The Coming Atlantic Century
By Anne-Marie Slaughter
Former director of policy planning in the US State Department
(2009-2011), Professor of Politics and International Affairs at
Princeton University
The United States is rising; Europe is stabilizing; and both are
moving closer together. That was the principal message earlier this
month at the annual Munich Security Conference (MSC), a
high-powered gathering of defense ministers, foreign ministers,
senior military officials, parliamentarians, journalists, and
national-security experts of every variety.
The participants come primarily from Europe and the US; indeed,
when the conference began in 1963, it was focused entirely on NATO
members. This year, however, senior government officials from
Brazil, China, India, Nigeria, Singapore, Qatar, and Saudi Arabia
also joined, an important sign of the times.
John McCain, the US senator and 2008 presidential candidate, always
leads a large congressional delegation to Munich. The US
administration also typically sends the Secretary of Defense or the
Secretary of State to deliver a ritual speech reassuring the
Europeans of the strength of the transatlantic alliance. This year,
Vice President Joe Biden did the honors, bumping the US
representation up a notch.
The conference also featured a panel on an unusual subject - "The
American Oil and Gas Bonanza: The Changing Geopolitics of Energy."
US Special Envoy and Coordinator for International Energy Affairs
Carlos Pascual described "the US internal energy revolution": a 25%
increase in natural-gas production, which should push down US gas
prices, and enough oil output to reduce oil imports from 60% to 40%
of consumption, with an additional 10% increase projected.
Pascual projected that the US will be able to import all of its
energy needs from within the Americas by 2030. A recent
confidential study by the German Intelligence Agency raises the
possibility that the US could actually become an oil and gas
exporter by 2020, in contrast to its present position as the
world's largest energy importer. That honor would likely fall to
China, which would become increasingly dependent on the Middle
East. As an extra bonus, the higher US proportion of gas use has
reduced US carbon emissions to 1992 levels.
The sense of US good fortune, a phrase that is not often heard
around the world these days, increased with the panelists'
description of how lower energy prices for US manufacturing has a
broad positive impact on the American economy's competitiveness. As
a result, the country's energy reserves have also become an
investment magnet. German Minister of Economics and Technology
Philipp Rösler said that many German firms are already relocating
to the US because of lower energy prices.
Equally important, the panelists reported on the rising importance
of liquid natural gas relative to pipeline gas, which has enormous
geopolitical implications. In a nutshell, if gas is exported in
liquid form, it is fungible. In other words, if Russia restricts
the flow of gas to Ukraine for political reasons, but the rest of
Europe has gas from other sources, they can simply resell their gas
to Ukraine and export it via the Baltic Sea.
Jorma Ollila, Chairman of Royal Dutch Shell, described the global
map of major shale oil and gas deposits. Ukraine itself has the
third-largest reserves in Europe; other countries with large
deposits include Poland, France, China, Indonesia, Australia, South
Africa, Argentina, and Mexico. And the US has already taken over
from Russia as the world's largest gas producer.
All of this data got Brazilian Foreign Minister Antonio de Aguiar
Patriota's attention. On a panel entitled "The Rising Powers and
Global Governance," Patriota referred to the energy discussion and
noted that the rising powers should remember that "the established
powers are not sinking powers." In short, the pervasive narrative
of Western decline suddenly reversed itself .
The horizon seemed brighter on the European side as well. In the
opening panel on "The Euro Crisis and the Future of the EU,"
cautious optimism prevailed. No one thought that the European
Union's troubles were resolved, but no one thought that the
eurozone was coming apart, either. On the contrary, German Finance
Minister Wolfgang Schäuble made clear that German resolve to see
the eurozone through its troubles was firm. And a prominent
economist in the audience who has often predicted the eurozone's
demise was backtracking rapidly.
Aside from reports of a rising US (fiscal woes notwithstanding) and
a stabilizing Europe (despite the common currency's troubles), the
conference featured a speech by Biden that went far beyond the
reassuring rhetoric that US policymakers typically offer in
European capitals. Biden told the audience that he and US President
Barack Obama believe that "Europe is the cornerstone of our
engagement with the rest of the world" and "the catalyst for our
global cooperation."
Biden pointed out that "Europe is America's largest economic
partner," recalling figures that the Asia-focused Obama
administration has often seemed to forget: "over $ 600 billion in
annual trade that creates and sustains millions of jobs on the
continent and at home, and a $ 5 trillion overall commercial
relationship. "Biden went on to suggest a" comprehensive
transatlantic trade and investment agreement "; a week later, in
his State of the Union Address, Obama announced the launch of
negotiations for precisely such an agreement.
Biden concluded with a flourish. "Europe remains America's
indispensable partner of first resort," he declared. "And, if you
forgive some presumptuousness, I believe we remain your
indispensable partner." Those strong words reflect a new
sensibility in Washington. As former Secretary of State Hillary
Clinton declared in one of her last foreign-policy speeches, the US
is not planning to pivot away from Europe to Asia, but rather with
Europe to Asia.
Western fortunes are rising, slowly but surely. Together, Europe
and the US account for more than 50% of global GDP, have the
largest military force in the world by many multiples, and control
a growing proportion of global energy reserves. They also have a
formidable diplomatic and development-assistance capacity,
representing a peaceful community of democracies that share a
common commitment to the rights, dignity, and potential of all
human beings.
Imagine that community spreading down the east coast of Latin
America and the west coast of Africa. It might be an Atlantic
century after all.
Copyrights: Project Syndicate
Here we are to serve you with news right now. It does not cost much, but worth your attention.
Choose to support open, independent, quality journalism and subscribe on a monthly basis.
By subscribing to our online newspaper, you can have full digital access to all news, analysis, and much more.
You can also follow AzerNEWS on Twitter @AzerNewsAz or Facebook @AzerNewsNewspaper
Thank you!