“The past is another
country. They do things differently there”.
L.P. Hartley, “The Go
Between”
Alphen, Netherlands. 14
September. They call her ‘Mama Merkel’. The hundreds of thousands of migrants
now in Germany and struggling across Europe see German Chancellor Angela Merkel
as their saviour. Without consulting the
German people or her EU counterparts she threw open German borders, unilaterally
suspended the Dublin Convention, and effectively destroyed the Schengen system
of free movement within the EU. Her
actions whilst clearly motivated by the best of intentions remind me of the
last days in power of another formidable female leader Margaret ‘Maggie’
Thatcher. Thatcher fell because she sought
to impose an unfair tax on Britain’s poor – the infamous poll tax. She was advised not to by her colleagues but
such was her sense of political superiority after eleven years of untrammelled
and unquestioned power she went ahead anyway. Worried about her growing
megalomaniac tendencies it was her colleagues in the Conservative Party who in 1990
eventually brought her down. Has Mama
Merkel met her Maggie moment?
The answer is as yet
unclear. Yesterday, Germany for the
second time in a month acted unilaterally to “temporarily” reintroduce border
controls and in so doing suspend one of the EU’s four fundamental freedoms –
free movement. It is hardly surprising
given that last week German Interior Minister Thomas de la Maizière warned that
up to one million people could claim asylum in Germany in 2015. Last week Merkel herself warned that the
influx would change Germany for ever, and that Germans could expect 500,000
immigrants each year for years to come.
Now, I have long defended modern
Germany which I admire from those who try to equate the actions of this powerful
model democracy with its Nazi past.
However, Berlin’s irresponsibility these past weeks clearly smacks of a
German Chancellor allowing Germany’s past to pollute policy. In her efforts to assuage that
past by offering open door asylum she has massively increased the so-called ‘pull
factors’ for migrants and refugees from the Middle East, Africa and beyond and
come dangerously close at times to acting as a recruiting agent for people
traffickers.
Chancellor Merkel has no need to
assuage Germany’s Nazi past or the hard-line intolerance of the Communist East
Germany in which she grew up by destabilising contemporary Germany and by
extension much of neighbouring Europe.
Yes, her instinct to help is laudable and reflects a quintessential
decency at her core that shines through.
However, ‘decency’ is not policy and at the very least she should have consulted
the German people about their willingness to accept such imposed change. Whatever commentators might say about Germany’s
failing demographics sudden, imposed hyper-immigration (which is what we are
witnessing) has not worked well in Europe and led to profound tensions over
identity, culture and worse.
The impression given is one of lofty detachment, Indeed, Merkel’s high-handedness
can at best be described as ‘let them eat cake’ politics. Telling
fellow Germans and Europeans to get used to such inflows without admitting that
the crisis is as much a consequence of elite failure to predict and prepare as
the collapse of the Levant smacks of the worst kind of political hubris. And, it appears all too typical of a detached, limousine-riding, champagne-quaffing,
palace-residing, security ring-fenced European elite all too ready to lecture
the poorest in society who must cope with such an influx about the human rights
of others.
Some sense of realism must also be established. In an effort to mask a profound
mistake Chancellor Merkel implies that everyone now making their way to and
across Europe are the saintly victims of conflict. Many clearly are and are deserving
of our help and, indeed, a Europe-wide humanitarian response. However, within
the exodus there will be opportunists, criminals and even terrorists which is
why due process must be re-applied rigorously if the first duty of any leader
is be upheld and seen to be so; to protect her own people.
Control and some sense of strategy and order must be established and quickly. Even though it is unfashionable
these days for continental Europe’s elite to admit David Cameron and the
British are right about this crisis the most important first response is to
help displaced Syrians in the camps in Jordan, Lebanon and Turkey. Thereafter,
the flow to Europe must be controlled by diplomatic engagement with Turkey, the
establishment of reception centres in Greece, Italy, Spain and elsewhere, the
quick and proper assessment of asylum claimants, with those who fail to qualify
for asylum returned to their country of origin. If migrants refuse to disclose their
identities, language and dialect experts must assist with the identification of
their likely origins. Countries that
refuse to take migrants back must face EU and national aid
sanctions/incentives. Such a rigorous approach would be massively strengthened
by evidence of a strategy to go after the major criminal gangs who are driving
this exodus and profiting from it. Germany must use its undoubted power and
influence to champion such a system to be run jointly by all EU member-states. Only thereafter will Chancellor Merkel begin
to regain the trust of the people who are going to have to live with the massive
change she suggests is coming.
Hopefully, today’s ‘crisis’ meeting of national interior ministers will
adopt such measures but do not hold your breath!
There is one other aspect of this
crisis which suggests it may be time for Chancellor Merkel to step down from
power. Twice in the past fortnight she
has unilaterally-suspended cornerstone EU rules. However, she has repeatedly told David
Cameron that the very modest reforms to the EU (more modest by the day) will be
impossible. She not only gives the impression
that it is she who decides the fate and status of millions of Europeans who did
not and cannot vote for her, she also gives the impression that in the EU whilst
it is no rules for Germany, it is too many rules for the rest of us. Worse, at
a dinner in Downing Street a couple of years ago she told David Cameron that if
a Brexit became likely she would move to isolate Britain. Britain has done a pretty good job isolating itself
but she is clearly far more Machiavellian than the impression she likes to
give.
Margaret Thatcher suffered from a
dangerous trinity of power; a dominant domestic political position, an innate,
unyielding Machiavellianism, and a long period in office during which those willing
to stand up to her were replaced by ‘yes men’. From a distance it looks as if
Angela Merkel is showing signs of suffering from the same dangerous
trinity. For Germany’s sake, for Europe’s
sake and indeed for own sake it is perhaps time for this quintessentially
decent woman to go.
The past is indeed a different country
and nowhere more so than Germany.
However, if Chancellor Merkel does not restore some element of control
to the current mass influx then the future Germany will also be a very different
country and they will have to do things very differently there. The German
people should have a say but Germany too must tread warily.
Julian Lindley-French
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