On the
campaign trail, Barack Obama promised that he would “reboot America’s
image” around the world. Indeed, many Americans who voted for Obama believed
that his global popularity would somehow reverse the tide of anti-Americanism that
so vexed his predecessor. Echoing this sentiment of Obama as saviour of America’s image
abroad, presidential advisor David
Axelrod recently asserted that “anti-Americanism isn’t cool anymore.”
In Europe, where
anti-Americanism was elevated to the status of a religion during the presidency
of George W Bush, the “chattering classes” have, by and large, toned down their
criticism of the United
States since Obama was elected. In general,
European media coverage of Obama has been quite favourable and the vehemence of
the anti-American rhetoric has been notably more muted than in recent years. But
now, five months into the age of Obama, the highly vaunted transatlantic honeymoon
may be coming to an end. During the past several weeks, European media have started
publishing stories that criticize Obama and once again cast the United States
in a negative light. Could this be a harbinger of things to come?
What
follows is a brief selection of European news stories that typify what seems to
be a general trend toward a return to more negative reporting about America, its people
and its president.
In Britain, the
left-leaning daily newspaper The Independent asks: “Has Obama
been exposed as an innocent abroad?” It continues: “Barack Obama’s foreign
policy honeymoon may be petering out as events around the globe, whether in Israel, Iran
or North Korea,
conspire to expose some inconvenient realities about his vaunted olive-branch
approach to international relations. A nicer America does not a nicer world
immediately make. It would help if the ‘Obama Effect’ could be demonstrated
actually to exist, even just a little.”
In Germany, the news media have been especially angry
over Obama’s failure to close the prison for terrorist suspects at Guantánamo Bay
in Cuba.
The Financial
Times Deutschland, in commentary titled “World’s Hopes Dashed By George
W. Obama,” writes: “This decision [to revive military trials for some Guantánamo
Bay detainees] isn’t a belated insight, but the pathetic faltering of a man
forced to confront a disastrous legacy…. No one who defends these institutions
ought to criticise Islam’s Sharia courts.” The Munich-based center-left Süddeutsche Zeitung,
in an editorial titled “Obama’s Great Mistake,” writes: “Obama’s people
certainly imagined things differently. But reality has caught up with them…. Bush
light, so to speak… Obama is discrediting both himself and the United States.”
German
newspapers have also been fiercely critical of Obama’s refusal to release more
photos of alleged torture at the Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq. The Berlin-based left-leaning
daily Die
Tageszeitung writes: “With his
decision to prevent the publication of the photos, Obama, who promised transparency…is
practicing opacity…. That the president is abdicating leadership on this
question is a tragedy.” In another commentary, Die
Tageszeitung writes: “Whenever [Obama]
takes a step forward, he stumbles backwards as well. That will likely be enough
to disappoint all those Europeans who had expectations that Obama would be an
almost messiah-like healer. It was expected that he would demolish all of the
ugly monuments from the Bush era and then, together with Al Gore, plant a
Garden of Eden over the top, through which he would drive fuel-efficient
compacts from Chrysler.”
The Financial
Times Deutschland writes: “Obama promised that, under his leadership,
politics in the US
would be both more ethical and more transparent than ever before. The dark
chapters of the Bush era would be illuminated as quickly as possible. But since
Obama assumed a position of responsibility, it has become increasingly obvious
that he cannot live up to these promises.”
The Hamburg-based
left-leaning Der Spiegel, which was
one of the most hyperactive purveyors of anti-Americanism during the Bush
presidency, has lately been back in full form. In recent weeks, the magazine
has published a series of articles that are unusually critical of Obama. Some
titles include: “From
Mania to Distrust: Europe’s Obama Euphoria Wanes,” “Torturing
for America,” “American
Gays and Lesbians Feel Betrayed by Obama,” and “GM
Insolvency Proves America’s Global Power is Waning.”
One of the favourite
tactics used by Der Spiegel is to interview
American left-wingers in order to “prove” that the United States is every bit as bad
as the German media say it is. In an article about the Iranian election titled
“Extraordinary
Amount of Wishful Thinking by the US,” Flynt Leverett, an American analyst,
assured Der Spiegel that the voting irregularities
in Iran “likely weren’t as bad as in Florida in 2000.” In another article
titled “America’s
Torture Legacy: Obama Isn’t Off to a Good Start on Human Rights,” Joan
McCarter of the left-wing blog Daily Kos, told German readers that a “truth
commission could have real value in illuminating for the American people what
the Bush administration did in our names.”
