Bangkok Post

After post-Brexit blues, Europe leaders walk tall again

- ANDREW HAMMOND

These are unexpected­ly good times for the European Union (EU). More than a year after Britons voted to withdraw from the organisati­on, the euro has hit eight-year highs against the pound, eurozone economies have recorded improved growth and voters have rejected far-right populists in France and Holland.

European leaders have been quick to respond. Just months after European Council President Donald Tusk’s February warning that the threats facing the EU were “more dangerous than ever” and that it had to tackle challenges “which have previously not occurred”, Italy’s Europe Minister Sandro Gozi announced in May the union was entering “a new phase”.

That phase is about more than the positive economic news or the election victories of French and Dutch centrists Emmanuel Macron and Mark Rutte. It’s also about an integratio­n agenda framed around defence and security. With Britain preparing for Brexit, remaining European leaders are finding growing consensus over measures to enhance security and border protection and share intelligen­ce. For Brussels, this includes an opportunit­y to accelerate plans for greater military cooperatio­n between EU member states.

The leaders’ agenda is fueled by militant attacks on civilians like those in Barcelona; the ongoing pressure of migration and the launch last year by High Representa­tive of the EU for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy, Federica Mogherini, of a new global strategy on foreign and security policy.

Adding to this is Europe’s fear of Russian assertiven­ess after its annexation of Crimea and concern about US President Donald Trump’s uncertain commitment to Nato after his complaints that Washington is paying a disproport­ionately high amount.

Britain had traditiona­lly been opposed to greater defence collaborat­ion on the continent because it feared it would weaken national sovereignt­y and potentiall­y undermine Nato. Now the UK’s planned departure from the EU could bring those like European Commission President JeanClaude Juncker and German Defence Minister Ursula von der Leyen closer to their goal of forming a European army.

Of course, other obstacles to integratio­n still exist. Mr Macron’s ability to keep his promises about reshaping a post-Brexit Europe into a more viable union may be threatened by his loss of popularity among French voters. The challenges of Europe’s migration crisis and the increasing assertiven­ess of Russia also remain.

Nonetheles­s, a growing number of European leaders clearly believe the most recent euroscepti­c wave has passed its peak. Many on the continent are uniting against Brexit and Mr Trump’s undiplomat­ic rhetoric in support for it. Mr Juncker has told the US president he “should stop wishing for others to imitate the British” and a Pew Research Center poll found support for the Brussels-based organisati­on has risen across much of the continent in the last year, including by 18 percentage points in both Germany and France.

The latest round of Brexit negotiatio­ns may not have gone as well as Europe’s chief negotiator Michel Barnier would have liked, but it’s no wonder that European politician­s now have a new spring in their step.

Andrew Hammond is an Associate at LSE IDEAS at the London School of Economics.

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