The European Union May Be on the Verge of Regime Collapse
Europe won the Cold War.
Not long after the Berlin Wall fell a quarter of a century ago, the Soviet
Union collapsed, the United States squandered its peace dividend in an attempt
to maintain global dominance, and Europe quietly became more prosperous, more
integrated, and more of a player in international affairs. Between 1989 and
2014, the European Union (EU) practically doubled its membership and catapulted
into third place in population behind China and India. It currently boasts the
world’s largest economy and also heads the list of global trading powers. In
2012, the EU won the Nobel Peace Prize for transforming Europe “from
a continent of war to a continent of peace.”
In the competition for “world’s true superpower,” China loses points for
still having so many impoverished peasants in its rural hinterlands and a
corrupt, illiberal bureaucracy in its cities; the United States, for its crumbling infrastructure and a
hypertrophied military-industrial complex that threatens to bankrupt the
economy. As the only equitably prosperous, politically sound, and
rule-of-law-respecting superpower, Europe comes out on top, even if -- or
perhaps because -- it doesn’t have the military muscle to play global
policeman.
And yet, for all this success, the European project is
currently teetering on the edge of failure. Growth is anemic at best and
socio-economic inequality is on the rise. The
countries of Eastern and Central Europe, even relatively successful Poland,
have failed to bridge the income gap with the richer half of the continent. And
the highly indebted periphery is in revolt.
Politically, the center may not hold and things seem to be falling apart.
From the left, parties like Syriza in Greece are challenging the EU’s
prescriptions of austerity. From the right, Euroskeptic parties are taking aim
at the entire quasi-federal model. Racism and xenophobia are gaining ever more
adherents, even in previously placid regions like Scandinavia.
Perhaps the primary social challenge facing Europe at the moment, however,
is the surging popularity of Islamophobia, the latest “socialism of fools.”
From the killings at the Munich Olympics in 1972 to the recent attacks at Charlie
Hebdo and a kosher supermarket in Paris, wars in the Middle East have long
inspired proxy battles in Europe. Today, however, the continent finds itself
ever more divided between a handful of would-be combatants who claim the mantle
of true Islam and an ever-growing contingent who believe Islam -- all of Islam
-- has no place in Europe.
The fracturing European Union of 2015 is not the Europe that political
scientist Frances Fukuyama imagined when, in 1989, he so famously predicted “the end of
history,” as well as the ultimate triumph of liberal democracy and the
bureaucracy in Brussels, the EU’s headquarters, that now oversees continental
affairs. Nor is it the Europe that British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher
imagined when, in the 1980s, she spoke of the global triumph of TINA (“there is
no alternative”) and of her brand of market liberalism. Instead, today’s Europe
increasingly harkens back to the period between the two world wars when
politicians of the far right and left polarized public debate, economies went
into a financial tailspin, anti-Semitism surged out of the sewer, and storm
clouds gathered on the horizon.
Another continent-wide war may not be in the offing, but Europe does face
the potential for regime collapse: that is, the end of the Eurozone and the
unraveling of regional integration. Its possible dystopian future can be
glimpsed in what has happened in its eastern borderlands. There, federal
structures binding together culturally diverse people have had a lousy track
record over the last quarter-century. After all, the Soviet Union imploded in
1991; Czechoslovakia divorced in 1993; and Yugoslavia was torn asunder in a
series of wars later in the 1990s.
If its economic, political, and social structures succumb to fractiousness,
the European Union could well follow the Soviet Union and Yugoslavia into the
waste bin of failed federalisms. Europe as a continent will remain, its
nation-states will continue to enjoy varying degrees of prosperity, but Europe
as an idea will be over. Worse yet, if, in the end, the EU snatches defeat from
the jaws of its Cold War victory, it will have no one to blame but itself.
The Rise and Fall of TINA
The Cold War was an era of alternatives. The United States offered its
version of freewheeling capitalism, while the Soviet Union peddled its brand of
centralized planning. In the middle, continental Europe offered the compromise
of a social market: capitalism with a touch of planning and a deepening concern
for the welfare of all members of society.
Cooperation, not competition, was the byword of the European alternative.
Americans could have their dog-eat-dog, frontier capitalism. Europeans would
instead stress greater coordination between labor and management, and the
European Community (the precursor to the EU) would put genuine effort into
bringing its new members up to the economic and political level of its core
countries.
Then, at a point in the 1980s when the Soviet model had ceased to exert any
influence at all globally, along came TINA.
At the time, British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher and
American President Ronald Reagan were ramping up their campaigns to shrink
government, while what later became known as globalization -- knocking down
trade walls and opening up new opportunities for the financial sector -- began
to be felt everywhere. Thatcher summed up this brave new world with her TINA
acronym: the planet no longer had any alternative to globalized market
democracy.
Not surprisingly, then, in the post-Cold War era, European integration
shifted its focus toward removing barriers to the flow of capital. As a result,
the expansion of Europe no longer came with an implied guarantee of eventual
equality. The deals that Ireland (1973) and Portugal (1986) had received on
accession were now, like the post-World War II Marshall Plan, artifacts of
another era. The sheer number of potential new members knocking on Europe’s
door put a strain on the EU’s coffers, particularly since the economic
performance of countries like Romania and Bulgaria was so far below the
European average. But even if the EU had been overflowing with funds, it might
not have mattered, since the new “neoliberal” spirit of capitalism now animated
its headquarters in Brussels where the order of the day had become: cut
government, unleash the market.
At the heart of Europe, as well as of this new orthodoxy, lies Germany, the
exemplar of continental fiscal rectitude. Yet in the 1990s, that newly
reunified nation engaged in enormous
deficit spending, even if packaged under a different name, to bring the former
East Germany up to the level of the rest of the country. It did not, however,
care to apply this “reunification exception” to other former members of the
Soviet bloc. Acting as the effective central bank for the European Union,
Germany instead demanded balanced budgets and austerity from all newcomers (and
some old timers as well) as the only effective answer to debt and fears of a
future depression.
The rest of the old Warsaw Pact has had access to some EU funds for
infrastructure development, but nothing on the order of the East German deal.
As such, they remain in a kind of economic halfway house. The standard of
living in Hungary, 25 years after the fall of Communism, remains approximately half
that of neighboring Austria. Similarly, it took Romania 14 years just to regain the gross national
product (GDP) it had in 1989 and it remains stuck at the bottom of the European
Union. People who visit only the capital cities of Eastern and Central Europe
come away with a distorted view of the economic situation there, since Warsaw and
Bratislava are wealthier than Vienna,
and Budapest nearly on a par with it, even though Poland, Slovakia, and Hungary
all remain economically far behind Austria.
What those countries experienced after 1989 -- one course of “shock
therapy” after another -- became the medicine of choice for all EU members at
risk of default following the financial crisis of 2007 and then the sovereign
debt crisis of 2009. Forget deficit spending to enable countries to grow their
way out of economic crisis. Forget debt renegotiation. The unemployment rate in
Greece and Spain now hovers around 25%,
with youth unemployment over 50%, and all the
EU members subjected to heavy doses of austerity have witnessed a steep rise in the
number of people living below the poverty line. The recent European Central
Bank announcement of "quantitative easing" -- a monetary
sleight-of-hand to pump money into the Eurozone -- is too little, too late.
The major principle of European integration has been reversed. Instead of
Eastern and Central Europe catching up to the rest of the EU, pockets of the
“west” have begun to fall behind the “east.” The GDP per capita of Greece, for
example, has slipped below that of Slovenia and, when measured in terms of purchasing power,
even Slovakia, both former Communist countries.
The Axis of Illiberalism
Europeans are beginning to realize that Margaret Thatcher was wrong and
there are alternatives -- to liberalism and European integration. The
most notorious example of this new illiberalism is Hungary.
On July 26, 2014, in a speech to his party faithful, Prime Minister Viktor
Orban confided that he intended a thorough reorganization of the country. The
reform model Orban had in mind, however, had nothing to do with the United
States, Britain, or France. Rather, he aspired to create what he bluntly called
an “illiberal state” in the very heart of Europe, one strong on Christian
values and light on the libertine ways of the West. More precisely, what he
wanted was to turn Hungary into a mini-Russia or mini-China.
“Societies founded upon the principle of the liberal way,” Orban intoned, “will not be
able to sustain their world-competitiveness in the following years, and more
likely they will suffer a setback, unless they will be able to substantially
reform themselves.” He was also eager to reorient to the east, relying ever
less on Brussels and ever more on potentially lucrative markets in and
investments from Russia, China, and the Middle East.
That July speech represented a truly Oedipal moment, for Orban was eager to
drive a stake right through the heart of the ideology that had fathered him. As
a young man more than 25 years earlier, he had led the Alliance of Young
Democrats -- Fidesz -- one of the region’s most promising liberal parties. In
the intervening years, sensing political opportunity elsewhere on the political
spectrum, he had guided Fidesz out of the Liberal International and into the
European People’s Party, alongside German Chancellor Angela Merkel’s Christian
Democrats.
Now, however, he was on the move again and his new role model wasn’t
Merkel, but Russian President Vladimir Putin and his iron-fisted style of
politics. Given the disappointing performance of liberal economic reforms and
the stinginess of the EU, it was hardly surprising that Orban had decided to
hedge his bets by looking east.
