The Future of Europe : An Interview with George Soros
George
Soros and Gregor Peter Schmitz APRIL 24, 2014 ISSUE / The New York Review of
Books / http://www.nybooks.com/articles/archives/2014/apr/24/future-europe-interview-george-soros/
Parts of
the following interview with George Soros by the Spiegel correspondent Gregor
Peter Schmitz appear in their book, The Tragedy of the European Union:
Disintegration or Revival?, just published by PublicAffairs.
Gregor
Peter Schmitz: The conflict in Crimea and Ukraine has changed the shape of
European and world politics, and we will come to it. But let us first talk
about a subject on which you’ve taken a critical position over the years: the
crisis of the European Union: With regard to the euro, isn’t the worst over?
George
Soros: If you mean that the euro is here to stay, you are right. That was
confirmed by the German elections, where the subject was hardly discussed, and
by the coalition negotiations, where it was relegated to Subcommittee 2A.
Chancellor Angela Merkel is satisfied with the way she handled the crisis and
so is the German public. They reelected her with an increased majority. She has
always done the absolute minimum necessary to preserve the euro. This has
earned her the allegiance of both the pro- Europeans and those who count on her
to protect German national interests. That is no mean feat.
So the euro
is here to stay, and the arrangements that evolved in response to the crisis
have become established as the new order governing the eurozone. This confirms
my worst fears. It’s the nightmare I’ve been talking about. I’m hopeful that
the Russian invasion of Crimea may serve as a
wake-up call. Germany
is the only country in a position to change the prevailing order. No debtor
country can challenge it; any that might try would be immediately punished by
the financial markets and the European authorities.
Schmitz: If
you said that to Germans, they would say: Well, we have already evolved a lot.
We are more generous now and have modified our policy of austerity.
Soros: I
acknowledge that Germany
has stopped pushing the debtor countries underwater. They are getting a little
bit of oxygen now and are beginning to breathe. Some, particularly Italy , are
still declining, but at a greatly diminished pace. This has given a lift to the
financial markets because the economies are hitting bottom and that almost
automatically brings about a rebound.
But the
prospect of a long period of stagnation has not been removed. It’s generally
agreed that the eurozone is threatened by deflation but opposition from the
German Constitutional Court and its own legal departments will prevent the
European Central Bank (ECB) from successfully overcoming the deflationary
pressures the way other central banks, notably the Federal Reserve, have done.
The
prospect of stagnation has set in motion a negative political dynamic. Anybody
who finds the prevailing arrangements intolerable is pushed into an
anti-European posture. This leads me to expect the process of disintegration to
gather momentum. During the acute phase of the euro crisis we had one financial
crisis after another. Now there should be a series of political rather than
financial crises, although the latter cannot be excluded.
Schmitz:
You say that current arrangements are intolerable. What exactly needs to
change? What needs to be reformed?
Soros: At
the height of the euro crisis, Germany
agreed to a number of systemic reforms, the most important of which was a
banking union. But as the financial pressures abated, Germany
whittled down the concessions it had made. That led to the current arrangements,
which confirm my worst fears.
Schmitz: As
we speak, European finance ministers are in the process of concluding an
agreement on the banking union. What do you think of it?
Soros: In
the process of negotiations, the so-called banking union has been transformed
into something that is almost the exact opposite: the reestablishment of
national “silos,” or separately run banks. This is a victory for Orwellian
newspeak.
Schmitz:
What’s wrong with it?
Soros: The
incestuous relationship between national authorities and bank managements. France in
particular is famous for its inspecteurs de finance, who end up running its
major banks. Germany has its
Landesbanken and Spain
its caixas, which have unhealthy connections with provincial politicians. These
relationships were a major source of weakness in the European banking system
and played an important part in the banking crisis that is still weighing on
the eurozone. The proposed banking union should have eliminated them, but they
were largely preserved, mainly at German insistence.
Schmitz:
That is a pretty drastic condemnation. How do you justify it?
Soros: In
effect, the banking union will leave the banking system without a lender of
last resort. The proposed resolution authority is so complicated, with so many
decision-making entities involved, that it is practically useless in an
emergency. Even worse, the ECB is legally prohibited from undertaking actions
for which it is not expressly authorized. That sets it apart from other central
banks, which are expected to use their discretion in an emergency.
But Germany was
determined to limit the liabilities that it could incur through the ECB. As a
result, member countries remain vulnerable to financial pressures from which
other developed countries are exempt. That is what I meant when I said that
over-indebted members of the EU are in the position of third-world countries
that are overindebted in a foreign currency. The banking union does not correct
that defect. On the contrary, it perpetuates it.
Schmitz:
You sound disappointed.
Soros: I
am. I left no stone unturned trying to prevent this outcome, but now that it
has happened, I don’t want to keep knocking my head against the wall. I accept
that Germany has succeeded
in imposing a new order on Europe , although I
consider it unacceptable. But I still believe in the European Union and the
principles of the open society that originally inspired it, and I should like
to recapture that spirit. I want to arrest the process of disintegration, not
accelerate it. So I am no longer advocating that Germany should “lead or leave the
euro.” The window of opportunity to bring about radical change in the rules
governing the euro has closed.
