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Free World: America, Europe, and the Surprising Future of the West

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At the start of the 21st century, the West has plunged into crisis. Europe tries to define itself in opposition to America; America increasingly regards Europe as troublesome and irrelevant; and Britain is split down the middle. What's to become of what we used to call "the free world"?

No contemporary thinker writes with the combination of passion, historical insight, and reportorial brilliance of Timothy Garton Ash, and here he assesses the causes and implications of our current geopolitical quandary–which dates back to the end of the Cold War and is not merely political but existential. The question is not just "What should we do?" It's "Who should we be?"

In Free World, Garton Ash draws on an extraordinary range of sources: from unique, personal conversations with Bush, Blair, and Schröder to encounters with farmers in Kansas and British soldiers in rural England; from history, memoirs, opinion polls, and sociological research to personal observations based on a quarter century of traveling in Europe and the United States.

The result is a book that explains why Washington can never rule today's interconnected world alone, why the new enlarged Europe can only realize its aspirations in a larger, transatlantic community, and how the torments of the Middle East and the world's poor can only be addressed by free people working together. To remain true to itself, the West must go beyond itself. As Garton Ash shows, Americans and Europeans have at hand a unique opportunity to advance from "the free world" of the cold war to a radically new international order of liberty.

And he urges us, with passion that comes from a lifetime of reflection on these issues, to seize that chance. Defying conventional wisdom and eschewing easy answers, this incisive book should be read not just by all those who purport to lead and and inform us but by everyone who wishes to be a citizen of a truly free world.

286 pages, Hardcover

First published July 1, 2004

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About the author

Timothy Garton Ash

43 books222 followers
Timothy Garton Ash CMG FRSA is a British historian, author and commentator. He is Professor of European Studies at Oxford University. Much of his work has been concerned with the late modern and contemporary history of Central and Eastern Europe.

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5 stars
29 (18%)
4 stars
59 (38%)
3 stars
54 (35%)
2 stars
9 (5%)
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Displaying 1 - 10 of 10 reviews
Profile Image for Kelly.
889 reviews4,526 followers
May 23, 2008
Timothy Garton Ash is a very smart man. But more importantly, Timothy Garton Ash is a very sensible man. The man can organize and express thoughts about extremely complicated situations in a way that not only makes them seem more understandable, but much less hysterical than most commentators in the news media would have us believe.

The discussion in this book centers on the situation of the US, the EU, and Britain and the seperate dilemmas that each of them bring to the 21st century. More specifically it centers on how each area can bring their strengths to bear on the problems of the world, and be the most effective. He questions whether the US and the EU have grown too far apart to work on he same team, as many very very stupid people appear to believe. (Sorry, he doesn't say that. I clearly have my biases). Of course his conclusion is that things are not as black and white as they seem. "The Americans" and "The Europeans" are not one single entity, and nobody can claim to speak for them all. Especially not after the expansions of the EU and the polarization of America. And what, really, are our differences when one gets right down and examines it? Are these differences that are likely to be permanent? Will America and Europe too engage in the "clash of civilizations" of sorts?

Again, no no no no. I think my professor put it best, if perhaps rather colorfully, in what he called the "Ghostbuster Doctrine." If the US cannot do something alone in the world, who are we gonna call? There is nobody else to call. As ineffective as the Europeans can be, as unclear as our family relationship is to them (son, uncle, father, daughter, what?), they are the ones who are going to sit on our side of the table. Certain core values are there. Again, with his sensible outlook: We do not disagree on the ends in large part, we disagree on means. Which can all be explained by history and soothed by a little sensitivity to that.

In any case, anyone who wants to understand US-EU relations should read this book. The only warning I will give is that the last few chapters do switch into a rather preachy, pedantic moral case about the US-EU obligation to fix the world. But it's just the last few chapters. The rest is some of the most sober, intelligent, engaging analysis on the subject that I have read.

Highly recommended!
Profile Image for Socraticgadfly.
1,133 reviews370 followers
September 5, 2023
I thought I had reviewed this when I first read it a decade or so ago. Well, on what I think is my third re-read (which would make four overall) I found out that was not the case.

