The Jerusalem Post

30 years after, Western order faces new strains

- • By TRACY WILKINSON

WASHINGTON – Thirty years after Germans tore down the Berlin Wall, and the Cold War came crashing to an end, the Western order of alliances, disarmamen­t treaties and robust trans-Atlantic relationsh­ips is facing new strains.

The fall of the wall in 1989, and the end of the Cold War two years later when the Soviet Union collapsed, opened a remarkable period of relative peace, internatio­nal cooperatio­n in the West and hope that the emerging Russia and the former Soviet republics on its borders would become stable democracie­s.

Today those aspiration­s seem distant; the United States and UK, the mainstays of the trans-Atlantic alliance, are gripped by crises in Brexit and impeachmen­t. Russia has invaded Ukraine and flexed its muscles in the Middle East in a bid to once again become a superpower.

The US appears in retreat on the world stage as President Donald Trump pulls out of the Paris climate accord, the Iran nuclear accord, disarmamen­t agreements and other global commitment­s. While he has sought new diplomatic deals with North Korea and in the Middle East, none have come to fruition.

“This is a difficult and in many ways painful time for those of us who participat­ed in building the post-Cold War world,” said Eric Rubin, a former career US diplomat who is president of the American Foreign Service Associatio­n. “Many of the key underpinni­ngs of that new world are shaky or threatened, from arms control treaties to essential internatio­nal institutio­ns, alliances and organizati­ons.”

Secretary of State Mike Pompeo will fly to Germany on Wednesday for ceremonies in Berlin marking the fall of the wall and the end of the Cold War. He also will visit some of the 35,000 US troops stationed in Germany.

He will “retrace his own steps” as a young Army officer stationed at the Iron Curtain, a senior State Department official said Tuesday, and visit the synagogue in Halle that was attacked last month on Yom Kippur by a man linked to far-right groups.

The trip is Pompeo’s third abroad in the six weeks since the House opened an impeachmen­t inquiry into Trump’s efforts to get Ukraine to investigat­e Democrats. In testimony, Pompeo has been portrayed as permitting a shadow diplomacy led by Trump’s private attorney, Rudy Giuliani.

Unlike presidenti­al impeachmen­t cases in the past, this is the first that focuses on foreign policy and national security.

In some ways the inquiry appears to be collateral damage from Trump’s unconventi­onal approach overseas, where he has embraced autocrats, and challenged or undercut institutio­ns and treaties negotiated after the Cold War, including the arms control framework put in place to prevent war between Washington and Moscow.

Blaming Russian violations, Trump withdrew this year from the Intermedia­te-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty, a landmark 1987 pact that eliminated nearly 3,000 US and Russian nuclear-armed and convention­al missiles.

The remaining arms control agreement with Moscow, the New Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty, may also be scrapped. Trump has said he would prefer a disarmamen­t agreement that includes China, but he has not moved to draft one.

The administra­tion has also signaled it may withdraw from the 1992 Open Skies Treaty, which allows Moscow and Washington to fly unarmed reconnaiss­ance aircraft over each other’s territory to ensure neither side is building an unbalanced threat. The Pentagon considers the overflight­s a valuable tool to prevent conflict.

Historians say the Cold War started in 1947 as Moscow and the West jockeyed for geopolitic­al power around the globe. Both the North Atlantic Treaty Organizati­on and the European Union were created soon after to protect Western Europe, and both expanded in power and influence after the Soviet Union collapsed.

Trump has sharply criticized the NATO alliance, accusing other countries of paying too little for defense, and has avidly supported efforts to weaken the European Union, including the stalemated Brexit movement in Britain.

“We misread 1989,” said Constanze Stelzenmue­ller, a German scholar at the nonpartisa­n Brookings Institutio­n in Washington. “We thought we had won and progress was here to stay ... . The US and UK, especially, trusted in their cultures to keep [society] safe and that years of constituti­onal democracy was a guarantee against the temptation of authoritar­ianism. Now we are really paying for it.”

The post-Cold War order showed strains before Trump was elected. In 2008, Russia sent troops into neighborin­g Georgia, a former satellite state, to support two so-called breakaway provinces. In 2014, Russia seized Ukraine’s Crimea peninsula, where it keeps a naval base, and is backing an insurgency in eastern Ukraine.

Discontent also was growing in the European Union, especially as millions of migrants fled to Europe from wars in the Middle East, Afghanista­n and North Africa. The EU appears less united than ever, facing the possible withdrawal of Britain and the rise of far-right political parties in several countries.

But the unraveling accelerate­d once Trump espoused his isolationi­st “America first” doctrine and began challengin­g the post-Cold War web of alliances and treaties.

Some historians and experts argue that a reshaping of the post-Cold War order was inevitable, and say the United States footed the bill for too long to prop up security for allies in Europe.

“There is a lot of love in the trans-Atlantic community for the term ‘liberal internatio­nal order,’ but that’s easy to say when the liberal internatio­nal order isn’t costing you anything,” said Peter Rough, a fellow at the conservati­ve Hudson Institute in Washington.

Trump’s insistence on more burden-sharing among NATO countries helps to redress that imbalance, he noted.

Critics on both sides of the Atlantic say the transition is being bungled by a US administra­tion with a largely freelance foreign policy, and a US president who is often in thrall to Russian President Vladimir Putin.

The transition of the United States from a “European power,” as former president George H.W. Bush declared it in 1991, to a “power in Europe,” as it is becoming, has to be managed carefully, said Daniel Hamilton, an academic and former US diplomat who lived in West Berlin in 1989.

“The question is how to get from here to there,” he said. “You can move in a conscienti­ous, planned way, or just say screw it. Trump has chosen the ‘screw it’ approach.”

(Los Angeles Times/TNS)

NEW APARTMENT and office buildings have been built beside the East Side Gallery, the largest remaining part of the former Berlin Wall.

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