The European Union has responded by harshly criticizing Orban’s government
for pushing through a raft of constitutional changes that restrict the media
and compromise the independence of the judiciary. Racism and xenophobia are on the uptick in
Hungary, particularly anti-Roma sentiment and anti-Semitism. And the state has
taken steps to reassert control over the economy and impose controls on foreign
investment.
For some, the relationship between Hungary and the rest of Europe is
reminiscent of the moment in the 1960s when Albania fled the Soviet bloc and,
in an act of transcontinental audacity, aligned itself with Communist China.
But Albania was then a marginal player and China still a poor peasant country.
Hungary is an important EU member and China’s illiberal development model, which
has vaulted it to the top of the global
economy, now has increasing international influence. This, in other words, is
no Albanian mouse that roared. A new illiberal axis connecting Budapest to
Beijing and Moscow would have far-reaching implications.
The Hungarian prime minister, after all, has many European allies in his
Euroskeptical project. Far right parties are climbing in the polls across the
continent. With 25% of the votes, Marine Le Pen’s National Front, for instance,
topped the French
elections for the European parliament last May. In local elections in 2014, it
also seized 12
mayoralties, and polls show that Le Pen
would win the 2017 presidential race if it were held today. In the wake of the Charlie
Hebdo shootings, the National Front has been pushing a range of policies
from reinstating the death penalty to closing borders that would deliberately
challenge the whole European project.
In Denmark, the far-right People’s Party also won the most votes in the
European parliamentary elections. In November, it topped opinion polls
for the first time. The People’s Party has called for Denmark to slam shut its
open-door policy toward refugees and re-introduce border controls. Much as the
Green Party did in Germany in the 1970s, groupings like Great Britain’s
Independence Party, the Finns Party, and even Sweden’s Democrats are shattering
the comfortable conservative-social democratic duopoly that has rotated in
power throughout Europe during the Cold War and in its aftermath.
The Islamophobia that has surged in the wake of the murders in France
provides an even more potent arrow in the quiver of these parties as they take
on the mainstream. The sentiment currently expressed against Islam -- at
rallies, in the media, and in the occasional criminal act -- recalls a Europe
of long ago, when armed pilgrims set out on a multiple crusades against Muslim
powers, when early nation-states mobilized against the Ottoman Empire, and when
European unity was forged not out of economic interest or political agreement
but as a “civilizational” response to the infidel.
The Europe of today is, of course, a far more multicultural place and
regional integration depends on “unity in diversity,” as the EU’s motto puts
it. As a result, rising anti-Islamic sentiment challenges the inclusive nature
of the European project. If the EU cannot accommodate Islam, the complex
balancing act among all its different ethnic, religious, and cultural groups
will be thrown into question.
Euroskepticism doesn’t only come from the right side of the political
spectrum. In Greece, the Syriza party has challenged liberalism from the left,
as it leads protests against EU and International Monetary Fund austerity
programs that have plunged the population into recession and revolt. As
elsewhere in Europe, the far right might have taken advantage of this economic
crisis, too, had the government not arrested the Golden Dawn leadership on
murder and other charges. In parliamentary elections on Sunday, Syriza won an
overwhelming victory, coming only a couple seats short of an absolute majority.
In a sign of the ongoing realignment of European politics, that party then
formed a new government not with the center-left, but with the right-wing
Independent Greeks, which is similarly anti-austerity but also skeptical of the
EU and in favor of a crackdown on illegal immigration.
European integration continues to be a bipartisan project for the parties
that straddle the middle of the political spectrum, but the Euroskeptics are
now winning votes with their anti-federalist rhetoric. Though they tend to
moderate their more apocalyptic rhetoric about “despotic Brussels” as they get
closer to power, by pulling on a loose thread here and another there, they
could very well unravel the European tapestry.
When the Virtuous Turn Vicious
For decades, European integration created a virtuous circle -- prosperity
generating political support for further integration that, in turn, grew the
European economy. It was a winning formula in a competitive world. However, as
the European model has become associated with austerity, not prosperity, that
virtuous circle has turned vicious. A challenge to the Eurozone in one country,
a repeal of open borders in another, the reinstitution of the death penalty in
a third -- it, too, is a process that could feed on itself, potentially sending
the EU into a death spiral, even if, at first, no member states take the
fateful step of withdrawing.
In Eastern and Central Europe, the growing crew who distrust the EU
complain that Brussels has simply taken the place of Moscow in the post-Soviet
era. (The Euroskeptics in the former Yugoslavia prefer to cite Belgrade.)
