The EU has plenty of problems in
governance, but then so does the USA ,
China , India , Russia , etc. We can only hope that governance will evolve
in a satisfactory manner over the years.
What can not be denied is that
the structure served to bring about internal peace at the multi national level
throughout Europe because it shoveled
bilateral issues into a forum of equals.
They all discovered bilateral concerns impossible to keep up at
all. Of course, we still have hold outs
and cultural stresses in the attempt to add a country such as Turkey . The solution to that might be to gift Istanbul to the EU as its
appropriate capital.
The fact remains that in spite itself
the odd structure of the EU brought about an end to thousand year old ethnic
rivalries and a general and ongoing mixing of peoples. We all still use ethnic labels but are
beginning to see the blurring of the many edges.
DYER: EU satisfies intention of Nobel Prize
By Gwynne Dyer,
Special to QMI Agency
Wednesday, October 17, 201
Maybe they gave the Nobel Peace Prize to the European Union because
they couldn’t think of anybody else who wouldn’t embarrass them. Nelson Mandela
already has one. So does Aung San Suu Kyi. Even Barak Obama has one, though for
what is not clear. They even gave it to Henry Kissinger once, but we probably
shouldn’t go into that. So who’s left? We’ll just give it to the European
Union. Nobody’ll notice that.
But they did notice, and some of them were not amused.
“A Nobel prize for the EU at a time Brussels
and all of Europe is collapsing in misery?
What next? An Oscar for (European Council President Herman) Van Rompuy?” asked
Geert Wilders, the Dutch euro-skeptic.
The EU was an elite project from the start, and policy for the
27-member union is still set mostly by politicians and officials, not by
citizens.
However, the original purpose of the Nobel Peace Prize was to honour
people who worked to put an end to the wars repeatedly devastated the European
continent (and much of the rest of the world) during the past four centuries.
The EU has made a major contribution to that task, but that is not its greatest
achievement.
It has been 67 years since there was a major war in Europe .
“This started after the (Second World )
war, putting together former enemies,” said EU Commission President Jose Manuel
Barroso in an interview with the BBC. “It started with six countries and we are
now 27, another one (Croatia )
is going to join us next year and more want to come. So the EU is the most
important project for peace in terms of transnational, supernational co-operation.”
That’s a bit over the top. The United Nations surely has more to do
with 67 years in which no great powers have fought each other. So do two
generations of American and Soviet officials and politicians who showed great
restraint and managed to avoid a nuclear war that would have devastated the
whole world. You could even give some credit to nuclear weapons themselves,
which forced the great powers to behave more prudently than usual.
The great virtue of the European Union, despite its “democratic deficit”
at the Brussels
level, is that its member countries must be fully democratic, relatively free
of corruption and fully observant of civil and human rights. Not only has this
prevented some members from backsliding in times of great stress, it has also
been a huge incentive for prospective members to clean up their act.
Would Greece , Spain and Portugal all have ended up as full
democracies after overthrowing their old dictators, and in the latter two cases
as relatively honest ones as well, if not for the changes they had to make to
qualify for EU membership?
Would the nine ex-Communist countries of Central Europe that emerged
from the long night of Soviet tyranny in 1989 have created modern civil
societies practically overnight without a great deal of aid from the EU? Would
they even have bothered, without the incentive of future EU membership?
The Nobel Peace Prize is a misnomer. It should actually be the Nobel
Democracy and Human Rights Prize. Occasionally it goes to some person or
organization whose main purpose is building international peace, but much more
often it goes to people like Nelson Mandela, Aung San Suu Kyi, and most
recently Liu Xiaobo, whose accomplishment, or at least goal, has been to make
their own countries democratic and respectful of human rights.
And if that is the real criterion, then the European Union deserves the
prize.
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