Alphen,
the Netherlands. 3 August. In one of
those deliciously Anglo-French moments this week President Hollande took a
swipe at the London Olympics and David Cameron.
Stung by Bradley Wiggin’s Tour de France Champs Elysee victory Hollande
said, “The British have
rolled out a red carpet for French athletes to win medals. I thank them very
much for that”. It was also a calculated
riposte to Cameron’s suggestion that the “red carpet” would be rolled out for
French economic refugees seeking to escape Hollande’s tax hikes. It would be easy to leave the Franco-British
relationship at that – a tragi-comic little battle over whose declining
influence is the greater. In fact the
London-Paris axis is Europe’s only true strategic defence relationship and thus
critical to the future defence of Europe.
As Europe heads inexorably towards the coming Euro mega-crisis cross-channel
defence relations will become more not less important and must be preserved at
all costs. The political realism inherent to the relationship acts as strategic
insurance against the woolly ideology of ‘Europe’ that has fathered the current
disaster.
Therefore, the
French-inspired decision to open up the 2010 Franco-British Defence and
Security Co-operation Treaty to others appears all the more strange and could well mark the
beginning of the end of this vital pact. Defence Minister Jean-Yves
Le Drian said France was not prepared to have a defence relationship with
Britain that was separate from other European allies. Strangely, Philip Hammond his British
counterpart, went along with this. The defence
relationship is now at the mercy of Eurozone
chaos. The timing could not have been worse.
Up to now London and Paris had
shown both sense and restraint by keeping the two distinct. At this most sensitive of moments the move
will certainly reinforce suspicions on the British right that the pact was
a French plot to weaken NATO and sucker the British into what they see
as the French-inspired EU Common Security and Defence Policy (CSDP). Indeed, Hammond’s acquiescence looks to all
intents and purposes as a political sleight of hand – give the French what
they think they want knowing full well that in time it will destroy it.
The only
possible practical argument for this decision is that most big, complex defence
procurement projects are multi-national rather than bi-national, and that Germany
and Italy have been pressing to be included.
However, not only is that wrong; Britain and France share several major
projects, it also wilfully misses the point of the 2010 pact. In any case, multilateral structures already
exist and they are failing. Consequently, the pact
will now become EU defence-lite…and fail.
This is
exactly what happened to the 1998 St Malo Declaration which was meant to herald
a new dawn in Europe-centric defence co-operation between Britain and
France. However, St Malo was never given
enough time to mature into a trusting strategic partnership. Rather, the Germans and others sought the early
transformation of St Malo into the failed European Security and Defence Policy
(ESDP) because inclusivity was judged more important than credible capability. Subsequently, not only did the Franco-British
strategic defence relationship falter (and then crash with the 2003 Iraq War)
but European defence became mired in the EU’s political and bureaucratic
morasse in which it has been stuck ever since.
The simple fact
is that Britain and France are different and neither can afford any more of the
strategic political correctness that has done so much to denude Europe of a sound
defence. Britain and France together
represent almost 50% of European defence expenditure. They are Europe’s only two nuclear powers
(excluding Russia). They have by far
Europe’s most experienced and capable militaries and best strategic
thinkers.
The British will now move further towards an
American-led defence Anglosphere, whilst the Eurozone and European defence
will slowly become one and the same pulling each other into the abyss. The British will never join the Euro and for
that reason the defence of Europe must be kept separate from it. Indeed, the timing
of this move makes it even less likely that London will focus real political
energy on CSDP.
Therefore,
London and Paris need to pause and for once think together and think
strategically. With the French about to draft a new White Book on defence (Livre Blanc) and the British moving towards the 2015 Strategic Security and Defence Review the Franco-British
defence relationship must be seen by both for what it is; the most strategically-dynamic of its kind in Europe
that given time can emerge as the central pillar of Europe’s future defence. Then and only then should the relationship be opened up to others.
The Franco-British strategic defence relationship must be seen as a long-term partnership above and beyond local and short-term vicissitudes, however severe. Only then will European security and defence be re-connected to world security and defence, whatever the downstream institutional arrangements that turn power into structure.
The Franco-British strategic defence relationship must be seen as a long-term partnership above and beyond local and short-term vicissitudes, however severe. Only then will European security and defence be re-connected to world security and defence, whatever the downstream institutional arrangements that turn power into structure.
Perhaps President Hollande’s concluding Olympic
remark may have spoken truth. “The
competition is not over,” he said. I
suspect it never will be.
It is time for Euro-realism.
Julian
Lindley-French
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