| Európai Egyesült Államok |
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The
European Counterweight BY
BRUCE A. RITTER
With its expansion to 25 member states, the European Union is poised to become a vast federal superstate. As it seeks to be a "counterweight" to U.S. Global interests, will Europe replace America as the world's leading superpower?
It has more people (454.7 million) than the United States-a larger consumer market-more troops (collectively, almost two million armed forces personnel)-and, with more votes on the United Nations Security Council and every other international body, stronger political muscle.
It has a president, a legislative body, a flag, a national anthem, a motto ("Unity in Diversity"), open borders between member states, a constitution (yet to be ratified), a Bill of Rights, and a court system that can overrule the highest of any member court.
It also has an emerging common culture that speaks a common language: English.
The decades-old European dream of becoming a kind of "United States of Europe" is becoming a reality. Speaking at the Carnegie Council's "Books for Breakfast" program, T.R. Reid, bureau chief for The Washington Post and author of the book The United States of Europe: The New Superpower and the End of American Supremacy, observed, "I think it's fair to say that Europe is more united today than at any time since the Roman Empire."
But what does this mean for America's future?
"Let Europe Arise!"
Within a 75-year span, the European continent was ravaged by three brutal war campaigns: the Franco-Prussian War (1870-71), World War I (1914-18) and World War II (1939-45). Together, an estimated 60 to 70 million Europeans were killed.
In the aftermath of WWII, the United States became a world-leading superpower, countered by the Soviet Union. As the Iron Curtain came down on Europe, dividing East from West, war-torn nations on both sides raced to rebuild their armed forces. Another continental war seemed to loom on the horizon. And so leaders, thinkers, idealists and religionists set out to fulfill a vision: a reorganized Europe free from nationalist strife, military competition and arms races.
On September 19, 1946, in Zurich, Switzerland, Winston Churchill gave a speech that addressed the state of Europe and its future. "If Europe were once united in the sharing of its common inheritance," he said, "there would be no limit to the happiness, to the prosperity and the glory which its three or four hundred million people would enjoy."
"...all the while there is a remedy which, if it were generally and spontaneously adopted by the great majority of people in many lands, would as if by a miracle transform the whole scene, and would in a few years make all Europe, or the greater part of it, as free and as happy as Switzerland is today. What is this sovereign remedy? It is to re-create the European Family, or as much of it as we can, and to provide it with a structure under which it can dwell in peace, in safety and in freedom. We must build a kind of United States of Europe."
Churchill proposed that this unified European state be spearheaded by a partnership between France and Germany.
Continuing, he said, "The structure of the United States of Europe, if well and truly built, will be such as to make the material strength of a single state less important. Small nations will count as much as large ones and gain their honor by their contribution to the common cause."
"...we must re-create the European Family in a regional structure called, it may be, the United States of Europe. And the first practical step would be to form a Council of Europe. If at first all the States of Europe are not willing or able to join the Union, we must nevertheless proceed to assemble and combine those who will and those who can. The salvation of the common people of every race and of every land from war or servitude must be established on solid foundations and must be guarded by the readiness of all men and women to die rather than submit to tyranny. In all this urgent work, France and Germany must take the lead together. Great Britain, the British Commonwealth of Nations, mighty America and I trust Soviet Russia-for then indeed all would be well-must be the friends and sponsors of the new Europe and must champion its right to live and shine.
"Therefore I say to you: let Europe arise!"
Churchill's speech laid the groundwork for today's European Union-and marked the prophetic path it will take.
The Power of Subtle Diplomacy
For centuries, Italy, Spain, France, Germany, Britain and other Western European countries ran global empires that steered or influenced the course of world events. These nations operated from a position of strength: They possessed the military might to force their will upon weaker countries-and were not afraid to use it.
But by 1945, this had changed; the age of European empires came to an end.
The conclusion of WWII ushered in the Cold War, which left Europe caught between the competing interests and politics of America and the USSR. With their economies and infrastructures in shambles-and no longer possessing the military means to impose their national will-European leaders were relegated to being minor players on the world stage. Under the far-reaching shadows of U.S. leadership and the looming threat of Soviet aggression, Europe operated from a position of weakness, and had to master the art of subtle diplomacy, using charm, stealth, guile, compromise and appeasement to secure their political interests.
