Europe weighs freedom against security
Berlin attack fuels conservative calls for tighter borders
PARIS — Europe’s open borders symbolize liberty and forward thinking for many residents — but they increasingly look like the continent’s Achilles’ heel.
Europe’s No. 1 terrorism suspect crossed at least two borders this week despite an international manhunt, and was felled only by chance, in a random ID check in a Milan suburb. The bungled chase for Berlin market attack suspect Anis Amri is just one example of recent crossborder security failures that are emboldening nationalists fed up with European unity. Extremist violence, they argue, is too high a price to pay for the freedom to travel easily.
Defenders of the EU’s borderfree zone say the security failures show the need for more cooperation among European governments, even shared militaries — not new barriers.
But their arguments are easily drowned out by the likes of farright leader Marine Le Pen, who is hoping to win France’s presidency in May.
“The myth of total free movement in Europe, which my rivals are clinging to in this presidential election, should be definitively buried. Our security depends on it,” she said in a statement Friday, calling Europe’s free-travel zone a “total security catastrophe.”
That poses a dilemma for European Union devotees like German Chancellor Angela Merkel, facing a re-election battle next year
Merkel’s defense of the EU, and the welcoming hand she extended to Syrian war refugees, were once seen as assets, signs of her moral authority. Today, with anti-immigrant, anti-establishment sentiment rising across Europe, they are threatening to become liabilities.
Millions of people cross borders in the 26-country Schengen travel zone every day, thanks to a 31-year-old system encompassing nearly 400 million people that has dramatically boosted trade and job prospects across the world’s largest collective economy.
Berlin truck attacker Amri is a painful example of how Islamic extremists have used Europe’s open borders to attack the principles of tolerance they’re meant to epitomize.
After migrating illegally from Tunisia in 2011, he was imprisoned for burning down a migrant detention center in Italy. When freed, attempts to deport him to Tunisia failed for bureaucratic reasons. He subsequently traveled to Switzerland and then Germany, where he apparently fell under the influence of a radical network accused of recruiting for the Islamic State group.
Although Germany rejected his asylum application last summer and flagged him as a potential terror threat, authorities patiently waited for Tunisia to produce the required paperwork before deporting him.
And just as the deportation was being finalized Monday, Amri is believed to have hijacked a truck and rammed it into holiday crowds at a Berlin Christmas market, killing 12 and wounding dozens.
He evaded an international manhunt for more than three days, slipping apparently into France — possibly with a pistol in his pocket — and then Italy before stumbling into a standard ID check in suburban Milan, where he died in a police shootout.
Germany, France and Italy have failed to explain how he escaped the dragnet.
“Movement from one country to another in Europe is easy, especially for someone like Anis Amri, who had lived in Europe for several years” and knew which borders were easier to cross, said Tunisian Foreign Ministry spokesman Bouraoui Limam.
France is especially embarrassed.
France’s far right and the conservative opposition have assailed the Socialist government as lax.
Security and migration will be central issues in elections in the coming year in Germany, France and the Netherlands — all founding nations of the EU. And related fears could be key to fueling opposition calls for an early election in Italy after its recent political crisis.
The leader of Italy’s anti-migrant Northern League, Matteo Salvini, called Saturday for closing and reinforcing Europe’s borders after the latest terror attack.
“I don’t want another two or three massacres before Europe wakes up,” Salvini said.
Le Pen’s far-right National Front party wants to retrench rather than reach out, to “give France back full control over its sovereignty.”
As Europeans head home for the holidays, many crossing multiple borders on the way without showing a single passport. or changing any currency, people are asking themselves: Is it all worth it?