May 02, 2010

The Reemergence of German Dominance in Europe


By  <http://www.americanthinker.com/peter_glover_and_michael_j_economides/> 
Peter Glover and Michael J. Economides

 

The European Union was supposed to change all that, but it is a hard-boiled 
geopolitical maxim that nationalism trumps transnationalism whenever national 
interest -- military, economic or energy -- is at stake. Unfortunately, for 
Europeans, it is a fact of life which Europe's leaders have consistently 
ignored, with historically disastrous consequences.  

 

While romantics, mostly liberals, like to dream about universal love, human 
selflessness, and the benevolence of transnational governance, national big 
hitters just keep batting them back to earthy reality. While the EU may believe 
its $40-billion bailout 
<http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2010/04/11/world/main6386193.shtml>  offer will 
buy desperately needed breathing space, the greater battle to harmonize the 
"un-harmonizable" -- sixteen vastly differing Eurozone economies -- is the far 
bigger story. Of even greater import is Germany's growing "fifth column" status 
in European politics, a direct corollary of its reemergence to political 
dominance in the new Europe. 

 

A Greek Tragedy in 3-D: Debt, Deficit, Default 

 

Though the political EU is made up of 27 member-states, only sixteen are signed 
up to Eurozone monetarization. But a Eurozone crisis has been brewing since 
Greece's economic free-fall from grace stemming from the general economic 
vulnerability of the southern states, those affectionately known as PIGS -- 
Portugal, Italy, Greece, and Spain (though Ireland too is normally included). 
While the spectre of economic debt, deficit, and default stalks all of these, 
the Greek economy is, at least for now, the weakest. It may appear exaggerated 
on the surface. After all, the Greek economy accounts for 2.6% percent of the 
Eurozone economy. But the interesting issue is that the Greek situation, if not 
resolved convincingly, will bring to the surface what many suspect and many 
others see clearly: a serious economic vulnerability in a Europe suffering from 
(just to name a few) enormous demographics problems, inability to grow 
economically, and suffocation by entitlements.

 

The immediate crisis was set in motion when Greece finally decided to admit 
that it had "misrepresented" (lied about) for years the extent of its debt and 
that it needed to borrow over 50 billion euros ($66.5 billion) to avoid 
bankruptcy before the end of 2010. But the root of the crisis is firmly bedded 
in the soil of Eurozone regulations for disparate economies -- a 
one-size-fits-all financial straitjacket. As a result, Greece's deficit is 
running at a rate four times higher than the Eurozone rules allow. The trouble 
is that Greek politicians were paralyzed into inaction. 

 

There are the rioting Greek street mobs, but those are a tiny group of mindless 
anarchists. Many other demonstrators fail to see why they should pay for the 
incompetence of the nation's profligate politicians and dishonest bankers. Tax 
evasion was rampant. In a recent study by the current Greek government, it was 
found that fewer than 1,500 Greeks were reporting incomes larger than 100,000 
Euros. Greece's deficit, having been recently revised up to nearly 13 percent 
of GDP, now threatens not only Greece defaulting on its loans, but the whole 
stability of the European Union project.

 

However, the debate is not just about the Greek economy and management; it goes 
to the heart of how the EU is run and what the whole experiment really means. 
Talk of a rule-changing Constitution and a new European Monetary Fund (an EU 
version of the International Monetary Fund) does not sit well with Europe's 
three major economies -- Germany, France, and Britain. In Britain, a new 
Constitution would be an impossible sell. Meanwhile, in Germany, an 
increasingly disillusioned electorate and political elite have simply had 
enough of picking up the tab for southern Europe's laggard economies. 

 

By late March 2010, as the Greek financial crisis worsened, Germany, Europe's 
largest economy, had made it clear that while it would play the EU unity game, 
it would do so on its own terms, and that meant no EMF slush fund -- especially 
one with Germany as the largest contributor. By mid-April, as Greece's approach 
to the bond markets was palpably stalling, the new EU President, Herman Van 
Rompuy, felt impelled to steady jittery markets by reiterating the EU's pledge 
of a bailout for Greece. That meant one thing: the EU must go cap in hand to 
the IMF. The resulting agreement to offer Greece a $40-billion loan (it is not 
clear how much will actually come from the IMF) at around 5 percent interest is 
now on the table. While Greek ministers initially  
<http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/business/8614062.stm> claimed that they would not 
need to pick it up, most investors believe they will have no choice. The 
investors were right. On April 25, Greek PM George Papandreou  
<http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/business/8643356.stm> formally asked the IMF and EU 
to activate their joint bailout rescue package.