Alone, no European nation had the resources to challenge the political, financial and military muscle of the two superpowers-yet Britain, Italy, Germany, France and others realized that together they could hold their own. This became a key motivator for the Europeans to unify. From the 1950s onward, the nations learned to pool their resources together, entering into treaties and setting up commissions that ultimately led to the formation of the European Union.
With the dismantling of the Berlin Wall in 1989, and the subsequent collapse of the USSR, America was left as the lone superpower. Despite all that the United States had done to rebuild, fortify and protect Western Europe, European leaders dreaded the prospect of the U.S. pursuing its global interests unchallenged. This fear motivated the EU's transformation into a political and economic counterweight to American power.
The European Counterweight
Today, the EU has the economic clout necessary to make many of the rules that shape and govern world commerce.
In a July 2001 decision, the European Commission voted unanimously-without even a debate-to veto a proposed merger between American aircraft giants General Electric and Honeywell. This $45 billion deal-which had been approved by the U.S. Justice Department-would have been the biggest industrial merger in history.
Four years later, the European Court of First Instance acknowledged that "the Commission's reasoning was marred by legal errors," and that "in the words of the court, the decision was 'vitiated [invalidated] by illegalities.'" However, the court upheld the 2001 decision.
Honeywell and GE did not merge.
Why? Because if the merger had taken place, the new aircraft giant would have been shut out of the largest market in the world-the 25 member nations of the European Union.
Even software titan Microsoft has had to bow to Europe's demands. For years, U.S. authorities have tried to restrain Microsoft Corporation's domination of the computer industry, but with little success. In a March 2004 antitrust ruling, the European Commission ordered the company to pay 497 million euros ($613 million), share its software code with competitors, and offer an unbundled version of the Windows operating system.
The Seattle, Washington-based company complied-but apparently not to the EU's satisfaction. In December 2005, taking further legal steps to ensure better compliance to the previous ruling, the commission threatened fines of up to $2.37 million per day if Microsoft did not provide its rivals with better documentation on its software programs.
If American corporations want access to the EU market, then they must be prepared to follow Europe's rules. And this is why, as T.R. Reid explains in his book The United States of Europe, American whiskey (for example) is sold in bottles that use the metric system, which is used universally in Europe.
In March 2005, the European Commission announced it would impose a 15% increase in duty on U.S. imports of paper, agricultural, textile and machinery products. This was in retaliation for Washington failing to comply with the World Trade Organization ruling that America's anti-dumping law (the Byrd Amendment) was illegal. The amendment was killed in the U.S. Senate nine months later.
These are just a handful of examples of the EU imposing its economic will upon American companies and blocking U.S. global interests.
One must ask: Will Europe some day summon the political will to do so by force?
A Widening Transatlantic Rift
Political commentator Robert Kagan, a senior associate at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, observed this about Europe's current position in exercising its political will: "In an anarchic world, small powers always fear they will be victims. Great powers, on the other hand, often fear rules that may constrain them more than they fear the anarchy in which their power brings security and prosperity....[Europe's] tactics, like their goal, are the tactics of the weak. They hope to constrain American power without wielding power themselves. In what may be the ultimate feat of subtlety and indirection, they want to control the behemoth [the U.S.] by appealing to its conscience" (Policy Review, No. 113, "Power and Weakness").
But what if the EU began to view America as unreasonable-without a "conscience"? How would it react? Would Europe, perhaps feeling justified, again embrace its former, centuries-old tactics of machtpolitik ("power politics") and flex its military muscle?
Most Europeans resent the current White House administration. Nonetheless, they do largely favor the American people. They may see them as brash and unsophisticated, but Europeans also recognize that their American cousins are resourceful and kind-hearted, quick to help countries and peoples in dire straits, especially in the wake of sudden disasters. Europeans do not see Americans as malevolent people bent on world domination.
