If we think of and treat Europe as a nascent Empire in the traditional sense, then it is possible to properly assess the future. Russia is very much a part of this tradition and desperately wants a proud role in that meme. The EU has divested most of the natural political stress unto the constituent provinces rather successfully. German and Greek politics continue to matter. What is needed in this construct is the unifying office of the Emperor holding the same powers as the Queen of England or the Pope for that matter. Their task is to communicate and focus a larger global vision not forth coming from say the representative from Germany. The position does not have to be hereditary as the Vatican has shown.
I would even go so far as to offer the position to the Queen as her house has at least studied the role and its ramifications. It would certainly draw both England and Russia firmly into the effective association. And i do want you to understand that all empires are agreements to associate and though usually constructed through military conquest, need not be, and always become an association of the willing.
Then Europe can address the necessities of empire. That does mean confronting Islam in the Caucasus and deploying NATO forward against the Islamic world. This must be done and done through a serious confrontation until Islamic culture resolves its internal barbarisms.
I would also add in a natural market driven protocol system that resolves poverty and supports population growth as well. Both have become strategic necessities and it can be done without cost.
Europe has the blessing of a common Christian culture and having almost all traditional tribalism diminished. That can and will easily continue even in the Balkans as rapid interchange across Europe takes place. .
.
A Net Assessment of Europe
May 26, 2015
https://www.stratfor.com/weekly/net-assessment-europe
Last week I began this series with a Net Assessment of the World,
in which I focused on the growing destabilization of the Eurasian land
mass. This week I continue the series, which will ultimately analyze
each region in detail, with an analysis of Europe. I start here, rather
than in the Middle East, because while the increasing successes of the
Islamic State are significant, the region itself is secondary to Europe
in the broader perspective. The Middle East matters, but Europe is as
economically productive as the United States and, for the past 500
years, has been the force that has reshaped the world. The Middle East
matters a great deal; European crises can destabilize the world. What
happens between Greece and Germany, for example, can have consequences
in multiple directions. Therefore, since we have to start somewhere, let
me start with Europe.
Europe is undergoing two interconnected crises. The first is the
crisis of the European Union. The bloc began as a system of economic
integration, but it was also intended to be more than that: It was to be
an institution that would create Europeans. The national distinctions
between European nations is real and has proved destabilizing, since
Europe has been filled with nations with diverging interests and
historical grudges. The EU project did not intend to abolish these
nations; the distinctions and tensions were too deep. Rather it was
intended to overlay national identities with a European identity. There
would be nations and they would retain ultimate sovereignty, but the
citizens of these nations would increasingly come to see themselves as
Europeans. That European identity would both create a common culture and
diminish the particularity of states. The inducement to all of Europe
was prosperity and peace. The European Union would create ongoing
prosperity, which would eliminate the danger of conflict. The challenge
to Europe in this sense was that prosperity is at best cyclical, and it
is regional. Europe is struggling with integration because without
general prosperity, the seduction of Europeans away from the parochial
allure of nations will fail. Therefore, the crisis of the European
Union, focused on the European Peninsula, is one of the destabilizing
forces.
I use the term European Peninsula to denote the region that lies to
the west of a line drawn from St. Petersburg to Rostov-on-Don, becoming
increasingly narrow until it reaches Iberia and the Atlantic Ocean.
France, Germany and Italy are on the peninsula, with its river systems
of the Danube and Rhine. To the line’s east is Russia. Whereas the
peninsula is intimately connected with the oceans and is therefore
engaged in global trade, Russia is landlocked. It is very much land
constrained, with its distant ports on the Pacific, the Turkish straits
its only outlet to the Mediterranean, and its Baltic and Arctic access
hampered by ice and weather. On the peninsula, particularly as you move
west, no one is more than a few hundred miles from the sea. Russia,
reliant upon land transportation, which is more difficult and expensive
than maritime trade, tends to be substantially poorer than the
peninsula.
The second crisis rests in the strategic structure of Europe and is
less tractable than the first. Leaving aside the outlying islands and
other peninsulas that make up Europe, the Continent’s primordial issue
is the relationship between the largely unified but poorer mainland,
dominated by Russia, and the wealthier but much more fragmented
peninsula. Between Russia and the peninsula lies a borderland that at
times as has been under the control of Russia or a peninsular power or,
more often, divided. This borderland is occasionally independent and
sovereign, but this is rare. More often, even in sovereignty, it is
embedded in the spheres of influence of other countries. The borderland
has two tiers: the first and furthest east is Belarus, Ukraine and
portions of the Balkans, while the second consists of Poland, the Czech
Republic, Slovakia, Hungary, Romania and Bulgaria. After World War II,
Russia’s power extended to the second tier and beyond. After the
collapse of the Soviet Union, these countries became sovereign, and the
influence of the peninsula moved eastward as two peninsular
institutions, the European Union and NATO, absorbed the second tier. As
this happened, and the Baltics were included with the second tier,
Belarus and particularly Ukraine became the dividing line and buffer.
