|
|
|
|
|
by nephihaha
42 days ago
|
|
The relationship is complex. Remember the Marshall Plan was needed partly because massive amounts of European infrastructure and industry which had occurred in some cases long before the USA even joined the war. The USA had the benefit of being resource rich, but also geographically isolated which meant that the continental USA never suffered from severe bombing raids or threats of invasion. (Many European towns and cities ended up being levelled.) It fought the war on entirely different terms to Europeans. Even today this geographic factor plays out. Europe deals with the refugee crises caused by Middle Eastern wars far more than the USA does, and Russia could invade EU countries by land far more easily than the USA. Europe has benefitted from the USA in some ways, but the USA doesn't always have to bear the consequences. |
|
How does that change things? You could just as easily argue that Poland's economy was ruined by the USSR, therefore EU help is "complex".
Europe was an unfortunate spot, due to a war which started in Europe, and the US helped Europe defend against tyranny and rebuild. If the US hadn't helped Europe rebuild and defend itself, perhaps the USSR would've expanded all the way to the Atlantic.
Europeans have an annoying habit of taking US help for granted, and complaining about us endlessly. I'm tired of it. We should've taken the Swiss approach and allowed Europe to suffer the full consequences of European folly. That's what we do about poverty in Africa and South America. We don't regard that as our problem. Europe should not be our problem either.
Lord knows Europe wouldn't help the US rebuild if we suffered a devastating war. There was no European Marshall Plan after the US Civil War.
I never see Europeans complain about Swiss neutrality. The US should take the Swiss approach.