Another Der Spiegel article is a quintessential
example of the magazine’s signature anti-American style. Titled “American
Recession Food: The Fat Crisis,” the article reports that millions of
unemployed Americans are trying to save money by eating junk food at McDonalds.
“The recession is leading to unemployment, waves of bankruptcies and the
decline of entire neighbourhoods—and health and fitness problems for American citizens.
Initial studies show that the crisis is impoverishing more and more people,
which leads them to the most unhealthy and fatty foods. And this in an already
obese and diabetic country.” The article fails to mention, of course, that
Europe in general, and Germany
in particular, is facing its own obesity epidemic.
In Britain, the media have been parroting the same
theme of America
as a terminal wasteland. The center-right Daily Telegraph reports that “dozens
of US cities may have entire neighbourhoods bulldozed as part of drastic
‘shrink to survive’ proposals being considered by the Obama administration to
tackle economic decline. The left-wing Guardian warns that “far-right
shootings raise fear of hate offensive in America.” The killing of a black
security guard at the Holocaust Museum in Washington,
DC is “the latest example of a
surge in extremist violence, as the election of Barack Obama and the economic
crisis breed resentment in a fanatical, racist minority,” the Guardian asserts.
In Switzerland, the St Gallen-based Nachrichten.ch asks whether America will go the way of General
Motors. In a commentary, the paper writes: “The triumph of US ideology after the Second World War was in no
small measure due to the positive associations connected to America. ‘Brand
USA’
was attractive and appealing. But this attraction—just like the status of
Cadillac as a dream car—is long since gone. Instead there is a general unease
toward the United States, a country regarded as aggressive, financially ailing,
the birthplace of a global recession and partly autistic when it comes to
understanding the sensitivities of other countries and their cultures.”
Underscoring
the hypocrisy that underpins so much of the anti-Americanism in Europe, many newspapers have expressed resentment over
Obama’s unwillingness to allow his European colleagues to bask in the limelight
of joint photo opportunities. Commenting on Obama’s recent trip to Europe, the Brussels-based EU Observer
ran a headline titled “Obama Keeps Leaders at Arm’s Length on Europe Trip.”
It reported that Obama, much to the dismay of his French hosts, turned down a dinner
invitation with French President Nicolas Sarkozy on top of the Eiffel tower.
Der Spiegel ran an article titled
“Obama and Merkel: Trans-Atlantic Frenemies,” which reports that the White
House denied a request by German Chancellor Angela Merkel for face time with
Obama. The magazine laments that “Germany is increasingly being left
out of the loop.” In an editorial, the Neue Osnabrücker Zeitung writes: “The
radiance of German-American relations today has its limits. In the G-8, as in
NATO and in Afghanistan, but
also in Obama’s itinerary, the waning importance of Germany is obvious.” In another
article, Der Spiegel quotes Sarkozy as
mocking Merkel: “She can’t even host the US
president in the capital city,” he bragged, while “I can meet him in Normandy and in Paris.”
In Italy, the Turin-based La Stampa grieves for the future of Europe. It argues that Europe’s political class is secretly
resentful for “being abandoned by America in the face of the
relentless advancement of European Islamization.”
Maybe the
center-right Times of London says it best. In an
article titled “Eventually, We Will All Hate Obama Too,” the paper predicts: “So
Barack Obama, en fête around the world, will one day learn that there is no
magical cure for the envy of others. What makes America
the indispensable power (and even more indispensable in the era of the new China), is
precisely what makes anti-Americanism inevitable.”
Soeren
Kern is Senior Fellow for Transatlantic Relations at the Madrid-based Grupo de Estudios Estratégicos / Strategic Studies
Group
@ obviously insane (1)
Submitted by Atlanticist911 on Mon, 2009-07-13 14:48.
Is there anything, and I mean ANYTHING, about the Chinese culture, politics, history etc., of which you DON'T approve? Is there anything, and I mean ANYTHING, about your own Western culture you don't hate?
@ Monarchist
Watch this space.
obviously insane
Submitted by kappert on Mon, 2009-07-13 13:45.