Nevertheless, America's reputed "cowboy mentality," an approach that addresses international problems with political bluntness and force, clashes with the European preference to employ diplomatic finesse and subtlety in place of military solutions. This is among the many issues and differences that are driving a wedge-a growing transatlantic rift-between Europe and America.
Other points of contention are...
Diplomacy and bureaucracy: Americans are known for their resourcefulness and "can-do" spirit; when unanticipated problems arise, they have a reputation for solving them with unconventional thinking. This reinforces the perception of an American cowboy mentality, in which U.S. statesmen are considered impatient and seek fast results from complex international situations.
In contrast, Europe is mired in bureaucracy; out-of-the-ordinary requests usually involve a great deal of bureaucratic red tape and form-filling. This is a product of the European mindset of patient diplomacy-the opposite of U.S. methods.
There is another related issue: While most U.S. citizens tend to want government involved in its affairs as little as possible, Europeans embrace government regulation. EU citizens gladly live under a "womb to tomb" welfare state that pays for virtually everything-health care, child care, education, etc.
But with such a far-reaching system comes bureaucracy, high taxes and heavy-handed regulation. Most Americans believe that these disadvantages far outweigh the benefits.
Capital Punishment: Perhaps due to the continent's centuries-long history of barbarism, capital punishment is both illegal and unpopular across Europe. From the average citizen, to government officials, to the pope, Europeans are vehemently against the death penalty-even for the most brutal of criminals. Any nation that desires to join the ever-expanding EU must abolish capital punishment from its land.
Whenever executions take place in the U.S. (which occur less often than Europeans might think), America is seen as barbaric.
A case-in-point: When convicted murderer Stanley "Tookie" Williams was executed, the European nations were outraged, especially Austria. Its native son, California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger, refused to block the execution. To show their indignation, local activists of Graz, Austria, Mr. Schwarzenegger's hometown, threatened to remove the governor's name from a 15,300-seat sports stadium. (Turning the tables on his critics, Mr. Schwarzenegger demanded that his name be removed, and returned a ring of honor that Graz officials had given him six years earlier.)
Controlling the Internet: From emails to web pages, Internet-based communications are enabling even the smallest of businesses to participate in the global market.
The Internet is a U.S. invention, and the vast majority of websites are still American-created and operated. Additionally, 62% of Americans have Internet access, while only 14% of the rest of the world possess this capability.
ICANN (the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers), a private, nonprofit U.S.-based organization, is responsible for assigning domain names and internet suffixes, such as ".com" and ".org." The EU, along with China, Brazil and other critics, fear that ICANN (which has close ties to the U.S. Department of Commerce) wields far too much control over the World Wide Web.
"Though ICANN is a private organization with international board members, the Commerce Department can still veto what goes on government-approved lists of the 260 or so internet suffixes, like '.com.' Theoretically, the US could simply disconnect the domains of countries, like Iran or North Korea, with which they are feuding" ("EU and US at Loggerheads Over Internet Control," Deutsche Welle).
Also, of the 13 root servers that direct traffic and serve as the Internet's master directories, only one is located outside the United States (in Tokyo, Japan).
Citing growing security threats, increased usage of Internet-based global communications and commerce, and its historic role in developing and expanding the World Wide Web, the U.S. says it has the right to retain control.
Europe has proposed replacing American government oversight with a technical intergovernmental body: "The 25 EU countries are unanimously demanding a new cooperation model for the Internet, where all interested countries sit at one table to discuss the core questions of the network together," the EU Commissioner for Information Society and Media told Der Spiegel magazine.
"Such a body stokes fears of the kind of stifling bureaucracy the United States regularly criticizes the EU of" (ibid.).
To offer an alternative-a counterweight-to U.S. Internet dominance, the EU is launching its own domain-name extension: ".eu".
Yet, perhaps the deepest issue separating Europe from America is religion.
Bonds of an Emerging Identity
A common European culture is emerging among the generation ranging from ages 15 to 40. Known as "Generation E" (or "the Nineties Generation"), it consists of college-educated young professionals who grew up in one part of Europe-Edinburgh, Madrid or Florence, for example-studied at universities in other parts of the continent-such as Oxford, Paris or Frankfurt-and are pursuing professional careers in still another section of Europe, as in Rome, Brussels or Dublin (called "the Silicon Valley of Europe").