The book gets five stars for its prescriptiveness, overall. Britain increasing its footing in both the EU and as a bridge to the US would be great. The EU getting its economic unification more together, and looking at some sort of partnerships beyond would be great. The US "growing up" more would be fantastic. (Calling for the expansion of the EU yet further east, as in Ukraine? Ash's biggest gaffe, even back then and without the benefit of hindsight.)

Ahh, hindsight.

In reality, this book is HUGELY dated. The Tory economic equivalent of American Tea Partiers, aided and abetted by an ambivalent Jeremy Corbyn (who should have resigned as Labour leader if he couldn't support an official party cause vote to "Remain," and couldn't support it vigorously), wound up thumbing its nose at the EU with the "Brexit," and under Boris Johnson, even worse, a no-deal Brexit. The deal may not be QUITE as bad for the UK as the worst predictions claim. That said, re Northern Ireland and Scotland, how much of a "Great Britain" will even remain in another 20 years.

And, this is to say nothing about the rise of Donald Trump in the US, and his America-First stance undermining any chance at a semi-unified "Western" stance against China's Xi Jinping, whom Ash also didn't predict.

Ash's prescriptiveness also didn't meet reality with the EU, which really showed itself to be half a bunch of individual nation-states and half a German Ebenezer Scrooge during the Great Recession. And now, 10 years later, it looks like little has changed overall in the EU even as Merkel, on her last legs, fears her own wingnuts inside Germany.

In reality, the prescriptive-predictive gap is so huge in so many ways, I doubt it will be closed by 205o.

Update, Sept. 4, 2023: I should have downgraded this a star with the second read. I'm now downgrading it a star for that, and a second star for Ash's Tweet of this Financial Times NATO warmongering piece against Russia.
Profile Image for Karellen.
125 reviews33 followers
December 21, 2013
The author has been encountered previously via his intelligent contributions to the Guardian. This is the first of his full length books I've read. And it's an entertaining dissection of the post 9/11 world. A world in which the West is challenged not by the Cold War problems of MAD but by religious extremists both within and without.
In one section the author makes a comparison between Europe and America and asks which is better? He concludes that neither is intrinsically so. From my own vantage point here in the UK I think that we are as he points out Janus Britain which is the best way to be. The European way is more humane though and given the choice I would reject the semi fascist ideology of the American right. Sadly it seems that most people have swallowed the propaganda and are persuaded that they need to get rich in order to be happy. To the hell with society which in any case doesn't exist according to Thatcher.
The chapter entitled America the powerful is convincing. In the authors opinion - one that I share - America will pursue its own interests regardless of the effect of the international community let alone the long term future of mankind on this planet. So we're basically fucked.
A fascinating book from which I learned much for instance that the frontiers are Europe were originally defined by Eratosthenes in about 200 BC.
The book may need updating to include the rise of BRICS but it's still an intelligent commentary on the modern world.
It's manifesto is clear : we must learn to live with one another despite our differences. Free the world.
Otherwise as David Simon has suggested the disenfranchised may eventually become too many. Orwell thought there was no hope in the proles. Perhaps he was right and mankind is heading straight to hell.
Profile Image for Peter Timson.
234 reviews
August 14, 2018
Looks like this book has been updated several times. Many books along similar lines I guess. is anyone listening?
Profile Image for Ann.
22 reviews1 follower
February 21, 2008
strong push for a world of cooperation, respect for human rights, less military and all things good. I particularly liked his bent for increasing development aid but thought his suggestion that everyone donate 1% of income to charities too short. my goal is 20% of my income this year.
Profile Image for Klenk.
112 reviews4 followers
October 27, 2008
The thing I like best about this book is that it probably takes the right level of abstraction concerning foreign policy ideas from different regions of Europe, the UK, and America.
Profile Image for haetmonger.
109 reviews5 followers
Read
January 7, 2011
i think i'll just stick with tga's guardian column from here on in.
Profile Image for Daniel Salvador Noguera.
27 reviews1 follower
December 26, 2012
A great example of liberal thinking. The book proposes some lines of thought on the concept of "The West" which are not only interesting but highly instructive. Much recommended.
Displaying 1 - 10 of 10 reviews

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