This is a fascinating reaction to the M11 bombings in that instead of bringing EU-US relations together, it could possibly create a wider chasm.
It could very well be a hair-trigger reaction to the bombings by a new Spanish government, and, in the long run, Britain and the US will make efforts to assuage Spain's anger and hurt.
But in essence it charges the U.S. with some culpability for these attacks, if not complicity -- the U.S. precipitated these bombings in its role as aggressive "liberator" and Spain, as a member of the "Coalition of the Willing," has paid the price.
Of course, the U.S., British and perhaps other members of the coalition of the willing will see the removal of Spanish troops as appeasement — a dirty word in Europe as it is a reminder of British PM Neville Chamberlain's policy toward Mussolini and Hitler's march through Ethiopia and Czechoslavakia, respectively, in the mid to late 1930s.
At a time when U.S.-EU relations appeared to be brightening ever so slightly, it will be interesting to see how the mood of Europe will be swayed, and if the Summit will be fractious.
BBC - Spain to re-join 'Old Europe'
Spain to re-join 'Old Europe'
By William Horsley
BBC European Affairs correspondent
The winner of the Spanish general election, Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero, has promised to end Spain's close alliance with the US over Iraq and to revive its traditional ties with France and Germany.
The political landscape of Europe may again be split in two.
Within hours of the election result, Mr Zapatero condemned the Iraq war and its US-led occupation as "disasters".
He said President George Bush and Britain's Prime Minister Tony Blair should engage in "self-criticism" for their mistakes.
He promised to bring home Spain's 1300-strong contingent of peacekeeping troops in Iraq.
He is to announce the date after his inauguration, in a few weeks.
Valuable ally
These outbursts may reflect Mr Zapatero's political inexperience, or his strong convictions.
Either way, they point to a re-heating of a cauldron of old arguments within Europe and across the Atlantic.
Under Jose Maria Aznar, Spain became - along with Britain - a pillar of the pro-American group of nations in western Europe.
Its main contributions were:
internationally, giving diplomatic support to the US and UK over the use of military force in Iraq
in Iraq, deploying highly-skilled peacekeepers to help with the physical and political re-building of the country
in the European Union, standing up for Nato and the vital importance of Europe's relations with America.
Along with Spain, the closest European allies of the US over Iraq and its strategy against terrorism are Britain, Denmark, Italy, Poland and most of the other eastern European countries which will join the European Union in May.
On the other side, France leads another group of European states which opposed the US-led war in Iraq and which still refuse to contribute directly to the coalition's work in Iraq.
Germany and Belgium are in this group. Spain may now join them.
For 18 months, from August 2002 up to last month, efforts to forge a credible common foreign policy for the EU were stymied as these two rival camps clashed in a series of public wrangles.
The divide helped to poison the atmosphere as leaders from 25 governments in Western and Eastern Europe struggled last year to agree on the text of a new EU constitution, which was meant to demonstrate the unity and common purpose of Europe as a whole.
'Appeasement of terror'
Instead, the talks on a constitution collapsed at an EU summit meeting in Brussels last December.
Mr Zapatero has promised to revive Spain's traditional "pro-European" foreign policy.
Its main points are:
to compromise over Spain's defence of its national interests - especially over its relative voting strength - for the sake of early agreement on the EU constitution
to bring back Spanish troops from Iraq to show the new government's disapproval of a "unjustified" war
to call for a new "international alliance" against terrorism, based on the authority of the United Nations, not "unilateral actions" by the US and UK.
This set of proposals has been welcomed by France, but brought a cool response from the British government.
The European Commission President Romano Prodi, a champion of a stronger Europe, told the Italian newspaper La Stampa that the US strategy had failed, as it had led to international terrorism growing "infinitely more powerful".
But a long-standing friend of the US, the German Christian Democrat Freidbert Pflueger, told BBC Radio that the new Spanish government was engaged in "appeasement" of terrorism.
Al-Qaeda appeared to have succeeded in changing the government of one European country through terror.
"That must never happen again," he said.
Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/europe/3513898.stm
Published: 2004/03/15 17:15:49 GMT
© BBC MMIV
Posted by Andrew Becker at March 15, 2004 11:30 AM