Finally someone in Europe is standing up to the neocons
By: Rachel Marsden
VANCOUVER, British Columbia — French President Emmanuel Macron got chatty
with reporters aboard his plane en route back from China recently, and what he
said had some observers wondering if the pilot had perhaps made a cabin
pressurization error that deprived the French leader of oxygen.
“The question Europeans need to answer … is it in our interest to accelerate [a
crisis] on Taiwan? No. The worse thing would be to think that we Europeans must
become followers on this topic and take our cue from the U.S. agenda and a
Chinese overreaction,” Macron told reporters. In other words, if China is next
in line for some freedom and democracy with U.S. weapons and assistance flooding
into Taiwan in the same way that it has into Ukraine to counter Russia — then
count France out.
The reaction from the U.S. neoconservative pro-interventionist camp was swift.
“If, in fact, Macron speaks for all of Europe, and their position now is they’re
not going to pick sides between the U.S. and China over Taiwan, maybe we
shouldn’t be taking sides either. Maybe we should basically say we’re going to
focus on Taiwan and the threats that China poses, and you guys handle Ukraine
and Europe,” said Sen. Marco Rubio (R-FL).
Does anyone care how the Ukrainian people feel about Rubio’s suggestion that
they be treated like pawns to keep France on board with a conflict that’s of
absolutely no benefit to Europe and has, on the contrary, wreaked havoc on its
industry and cost of living with no end in sight? Macron needs to call Rubio’s
bluff. Sure, mon ami, drop Ukraine in Europe’s lap. Watch how fast peace breaks
out.
The response to Rubio’s query of whether Europe as a whole agrees with Macron
came swiftly. “There has been a leap forward on strategic autonomy compared with
several years ago. … Some European leaders wouldn’t say things the same way that
Emmanuel Macron did … I think quite a few really think like Emmanuel Macron,”
European Council President and former Belgian Prime Minister Charles Michel
said.
So far, the only actual “leap forward on strategic autonomy” in Europe has come
in the form of idle blabber rather than action. Everyone’s arguing over the
bloc’s role in a potential future conflict with China over Taiwan while ignoring
the existential one in Ukraine.
Macron has the opportunity to return to the French status quo of East/West
neutrality that persisted for decades under former President Charles De Gaulle
until former French President Nicolas Sarkozy reinstated Paris back into NATO’s
strategic command in the wake of his 2007 election. Strategic autonomy kept
France out of Iraq under former President Jacques Chirac, and would have
arguably prevented the current quagmire in Ukraine.
It would just take one leader of a major European nation to adjust course on
Ukraine for the rest of Europe to follow. Polish Prime Minister Mateusz
Morawiecki recently flew to Washington and denounced Macron’s defense of
autonomy, which is hardly surprising considering the generous defense funding
that Warsaw receives from Washington. But ultimately, Poland is more dependent
on top EU donor France’s generous contributions, as the top recipient of bloc
funding, by far.
And while Germany relies on America’s nuclear umbrella and close defense
cooperation with U.S. bases all over Germany, Berlin will follow France for
reasons of economic competitiveness.
All war and conflict ultimately is about economics, with winners and losers — no
matter how some might try to dress it up in lofty ideals. Pulitzer Prize-winning
investigative journalist, Seymour Hersh, recently cited American intelligence
sources accusing Kyiv officials of embezzling American assistance funds. And
American Big Oil is enjoying skyrocketing profits from global price increases
and European energy needs that have shifted away from Russia in favor of
outsized reliance on pricy U.S. gas. So while some are profiting from the
fighting, an exit ramp is starting to look increasingly attractive to others.
Economics also explain why Macron isn’t interested in riding shotgun with
Washington into a conflict with China. During Macron’s China trip,
French-headquartered Airbus secured a new sale of 160 new commercial aircraft to
Beijing and a doubling of the aerospace multinational’s Chinese production,
marking a victory over Pentagon contractor, Boeing.
But what does France get out of siding with the U.S. in the Indo-Pacific — other
than the shaft? Paris was not only excluded from the U.S.-led “AUKUS” security
pact of Anglo allies against China in the Indo-Pacific, despite France’s
overseas territories in the region, but was also simultaneously booted from a
$66 billion submarine deal with Australia to Washington’s ultimate benefit with
its own deal. So why shouldn’t Macron tell them now to shove it?
It’s long past time for a European leader to stand up for the interests of
Europeans. Macron has just taken a step in the right direction, but only time
will tell if he has the courage to stay the course.
COPYRIGHT 2023 RACHEL MARSDEN