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  • The EU: a new vision, a new geography

    The EU: a new vision, a new geography
    By Max Gevers


    Cyprus Mail, Cyprus
    23 Nov 08


    THE IRISH decision to reject the Lisbon Treaty, coming after the
    previous French and Dutch decision to oppose the EU Constitutional
    Treaty, has added to the sense of institutional malaise within the
    European Union. But while efforts continue to try to find a way to
    reverse the Irish decision, European leaders also need to recognise the
    much wider problem facing the Union: its lack of a clear mission
    statement and the deeply felt sense of uncertainty about its
    geographical boundaries.

    As others have noted, European citizens fail to identify with the EU.
    Despite unprecedented economic wealth that Europe has generated over
    the past fifty years, and the beneficial co-operation that has emerged
    between governments, popular attitudes towards the EU remain
    ambivalent.

    In part, this is because the original purpose of the European Community
    has ceased to have much resonance. Its value as a prophylactic against
    conflict, especially between France and Germany, and fostering
    friendship and co-operation in Europe has little meaning to
    contemporary Europeans who have grown up with the peace the Union has
    created.

    And yet, European political leaders appear hesitant about taking the
    bold steps needed to articulate a new, more contemporary, vision for
    the Union. Obsessed with short term issues and focused on the here and
    now,
    they neglect to recognise the importance of developing a strategic
    vision for Europe. Remedying this situation will require several steps.
    In particular, the Union needs a `mission statement'. This short
    charter for the `United States of Europe', no more than a couple of
    pages long, should clearly and unambiguously explain what the EU stands
    for and what it means for citizens.

    First of all, it would tackle the question of national identity ` a
    source of angst for many Europeans ` head on. It would stress the
    importance of keeping Europe's cultural diversities and identities
    intact. As galling as it might be for many European leaders, this
    document must enshrine the notion of popular democracy, running
    alongside national representational democracy. It needs to be
    recognised that it is only by insisting that the consent of the peoples
    of Europe lie at the heart of the European Union that one can hope to
    build pan-national support for the European project.

    The fear for referenda, so evident now after the three no's, must be
    overcome. (The UK, where the EU is a continuous issue in party
    politics, should clearly question voters in a referendum if they want
    to belong in the EU, including the Euro. If not, separation should
    follow, with a new application years away.)

    Secondly, it must seek to address the widespread perception that the EU
    is too bureaucratic. The EU Counc
    il, as the body enshrining the member
    states, must explain in unflinching political terms why they need the
    bureaucracy in the light of their political `mission statement', and
    that this executive is there to serve the interests of the member
    states. In pressing this message home, the members should agree to
    undertake a root and branch reform of the Commission and the
    secretariat, cutting its size and costs as much as possible. Also, if
    the negative impression of the EU is to change, EU leaders must try to
    avoid that Brussels bureaucrats get blamed for unpopular domestic
    decisions ` a common tactic at present.

    Thirdly, Europe needs to clarify its boundaries. As the French and
    Dutch votes highlighted, European citizens have deep concerns about the
    prospect of an ever increasing Union that gradually dilutes their
    national identity. While many within the European elite object to an
    attempt to create a `Fortress Europe', we must recognise that for all
    Europe's achievements and wealth, and the global vision of its
    citizens, many EU-inhabitants are still parochial. In return for
    pursuing a larger `United States of Europe', European citizens have a
    right to know what this means in real terms.

    Most of Europe should, in due time, be allowed to join the EU. This
    would not only include current hold outs, Norway, Switzerland and
    Iceland, but also states that are currently in the q
    ueue, such as
    Turkey and the Balkan countries. Likewise, we must recognise that,
    eventually, a number of Eastern European countries have a place in the
    European family: Moldova, Belarus and Ukraine. Armenia and Georgia may
    be more problematic now, but should also, eventually, be included.

    The EU should develop a clear `Black Sea Strategy' to that extent.
    Russia, a much larger entity that would overwhelm the Union, must
    nevertheless be treated as a partner, outside the EU.

    Despite the current pressures facing European leaders ` including
    Lisbon, the global economic crisis, relations with Russia and the new
    US administration ` they really need to be concentrating more attention
    on the Union itself. They must clearly elaborate its merits
    politically, economically and socially: emphasising the benefits of
    political stability to a whole region, extolling the virtues of a vast
    area for free movement of people and goods that is not burdened down
    with cumbersome administration, and stressing the goal of maintaining
    national cultural diversities intact within clearly defined borders.
    Fifty years on, the same vision and courage of the founding fathers of
    the EC is again needed.

    n Max Gevers is a Netherlands diplomat and former ambassador at the
    Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW) in the
    Hague, and from 2002 to 2006 in Cyprus



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