European Nations Throw Up On EU Plan To Seize Border Sovereignty, Impose Standng Border Force
15
December, 2015
Last
week we
reported that
in a move which the FT
dubbed would
"arguably represent the biggest transfer of sovereignty since
the creation of the single currency" Brussels was about to
propose the creation of a standing European border force that could
take control of the bloc’s external frontiers — even
if a government objected.
Not
unexpectedly, the plan went far beyond a Franco-German request to
give Frontex more powers and staff. The request was made a few weeks
after the Paris attacks, when frustration surfaced over Greece’s
inability to better manage the flow of migrants as it emerged that at
least two of the Paris attackers were registered as Syrian refugees
on a Greek island. Why? Because Europe saw a real crisis opportunity
and decided to jump on it.
As
a result of this dramatic takeover of the most sacrosanct aspect of
state sovereignty, a few unelected EU bureaucrats would effectively
have veto rights over decisions how individuals states would police
their borders: "Although member states would be consulted, they
would not have the power to veto a deployment unilaterally."
Furthermore,
the new agency would be able to deport people who do not have the
right to remain in Europe, essentially voiding the protections that
come with nationality at least among EU member states, as well as
several that are currently outside of it.
The
take home was simple: "goodbye
sovereignty... all
in the name of halting the endless onslaught of Syrian refugees,
which ironically was unleashed in the first place just so Europe
could get its supplies of natural gas from Qatar instead of Russia."
We
wondered if Europe would quietly go along with this unprecedented
sovereignty land grab by Brussels and Berlin, in the process
admitting that the political structure of Europe has been forever
changed and that Germany is effectively the new hegemon of the
formerly independent states. And while the final outcome is almost
preordained, because what Germany wants Germany will eventually get,
the process will be noisier than expected.
According to
the WSJ,
the proposal to police the bloc’s external borders "is facing
growing opposition ahead of an EU leaders’ summit this week on the
continent’s migration crisis."
The
first objecting state was, not surprisingly considering its
history vis-a-vis German
territorial and sovereign ambitions, Poland:
Polish
Foreign Minister Witold Waszczykowski said Monday that while
his country welcomed the strengthening of EU’s existing border
agency, Frontex, the commission’s plan went too far.
“Strengthening
Frontex, creating a kind of border guard would by all means be
needed, beneficial,” he said on his way into a meeting of EU
foreign ministers in Brussels. “But
the way the commission proposed it—for it to be a structure
independent from nation states—is astounding.”
He
added: “There’d be an undemocratic structure reporting to no one
knows who.”
Well,
that's the point!
The
WSJ adds that Mr. Waszczykowski’s remarks were echoed by Hungary’s
foreign minister Peter Szijjarto, who said that border controls were
part and parcel of national sovereignty. “I
would not support a diktat-based takeover of border controls,” Mr.
Szijjarto said.
He
also pointed out that the entire proposed pool of border guards
wouldn’t suffice to guard just Hungary’s southern border.
Indicatively, the commission’s proposal calls for at least 1,500
border guards that EU governments would have to put at the disposal
of the new agency, to deploy within days should a crisis situation
arise.
Greek
Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras welcomed the proposal on Friday "but
said that it would work only if his country retained the ultimate
authority to police the borders. He also repeated the government’s
opposition to joint sea patrols with Turkey—a long-standing request
by his European peers."
Considering
Greek banks still exist only at the mercy of the ECB, which means de
facto, Europe, it is unclear just what leverage he has to demand
conditions.
Others,
however, did not have too much problems with ceding sovereignty to
Brussels:
Slovak Foreign Minister Miroslav Laj?ák, whose prime minister has gone so far as to ask that Greece to be kicked out of the Schengen accord, voiced cautious support for the plan Monday. “If one member state is unable to cope with its responsibilities, others should be able to come and assist,” he said. “We need a mechanism for that, the protection of the Schengen border is a shared responsibility.”
The
defenders of the plan were ready: "diplomats from countries
favorable to the project - including France, Germany and the
Netherlands—said the commission’s plan was so ambitious for
tactical reasons. “They
put the bar so high because they know it will get watered down
anyway,” one
diplomat said."
So
watered down from a demand for full abdication of sovereignty?
Perhaps the compromise plan will reflect that. But what happens when
the "Syrian refugee crisis" is not contained as a result of
a "watered down" plan, or - as many expect will happen -
there is another deadly terrorist act in Europe pushing the crisis
level to new highs and emboldening Brussels to demand even more
aggressive measures and even more steps that see individual state
sovereignty disappear at the expense of a collective controlled by a
handful of political (and financial ) oligarchs and plutocrats.
Once
again we urge readers to keep a very close eye on this unprecedented
attempt to dissolve Europe's borders because if it succeeds the
implications would be far greater for the European project than a
mere temporary or permanent Grexit.
Finally,
we conclude as we always do when describing Brussels' unprecedented
political power grab, with a simple forecast made by AIG
in 2008, explaining "What Europe Wants."
To use global issues as excuses to extend its power:
environmental issues: increase control over member countries; advance idea of global governance
terrorism: use excuse for greater control over police and judicial issues; increase extent of surveillance
global financial crisis: kill two birds (free market; Anglo-Saxon economies) with one stone (Europe-wide regulator; attempts at global financial governance)
EMU: create a crisis to force introduction of “European economic government”
Unless
the people of "Europe" finally stand up and reject the
monster that has been spawned in Brussels, Europe will get all that
it demands.
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