For Clinton, the stalwart British support for his military adventures has been an unalloyed blessing. Even when his orders misfire, as in Sudan, he can still count on Blair’s endorsement. Such endorsements draw on a deep British sense of themselves as members of the global ruling class. Despite these days of diminished power, British diplomats still advertise the British willingness to share with the U.S. unpleasant military duties in dusty parts of the globe as the quality that distinguishes them from the “weaker brethren” among their European partners. In 1991, Britain’s enthusiastic participation in Desert Storm headed off a worrying U.S. flirtation with Germany as America’s preferred European partner.
Despite the obvious immediate benefits to the U.S. of Britain’s military steadfastness, it is doubtful whether Britain’s enduring romance with military bravura is in the long-term British or American interest. For it comes at the price of Britain’s ability to play a full role in Europe. Today, Blair finds himself in lockstep with the U.S. on matters military but on the outside of yet another seminal development in European institution-building, the introduction of the single European currency, the euro. This isolation echoes the events of 1963, when French President Charles de Gaulle delivered his fateful veto on Britain’s application to join Europe. At the time of that bombshell, then-British Prime Minister Harold MacMillan was closeted with President Kennedy on Bermuda discussing a new generation of nuclear weapons.