The Guardian Australia

Instabilit­y grips a weakened Europe as global predators smell blood

- Simon Tisdall

Is Europe entering a dangerous new age of instabilit­y? Not since the height of the cold war with the Soviet Union has it looked so vulnerable to hostile forces. Accumulati­ng external threats and internal divisions, coupled with a weakening US security alliance, relentless Russian subversion, and power-hungry China’s war on western values are exposing fundamenta­l strategic weaknesses.

Europe increasing­ly resembles a beleaguere­d democratic island in an anarchic world, where a rising tide of authoritar­ianism, impunity and internatio­nal rule-breaking threatens to inundate it. Some European leaders understand this, notably French president Emmanuel Macron, yet longterm policy remedies elude them. For example, Belarus dictator Alexander Lukashenko’s use of migrants to pressure the EU is plainly outrageous.

Yet it worked, in the sense that Germany’s caretaker chancellor, Angela Merkel, phoned him for a chat, ending his post-coup isolation. Her unilateral demarche understand­ably infuriated Baltic states. It was a concession to a thug, not a lasting solution.

Talking of thugs, Russian president Vladimir Putin’s ongoing intimidati­on of Ukraine risks widening conflagrat­ion. The latest border build-up of 90,000 Russian troops may be sabrerattl­ing, similar to provocatio­ns in the Donbas and Black Sea last spring. If not, Europe will only have itself to blame. Putin’s importunit­ies stem directly from its de facto acquiescen­ce in his illegal 2014 annexation of Crimea.

Instabilit­y on Europe’s periphery extends to the Balkans amid wellfounde­d fears that Bosnia-Herzegovin­a

is slipping back into conflict 26 years after the Dayton peace accords.

Resurgent ethnic nationalis­m, embodied by the separatist Bosnian Serb leader, Milorad Dodik, is fuelled by Belgrade and Moscow. A larger, strategic problem is the EU’s inability to fulfil promises of closer integratio­n with the region.

Europe’s relationsh­ip with Turkey, a key gatekeeper, is dysfunctio­nal, too, thanks partly to Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, its deeply unpleasant president. When he menaced EU members Greece and Cyprus last year, Macron sent naval forces to the eastern Mediterran­ean. The rest of Europe sat on its hands.

Erdoğan is also meddling in Ukraine and the Azerbaijan-Armenia conflict, which flared up again last week. Yet Brussels pays him to keep out Middle Eastern refugees, so it hardly dares challenge him.

The vice-like circle of instabilit­y squeezing Europe is about more than actual or potential armed conflict. One of its bigger dilemmas is migration.

Despite the searing 2015 Syrian refugee crisis, the EU still lacks an agreed, humane policy. That guarantees more trouble down the road. One of the main objectors, ironically, is Poland, which rejects migrant quotas. Yet faced by border mayhem, its hypocritic­al rightwing leaders who, like Hungary’s Viktor Orbán, are in a bitter fight with Brussels over rule of law and democracy issues, appealed for EU solidarity.

Disturbing, too, is the way much European opinion appears to have accepted illegal pushbacks and routine mistreatme­nt of asylum-seekers, whether in camps in Libya or on the beaches of Greece, in breach of EU law. This reflects another self-inflicted wound: the increased influence of xenophobic, rightwing populists and the re-normalisat­ion of circa 1914 ultranatio­nalist politics across Europe.

If Europeans will not stand up for western democratic values in a world overrun by Donald Trump clones and copycats, who will? Sadly, they cannot look to Britain. No longer a trusted friend, the UK under Boris Johnson, sniping and sneering from the sidelines, has become another peripheral conflict zone for the EU. Britain is more irritant than ally.

Defence minister Ben Wallace used the linked Belarus-Ukraine crises last week to advance the Brexit agenda and seal arms deals with Warsaw and Kiev. Tellingly, the UK sent troops, not humanitari­an aid, to the Polish border.

Europe’s age of instabilit­y also owes much to events beyond its control. Few forecast Trump would try to blow up what Franklin D Roosevelt called the “arsenal of democracy”, and the western alliance with it. He may yet try again.

Likewise, few predicted, as Merkel now admits, that China would emerge as such a domineerin­g, economical­ly aggressive, anti-democratic global competitor.

US president Joe Biden reassures Europeans that Nato, even after Afghanista­n, is as vital as ever. But his edgy video summit with China’s Xi Jinping last week showed where his true focus lies.

Putin sees this, and smells blood. Europe’s gas supply is one pressure point. Covert cyber-attacks are another. Russia’s reckless anti-satellite missile test, scorning European safety concerns, was the first recorded act of hooliganis­m in outer space.

Europe’s inability to make Putin pay a serious price for aggression in Georgia and Crimea, his decimation of Russian democracy, his foreign election meddling, and his murderous attacks on Alexei Navalny – and other opponents on European soil – heightens a sense of decline.

On China, there is nothing close to a united front. Such weakness encourages other predators. So what is to be done?

Europe, as ever, is a house divided. East Europeans continue to place their faith in Washington rather than Brussels, despite clear portents of another transatlan­tic rupture if the Democrats lose the White House in 2024.

The EU bureaucrac­y is feebly led, its parliament toothless. Germany lacks a proven leader. In France, Macron faces a vicious spring election scrap against the Russian-backed far right.

Yet it is Macron’s ideas about enhanced European political, security and military “strategic autonomy”, and a stronger, more fiscally and economical­ly integrated EU, that offer the most hopeful path forward.

EU defence ministers last week discussed a “Strategic Compass” plan to boost joint capabiliti­es. But agreement on proposed “rapid-deployment forces” and the like seems a long way off.

As France prepares to assume the EU presidency, will other leaders recognise this critical moment and back Macron? In a world of sharks, snakes and scary monsters, Europe’s independen­ce, cohesion and values are on the line like never before.

If Europeans will not stand up for western democratic values in a world overrun by Donald Trump clones, who will?

 ?? Photograph: Thibault Camus/EPA ?? French president Emmanuel Macron understand­s the threats Europe faces.
Photograph: Thibault Camus/EPA French president Emmanuel Macron understand­s the threats Europe faces.

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