A perfect example of the differences between the United States and the EU.
From Christopher Booker writing at
the
UK Telegraph:
Haiti response shows the difference between the EU and a superpower
Compare and contrast the initial responses of two "major world
powers" to the Haitian earthquake disaster. Within hours of Port-au-Prince crumbling into ruins, the US had sent in an aircraft carrier with 19 helicopters,
hospital and assault ships, the 82nd Airborne Division with 3,500 troops and hundreds of medical personnel. They put the country's small airport back on an
operational footing, and President Obama pledged an initial $100 million dollars in emergency aid.
Meanwhile, across the Atlantic, the European Union geared
itself up with a Brussels press conference led by Commission Vice-President Baroness Ashton, now the EU's High Representative -- our new foreign minister. A
scattering of bored-looking journalists in the Commission's lavishly appointed press room heard the former head of Hertfordshire Health Authority stumbling
through a prepared statement, in which she said that she had conveyed her "condolences" to the UN Secretary-General, Ban Ki-Moon, and pledged three million euros
in aid.
And this dichotomy is nothing new -- the 2004 tsunami:
Memories might have gone back to December 2004, which saw similarly contrasting responses to the Indian Ocean tsunami catastrophe which cost nearly
300,000 lives. Again, within hours the US took the lead in forming an alliance with Australia, India and Japan, and had sent in two battle groups fully equipped
to deal with such an emergency, including 20 ships led by two carriers with 90 helicopters. President Bush immediately pledged $35 million, later rising to $350
million. Because they were self-sufficient, the US forces pulled off a stupendously successful life-saving operation, almost entirely ignored by the
British media, notably the BBC (whose journalists on the spot were nevertheless quite happy to hitch lifts from US helicopters).
The EU, by contrast,
pledged three million euros for the tsunami victims, called for a three-minute silence (three times longer than is customary to remember the millions who
died in two world wars) and proposed a "donors' conference" in Jakarta nearly two weeks later to discuss what might be done.
The only real difference
between these two episodes is that, in the five years which have elapsed since 2004, the EU has even more noisily laid claim to its status as what Tony Blair
liked to call "a world superpower", capable of standing on the world stage as an equal of the US. Anyone who witnessed the dismal showing at Thursday's press
conference of the High Representative, which would scarcely have passed muster at a board meeting of the Hertfordshire Health Authority, might well cringe at
the thought.
The comments are a wonderful read -- a good mix of delusional dreaming and facts on the ground...