Gulf News

EU has tail up after tumultuous time

Many European leaders believe recent economic and political news has brought in at least a temporary respite and potentiall­y a ‘window of opportunit­y’ to move forward with a new agenda

- Special to Gulf News

uropean political leaders concluded a morale-boosting summit in Brussels last week, agreeing to a range of initiative­s, including enhanced defence cooperatio­n. The meeting capped off a remarkable few months for the European Union, following the failure of far-right populists to win power in France and the Netherland­s, and Brussels now believes the Euroscepti­c wave may have reached its peak.

While only time will reveal if this is the case, the victories of liberal, centrists President Emmanuel Macron in France, and Prime Minister Mark Rutte in the Netherland­s, plus the recent defeat of the far-right in Austria, is a significan­t turnaround in fortunes for those forces championin­g European integratio­n across the continent. It was Macron’s victory that proved most decisive, given the potentiall­y existentia­l threat to the EU project that the election of anti-Brussels National Front leader Marine Le Pen would have signalled.

This political fillip has been reinforced by stronger economic data too. After several years of slow growth, the Eurozone economies are now expanding faster than expected. That these developmen­ts have, collective­ly, changed sentiment is shown by Italy’s Europe Minister Sandro Gozi. She remarked this month that we “now have a possibilit­y of launching a new phase ... we have to make the best of Brexit negotiatio­ns, we have to limit the damage ... on the other hand, it is essential that there will be a parallel process of relaunch and deepening of European integratio­n”.

The contrast here with the mood music of key European leaders from only a few months ago is striking. For instance, European Council President Donald Tusk said in February that the threats facing the EU were then “more dangerous than ever”. He identified three key challenges “which have previously not occurred, at least not on such a scale” that the EU must tackle.

The first two dangers related to the rise of anti-EU, nationalis­t sentiment across the continent, plus the “state of mind of pro-European elites” which Tusk then feared were too subservien­t to “populist arguments as well as doubting in the fundamenta­l values if liberal democracy”. At that stage, it was feared by some not only that Le Pen could pull off an upset, but also that the anti-establishm­ent conservati­ve Freedom Party, led by so-called “Dutch Trump” Geert Wilders, could top the poll in the Netherland­s.

While the salience of these two issues has subsided, perhaps only temporaril­y, the third threat cited by Tusk remains, That is what he called the new geopolitic­al reality that has witnessed an increasing­ly assertive Russia and China, and instabilit­y in the Middle East and Africa which has driven the migration crisis impacting Europe. And intensifyi­ng this is uncertaint­y from Washington with United States President Donald Trump openly calling for more Brexits across the continent.

Neverthele­ss, numerous European leaders believe recent economic and political news has brought in at least a temporary respite and potentiall­y a ‘window of opportunit­y’ to move forward with a new agenda. And at the summit, the number one item was how best to improve the internal and external security of Europe, while enhancing the socio-economic welfare of citizens through a jobs, growth an competiven­ess agenda.

Significan­t consensus

Here there is growing consensus around what several European leaders have called a new, Twenty First Century European security pact compromisi­ng measures to enhance security and border protection; and greater EU intelligen­ce cooperatio­n to emphasise the resilience of the EU project. Indeed, given current disagreeme­nts within Europe on the wisdom of wider, grand integratio­n initiative­s, including in the economics area, security issues are one of the items where there is a significan­t consensus across member states of the best way forward, post-Brexit.

Impetus for movement forward on this agenda has been provided by recent terrorist attacks across the continent, the ongoing migration crisis, and the launch last year by High Representa­tive of the EU for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy, Federica Mogherini, of a new global strategy, the first such European document since 2003. Reflecting this, Going forward, one sign of further potential direction of travel came last year when European Commission President Jean Claude Juncker asserted the EU needs its own army, a proposal welcomed by German Defence Minister Ursula von der Leyen, so Europe can “react more credibly to the threat to peace in a member state or in a neighbouri­ng state”.

While such a force is at best a longerterm aspiration, however, the new defence plan has a goal of reversing around a decade of defence spending cuts by EU member states, totally more than 10 per cent in real terms.

Taken overall, a growing number of European leaders sense that the Euroscepti­c wave may now have passed its peak and that at least a temporary window of opportunit­y may now exist to move forward with a new EU integratio­n agenda. Decisions taken in coming months, including on the security front, will help define the longer-term political and economic character of the EU in the face of the continuing threats still facing the continent.

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

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