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Tags: america first | china | nato

America's Choices: Domestic Prosperity or Global Dominance

America's Choices: Domestic Prosperity or Global Dominance
Demonstrators sing the national anthem during a rally near Trump Tower, Saturday, June 3, 2017, in New York. The rally in support of President Trump and his policy to build a wall on the Mexican border was organized by America First Foundation. (Mary Altaffer/AP)

By    |   Tuesday, 11 July 2017 10:41 AM EDT

One could easily become confused about the tenuous relationship between Europe, America and the rest of the known world. After all, America, though linked to Europe by blood and kinship, has staked its own claim to singular regard among the world’s community of nations. For a long time that claim was supported by economic, geographic, and historical realities that set us apart from the rest of the world.

For the sake of relevance, we should first admit that America First is not the first attempt to clearly separate America’s destiny from that of the rest of the world. The first major such philosophy was known, of course, as "splendid isolation" and was ultimately codified into the Monroe Doctrine.

That world-view held that Europe was to stay out of American affairs, restricting itself to European matters, thus leaving America free to chart its own destiny. Conversely, America would refrain from involving itself in old world politics, wars, and economic decisions.

Early in America’s history, Europe did not consider this a n equitable arrangement. European nations viewed with envy the westward expansion of the American Empire to California, while lustily eying Mexico and South America as opportunities to stake their own claims to new world abundance. Several wars were fought against Europe, between 1776 and 1812. We need no reminder here of the outcomes.

America ultimately secured her hard-won independence, enduring little interference from her European cousins, bound as they became within colonial entanglement and internecine strife. There did come a time, however, when cousins were called upon to aid their familial bonds.

World War I was such a necessary occasion. Surely, Americans viewed this as an engagement limited to rendering aid and supplies. Nonetheless, Europe’s losses in men and capital were so costly it affected the prosperity of entire generations and, if truth be told, laid the foundations for World War II.

Germany was not only Europe’s most advanced military power before the First World War, it was also its most advanced democracy. Germany’s administrative state — efficient, just, and well-resourced — became a shining example of what a properly governed democracy could achieve in terms of human comfort and educational attainment.

Germany's governmental structure provided a necessary counterpoint to America’s own democracy, which preceded an administrative state, and was messy and uncertain. Yet, in the eyes of many it promised a penultimate degree of individual freedom. Germany’s innovation of democracy presaged and fueled America’s mass production of it.

In the onerous aftermath of the war, dignitary harms and forced austerity ultimately turned the tide against European solidarity. It is worthy to note that similar indignities and economic pressures also drive our American hunger for a return to greatness.

We have always enjoyed an absolute abundance within our national borders; but it is only now that we have come to rely upon a certain global prominence. Yet we are at a stage in history where we cannot have both. Either we resign ourselves to our own ingenuity once again, or we resolve to answer the call of international emergency in the spirit of mutually assured prosperity.

That is the cusp upon which we now pause. Our president has issued a call for a return to our former splendor; that requires inward focus. But we also have global commitments that will not diminish just because we ignore them. More fundamentally, our economy is subject to a real interdependency, and that phenomenon tends to diminish our claims to absolute primacy.

So, what do we do?

We set ourselves apart by publicly annuncing that Europe must, going forth, pay its fair share to support our military allegiance to NATO, and also compensate us for unpaid support. Europe, for its part, has a valid claim for forbearance of its NATO obligations.

Fossil fuel energy costs are now at a generational bottom. Europe could easily turn to suppliers like Russia to bolster its flailing economies. However, in the spirit of solidarity and its ongoing security relationships with NATO and the U.S., it has refused to allow Russia to build permanent delivery infrastructure throughout the continent.

On another front, China seeks to leverage its relationship with rogue nuclear state North Korea in order to force economic and military concessions from the United States.

A central tenet of the President Trump's America First strategy is to emply American market power to demand fairer trade relations with China. Something easier said than done.

If China senses that the America’s increasingly isolated foreign policy orientation reduces its ability to expend resources deflating North Korea’s recently aggressive military overtures, it may seek to exploit that perceived isolation. This is where an America First policy could potentially weaken America’s hand in orchestrating economic concessions from China and other trading partners.

Is NATO necessary or is it not?

The necessity of NATO is dependent upon how much trouble one believes regional powers can wield in this scenario. Europe, especially England, has relied upon Russian resource capital to fuel its City of London financial capital. Can it survive in a world in which Russia restricts its investments in British banks?

China supplies the lion’s share of consumer goods to America. If it’s "cat’s paw" North Korea rattles its tail, is that cause for our nation to abandon America First merely to supplicate China? Perhaps so, but the short-term price in terms of consumer activity will be high. There are no easy answers to this, hence the current conundrum.

Armstrong Williams is the author of "Reawakening Virtues." He is a political commentator who writes a conservative newspaper column, hosts a nationally syndicated TV program called "The Right Side," and hosts a daily radio show on Sirius/XM Power 128 (6-7 p.m. and 5-6 a.m.) Monday through Friday. He also is owner of Howard Stirk Holdings Broadcast TV stations. Read more reports from Armstrong Williams — Click Here Now.

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ArmstrongWilliams
We have always enjoyed abundance. It's only now that we have come to rely upon a certain global prominence. Yet we are at a stage in history where we cannot have both. Either we resign ourselves to our own ingenuity once again, or we resolve to answer the call of global emergencies.
america first, china, nato
969
2017-41-11
Tuesday, 11 July 2017 10:41 AM
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