8.03.2018 Author: F. William Engdahl
Opposition
Grows to Merkel Macron EU Superstate
Column: Economics
Region: Europe
A
predictable process of dis-integration across the European union is underway.
It has now gained momentum not only from the elections in Italy where more than
two-thirds voted against open borders refugee policies pushed by Brussels. And
it comes not only from Austria or the East states such as Hungary and Poland or
the new Austrian government. Now opposition to the Berlin-Paris-Brussels
“centralist” axis is coming from Holland and a group of northern EU countries.
The issue at the heart involves nations who are asserting the sanctity of
national sovereignty versus those who want to dissolve borders and create some
form of top-down EU Superstate, euphemistically called the “ever closer union.”
The conflict will determine the future viability of the entire European Union
project. Brexit was only the first crack in the EU edifice.
‘Sovereign
nations’
During
a visit to Berlin March 3, Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte bluntly came out
against the recent trend led by Germany, France and other EU states to create a
top-down central supranational state along the lines of a United States of
Europe. He told press, “There has been this narrative that there is this
inevitability of closer cooperation in a European federal state.” He became
blunt: “This horrible language about ‘ever closer Union’ I don’t like. In
the past 20 or 30 years this has moved from ever closer union of the peoples of
the EU working together on collective issues, where member states weren’t able
to deal with it themselves, to become an inevitable goal in itself.” Then Rutte
declared the unspeakable “S” word: “We can never forget that these are
sovereign nations. This is not a movement in itself, just when needed in
special occasions. It has moved from a collective effort of nations to a goal
in itself. It’s totally wrong!”
North-south
divide opens
Now
in addition to the growing East-West divide within the EU between Poland,
Hungary and others versus Berlin and Paris, there is a clear North-South divide
opening. Rutte’s throwing down the gauntlet in Berlin was followed three days
later by a meeting of eight northern EU finance ministers including Netherland
on 6 March where they issued a common statement that was directed against the
French-German Macron Plan that seeks to create more centralized Brussels
control beginning with a single EU finance minister. The finance ministers of
Holland, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, Latvia, Lithuania and Sweden issued their
declaration from Den Haag where the meeting took place.
Macron,
with apparent backing of the new German coalition, joined with EU Commission
President Jean-Claude Juncker to call for a common Eurozone budget and a
European finance minister as the first step to a central fiscal union that
would be even more controlled top down from Brussels. Macron proposes in effect
an ultimate EU fiscal union, with Europe-wide taxes and spending, even more top
down than at present as sovereign nations would largely lose the taxation
sovereignty. Macron’s plan is a thinly-disguised attempt to create an EU fiscal
union in which German taxpayers as well as Dutch and other conservative EU
members will in essence bail out Southern European countries, including Greece
and Italy where French banks hold the largest exposure. Macron unveiled his plan in September 2017
just as German elections were taking place. He promoted it as a way to a
“sovereign (sic), united and democratic Europe,” something it definitely is
not.
Soros
in Background
The
push for a Brussels-run EU, ultimately with the central power to issue
“Eurobonds” for the entire Eurozone, has been a top issue for billionaire US
hedge fund speculator, George Soros. Were this to happen, it would turn the EU
into a huge financial target for currency speculators and make Germany and
other fiscally prudent states the paymaster for weaker states such as Greece or
Italy or Spain in the next financial crisis, and make no mistake there will come
a next, as nothing fundamental has been done by EU governments since the 2008
crisis to fundamentally reduce systemic risk. The zero interest rate policy of
the ECB has kept the debt bubble inflated across the Eurozone. Since the ECB
introduced its unprecedented program of buying Eurozone state debt in 2015, the
ECB has bought an eye-popping €2.3 trillion of euro securities to end of 2017.
All agree this is unsustainable. The question is what to do.
According
to media reports, on 14 November last year Soros requested a private,
unpublicized meeting with Benoît Coeuré, a European Central Bank executive
board member. According to Coeure’s diary published in February this year, they
discussed “euro area deepening.” An ECB spokeswoman told Reuters the meeting, which
was also attended by a representative of his hedge fund and another ECB
official, was to discuss a common eurozone budget and Treasury/Fiscal Union.
The
surprise decision of Chancellor Angela Merkel late last year to “kick upstairs”
long-standing and respected fiscal conservative CDU Finance Minister Wolfgang
Schauble, the way was cleared to name a new German finance minister more open
to the Macron ideas, something Schauble bitterly opposed. With Schauble gone,
the resistance is greatly weakened to creation of a de facto Eurozone “transfer
union” in which northern EU states, including above all Germany, accept large
fiscal or tax transfers to the heavily indebted Eurozone states of the south.
The ultimate winners in such a scheme would be French banks.
As
the new German Great Coalition was finally announced, Merkel and Macron have
decided to postpone their push for the Macron reforms at the EU summit in some
weeks, claiming lack of adequate time for the new German government to prepare.
In reality, it will likely reemerge in full fury in May.
According
to a report in the online US news site Politico, EU Commission Vice President,
Valdis Dombrovskis, revealed plans to propose creation of so-called “European
Safe Bonds“ (ESB) or “Sovereign Bonds Backed Securtities“ (SBBS) at the May EU
summit. The state bond debt of different EU states would be “bundled” into new
securities and sold. As the US rating agency Standard and Poors noted,
“European safe bonds (ESBies) have been proposed as a tool to increase the
supply of ‘AAA’ rated euro-denominated assets and reduce systemic risks from
banks’ large holdings of bonds issued by their respective sovereign
governments.” The reality they point out is likely to be the opposite. German
AAA bonds will have to be “bundled” with higher risk bonds from countries such
as Italy or Greece in an effort to sell the risky Greek debt.
As
the 2007-2008 US asset-backed securities crisis revealed, these schemes to
bundle risky debt with safer debt such as Germany backfire badly once a real
systemic crisis erupts. As Dutch Prime Minister Rutte warned, beware of US
hedge fund operators bearing large gifts and beware of sly attempts to further
erode EU national fiscal and other sovereignty to stabilize de facto bankrupt
Eurozone French and other banks.
F.
William Engdahl is strategic risk consultant and lecturer, he holds a
degree in politics from Princeton University and is a best-selling author
on oil and geopolitics, exclusively for the online magazine “New Eastern Outlook.”
https://journal-neo.org/2018/03/18/opposition-grows-to-merkel-macron-eu-superstate/
https://journal-neo.org/2018/03/18/opposition-grows-to-merkel-macron-eu-superstate/
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