By John Gustavsson
Tuesday, August 22, 2023
A second term for Donald Trump—the prospect of which
cannot be ignored—would likely have devastating consequences for Ukraine. Trump
has been highly
critical of American support for the war effort, without which Ukraine
would likely lose. But there’s an even more serious consequence of U.S. abandonment
of Ukraine: the end of NATO.
To understand how that could happen, you have to
understand European
federalism, an ideology that has nothing in common with what Americans call
federalism: While American federalism emphasizes the value and necessity of
local government, European federalism calls for the centralization of power in
the hands of the EU. It strives to transform Europe into a federation in which
national governments are nothing more than regional authorities tasked with
carrying out Brussels’ directives. This vision is popularly known as the
“United States of Europe.”
European federalism became popular among intellectuals
and certain policy-makers in Europe in the aftermath of World War II. When what
today is known as the European Union was founded, it was a narrow organization
concerned mainly with ensuring the ease of trade
of coal and steel across its then-six member states. But even the
Treaty of Rome, the founding treaty of what was then the European Economic
Community, had the fingerprints of
federalism, stating that its aim was to lay the foundation for an “ever closer
union between the peoples of Europe.” A union of nations that grows ever closer
does inevitably become a superstate. The founding
fathers of the European Union were aware of
this, and many of them, including Konrad Adenauer,
actually spoke rather candidly about
their hope that their project would one day create such a superstate.
The appetite for federalism came from two sources: Some
supported it simply in the belief that it was the only way to guarantee peace
in Europe at a time when the continent had just suffered two horrendous wars in
a span of less than 30 years. This was an admirable ambition, but was only half
of the reason federalism caught on: Politicians from former or declining
empires looked with despair at how Europe’s influence on the world stage was
waning. Finding themselves in this helpless situation deeply wounded the pride
of Europe’s political leaders.
During and
in the aftermath of World War II, the U.S. pushed the European colonial
powers, at least once by threatening to
withdraw Marshall Plan aid, to agree to decolonization with the stated reason
being that the U.S. believed in a universal right of self-determination. The
perhaps-not-unintended side effect of decolonization was that no European
country would ever again command a large enough territory, population, or
military to threaten the United States’ position in the Western world. While
Europe allied with the U.S. during the Cold War, the resentment against the
U.S. never quite went away. In my view, European federalism may most accurately
be classified as a revanchist ideology: While no European country is big enough
to challenge U.S. hegemony on its own, a European superstate could at
least in theory restore what the federalists consider to be Europe’s
“rightful place” in the global order.
Yet, despite federalists possessing a large majority in
the European Parliament and European Commission, there is one item atop the
federalist wish-list that has never even been close to materializing: an EU
military. If the EU is to become a United States of Europe, a superpower in its
own right, it needs not just soft but also hard power. European Commission
President Ursula von der Leyen has spoken
openly about her desire to one day see the EU become a military
alliance, operating
independently from NATO. French President Emmanuel Macron has
also expressed
support for the idea. Whether this would be merely an alliance, or
whether it would include an army directly under Brussels’ command, is not
clear.
Support has been lackluster among member states, however,
on the grounds that NATO already exists. Why reinvent the wheel by forming a
separate, EU-wide military alliance, when nearly
all EU members are already also members of NATO? This would serve no
purpose other than adding an additional layer of bureaucracy for the national
militaries participating in the new alliance. Besides, the new alliance would
always be weaker than NATO simply on account of the United States not being a
member.
Federalists would respond that Europe should not depend
on the United States for its defense. Who knows if the Americans can really be
relied upon in a moment of truth? These arguments tend to be ignored by
ordinary Europeans, for whom the idea that the United States could not be
trusted to defend its allies has always been nonsensical.
Re-electing Trump and abandoning Ukraine would change
that. Forever.
Ukraine is not a member of NATO, but it did receive security
guarantees from the U.S. in the 1990s in exchange for giving up its
nuclear arsenal, left over from the Soviet Union. While the U.S. may argue that
the agreement never specified that it had to defend Ukraine if Russia, another
signatory, violated the agreement, this was the common understanding in Eastern
Europe. Besides, Trump has flirted with the idea of abandoning NATO altogether,
so what is to say that leaving Ukraine to fend for itself won’t just be a first
step?
The other reason leaving Ukraine would be a big deal is
that European countries have sacrificed immensely to help Ukraine resist the
Russian invasion. Like the U.S., EU members have supplied arms, intelligence,m
and humanitarian aid. Unlike the U.S., the EU has also had to
deal with millions of war refugees, for the second
time in less than a decade. And unlike the U.S., the EU had to rapidly
transition away from Russian gas. Many European countries have suffered inflation
rates peaking above 20 percent because of the war, which is now
personal for Europeans. They’ll not be in a forgiving mood if the U.S. ends its
support.
Abandoning Ukraine would give European federalists the
ultimate proof that the U.S. can no longer be counted on, and that an
EU-controlled military alliance is necessary to replace NATO. The Eastern
European member states that are the geographically closest to Russia and its
puppet state Belarus are traditionally the fiercest critics of federalism, but
they could conceivably be convinced to cave on this issue if they themselves
suddenly felt vulnerable.
A push for an EU military would likely happen regardless
of the outcome of the war in Ukraine. In fact, if Ukraine were to be able to
cast out the Russian invaders with only the support of the EU (and the U.K.),
it would be yet another argument that NATO was obsolete: Not only can the U.S.
not be trusted, but we don’t even need them anymore.
It may be tempting to think that, just like NATO survived
Trump’s first term, it would survive his second. After all, his second term
would be his last, and by January 2029 the U.S. would be back to normal. Even
if Europe formed an alliance to protect itself while Trump was in office,
surely it would come back into the fold once the U.S. had a decent president
again? Unfortunately, this would not be the case.
The first is that, as mentioned earlier, militarizing the
EU has been a long-term goal of the European federalists that form the majority
in the European Parliament. To anyone who has studied the workings of the EU,
it is ridiculous to think that the federalists would let go of a military
alliance once it was formed, even if its original raison d’être (Trump)
was no longer around. The very business of the EU is consolidating power, not
ceding it.
The second reason is that reelecting Donald Trump would
prove that his brand of politics has a staying power many thought and hoped
otherwise. But even a Democratic or non-Trumpist Republican victory in 2028
would not mean a Trumpist candidate couldn’t win again another four years
later. An America governed by isolationists every other four years will not be
a reliable ally—not for Europe, nor for anyone else.
A NATO collapse would greatly diminish U.S. clout around
the world. It would officially usher in a new era of a multipolar world, one
where we would see more frequent wars between nations as the world returned to
the pre-WWII state of regional great powers. Refugee flows would increase,
supply chain disruptions would become commonplace, and from these disruptions
price increases would follow. America’s weaker position would also make it
harder for it to negotiate favorable trade agreements, leading to both higher
prices and lower exports. The cost, both to U.S. taxpayers and consumers, will
be far greater than the cost of helping Ukraine defend its
sovereignty.
While American
progressives may think a European superpower replacing the U.S. on the
world stage might actually sound like a good idea, given the EU’s more
progressive bent, the EU will never be able to lead the world. A hypothetical
European superstate would be but one great power among many in this new world
order. The EU lacks the coherent ideological framework provided by the U.S.
Constitution, and most of its member states lack the willingness to sacrifice
for others’ freedom that so often throughout history has been demonstrated by
the U.S.
What hangs in the balance is not merely the fate of
American conservatism, but the fate of the very post-war order that has kept
both Americans and Europeans safe and prosperous.
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