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112 pages, Hardcover
First published January 1, 2003

Europe’s relative weakness has understandably produced a powerful European interest in building a world where military strength and hard power matter less than economic and soft power, an international order where international law and international institutions matter more than the power of individual nations, where unilateral action by powerful states is forbidden, where all nations regardless of their strength have equal rights and equally protected by commonly agreed-upon international rules of behavior. Because they are relatively weak, Europeans have a deep interest in devaluing and eventually eradicating the brutal laws of an anarchic Hobbesian world where power is the ultimate determinant of national security and success. (37)
As Niebuhr wrote half a century ago, America’s ‘inordinate power,’ for all its ‘perils’ provides ‘some real advantages for the world community.’ Instead many Europeans today have come to consider the United States itself to be the outlaw, a rogue colossus. The danger - if it is a danger - is that the United States and Europe could become positively estranged. Europeans could become more and more shrill in their attacks on the United States. The United States could become less inclined to listen, or perhaps even to care. The day could come, if it has not already, when Americans might no more heed the pronouncements of the EU than they do the pronouncements of the ASEAN or the Andean Pact. (100)