But the question is: Were the Europeans obligated to ‘walk the US path’?
Let’s travel backward in time to September 11, 2002. What happened after the Twin Towers had been reduced to rubble? The Security Council in the UN agreed to a resolution about cooperation for calling the terrorists responsible into account as quickly as possible. The countries in the EU stressed in a declaration that the US were in their full right to strike back on the terrorists. And NATO activated the fifth article in the treaty as soon as the USA asked for help.
Now make a short jump forward and contrast this with the lack of European support concerning Iraq. US complaints about shortcomings in the report supplied to the UN by Iraq and claims that they possessed several thousand liters of chemical \ biological weapons, were understandingly met with skepticism by the EU since no evidence had been presented. They believed it would be difficult to justify an attack upon Iraq without proof that the Iraqi possessed weapons of mass destruction. The UN was of the same opinion, and the US couldn’t possibly make use of NATO’s Article Five without proof.
So why the difference in reactions?
1. Proof.
After the terrorist attack on the Twin Towers, the US didn’t dick around but shortly afterward presented NATO with evidence that Osama bin Laden was behind it. Later, the US was unable to provide any kind of conclusive proof that Iraq had weapons of mass destruction or Al-Queada connections.
2. A threat.
During September 11 the USA was directly attacked by a terrorist organization that had the backings of the government in Afghanistan. According to the NATO treaty such a situation is to be considered an attack upon all the members. Iraq, on the other hand, didn’t even have the capability to hurt the US.
3. American attitude.
The subsequent US attempts to bully themselves into a UN mandate only made the situation worse, and of course stirred up a lot of anger. The fact that the US seemingly couldn’t decide on a reason for invading Iraq didn’t help either, not to mention the declaration that the US maybe didn’t need evidence in order to go to war. Nor did the ‘intelligence info’ supplied to the UN weapon inspectors by the CIA; it was either wrong or so old it was useless.
Finally, let’s see what www.dictionary.com has to say about the word ‘ally’:
In other words, an ally is not someone who jumps whey you tell them to jump, or who unconditionally enters a war on the thinnest excuse.www.dictionary.com wrote:al·ly
v. al·lied, al·ly·ing, al·lies
v. tr.
1. To place in a friendly association, as by treaty: Italy allied itself with Germany during World War II.
2. To unite or connect in a personal relationship, as in friendship or marriage.
v. intr.
To enter into an alliance: Several tribes allied to fend off the invaders.
n. pl. al·lies
1. One that is allied with another, especially by treaty: entered the war as an ally of France.
2. One in helpful association with another: legislators who are allies on most issues.
The truly sad part is that the USA enjoyed a lot of goodwill in Europe after the attack on the Twin Towers. Instead of building upon this, the Bush administration has wasted it away by acting like a spoiled kid.
Now I shall eagerly await being flamed as an ‘anti-American’. [puts on flameproof suit and hides under bed]