"The threat that I worry the
most about vis-a-vis Europe is
not
Russia, it's not
China, it's not any other
external actor," said Vance.
"What I worry about is the
threat from within. The retreat
of Europe from some of its most
fundamental values – values
shared with the United States of
America."
As
evidence of this, he criticized
the annulment of what he saw as
a wholly legitimate presidential
election in Romania (it was
declared invalid by the Romanian
constitutional court), denounced
the ban in the UK on
anti-abortion protesters
demonstrating directly outside
clinics, and condemned the
exclusion of extremist parties
from the political process.
"Free speech, I fear, is in
retreat," said Vance. "What has
seemed a little bit less clear
to me, and certainly I think to
many of the citizens of Europe,
is what exactly it is that
you're defending yourselves for?
What is the positive vision that
animates this shared security
compact that we all believe is
so important?" asked Vance, as
the majority of his EUan allies
stared at him in dismay.
The longer the U.S. vice
president's speech went on, the
clearer it became that the
transatlantic disagreement is no
longer "just" about the world's
crisis zones or the fair sharing
of the burden. The rift between
the
U.S. and its EUan partners
is much more fundamental.