By Peter Rough
Thursday, January 24, 2019
Alexander Herzen wrote that after any revolution, “the
departing world leaves behind it not an heir but a pregnant widow.” Yet ever
since the election of Donald Trump convulsed the world, Western Europe’s
leaders have been speaking as if a new international order had already been
born. Last August, French president Emmanuel Macron told his diplomatic corps
that “Europe can no longer entrust its security to the United States alone.”
Heiko Maas, the German foreign minister, a few days later wrote that “the
outstanding aim of our foreign policy is to build a sovereign, strong Europe”
that can “form a counterweight when the US crosses the line.” In the thinking
of Macron, Maas, and their confreres in Brussels, the heir to the dearly
departed American-led postwar system has already been named, and that heir is
ever-closer European union.
This has been a premature christening. While President
Trump has indeed turned up the temperature on Europe with his brash criticisms
of transatlantic relations, especially in the North Atlantic Treaty
Organization (NATO), the labor pains jolting Europe are not of America’s
creation. Instead, the continent is in a political turmoil of its own making —
a crisis that is directly linked to, and exacerbated by, aspects of the
European Union (EU). With Paris and Berlin eying a second Élysée Treaty and
Great Britain in the throes of Brexit, today’s Europe is the pregnant widow of
Herzen’s imagination. Now is the time for the U.S. to promote the birth of a
new alternative to the dogma of integration — a model that gives European
nations the flexibility to choose their own destinies.
Over the past two decades, Western European leaders have
made two broad claims in support of greater European union. First, they have
argued that European integration is responsible for the post–World War II
peace. On this point European leaders regularly echo the sentiments of European
Commission president Jean-Claude Juncker: “You only need to visit a war
cemetery to see what the alternative to European integration is.” Second, EU
leaders have often contended that the Union promotes discussion and
coordination without impinging on national sovereignty. In defense of Brussels,
one senior European diplomat often emphasizes in private conversations that
“where we once fought, we now talk.”
The truth, though, is more complicated than these broad
claims suggest. While European integration certainly may have hastened the fall
of the Berlin Wall, American power and democracy struck the decisive blow for
victory in the Cold War. And while no observer of Brussels could accuse it of
an untoward propensity for action, the EU is much more than a mere debating
society. It has a voracious appetite for power in almost every domain of public
policy, from product regulations to budgetary targets. Already, a large
percentage of European laws are decided by EU bureaucrats; tellingly, many
European countries consider their EU ambassadors to be their most important
diplomatic representatives.
Alas, the EU’s growth has thrown Europe off balance. This
is because citizens across the continent identify far more as citizens of their
nation than as citizens of some Greater Europe. Brussels’s penchant for making
decisions at odds with local preferences only fuels the fires of nationalism.
While this may seem anodyne to Americans, whose national identities are
tempered by founding documents and a strong republican tradition, nationalism
carries far darker connotations in the political mainstream of Europe. In
November, Macron defined nationalism as “a betrayal of patriotism.” German
chancellor Angela Merkel stated categorically that “nationalism and egoism must
never have a chance to flourish again in Europe.” While nationalist forces are
embraced in American politics, from Paris to Berlin they are shunned as
anathema.
The upshot of this elite suspicion of nationalism is that
anti-systemic movements on the political extremes end up as the principal
beneficiaries of public discontent. From right-wing nationalists to left-wing
radicals, these movements often lack professionalism and a basic appreciation
for the economic marketplace. Most worryingly, they seem fonder of Vladimir
Putin than of the Pax Americana. As one local official in eastern Germany,
himself a member of Angela Merkel’s Christian Democratic Union (CDU), lamented
last year, “The populists tell my constituents that we have a friend in the
United States. ‘Why don’t we reach out to the Russians, too? Then we’ll have
two friends instead of one,’ they say.” So long as it does not know which way
the winds are swirling, the U.S. should be wary of igniting a populist
brushfire across the continent.
By contrast, Europe’s mainstream has been mostly
supportive of American leadership in the world. Take Angela Merkel. Despite
President Trump’s criticisms of her immigration blunders, she rarely misses an
opportunity to pay tribute to the transatlantic alliance in interviews and
speeches. If European nationalists think parochially, making them vulnerable
targets for revisionists, today’s European establishment reveres the liberal
order, inoculating itself against such entreaties.
These realities carry one clear implication for the
United States: We should strive to tame European nationalism, bringing its
healthiest features into the political mainstream. Concretely, this means
supporting a multi-speed Europe that jettisons the commitment to “ever-closer
union.”
One need only look to recent European history to see the
benefits of such policy flexibility. During the financial crisis, it was beyond
the pale to support a Greek exit from the euro zone, despite the knowledge that
a currency devaluation would have burnished Greece’s economic competitiveness.
The unfortunate result? The Coalition for the Radical Left shot to power over
centrist parties in Athens, where it has governed ever since. The same
calcified attitude is apparent in France, where Macron has framed a binary
choice between ugly populism and enlightened Europeanism — and reaped the
whirlwind as yellow-vested demonstrators have taken to the streets.
The steady build-up of political tensions across Europe
cannot be in the American interest. What the continent needs today are
pressure-release valves — reforms that reflect national moods and defuse public
discontent. In Austria, for example, Sebastian Kurz has shown the way forward
on the issue of immigration. His center-right People’s Party (ÖVP) languished
in the polls before he adopted a more restrictive immigration policy and
co-opted the message of the country’s nationalist Freedom Party (FPÖ). In
December 2017, he was rewarded with an impressive come-from-behind victory in
national elections. Today, the pro-Western ÖVP calls the shots in Vienna, while
the openly pro-Russian FPÖ must content itself as a junior partner.
Of course, if our European allies choose to integrate in
select areas on a voluntary basis, the United States should not stand in their
way. But the U.S. should be crystal clear that political integration must not
carry over into the domain of defense. A serious European effort at military
integration directly threatens the viability of NATO.
In December 2017, the EU officially activated Permanent
Structured Cooperation, a means of pooling European defense investments. Less
than a year later, Macron announced a much more ambitious goal: the creation of
“a true European army.” Within days, Angela Merkel told the European
Parliament, “We have to work on a vision to establish a real European army one
day.”
An effective military apparatus requires an esprit de
corps, a martial vigor that is incompatible with the EU’s postmodern ethos.
Moreover, the EU’s most important member, Germany, maintains a deep-seated
aversion to the use of force. For Berlin, the allure of a European army has
less to do with pursuing military interventions abroad than it does with
encouraging political integration at home. Another shiny headquarters in
Brussels commanding phantom troops abroad would simply attract the ire of
Americans and Brits and undermine the North Atlantic Treaty Alliance. It would
do nothing to augment capabilities and much to weaken NATO, which is the
world’s premier defense alliance and has guaranteed the continent’s security
for decades. Europe does not need a standing army because it already has a
better one at its back.
The need to forestall the birth of a European army, and
the opportunity to sublimate European nationalism by channeling it into the
mainstream, only highlights the importance of creating a new alternative to
automatic EU integration. For decades, the United States played an essential
role in fostering the consolidation of Europe. Even today, the EU’s
forerunners, such as the European Coal and Steel Community, are seen as
diplomatic successes, while free-market supporters credit European integration
with the liberalization of the continent’s economies. That era of automatic
support for uninhibited integration has ended. Now is the time to shepherd the
birth of its heir.
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