Arab News

The end of a loveless marriage

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LONDON: Britain’s relationsh­ip with the EU was always an awkward marriage of convenienc­e rather than a case of love at first sight.

And after 44 years — during which trade ties always took precedence for Britain over closer integratio­n — London has filed for divorce.

Anand Menon, a professor of European politics at King’s College London university, said the relationsh­ip was always “transactio­nal” and therefore the break-up is “pretty logical.”

“It’s been a utilitaria­n relationsh­ip since 1973 and the emphasis was always on the economic dimension, not on the political one,” said Pauline Schnapper, professor of contempora­ry British history at the Sorbonne University in Paris.

“The sentimenta­l dimension is near non-existent,” she said.

The path toward today’s EU began after World War II as the shattered continent tried to rebuild and deepen integratio­n as a way of bolstering the peace. The project did not immediatel­y appeal to Britain.

“I think we didn’t feel vulnerable enough to join, quite simply,” Menon said.

Britain preferred to focus on its special relationsh­ip with the US and the remains of its empire.

London neverthele­ss supported the push for closer integratio­n on the European continent: Wartime Prime Minister Winston Churchill called for the creation of a “United States of Europe” in a 1946 Zurich speech.

But in the early 1960s, Britain’s fortunes changed for the worse.

Its economic growth started lagging behind that of France and Germany, making the European single market on its doorstep seem an appealing option.

Britain on Wednesday began what is expected to be two years of difficult divorce negotiatio­ns with a formal notificati­on by letter to EU President Donald Tusk.

Joining the European fray in the first place was not an easy task.

In 1961, France’s then-President Charles de Gaulle vetoed Britain’s first applicatio­n, seeing it as a “Trojan Horse” for the US and doubting Britain’s European spirit.

Another French veto followed in 1967 and the UK was only finally welcomed into the European Economic Community (EEC) in 1973.

Unfortunat­ely for Britain, the first oil crisis struck that same year and so the much-hoped-for economic boost failed to materializ­e.

Neverthele­ss, 67 percent of the British people voted to remain in the EEC in a 1975 referendum.

“The fact that we joined late is one of the reasons there are suspicions because obviously there is a sense that we joined a club that others had set up to suit themselves,” Menon said.

Britain and the EEC soon locked horns and London began opting out of the major attempts to step up European integratio­n.

In 1979, London refused to participat­e in the European monetary system, defending its national and fiscal sovereignt­y.

Six years later, it refused to ratify the Schengen Agreement — abolishing internal border checks — and in 1993, it opted out of the European single currency.

Britain’s anti- federalist approach was spelled out by Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher during a 1988 speech at the College of Europe in Bruges.

In it, she rejected the idea of a “European super-state exercising a new dominance from Brussels.”

Conservati­ve MP Bill Cash, a prominent euroskepti­c, said earlier this month of the Brexit trigger: “This is a historic moment for which I and my colleagues have fought for 30 years. This is the moment.”

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