The European Union was an attempt to subsume European nationalism under its banner and bureaucracy. The intent was to forestall the wars that had bedeviled the continent as well as to position Europe as a monolithic economy the counter-balance U.S. influence.
 In this article Friedman argues that the present European financial crisis has essentially ended that experiment. European nationalism always existed just under the EU veneer and the crisis is bringing it back to the front. Friedman argues these forces will result, over the course of the next generation, of the EU fracturing -- the only question being how many parts it eventually breaks into.
Since the topic was Europe I looked to European actresses for the article's Hot Stratfor Babe and, after my usual due diligence, I selected the French actress Eva Green for the honor.
Ms Green has been in the movies since 2003 and has worked her way into starring roles in major studio films, including roles a Bond girl is a couple of 007 films. However, I selected her for her role in her first movie, The Dreamers, because it was an international French/British/Italian production.
The synopsis of The Dreamers has a young American film buff meeting Eva nad her brother, also film buffs, and they end up frequently naked in a faintly incestuous threesome while the 1968 Paris riots occur outside of their fantasy world. I haven't seen the movie, but I can't imagine that it ends well.
The description of the movie led me to suspect there was, aside from a lot of romping around nekkid, much European film philosophical twittery in it. The single work-safe clip I found, which I've embedded as a bonus after the article, certainly would seem to support that suspicion.
 
