The
leaders of the G-8 industrialized countries will meet June 1-3 in
Evian, France for their annual Economic Summit. What distinguishes
this from past meetings is the sharp disagreement by four of the
participants -- President Jacques Chirac of France (the host at
Evian), President Vladimir Putin of Russia, Chancellor Gerhard
Schroeder of Germany and Prime Minister Jean Chrétien of Canada –
with President George Bush’s decision to remove Saddam by force.
Consequently, American relations with all four leaders have
deteriorated significantly, with President Chirac facing the
sharpest wrath of the Bush Administration.
Even
without the Iraq cloud, most of the participants probably would
just as soon skip the event. Since the first Economic Summit in
1975, ritual has increasingly overtaken substance. Summit
declarations, laboriously negotiated in advance by subordinates,
are long on rhetoric and short on lasting action. In fact, G-8
Finance and Foreign Ministers
have
already discussed in detail the main issues on the Evian agenda --
the global economy, terrorism, Iraq, North Korea, weapons of mass
destruction and regional issues. Regrettably, G-8 leaders are
likely to add little of substance or direction on these subjects.
It
would, however, be a mistake to yield to the temptation to muddle
through Evian with minimum courtesy and dialogue. Evian is
arguably the most important G-8 meeting in recent times precisely
because the leaders have such discordant views on how to manage
global affairs. Until they can reach a common understanding on a
desired course for the global ship of state, no real progress can
be made on important issues such as the necessary conditions for
creating jobs globally, the Doha Development Round, terrorism,
Middle East peace, North Korea and economic and political reform
in Africa.
In
fact, Evian is potentially an inflection point in the history of
G-8 summits. If the leaders cannot surmount intense policy and
personal differences over Iraq, or worse are unwilling to make the
effort, the G-8 process may collapse – at least at the level of
the leaders. However, if the leaders decide to talk openly among
themselves about what divides them in order to find common ground
on global issues that can only be tackled jointly, there is hope
the G-8 process can be revitalized and even strengthened. Several
procedural steps might facilitate this.
First, President Chirac and his G-8 colleagues should agree to put
aside the formal agenda and the prepared communiqués. Assuming the
leaders have confidence in their ministers, the conclusions of
Foreign and Finance ministers can stand on their own.
Second, President Chirac could convene his guests in private,
without aides or note takers, for a frank discussion of how
differences over Iraq have resulted in the most serious fissures
in recent memory in the transatlantic relationship, a relationship
that covers political, security and economic interests vital to
all the participants. Any expressions of “mea culpa”, “I told you
so” or “If only I could wind back the clock” by the eight most
powerful world leaders are best made in strictest privacy.
Should it be possible to clear the G-8 air so that it becomes as
invigorating as Evian’s fabled waters, leaders might then be able
to focus on pressing issues whose resolution requires full trust
and collaboration among the G-8. The global economy today, with
the looming menace of deflation, merits the same attention from
G-8 leaders as when French President Giscard d’Estaing hosted the
first Economic Summit in 1975 to discuss, informally and without
aides, the grave state of the world economy as a result of the
sharp increase in crude oil prices. Evian could be the time and
place to restore the necessary trust and confidence among G-8
leaders.
This
is certainly not the time for a canned and insincere Evian
Communiqué. Rather, business leaders, concerned citizens and the
media would welcome -- and probably find convincing – a concise
statement that the leaders discussed frankly what has divided
them, acknowledged they share common objectives to promote global
economic growth while enhancing global security, and that they
resolved to work together to achieve these goals. With such a
declaration, even Americans might be willing to toast the G-8 with
a glass of Evian.
Eric D.K. Melby,
a senior associate at the Forum for International Policy, handled
international economic issues on the National Security Council
staff in 1987-1993.