EUROPE AND THE MEDITERRANEAN: DREAMS AND DISILUSSIONS ON BOTH SIDES OF THE POND

Marc COGEN

Jerusalem, 25 May 2010

The overall-theme of the KAS-BGU conference is the foreign policy of the European Union and this session deals with the Mediterranean. Whether the treaty of Lisbon will change significantly the existing working methods or even foreign policy orientations is highly doubtful taking into account the structural characteristics of the European Union for several decades. The Union is based on a series of treaties, a complex network that falls under treaty law in international law. At law schools In Europe the European Union is taught as a separate branch of law, namely European law, although it cannot be denied that the Union is based on and works with treaties. Even the so-called Constitution is a treaty and stills resides under the rules of treaty law. This puts international lawyers in an advanced position of being able to look at the European Union as it is: a treaty based organization of states.

Let us first look at the EU side of the pond.

Historical determinism, denial of free choice and democracy.

Whether the European Union is the most appropriate formula for Europe is still debated, notwithstanding its triumphalism and proclaimed successes. Too many politicians and academics in Europe, dealing with the European Union, are biased in the sense that they see the European Union as a kind of historical determination – they borrowed the concept of historical determinism from old-style Marxism – and this belief blinds them for the many EU mistakes. It may even exclude free choice in the end. If the Union is an inevitable ever-closer Union, free choice is not possible anymore. European treaties are used as instruments of political projects without the democratic accountability and transparency inherent of democracies. One example is the unfolding Greek drama. Remember, the European Monetary Union was part of the Treaty of Maastricht (1991), including the stringent Maastricht criteria. Greece and some other states did not even fulfill the Maastricht treaty criteria but were admitted on political grounds anyway. This could already count as a material breach of the Maastricht treaty according to treaty law. Then came the news that Greece and some other European states had not faithfully implemented the Maastricht monetary criteria after admission. Again a material breach of the Maastricht treaty. To make things even worse, the panicking political leadership of the European Union now decided for a bail-out plan of not less than Euro 750 billion, again without consulting the voters, and again contradicting the stringent Maastricht treaty criteria.

European policies.

As in many European member states, the European Union is run by the political Left which stands for democratic socialism. Yes, the political Left also rules Europe and the EU. Its policies are defined by subsidized mass transfers, free college tuiton and an ever worsening educational project, extended maternity leave, early retirement and utopian pacifism as a foreign policy. As one observer wrote: ‘… no wonder that Turkey begged and even humiliated itself to get inside this more perfect union’ (Victor Davis Hanson, NRO, May 14, 2010). But Europe’s socialist model – I am not speaking about the former USSR – led to modest growth, high and long-term unemployment, few technological innovations compared to the United States. Yes, Microsoft is located in the state of Washington in the United States, not in France or in Spain and Google is located in California, not in Bohemia or Flanders.

But the political Left, ruling large swaths of present-day Europe, has no real commitment to democracy, including the EU project. One of the main reasons for the decline of Europe is the disconnection between political leadership and voters. If the political elite of Europe has trusted its fate entirely to the European Union, voters are only seen as an obstacle in ‘… the way forward towards an ever closer Union’, at whatever price and costs. The last time I spoke in Jerusalem on the issue of the Lisbon treaty – it was two years ago - I already pointed out that the EU leadership would only accept a choice between ‘yes’ and ‘yes’. Ask the French, Dutch and Irish peoples about what happened to them after their national referendums. The then Prime Minister Tony Blair took no risk and simply refused a referendum. That’s how European governments create their ‘ever closer Union’ and their ever growing problems. Have treaties not become the instrument or the excuse to exclude voters and to concentrate powers at the European level? If so, democracy is circumvented and survives only in name.

Free debate is undermined in the public sphere – both in universities and in newspapers – in the name of democracy and peace. Critical voices are sidelined in a discrete way or labeled as extremists or ‘right-wing populists’. This imposed censorship by the European Left contradicts freedom of expression, one of the core values of our society. At the same time the political Left appeases European jihadists who never liked freedom of speech unless they could attack the West or Israel. The more the European Left tried to appease radical Islam and its ever growing Muslim underclass at home, the more Europe became vulnerable and irrelevant. Now let us turn to the non-EU side of the pond.

The non-EU side of the pond.

Few people, even in academia, ever heard of it. Yet the ‘Mediterranean Union’ was proclaimed by one of the founding fathers of the Union, France, as a very important step forwards towards peace and stability in the Mediterranean. In true EU style, the multilateral union approach was launched in Paris in July 2008. Now, two years later, the grandiose union is already derailed by ambiguities on both sides of the pond. If we read the latest press releases, Arab states see a Mediterranean Union as a new political opportunity to attack Israel while EU Commissioner Stefan FUELE said that the Med Union was a ‘project based’ club without ambitions of conflict resolution. Now, the Spanish presidency of the EU and the two co-chairs, Egypt and France, have agreed to postpone the summit, scheduled for June 2010, to November 2010 in Barcelona. Last month, talks in Barcelona aimed at adopting a water management for the region ended already in failure, again due to a row on the Israel/Arab conflict.

