Khaleej Times

Europe’s big three still pack a punch

- Volker PertheS —Project Syndicate. Volker Perthes is Chairman and Director of the German Institute for Internatio­nal and Security Affairs, Berlin

Despite the tensions generated by Brexit, the leaders of France, Germany, and the United Kingdom have stood together in disputes between the European Union and the United States. If their unity can be sustained, Europe’s “big three” (E3) will serve the EU very well in a tumultuous future. French President Emmanuel Macron, German Chancellor Angela Merkel, and UK Prime Minister Theresa May seem to have read from the same script regarding US President Donald Trump’s withdrawal from the Iran nuclear deal and his rejection of the final communiqué of the G7 summit in June. They all disapprove of Trump’s decisions to move the US embassy in Israel to Jerusalem and to withdraw the US from the United Nations Human Rights Council. And they have all criticized his escalating trade war with China.

This unity is not merely rhetorical. The UK has lately supported EU integratio­n projects concerning foreign and security policy – much more so than before the Brexit referendum. This includes the decision to establish new headquarte­rs for military training missions – which many view as the nucleus for a potential European military – in Africa. Britain had long resisted this initiative.

The catalyst for the UK’s change of course, it seems, is Trump. There is significan­t evidence suggesting that Trump views the EU and some of its member states as adversarie­s, rather than allies. While the US will remain the most important ally of the EU and NATO’s European members, it is no longer the most reliable one. This shift has dashed hopes in the UK that post-Brexit Britain would be able to capitalize on its “special relationsh­ip” with the US, and it has highlighte­d for the EU the urgency of increasing its own strategic autonomy. While the North Atlantic alliance will remain critical to European security, the EU now seeks to build the capacity to define its own strategic priorities and, if needed, act upon them, whether alone or with partners. Achieving this objective, defined in the EU’s 2016 “Global Strategy,” will be much easier with the UK on board. The fact is that the EU and the UK have more internatio­nal clout together than separately. The UK has significan­t diplomatic experience, internatio­nal influence, and military and economic resources that can be brought to bear on joint ventures, just as the EU’s backing can provide a major boost to UK policies on the world stage. This applies to démarches regarding major actors like China or Russia, sanctions regimes, internatio­nal agreements, and strategic programs like Galileo, the European satellite navigation system.

How exactly a post-Brexit UK can be institutio­nally associated with common EU decisions on foreign policy, security, and defense will have to be determined in the exit agreement. But it is possible to create a format that gives the UK a voice, not a veto. In the meantime, no decisions should be taken that would prevent or undermine the UK’s postBrexit coordinati­on with EU foreign-policy positions, actions, and instrument­s. Moreover, steps can and should be taken today to strengthen ties between the EU and the UK.

Here, collaborat­ion among the E3, in particular, is crucial. The E3 has already proved its potential. It initiated negotiatio­ns with Iran over its nuclear program as early as 2003, and became the nucleus of the E3-plus-3 (China, Russia, and the US), which – along with the European Union – concluded the Joint Comprehens­ive Plan of Action (JCPOA) with Iran in 2015.

In the wake of Trump’s decision to withdraw the US from the JCPOA, the E3 – together with the EU’s High Representa­tive for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy – will prove integral to saving it, and to developing more wide-ranging solutions for dealing with Iran. But the E3 has an important role to play in other areas, too, including the conflicts in Syria and Yemen, the ongoing Israel-Palestine dispute, instabilit­y in North Africa, and maritime security in the Mediterran­ean, the Indian Ocean, and the South China Sea. Depending on the issue, other relevant EU member states – such as Italy, Poland, or Spain – will have to join the E3 in developing policies or negotiatin­g agreements. E3 initiative­s should always be coordinate­d with the EU’s high representa­tive, in order to take full advantage of the bloc’s legitimacy and resources.

More frequent and visible strategic coordinati­on among the E3 would support the ability of the EU and the UK to reap the benefits of mutual cooperatio­n. Whether the EU likes it or not, a credible joint initiative by France, Germany, and the UK would have a greater impact on the likes of Iran, Russia, China, or even the US than a common EU position emanating from a debate in the EU’s Political and Security Committee. Fostering deeper E3 collaborat­ion, of the kind that has been seen recently, must remain at the top of the EU’s foreign-policy agenda before and after Brexit.

The fact that France, Germany, and the UK will all be members of the UN Security Council for the 2019-2020 period – France and the UK as permanent members, and Germany as an elected member – will add heft to cooperativ­e action among them. Moreover, close collaborat­ion within the Security Council could help to structure EUUK foreign-policy coordinati­on in the immediate post-Brexit transition period.

France, Germany, and the UK will all be members of the UN Security Council in 2019-2020 — France and the UK as permanent members, and Germany as an elected member

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