Alphen, Netherlands. 23
December, 2015. 2016 will be a tipping point for the West between power and
weakness. The other day I spoke at an event at the Clingendael Institute here
in the Netherlands on the planned Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership
(TTIP). Most of my colleagues were focused on technicalities and what for me
are justified concerns about the relationship between power and the individual
in the West. The elite penchant for grand architectures such as the EU and TTIP
are shifting the balance of power away from democracy towards bureaucracy; efficiency
at the expense of accountability through the creation of sham democracy.
Equally, in a room in
which there were many elephants implicit in the debate over TTIP was the
creation of a new American-centric West. Indeed, if one combines TTIP with the
Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) a new form of West becomes apparent, one which
is more idea than place. All well and good? Well no. The problem with such grands dessins as TTIP, TPP and indeed
the EU, is that far from aggregating the capacity of states to act experience
suggests such architectures exaggerate inaction. The EU is the most obvious and
dangerous example of that.
Western powers
will need to act. From Libya to Syria and on to Afghanistan the anti-state is defeating
the state and by extension the West. This morning David Miliband, Chairman of the
International Rescue Committee, described the world as “interlinked but
instable”. In Afghanistan the Taliban are threatening to take Sangin, a key
strategic town in Helmand province in Afghanistan which over 100 British
soldiers died defending between 2006 and 2014. If Sangin falls the chances of
President Ashraf Ghani creating an inclusive Afghan state in which the Pashtun
tribes invest will be much reduced and Western strategy will again be seen to have
collapsed.
And yet 2016 will see the
West on strategic hold. The US presidential elections will consume much of
America’s political energy. Sure, the US administration will go onto automatic
and holding operations will be conducted across the world. However, as America
debates its next president much of the world’s many contended spaces will be
vulnerable to adversaries. Russia will continue to be the West’s ‘frenemy’, co-operating
on Moscow’s pro-Assad terms in Syria (forget the talk of a new peace process as
Russia is not going to abandon Assad), whilst seeking to extend its influence
over an arc from the Baltic States in the north through to Georgia and Central
Asia to the south. Eurasian Union? China will continue its efforts to exclude
the US from the East and South China Seas and in so doing push forward its
long-term strategy to establish strategic hegemony over Japan, the Koreas,
Taiwan, Vietnam and the Philippines.
That EU will also continue
to fail in the face of an unfixed Eurozone and a chronically mismanaged
migration crisis. Then there is Brexit. It was strange listening to former
British Prime Minister Sir John Major the other day suggesting that the EU had
made Britain more prosperous, more secure, and more influential. The EU is hopelessly over-governed,
uncompetitive and insecure with much of the problem the EU itself! The EU’s
open borders have helped migrants and indeed terrorists march at will across Europe.
As for Britain Germany continues to block key areas of the Single Market which
favour Britain, whilst France and Germany force Britain into a form of serfdom
by denying Britain its rightful leadership place.
The only way to fix these
dangerous structural problems is to create a new EU. Moreover, experience
suggests a new EU will mean a) a new treaty; b) more elite bureaucracy in the
guise of ‘ever closer union’; and c) less democracy. The new EU will also need
a new political settlement for Britain and all non-Eurozone member-states if
cost is to be matched by benefit of membership which frankly is ever harder to
see. Whatever happens it will take years
before Europe’s infernal, eternal struggle over internal ‘ordnung’ is resolved
and Europeans can at last play the role to which they should aspire in the
world.
With an EU unable to act,
and major Europeans rendered incapable of action, Europe has been rendered effectively
impotent. Worse, two of Europe’s major state powers Britain and France are too
often constrained to act by the EU, whilst Germany now apparently takes it for
granted that European ‘integration’ should effectively mean the abandonment of sovereignty
by all other EU member-states abandon so that Berlin can govern Europe through Brussels.
Reminds me of something.
Worse, the very existence
of European states is now threatened by the Balkanisation of Europe. The EU
helped almost destroy my country Britain in 2014 and could do so again if
England votes to leave the EU next year and Scotland does not. Indeed, all European states with significant
minority groups are now threatened because minority nationalist groups invariably
look to Brussels as an alternative to national capitals. This week Corsican
separatists were elected in what is a region of France.
For all the above reasons
2016 will be a tipping point. Until and indeed only if, the Americans elect a
president willing and able to re-commit the US to leadership and the major
European state powers break out of their EU-induced strategic torpor my fear is
the West will continue to retreat. Sadly,
the world will be a far more dangerous place for the West’s retreat.
Hold on to your hats!
2016 is going to be a bumpy ride.
Merry Christmas!
Julian Lindley-French
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