 

So for the moment, while the promise of bailout may forestall fears of an 
imminent Eurozone collapse, the crisis itself has thrown into stark relief a 
seismic change in the anatomy of EU "unity." While the European Central Bank -- 
the former German Central Bank -- is content to act as Europe's banker, that no 
longer means that it is content to act as its chief investor and financial 
guarantor. It's a fundamental change that overtly exposes the EU's political 
frailty on the global stage, particularly its ability to keep its own house in 
order. But, just as significantly, it reflects Germany's "fifth column" status 
in Europe, too, as it now regularly subverts EU policy in its national 
interest; indeed, something we applaud. When it comes to key national security 
-- energy and otherwise -- all EU states need to consider extracting themselves 
from the politicized machinations of a transnationalist governance that, like 
the U.N., operates on the basis of the lowest common denominator principle, 
that being often against national interest.      

 

The Russo-German "Special Relationship"

 

We have written elsewhere (see next link below) about the growing Russo-German 
trade and energy ties that have progressively usurped EU policy. Germany's 
penchant for cutting unilateral oil and natural gas deals with Russia, for 
instance, runs entirely counter to the EU's critical policy to escape the grip 
of Russian energy dependency. Clearly, while Germany talks the talk of EU 
unity, in reality, it is inclined to walk the walk all the way to Moscow to 
secure a more realistic national energy future, one that is far more pragmatic 
than that offered by the EU's absurdly optimistic alternative energy strategy. 
Indeed, Germany's so-called "Green" Chancellor had no compunction in 
green-lighting Germany's new generation of 26 coal-fired power stations, carbon 
storage or no carbon storage.  

 

Most iconic, however, is how the Russo-German "special relationship" has 
consistently attempted to sabotage EU moves aimed at ending dependence on 
Russian oil and gas through what we have termed "The Nabucco Conspiracy 
<http://www.energytribune.com/articles.cfm?aid=1487> ." The Nabucco pipeline, 
due to begin construction in 2011, is still without a viable supply of natural 
gas. Yet Nabucco continues to be cited by European ministers as the key to 
European diversification away from Russian energy dependence. With Nabucco's 
future still uncertain, Russia has proceeded apace with its plans for the 
Europe-bound Nord and Sud Stream pipelines, with German connivance. 

 

On April 9, Russia's Gazprom began laying over 1,200 kilometers of the Nord 
Stream pipeline. At the launch were Vladimir Putin and Nord Stream's chairman 
and former German Chancellor, Gerhard Schröder. Herr Schröder has proved a 
redoubtable choice as chairman of Nord Stream, with his still powerful ties to 
Angela Merkel's administration, as well as a vital cog in Russia's "divide and 
conquer" energy strategy, when it comes to cutting energy deals with European 
states. These are states that inexplicably have an aversion to having their 
lights go out and heat turned off, and who have zero confidence in the EU's 
unrealistic energy policies. 

 

More significant on the global stage is how increasing Russian energy 
dependency for European states is likely to prove a foreign policy 
game-changer, and one that does not augur well for future EU relations with the 
United States. It seems that though the EU ship of state(s) sails under an 
independent flag, the ship will continue to be Russia-fueled, with the 
German-dominated European Central Bank acting as rudder.  

 

The Greek Tragedy: A Symptom of the Failure of Transnational Governance

 

It is a fact of geopolitical life that as a single culture will come to 
dominate wherever multiculturalism is trumpeted, so the largest national 
economy too must dominate wherever transnational governance is attempted. 
Margaret Thatcher saw the EU's Achilles heel from the start. In 2003, in her 
opus "Statecraft," Mrs. Thatcher noted how European Union enthusiasts preferred 
the expression "the United States of Europe." Mrs. Thatcher warned, "The 
parallel is deeply flawed and deeply significant. It is flawed because the 
United States was based from its inception on a common language, culture, and 
values -- Europe has none of these things." Thatcher added, "By contrast, 
'Europe' is ... a classic utopian project, a monument to the vanity of 
intellectuals, a programme whose inevitable destiny is failure; only the scale 
of the final damage done is in doubt." Germany's contemporary reemergence as 
the dominating European power is not only likely, but has always been 
inevitable.   

 

It is the irony of ironies that a European "supra-state" wholly conceived for 
the express purpose of suppressing German nationalist ambition should end up, 
within just two decades, in Germany's economic thrall. 

 

The importance of how nationalism will always trump trans-national governance 
is dealt with in greater depth in "Energy and Climate Wars: How naive 
politicians, green ideologues and media elites are undermining the truth about 
energy and climate" by Peter C. Glover and Michael J. Economides, to be 
published by Continuum Books in September 2010 and now available for pre-sale  
<http://www.continuumbooks.com/books/detail.aspx?BookId=158049&SubjectId=1023> 
here at Continuum and  
<http://www.amazon.com/Energy-Climate-Wars-Politicians-Undermining/dp/1441153071/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1271078628&sr=1-1>
 here at Amazon.

25 Comments <http://comments.americanthinker.com/read/42323/589423.html>  on 
"The Reemergence of German Dominance in Europe"

 

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