Hans Kundnani:
The return of the German question: why conflict between creditor and debtor
states is now the defining feature of European politics
Social Europe, 27 Jan 2015

***
One of the key geopolitical issues in Europe prior to the Second World War was
how the power of Germany could be effectively balanced by other European states.
Hans Kundnani assesses the relevance of these historical debates to the current
situation within Europe in the aftermath of the Eurozone crisis. He argues that
while Germany is no longer a threat from a military perspective, its economic
power has put intolerable pressures on other members of the Eurozone, generating
instability in much the same way as its previous military power once did. This
instability is now centred around the standoff between creditor and debtor
countries, underlined by the victory of Syriza in the Greek parliamentary
elections, and potential future electoral success for parties such as Podemos in
Spain.
***

During the five years since the euro crisis began, there has much been much
debate about German power in Europe. In 1953 Thomas Mann famously called for a
“European Germany” rather than a “German Europe”, but it has now become
commonplace to speak of a German Europe emerging from the crisis. There has been
much debate about actual or potential German “hegemony”. Some serious analysts
such as George Soros and Martin Wolf have even perceived the emergence of a kind
of German “empire” within Europe – a term that is even stronger than “hegemony”,
which implies at least a degree of consent.

Obviously, questions about German power in Europe have a long history. Implicit
in the current debate about a new “German question” is the idea that history has
in some way returned to Europe and in particular that Germany has in some
respects regressed or reverted to a role comparable to the problematic one it
had between 1871 and 1945. Even Anthony Giddens has written: “Germany seems to
have achieved by pacific means what it was unable to bring about through
military conquest – the domination of Europe.” My book, The Paradox of German
Power, is an attempt to explore whether Germany’s pre-1945 history is relevant
to the current situation in Europe – and if so, how.

full: http://www.socialeurope.eu/2015/01/return-german-question/
first published on EUROPP@LSE: http://bit.ly/1uNCLMl
http://blogs.lse.ac.uk/europpblog/
_______________________________________________
pen-l mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.csuchico.edu/mailman/listinfo/pen-l

Reply via email to