Increasingly, those in Generation E view themselves as Europeans first-secondarily Scots, Spaniards, Germans, Italians or otherwise. In their eyes, Europe is more than just a continent-it's their national homeland. And English is emerging as the common language.
A prevalent bond among these and other Europeans is their belief that religion in the public forum is archaic-and at best, explosive. Their common history, which is filled with mass brutality and bloodshed, has taught them that religion in the public sphere, mixed with fervent nationalism and national self-interests, inevitably leads to war.
According to a survey by the Pew Forum on Religion and Public Life, 59% of Americans called their faith "very important." But only 21% of Europeans said that religion is "very important" to them; only 11% of the French, 21% of Germans and 33% of Britons feel this way (European Values Study, which tracks attitudes in 32 European countries).
The history of Europe has seen war, torture and death-all in the name of religion. Little wonder Europeans are now deeply skeptical of patriotism mixed with religious sentiment.
This is most true of Germany. Karsten Voigt, German Foreign Ministry's coordinator on German-U.S. cooperation, explained, "The mixture of patriotism and religion is anathema and heresy in German religious life because it was misused and went too far in the past. Remember, German soldiers in World War I wore belt buckles reading 'Gott Mitt Uns' [God With Us]" (Christian Science Monitor).
This firm mistrust is heightened when the American president invokes religious rhetoric into his speeches, such as his 2005 inaugural address, in which he said, "America's vital interests and our deepest beliefs are now one. From the day of our Founding, we have proclaimed that every man and woman on this earth has rights, and dignity, and matchless value, because they bear the image of the Maker of Heaven and earth" (emphasis ours).
Mr. Bush's convictions clash with the European belief that human rights arise from the secular humanist idea that man is the ultimate norm by which values are to be determined. It is a form of naturalistic religion that places man-his human reasoning, feelings, scientific inquiry, ethical conduct-above God.
Dominique Moisi, one of France's most respected political analysts, said that "the combination of religion and nationalism in America is frightening. We feel betrayed by God and by nationalism, which is why we are building the European Union as a barrier to religious warfare" (ibid.).
Many call this Europe-wide aggressive attitude toward religion, particularly traditional Christianity, "secular fundamentalism"-a mindset that views religion as "lifeless." Europe's current climate of "Christianophobia" explains why churches that once held hundreds of attendees at a time are rapidly losing adherents.
Rocco Buttiglione, whom the European Parliament blocked from becoming the European commissioner for justice because he had described homosexuality as a sin, observed the following: "The new soft totalitarianism that is advancing on the left wants to have a state religion," adding, "It is an atheist, nihilistic religion-but it is a religion that is obligatory for all" (ibid.).
A 2004 Gallup poll revealed that 44% of Americans said they attended a place of worship once a week. In contrast, only 15% of Europeans claimed this about their religion (on average; this number varied widely among the member states).
A California man's attempt to remove the phrase "One Nation, Under God" from the Pledge of Allegiance brought cries of foul; a poll revealed that 90% of Americans wanted to keep the phrase. Meanwhile, in Brussels, the EU capital, officials have agreed on the final text of the EU's new Constitution, which makes no direct mention of God, despite calls from the Vatican and other voices to recognize Europe's "Christian roots."
Religious convictions and practices among Europeans are fading from people's lives, only to be replaced with increasing materialism and permissiveness. Mainstream churches-especially the Catholic Church-continue to suffer dwindling membership, church attendance and influence.
Cardinal Renato Raffaele Martino, president of the Vatican's Pontifical Council for Justice and Peace, fought a hard, but unsuccessful, battle for Christianity to be mentioned in the EU Constitution. Still troubled by Mr. Buttiglione's treatment, and by the Spanish parliament's moves toward legalizing homosexual marriage, he asked, "Those Roman emperors who wanted to get rid of us, where are they today? And Napoleon, he didn't like us either. And where is Napoleon today?" ("European, Not Christian," U.S. News & World Report).
