Alphen, Netherlands. 27
May. This week the slavishly pro-EU newspaper The Guardian ran the headline, “Germany (and France) tighten their grip on Europe”. The trekkies amongst you will recall Star Trek: the Next Generation back
in the 1990s. It was a very ‘European’
Star Trek in which a very English (Yorkshire actually) captain of the Starship Enterprise pretended to be
French but was in fact far more Nelson than Bonaparte. And, the really, really, really bad villains
– the Borg – were quite clearly Swedish.
Imagine a spaceship full of alien Carl Bildts and you get the basic
idea. The Borg were implacable – Jean-Luc Picard could not talk to them, reason
with them, or debate with them. All the
Borg would do was to repeat the mantra, “resistance is futile’. David Cameron must be feeling like that this
morning and it is only Week One of his efforts to repatriate some very modest
powers from Brussels to Britain.
Cameron has at least
achieved one thing; he has flushed the Germans (and French) out into the
political open. It is now clear for all
to see that the EU is not a political union at all. It is a good old-fashioned empire with
Germany (and France) at its core. This
was revealed by the deliciously-timed leak of secret German (and French)
proposals to deepen Eurozone integration that had been agreed at a secret
meeting in the margins of last week’s Riga Summit. The leak was timed to coincide with Cameron’s
meeting with Jean-Claude Juncker and thus to cause ‘Dave’ maximum embarrassment. .
For months now I have
been told by senior German and French politicians and officials that the seriously
modest (some would say cosmetic) changes Cameron seeks would require a treaty
change and for that reason such changes are impossible. Britain, I was told, must take the EU as it is
or leave it. Now Germany (and France) seeks to move far and fast towards deeper
political and economic union and somehow such a move will not require treaty
change. What complete and utter
hypocrisy.
The irony is that
Germany (and France) is right. Back in 2010 at the height of the crisis I
published a much-lambasted piece entitled “Britain must now leave the EU”. My logic was irresistible. If the Eurozone was to be saved much deeper
political and economic integration would be required through the establishment
of pan-EU institutions that in effect replaced national decision-making with
some form of federal structure. Indeed,
that was precisely the intent of Jacques Delors when he helped dream up the
Single Currency. When it comes to ‘ever closer union’ there is no such thing as
a ‘bad’ crisis in the EU. Britain, my
logic ran, would never join the Euro and therefore would become a second class
passenger on the EU train paying a first class fare. Worse, Germany (and France) would never let
Britain anywhere near the locomotive which they had firmly under their control.
Therefore, for the sake of the Eurozone AND for Britain the British should
leave….amicably.
It may be that the
secret accord agreed in the margins between Germany (and France) is but the
opening shot in the Brexit negotiation. Behind
the hubris the issues implicit in the Brexit debate are fundamental. The British are questioning the very idea of ‘ever
closer union’ sanctified at the heart of every European treaty since 1957. They are challenging the very idea of European
elitism and challenging the idea that the best form of governance is at the highest
and thus most distant level of power. Above all, the British are doing what
they have done for centuries; challenging hegemony in Europe. The language may be different and indeed the
institutional setting but implicit in the Brexit is the same impulse as drove
the British to oppose Phillip II of Spain, Louis XIV, Napoleon, Kaiser Wilhelm
and indeed Hitler. For the record I am NOT equating modern Germany with either
the Kaiser or the Nazis but history is always eloquent in Europe.
If Berlin (and Paris)
drive fair thinking Brits away by insisting upon deeper political integration
at the EXPENSE of the world’s fifth largest economy, Europe’s second largest
economy, and for all the defence-incompetence of the current government,
Europe’s most powerful military actor (outside of Russia) then Britain WILL
leave the EU. And, no amount of bullying
by multinational corporations will stop it.
Rather, a proper, adult
negotiation must start that deliberately distinguishes itself from
history. Jean Claude Juncker has said he
wants a “fair deal” for Britain. That
could work one of two ways. If the EU is
indeed an empire in all but name Germany and France could take the bold step of
simply inviting Britain into its command club.
If, on the other hand, Berlin and Paris really are prepared to surrender
deep sovereignty to create a real European Union then a new form or Single
Market membership should be created.
“Resistance is futile”
is not the message to send to the British right now. However, the simple truth is that the EU has reached a crossroads, a bifurcation, a junction that can no longer be avoided. Equally, the British people should be under
no illusion; even this modest attempt to repatriate powers represents a
fundamental challenge to Europe’s power order.
My only hope is David Cameron, a man who routinely and deliberately
confuses politics with strategy, also understands the strategic importance of the moment and indeed its significance.
Let’s talk.
Julian Lindley-French
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