New
Atlanticism and Military Keynesianism are rarely
addressed topics when European economic policymaking
is debated; but there is indeed a great need to question
developments in the European Union from these two
angles.
Let me start with a brief comment on the meaning of
the term new Atlanticism, and on the size of the phenomenon.
The new Atlanticism refers to capital concentration
joining American and European armament corporations,
both in the form of mergers and in the form of joint
ventures. While almost non-existent ten years back,
this type of capital concentration over the last decade
has rapidly grown in size. On the one hand, the five
American corporations which dominate the US military
sector have taken over or allied with one or several
European armament producers. On the other hand, all
four European armament corporations which dominate
Europe’s military sector have opted to forge close
links with US corporations.
The following examples help to underline the point.
BAE systems, formed through a merger between leading
British military corporations in 1999, has staged
at least 13 take-overs in the United States, including
the take-over of United Defense Industries. Again,
the corporation MBDA too illustrates the new Atlanticism.
MBDA was constituted in 2003 via a merger between
three leading manufacturers of missiles in Europe.
It is owned jointly by BAE Systems, EADS and Finmeccanica.
While this shows MBDA epitomizes the process of internal
integration in Europe’s military sector, the same
corporation also participates enthusiastically in
the new Atlanticism, via teaming agreements
with Boeing.
One way of interpreting the emergence of the new
Atlanticism is to relate it to the new role assigned
by the Western powers to NATO. NATO’s drive to implement
‘security’ functions beyond the borders of Europe
is supported by close cooperation between US and European
armament corporations, which facilitates implementation
of NATO procurement schemes. However, this is not
the only, or even the main motive behind the emergence
of the new Atlanticism. Evidence contained
in US policy documents (e.g. the AICRs) indicates
that the formation of alliances between armament corporations
across the Atlantic is the outcome of a conscious
decision taken by the US government under the Democratic
Presidency of Clinton (1998). There are strong reasons
to interpret the move as part of military Keynesian
policymaking.
Here, we need to briefly reflect on the historical
evolution in military Keynesianism, as applied in
the US. In the later part of the 1980s, the then Republican
Administration concluded that primary reliance on
military Keynesianism had to be abandoned. No longer
could allocations towards the military in the US be
used as principal means for macro-economic stimulation.
In consequence, government policymaking during the
business cycle of the 1990s was structured differently.
On the one hand, the market sector, where information
technology is manufactured, was left to play the role
of driving force of the business cycle. On the other
hand, government expenditures towards the US military
were scaled down. The internal restructuring in the
US military sector referred to was a consequence of
the fact that the Clinton Administration chose to
apply a secondary form of military Keynesianism.
The construction of a new Atlanticism which
has occurred in the beginning of the new millennium
is related to US policies towards the next business
cycle. It was part of a new consensus reached in the
US, that the American government would restore the
primacy of military-related procurement. Under the
pressure of lobbying groups representing the interests
of the US Military Industrial Complex (M.I.C.), the
Clinton government in 1998/1999 reversed the trend
with regard to the military budget. Instead of implementing
annual cuts, the government henceforth opted for annual
increases in budgetary allocations. These have since
resulted in a situation where military-related expenditures
represent more than 8 per cent of the US GNP (2008/2009).
And to reduce the risks of a renewed periodic crisis,
the US government designed its strategy of new
Atlanticism, expected to result in additional
arms exports to European countries.
The above discourse may sound like a diversion. Yet
the new Atlanticism has major implications
for European economic policymaking. The EU has seen
a creeping process of militarization since the decision
taken when the Amsterdam Treaty was signed (1997),
i.e. to integrate the Western European Union (WEU)
military alliance into the EU. Since then, efforts
have been underway to centralize ‘defence’-research
at the European level, to build an integrated European
market for the procurement of arms, to militarize
Europe’s space policy, and to initiate the building
of a European army. All these developments are contrary
to the vision which originally formed the basis of
Europe’s integration.
Moreover, the danger that the character of the European
Union will be transformed is all the larger in view
of the new Atlanticism—the intense cooperation
between American and European armament corporations
shaped alongside Europe’s militarization. European
policymakers have legitimized their formulation of
a military research agenda with the argument that
without enhanced competition in the technological
field, Europe threatens to become dependent on the
US. Yet the cross-continental alliances between armament
corporations imply the very opposite, i.e. dependence
of European armament corporations on American corporations
which are the largest in size! Most ominously, the
existence of these alliances results in added pressure
on state policymakers in Europe to purchase expensive
weapons systems.
The issues posed here need to be integrated into the
work of the Euro-Memorandum Group—a grouping of economists
which critically follows policymaking by the EU. This
platform rightly seeks to contribute towards a drastic
re-orientation in policymaking by the European Union,
away from the disastrous neo-liberalism that still
prevails—towards policies that better help sustain
the welfare of Europe’s citizens. A social and ecologically-oriented
Europe needs to reject the new Atlanticism
and all forms of military Keynesianism.
* The author is Member, Euro-Memorandum
Group, Leiden, the Netherlands. This is a grouping
of economists which critically follows policymaking
by the EU. The article is the modified version of
a Statement to be made by the author to the International
Workshop of the Euro-Memorandum Group, September 25,
2009.
September
23, 2009.
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