Many recognize that there is a spiritual void-a gnawing hunger-that secularism cannot satisfy. Some are looking past today's secular landscape and are envisioning a future when a new spiritual reawakening will arise. But how will this come to pass?
From "Military Pygmy" to "Flabby Giant"
Before the EU's expansion to 25 members, the commander of NATO called Europe a "military pygmy." Since then, the EU's combined military manpower has grown to almost two million armed forces personnel-more than the United States.
Yet the same commander upgraded Europe to being only a "flabby giant," because its troops are not united into a large, single military force. There still remains a technological gap between European forces and the U.S. military, especially in transportation, intelligence and modern weapons technology.
But the EU would rather spend funds on its burgeoning welfare programs and let the U.S. protect it from external threats. Indeed, one of the key reasons for forming the EU was to find an alternative to war. Today, European politicians and academics tend to view the use of military force as a relic held over from the era of colonialism and world-spanning empires. In their secular thinking, war is judged as a waste of time and money, and is immoral.
Yet this thinking is bound to change as the European Union grows into an economic, political and, potentially, military juggernaut. It already possesses virtually every component necessary to be a counterweight to American supremacy. Could men, when given access to such power, deny human nature and pass up the opportunity to become the global leader in all arenas?
With 25 democratic nations each having a say in EU affairs, the government is too large and unwieldy to govern efficiently and effectively. Only when the member states concentrate on countering U.S. interests are they unified and unanimous.
Just as a corporation, school system or church cannot be successfully governed by committee, neither can a government. Someone must be in charge-someone must take responsibility for when things go wrong-someone must captain the ship.
To become a federal superstate with supranational governance, capable of executing decisions with speed and precision, Europe must have a strong leader guiding the way.
Plans are already in the works.
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Before it can assume the mantle of global preeminence, the European Union must face several daunting obstacles and challenges-including a drastic and startling change in government.
Europe
finds itself at a major crossroads: continue on its present course and
remain in America's shadow, while flexing its diplomatic and economic
muscles like a passive-aggressive giant-or take the lead role on the
world stage and become a dominant superpower.
Many
believe that, because it is mired in bureaucracy and is severely limited
by its system of governance by committee, Europe is incapable
of choosing the latter path.
Consider
the numerous obstacles and challenges that the EU must face: dealing
with Russia and its competing interests; the growing economic threat of
a China-India trade alliance; the continual Europe-wide need for oil;
the rising tide of secularism, as the Vatican repeatedly calls for
Europe to return to its spiritual roots; a growing and restless European
Muslim population that could one day become the majority; terrorism from
Islamic extremists; deciding whether to grant Turkey, an Islamic country,
EU membership-the list goes on.
Europe's
future will be determined by how it deals with these and other issues.
An Example
of EU Bureaucracy
The European Union "excels" at
establishing endless government regulations, in effect, micromanaging
its sovereign member-states.
Consider the following example.
Aland, an island of 26,000 people in the Baltic Sea, is an autonomous
region of Finland. For centuries, the people of Aland have hunted
migrating fowl, such as wild duck. When Finland joined the EU in 1995,
about 70% of Aland voters voted "yes" in their own referendum, after
being assured that their hunting rights would be preserved. Yet the
European Court of Justice later declared most spring hunting as illegal.
Because their island is autonomous,
but considered a part of Finland, the citizens of Aland are essentially
sovereign co-rulers of Finland. Therefore, they have veto-power of any
international treaty that the Finnish government wants to enter-including
treaties of the European Union.
Tired of being outvoted and
overruled by the EU time and again-losing the right to fish at sea
with traditional nets, having their spring duck hunting virtually
abolished, and the European Court of Justice's attempt to abolish the
local laws on consuming "snus" (a form of chewing tobacco that has
been outlawed by the EU in every nation except Sweden)-the islanders
are threatening to veto the European Commission's attempts to revive
the Constitution.
Despite taking Finland to court to
quash Aland's snus law, the Commission ruled that Finland has no power
to change that law; only Aland has the power to control its internal
laws covering health.
Think of it! Just a single European
nation (or, in this case, an autonomous region within a nation) can
bring EU initiatives to a screeching halt. With all members having a say
in internal affairs, how can Europe hope to become a federal superstate?
