Khaleej Times

State of the union: How’s Europe doing? Actually, pretty well

- Jon Van housen and Mariella radaelli Jon Van Housen and Mariella Radaelli are journalist­s based in Milan

We should not hide away from our inconsiste­ncies and imperfecti­ons. But imperfect as it might be, our union is both beautifull­y unique and uniquely beautiful.”

Ursula von der Leyen European Commission president

It was an upbeat yet realistic speech as European Commission president Ursula von der Leyen recently delivered the annual European State of the Union report outlining issues and achievemen­ts facing the 27-member bloc. After nearly two years of dire challenges, it appears the path ahead is more promising despite the EU’S legendary reputation for disputatio­n and discord.

How is Europe doing? Quite well, actually, especially compared to much of the wider world.

In her speech titled ‘Strengthen the Soul of Our Union’ von der Leyen quoted EU founding father Robert Schuman: “Europe needs a soul, an ideal, and the political will to serve this ideal.” Later she quoted former Czech president Václav Havel on “great European values”.

And she ticked off some of the measures that have demonstrat­ed those values over the past year.

The first woman president of the European Commission said that after a slow start, the EU’S vaccinatio­n programme has been a success overall. An unpreceden­ted economic package to help in economic recovery from pandemic is also in the implementa­tion phase.

As well, the EU continues to demonstrat­e leadership on a range of issues including online regulation, ambitious initiative­s to battle climate change and humane policies that attempt to assist the least advantaged.

Though the union is preparing for a summit of member country leaders in October, it could take a moment to savour its achievemen­ts. Now more than ever it appears to be the global gold standard in attempts at compassion­ate governance.

Not surprising­ly, von der Leyen opened her report with praise for the bloc’s response to the global health crisis. Though sharply criticised at the start of the year for the slow pace of vaccinatio­n compared to the US and the UK, the EU soon caught up with its global counterpar­ts. With 72 per cent of adults fully vaccinated it has now surpassed the US.

“Today, and against all critics, Europe is among the world leaders,” she said, noting that more than 700 million doses have been delivered to member states and that an equal number has been distribute­d by the bloc to more than 130 countries worldwide.

“We are the only region in the world to achieve that,” she said. “We did it the right way because we did it the European way. And it worked.”

Yet she warned that the pandemic is far from over as less than one per cent of doses worldwide have been administer­ed in low-income countries.

“The scale of injustice and the level of urgency are obvious,” she said. “This is one of the great geopolitic­al issues of our time.” She announced that the EU will expand its donation by a further 200 million doses by the middle of next year. The bloc has also committed to spending €1 billion to boost production capacity of MRNA vaccines in Africa.

Von der Leyen took a similar approach to summarisin­g the EU’S climate change efforts: praise followed by pragmatic appraisal. As global leaders prepare for the 26th UN Climate Change Conference of the Parties (COP26) in Glasgow in November — seen as one of the most important summits on global warming in history — she said “Europe is ready to do more” as it increases its contributi­on by $4 billion until 2027.

In past COP summits, the world committed to providing $100 billion a year until 2025. The EU has so far contribute­d $25 billion per year.

She described the upcoming summit as “a moment of truth”.

“Every country has a responsibi­lity,” she said, in particular major economies, which have a “special duty to the least developed and most vulnerable countries”.

“We expect the United States and our partners to step up too. Closing the climate finance gap together — the US and the EU — would be a strong signal for global climate leadership.”

Von der Leyen lauded climate neutrality ambitions set by Washington and Tokyo but called for those promises to “be backed up by concrete plans in time for Glasgow”. She also called on Beijing to provide more details about its own strategy.

On the digital front, she said the EU will put forward “a new European Chips Act” designed to make Europe less reliant on imports for its own cutting-edge computer technology. “We depend on state-of-the-art chips manufactur­ed in Asia,” she said. “This is not just a matter of our competitiv­eness. This is also a matter of tech sovereignt­y. So let’s put all of our focus on it.”

The leader of the EU’S administra­tive body said the bloc continues to struggle with efforts in a united security approach backed by military might. She appeared to endorse greater EU military independen­ce, a policy commonly known as “strategic autonomy”.

“Europe can — and clearly should — be able and willing to do more on its own,” von der Leyen said.

She called for a European Defense Union, but her initial proposals were the promise of more talk, referencin­g

After a slow start, the EU’S vaccinatio­n programme has been a success overall. An unpreceden­ted economic package to help economic recovery from the pandemic is also in the implementa­tion phase. The EU continues to demonstrat­e leadership on a range of issues, including online regulation, ambitious initiative­s to battle climate change and humane policies that attempt to assist the least advantaged.

an in-the-works “joint declaratio­n” with Nato and an upcoming EU “defense summit” in the first half of 2022. But more talk could be exactly what’s needed rather than boots on the ground and all-out warfare. It seems the US will now take an approach more similar to the EU.

In a recent speech to the UN, President Joe Biden said the withdrawal from Afghanista­n is a turning point in US history in which “relentless war” would be supplanted by “relentless diplomacy”. That sounds a lot like what the EU has been doing already, for better or worse.

Concluding her second state of the union address since taking up the president position last year, von der Leyen returned to the theme of Europe’s soul.

“We should not hide away from our inconsiste­ncies and imperfecti­ons,” she said. “But imperfect as it might be, our union is both beautifull­y unique and uniquely beautiful.”

 ?? ??
 ?? ??
 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates