The Euro-Basher

GEDMIN, JEFFREY

Books The Euro-Basher By Jeffrey Gedmin Mention Maastricht and eyes glaze over. That is, of course, unless discussion is punctuated by anecdotes about Brussels bureaucrats working feverishly to...

...But it's the French and Germans who lead the campaign for a federal Europe, and it's these two countries, with their conflicting motives, that worry Connolly most...
...It's also where his overblown rhetoric matches the ridiculous posturing of his opponents, whose house of cards, had he been a bit more clever, Connolly could have more effectively blown down...
...In the present-day European Community," he continues, "dissent does not yet warrant incarceration in brutal mental hospitals...
...Jeffrey Gedmin is research fellow at the American Enterprise Institute and editor of the forthcoming book, European Integration and American Interests...
...In fact, when Helmut Kohl visited his French counterpart this past fall, he gave the Gaullist leader a stern talking to about deficit reduction and France's struggle to meet the convergence criteria for monetary union (scheduled for January 1999...
...It's a shame that a prime reason for Connolly's success in selling books (and offending political adversaries) is also a prime reason why his book will find few converts, and why many reviewers in Europe have been able to dismiss the book so easily...
...Connolly wrote the book while he was head of monetary policy at the European Commission...
...Ceding sovereignty in favor of European unity was a way to extend French influence, to tame German power, and to confront the Americans and Japanese...
...Fair enough...
...Nevertheless, to help execute the plan, the late president Fran?ois Mitterrand saw to it that the French people were subjected to a "relentless" stream of propaganda...
...Countries that try to keep their exchange rates close to the Deutschmark often have to raise their interest rates, slowing down domestic growth and making the Maastricht criteria for budget reduction more difficult to achieve...
...Europe is first and foremost a political program, not an economic program," says Wolfgang Sch?uble, chairman of Kohl's Christian Democratic Union...
...That is, of course, unless discussion is punctuated by anecdotes about Brussels bureaucrats working feverishly to "harmonize" rules on everything from the size of condoms to the curvature of bananas...
...Of course, everyone's up to something different, says Connolly, whether the Irish, the Dutch, or the Portuguese...
...Connolly rips French leaders for their delusional and "blinding arrogance," while wondering simultaneously how "murdering" the economy can ever find popular support on "geopolitical" grounds...
...According to new legislation, "visually challenged" truck drivers in the European Union's 15 member states will be required to take driving tests without their glasses-after all, glasses could always fall off while the driver is at the wheel...
...The Mitterrand-S?guin debate was scheduled immediately after Kohl's message and following nearly two hours of interviews with Mitterrand interspersed with various pro-Maastricht commentaries...
...Connolly's problem with European federalism is simple...
...Connolly's observations about Maastricht's democracy deficit are important, and he's right to attack Kohl for suggesting that failure of the federalist project means nationalism and war...
...About this, Germany's political leadership has been remarkably candid...
...Yes, if it happens, monetary and political union will mean protection for the French and German welfare states, continued statism on the Continent, and a European Union that will serve more than ever as cover for German interests...
...Indeed, since its founding in 1957 the European Community, based on Franco-German reconciliation, has maintained this as a goal...
...Deficit reduction, not job creation, would henceforth be the French government's priority...
...Connolly sees the "subversion of democracy" and a threat to peace as byproducts of the work of European federalists, which he calls "economically perverse and politically perverted...
...What's more, "fixed exchange rates transform domestic policy questions from 'low politics' (what gets done...
...In Stalinist Russia, dissent was regarded as evidence of lunacy," writes Connolly...
...Collaborationist Vichy it's not, but Chirac's sudden change of heart is a vivid illustration of Connolly's concern about national sovereignty...
...The Italians, for instance, have always sought Europe as a solution to their internal problems, which is why many favor being ruled from Brussels rather than from Rome...
...Connolly sees Brussels as an insatiable, power-hungry elite readily assisting the French and German governments in an attempt to impose a federalist state on their neighbors...
...What do the Germans want out of all of this...
...You don't need a single currency, he argues, to maintain a single market...
...Connolly's offense...
...Like Mitterrand, Jacques Delors, president of the European Commission until 1994, saw Europe's federalist project as a necessary evil...
...to European officials as "missionaries, soldiers in the crusade" against "decadent Anglo-Saxon culture" and "the pagan Anglo-Saxon worship of markets...