Dealing With
Iran
The government of Iran claims that
advancing its nuclear research program is vital to the needs of the
nation's booming population, which has more than doubled in 20 years.
But Europe, along with the U.S., Israel and other nations, remains
skeptical, believing that the Islamic republic is bent on becoming a
nuclear power. Even Russia, China and India-Iran's allies and
trading partners-are wary of Tehran's insistence on uranium fuel
enrichment.
At first, Russia's offer to use
its own nuclear reactors to enrich Iran's uranium was rejected, with
Tehran postponing further negotiations; eventually, they reached an
agreement. However, fearing possible economic or political sanctions,
Iran's deputy nuclear chief warned that the deal would be off if the
International Atomic Energy Agency referred the nation to the UN.
Despite these on again-off again negotiations, Moscow, like Beijing,
prefers diplomacy rather than military options in dealing with Iran.
Acting on behalf of the EU, Britain,
France and Germany (also called the EU3) negotiated with Iran to cease
its fuel enrichment work. However, these efforts failed when talks were
suspended.
In keeping pressure on Tehran,
German Chancellor Angela Merkel still views diplomacy as a viable
solution, but she refuses to rule out other options-thus keeping the
threat of military action on the table. According to Der Spiegel,
this position is threatening to fracture the chancellor's coalition of
the Christian Democrats and the Social Democrats, Germany's two
largest political parties. German conservatives generally believe that
without the looming threat of military confrontation, Iran will never
give up its nuclear ambitions. However, many members of the center-left
Social Democratic Party do not support the use of force.
For now, both parties are nervously
awaiting how this international situation will unfold. If the unresolved
tensions between Iran and the Western nations come to a boil, Ms. Merkel
could face a major internal political crisis.
Meanwhile, Iranian president Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad has hinted that his nation may be considering a withdrawal
from the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty.
Contributing to rising tensions and
the West's growing concern of future Iranian aggression, Mr.
Ahmadinejad stated that Europeans are being "held hostage" by "Zionists,"
and demanded an independent investigation to look into the "truth
about the fairy tale of the Holocaust" (ibid.). Further, he asked that
the West "remove what they created 60 years ago and if they do not
listen to our recommendations, then the Palestinian nation and other
nations will eventually do this for them." Then he added, "Remove
Israel before it is too late and save yourself from the fury of regional
nations."
The Iranian leader also said that it
was time for the West to bow to Allah.
What will Europe do? What kind of
decisions can a committee of European leaders-all harboring national
and personal self-interests-unanimously agree to? As stated in Part
One of this two-part series, no corporation, school system or church can
successfully govern by committee. Someone must take the lead-someone
must take full responsibility when things go wrong
A Future EU
Foreign Minister?
To do away with bureaucratic
confusion and institutional frictions, and to establish a stronger
foreign policy presence, the EU Constitution introduced the creation of
a future office: EU Minister for Foreign Affairs. This individual's
role would be to represent the EU's foreign interests and positions-to
allow the 25 member-states of Europe to speak with one voice and act
jointly in international affairs.
The future EU foreign minister would
also be vice-president of the European Commission, responsible for
external relations-development issues, human rights, foreign and
security policies, etc.-and chair the Foreign Affairs Council.
To assist in carrying out the
functions of this office, the EU Constitutional Treaty calls for the
creation of the European External Action Service (EEAS), which would be
an administrative body the foreign minister would preside over, and from
which he would appoint EU ambassadors.
Issues have already arisen, such as
working out and agreeing to the foreign minister's powers and duties;
deciding if he will have his own independent secretariat, or be part of
the Council or the Commission; and determining whether he should be
authorized to represent the EU in trade and development policy.
Suppose that this new office
successfully allows Europe to carry out its foreign policy and interests
speedily and effectively. Would EU leaders conclude that a similar
office needs to be created-one that would handle Europe's internal
affairs?
A "Club
Within a Club"
The EU requires unanimity in
deciding key issues. Yet, ever since expanding to its present size-25
nations, all desiring a say in how the government should operate-administration
has become unwieldy.