Two things must be noted here. First, it was the existence of the
European Union that gave the peninsula a framework for eastward
expansion. NATO, in many ways, became moribund as it lost its rationale
after the Cold War. However, in the years after Soviet collapse, the
European Union was dynamic and seemed destined to unite the peninsula.
As Soviet power collapsed and European power seemed to expand, the
European Union provided a united framework for expansion and an
attractive option for newly sovereign nations in the borderland.
Second, Russia was in a state of systemic shock in the 1990s. It was a
period of chaos, characterized by the complete loss of both controls
and plans. It was almost as though Russia was unconscious. From the
European and American points of view, this was the new normal in Russia.
In fact, it was inevitable that this was merely a transitory state. The
single institution that historically had held Russia together was the
secret police. In a poor country with minimal communications and
transportation, the ability of the center to control the periphery is
limited. The institution of an efficient security system would be
indispensable if Russia were to avoid fragmentation. From the Czars
onward, this is what held Russia together. It followed that when the
first shock of collapse passed, the security apparatus would reassert
itself and stabilize Russia. It was not the personality of Vladimir
Putin that mattered; if not for him, another leader would have emerged
and halted the disintegration of the Russian economy and polity.
This process inevitably led Russia to restructure itself, within the
limits of its diminished power. The effort included an attempt to both
stabilize the country’s economy and reassert its geopolitical interests,
first in the Caucasus and then in Ukraine. Without a buffer in the
eastern peninsula, Russia lacks strategic depth, and it has only been
this strategic depth that has saved it from peninsular invasions in the
past. Therefore, any attempt to stabilize Russia would necessitate a
look westward to the borderlands, where the second tier was completely
lost and even the Baltics had become part of the peninsular system, and
an interpretation of eastern expansion as an existential threat to
Russia.
The European Union’s position was that the Continent’s growing
integration was completely benign. That might well have been the
subjective intention of the Europeans, but the Russians saw something
they had never seen before: integrated institutions, with ambitions
among some members to become a federation of nation-states that might go
well beyond economics. There had been sufficiently ample discussion of
European defense systems and federation to cause concern in Moscow.
Without buffers, a united Europe with a shifted intent might well pose
an existential threat to Russia. This was particularly the case because
the United States held a vague alliance with the Europeans and shared
the fear of Russia’s power re-emerging.
Russia's Resurgence and Europe's Crisis
In 2008, two critical things happened. First, and less important, was
the Russian war with Georgia that demonstrated—more than reality might
require—the re-emergence of Russia as a significant and capable regional
power. Second, and more important, the economic crisis triggered by the
American sub-prime mortgage crisis led to the gradual fragmentation of
European unity, causing a massive divergence of interests. The eastern
movement of European influence, supported by the United States,
continued in spite of the crisis. The Russians were forced to counter
and were less concerned about the consequences.
The European crisis was simple, at its core. Germany had the
fourth-largest economy in the world. It derived over 50 percent of its
income from exports, half of which went to the European free trade zone.
In addition, using its substantial influence, the euro maximized the
interest of the European economy as a whole. Given the size of the
German economy, it is only a slight overstatement to assert that its
economic needs defined Europe’s economy. The euro helped stabilize and
sustain German growth, as did the regulations created by Brussels. This
limited entrepreneurial behavior in countries where low wages ought to
have been the impetus for growth. Instead, these countries became
opportunities for German investment.
All of this was bearable before 2008, because since EU members signed
the Treaty of Maastricht in 1992, which led to a common currency, they
had seen a period of extraordinary prosperity. A rising tide floats all
ships. But in 2008, a routine financial crisis (from the standpoint of a
century) tore apart the fabric of the peninsula. During any economic
crisis, the most important question is who shall bear the burden, the
creditors or debtors? Broadly speaking, Europe split along these lines.
Germany was the peninsula’s major creditor. Southern Europe was its
major debtor. Leaving aside the moral posturing over who committed what
injustice against whom, the Germans insisted on austerity. International
institutions, including the International Monetary Fund, aligned with
Germany.
The interests of the European Peninsula diverged into four parts:
those of Germanic Europe (Germany, Austria and, to some extent, the
Czech Republic); Mediterranean Europe; the eastern frontier of the
European Union; and the rest of northern Europe.
