After French President Nicolas Sarkozy's and German Chancellor
Angela Merkel's successful visits to Washington, D.C., U.S.
policymakers might be forgiven for thinking that U.S. strategic
interests are now in safe hands in continental Europe.
However, this optimism discounts the enormous threat posed by
the Reform Treaty, which was signed in Lisbon on December 13 and is
little more than the European Constitution with a cosmetic
makeover.
Under Chancellor Merkel's personal leadership, the European
Union breathed life back into the rejected European Constitution,
recasting it as the Reform Treaty. It still contains the building
blocks of a United States of Europe and will shift power from the
member states of the European Union to Brussels in critical
areas of policymaking, including defense, security, and
energy--areas in which the United States finds more traction on a
bilateral basis. The treaty is a blueprint for restricting the
sovereign right of EU member states to determine their own foreign
policies and poses a unique threat to the British-American Special
Relationship.
Above all, the treaty underscores the EU's ambitions to
become a global power and challenge American leadership on the
world stage.
Substantially the Same. The Reform Treaty retains
all the essential components of an EU superstate that were
included in the EU Constitution, including a single legal
personality, a permanent EU presidency, an EU-wide public
prosecutor, and the position of foreign minister in all but name.
It increases the number of decisions that can be taken by qualified
majority voting (QMV) to 40 new matters, including foreign policy,
energy, transport, space, commercial policy, humanitarian aid,
sport, tourism, and investment. Overall, the treaty takes at least
as many steps toward "ever closer union" as the old constitution
and will significantly strengthen EU powers at the expense of
member states' sovereignty.
To this effect, the House of Commons' European Scrutiny
Committee made a stunning indictment of British government policy:
"Taken as a whole, the Reform Treaty produces a general framework
which is substantially equivalent to the Constitutional
Treaty." The committee's report makes clear that the British
government did not think through the Reform Treaty and secured few,
if any, exemptions from the constitution's excesses that the
EU cannot change.
Foreign Policy Implications. The EU has attached great
importance to the treaty's granting of a stronger voice on the
world stage. The EU boasts that the Reform Treaty compels member
states to speak with a single voice on external relations. With a
single legal personality, Brussels will now sign international
agreements on behalf of all member states. With breathtaking
arrogance, the European Commission claims that with the Reform
Treaty in place, "The European Union is uniquely well placed to
find the answers to today's most pressing questions...and to
see European values promoted effectively in the global
community."
However, the EU has been anything but effective in speaking with
one voice on such major problems as Islamic terrorism, the Balkans,
and Darfur. For example, it has refused to use its extensive
arsenal of sanctions to fight the broader war on terrorism and
continues to implement the barest of sanctions against Iran.
Implications for the Special Relationship. The
institutional and political constraints of further European
integration will severely limit Britain's ability to build
international alliances and make foreign policy. The greatest
damage would be to Britain's enduring alliance with the United
States. In political, diplomatic, and financial terms, no good has
come from limiting Britain's geopolitical outlook to the European
continent, and certainly no benefit can come from a deeper EU
absorption that limits Britain's time-tested relationship with
the United States.
Britain has found its strongest, most enduring alliance in its
Special Relationship with the United States. Consistent and
recurring cooperation, systematic engagement, and enduring
bilateral relations have defined this relationship.
Ultimately, the Special Relationship is special because shared
values and common interests bind the two countries in ways
that are beyond the reach of the EU elites' undemocratic and
unaccountable governance. Further still, Britain and America
are prepared to defend their common values--with military force if
necessary.
Under the treaty, the United Kingdom will not have the power to
veto the appointment of the EU's primary foreign policy actor. Yet
the enhanced role for this unelected minister should cause
Washington great concern. Under the treaty, the EU foreign
minister will have the power to appoint EU envoys; a bigger
profile, budget, and diplomatic corps at his disposal; the right to
speak on behalf of member states in multilateral institutions
(including the U.N. Security Council upon request); and the right
to propose EU military missions.
It is vital that the U.S. recognize the value of dealing
with its enduring allies on a bilateral level. The EU's desire to
create "One Europe" using the European Security and Defense
Policy has duplicated NATO security structures and significantly
downgraded the possibility of traditional
alliance-building by the United States. Replacing individual
European allies with a single EU foreign minister in any context or
institution is a bad idea.
Brussels clearly intends to become the U.S. Administration's
first port of call in conducting its European foreign policy.
However, the Administration should not expect the warm
response that it gets in London and other national capitals.
Conclusion. The Lisbon Reform Treaty is demonstrably a
political treaty. After only five months to study this historic
international treaty, the British government effectively signed
away its independence and self-determination. If there was
ever a time for the White House to become unnerved about further
European integration, this is it.
The world faces both unprecedented threats and unprecedented
opportunities that require greater flexibility for nation-states to
act. The Reform Treaty denies sovereign states the ability to do
that and further limits their right to build alliances with
the United States. Britain is uniquely positioned to fashion
an EU that better serves British and American interests, and its
initial reluctant signature of the Reform Treaty can be reversed.
America should send its special ally a clear message that it will
support Britain in reasserting its sovereignty.
Sally McNamara is Senior
Policy Analyst in European Affairs in the Margaret Thatcher
Center for Freedom, a division of the Kathryn and Shelby
Cullom Davis Institute for International Studies, at The Heritage
Foundation. Erica Munkwitz, an intern in the Davis Institute,
assisted in preparing this paper.