SUPERPOWER EUROPE'S SYSTEMATIC
EXPANSION OF ITS TERRITORY
Date of Report 18 May 2003
Translated 18 May 2003
MUNICH - A German strategy paper on the future of the European Union
foresees the disintegration of the EU and a "return to the power
politics of former days" if the Berlin-driven "ascent of Europe
to global power" is hindered by the "blockade mentality"
of some members. The politically influential authors contrast the threat
of this scenario against that of a "Superpower Europe" which
will reach "power parity" with the USA and thereby achieve
its rightful "objective, world-power potential".
"Downfall or ascent to world power" are the alternatives
placed before the EU member states by the Centre for Applied Policy
Research (CAP), an influential German think tank which co-operates closely
with the German Foreign Office. The German political advisers assert
that the (railway) points to the future should be reset in view of the
dissension within the EU over the Iraq war. (See Europe's Full Circle
and Fascist Europe Rising page 45 for the historic Nazi resonance
of "setting the points" - ed). The Union and its member states
must now define themselves anew as a "future-orientated community
for success" which was concerned at "fundamental attacks on
the substance of European integration".
"POWER POLITICS OF BYGONE DAYS"
If the attempt to "europeanise" national foreign and security
policies failed, a "renationalisation" would follow. In the
first of the future scenarios offered in the German paper, relationships
between European states would be affected by "a marked return to
the power politics of bygone days". The dominant influence of the
USA in Europe would experience a renaissance. If the "blockade
mentality" of some members hindered the "ascent of Europe
to global power" then a group of member states could combine together
in a "closed European nucleus" outside the framework of the
EU treaties - thus the next threat. The strategic baselines would be
agreed by the most powerful member states "which have at their
disposal the necessary military capabilities and structures as well
as the political will when necessary to commit military emphasis to
their world-wide interests". The rest of the EU would then degrade
into a "de luxe free trade area" without capability in political
matters.
"SUPERPOWER EUROPE"
A development after the fashion of the last few decades and an "Avant
Garde" inside the EU does not appear sufficient for the German
world-power strategists "to activate the world-power potential
of 500 million people". Only in the scenario of "Superpower
Europe" will "Greater Europe" achieve its rightful world-power
potential. Therefore it followed that the "final goal of a European
state" should be pursued.
All central political competences (interior, foreign policy, defence,
social and economic policies) must be communitised. The EU, already
developing in the direction of "Superpower Europe", would
always be capable of accepting new members . Thus it would be "globally
the only system which could continually expand its territory. Then
the great political and economic power potential of the EU would achieve
parity with the USA" .
"UNRESTRICTED MEANS OF INTERNATIONAL POWER
POLITICS"
In particular the "building up of United Strategic Armed Forces"(VESS)
which could use the nuclear weapons capability of France and Britain
under a unified European High Command , would alter the international
role of the EU" - thus the German vision. This would lead to "power
parity with the USA". "Superpower Europe is finally saying
goodbye to the idea of a civil power and is acquiring without restriction
the means of international Great Power policy".
SEE ALSO
The Will to World Power
Unilateral Reamament for the "necessary basis of power"*
Ethnic "New Order" for the Gulf Region
Berlin: Balkans of "ethnic groups" and regions *
German Leadership for "World power in the making"*
Excerpts from paper in Documents section*
* In German on www.german-foreign-policy.com
SOURCE
Centrum fuer angewandte Politikforschung (CAP) Mai 2003
Europas Zukunft; www.cap.uni-muenchen.de
(Centre for Applied Policy Research - Europe's Future)