Doug Bandow
European Disunion

Europe, once ever fractious, combative and
warlike, has gone soft. The problem is not the lack of war—outside
of the Balkans—for more than sixty years, a major advance over
preceding decades and centuries. The challenge is a European elite
which neither respects national traditions, cultural differences and
even democratic processes nor believes in possessing a serious
military. Wherever the European Union ends up, it isn’t likely to be
as the globe’s third pole, along with America and China.
The original European project as it developed out of World
War II was geared towards promoting economic recovery and
constraining Germany The beginning was modest: the European Coal and
Steel Community. That successively turned into the European Economic
Community (or Common Market) and the European Union. Cooperation has
become consolidation as ambitious Eurocrats seek to create another
superpower, one prepared to reduce U.S. dominance and share global
influence with America. And the EU has the formal requisites of
superpower status. The 27 members of the European Union possess a
collective population of about 500 million, compared to America’s
300 million, and last year enjoyed a combined GDP of $16.62
trillion, compared to $13.84 trillion for the United States.
But united the EU is not. Members took different positions
on the Iraq War, disagree violently over the desirability of
including Turkey and cannot agree on recognizing Kosovo as an
independent state. Binding America’s states together into the United
States singular as opposed to plural required a bloody interstate
conflict. Europeans instead have been united by their (laudable)
desire to avoid war. The result is no United States of Europe
singular. Left to its own devices, the EU—governed by a European
Commission and European Parliament, limited by member-state vetoes,
represented by a temporary, rotating president, and denied effective
control over members’ foreign and military policies—isn’t going to
achieve geopolitical (in contrast to economic) influence matching
that of China or Russia, let alone the United States.
Which led to the Lisbon Treaty. Don’t mind the details. The
purpose of the complicated accord, which started out as a formal
constitution before being rejected in referendums in France and the
Netherlands in 2005, is to create something approximating a
superstate to compete with America (and, presumably, any other
eventual great power). But the only way to do that is to submerge
national power and identity by, for instance, stripping countries of
their guaranteed member of the European Commission and veto of major
policy changes. Alas for the Eurocrats, polls indicate that the
majority of Europeans do not share this continental corporate
vision. So it must be imposed on the masses.
French President Nicolas Sarkozy, whose government has just
taken over the EU’s rotating presidency, was refreshingly honest
when he observed: “There will be no treaty at all if we had a
referendum in France.” Which is why twenty-six of twenty-seven
members refused to put the issue to a vote of their citizens. Polls
indicate that a majority of people in every EU country wants to
vote, and likely would vote no in sixteen of them, including the
continent’s most important power, Germany. So parliaments, not
peoples, were tasked to decide the issue.
Except in Ireland, where the constitution mandates a
popular vote. Despite Irish contrariness evidenced by their refusal
in 2002 to ratify the Nice Treaty (reversed in a second vote the
following year), which advanced EU consolidation, the European elite
assumed victory would be theirs. The major Irish political parties
all backed the treaty and Eurocrats trooped to Dublin to proclaim
the wonders of the new Europe. It apparently never occurred to the
“new class” of politicians, bureaucrats, lobbyists, activists and
intellectuals that run the EU that common people might not be in
tune with their goals as well as their methods.
So when the Irish voted no in June, there was consternation
in the capitals of Europe, and especially Brussels, home of the EU
bureaucracy. Classic was the comment of Germany’s interior minister,
Wolfgang Schaeuble: “A few million Irish cannot decide on behalf of
495 million Europeans.” Minister Schaeuble, of course, believed that
the job of deciding belonged to a few thousand Eurocrats.
With unanimity required, the Irish vote should have killed
the Lisbon Treaty. But the response from chanceries, parliaments,
and agencies across Europe was: we expected a yes, politicians in
Dublin promised a yes, we insist on a yes. Although there continues
to be some talk of bumping Ireland to second-class status or even
kicking the Emerald Isle out of the EU, the consensus is that a
second vote has to be held. And the Irish people must be made to
vote the right way. Some Eurocrats advocate political inducements,
such as allowing Ireland to keep its national commissioner. Others
propose an intensified propaganda campaign. Everyone insists on
putting pressure on Dublin: hold another referendum and do it right
this time. Last week Italy became the twenty-third nation to ratify
Lisbon, and the Eurocrats hope to reach twenty-six soon. Nicolas
Sarkozy journeyed to Ireland to make sure the Irish government was
listening.
