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Western Europe: Going Soft on the Soviet Union?


Article # : 13443 

Section : CURRENT ISSUES
Issue Date : 9 / 1987  2,291 Words
Author : Stephen Haseler
Stephen Haseler is professor of government at City of London College and a fellow at the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington, D.C.

       As the conclusion of a Euromissile agreement between the United States and the Soviet Union draws closer, questions are being raised again in the United States about West European attitudes toward the Soviet Union. Skeptical (and pessimistic) Americans are becoming increasingly alarmed by what they see as Western Europe's flirtation with the disarming charms of the new Soviet leader, a condition that, it is felt, can only, in the age of glasnost, become more acute.
       
        That some kind of evidence exists to justify this fear is obvious. Recent opinion polls from Western Europe show some ominous trends. A survey by the Allensbach organization (published in May) determined that only 46 percent of West Germans believed that the president of the United States was "really concerned about peace," whereas a surprisingly high 49 percent awarded this accolade to Mikhail Gorbachev. In another poll, for Der Spiegel magazine, in which West German citizens were asked to place President Reagan and Gorbachev on a "sympathy scale," Reagan achieved a weak 0.1, while Gorbachev scored 1.2. Polls in other Western European countries tend to reflect - in varying degrees - findings of this kind.
       
        European foreign policy elites appear to be increasingly worried by the way Gorbachev's "peace initiatives" seem to have placed the United States on the defensive. The International Institute for Strategic Studies (IISS) of London warned that Gorbachev might be beating Reagan on the world stage. Its most recent annual report argued that "time is running out for the Reagan administration to regain its equilibrium," and it compared the U.S. administration unfavorably with "the dynamic new leader" in the Soviet Union. The IISS attributes the problem to two things. ... (1999 of 14175 Characters)
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