Название: European Integration
Автор: Mark Gilbert
Издательство: Ingram
Жанр: Историческая литература
isbn: 9781538106822
isbn:
In April 1948, by large majorities in both chambers, and with Fulbright as a key broker, Congress authorized the first $5 billion of recovery spending for Europe. It also established the Economic Cooperation Administration (ECA), with branches in every Western European country, to oversee the distribution of Marshall Plan aid. The first director of the ECA was a prominent businessman strongly sympathetic to the idea of European political unity, Paul Hoffman. Day-to-day relations with the Europeans were entrusted to a presidential special representative based in Paris, W. Averell Harriman.
In parallel to the ECA, the European countries set up the OEEC, the “continuing organization” that would plan the division of Marshall Plan aid among its member states as well as act as the forum for intra-European negotiations to liberalize trade. Essentially a ministerial council of sovereign states, the OEEC was served by a secretariat of officials, planners, and economists and by an executive committee of civil servants from the nation-states that formulated the Council’s final decisions. The work of the secretariat was placed in the hands of Robert Marjolin; the executive committee was chaired by a British official, Sir Edmund Hall-Patch. As Marjolin has written, “France and Britain called the tune in the OEEC.”38 Nevertheless, every country (even small nations such as Iceland and Luxembourg) had a right of veto in the Council, and no country was obliged to implement Council decisions against its will.
Despite the intergovernmental character of the OEEC, and thus the difficulty of securing unified action, Hoffman’s opening address to the Council on July 25, 1948, called upon the nation-states of Europe to devise a “master plan of action” for the rebirth of European economic and political life. He called for the OEEC nations to “face up to readjustments to satisfy the requirements of a new world.” In particular, nations should avoid thinking along “the old separatist lines.” Hoffman urged his listeners to think in terms of “the economic capacity and the economic strength of Europe as a whole.”39 What the Americans had in mind for Europe has since been dubbed “the politics of productivity”—the creation of a free trade area administered (at least in the first instance) by supranational planning bodies that would make boosting production their fundamental goal and lead to political unity in friendship with the United States.40
THE QUEST FOR UNITY
The OEEC was not regarded as a pan-European political institution by true believers in the cause of European unity. They were mindful of Seeley’s admonition against mere intergovernmentalism. Robert Marjolin’s mentor was Jean Monnet, a French international civil servant who was the architect of the postwar French economic plan and an advocate of greater European unity since the time of Briand. Monnet regarded the OEEC as a “watered down British approach to Europe—talk, consultation, action only by unanimity.”41 It was no way to make Europe, Monnet believed. Marjolin sharply disagreed, believing that the concept of nationality would not be displaced merely by creating new institutions.
In the long run, Marjolin would be proved right. Far from abolishing national sovereignty, the process of European integration has actually demonstrated its remarkable tenacity. At the time, however, he was in a minority among intellectuals, most of whom were gung ho for greater political unity as soon as possible. By 1946, every country in Western Europe could boast a federalist movement of greater or lesser size: some countries, notably France, had more than one. In April 1947, these bodies federated themselves into the Union Européenne des Fédéralistes (UEF). The new association, which had a collective membership of some 150,000 people, declared its purpose was “to work for the creation of a European federation which shall be a constitutive element of a world federation.”42 As this declaration suggests, the UEF was not without its utopian aspects. Its main goal, however, was one that inspired intellectuals all over the continent in the early months of the Cold War—the creation of a European “Third Force” that could act as a bridge between Soviet communism and the Western European tradition of democratic socialism.43 Intellectuals in all of the major Western European nations contended that a European federation offered the opportunity of building a progressive socialism that would assuage Soviet fears of capitalist aggression and would, over time, lead to totalitarian and federalist forms of socialism, converging into a single democratic model.
Some left-wing intellectuals—the British novelist and political writer George Orwell and Altiero Spinelli being the most famous examples—were less optimistic about relations between a United States of Europe, even one that followed socialist precepts, and Soviet totalitarianism. Spinelli, breaking decisively with the two mass parties of the Italian left (the Communists and the Socialists), was arguing by 1947 that the Soviet Union regarded Western Europe as a “vital space” that it was hoping to “exploit” economically to relieve the Soviet people’s misery. The United States, by contrast, while it possessed “imperialist temptations and ambitions,” also possessed a “sincere desire” to see Europe emerge as an independent liberal state. Spinelli contended on many occasions that the shortsighted nationalism of Europe’s leaders, who refused to admit that the day of independent nation-states was over, was the main cause of their increasing subordination to Washington.44
Federalist ideas might nevertheless have remained isolated in an intellectual ghetto had it not been for the intervention of Winston Churchill, the internationally renowned British war leader whose Conservative Party had been defeated in the general elections of July 1945. At the University of Zurich on September 19, 1946, Churchill argued that the countries of Western Europe should “re-create the European family, or as much of it as we can . . . we must build a kind of United States of Europe.” According to Churchill, the rock upon which this new federation should be founded was not Britain—“We British have our Commonwealth of Nations . . . why should there not be a European group which could give a sense of enlarged patriotism and common citizenship to the distracted peoples of this turbulent and mighty continent”—but a “partnership between France and Germany.” This was the only way, Churchill thought, that France could “recover the moral leadership of Europe.”45 Subsequently, in May 1947, Churchill became the founder of the United Europe Movement (UEM).46 Its three thousand members included numerous MPs, especially Conservatives, and many prominent academics, journalists, and clergymen. Relations with the UEF were not easy at first. Whereas the UEF saw European federalism as an opportunity to reassure the Soviets, the UEM regarded it as a way of reinforcing Europe’s ability to resist the encroachments of the USSR. Nevertheless, together with several other influential movements such as the French Council for a United Europe, the European Parliamentary Union, the Economic League for European Cooperation, and the Christian Democrat Nouvelles Équipes Internationales, the two principal associations agreed in December 1947 to form a coordinating committee that would hold a “Congress of Europe” at The Hague (the Netherlands).47
The Congress, which was attended by over 700 dignitaries—including 200 parliamentary deputies—from every free country in Europe, took place in May 1948 in the aftermath of the Soviet takeover of Czechoslovakia in February 1948 and the ideologically charged elections in Italy in April. In addition to Churchill, the Christian Democrat prime ministers of Italy (Alcide De Gasperi) and France (Georges Bidault) attended, as did such statesmen as Léon Blum, the Socialist prewar premier of the Popular Front government in France; Paul Reynaud, the last premier of France before the Nazi victory; and Paul Van Zeeland, a Princeton-educated economist who was a former premier of Belgium.
The Congress, СКАЧАТЬ