The Mercury News Weekend

Germany sticks nose in America’s business

- By Victor Davis Hanson Victor Davis Hanson is a syndicated columnist.

BERLIN — Germans do not seem too friendly to Americans these days.

According to a recent Harvard Kennedy School study of global media, 98 percent of German public television news portrays President Donald Trump negatively, making it by far the most anti-Trump media in the world.

Yet the disdain predates the election of Trump, who is roundly despised here for his unapologet­ic antiEurope­an Union views.

In a 2015 Pew Research Center survey of European countries, Germany had the least favorable impression of America. Only about 50 percent of Germans expressed positive feelings toward the U.S. Former President Barack Obama never changed negative attitudes much from the unpopular George W. Bush years.

Germans apparently do not appreciate that fellow NATO member America still subsidizes their defense. Nor do they seem appreciati­ve of their huge trade surplus ($65 billion) with the United States.

Germans seem to have forgotten that American troops for 45 years kept the Soviets from absorbing all of Germany. The Berlin Airlift is now premodern history.

Why, then, do confident Germans increasing­ly dislike the United States? It is complicate­d. Since 1989, Germany has worked hard on its post-unificatio­n image as a largely pacifistic country. It is eager to teach others how to conduct themselves peacefully and to pursue shared global goals.

Implicit in Germany’s utopian message is that postmodern Germans know best what not to do — given their terrible 20th century past, with the aggression­s of imperial Germany and later the savagery and Holocaust perpetuate­d by Hitler’s Third Reich.

Yet being guilt-ridden does not equate to being humble. The same conceit of an ethnically, linguistic­ally and culturally uniform state that drew Germany into conflict with the United States has never quite disappeare­d.

Instead, German condescens­ion merely has been updated.

In internatio­nal finance, Germany de facto runs the European Union on a mercantile system. It manipulate­s the euro as a weaker currency to swarm export markets in a way that would have been difficult with the older and higher-valued Deutsche mark.

A similar German hubris was true of recent immigratio­n into Europe.

Berlin often virtue-signals the world how morally superior it now is, while also searching for ways to import cheap labor. One result is German Chancellor Angela Merkel’s disastrous open-door policy of welcoming in millions of unvetted immigrants from the war-ravaged Middle East at a time of heightened worries over jihadist terrorism.

But Germany did not just flood its own country with impoverish­ed, hard-to-assimilate newcomers. It also dictated that other European countries do the same — whether they wished to or not.

In matters of internatio­nal relations and trade, Germany’s sense of superiorit­y occasional­ly resulted in old-style cheating. To increase imports of Volkswagen­s into the U.S., the company tried to cheat emission tests. Germany’s Deutsche Bank was caught money-laundering the profits of Russians in Vladimir Putin’s crony cabal.

Germans brag about their generous social welfare state and often compare it to a supposedly cutthroat capitalist America. But it is quieter about shirking its NATO membership requiremen­ts for defense spending to free up cash for its own citizens — and making mega-profits from exporting pricey luxury cars to a hyper-capitalist American elite.

We should all feel gratitude to Germany for turning its undeniable talent and energies from war to peace. Its huge economy understand­ably makes Berlin influentia­l in the European Union. Yet if German haughtines­s works on a dependent Europe, it certainly does not always impress a wary America.

The United States is still far larger, wealthier and more powerful, just as it was in 1918, 1945 and 1989. It does not necessaril­y listen to German sanctimony on climate change, immigratio­n, trade or the occasional need for the use of force.

Instead, America more or less does what it believes to be in the best interests of itself and its allies. Germans find such American independen­ce cowboyish and insubordin­ate — and believe they can teach Americans about the dangers of such misplaced chauvinism.

Americans usually ignore these weary sermons. Instead, many believe that whenever Germany sticks to worrying only about Germany, the world is a far safer place.

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