European Integration. Mark Gilbert

European Integration - Mark Gilbert


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the discrepancies of language, race, culture, and religion can be so far overcome, that by slow degrees the members of the new State may come to value their new citizenship as much, and at last more, than their old; so that when any great trial comes, when State membership draws one way, and Federal membership another, they may, as the Americans did in their trial, deliberately prefer the Union to the State.2

      Seeley was no more able than Hugo to suggest a plausible method of achieving this state of affairs, although his remark that a federation founded upon intergovernmental cooperation is a mockery was a powerful idea that continues to drive the desire for “more Europe”—that is, more supranationalism—to this day. In the late nineteenth century, there was no willingness among the statesmen of Europe to put such generic plans into practice. The emblematic political figure of the age was Bismarck, the epitome of realpolitik, and war was regarded by every European cabinet as an instrument of policy, not as a pathology to be eradicated by purposeful statesmanship. Although a precarious peace was maintained by competing alliances, general war was an ever-present prospect. European nations constantly threatened one another with war over colonial disputes or over the conflicting aspirations of the peoples of the Balkans. A newly literate population was titillated by newspapers espousing inflammatory doctrines of national superiority. All nations except the British maintained large and wasteful armies: the British maintained a huge navy and spent money liberally to ensure that no other power, especially Germany, could challenge their dominance at sea. In August 1914, the tensions accumulating in European societies found an outlet. People went to war with joy in their hearts, but soon learned that killing, like the mass production of commercial goods, could now take place on an industrial scale.

      Passports were not necessarily a requirement for travelers.3 If an upper-class English family wanted to spend a half year at a pensione in Florence, enjoying a “room with a view,” it could set off from Victoria Station with a purse full of gold sovereigns, or an address to which money could be wired, with the same ease that tourists today can fly by Ryan Air and pay by credit card or euro banknotes. The only real difference was that they traveled far more comfortably. Some contemporary thinkers, notably Norman Angell, a British scholar and journalist, wrote bestsellers that contended—on the eve of the Great War—that war between the major states of Europe had been made futile (and perhaps impossible) by virtue of the closeness of their economic and cultural ties.4

      World War I broke the Europe of dynastic monarchies for good. Russia became a communist state; Italy became fascist. Germany became a humiliated republic whose leaders never fully established their right to rule. Austria-Hungary was dissolved, and its successor states, after an initial fling with constitutional government, mostly became authoritarian regimes.5 Maintaining the peace was the task of the League of Nations, which was based in Geneva and which aroused great hopes among the political elites of Europe, despite the decision of the Congress of the United States not to join an organization that President Woodrow Wilson had done so much to create. Liberal thinkers and statesmen advocated intensifying political cooperation within the broader framework for security established by the League. In fascist Italy, the country’s leading political economist (and future president of the republic of Italy), Turin professor Luigi Einaudi, was a stern critic of unchecked national sovereignty: constraints on the power of states to do as they willed were essential for peace, he believed.6 An Austrian aristocrat with a Japanese mother, Count Richard Coudenhove-Kalergi, the founder of the “Pan-Europe” movement, won many adherents among the elites of all the major European countries by advocating greater continental European political unity against the menace of Bolshevism.7

      The Briand Plan concluded by expressing the French government’s “firm hope” that Europe was “ready for a positive effort” to achieve greater unity and prosperity.12 The timing was off for such proclamations. The age of Locarno was over. Stresemann died in October 1929, the target of vitriolic criticism in Germany from the forces of German nationalism; Wall Street crashed in the same month: economic growth financed by easy credit from the United States was about to shudder to a halt. On September 14, 1930, as Europe’s states discussed Briand’s initiative at Geneva, a hitherto little-known party called the National Socialists won 107 seats in elections to the German Reichstag and became Germany’s second-largest political party. Its leader, Adolf Hitler, had other kinds of European unity in mind.

      World War II is usually seen by proponents of European integration as being the “wages of sin” for European nations’ obsession


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