For instance, EU members cannot
agree as to how Europe should address the economy and high unemployment
within member nations. Such division keeps the EU from effectively
challenging America's financial clout, or China's increasing
economic presence.
Belgian Prime Minister Guy
Verhofstadt has offered a bold solution: the creation of an EU core.
This "United States of Europe," a name Mr. Verhofstadt has proposed,
would function as a "club within a club" of the EU political machine.
Only a small group of member-states bound closely together, he argues,
would solve the current administrative logjam.
The model for Mr. Verhofstadt's
proposal already exists: The 12-nation single currency euro zone-Austria,
Belgium, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, the Netherlands, Ireland,
Italy, Luxembourg, Portugal and Spain.
"Twelve countries within the
European Union have already handed control over their monetary policy to
the European Central Bank. When EU finance ministers meet, the 12
ministers from the euro zone hold talks among themselves before they
meet the 13 colleagues whose countries haven't adopted the euro.
"In that pre-meeting, the most
important decisions for the euro zone are made-in the club of the
avant-garde. And it's a model that could conceivable be transferred
from finance policy to other areas-with the euro zone core leading the
way" ("European Union's Future: A Club Within a Club," Der
Spiegel).
Both Paris and Berlin have shown
interest in this proposal.
How Will It
All Come Together?
With Europe weighed down by
bureaucracy and regulations, and inefficiently governed by committee,
dramatic changes in government must take place before the EU can surpass
America's global leadership.
Imagine this future scenario: The
materialistic morals and values of secular Europe have left a spiritual
hunger in the lives of millions, waiting to be satisfied. Conditions are
ripe for a charismatic religious leader to fill this spiritual void.
Through awesome miraculous powers-bleeding statues, signs in the sky?-this
leader sparks a religious revival throughout the continent; Europe's
spiritual roots are re-awakened.
As was done for centuries in
European history, this religious leader, backed by throngs of fervent
believers, will use his new-found standing to influence government
policy and civil laws. Through him, religion gains a voice in state
affairs.
He then uses his clout to endorse a
popular European statesman who shares his values and vision for Europe-perhaps
a "rising star" whom many see as destined for a bright political
future. (Could this man's shrewdness, charm and deft diplomacy become
evident with his successful tenure as the EU's foreign minister?)
The religious leader uses his
increasing authority to influence-even pressure-the heads of the
"club within a club" to hand over governing powers and authority to
his political counterpart. Europe is no longer ruled by committee, but
by one man-one voice-one will and purpose.
Does this sound far-fetched? Is it
even conceivable that secular Europe would zealously embrace
religion and transform itself from democracy to one-man rule?
Before you answer, remember the
world before 9/11: Who would have dreamed that a group of terrorists
could hijack four U.S. planes, demolish the twin towers of the World
Trade Center and destroy a portion of the Pentagon? Who would have
imagined that the U.S. and its allies would wage a worldwide war on
terrorism, invading Afghanistan and Iraq, and toppling the government of
Saddam Hussein?
This may come as a surprise, but
this hard-to-believe scenario was foretold long ago in an ancient book
of historic records, poetic writings and religious text. It's called
the Bible. While it continues to be the world's leading bestseller,
the Bible is greatly misunderstood and sorely misinterpreted by hundreds
of millions of readers. Even the overwhelming majority of Christians and
their most highly educated religious leaders cannot comprehend its
teachings.
For instance, very few know or
understand that an estimated one-third of the Bible is prophecy, 90% of
which pertains to our time-now-and
to "the world to come" (Heb. 2:5; 6:5). It speaks of a future leader
who, endorsed by a powerful religious leader, will receive government
authority from ten heads of European nations (or groups of nations)-possibly
a "club within the club"? (See Revelation 17:12-13.)
Europe's rise to global
preeminence will become a reality-and, to worldwide astonishment, the
United Kingdom will not be a part of this!
As the European counterweight
assumes its place as the world's leading superpower, what will become
of the United States and her staunch allies-Britain, Canada, Australia
and other Western nations? The answer, thoroughly explained in our book America
and Britain in
bible prophecy, will surprise you! So will information in our
booklet How WORLD PEACE Will Come.
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