axis
Fair Use Notice
  Axis Mission
 About us
  Letters/Articles to Editor
Article Submissions
RSS Feed


Europe: Between Illusion and Reality Printer friendly page Print This
By Tortilla con Sal
teleSUR
Tuesday, Jun 14, 2016

European flags are seen outside the European Commission headquarters in Brussels Sept. 10, 2014. | Photo: Reuters

It is no longer taboo to question the E.U. in its current form, especially after the brutal treatment of Greece.

The launch and development of the European Union has been probably the most elaborate deception in the whole of history. It was projected to be an integration initiative based on the high ideals of Western humanism, aiming to achieve peace and prosperity within Europe and beyond. But that ideal vision was never consistent with the fundamental reality of its origins and development at the service of the geopolitical interests of the United States élites and as a neocolonial response to decolonization.

After 45 years, the demise in 1991 of the Soviet Union reinforced the loyal collusion of the European elites with their U.S. counterparts, prioritizing their interests over those of the peoples of Europe and the rest of the world. Now, after the collapse of the Western financial system between 2007 and 2009, that reality is much clearer than ever before. The EU has followed a pattern of development cut to the measure of its corporate elites and their U.S. partners.

European institutions are deeply anti-democratic, with a parliament decisively weaker than the unelected executive. The European Parliament shares its legislative function with a Council of the European Union whose members by no means represent the majority of their respective countries electorates. That anti-democratic sleight of hand is repeated in the European Council composed of heads of state and government. In Europe most government leaders win elections with the support of a minority of the electorate, sometimes as low as under 25 percent, as was the case with Britain's Tony Blair.

E.U. foreign policy has been characterized by military and economic aggression, unwarranted intervention in the internal affairs of other nations and a fierce defense of its neocolonial power, the rotten fruit of centuries of enslavement and genocide. Just in this 21st Century the E.U. authorities and member governments have attacked Afghanistan, Iraq, Ivory Coast, Libya and Syria. In both Libya and Syria they have deployed élite forces and have armed, trained and supplied terrorist organizations guilty of heinous crimes against humanity.

In Latin America and the Caribbean, E.U. member countries have participated actively in destabilizing Venezuela, collaborated in the illegal U.S. blockade of Cuba and approved the 2004 coup d'etat in Haiti along with its shameful military occupation by U.N. forces working at the behest of the U.S. government. In Palestine, the E.U. and its member countries have collaborated with Israel's slow motion genocide of the Palestinian people. In Ukraine they supported a U.S. right-wing coup d'etat against the elected government carried out by Nazi militias.

Those Nazi militias went on to try and ethnically cleanse Ukraine's Russian speaking population in the country's eastern regions. Against Russia itself, the E.U. has applied economic sanctions to punish Russia's acceptance of the Crimean people's democratic decision to join the Russian Federation, based on the precedent set by the E.U. itself in accepting Kosovo's secession from Serbia. Against Iran, the E.U. applied completely unjust sanctions to weaken the Iranian people in support of the regional agenda of Saudi Arabia's feudal tyranny and Israel's sadistic Zionist government.

This collaboration with U.S. foreign policy is hardly surprising since the E.U. developed from treaties negotiated under pressure from the U.S. government after the end of Word War 2. The NATO military alliance was formed in 1949. The 1951 Treaty of Paris agreed economic cooperation between France, Germany, Holland, Belgium and Luxembourg and from that agreement derived the European Iron and Steel Community consolidating the industries vital for a war economy.

The 1957 Treaty of Rome incorporated Italy into what became the European Economic Community which was basis for the current institutional structure of the European Union. It is completely historically false to paint the European project as a project for peace. It was designed to support U.S. intimidation of the Soviet Union. Throughout its history, the member countries of the European Union have always accepted on their territory large and powerful units of the U.S. armed forces targeting first the Soviet Union and now the Russian Federation.