...Only later, says Connolly, after he switched in 1986 to the monetary side of the Commission, did he come to the conclusion that monetary union was really part of a larger project designed "to subvert the independence-political as well as economic"-of Europe's countries...
...But this kind of heavy breathing obscures a genuinely fascinating analysis and important political message-that the stubborn attempt to forge monetary union may actually drive Europeans apart rather than closer together...
...Meanwhile, two-thirds of the German population remains firmly opposed to giving up the cherished Deutschmark, a symbol of stability and affluence for more than four decades...
...It's a grotesquely naive proposition, in his view, presumably to entail careful maneuvering by clever French technocrats at a future European Central Bank...
...Capital liberalization," he writes, "by allowing capital to flow where the return is highest, thus aiding economic development and integration, requires flexibility in nominal exchange rates...
...Nation states and nationalism are not the same thing...
...There are questions and problems everywhere you look...
...Connolly deliberately borrows Nazi vocabulary to talk of a conspiratorial attempt by today's Germany to impose a Gross-wirtschaftsraum (large economic corridor) in Europe...
...Unlike in France, and to the relief of Germany's political leaders, Maastricht need not be put to the test in a popular referendum...
...Thus, monetary union reduces political legitimacy and increases economic instability in each country that participates...
...Never mind the immediate loss of several hundred jobs in a Europe feeling the crush of unemployment, from 11 percent in Germany to over 23 percent in Spain...
...to 'high politics' (who decides what gets done...
...And the democratic Europe of 1996 bears little resemblance to the Europe of 1926...
...In The Rotten Heart of Europe: The Dirty War for Europe's Money (Faber and Faber, $27.95, 427 pages), Bernard Connolly, a devout Thatcherite and highly regarded economist from Manchester, argues that far more is at stake in Europe's grand federalist project than bureaucratic tedium and occasional instances of regulatory idiocy...
...A scathing attack on the Exchange-Rate Mechanism as a vehicle for reaching economic and monetary union in Europe...
...The North American Free-Trade Agreement recognizes this...
...But Connolly's narrative is dense with spastic and ranting references to France's "Vichyite monetary obeisance" and the "Vichy-like atmosphere created by the [French] political elite...
...Seventy-six percent of Italians say they favor giving up the lira for a European currency...
...Connolly's insider story is a tale of heroes, including Margaret Thatcher and Helmut Schlesinger, the former Bundesbank president, and a long list of useful idiots and devious villains...
...And from there it's not difficult to see how one then arrives at political union...
...But for Connolly, the campaign for a single European currency, first begun in 1978 by then-German chancellor Helmut Schmidt and then-French president Val?ry Giscard d'Estaing, represents a "massive lie" and a dangerous "confidence trick...
...On the eve of the French referendum on Maastricht, for instance, the French government staged an elaborately rigged telethon, which included a live appearance by Kohl (in Bonn) pleading for a "yes" vote and a debate between Mitterrand and Philippe S?guin, the leading "no" campaigner...
...There's even talk of the ideology of "Europe" replacing the ideology of "Communism," with a "KGB" policing dissent within the Commission...
...But economic issues are the tip of the iceberg...
...Pretty dull stuff, perhaps...
...Maastricht's monetary union does not...
...From monetary union to a European ministry of economics is a short step...
...The French, ever cognizant of German power and believing that money is politics, seek "capture of the Bundesbank" through monetary union, according to Connolly...
...Germany's Eurobegeisterung, Euroenthusiasm, is mischievously mistranslated as "Eurofanaticism...
...He has a point...
...And while the book has become something of a bible for Euroskeptics in Britain, Connolly has become persona non grata in much of continental Europe...
...In fact, its publication in Europe last year got him fired...
...Entertaining, perhaps...
...Connolly carefully documents how the Bundesbank has been torn between the fear of "importing vice" from its neighbors and the temptations of (greater) hegemony in Europe...
...Nevertheless, insinuations about war and Maastricht as the "most dangerous folly in Europe since Munich" are where Connolly's evidence runs out...
...Connolly joined the European Commission in August 1978, not driven by any convictions about "building Europe," he writes, but because he believed that the European Community was a useful forum for maintaining and developing cooperation and friendly relations between Europe's democracies...
...And this is what scares Connolly most...
...President Jacques Chirac did a complete turnabout on national television the very next day...
...We simply don't want "madmen," one Belgian official recently told a British paper, as the European Union prepared for Maastricht II, the year-long inter-governmental conference that began at the end of March...
...The hegemonists have the support of Germany's export-dependent industrialist community...

Vol. 1 • April 1996 • No. 30


 
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