Bucharest, Romania. 25
June. Europe from the other end. My reason for coming to Bucharest is to
address the 16th Partnership for Peace Conference. One gets a different perspective of European
security from Romania.,,and a different perspective of the EU.
EU leaders will
tomorrow gather for a very tetchy meeting in Ypres during which they will
appoint Jean Claude Juncker as President of the European Commission. I am not
one of those hoping for a Juncker appointment because it will make a bad situation
worse. My instinct is always to try and
make things work. However, it is now
clear that Juncker’s appointment will lay the ground for Britain’s historic and
pending departure from the EU. Given
that two things are now clear. First,
the EU needs a new political settlement.
Second, Europeans must somehow separate the dispute over the future
governance of Europe (for that is what it is) from the security and defence of
Europe, hard though that will be.
The Juncker Affair
reflects a structural split between those in the Eurozone who by joining the
single currency wittingly or unwittingly signed up for some form of European
Government and those who did not. The
seeming principle (as much as it exists) behind those supporting Juncker who
are not die-hard Euro-federalists is they accept the loss of national
sovereignty necessary to make the Euro work.
What this group seemingly fail to see is that inevitably means some form
of European Government.
For the British (and all
those not yet in the Euro) this dawning reality is simply recognition that the
EU and the Eurozone are one and the same thing. Henceforth it will no longer be
possible to be in the EU but outside the Eurozone unless a state is willing to
bear a disproportionate cost. In reality
Britain left the EU the moment it rejected membership of the Euro. Indeed, as Churchill might have said; we have
established where we are now all that is left is to decide where next to go.
Therefore, Britain’s pending
‘defeat’ in Ypres will mark an irreparable breach with the Eurozone countries that
will inevitably lead to some form of Brexit.
It might be delayed for a time by a Labour Government but the destiny is
set because the British people will never accept a European Government.
Which is why EU leaders
must find a political settlement before the crisis (for that is what it is)
pollutes further Europe’s security and defence.
Without such a settlement Europe could remain trapped in its own
eternal, internal debate as the world around the EU (and NATO) becomes steadily
more dangerous. Therefore, it is far
better to start thinking now about an equitable relationship between Britain
and the German-led EU. If not the Fourth
Battle of Ypres will be re-fought over and over again as it is one about
structure and principle, rather than personality.
The huge ramifications
of permitting the European Parliament to dictate to the elected political
leaders of the EU’s member-states are becoming clearer by the hour. Social-democrats in the European Parliament are
already using the precedent the Juncker appointment will set to demand the
right in November to replace the European Council President Herman van Rompuy
and High Representative Cathy Ashton with their own appointees. Hitherto these appointments have been the
strict preserve of national leaders.
Which brings me to
Partnership for Peace or PfP. PfP was a
1990s NATO initiative designed to help stabilise Europe in the post-Cold War
period. As evident from the tragedy in
Ukraine Europe is still not “whole and free” in the then words of President
George H.W. Bush. Many today equate “whole
and free” with the EU and “ever closer union”.
However, it is now clear a new way must be found and fast. Indeed, with Islamism marching across the
Levant and the entire Sykes-Picot system of Middle Eastern states tottering
between autocracy and fundamentalism on Europe’s doorstep a new big picture
strategy is urgently needed. That will
mean nothing less than a Strategic Partnership for Regional and Global Peace.
However, that will only
happen when and if a new EU political settlement is reached. Therefore, it is time for a pan-EU conference
to enable leaders to establish a new European political order that offers an
alternative to “ever closer union”. Yes,
that will mean a new treaty and yes that will mean several ‘Europes’. However, a new treaty be needed in any case
for the Eurozone to move towards the deeper political integration necessary to
save the benighted currency.
The cost to individual liberty
will be high and the gap between the citizen and power will increase which is
precisely why deeper political integration is unacceptable to the British. However,
only with a new political settlement will current pressures be eased and order
restored to an EU political system that is under intense, growing and
paralyzing pressure. And only then will
proper consideration begin of Europe’s place in the world and its future
security.
We simply cannot go on
like this.
Julian Lindley-French
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