“The law of the
strong is the determining factor in statecraft….the most effective form of
government is one that incorporates the most powerful forces within the state”.
Ludwig von Rochau
Alphen, Netherlands. 2 February. Welcome
back to the new age of Realpolitik and the dark arts of statecraft. Sad then
that so much of British and wider European academia seems to be in wilful
denial. Yesterday, I received a round-robin email from a Cambridge academic
that began with the self-righteous sentence: “Dear All, I think everybody is
agreed that Donald Trump is a threat to NATO, the EU and the western liberal
order generally”. Now, as an Oxford man I suppose I could make some cheap shot
about Cambridge academics. Sadly, politically correct, leftist political dogma
presented as fact is too often what passes for evidence-free analysis across
too much of British academia these days. There are two questions yesterday’s
missive poses. Firstly, what is driving the retreat from strategic reason in
Europe? Secondly, how best to influence a President Trump who remains vital to
the security, defence, and stability of Europe?
Ultra-Liberal Democracy-Denying
Hysteria Syndrome has again been in full flow this past week in Britain. This
time the PC ‘let me off the real world’ brigade are protesting about the planned
state visit by President Trump to Britain. Cheered on by media ‘luvvies’ at the
BBC much has been made of an online petition that has drawn some two million
signatures calling for the planned Trump visit to be cancelled. And yet, and
not untypically, the BBC made very little of yesterday’s YouGov poll that
showed 49% of those asked want President Trump to visit Britain, against 36%
who do not.
Why the self-righteous kerfuffle?
There is no question that the roll-out of President Trump’s Executive Order temporarily
curtailing entry to the United States of citizens from seven countries in the
Middle East has been handled with catastrophic cack-handedness. If there is a
criticism to be made of the Order it is that President Trump is playing
politics with strategy. In 2011 President Obama signed a similar order after it
emerged that US vetting procedures were inadequate. In other words, the need to
establish systems to protect the American people from terrorists posing as
refugees are already in place. This White House Order is merely to pander to
President Trump’s electoral base.
What is behind much of the
protest has nothing actually to do with the Order itself. There is a
paradoxically intolerant ‘ultra-liberal’ caste that refuses to accept a
fundamental principle of democracy; that one accepts the legitimacy of a vote
even if one profoundly disagrees with it. For the past twenty years or so this
caste and their beloved ‘isms’ has been in the ascendancy, and by and large ridden
roughshod over the concerns of millions of people about globalisation,
mass-immigration et al. Brexit and President Trump are but two examples of
their decline and they are determined to fight it by whatever means they can.
However, the more important question
now is how best to influence the rough-edged but democratically-legitimate
President Trump. In fact, the two questions come together at this point. President
Trump himself reflects the decline of the western liberal order, a retreat that
has been hastened by Europe’s retreat into strategic la la land. The rise of China
and the re-emergence of President Putin’s Russia now sees the harsh Realpolitik
of the new East matched by the business Realpolitik of President Trump, with
powerless Europeans lost in an ocean-wide abyss of irrelevance in between.
This irrelevance was evident in President
Tusk’s absurd suggestion yesterday that President Trump’s America, the very
country that guarantees his freedom to speak nonsense, is now such a threat to ‘Europe’
that it ranks alongside China and Russia. Of course, the likes of presidents
Trump, Erdogan, Putin, and quite possibly in time President Xi, are going to do
deals over the heads of Europeans. Europeans have brought such impotence upon
themselves by retreating these past decades into empty institutionalism and by refusing
to heed the historic lessons of power and influence.
The one European leader who seems
to understand this is British Prime Minister Theresa May. She was absolutely
right to a) go to Washington quickly; and b) invite President Trump to Britain for
a state visit. Right now, given Brexit, Britain needs the US as much as at any
time since 1940. Europe does too. And yes, there will be a price. That is
Realpolitik, der! Therefore, rather concentrate on finding new and novel ways to
gratuitously offend President Trump Europeans should instead concentrate on how
best to constructively influence him. That means at the very least Europeans coming
down from their whining city on a molehill and re-learning the arts, sometimes
dark arts, of statecraft.
Here’s the twist. My instincts
are in some ways those of the ultra-liberals. However, I am a pragmatic
liberal, in line with most of the 49% of Britons who want President Trump to
visit Britain. I also have a profound understanding of history, power and
statecraft, which the ultra-liberals seems to wilfully ignore. Therefore, if I
want my liberal values to eventually prevail in this hyper-competitive world I recognise
I need the power and the argument to convince both friends and adversaries. The
argument of weakness, however loud, indignant and obnoxious, is no argument at
all.
Maybe one day a Cambridge
academic might learn…but then again it is Cambridge.
Julian Lindley-French
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