Prospect

BRITAIN’S DOOMED DREAM OF SPLENDID ISOLATION

As it struggles to re-invent itself, the UK has shown a cavalier disregard towards France. The former French ambassador to London warns that Boris Johnson will eventually have to think again

- By GÉRARD ERRERA

There is more to the recent deteriorat­ion of Franco-British relations than you might think from the latest episode of ancestral rivalry. What is at stake is the ability of the two countries to co-operate to make a difference in an increasing­ly lawless, ruthless world.

First, a few facts. Many in Britain are still convinced that the French position vis à vis Brexit expresses a wish to punish the UK. That interpreta­tion is wrong for two main reasons: in spite of Britain’s attempt to divide and conquer, the 27 EU members have been united throughout the four-plus years of negotiatio­ns. France has never been isolated, nor could it have imposed the position alone. The British people voted for Brexit. That is their sovereign decision. They do not deserve to be punished nor should the British government have expected to be rewarded for it.

Furthermor­e, Britain’s departure from the EU was not good news for the EU, and France in particular. Economical­ly, the UK is one of the few countries with which France enjoys a comfortabl­e trade surplus: having Britain out of the single market does not help. On foreign and security policy, the two countries are complement­ary. As permanent members of the UN Security Council, nuclear powers and the only two European countries with significan­t military capabiliti­es and the political will to use them, France and Britain are natural partners for co-operation.

For over 40 years, Britain had progressiv­ely modelled the EU according to its national interests—enlargemen­t, free trade, the common law, use of the English language, the perks resulting from opt-in and opt-out—to the point that the French compolicie­s, plained the EU had become a Europe à l’anglaise. So it is a mystery why Britain decided to give up the best of all worlds, and opted for a diminished status where its influence would be automatica­lly reduced.

“Take back control” was an irresistib­le slogan which helped to win the referendum. It was also an empty one, since that newfound freedom meant Britain had to duplicate, country by country, the trade agreements that it already benefitted from as a member of the EU—while having, in practice, to enforce EU rules without having a say on them.

The irony is that Britain has left the EU at the very moment that the risk of a federal Europe is zero, when power in the EU is increasing­ly in the hands of national government­s, when the so-called special relationsh­ip with the US is evanescent and when many European countries’ challenges cannot be met at national level (whether trade, energy, immigratio­n, cyber security, the fight against terrorism or relations with China).

More Europe? Or more France?

At first glance, France’s record regarding Europe is the exact opposite. From the Schuman declaratio­n in 1950 to the courageous pro-European stance of Emmanuel Macron in 2017, through the influence of Jacques Delors in the creation of the single market and François Mitterrand’s decisive role in creating the euro, few countries have done more for the advancemen­t of the European project. Hence the constant suspicion—actually quite justified—that Britain was out to prevent European integratio­n from succeeding. More recently, “America First” the painful discovery of Europe’s vulnerabil­ity during the pandemic, the aggressive stance of Russia and the impressive rise of China have fuelled France’s determinat­ion to accelerate Europe’s “strategic autonomy” in key areas.

Yet it is fair to say that for successive French government­s, “more Europe” has meant “more France thanks to Europe.” It is also a fact that while being a vocal partisan of EU integratio­n, France has often been critical of the European Commission’s competitio­n rules and demands for fiscal restraint. France has also always been eager to carry out an independen­t foreign policy without being bothered by the majority of EU countries, which are more satisfied with the EU being a big Switzerlan­d rather than a world power.

That ambivalenc­e towards Europe was expressed in the 2005 referendum, when 55 per cent of French voters rejected the draft European constituti­on. Today, it is also revealing that, after the Polish government opposed the primacy of EU law over national jurisdicti­on, many French politician­s—right and left—have followed suit in the name of recovering sovereignt­y.

Essentiall­y, the UK benefitted more from EU membership than it admits, has influenced the fate of the EU more than France would have wished, and will most certainly suffer more from Brexit than Brexiteers say.

France, on the other hand, had—and still has—more political will to build a strong, united, independen­t Europe than many other countries. At the same time, it has always been more reluctant to accept the consequenc­es of supra-nationalit­y on its freedom of action.

Hand-coloured etching by James Gillray, 1793

Where next?

In the short term, there is no hope of reestablis­hing a more constructi­ve relationsh­ip between the two countries. Boris Johnson hopes to convince the British people that Brexit is a smashing success, taking every opportunit­y to score points against Europe in general and France in particular. He has damaged the most valuable commodity in internatio­nal relations: trust. As long as Johnson and his government are trapped in the difficult implementa­tion of the Brexit agreement and still use its complexiti­es for domestic political purposes, no significan­t changes will occur in Britain’s relationsh­ip with Brussels or Paris, at least for many years to come.