3 girls (escort, assistance, personal summit secretary) for 1 head of state - Berlusconi knows how to distract men, the G8 Acquila summit for a showcase of nuts. Fotographers were delighted for snapshots of 'our mighty ones' blinking at the asses passing by (exception Manmohan Singh). The only woman head of state didn't even complain.
"political class" obviously insane
Submitted by Andrew X on Mon, 2009-07-13 11:01.
"In Italy, the Turin-based La Stampa grieves for the future of Europe. It argues that Europe’s political class is secretly resentful for 'being abandoned by America in the face of the relentless advancement of European Islamization'."
Why must you tell me (an American) these things? Why must I now be unable to sleep until I find a person, any person, who actually thinks this way, and slam their head into a brick wall repeatedly until my rage is sated. (It certainly cannot harm their intelligence.)
After suffering through the last eight years of Europeans not shy with their opinions of American assertiveness, to think any "member of the political class" of that continent would have the unmitigated gall to think this way leaves me speechless.... (and looking for a handy brick wall....)
Ambivalence
Submitted by atheling on Wed, 2009-07-08 18:44.
In an endearing moment with the Russians, the Tarnished Calf quipped, “Along the way, you gave us a pretty good deal on Alaska. Thank you.”
We paid Czar Alexander II less than two cents an acre for Alaska, which apparently still rankles the Russians to this day. That ought to give him good Russian press.
While I chuckle at the about face of the European press (and their political class) which can only be a slap in the face to Ogabe, I also feel a smidgen of smugness towards them. They fawned and championed him during his campaign, and now they got what they deserved: an arrogant naif whose fumblings at home and abroad will cost them the security they enjoyed under George W. Bush.
Wishful thinking....
Submitted by PatriotUSA on Wed, 2009-07-08 08:16.
But look at the bright side. Maybe with all the well-earned flak from abroad, Obambi's pride will be piqued and he will stand up for US for a change.
Barring a major attack or super disaster, the mullah in the White House and all his pride will continue on the destructive path he and the American voters have mainlined the USA into taking. He deserves each and every attack he gets. Every domestic and foreign policy move that his adminsitration has made has done NOTHING to strengthen the USA, or help the economy, or the world, except muslims.
The list of errors and blunders is already extensive and continues to grow. This liar and thief, who is the POTUS now has some negative ratings and these will continue to grow as failure mounts upon failure. Europe is fair game for criticism and why should the USA and Obama be immune to such flak? It was OK to nail Bush at every turn, why should this be stopped now?
I do agree with what Mr. Lee states in his post but Europe has done the same thing with many past US Presidents, and I disagree with his comment on European dementia. The honeymoon for Obambi is rapidly coming to an end and many around the world see him as a fool, ignorant, cowardly, an appeaser and Islamosympathizer who cannot run his administration, or the country he was elected to lead, except into the ground. If Obama set out to "reboot" America's image, he has done so in grand style but in all the wrong ways. Obama has forced this country in the wrong direction and those who were not aware of what he truly represented, now or in the past are also open for attacks. Righfully so.
Five months into the term, many are off the Obama bandwagon and many, many more will follow. No matter who or what party is in power in the USA, no matter what policies are made, Anti Americanism will be around in Europe, and abroad. It has been and will remain popular to be critical of America. Envy is surely part of this and I will close with this: Without a strong America where would the world be? Take that into past and present history.Where Obama is "leading," only fools and the far left of both continents will want to go. One thing for sure: That is one place I do not want to go. The sooner the world is done with Obama, the better off we will be. Of course, unless the damage is catastrophic before his term ends or gets impeached. Now that would be change for the better!
and Pathetic
Submitted by KO on Wed, 2009-07-08 00:26.
But look at the bright side. Maybe with all the well-earned flak from abroad, Obambi's pride will be piqued and he will stand up for US for a change.
Crazy
Submitted by Frank Lee on Wed, 2009-07-08 00:20.
These clippings about Obama -- like the astounding amount of attention being paid around the world today to the memorial service for Michael Jackson -- reinforce the impression I've had for some time that the obsession Europeans have with America has reached a level of dementia. Get a culture of your own, for God's sake. Get a political leadeship of your own. "The Times" states that America is an indispensable power, especially in the era of the new China, but that is so only because Europe chooses to be dispensable.