In response to The Man Who Was Right
(March 23, 2000)
To the Editors:
I don't want to carp at Michael Ignatieff's generous review of my Reflections on a Ravaged Century [NYR, March 23]. Nor can he be faulted for giving his (hostile) view of a controversial subject—the possible development of a closer association between the law-and-liberty countries of, mainly, what has been called the Anglosphere. He notes the fallings-off and faults to be found in the US and the UK; so do I, over two chapters. But he does not cover the far worse failings of his European choice.
He rightly shows that I am skeptical of the European political tradition. But I, and many others, are much more so of the EU actuality. We see it as divisive of the West, and indeed divisive of "European" civilization itself; as implicitly, and often explicitly, anti-American; as already, and with the promise of worse to come, an (immensely corrupt) bureaucratic and regulationist nightmare; as contrary to the law-and-liberty tradition; and, fatally, as missing any real sense of how the feeling of citizenship arises—something that cannot be elicited by appeals or compulsions on behalf of a supranational entity.
As to British feelings about the US and "Europe," a recent poll published in The Economist on what ally would you trust in a crisis showed the British answer to be nearly 60 percent for the US, about 16 percent for Europe.
Robert Conquest
Stanford, California
So the disagreements are as clear as they are important. As I said in the review, Conquest is to be warmly congratulated for making Britain's historical choices so clear.