Alphen, Netherlands. 1
December. David Cameron made his ‘big’
speech on immigration last week. However,
as with most things Cameron the speech was not what it seemed. Indeed, it was not so much a ‘big’ speech on
immigration as another ‘small’ speech on ‘Europe’. And, because it was Cameron it was an all
things to all men speech, or rather an as much as one German woman was prepared to accept speech. Consequently, the speech satisfied
no-one. The speech was also full of reality-defying
contradictions. Cameron’s claim
that he can re-negotiate a significant change in Britain’s relationship with
the EU that will, as he said, require treaty change and do it by the promised
2017 referendum is complete nonsense. The EU if it works at all does not work like that. So,
is a Brexit now more likely? Would a
Brexit matter? And what would happen if
the EU were to fail because of it?
Is a Brexit more
likely? Possibly. As someone who sees free movement as a
consequence of victory in the Cold War it is a principle worth upholding. However, I am a member of a British minority on this subject.
My concerns about the EU are not so much about the fundamental
principles that have enshrined ‘Europe’ since the 1957 Treaty of Rome. Rather, they concern the emaciation
of democracy and the appalling ‘governance’ now inflicted upon the European
peoples because of the silent power struggle between EU institutions and the
member-states. The result is the kind of political paralysis that was so evident in Cameron’s speech.
Equally, denying
member-states even temporary controls over mass movements at times of economic
extremis such as today is utterly irresponsible and creates the conditions for
revolt which is apparent in England in particular. Many EU member-states are using
Britain and the British people as a gigantic pressure valve for the release of
social tensions caused by Eurozone failure and that is unfair. Current levels of immigration to England from the EU are simply unsustainable. If a solution is not found there is a real
chance that England will reject London’s pro-EU political class
en masse. That would mean a Brexit?
Would a Brexit matter? Certainly. Last week former Commission
President Romano Prodi warned about the wider implications of Britain’s virtually
complete marginalisation in Brussels.
This is not a recent phenomenon but has been underway since Britain
sensibly opted not to join the Euro, the root cause of Europe’s endless
economic and political crises, and because no political settlement has been put
in place to make the EU fairer for non-Eurozone members. Prodi’s essential point was that the implicit
balance of power at the heart of the EU between Berlin, London and Paris has
been shattered by British marginalisation and French decline.
In the past smaller EU member-states
would have reinforced the implicit balance of power by siding with one or the
other of the so-called ‘Big Three’ thus preventing hegemony in Europe. Now, in the absence of such balance the
smaller member-states are rushing to cluster around Berlin which is giving the
EU the character of an emerging German Empire.
This is something most sensible German leaders neither seek nor want
because as Prodi suggests such a concentration of power on one member-state
would sooner rather than later de-legitimise the EU and it would sooner or
later unravel.
What would happen if the
EU were to fail? Disaster. If the EU began to unravel the entire
political, economic and security balance of the Continent would be threatened. Politically and economically the smaller,
weaker member-states would look to Germany for leadership she is simply unable
to offer. Economically, the inability or
plain refusal of southern and eastern European member-states to reform would
impose ever greater burdens on the taxpayer’s of the seven member-states left paying
for the wealth-transfer mechanism that in the absence of growth is the EU. Add to that mix unstable banks and broke
governments and at some point another major economic crisis would a) happen;
and b) see the whole structure collapse.
If it survived at all the Eurozone would retrench into a German zollverein focused on a few northern,
western Europeans. The great unreformed
would be forced out and their citizens subjected to the full fury of panicking
financial markets and social and economic meltdown. Russia would undoubtedly see such a crisis as
a golden opportunity to re-establish a sphere of influence in central and
eastern Europe with profound consequences for European security.
Therefore, if David Cameron
was a Winston Churchill he would have couched his ‘big’ speech in ‘big’ strategy
rather than ‘small’ politics. He would
have pointed out the strategic dangers to Europe of forcing Britain out through
EU intransigence because said intransigence is in fact a refusal to face up to
reform. Specifically, Cameron would have
pointed out that: a) ‘ever closer union’ has failed; b) the Treaty of Lisbon has led
Europe into a political dead-end; c) the Euro as structured is the cause of Europe’s
endless economic crises; and d) integration and harmonisation is leading to
over-regulation and a form of statism that will doom Europe to inevitable economic
decline.
Finally, Cameron would have called on EU member-states to decisively take control back from those in Brussels seeking ever more Europe. Only if other European leaders refuse to recognise what is now blindingly obvious would Cameron move to take Britain out of the EU because then he would have no alternative. Unfortunately, David Cameron is no Winston Churchill. Whereas Churchill was able to see the biggest of big pictures, Cameron never sees them. Whereas Churchill understood strategy, Cameron only understands politics. Or, rather, he only sees big-issue strategy as part of his endemic short-term local politicking.
Finally, Cameron would have called on EU member-states to decisively take control back from those in Brussels seeking ever more Europe. Only if other European leaders refuse to recognise what is now blindingly obvious would Cameron move to take Britain out of the EU because then he would have no alternative. Unfortunately, David Cameron is no Winston Churchill. Whereas Churchill was able to see the biggest of big pictures, Cameron never sees them. Whereas Churchill understood strategy, Cameron only understands politics. Or, rather, he only sees big-issue strategy as part of his endemic short-term local politicking.
The EU must reform or
die. As for David Cameron he must for
say what he means and mean what he says.
Last week he did not and as such he made an eventual Brexit from a broken
EU more not less likely.
Julian Lindley-French
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