Brussels, they insist, establishes the parameters of economic policy that its
member states ignore at their peril, while Eurozone members find themselves
with ever less control over their finances. Even if the edicts coming from
Brussels are construed as economically sensible and possessed of a modicum of
democratic legitimacy, to the Euroskeptics they still represent a devastating
loss of sovereignty.
In this way, the same resentments that ate away at the Soviet and Yugoslav
federations have begun to erode popular support for the European Union. Aside
from Poland and Germany, where enthusiasm remains strong, sentiment toward the
EU remains lukewarm at best across much of the rest of the continent, despite a
post-euro crisis rebound. Its popularity now hovers at around 50% in many
member states and below that in places like Italy and Greece.
The European Union has without question been a remarkable achievement of
modern statecraft. It turned a continent that seemed destined to wallow in
“ancestral hatreds” into one of the most harmonious regions on the planet. But
as with the portmanteau states of the Soviet Union, Yugoslavia, and
Czechoslovakia, the complex federal project of the EU has proven fragile in the
absence of a strong external threat like the one that the Cold War provided.
Another economic shock or a coordinated political challenge could tip it over
the edge.
Unity in diversity may be an appealing concept, but the EU needs more than
pretty rhetoric and good intentions to stay glued together. If it doesn’t come
up with a better recipe for dealing with economic inequality, political
extremism, and social intolerance, its opponents will soon have the power to
hit the rewind button on European integration. The ensuing regime collapse
would not only be a tragedy for Europe, but for all those who hope to overcome
the dangerous rivalries of the past and provide shelter from the murderous
conflicts of the present.
John Feffer is
the director of Foreign Policy In Focus at the
Institute for Policy Studies, the editor of LobeLog,
a TomDispatch regular,
and the author of several books, including Crusade 2.0.
Remember the glory days of the 1990s, when our interconnectedness -- the ever-tighter embrace of Disney characters, the Swoosh, and the Golden Arches -- was endlessly hailed? It was the era of “globalization,” of Washington-style capitalism triumphant, and the planet, we were told, would be growing ever “flatter” until we all ended up in the same mall, no matter where we lived. Only a few years later in a twenty-first-century world that, from Ukraine to Libya, Syria to Pakistan, seems to be cracking open under the strain of religious-political conflicts of every sort, isn't it curious how little you hear about that interconnectedness? And yet, through time as well as space, we couldn’t be more linked (and not just online), as the Charlie Hebdo murders and the response to them indicated.
ReplyDeleteThink of the Parisian killers of that moment as messengers from the European past. After all, the place we have long called “the Middle East” was largely a post-World War I European creation. The map of the area was significantly drawn, and a number of the countries in the region cobbled together, by and for the convenience of European colonial powers France and England. Jump slightly less than a century into the future and what one set of powers created, a successor power, the last “superpower” on planet Earth, helped blow a hole through in 2003 with its invasion of Iraq -- and the damage is still spreading.
In the rubble of American Iraq, that old European “Middle East” has collapsed in a paroxysm of violence, chaos, and religious extremism (hardly surprising given the circumstances). And on a planet that's been “globalizing” since the first European ships with cannons appeared off the coasts of Asia, Africa, and the Americas, how could that crumbling region not send a message back to the world that created it? That message has been arriving regularly in rusty cargo vessels, as well as in Islamic State videos aimed at the Muslim communities of Europe, and two weeks ago in the outrages in Paris. Now, the Middle East is threatening to blow a hole in Europe.
It’s a grim irony that TomDispatch regular John Feffer, the director of Foreign Policy In Focus, takes up today. The disintegration of the Middle East is visibly blowing back on Europe and its hopes for an integrated future. It will certainly be blood-drenched years before we can hope to know what shape the post-colonial, post-European, possibly even post-superpower Middle East might take. In the meantime, the shape of a Europe in which the right (and in some places, the left) is rising amid an upswelling of Islamophobia remains remarkably undetermined.
The European Union, that great integrating experiment of the last century, may now, as Feffer writes, be tottering. There is, however, at least one new form of “integration” that might be emerging. In France (which, in seeming imitation, if not parody, of the post-9/11 Bush administration, declared “war” on Islamic extremism in the wake of the Charlie Hebdo killings), Belgium, Germany, and possibly elsewhere, national security states built on the American model are being strengthened in the American fashion. We may, in other words, be seeing the sinews of a new, increasingly integrated global security state taking form amid the ruins of the old Middle East and at a moment when the European Union threatens to dissolve. Tom Dispatch
Hey, there is a broken link in this article, under the anchor text - predicted
ReplyDeleteHere is the working link so yo can replace it - https://selectra.co.uk/sites/default/files/pdf/Fukuyama-End-of-history-article.pdf