Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Can Europe become Western again?

Continent’s traumas, missteps have led it to become less relevant

- VICTOR DAVIS HANSON COMMENTARY Victor Davis Hanson is a distinguis­hed fellow of the Center for American Greatness and a classicist and historian at Stanford’s Hoover Institutio­n. Contact at authorvdh@ gmail.com.

FOR the first time in a millennium, Europe no longer plays a critical role in promoting Western civilizati­on nor in world history at large.

Ostensibly it should. Some 750 million people live on the European subcontine­nt.

Europe still remains the most popular tourist spot on Earth. Its hallowed architectu­re, art, infrastruc­ture and natural beauty still remind millions of visitors of the world’s once most dynamic and grandiose civilizati­on.

Even now, European nations, in and out of the Europe Union, still produce a combined gross domestic product of $24 trillion, second only to the United States. Europe’s exports are among the world’s most coveted cars, sophistica­ted technology and valued industrial goods.

Yet since World War II, Europe has played an increasing­ly reduced role in world affairs. Why?

The 20th-century traumas of World War I and II — in which some 70 million Europeans were killed — saw Europe commit near collective suicide. The ensuing Cold War hinged on protecting a relatively unarmed Europe from an aggressive nuclear Soviet empire on Europe’s borders.

But as World War II and the Cold War faded into memory, Europe did not snap back and assume its centuries-old role as a world leader and beacon of Western civilizati­on. Instead, a weary Europe outsourced its security to the United States. It redefined itself as a postmodern, pacifist, socialist utopian project — most recently predicated on redistribu­tionist entitlemen­ts, open borders and radical green policies that have all inevitably ensured European decline.

Europeans grew louder and whinier the less relevant they became.

Although Europe has large sources of untapped hydroelect­rical, nuclear, coal and natural gas power, its green religion has all but shut down new nuclear and fossil fuel generation and closed existing plants. The result is that the cost of European energy is prohibitiv­e for both the public and industry.

Recent economic growth was essentiall­y zero throughout the Eurozone. The European cradle-to-grave social net, and its hyper-government regulation­s and restrictio­ns on economic activity, increasing­ly are unsustaina­ble.

Few European nations spend even a mere 2 percent of their GDP on defense. And the result is that both Europe at large and its NATO members cannot defend their continent without the assistance of the United States. Nor can Europe project power beyond its shores to pre-empt dangerous threats.

Europe is also shrinking and aging. Its collective fertility rate of 1.5 is far below the rate of replacemen­t. Most young people in Europe — the ancient home of Christendo­m — express neither belief in God nor any faith in organized religions.

In many European countries, foreign-born emigrants make up 20 percent of the population. Most of them have arrived poor, without education, in mass, illegally, with little desire to fully integrate, from inimical countries, and holding political and religious views hostile to Europe.

The other half of the West is in little better condition.

The United States is reeling under $33 trillion in national debt.

After embracing various bankrupt academic critical legal “theories,” major American cities are unsafe, unhealthy and unsightly. The American southern border is wide open. Eight million illegal aliens have poured in just since January 2021, many of them hostile to the United States. America is increasing­ly politicall­y, racially and tribally divided. It has mysterious­ly determined not to fully utilize its vast natural resources, especially gas, oil and rare earth metals.

In this vacuum, the enemies of the West see only opportunit­y. Russia invaded European Ukraine. Its ongoing aggression still terrifies front-line NATO nations.

China threatens periodical­ly to storm Taiwan, as it bullies its neighbors, buzzes U.S. ships and planes and manipulate­s currency, markets and trade.

Iran has armed to the teeth anti-western terrorist organizati­ons such as Hezbollah and Hamas. Iran’s “Shiite Crescent” from Tehran to Damascus to Beirut to Palestine threatens both pro-western Arab regimes and Israel.

Hamas attacked Israel on Oct. 7, presumably on the assumption that current generation­s of Westerners in Israel, the United States and Europe would not react too strongly to its preciviliz­ational barbarity if it entailed a subsequent messy war.

In sum, the world is safe only when a strong America, alongside its European partner, secure their borders, protect the world’s sea and air spaces, support constituti­onal and pro-western nations and deter thuggish belligeren­ts.

Perhaps as war clouds gather and enemies multiply, Europe will rediscover its heritage and reawaken.

Increasing­ly, a lonely United States — and the world at large — needs the return of a sane and powerful European co-partner, one that emerges from its self-induced slumber and resumes its ancient role in preserving civilizati­on from its multiplyin­g enemies.

 ?? The Associated Press ?? The European flag, left, flies at the European Parliament in Strasbourg, eastern France.
Jean-francois Badias
The Associated Press The European flag, left, flies at the European Parliament in Strasbourg, eastern France. Jean-francois Badias
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