Carrots and sticks

Last weekend, the Dutch coalition government, headed by Prime Minister Jan Peter Balkenende, fell apart. The Labor Party wanted all of the Netherlands’ troops out of Afghanistan by the end of 2010; the Christian Democrats wanted to agree to a NATO request to extend their stay. Labor pulled out, and now Balkenende needs to scramble ...

Last weekend, the Dutch coalition government, headed by Prime Minister Jan Peter Balkenende, fell apart. The Labor Party wanted all of the Netherlands’ troops out of Afghanistan by the end of 2010; the Christian Democrats wanted to agree to a NATO request to extend their stay. Labor pulled out, and now Balkenende needs to scramble to create a new government. It’s all a bit less dramatic than it sounds; Balkenende’s last three coalitions governments disintegrated as well.

Last weekend, the Dutch coalition government, headed by Prime Minister Jan Peter Balkenende, fell apart. The Labor Party wanted all of the Netherlands’ troops out of Afghanistan by the end of 2010; the Christian Democrats wanted to agree to a NATO request to extend their stay. Labor pulled out, and now Balkenende needs to scramble to create a new government. It’s all a bit less dramatic than it sounds; Balkenende’s last three coalitions governments disintegrated as well.

But it’s ginned up some very dramatic bellowing from across the pond. None less than Secretary of Defense Robert Gates lamented the Dutch pull-out (the Orwellian New York Times headline, sadly now changed, read "Gates Calls Europe Anti-War Mood Danger to Peace").

The real stick the U.S. and NATO seem ready to use to punish the Dutch? Ejecting them from the G-20. Granted, it sounds a bit wet noodle-ish. But the Dutch have tried to get into the G-20 for years, and won their observer status by being strong international partners during the financial crisis. It’s going to smart.

Annie Lowrey is assistant editor at FP.

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