Posted on 03/23/2007 5:57:01 PM PDT by Jedi Master Pikachu
European Union leaders are due to meet in the German capital, Berlin, for the 27-nation bloc's 50th birthday party. Chancellor Angela Merkel will use the celebrations to relaunch the debate on the EU's stalled constitution, rejected by French and Dutch voters in 2005. A declaration to be issued in Berlin will include a commitment to place the EU on a renewed basis within two years. Correspondents say it will paper over deep divisions among the 27 EU members over the bloc's future direction.
"We, the citizens of Europe, have united for the better," the draft Berlin declaration says, hailing some of the EU's achievements over the past 50 years, including open borders, the common market and the euro, and an end to Europe's Cold War divisions.
The BBC's Oana Lungescu in Berlin says there is no explicit mention of the most divisive issues; future enlargement to admit Turkey and the Balkan nations, and the EU constitution.
Just weeks before the French presidential elections, and faced with stiff opposition from the Czech Republic, Poland and Britain, Chancellor Merkel has chosen the vaguest of terms, our correspondent says. "We are united in our aim of placing the EU on a renewed common basis before the European Parliament elections in 2009," the statement says. But a poll by a British Euro-sceptic think tank, Open Europe, suggests that three quarters of Europeans would like a referendum on any new treaty giving more power to the EU. 'Great achievements' According to the poll, carried out in all 17 EU countries, 41% of respondents said the union should have fewer powers and that more decisions should be taken at a national or local level.
While the "Berlin Declaration" will cite the euro as one of the great achievements of the EU, a majority of citizens in the eurozone want to go back to their old national currencies.
There was majority support for keeping the euro in only six of the 13 euro member countries, according to the poll results. Respondents' top priorities were to establish clear fixed limits on the powers of the EU, and to reduce the EU's trade barriers against developing countries. According to another poll, conducted in several European countries and the United States, most people believe the EU will still be around in 50 years from now, but expanded to Turkey and even Russia. However, less than one third of those polled think trans-Atlantic relations will be much better in 2057.
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This is NOT good.
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"[They] the People of the United States" (The United States Constitution).
United States of Europe.
I have said before the EU is an enemy waiting to declare itself. With the ever widening streak of anti-Americanism making its mark in Europe, the coming together of the EU is not going to be very good for us or our relationship with our European "allies." If I had a wish it would be to see an Anglo-alliance, but unfortunately that would not be very popular in Britain. At the very least we should leave NATO now.
Do you read your bible? The King of the North.... you seem to know.
I don't know much about this subject. Can you give me some history on this, and the reasons that we don't just abandon Europe as allies anyway? Aren't they going to be "EurAbia" in a few decades based on their lax immigration laws and the invasion of IslamoFascists into may European countries?
Or is THAT the crux of the issue, and why we should be worried?
As enemies go, though, they are pretty anemic. To illustrate, they formed as a 10 nation block that was about the same size as the American GDP, explicitly to compete with our economy. Since then they have grown mostly by adding new member states, now 27, and they are still about the same size as our economy.
Besides, if we ever need to attack the EU, we can just wait until August, when they are all off on holiday, and pretty much walk in and take it all.
At the moment I would agree with you, however, I see Europe as spiteful enough to work with our enemies specifically to block us at every turn. We saw what happened in the run up to the Iraq war, they did everything they could to thwart the US. This is just the beginning of what I think will be a very adversarial and contentious relationship.
Lots of things are going on at the moment, the article in the WSJ ( http://www.opinionjournal.com/wsj/?id=110009802 ) couldn't have come at a better time IMO. There is still hope :) I believe the islamo-socialist spell is about to be broken!
Ping for later. Gotta work today. Be back later!
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