Former German Chancellor Says U.S.-EU
Alliance Could Now End
Eric Zuesse, originally posted
at The Saker
A German equivalent to UK’s Financial
Times and America’s Wall Street Journal is the
Dusseldorf Handelsblatt or “Commerce Sheet,” which headlined
on June 30th, “Former Chancellor Schröder: USA
Ending Transatlantic Partnership”.
They reported:
Former German Chancellor Gerhard
Schröder has condemned possible new US sanctions against the Nord Stream 2
natural gas pipeline as “deliberate termination of the transatlantic
partnership.” A draft law currently under discussion in the US Congress is “a
widespread, unjustified attack on the European economy and an unacceptable
interference with EU sovereignty and the energy security of Western Europe,”
Schröder writes in his statement for a public hearing of the Economic Committee
scheduled for Wednesday in the Bundestag.
The article closes:
Schröder sees the relations with the
USA as “heavily burdened” by “escalating tariffs and going it alone” policy by
the Americans. Schröder writes: “Economic fines against a NATO ally during the
current economic recession are nothing other than a deliberate termination of
the transatlantic partnership.”
This is as if Jimmy Carter or Barack
Obama were to say that EU policymakers had a trade policy toward the U.S. that
is so hostile and uncooperative that in order to comply with it, the U.S. would
have to subordinate itself to the EU and lose some of its own sovereignty, and
as if he were to tell the U.S. Congress that for them to okay the EU’s demands
in this matter would be “nothing other than a termination of the transatlantic
partnership.”
Congress has not yet passed this
legislation (new economic
sanctions legislation that is co-sponsored in the U.S. Senate by Republican Ted
Cruz and Democrat Jeanne Shaheen) but it (“S.1441 -
Protecting Europe's Energy Security Act of 2019”) enjoys strong bipartisan support and has been
considered almost certain to be passed in both houses of the U.S. Congress and
signed into law by President Donald Trump. It is not a partisan issue in the
United States.
Neither is it partisan in
Germany. Both of
Germany’s main political Parties (Schröder being SPD) support strongly the Nord
Stream 2 natural gas pipeline, which will be considerably more economical for
supplying natural gas to the EU than would be the U.S. Government’s demand that
American shipped fracked liquified natural gas be used, instead of Russian
pipelined natural gas, in Europe. Though this U.S. legislative initiative is
called “Protecting Europe’s Energy Security,” its overwhelming support in the
U.S. Congress is instead actually for protecting U.S. fracking corporations.
The bill’s title is only for ‘patriotic’ propaganda purposes (which is the
typical way that legislation is named in the United States — as a sales-device,
so as to sound acceptable not only to the billionaires who fund the Parties but
also to the voters on election day).
Both of America’s political Parties
are significantly funded by America’s domestic producers of fracked gas. One of
the few proud achievements of U.S. President Obama that has been proudly
continued by President Trump has been their boosting U.S. energy production,
largely fracked gas, so as to reduce America’s foreign-trade deficit. However,
if this control over the U.S. Government by frackers continues, then there now
exists a strong possibility, or even a likelihood, that the transatlantic
alliance will end, as a result.
—————
Investigative historian Eric Zuesse
is the author, most recently, of They’re Not
Even Close: The Democratic vs. Republican Economic Records, 1910-2010, and
of CHRIST’S
VENTRILOQUISTS: The Event that Created Christianity.
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