Series: CUSE Annual Conference | Number 9 of 9 « Previous

May 23

Past Event

Visions of Europe in an Election Year

Video

Highlights

  • NATO in Afghanistan: In Together, Out Together

    Philip H. Gordon, U.S. Department of State: Afghanistan was the centerpiece of the NATO Summit and from the beginning the alliance has held firmly to the principle of in together and out together. There are no illusions about the difficulties now and in the future, but tremendous progress has been made in the last decade.

  • U.S. Has Enormous Stake in Euro Crisis

    Philip H. Gordon, U.S. Department of State: The U.S. has an enormous stake in the outcome of the euro crisis, but we recognize that these are European issues that require European solutions.

  • U.S., European Allies United on Iran

    Philip H. Gordon, U.S. Department of State: As serious negotiations are underway in Baghdad over international concerns on Iran, the U.S. and its European allies have never been more united and the pressure has never been greater.

  • U.S. Will Move Forward with Russia on Areas of Mutual Interest

    Philip H. Gordon, U.S. Department of State: The development of a more effective working relationship with Russia has led to an impressive list of mutually beneficial foreign policy achievements. Despite difficult issues, the U.S. will move forward with President Putin on areas of mutual interest without sacrificing our principles or friends.

Summary

With many national economies slipping back into recession and voters in Greece, France and the United Kingdom rejecting austerity measures in recent elections, the European political and economic landscape has shifted again. Europe now seems headed towards a revised social contract and a new round of negotiations to respond to the continuing financial crisis. The United States, while experiencing a mild recovery, also strives to find the right balance between fiscal consolidation and growth preservation—a mission made more challenging with the upcoming November elections. A new loss of confidence in Europe may well imperil the U.S. economy’s fragile recovery. Will similar anti-austerity political currents cross the Atlantic and bring "change" to the United States? Despite the crisis, transatlantic cooperation has increased during the Obama administration, but U.S.-EU relations will be subjected to critical examination during the election year.

On May 23, the same day European leaders will gather for an extraordinary summit in Brussels, the Center on the United States at Brookings (CUSE) and the Heinrich Böll Foundation hosted a discussion featuring experts and top officials from both sides of the Atlantic for the 2012 CUSE Annual Conference. Panelists explored critical issues shaping the future of transatlantic relations in a year of elections and political transitions, from the euro crisis and the future of NATO to relations with Russia, Turkey and the Middle East.

After each panel, participants took audience questions.

The event is available in full on C-SPAN »

Event Agenda

  • Introduction

  • 1:30 PM -- Keynote Address: President Barack Obama and Europe – The Record So Far

    • Phillip Gordon

      Philip H. Gordon

      Assistant Secretary of State for European and Eurasian Affairs

      U.S. Department of State

  • 2:45 PM -- Panel 1: European Visions of the Crisis

  • 4:30 PM -- Panel 2: Differing American Visions of Europe

Details

May 23, 2012

1:30 PM - 6:00 PM EDT

Brookings Institution

Falk Auditorium

1775 Massachusetts Avenue, N.W.

Map

More from Brookings

SERIES: CUSE Annual Conference | Number 9