Intercontinental Church of God
Leviathan Is Born: The Annexation of Europe by Brussels
From the desk of Paul Belien
On November 3rd 2009, at 3 pm local time, the Czech Republic
ceased to exist as a sovereign state when Vaclav Klaus, its
president, put his signature under the
Treaty
of Lisbon. The Czech Republic was the last of the 27 member
states of the European Union to ratify the treaty which turns
the EU into a genuine state to which it members states are
subservient.
Klaus had delayed signing the document for as long as he could.
The Czech Parliament approved the treaty last May. On the
morning of November 3rd the Czech Constitutional Court ruled
unanimously that the Lisbon Treaty did not contravene the Czech
Constitution. The president accused the court of bias and
publicly stated that he fundamentally disagreed with the court’s
verdict, its content and justification. “With the Lisbon Treaty
taking effect, the Czech Republic will cease to be a sovereign
state, despite the political opinion of the Constitutional
Court,” Klaus said. However, he added, as President he had to
respect the verdict. Consequently, he signed his country’s
independence away, barely 20 years after its liberation from the
Soviet empire.
The pressure on Klaus had been tremendous. Because the treaty
could not come into force until the Czech ratification, the EU
authorities and the political establishment of the 26 other
member states had been tightening the screws on Prague. In early
October, the Czech cabinet, under pressure from Berlin and
Paris, had met in an emergency session to consider how to
complete ratification in the event of Klaus’s continued
intransigence. They even considered impeaching the president.
Bernard Kouchner, the French Foreign Minister, was very blunt on
15 October: he threatened that “a single man is not allowed to
oppose the will of 500 million Europeans.” The “500 million
Europeans” referred to the citizens of the 27 member states of
the European Union, the “single man” to Vaclav Klaus. Kouchner’s
declaration, however, was as deceptive and mendacious as the
entire ratification process of the Lisbon Treaty had been
throughout the EU. 500 million people had deliberately not been
asked for their opinion of the treaty because the European
political establishment feared they would vote it down.
Indeed, the so-called Lisbon Treaty is the second version of the
European Constitution, which the electorates of France and the
Netherlands forcefully rejected in referendums in May and June
2005. Refusing to take the people’s “No” for an answer, Europe’s
political establishment simply repackaged the Constitution in a
somewhat different order, but without changing its basic
content. This Constitution.2 was called the Treaty of Lisbon,
after the place where the new document was signed. It was
subsequently pushed through the parliaments of the member states
without allowing any more referendums. Only Ireland was obliged
to put Lisbon before the people because the Irish Constitution
required it. After the Irish rejected the treaty in June 2008,
their “No” was also discarded. The Irish were made to vote
again. Last October, they gave in, making Vaclav Klaus the last
man standing in Europe.
Now, with Mr. Klaus’s signature, the game has drawn to its close
and a treaty, so despised by the people that it was never put to
them, has turned 500 million Europeans into citizens of a
genuine supranational European State which is empowered to act
as a State vis-ŕ-vis other States and its own citizens. The EU
will have its own President, Foreign Minister, diplomatic corps
and Public Prosecutor. Henceforward, the only remaining
sovereign power of any significance in Europe is Russia. Apart
from Switzerland, Norway and Iceland, the EU leviathan has a
grip on every other nation, whose national parliaments are, in
accordance with the Lisbon Treaty, obliged to “contribute
actively to the good functioning of the Union,” i.e. further
primarily the interests of the new Union, rather than those of
their own people.
The new European superstate, however, is not a democracy. It has
an elected parliament, but the European Parliament has no
legislative powers, nor does it control the EU’s executive
bodies. The latter, who also have legislative power overriding
national legislation, are made up of “commissioners.” These are
appointed by the governments of the member states (although no
longer with one commissioner per member state, as was the case
so far, but with a total number capped at two-thirds of the
number of member states). The EU is basically a cartel,
consisting of the 27 governments of the member states, who have
concluded that it is easier to pass laws in the secret EU
meetings with their colleagues than through their own national
parliaments in the glare of public criticism.
“I have always considered this treaty a step in the wrong
direction,” Czech President Vaclav Klaus said last month. “It
will deepen the problems the EU is facing today, it will
increase its democratic deficit, worsen the standing of our
country and expose it to new risks.” Klaus calls the EU doctrine
“Europeism.” In a speech last August, he defined “Europeism” as
“a neosocialist doctrine, which believes neither in freedom, nor
in the spontaneous evolution of human society.” He said it has
the following four characteristics:
“(a) economic views based on the concept of the so-called social
market economy, which is the opposite of the market economy; (b)
views on freedom, democracy and society based on collectivism,
social partnership and corporatism, not on classical
parliamentary democracy; (c) views on European integration which
favor unification and supranationalism; (d) views on foreign
policy and international relations based on internationalism,
cosmopolitism, abstract universalism, multiculturalism and on
denationalization.”
“To my great regret,” he added, “Europe is more and more
dominated by this way of thinking despite the fact that it is an
extremely naďve, unpractical and romantic utopism, not shared by
the European silent majority, but predominantly by the European
elites.”
These European elites are currently deciding whom to appoint as
the Union’s first President and first High Commissioner (the
EU’s common Foreign Minister). The 27 EU governments have
already agreed that the former should be a Christian-Democrat
and the latter a Social-Democrat. Diplomatic sources say that
Prime Minister Herman Van Rompuy of Belgium has the best chances
of becoming President, while the British Foreign Secretary,
David Miliband, is tipped as High Commissioner. Incidentally,
Mr. Miliband, too, has a link to Belgium. His father, the
Marxist ideologue Ralph Miliband, was born in Brussels and spent
the first sixteen years of his life in the Belgian capital.
Although the Belgian Christian-Democrats are considered to be
conservatives, they are very close to the Social-Democrats,
their preferred partners in government. Both Messrs. Van Rompuy
and Miliband represent the “Europeism” which Czech President
Klaus so abhors.
The formal decision about who will become President and High
Commissioner will be taken in late November. As the wheeling and
dealing – all of it behind closed doors so that the people will
not know – continues, it is not certain yet that
Herman
Van Rompuy will emerge as Europe’s first president. It is,
however, not a coincidence that a Belgian seems the most likely
candidate. Belgium is a supranational state, constructed by the
European powers in 1830 and made up of two different nations,
Dutch-speaking Flanders and French-speaking Wallonia. As such,
Belgium, whose capital Brussels also happens to be the EU’s
capital, serves as a model for the EU in its attempt to build a
supranational state out of the continent’s different nations.
Like EU politics, Belgian politics is characterized by a lack of
transparency, unaccountability, corporatism and a willingness to
bend the democratic rules and legal procedures so as to allow
the political establishment to proceed with their own project
and secure the survival of a state which is unloved by its
citizens but provides the livelihood of the ruling elites. What
Vaclav Klaus calls “Europeism” is the application of Belgicism,
the doctrine underpinning the Belgian state, on the European
level.
The whole process of writing a European Constitution and
changing the EU from a supranational organization into a state
began with the Laken Declaration of December 2001, an initiative
of the Belgian presidency of the European Council that year. The
coming into power of the Lisbon Treaty marks the annexation of
Europe by Brussels – the expansion of Belgium over an entire
continent.
http://www.brusselsjournal.com/node/4154
| to the top | back to Weekly Update | back to Week Update - pf | what's new | quick links | home |
Intercontinental Church of God