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November 2002

The European project

by Gerald Frost

It would be an exaggeration to suggest that Europe’s anti-American vocation asserted itself from the start of the European Union. Had it done so, America would presumably have noticed. Instead of indulging the European infant, it might consequently have smothered it. But if hostility to U.S. interests and policies did not assert itself immediately, it was inevitable that it would do so at a later date. The nature of the European project and the ideology of liberal internationalism that underlies it ensured that this would be so. Opposition to U.S. goals and interests is likely to continue, and indeed to become more pronounced, unless the European Union is rebuilt on different assumptions or simply collapses.

Britain’s foremost Atlanticist, the former Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, was as slow as most Americans in grasping the inevitability of the E.U.’s anti-Americanism. Once having done so, however, she described its possibl ...

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Gerald Frost is editor of the fortnightly London publication Eurofacts
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This article originally appeared in The New Criterion, Volume 21 November 2002, on page 9
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