Right from the start, the focus of a potential war was a nuclear attack. The menace of U.S. aggression intensified in the 1980s with the deployment of U.S. nuclear cruise missiles in Germany and Britain. The menace subsided for a brief period in the 1990s after the demise of the Soviet Union only to once more intensify following Russia's rejection of NATO's bombing campaign against Serbia in 1999. Now, in violation of NATO promises to Russia in the early 1990s, NATO is stationing missile systems right on Russia's borders, dramatically increasing the likelihood of a nuclear war.

The only possible rationale for current European policy towards the Russian Federation is a hopelessly misguided belief that Russia will somehow fold before Western intimidation. The reverse has happened. Russia has for the moment abandoned it's earlier efforts to accommodate with the West and instead is developing a powerful de facto economic and military alliance with China, also a victim of Western menaces. The resulting Eurasian economic bloc stretches from the Western Pacific to Europe.

Unable to compete with this huge economic, political and military power, the anti-democratic European elite's economic response to that reality has once more been to collude with their U.S. corporate allies. Now they are working together to force an abandonment of the Doha Round of trade talks so as to protect their massively subsidized agricultural sector against majority world farmers with whom Western farmers cannot compete. The Western corporate elites are also trying to force through acceptance of the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership, against the interests of their peoples, to protect their corporations against majority world competitors.

Likewise on Climate Change, the E.U. and the U.S. collaborated to rig the Paris Climate Summit so as to avoid all discussion of proposals for climate justice from majority world countries. So now Western countries will continue to contaminate, provoking disastrous temperature increases which will reach between 3 and 5 degrees Celsius, if not more, in much of Africa, Asia, Oceania and Latin America. The Paris COP 21 agreement is above all the continuation by other means of the West's historic war on the majority world and derives ultimately from the E.U.'s origins as a neocolonial structure designed to maintain imperial domination despite decolonization.

With over 500 million people, the E.U. is the third largest political entity by population and by territorial extension it is the seventh largest. Its gross domestic product of over US$16 trillion makes it the second biggest world economy after the United States. Even so, with all those huge resources, in domestic terms, rather than protect the most vulnerable sectors of its people, the E.U. authorities have applied repressive and regressive economic policies provoking high levels of unemployment and deepening poverty especially among women, young people and ethnic minorities.

Unemployment early in 2016 averaged over 10 percent in the E.U. ranging from over 24 percent in Greece to a little over 4 percent in Germany. But, as with the headline figure in the U.S., a more realistic figure is likely to be the equivalent of the U.S. Labor Statistics Bureau U-6 number, usually around 10 percent higher than the headline number. In 2014, seven years after the beginning of the economic crisis, depending on the methodology one uses, between 17 percent and 24 percent of people in the E.U. were at serious risk of poverty or social exclusion and between 10 percent and 16 percent of people in the E.U. were suffering serious deprivation. The E.U. leadership show no sign of being able to correct this damning policy failure.

At a micro-economic level indebtedness continues to plague countries of the E.U. In many countries household debt in relation to GDP in 20013 was higher than in 2008. In France it increased from 75 percent to 83 percent, in Italy from 58 percent to 65 percent, in Holland from 249 percent to 266 percent and in Ireland from 209 percent to 212 percent. Germany and Britain saw a slight reduction. These levels of household debt are due to stagnant incomes which imply a steady, hopeless downward spiral in consumption affecting production and investment. That problem can only be addressed by decisive fiscal measures which the E.U. and its member governments refuse to implement.

At the macroeconomic level, various writers have pointed out that the ratio of government revenue to government debt gives a much more realistic account of a country's economic health than debt to GDP. For Ireland that measure shot up from 187 percent in 2008 to 340 percent in 2012. In that same year the figure for Germany was 181 percent, France 174 percent and Britain 212 percent, higher than other countries, like Hungary, who are perceived to be less stable. High levels of government debt in the E.U. result from deliberate policy spearheaded by the politically driven European Central Bank.

