European reconcillation is permanent. And Europe as a whole is way less in debt than the United States. American media just wants something to take the attention off their own problems.
There are only a
handful of nations in Europe with debts exceeding the United States on a per GDP basis, and they make up a fairly small fraction of the EU's GDP. Greece, Ireland, Italy, Portugal, add up to less than 17% of the EU's GDP. It's positively laughable for the American media to hype up the "debt crisis" in Europe with a straight face.
The economies in Europe that are really floundering are the ones which have always been considered the "poor men" of Europe, and almost all of those only really became modernized democractic economies in about the 1970's (Greece, Spain, Portugal).
Saying that all of Europe is doomed because the historically weakest economies are fragile makes no more sense than saying the USA is doomed because of all the dirt-poor third world countries in the American sphere of influence.
Greece for example only makes up 1.7% of the European Union's GDP, yet it's the example we always hear about how Europe's ways are bringing the whole thing down. Yet it was purely the Greek government's fault they got into so much debt, they were cooking the books and lied to the EU about their spending vs revenue, which should have excluded them from joining the EU in the first place.
Greece is where the European Union is least favorable in your chart, even though they've been bailed out HEAPS. Any EU blame in Greece is the local media wanting to blame someone else for a crisis which is purely a Greek invention. Basically they don't like their being conditions to get the free money.