Europe, the International System and a Generational Shift 
By George Friedman, November 8, 2011
Change in the international system comes in large and small doses,  but fundamental patterns generally stay consistent. From 1500 to 1991,  for example, European global hegemony constituted the world’s operating  principle. Within this overarching framework, however, the international  system regularly reshuffles the deck in demoting and promoting powers,  fragmenting some and empowering others, and so on. Sometimes this  happens because of war, and sometimes because of economic and political  forces. While the basic structure of the world stays intact, the precise  way it works changes.
The fundamental patterns of European domination held for 500 years.  That epoch of history ended in 1991, when the Soviet Union — the last of  the great European empires — collapsed with global consequences. In  China, Tiananmen Square defined China for a generation. China would  continue its process of economic development, but the Chinese Communist  Party would remain the dominant force. Japan experienced an economic  crisis that ended its period of rapid growth and made the world’s  second-largest economy far less dynamic than before. And in 1993, the  Maastricht Treaty came into force, creating the contemporary European Union and holding open the possibility of a so-called United States of Europe that could counterbalance the United States of America.
The Post-European Age
All these developments happened in the unstable period after the  European Age and before … well, something else. What specifically, we’re  not quite sure. For the past 20 years, the world has been reshaping  itself. Since 1991, then, the countries of the world have been feeling  out the edges of the new system. The past two decades have been an  interregnum of sorts, a period of evolution from the rule of the old to  the rule of the new.
Four things had to happen before the new era could truly begin.  First, the Americans had to learn the difference between extreme power  (which they had and still have) and omnipotence (which they do not  have). The wars in the Islamic world have more than amply driven this  distinction home. Second, Russian power needed to rebound from its  post-Soviet low to something more representative of Russia’s strength.  That occurred in August 2008 with the Russo-Georgian war,  which re-established Moscow as the core of the broader region. Third,  China — which has linked its economic, political and military future to a  global system it does not control — had to face a readjustment.  This has yet to happen, but likely will be triggered by the fourth  event: Europe’s institutions — which were created to function under the  rules of the previous epoch — must be rationalized with a world in which  the Americans no longer are suppressing European nationalism.
With the benefit of hindsight, we know that the 2008 financial crisis  initiated the last two events. The first result of the financial crisis  was the deep penetration of the state into those financial markets not  already under state influence or control. The bailouts, particularly in  the United States, created a situation in which decisions by political leaders and central banks  had markedly more significance to the financial status of the country  than the operation of the market. This was not unprecedented in the  United States; the municipal bond crisis of the 1970s, the Third World  debt crisis and the savings and loan crisis had similar consequences.  The financial crisis, and the resultant economic crisis, hurt the United  States, but its regime remained intact even while uneasiness about the  elite grew.
But the financial crisis had its greatest impact in Europe,  where it is triggering a generational shift. Since 1991, the idea of an  integrated Europe has been a driving force of the global economy. As  mentioned, it also has been presented as an implicit alternative to the  United States as the global center of gravity.
Collectively, Europe’s economy was slightly larger than the U.S.  economy. If mobilized, that inherent power made Europe a match for the  United States. In the foreign policy arena, the Europeans prided  themselves on a different approach to international affairs than the  Americans used. This was based on a concept known as “soft power” —  which relied on political and economic, as opposed to military, tools —  an analog to the manner in which it saw itself managing the European  Union. And Europe was a major consumer of goods, particularly Chinese  goods. (It imported more of the latter than the United States did.)  Taken together, Europe’s strengths and successes would allow it to  redefine the international system — and the assumption for the past  generation was that it was successful.
In the context of the ongoing European financial crisis, the issue is  not simply whether the euro survives or whether Brussels regulators  oversee aspects of the Italian economy. The fundamental issue is whether  the core concepts of the European Union remain intact. It is obvious  that the European Union that existed in 2007 is not the one that exists  today. Its formal structure appears the same, but it does not function  the same. The issues confronting it are radically different. Moreover,  relations among the EU nations have a completely different dynamic. The  question of what the European Union might become has been replaced by  the question of whether it can survive. Some think of this as a  temporary aberration. We see it as a permanent change in Europe, one  with global consequences.
The European Union emerged with the goal of creating a system of  interdependency in which war in Europe was impossible. Given European  history, this was an extraordinarily ambitious project, as war and  Europe have gone hand in hand. The idea was that with Germany intimately  linked to France, the possibility of significant European conflict  could be managed. Underpinning this idea was the concept that the problem of Europe was the problem of nationalism.  Unless Europe’s nationalisms were tamed, war would break out. The  Yugoslav wars after the collapse of Communism comprised the sum of  Europe’s fears. But there could be no question of simply abolishing  nationalism in Europe. [continued after the jump]
National identity was as deeply embedded in Europe as elsewhere, and  historical differences were compounded by historical resentments,  particularly those aimed toward Germany. The real solution to European  wars was the creation of a European nation, but that was simply  impossible. The European Union tried to solve the problem by retaining  both national identity and national regimes. Simultaneously, a broader  European identity was conceived based on a set of principles, and above  all, on the idea of a single European economy binding together disparate  nations. The reasoning was that if the European Union provided the  foundation for European prosperity, then the continued existence of  nations in Europe would not challenge the European Union. Perhaps, over  time, this would see a decline of particular nationalisms in favor of a  European identity. This assumed that prosperity would cause national  identity and tensions to subside. If that were true, then it would work.  But there is more to Europe politically speaking than an enhanced  trading area, and the economics of Europe are hardly homogeneous.
Germany and the Periphery
 The German economy was designed to be export-based.  Its industrial plant outstrips domestic consumption; it must therefore  export to prosper. A free trade zone built around the world’s  second-largest exporter by definition will create tremendous pressures  on emerging economies seeking to grow through their own exports. The  European free trade zone thus systematically undermined the ability of  the European periphery to develop because of the presence of an  export-dependent economy that both penetrated linked economies and  prevented their development.
Between 1991 and 2008, all of this was buried under extraordinary  prosperity. The first crisis revealed the underlying fault line,  however. The U.S. subprime crisis happened to trigger it, but any  financial crisis would have revealed the fault line. It was not a crisis  about the euro, nor was it even a crisis about economics. It was  actually a crisis about nationalism.
Europe’s elites had crafted and committed themselves to the idea of a European Union. The  elite of Europe, deeply tied to a European financial system  as a principle, were Europeanists in their soul. When the crisis came,  their core belief was that the crisis was a technical matter that the  elite could handle within the EU framework. Deals were made, structures  were imagined and tranches were measured. Yet the crisis did not go  away.
The German-Greek interplay was not the essence of the problem but the poster child. For the Germans, the Greeks were irresponsible profligates. For the Greeks, the Germans had used the EU free trade and monetary system to tilt the European economy in their favor,  garnering huge gains in the previous generation and doing everything  possible to hold on to them in a time of trouble. For the Germans, the  Greeks created a sovereign debt crisis. For the Greeks, the sovereign  debt crisis was the result of German-dictated trade and monetary rules.  The Germans were bitter that they would have to bail out the Greeks. The  Greeks were bitter that they would have to suffer austerity. From the  German point of view, the Greeks lied when they borrowed money. From the  Greek point of view, if they lied it was with the conscious  collaboration of German and other bankers who made money from making  loans regardless of whether they were repaid.
The endless litany is not the point. The point is that these are two  sovereign nations with fundamentally different interests. The elites in  both nations are trying to create a solution within the confines of the  current system. Both nations’ publics are dubious about bearing the  burden. The Germans have little patience for paying Greek debts. The  Greeks have little interest in shouldering austerity to satisfy German  voters. On one level, there is collaboration under way — problem  solving. On another level, there is distrust of the elites’ attempts to  solve problems and suspicion that it will be the elites’ problems and  not their own that will be addressed. But the problem is bigger than  Greco-German disputes. This system was created in a world in which  European politics had been declared in abeyance. Germany was occupied.  The Americans provided security and inter-European fighting was not  allowed. Now, the Americans are gone, the Germans are back and European  international politics are bubbling up to the surface.
In short, the European project is failing at precisely the point that  it had been attempting to solve — nationalism. The ability of leaders  to make deals depends on authority that is slipping away. The public has  not yet clearly defined the alternatives, but that process is under  way. It is similar to what is happening in the United States with one  definitive exception: In the United States, the tension between mass and  elite does not threaten to disintegrate the republic. In Europe, it  does.
Europe will spend the next generation sorting through this. Whether  it can do so remains to be seen — though I doubt it. We know the  tensions between nations and between elites and the public will redefine  how Europe works. Even if things do not get any worse, the situation  already has been transformed beyond what anyone would have imagined in  2007. Far from emerging as a unified force, the question will be how  divided Europe will become.
Europe, the International System and a Generational Shift is republished with permission of STRATFOR.

 
 
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