Wednesday, January 23rd., 2019France And Germany Take Major Step Toward EU Army To Protect "Europe Threatened By Nationalism"
Wednesday, January 23rd., 2019
It is inevitable that dozens of scenarios will emerge, if they have not started materializing already, with infinite proportions, combinations and permutations, using the sky as a limit, in the aftermath of this EU Army creation treaty, amongst France and Germany. It is a good option for both of them, that for starters, they will be able to energize the mince meat machines by recruiting, disciplining and/or 'disappearing' their most disturbing or rebellious or newcomer inhabitants/citizens, thus sescuring their political parties' and socio-banking systems' and personal overall status, intactness.
On a second level, it will be very amusing, if one is still alive of course, to watch the NATO depletion of its usual partners and its embarrassment when the comrades-in-arms will find themselves involved into a civil war of the right hand fighting against the left hand and so on and vice-versa, while a humongus economic fuss will burst out as to whose is this gun and whose is this bomb, this tank, etc.
Global situation has reached such a point that poor NATO shall have to reinvent itself, because historically and traditionally the trully big Castles start falling from inside, as we actually see happening right now and from many angles too.
To vouchsafe its sustainability in the coming days there are one or two things that have to be undertaken:
a. Take distances from the old powers that be, aka the global deep state. They are not useful any more.
b. Stop messing around with dastardly high technologies-stratagems-policies and criminal practices, explore and encourage Free Energy sources, free new medical cures and embark with their good know-how upon other, sincerely humanitarian actions.
c. Protect and guard Earth and Humanity.
Not a very difficult task if they have the heart and the thought/perception thoroughness, required.
Cheers!
Maria L. Pelekanaki.
France And Germany Take Major Step Toward EU Army To Protect "Europe Threatened By Nationalism"
Macron addressed this trend specifically at the signing ceremony with the words, "At a time when Europe is threatened by nationalism, which is growing from within... Germany and France must assume their responsibility and show the way forward." German Chancellor Angela Merkel and French President
Emmanuel Macron attend a signing of a new agreement on bilateral
cooperation and integration, known as Treaty of Aachen. Image via
ReutersGermany's Angela Merkel agreed, adding in her own remarks:
“We are doing this because we live in special times and because in
these times we need resolute, distinct, clear, forward-looking answers.”
The agreement, which is being described as sparse on specifics or
detail, focuses on foreign policy and defense ties between Berlin and
Paris. “Populism and nationalism are strengthening in all of our countries,” Merkel EU
officials at the ceremony. “Seventy-four years – a single human
lifetime – after the end of the second world war, what seems
self-evident is being called into question once more.”
Macron said those “who forget the value of Franco-German reconciliation are making themselves accomplices of the crimes of the past. Those who... spread lies are hurting the same people they are pretending to defend, by seeking to repeat history.”
And in remarks that formed another affirmation that the two leaders
are seeking to form an "EU army" Merkel said just before signing the
treaty: “The fourth article of the treaty says we, Germany and France, are obliged to support and help each other, including through military force, in case of an attack on our sovereignty.”
The text of the updated treaty includes the aim of a “German-French
economic area with common rules” and a “common military culture” that
Merkel asserted could “contribute to the creation of a European army”.
Later before a press pool, Merkel endorsed the idea of a joint European army further:
We have taken major steps in the field of military cooperation,
this is good and largely supported in this house. But I also have to
say, seeing the developments of the recent years, that we have to work on a vision to establish a real European army one day.
She clarified that the new military organization wouldn't exist as a
counterpart to or in competition with NATO, similar to prior comments
she made before European parliament.
Previously in November she had assured, "This is not an army against
NATO, it can be a good complement to NATO." This was also in support of
Macron's early November statements wherein he said of the proposed EU army, "We have to protect ourselves with respect to China, Russia and even the US” — words
that were issued on the heels President Trump's initial announcement
that the US would withdraw from the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces
Treaty (INF).
Despite such such assurances analysts say the natural and long term by-product of a "real European army" — as Macron and Merkel suggesting — would be the slow eroding and demise of US power in the region, which would no doubt weaken the NATO alliance.
The closest thing to a current "EU army" that does exist (if it can
be called even that) - the Common Security and Defence Policy (CSDP) -
is generally perceived as more of a civil and emergency response joint
EU member mechanism that would be ineffectual under the threat of an
actual military invasion or major event. Meanwhile perhaps a prototype EU army is already in action on the
streets of Paris, revealing what critics fear it may actually be used
for in the future...
The expected push back came swiftly and fiercely as Marine Le Pen, the leader of France’s National Rally party, slammed the updated Aachen treaty as“an act that borders on treason”, while others worried this is an attempt to create a “super EU” within the bloc.
Alexander Gauland of Germany’s Alternative für Deutschland (AfD), for example, warned:
As populists, we insist that one first takes care of one’s own
country... We don’t want Macron to renovate his country with German
money … The EU is deeply divided. A special Franco-German relationship will alienate us even further.
Italy’s far-right interior minister, Matteo Salvini, warned earlier this month that his country could seek an “Italian-Polish axis” to challenge the whole premise of a “Franco-German motor” that drives European centralization.
Also notable of Tuesday's signing is that the Aachen document
prioritizes Germany being eventually accepted as permanent member of the
U.N. Security Council, which it mandates as a priority for
French-German diplomacy. Such a future scenario on the security council
would shift power significantly in favor of a western bloc of allies the
US, Britain, and France, which Germany would vote alongside.