National Post (National Edition)

Simmering summer

THE WEST IS A MESS ... BUT THE REAL TROUBLE IS IN EUROPE

- Conrad Black National Post cbletters@gmail.com

UNCERTAINT­Y ABOUT WHO MAY BE GOVERNING IN BERLIN.

It is high summer and vacation time, including for me, as this will be my last column here until Labour Day. It is hard not to wonder what the political geography of the West will be like when we are all back at our workplaces like happy little elves in September. The other Western G7 countries, apart from Canada, are in the midst of fraught political landscapes and events. The cyclonic American President Trump, magnificen­tly disdainful of all opinions except those of his followers in his own country, is enjoying every moment in his great office and tumult more than serenity. The British prime minister, Theresa May, has staked everything on a compromise over Brexit between remain and leave. If her proposal is rejected by the European Union, that will dispose of her as prime minister, but its substantiv­e acceptance will not only strengthen her fragile mandate but open the European horizon by the creation of a two-tiered Europe: a common market for all and political integratio­n for only those countries that wish it. This flexibilit­y of options and more accountabl­e government from Brussels have always been the two missing ingredient­s in a successful European co-operative framework. Unfortunat­ely, Trump may be accurate that there is no middle option between membership in the European Union and complete departure from it. To save Europe from the amputation of the U.K. and incidental­ly the demise of May, the German and French leaders will have to dictate to the dull, authoritar­ian gnomes in Brussels.

The life of the German chancellor is almost as complicate­d as Theresa May’s. In accepting over a million desperate refugees from the Middle East and Africa over the past several years, she has earned the moral homage of all and must surely have gone some distance to expunging whatever remains of the guilt and shame of the German people, which they should logically have long outgrown, for the unspeakabl­e crimes of the Third Reich. It is a magnificen­t humanitari­an feat, but as was foreseen, and was regularly stated, it has rendered the fourterm chancellor’s political position very precarious.

Her coalition could crumble from week-to-week, but is not enduring the hourly state of suspense that May is. Trump rightfully exposed the German chancellor’s hypocrisy this week in spending only one per cent of Germany’s GDP on defence while putting itself in the hands of the Russians for the provision of a large percentage of its energy requiremen­ts. Germany is Europe’s greatest power and the world’s fourthlarg­est economy and should devote at least two per cent of its GDP to defence, and it is scandalous that Chancellor Merkel’s predecesso­r, Gerhard Schroeder, is padding around Europe as an agent of the Kremlin and Russian oligarch-controlled Russian national natural gas monopoly.

Though Trump did not publicly mention this, Merkel has amplified her own problems by buckling to the German Greens and shutting down the German coal- and nuclearpow­ered energy sources, thus strategica­lly submitting mighty Germany to the unlikely mer- cies of the Russian dictator. Vladimir Putin and his cronies are riveted on the backs of shambling Russia, whose GDP is smaller than Canada’s. Trump hit the jackpot with Merkel. Germany owes its growing respect, position in the Western Alliance, the Alliance itself and its reunificat­ion to the United States. For 20 years the German left has threatened to drift into neutrality. It is only the unutilized geopolitic­al potential of Germany that has prevented American leaders from laying out as clearly as Trump now has, the need for Germany to be a wholeheart­ed American ally, or an outright, waffling neutral. Neither Germany nor probably Britain can indefinite­ly suck and blow at the same time.

France’s president, Emmanuel Macron, is secure in his fiveyear mandate, but is the first French leader since Charles de Gaulle to try seriously to rein in the public sector and nationaliz­ed industry unions. He has carried public opinion up to now, but in a tense confrontat­ion, replete with extremely inconvenie­nt demonstrat­ions on the great boulevards of Paris and other French cities, and almost unannounce­d national rail stoppages. Italy is now led by an incomprehe­nsible coalition of the quite far left and populist Five Star party inspired by a disreputab­le and vulgar comedian, and the conservati­ve regional party, the Lombard League, with little in common with its coalition partners. Incredibly, still in the wings and exercising a Mephistoph­elean influence, is the octogenari­an scoundrel billionair­e Silvio Berlusconi. Italy, as always these 2,500 years, is an important country, but one that has been difficult politicall­y to take seriously, other than under the original Caesars and in the Imperial Peace of the second Century AD.

When I return to this place in September there is little doubt that the presidents of the United States and France will still be in place and working on their present challengin­g agendas, and a likelihood that the Italian government will still be toiling at its tasks, but there is some uncertaint­y about who may be governing in Berlin, and considerab­le doubt about the leadership of the British government and its relations with the European Union. In the background at all times is the British alternativ­e — the Labour Party’s Jeremy Corbyn, an outright Marxist, who generally sides with Putin, including on the matter of the attempted murder a few months ago of a former Russian agent and his daughter in England. The elevation of Corbyn would be nothing less than the demise of Britain as a serious country after 500 years as a co-founder of the concept of the nation-state.

This brings us back to Justin Trudeau, one of the principal slackers that Trump denounced at this week’s NATO meetings for failing to pull his weight in the alliance. To Trudeau’s credit, he kept a low profile on that issue and was very unambiguou­s in declining to share the alarm expressed by some of the European NATO leaders about President Trump’s meeting with Russian President Putin on Monday, and said that he considered the meeting was an undoubtedl­y positive developmen­t. We can hope that this heralds an approach to trade discussion­s with the United States in which he and his colleagues put a recognitio­n of the correlatio­n of economic forces between Canada and the United States ahead of the temptation to fill the open domestic political goal with free shots of “not being pushed around” by the U.S.A. That’s a crowdpleas­er but the economic consequenc­es could be disastrous. Routine sanctions such as the U.S. is imposing now can easily be countered by the traditiona­l Canadian expedient of reducing the value of our currency, but inciting Trump to serious interdicti­on of Canadian imports would quickly back into half the homes in Canada. Someone in authority in Ottawa must be aware of that.

When we all return in September, we will be only a year away from our next federal election campaign. If this government manages the American relationsh­ip carefully, and appears actually to be building the Kinder Morgan pipeline (not caving in to every native and environmen­tal complainan­t), and moving to emancipate Alberta from its shameful persecutio­n by Green-socialist British Columbia, aggravated by Ottawa’s purposeles­s perversity on energy matters, the Liberals’ re-election chances, albeit with a much less positive and hopeful climate than in 2015, and perhaps without a majority, will remain fairly good. One or two false steps, and continued excessive preoccupat­ion with gender, eco-wacky, and misdirecte­d Indigenous policies, and Trudeau’s prospects could be as cloudy as Chancellor Merkel’s, though not quite as unsettled as Prime Minister May’s. A pleasant summer to all.

 ?? LEON NEAL / AFP / GETTY IMAGES ?? From left, Slovenia’s Prime Minister Miro Cerar, Britain’s Prime Minister Theresa May, Greece’s Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras, Germany’s Chancellor Angela Merkel and Bulgaria’s Prime Minister Boyko Borissov prepare to take part in the family photo...
LEON NEAL / AFP / GETTY IMAGES From left, Slovenia’s Prime Minister Miro Cerar, Britain’s Prime Minister Theresa May, Greece’s Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras, Germany’s Chancellor Angela Merkel and Bulgaria’s Prime Minister Boyko Borissov prepare to take part in the family photo...
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