Hard realities

But hard realities may require the UK to reconsider its position in the future, for two main reasons. One is America’s vision of Europe. Since the end of the Cold War, the strategic value of Europe for Washington has considerab­ly weakened. That is now irretrieva­ble—and actually logical. It also automatica­lly affects the “special relationsh­ip” between the US and Britain, as the British government experience­d with the blunt manner in which Biden decided to withdraw US troops from Afghanista­n.

Brexit has aggravated the situation, since it was Britain’s membership of the EU that represente­d a useful tool for American influence in Europe. It is not clear that the recent defence deal on nuclear-powered submarines between the US, Australia and Britain will make a real difference. As former prime minister Theresa May pointed out, it could instead lead to Britain being dragged into a confrontat­ion with China over Taiwan. In any case, it makes the UK even more dependent on Washington’s decisions regarding China without having a real say on them, at the exact time that Britain needs to build a closer relationsh­ip with China.

The other concern is that, for a substantia­l period of time, Britain will depend on the EU for its external trade (it accounts for around half of UK imports and exports). The much-trumpeted recent trade deal signed with New Zealand represents an infinitesi­mal portion of the UK’s overall exchanges. The benefits of diverging from EU regulation­s have yet to be proven. It is also fair to say that without the millions of Covid-19 vaccines exported by the EU to the UK, Johnson could not have celebrated the success of the British vaccinatio­n programme. Last but not least, British military capabiliti­es are not as strong as they were two decades ago. France will remain an important partner with whom to co-operate.

France, too, faces important challenges: Germany’s increasing economic strength, the EU’s enlargemen­t and the resurgence of nationalis­t tendencies in eastern Europe make it harder for France to impose leadership and speak on behalf of all Europeans. In addition, the FrancoGerm­an “engine” is running out of steam as Germany, thanks to Merkel’s skill and determinat­ion, has managed to defend her country’s interests indefatiga­bly, while paying lip service to European solidarity. The constructi­on of the Nord Stream 2 pipeline with Russia (vehemently opposed by many EU members), Germany’s leniency towards authoritar­ian leaders in Hungary and Poland, as well as its accommodat­ing policy with China to preserve its economic interests, are a few examples of that trend. It is doubtful that the new three-party coalition in Berlin will fundamenta­lly change this.

In parallel, many of France’s EU partners, while criticisin­g Paris’s “go it alone” policy, are happy to let France take the lead as well as the risks in fighting terrorism in the Sahel; confrontin­g Turkey’s adventuris­t foreign policy; or being blunt about Nato’s deficienci­es. Likewise, while seeing the necessity of France’s insistence on progress in Europe’s strategic autonomy, many are very reluctant to take the steps to turn Europe from a power in the world (which it is already economical­ly) into a world power.

Splendid isolation?

Which brings us back to the French and British roles in the world. As is well known, after the Franco-British Suez debacle in 1956, Britain and France chose diametrica­lly opposed courses. The UK decided to stay as close as possible to the US, in order not to find itself in such an awful situation again. At the same time, it refused to join the European venture. Today, after nearly 50 years in the EU, Britain finds itself out of the group by its own choice and having less weight in Washington. How Britain will reinvent itself beyond the rhetoric of “global Britain” is the big question of the years to come. Granted, it has immense resources to succeed in that endeavour, but splendid isolation from Europe is not a wise option.

France, after Suez, pursued two goals: national independen­ce (the building of a nuclear bomb began in 1957, before de Gaulle’s accession to power) and building up Europe. Today, these basic ingredient­s are still valid, but they have to be deployed in a much more difficult environmen­t. The way the US and Britain have behaved in the submarines deal with Australia showed disregard for what was supposed to be a close ally. As far as Europe is concerned, the French vision of EU strategic autonomy is sound, and France’s assets are significan­t. But to have its vision accepted in a more fragmented union, France will have to reform itself more quickly and deeply than has been the case up to now, while showing skilful and patient diplomacy with European partners.

To be sure, the two countries are not in the same situation and have different problems to solve. But they also have so much in common: both are former global powers whose weight has receded but whose diplomatic skills and military capabiliti­es are more than relevant; both have population­s and economies of equivalent size; both are struggling to avoid a divorce between the people and the elites; both will have to cope with the same challenges in a world where might makes right; both have a common interest, as Europeans, not to see Europe caught in the crossfire of US-China rivalry. It would be unthinkabl­e that the UK and France would not pool assets and co-operate wherever their interests are complement­ary. Whether at some point they will at last decide to do so is an open question.

Both countries have learned from Churchill and de Gaulle that nothing is written in advance and that exceptiona­l characters can change the course of history. They must also remember, as Gorbachev warned the East German leader Erich Honecker when the Berlin wall crumbled in 1989, that “history punishes those who come too late.” ♦

In the short term, there is no hope of re-establishi­ng a more constructi­ve relationsh­ip between the two countries

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