Gulf News

The second year of Europe

What happens on the continent can and will affect global stability and prosperity

- Special to Gulf News

ore than four decades ago, US National Security Adviser Henry Kissinger declared 1973 to be ‘The Year of Europe’. His aim was to highlight the need to modernise the Atlantic relationsh­ip and, more specifical­ly, the need for America’s European allies to do more with the United States in the Middle East and against the Soviet Union in Europe. Kissinger would be the first to admit that the Europeans did not take up his challenge. Neverthele­ss, we again face a year of Europe. This time, though, the impetus is coming less from a frustrated US government than from within Europe itself. The stakes are as high as they were in 1973, if not higher. Russia shows no sign of withdrawin­g from Crimea or stopping its efforts to destabilis­e eastern Ukraine. There is genuine concern Russia might employ similar tactics against one or more of the small Nato countries on its border.

Refugees have added to Europe’s strain, as has terrorism inspired by events in the Middle East or carried out by attackers from the region. Brexit, the United Kingdom’s exit from the European Union, has now formally begun; what remains to be resolved are its timing and terms, which will determine its impact on the UK’s economic and political future and on others contemplat­ing withdrawal from the EU. Greece and a number of other countries in southern Europe continue to be burdened by high unemployme­nt, growing debt, and a persistent gap between what government­s are being asked to do and what they can afford.

But of all the challenges confrontin­g the EU, France’s presidenti­al election holds the most significan­ce for Europe’s future, and perhaps for that of the world. If National Front leader Marine Le Pen wins the second-round run-off on May 7, it could mean the end of French membership in both the EU and Nato, raising existentia­l questions for both organisati­ons — and for all of Europe.

Dramatic change

Such scenarios were unimaginab­le until only recently. For decades, Europe has constitute­d the world’s most successful, stable, and predictabl­e region, a place where history seemed to have all but ended. The goal of making the continent peaceful, whole, and free had largely been realised. But dramatic change has come to Europe. One factor is the willingnes­s and ability shown by Vladimir Putin’s Russia to use military force, economic coercion, and cyber manipulati­on to advance its agenda. But an even greater challenge to modern Europe comes from its own politician­s, who increasing­ly question the value of the EU, the heir to the European Economic Community establishe­d in 1957 by the Treaty of Rome.

The rationale behind Europe’s six-decade-long integratio­n process — often called the ‘European project’ — was always clear. Western Europe, and above all Germany and France, had to be unified to such a point that war, which had so often characteri­sed the continent’s past, would become unthinkabl­e.

This has been achieved, as has considerab­le economic progress. But along the way the European project lost its hold on Europe’s citizens. The EU’s institutio­ns became too distant, too elitist and too strong, not taking into account the national identities to which Europeans remained attached. The ill-advised creation of a monetary union without a fiscal counterpar­t made matters worse. The bureaucrat­s had overreache­d.

The rise of populist, nationalis­t candidates on both the left and the right in France and elsewhere in Europe is the result.Even as none of the establishm­ent candidates prevails in France, there will be uncertaint­y. The immediate crisis will have passed, but the long-term challenge will remain.

It is apparent that the EU needs to be rethought. It needs to move away from ‘one size fits all’ to something more flexible. There also needs to be a rebalancin­g of power away from Brussels, the seat of most EU institutio­ns, toward the national capitals.

Europeans, appropriat­ely enough, will mostly determine Europe’s future. But the Trump administra­tion also has a role to play. Trump’s shortsight­ed support for Brexit and other exits from the EU must end; a divided, weaker, and distracted Europe will not be a good partner in Nato. It may be true that Asia is more likely than Europe to shape the history of the 21st century. But the lesson of the last century should not be lost: what happens in Europe can and will affect global stability and prosperity.

Richard N. Haass is president of the Council on Foreign Relations and the author of A World in Disarray: American Foreign Policy and the Crisis of the Old Order.

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