Germany has an overwhelming interest in the European Union and its
free trade zone. It is an inherently weak nation, as are all countries
that are dependent on exports. Germany's well-being depends on its
ability to sell its products. If blocked by an economic downturn among
its customers or political impediments to exports, Germany faces a
declining economy that can create domestic social crises. Germany must
do everything it can to discipline the European Union without motivating
its members to leave. (The issue is not leaving the euro, but placing
limits on German exports.) Thus Germanic Europe is walking a fine line.
It is an economic engine of Europe, but also extremely insecure. Given
the fragmentation in the European Union, it must reach out to others,
particularly Russia, for alternatives. Russia is not an alternative in
itself, but in a bad situation it could be part of a solution if Germany
could craft one. This is, of course, a worst-case scenario, but the
worst case is often the reality in Europe in the long run.
Southern Europe is seeking a path that will allow it to escape
catastrophic austerity in a Europe that seems unable to generate
significant economic growth. If that does not save Southern European
nations, they must decide, in simplest terms, whether they are better
off defaulting on debt than paying it. While Germany is currently
inclined not to force them to this point, it is emerging on its own.
This is the fundamental reality of Europe: Germany wants to save the
free trade zone, but without absorbing Europe’s bad debts. Southern
Europe needs to shift its burden and will eventually reconsider the
viability of free trade, though it has not yet done so. Just as there
are limits on agricultural trade, why not create the same environment
that the Germans enjoyed in the 1950s, when they were able to protect
themselves from American industrial exports, thereby growing their
industry with minimal competition?
Central and Eastern European countries are in a complex position with
the European Union, since they are generally members that are not in
the eurozone. But for most of them, the question of Russia’s power and
intentions is more important than the Greek crisis. For the east, there
is an awareness that Europe never did progress to a common foreign and
defense policy and that the European Union cannot defend them against
Russia. They are also aware that NATO cannot defend them, except with
American involvement, which is coming in very measured and slow
increases.
Then there is the fourth part of Europe, particularly France, which
is supposed to be Germany’s equal in the European Union but has fallen
behind in recent decades, as it did in the 19th century. France is as
much part of Southern Europe as Greece, along with high unemployment in
the south. And along with the Southern Europeans, who are facing
problems in the Mediterranean and North Africa alongside their economic
woes, France is not drawn east, nor is it comfortable with German
policies, but it is being drawn in multiple directions on economic and
strategic issues.
A Continent Divided
A continent drawn in multiple directions is the best description of
the European Union, and one that gives the Russians some relief. The
collapse of oil prices and Russia’s inability to turn oil income into a
diverse and sustainable economy are inherently limiting factors on
Russia’s power. In Ukraine, the Russians are experiencing the twin
problems of a failure of intelligence and the limits of their military
forces. Their intelligence failed to detect or manage events in Ukraine,
from anticipating the fall of the government to understanding that
there would be no general uprising in eastern Ukraine. Russia’s military
never invaded anything, albeit that Russia controlled and, to some
degree, still controls warring militias. Russia was present in Crimea by
treaty, and its minimal forces and operations in the east revealed both
its aggressive intent and the limits of its power. The Russians did not
do well in that campaign, nor in my view could they mount a successful
invasion of Ukraine as a whole, given their limits on logistics and
other capabilities.
But the Russians were saved by the fragmentation of the peninsula.
The eastern Europeans wanted some definitive action from Europe. None
came. Sanctions created pain, but they did not define Russia’s strategic
policy. Thus, to the extent that the borderland has a patron, it is not
Europe but the United States. The Germans have no desire to
fundamentally alienate Russia over Ukraine. The French are torn in
multiple directions and the Southern Europeans have no interest in
non-EU issues aside from Muslim immigration. (This latter challenge,
which solves problems of labor shortages but creates problems of
immigration and some risk of terrorism, is important and a topic to
which I will return in the future. Muslim immigration, however, does not
threaten Europe's fundamental architecture, the elucidation of which is
the purpose of a net assessment.)
The Net Assessment of Europe is that the Continent’s basic
geographical split remains in place, and Russia still holds the weaker
position. However, its relative strength has increased with the rise of
divergent interests within the European Union, and its primary concern
regarding the Continent is not Europe but the United States. Therefore,
the crisis in the European Union will define the broader situation in
Russia, and that fundamental crisis appears insoluble within the current
framework of discussion. The discussion will move from debt and
repayment to the creation of a sustainable European Union in which
Germany may not get to export all it wants but must accept limits on its
prosperity relative to its partners. Since politics makes that
unlikely, the fragmentation of the peninsula will increase, and with it,
Russia’s relative power will rise, drawing in the United States.
No comments:
Post a Comment