slovakia 888 against 28; Slovenia

  391 against 21; Latvia 220 against 1; Estonia 228 against 0; Lithuania

  171 against 0.33 In short, whatever the rhetoric, the actual dynamics

  of economic integration links firmly the region to Western Europe

  rather than to the United States.

  No less importantly, the differences in Europe on issues related to

  the economic model and globalization are not confirmed by public

  opinion surveys. The Pew Global Attitudes survey shows a fair amount

  of convergence between old E.U. members and new ones on main

  issues such as openness to the expansion of trade and rise in business

  ties.34 The effect of globalization is seen positively by a similar number

  of Czechs and Slovaks (around two-thirds) as of West Europeans.35

  Only Poland shows greater reluctance with 38 percent positive opin-

  ions. A similar pattern emerges with the widespread acceptance of free

  markets combined with the need for a social safety net. Americans

  alone, according to the survey, care more about personal freedom than

  about government assurances of an economic safety net. Nearly six in

  ten value freedom to pursue individual goals without government

  interference while only a third think it is more important for a govern-

  ment to make sure that no one is in need. In contrast, the majority in

  all European countries believes the opposite.36

  The only discrepancy between the current E.U. members and

  the newcomers from the East is public opinion attitudes toward

  anti-globalization protesters (often associating in their discourse U.S.

  influence with the negative view of globalization). While a significant

  number of West Europeans think that antiglobalization protesters are

  a “good influence” (Britain, 39 percent; France, 44 percent; Germany,

  33 percent), only a handful of Central Europeans share such a view

  (Czechs, 18 percent; Bulgarians, 16 percent; Poles, 21 percent).37

  The contrast was particularly visible during the September 2000

  World Bank/IMF summit in Prague where violent antiglobalization

  demonstrations were seen by the Czech population as a foreign

  import of anticapitalist/anti-American rhetoric and of a culture of

  violence and anti-Americanism without any echo in the domestic

  population.38

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  It can thus be argued that just as for attitudes toward the primacy

  of American power on the international scene, the attitudes toward

  American economic influence, often identified with the challenges of

  globalization, reveal a discrepancy between the political and economic

  elites dominant in the first decade after the collapse of the Ancien

  Régime and the public at large. The latter shares the basic perceptions

  and priorities of their West European counterparts, though it is less

  tolerant of some of the political excesses of the antiglobalization radicals.

  The “Americanization” of Culture?

  The third dimension of anti-American ressentiment in France (and

  parts of Western Europe) concerns the penetration of American mass

  culture. Opposition to free-market globalization associated with the

  United States tends to be politically on the left. Opposition to the

  “Americanization” of culture tends to come from the nationalist right:

  the fear that modernity and mass culture destroy traditional values and

  dissolve national identities.39 It tends to focus on two main issues.

  First, there is the opposition to the commercialization of culture, the

  idea that culture is to be seen (above all in the United States) as an

  industry just like any other, subjected primarily to the laws of supply

  and demand and of free trade. The argument widely shared by French

  elites is, in contrast, that art and culture cannot be treated as mere

  commodities; that culture and national identities related to it are too

  important to be left to the market forces, where economically weaker

  national cultures run the risk of being leveled by the all-powerful

  American steamroller.40

  In this “cultural war,” according to Le Nouvel Observateur: “America

  owes its domination of the world as much to its cultural hegemony

  as to its economic power.”41 Hence French defense of a “cultural

  exception” as a guarantor of diversity on one hand and of high culture

  threatened by mass culture and the powerful entertainment industry

  on the other.42 France made these issues one of its priorities at the

  European constitutional convention and succeeded in introducing an

  amendment that gives countries veto power over cultural matters.43

  The cultural exception amendment means that a E.U. country could

  block trade deals with countries outside Europe in the field of cultural

  products, film, and music.44 Nobody was under any doubt that this

&nb
sp; concerned the United States.

  What then are some of the responses to the issue of the

  “Americanization of culture” in the countries that, historically, were

  cultural nations before they became political ones and where, until 1990,

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  writers and philosophers were considered the ultimate rampart for

  a spiritual resistance to totalitarianism?

  The conditions prevailing in the old days was described by the

  American novelist Philip Roth, after his return from a visit to Prague

  in the 1980s, as follows: “In the West, everything goes nothing mat-

  ters, in the East nothing goes everything matters.” Some in communist

  Europe had made a virtue out of necessity: the independent, samizdat

  culture was the last remnant of a noncommercial culture, with works

  of art “made with the only aim to appear” (to use H. Arendt’s phrase)

  outside the consumer society. Hence the suggestion (from Kundera to

  Solzhenitsyn) that, paradoxically, the last refuge of high culture not

  corrupted by the American/Western commercialism, was precisely

  where it was threatened by “socialism that came in from the cold.”

  Interestingly, a somewhat similar argument was made by the Polish

  Pope and the Catholic Church in Poland concerning the possible spir-

  itual revival coming from the East to the decadent materialistic West.45

  The legacy of communism and dissident counter-culture is more

  complex than this self-serving stereotype. The dissident “high culture”

  (samizdat translations, seminars) in pre-1989 Prague had more

  European than American influences (Heidegger, Arendt, Levinas,

  Ricoeur), but its counter-culture looked more to late 1960s and

  1970s California and New York (Frank Zapa, Lou Reed, and the

  Velvet Underground46). Both had elements of a critique of dominant

  commercial culture. Vaclav Havel, the symbol of the “new” Central

  Europe clinging to common “atlantic” values was also a critic of

  modernity, warning against a world dominated by the logic of “imper-

  sonal megamachines” of which the Eastern communist version was

  the most extreme and most objectionable (though not the only)

 

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