So let us look at the perceived obstacle in the Mediterranean, the Israel/Arab dispute. If there is one common denominator between the European Left and the Muslim/Arab-Mediterranean states it is anti-Semitism. One observer (Melanie Phillips) noted that ‘… the treatment of Israel by the left-wing Western intelligentsia is unique in its irrationality and moral and historical inversion. It takes a nation (Israel) that is the historic victim of aggression and blames it for endangering peace in the Mediterranean and causing Islamic extremism worldwide’. Anti-Semitic propaganda is poisoning the minds of the Arab and Muslim worlds, tolerated by the opportunistic calculations of the European Left. These anti-Semitic acts go unpunished and therefore gain a level of acceptance in the eyes of large sections of public opinion, at both sides of the pond. The way to deal with it is prosecuting the propagandists of anti-Semitism wherever they are. The appropriate legal label is ‘the anti-Semitism against Israel case’. The conflict between Israel and Arabs would have been long over were it not for the radical hatred of the Jews that was articulated and given assistance by Nazi propagandists and continued after the Second World War by radical Islamists (Jeffrey Herf). But European intelligentsia tolerated and silently accepted this propaganda. Also Israel shares part of the responsibility. The silence of Israel regarding anti-Semitic propaganda is one of the problems we face, and the remedy is that Israel should take the lead in developing legal policies that punish anti-Semitic propaganda in full public and open to the world press. At least it would encourage those governments, who have had enough of the hate propaganda emanating from the Mediterranean, to act accordingly.

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Victor Davis Hanson

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May 14, 2010 4:00 A.M.

The Other European Volcano

When Greece started to erupt, the volcanic ash spread over the social democrats’ smug vision of a perfect European Union.

Five years ago, the European Union’s account of itself resonated with end-of history triumphalism. In organic fashion, democratic socialism would spread eastward and southward, recivilizing the old Warsaw Pact and the Balkans through cradle-to-grave entitlements, state unionism, radical environmentalism, and utopian pacifism. No wonder that Turkey begged — and often humiliated itself in the process — to get inside this more perfect union.
Over here, we were often lectured by “progressives” that almost everything Europe did was better — subsidized mass transit, free college tuition, extended maternity leave, early retirement, and “soft-power” diplomacy. Indeed, Obama’s presidential campaign was in some senses a stealthy referendum on Europeanization. And once he was elected, his moves to raise taxes, expand government, expropriate some private industries, run up exponentially increasing deficits, subsidize environmentalism, and triangulate with enemies and allies abroad were European Union to the core.
Few wanted to listen when it was pointed out — well before the Greek meltdown — that on key questions of demography and immigration, the future of the European Union was bleak. The very idea that, in historical terms, socialism, agnosticism, pacifism, and hedonism were not only interrelated and synergistic, but also suicidal for civilization, was considered crackpot.
Furthermore, even in the days of loud socialism, Old Europe’s notion of class made it hard to assimilate Islamic immigrants. Unlike other newcomers, North Africans and Turks channeled their resentments through religious fundamentalism. Something about their European hosts — the pacifism, the liberal perspective on matters of sex, the agnostic and atheistic proclamations — infuriated Muslims in a way not even the Great Satan did. The result was that the more a liberal Europe tried to appease radical Islam abroad and its own estranged Muslim underclass at home, the more it was despised as weak, decadent, and — worst of all — increasingly irrelevant.
Few wanted to listen when it was pointed out that Europe was, in terms of traditional military power, nearly defenseless, unable to protect itself from Russian bullying, a bellicose radical Islam, or a soon-to-be-nuclear Iran. Its reluctant participation in the war against the Taliban, warmly welcomed by Washington, only made all of that more clear. Apparently, the technocrats in Brussels figured that the Neanderthal age of war itself was over. Learned diplomats in The Hague and at the UN would soon adjudicate “differences,” which largely grew out of either misunderstanding or preventable material inequality, rather than Thucydidean honor, fear, and perceived self-interest, which were innate to the human condition, and checked by fossilized concepts like military preparedness and deterrence. That all such pretension was predicated on the safety net of NATO and the U.S. defense budget was considered simplistic, or at least problematic. (Or perhaps Europeans felt that if cowboyish Americans like to strut on the world stage — why, let them strut and waste their money occasionally on Europe’s behalf.)
That Europe’s socialist model had led to relatively modest growth over the last decade in comparison with other advanced economies, that unemployment in Europe was likewise chronically high, and that worker productivity was static were always downplayed or at least balanced by “quality of life” counterpoints. Who cared that, over the last decade, much of Europe saw economic growth at only 50 to 75 percent the U.S. rate per annum, or that it struggled with 10 percent unemployment, or that it discouraged start-up companies, when the quality of life there was so much better for so many more people than anywhere else?
The wonder of the Greek implosion was not that it came so soon, but rather — given the pan-European phenomena of early retirement, declining populations, bloated public sectors, and militant unionism — that it took so long. In some sense, the dream of the European Union — a continental democratic socialism that offered a Western liberal antithesis to the United States — is now finished. Let us count the reasons why.
1. EU expansion has probably ended. The irony is that wannabe members like Turkey will now probably be relieved rather than envious and bitter at being excluded. At worst, a chronically broke Turkey can cook its books and devalue its currency as it wishes, without international lenders assuming de facto control of its government, as in the case of Greece. In the next few years, we will not hear discussions about expanded EU membership; rather, we will hear debates about members’ voluntary or forced withdrawals. At best, the entire unworkable scheme will devolve to its original idea of a few Western European nations’ agreeing to loosely integrate their economies, and to adopt a common foreign policy within the NATO alliance.
2. So the pan-European commonality is unraveling. What is striking about the German-Greek fight is not that frugal lenders would be angered at profligate borrowers, or even that the envious, weaker client would resent the more powerful and haughty patron, but just how quickly the memories of 1939 rippled through the continent, as the thin veneer of European socialist brotherhood was torn away. The German and Greek presses almost immediately were refighting World War II — Greeks demanded more wartime reparations and the return of their supposedly stolen “gold”; Germans were willing to take in exchange uninhabited but picturesque Greek islands. The old European fear of a strong, alienated, and angry Germany resurfaced, along with the old stereotypes about sun-loving, irresponsible (and lazy) Mediterraneans in need of handouts from hardworking and sober (but cold and ruthless) northerners.