“To see what is in
front of one’s nose needs a constant struggle…In general one is only right when
either wish or fear coincides with reality”.
George Orwell
Alphen, Netherlands. 25 January. Thank
God for Dutch pragmatism! Today, two events will take place in the Netherlands under
the Dutch presidency of the EU which suggest a way out of the mess into which
Europe’s elite have led Europe. The first is what Dutch Prime Minister Mark
Rutte calls “Plan B” for containing the crisis caused by the implosion of EU
structures in the face of a clearly-organised avalanche of people entering Europe
from beyond its borders. The ‘temporary’ suspension of Schengen and thus uncontrolled
free movement is in reality the end of Schengen. The other event is the launch today
in Amsterdam of Europol’s new European Counter-Terrorism Centre. What is
significant about both initiatives is they reflect the return to Earth of Europe’s
elite and the fantasy politics of political union in favour of deeper
pragmatism and the realignment in Europe of power, politics and pragmatism.
On my desk there sits a Christmas
card sent to me by a senior French diplomat. The card is a photograph of Prime
Minister Winston Churchill and General Charles de Gaulle walking together down
the Champs Elysée on Armistice Day, 11 November, 1944. In the background some
American senior officers are also visible. The irony of the photo is that
Churchill and de Gaulle really did not like each at other when it was taken.
However, they were faced with the need to complete the defeat of Hitler, and
increasingly aware of the threat posed by Stalin’s USSR. Critically, the two leaders
understood all too well that Britain and France needed the power of each other,
and moreover both needed the power of the United States. Seventy years on
nothing much has changed on that front.
However, since that photo was
taken Europe’s self-obsessed, unworldly elite has spent much of the intervening
seventy years trying to expel power from Europe and replace it instead with an
institutional straitjacket designed to deny power. Now dominated by a liberal
Germany still too traumatised by World War Two to really face up to the real
burdens of its self-comforting EU leadership, and a European Commission
dominated by small town, small country politicians, the EU remains far too-focused
on preventing war BETWEEN Europeans, rather than war in all of its many forms
ON Europeans. This obsession with non-power has rendered Europeans incapable of
preventing, stopping, or fighting wars that threaten Europe, and instead is fast
turning Europeans into victims of dangerous change.
Recently, one former prime
minister and foreign minister of a significant EU state told an audience of which I was a part that “Europe
is in a mess”. He is right. If Europeans are to successfully face the many
dangers that now confront them the EU will need to be fundamentally reformed…or
die. David Cameron’s Brexit adventure is such a massive missed opportunity for
Britain and Europe. Indeed, Winston Churchill would have despised the theatre d’absurde that is David Cameron’s
non-renegotiation of a titbit ‘reform’ package to con the British to remain in
a structurally unreformed EU. Germany
has wrapped itself in the mantle of EU leadership but is incapable of leading.
Worse, Europe is now suffering from the consequences of Chancellor Merkel’s increasingly
‘what is good for Germany is good for Europe’ alternative to leadership. The disastrous
consequences of her disastrous open door to hyper-migration demonstrates all
too clearly that when she sneezes Europe catches a cold. Incredibly, in another
example of “I’m alright, Jack” politics, and in spite of Russia’s attempts to
destabilise Europe, Berlin is still pushing ahead with construction of the Nord
Stream 2 gas pipeline between Russia and Germany. Although sold as a ‘European’
project it is in reality a Russo-German project.
However, for all that Europe must
still find some way to stand together as ‘Europe’. What is needed is a new EU
that supports its member-states rather than seeks to replace them. If such
transformation can be achieved the EU will be transformed into a form of
super-alliance that secures the citizens that live within its borders. If the
Dutch can nudge Europeans down that road then they will help deepen the strategic
unity of effort and purpose vital to securing Europe against twenty-first
century threats. Moreover, they will also stop in its tracks the mighty glacier
of a glacial EU super-bureaucracy creeping ever forward across the green
landscape of European democracy, preventing effective and efficient crisis
management. In other words, Europeans need an effective, inter-governmental European
External Action Service. They do not need a common foreign and security policy.
Frederick the Great once said, “Diplomacy
without armies is like music without instruments”. Pragmatism is the key to resolving
THE fundamental strategic challenge Europeans today face; how to generate
together a critical and credible level of diplomatic, economic, and military
power to not only influence the dangerous world in which Europe resides, but change
it for the better. THAT is why the EU
must be reformed, THAT is why it is vital to keep major power Britain in a
really-reformed EU, THAT is why Europeans (and Canadians) must share burdens
with the US in a reformed NATO, and above all THAT is why Europeans need
credible armed forces, fit in terms of both capacity and capability to meet the
challenges of the twenty-first century.
The idea of ‘Europe’ is an important
one and must be preserved. However, to be grounded in reality ‘Europe’ must
reflect power, politics and pragmatism.
Julian Lindley-French
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