By Robert Marquand, Staff writer of The Christian Science MonitorFri Mar 23, 4:00 AM ET
As leaders of the 27 European Union members gather in Berlin this
Sunday for the 50th anniversary of the EU, much of the effort behind a
highly anticipated "Berlin Declaration" is to make the postwar
organization pertinent to ordinary Europeans – a record number of whom
are skeptical of the Union, even while enjoying its benefits.
Five decades ago this Sunday, a new Europe formally emerged with the
signing of the Treaties of Rome. It was a brave and visionary effort to
transcend national boundaries and illiberal ideologies. With American
help, Europe shaped a common market and sphere of values against the
backdrop of Soviet communism, two cataclysmic wars, and Auschwitz.
Now, as the EU pauses to consider its foundational ideals, it's
striving to make them relevant. Climate change has emerged as a key
rallying point. In addition, the US seems to be placing renewed
emphasis on the transatlantic relationship. In Washington, top US
diplomats told the Monitor that a stronger working relationship with
Europe is needed in the Middle East, Afghanistan, and Kosovo, among
others, and admitted that Europe had been wrongly ignored in the
"strategic complications" after 9/11.
The EU's success in shaping peace, prosperity, and notions of
international justice and human rights are today so taken for granted
that it practically requires a half-century anniversary to mention it,
experts say. After the cold war, most states wanted to join what is
seen as a haven of wealth and security.
Yet the EU has struggled, often vainly, to capture the popular
imagination of ordinary Europeans, who often think of Brussels as a
massive bureaucracy run by distant elites interested only in measuring
bananas and regulating figs. The need to make the EU seem "relevant" on
the street is seen as crucial to its future success and development,
argued World Trade Organization chief Pascal Lamy in the Financial
Times (FT) this week. "Europe today lacks the necessary political
energy," he wrote. "Public opinion is skeptical, political elites are
fatigued."
The Berlin Declaration, hashed out for months, will build on the
EU's decision this spring to take the global lead in battling climate
change, and it will provide a "road map," as a foreign ministry source
in Berlin put it, for reinvigorating the idea of Europe. The issue is a
sensitive one. In a 2005 referendum, French and Dutch voters said "No"
to the idea of a common European constitution.
Though the Berlin Declaration will not mention the concept of a
constitution, the idea of a road map is clearly seen as a way to move
toward the kinds of common security and foreign policies, more-
equitable and clear decisionmaking in a group now bursting with 27
members, and other elements found in constitutions.
The 50th anniversary of what was then a six-nation union called the
European Economic Community is seen by many diplomats as a chance to
pause and revisit the original concepts of the EU. In the past months,
the Berlin Declaration itself has been a document in search of a more
relevant message. The initial idea was to emphasize something called
the Lisbon Declaration that spelled out state responsibility in the EU
– though France and Holland were missing from the pack. Then the
emphasis shifted to energy and security, following the threat of
Russian gas cutoffs in early January. Finally, after the bold move in
Paris by EU states to battle climate change, the EU found its common
touch issue.
"Politicians in Europe are looking for the winning formula. They
want to know how to talk to the people about a new vision," argues
Heinrich Kreft, senior foreign policy adviser to the Christian
Democratic party in Berlin. "People first have to know what Europe
is.... The idea has been lost ... It sounds too abstract. It was easier
and more successful to build against the Soviet bloc, than to define it
positively."
While the EU's precursor was focused on economics, it also
introduced a new concept of identity. "We unite people, not just
states," argued one founder, Jean Monnet of France.
But today, Europeans show deep ambivalence about such unity. In
FT/Harris polls this week in the five largest European states, some 44
percent said their country had not improved since joining the EU. But
only 22 percent felt life would be better if their country left the EU.
US diplomats noted ruefully this week that US relations had largely
been ignored in European debates leading to the Berlin Declaration.
They say Washington is eager to join with Europe as a "central partner"
in a "shared vision of values" to resolve many of the conflicts
challenging the stability of the world.
We were "disappointed" that "not a very big part of the debate"over
Europe's future touched on America's role and "transatlantic
relations," said Kurt Volker, principal deputy assistant secretary for
Europe at the State Department, in comments to the Monitor. But he also
said the US could have done a better job in engaging Europe after 9/11.
Americans had steadily supported Europe in its birthing in the 1950s,
including the Marshall Plan, whose 60th anniversary is this year, he
noted. Moreover, for decades prior to Sept. 11, Europe had been central
to all US foreign-policy questions. But after the 2001 attacks and the
"strategic challenges" they raised, "Europe was seen as not central,"
he said, to the US challenge of "rogue states, problem states, and
terrorism ... which seemed to exist in a separate sphere from Europe."
"But we've gone through an intellectual evolution ... and it is
significant," Mr. Volker added. "Now, the principal pillars of the
democratic community in the world are Europe and the US."
Much of the initiative to offer a reinvigorating "declaration" is
due to tireless efforts by German Chancellor Angela Merkel, diplomats
say. This week, Ms. Merkel avoided a small crisis in the 50th
anniversary celebration by gaining Poland's agreement not to oppose the
statement.
Most political observers agree that Europe can't approach the
question of a new constitution until after the French elections in May.
The German presidency of the EU ends June 30 – giving Berlin only a
brief window to hammer out a new road map with the incoming government
in Paris.