But the strategy has run aground. If Prime Minister Brian
Cowen calls another vote and loses, his job likely is forfeit. And,
no surprise, Irish voters have not taken kindly to Sarkozy’s variant
of the Brezhnev Doctrine: a no vote is only temporary, while a yes
vote is forever.
A poll by the Irish company Red C, commissioned by Open
Europe, found that 71 percent of Irish voters oppose holding a
second referendum. Moreover, 17 percent of proponents would shift
into opposition, while only six percent would do the reverse.
Nonvoters in June expressed themselves 57 percent to 26 percent
against. Maybe the Eurocrats can turn this all around before a vote
next year, but don’t count on it.
And even if they get their way with Ireland, the result
won’t be what they really desire: a Europe capable of competing with
the United States and other great powers. A quasi nation which can
be constructed only by preventing people from voting, and by
coercing those who do vote, is not going to generate the sort of
loyalty, let alone enthusiasm, needed to forge a new nationality.
Some Americans may be over the top in believing their country to be
unique and tasked with a special global mission, but that conviction
(delusion?) has helped drive an active U.S. policy abroad. Europe
has nothing comparable—who in Europe, other than a few Belgians,
perhaps, is prepared to die for Brussels?—and the Lisbon Treaty
can’t create it ex nihilo.
Equally important, even a consolidated EU will not have the
most important tool of international relations: a real military.
Nicolas Sarkozy has proposed new EU forces, and former–German
Foreign Minister Joschka Fischer also recently called for greater
continental military cooperation. But the likelihood that any
European government other than France will respond seriously is
barely above nil.
Last year the Europeans spent about $312 billion, less than
half of America’s total outlays, on defense. But much of that money
was wasted on large, inefficient conscript forces. EU members have
little lift capability. During the Kosovo conflict, European
officials admitted that they possessed barely 10 to 15 percent of
America’s combat capabilities.
And about the same proportion of Europeans are prepared to
use military force. Other than the British and Dutch, EU forces in
Afghanistan have done as much as possible to avoid conflict. In
principle there’s nothing wrong, and much right, with this attitude.
Even Russia poses little threat to Europe, Old or New, to use Donald
Rumsfeld’s famous dichotomy. Why go to war if you don’t have to?
However, the EU members aren’t going to match America’s
geopolitical power without an effective military, since that means
they have little useful to say in the most serious conflicts. And
they certainly won’t get much respect as long as they continue to
rely on the U.S. to defend them. So long as the EU expects
Washington to do Europe’s dirty work—promoting largely European
interests, as when the U.S. bombed Serbia over Kosovo and advanced
NATO to Russia’s border—Washington will never have any reason to
take the Europeans seriously on geopolitical questions. Political
figures in Brussels may whine about not having a decision-making
role, but why should anyone listen to them unless they start
spending money and taking risks? Their biggest failure in
Afghanistan is not failing to provide meaningful combat forces in
areas where combat is occurring, but professing to believe that
Afghanistan is important, and then failing to provide meaningful
combat forces in areas where combat is occurring.
The Bush administration has formally blessed EU
consolidation, though it is not obviously in America’s interest. A
Brussels-dominated foreign and military policy is just as likely to
hinder U.S. goals as advance them. And strengthening central
continental control almost certainly means reducing the liberty of
average Europeans, but then, that has not been a particularly
cherished value in Europe for years. In any case, whatever the
impact on America, the decision is Europe’s.
But the decision doesn’t really matter. The Lisbon project
is a dead end. Popular nationalism drove America’s process of
consolidation. There are Europeans today, but only in the sense of
Germans not really being Germans or Belgians not really being
Belgians. Forcing through the Lisbon Treaty only illustrates the
lack of national identity on the continent. Combine that with a
determined unwillingness to acquire, let alone wield, meaningful
military force, and the EU will remain a paper tiger. The
twenty-first century could end up being another American Century or
the Chinese Century. It will not be the European Century.
Doug Bandow is the Robert A. Taft Fellow at the American
Conservative Defense Alliance. He is a former special assistant to
President Ronald Reagan and the author of several books, including
Foreign Follies: America’s New Global Empire (Xulon).
(05.08.
2008, The National Interest)
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