[Skip to content]

.

AP 389: Repairing the Damage

Repairing the Damage

Possibilities and limits of transatlantic consensus

 

Dana H. Allin, Gilles Andréani, Philipe Errera and Gary Samore 

 

The damage that has been done to the transatlantic alliance will not be repaired through grand architectural redesigns or radical new agendas. Instead, the transatlantic partners need to restore their consensus and cooperation on key security challenges with a limited agenda that reflects the essential conservatism of the transatlantic partnership during the Cold War and the 1990s. There will inevitably be big challenges, such as the rise of China, where transatlantic disparities in strategic means and commitments preclude any common alliance undertaking. Yet such limits are nothing new. The absence of a common transatlantic commitment to counter-insurgency in Iraq may cause resentments, but so too did the lack of a common commitment to counter-insurgency in Vietnam.

 

This paper suggests ten propositions for future transatlantic consensus – that is to say, ten security challenges for which the allies should be able to agree on common approaches. These run the gamut from an effective strategy to prevent Iran from developing a nuclear-weapons capability to transatlantic leadership for international cooperation against global warming. If pursued with seriousness and a reasonable degree of transatlantic unity, these propositions could constitute the foundations of an effective partnership. They are, in the authors’ view, the basis for a consensus on the most pressing security challenges of the twenty-first century.

 

The time is right for this kind of serious re-dedication to alliance purposes. There has already been some effort to repair the damage; moreover, new leaders are in place in or coming to the countries that were major protagonists of the transatlantic crisis: Germany, France, Britain and, in 2009, the United States. It is possible that these four new leaders will be better able to put the disputes of the recent past behind them. This extended essay is a guide to the possibilities, and also the limits, of a new start.

 

 

Further details:

To order a copy of this Adelphi Paper please click here

For Adelphi Paper (300+) summaries, please  click here

To go to the Adelphi Papers homepage, please click here

 

 

 

 

 

This Adelphi Paper will also be discussed in Washington on 16 November 2007. Click here to read more

Repairing the Damage: Possibilities and limits of transatlantic consensus by Dana H. Allin, Gilles Andréani, Philipe Errera and Gary Samore was published on launched on 8 October 2007. Click here to view the interview with Dana Allin (7 minutes).

 

Briefing on Repairing the Damage. Washington DC. 16 Nov 07
Briefing on Repairing the Damage. Washington DC. 16 Nov 07 - [277 KB] View invitation to a briefing on the US release of Repairing the Damage, AP 389 as a PDF file