February 27, 2005
IF THE CIA THINKS THEY'LL LAST 15 THEY'RE TOAST:
U.S. can sit back and watch Europe implode (MARK STEYN, February 27, 2005, Chicago SUN-TIMES)
I had the opportunity to talk with former French President Valery Giscard d'Estaing on a couple of occasions during his long labors as the self-declared and strictly single Founding Father. He called himself ''Europe's Jefferson,'' and I didn't like to quibble that, constitution-wise, Jefferson was Europe's Jefferson -- that's to say, at the time the U.S. Constitution was drawn up, Thomas Jefferson was living in France. Thus, for Giscard to be Europe's Jefferson, he'd have to be in Des Moines, where he'd be doing far less damage.But, quibbles aside, President Giscard professed to be looking in the right direction. When I met him, he had an amiable riff on how he'd been in Washington and bought one of those compact copies of the U.S. Constitution on sale for a buck or two. Many Americans wander round with the constitution in their pocket so they can whip it out and chastise over-reaching congressmen and senators at a moment's notice. Try going round with the European Constitution in your pocket and you'll be walking with a limp after two hours: It's 511 pages, which is 500 longer than the U.S. version. It's full of stuff about European space policy, Slovakian nuclear plants, water resources, free expression for children, the right to housing assistance, preventive action on the environment, etc.
Most of the so-called constitution isn't in the least bit constitutional. That's to say, it's not content, as the U.S. Constitution is, to define the distribution and limitation of powers. Instead, it reads like a U.S. defense spending bill that's got porked up with a ton of miscellaneous expenditures for the ''mohair subsidy'' and other notorious Congressional boondoggles. President Ronald Reagan liked to say, ''We are a nation that has a government -- not the other way around.'' If you want to know what it looks like the other way round, read Monsieur Giscard's constitution.
But the fact is it's going to be ratified, and Washington is hardly in a position to prevent it. Plus there's something to be said for the theory that, as the EU constitution is a disaster waiting to happen, you might as well cut down the waiting and let it happen. CIA analysts predict the collapse of the EU within 15 years. I'd say, as predictions of doom go, that's a little on the cautious side.
But either way the notion that it's a superpower in the making is preposterous. Most administration officials subscribe to one of two views: a) Europe is a smugly irritating but irrelevant backwater; or b) Europe is a smugly irritating but irrelevant backwater where the whole powder keg's about to go up.
For what it's worth, I incline to the latter position.
Maybe Mr. Estaing meant he'd found his own Sally Hemmings? Posted by Orrin Judd at February 27, 2005 10:31 AM
Will the CIA last 15 years?
Posted by: ed at February 27, 2005 3:18 PMGiscard is the quintessential product of the French system. He was probably the best President they had since deGaulle. He was an aristocrat, though not of old family, and a graduate of ENA and the Ecole Polytechnique, kind of like going to the JFK School of Government and MIT's grad school. He can probably quote from the EU Constitution as well as any American scholar can from our Constitution. He is a brilliant guy, charming and witty, and unlike most French politicians completely fluent in English. But he is utterly clueless.
My favorite Giscard story is when he stayed over at my great-uncle's house. Carter was President when Giscard was and if you remember Carter would travel across the nation and stay with ordinary Americans, like the welfare recipient in the South Bronx. Giscard thought this was a great idea so he decided to stay in the houses of ordinary Frenchmen, among whom was Marcel. At the time, Marcel was the Mayor of the Alsatian town of Barr(our hometown hence 'Bart') and was a prominent physician and professor at the University of Strasbourg. Marcel's home in Barr had 20 rooms and a wine cellar with about $50,000 in wine at any given time and he had a collection of Alsatian decorative art, including pieces that predate the Renaissance, worth about a million. This was Giscard's notion of the 'ordinary Frenchman,' and the closest he could bring himself to Carter's nights with ordinary Americans.
Posted by: Bart at February 27, 2005 4:08 PMI predict the EU will be dead letter before it is actually declared dead letter. For example, France and Germany have already dispensed with the EU obligation to limit their government deficits. So they'll just do what Europeans have always done; sign nice-sounding laws and then simply ignore them.
Posted by: Tom at February 27, 2005 7:26 PM"Excuse me, is that the EU constitution in your pocket, or are you the Elephant Man."
Posted by: mike at February 27, 2005 9:12 PMTom is right. The EU will pay as much attention to it as the Soviets did.
Posted by: Gideon at February 27, 2005 11:30 PM