At the behest of the E.U. elites after the 2007-2009 crisis, the ECB rescued the region's delinquent financial institutions and threw the cost onto the region's peoples. That is why economic growth in the E.U. in the decade since 2006 has barely averaged above zero. However, the figures conceal various asset price bubbles that in fact mean the real productive economy has been in recession all that time. In such a depressing context the economic challenge for Europe is not merely how to snap out of recession but how to break the stranglehold its financial sector maintains on political power.

That itself implies the need for a radical change in foreign policy that is simply not going to happen in the foreseeable future. The U.S. will always stymie rapprochement between the E.U. and Russia to the detriment of the interests of Europe's peoples. This economic and foreign policy impasse has resulted in the emergence of radical political movements in Europe both right and left. In Austria on May 22 the extreme right wing candidate Norbert Hofer lost the presidential election by only 31,000 out of over four and a half million votes.

Following the current economic crisis in France, the extreme right wing National Front expects to increase its substantial levels of support from the 28 percent it won in the last municipal elections. In Germany, the extreme right wing Alternative for Germany movement made notable advances in recent regional elections, for example becoming the second force in the important state of Saxony-Anhalt. In Denmark the extreme right wing People's Party formed part of the government after last year's elections winning 21 percent of the vote. In Italy, the third most important party is the amorphous euro-sceptic Five Star movement.

In the so-called Brexit referendum in Britain on June 23, it is very possible people will vote for Britain to leave the E.U. In Spain the progressive Unidos Podemos electoral alliance, highly critical of current E.U. economic policy, may well form part of the government following Spain's national elections on June 26. In Greece and Portugal it is no longer taboo to question the E.U. in its current form, especially after the brutal treatment of Greece and its people by Germany and the European Central Bank. All of these political developments show that the EU faces a strong crisis of acceptance among much of its people.

The crisis has been exacerbated by the E.U.'s cynical response to mass migration of refugees from North Africa and Syria. The E.U. encouraged the Turkish government's support for terrorist extremists to destroy Syria. That policy resulted in around 2 million Syrian refugees moving to Turkey where President Erdogan last year encouraged them to migrate to Europe. In effect. President Erdogan was saying to the E.U. that if they want to generate a humanitarian crisis by supporting his terrorist war on Syria then they should help pay the costs of that crisis. So last March the E.U. and Turkey signed an agreement whereby hundreds of thousands of refugees will be sent back to Turkey in clear violation of their rights under international humanitarian law .

The E.U. will fund an economic package to help Turkey pay the costs of receiving those refugees. The E.U. also agreed to speed up consideration of Turkey's request to join the E.U., something unlikely ever to happen given European Islamophobia. The E.U.'s response to the refugee crisis it provoked is another example of an irrational policy agenda making progress on other fronts, especially economic recovery in the short term, very improbable. All this context has laid bare self-evident contradictions within individual E.U. member countries and in the wider E.U. as well, very much derived from the logic of the E.U.'s origins as a U.S. project to menace the Soviet Union and as an imperialist response to decolonization.

The reality is that, along with the U.S., the E.U. is condemned to chronic insecurity and relative decline against a majority world, led by China and Russia, determined to realize its potential, stolen over centuries by the Western elites. The only rational option for the peoples of the E.U. to achieve a sustainable resolution of their many problems is to finally give up their imperial nostalgia and treat their former colonies as equals. That kind of realism is still extremely distant from current official E.U. thinking, despite all the smarmy rhetoric and the redundant performances of Beethoven's Ode to Joy.


Source URL


Printer friendly page Print This
If you appreciated this article, please consider making a donation to Axis of Logic. We do not use commercial advertising or corporate funding. We depend solely upon you, the reader, to continue providing quality news and opinion on world affairs.Donate here




World News
AxisofLogic.com© 2003-2015
Fair Use Notice  |   Axis Mission  |  About us  |   Letters/Articles to Editor  | Article Submissions |   Subscribe to Ezine   | RSS Feed  |