Schmitz:
So, basically, you are giving up on Europe ?
Soros: No.
I am giving up on changing the financial arrangements, the creditor–debtor
relationship that has now turned into a permanent system. I will continue to
focus on politics, because that is where I expect dramatic developments.
Schmitz: I
see. Obviously, people are concerned about the rise of populist movements in Europe . Do you see any opportunity to push for more
political integration, when the trend is toward disintegration?
Soros: I do
believe in finding European solutions for the problems of Europe ;
national solutions make matters worse.
Schmitz: It
seems the pro-Europeans are often silent on important issues because they are
afraid that speaking up might increase support for the extremists—for example,
in the case of the many refugees from the Middle East and Africa who hoped to
reach Europe and were detained on the Italian island of Lampedusa .
Soros: Like
it or not, migration policy will be a central issue in the elections. We must
find some alternative to xenophobia.
Schmitz:
What do you propose to do about it?
Soros: I
have established an Open Society Initiative for Europe —OSIFE
for short. One of its first initiatives is Solidarity Now, in Greece . The
original idea was to generate European solidarity with the plight of the Greek
population that is suffering from the euro crisis and Greek solidarity with the
plight of the migrants, who experience inhuman conditions and are persecuted by
the ultranationalist Golden Dawn party. It took us some time to get the project
off the ground, and by the time we did, it was too late to generate European
solidarity with the Greeks because other heavily indebted countries were also
in need of support. So we missed that boat, but our initiative has had the
useful by-product of giving us a better insight into the migration problem.
Schmitz:
What have you learned?
Soros: That
there is an unbridgeable conflict between North and South on the political
asylum issue. The countries in the North, basically the creditors, have been
generous in their treatment of asylum seekers. So all the asylum seekers want
to go there, particularly to Germany .
But that is more than they can absorb, so they have put in place a European
agreement called Dublin III, which requires asylum seekers to register in the
country where they first enter the EU. That tends to be the South, namely, Italy , Spain ,
and Greece .
All three are heavily indebted and subject to fiscal austerity. They don’t have
proper facilities for asylum seekers, and they have developed xenophobic,
anti-immigrant, populist political movements.
Asylum
seekers are caught in a trap. If they register in the country where they
arrive, they can never ask for asylum in Germany . So, many prefer to remain
illegal, hoping to make their way to Germany . They are condemned to
illegality for an indefinite period. The miserable conditions in which they
live feed into the anti-immigrant sentiment.
Schmitz:
Looking at other European issues, aren’t your foundations also very involved in
the problems of the Roma (Gypsies)?
Soros: Yes,
we have been engaged in those issues for more than twenty-five years. The Roma
Education Fund has developed effective methods of educating Roma children and
strengthening their Roma identity at the same time. If this were done on a
large-enough scale it would destroy the hostile stereotype that stands in the
way of the successful integration of the Roma. As it is, educated Roma can
blend into the majority because they don’t fit the stereotype but the
stereotype remains intact.
This is
another instance where the European Commission is having a positive effect. I
look to the European Structural funds to scale up the programs that work.
Schmitz:
What do you think of Vladimir Putin’s recent policies with respect to Ukraine , Crimea, and Europe ?
Soros: Now
you are coming to the crux of the matter. Russia is emerging as a big
geopolitical player, and the European Union needs to realize that it has a
resurgent rival on its east. Russia
badly needs Europe as a partner, but Putin is
positioning it as a rival. There are significant political forces within the
Russian regime that are critical of Putin’s policy on that score.
Schmitz:
Can you be more specific?
Soros: The
important thing to remember is that Putin is leading from a position of
weakness. He was quite popular in Russia because he restored some
order out of the chaos. The new order is not all that different from the old
one, but the fact that it is open to the outside world is a definite
improvement, an important element in its stability. But then the prearranged
switch with Dmitry Medvedev from prime minister to president deeply upset the
people. Putin felt existentially threatened by the protest movement. He became
repressive at home and aggressive abroad.
That is
when Russia started shipping
armaments to the Assad regime in Syria on a massive scale and helped
turn the tide against the rebels. The gamble paid off because of the
preoccupation of the Western powers—the United States and the EU—with their
internal problems. Barack Obama wanted to retaliate against Syria ’s use of
chemical weapons. He asked for congressional approval and was about to be
rebuffed when Putin came to the rescue and persuaded Assad to voluntarily
surrender his chemical weapons.
That was a
resounding diplomatic victory for him. Yet the spontaneous uprising of the
Ukrainian people must have taught Putin that his dream of reconstituting what
is left of the Russian Empire is unattainable. He is now facing a choice
between persevering or changing course and becoming more cooperative abroad and
less repressive at home. His current course has already proved to be
self-defeating, but he appears to be persevering.
Schmitz: Is
Russia a credible threat to Europe if its economy is as weak as you say?
Soros: The
oligarchs who control much of the Russian economy don’t have any confidence in
the regime. They send their children and money abroad. That is what makes the
economy so weak. Even with oil over $100 a barrel, which is the minimum Russia needs to
balance its budget, it is not growing. Putin turned aggressive out of weakness.
He is acting in self-defense. He has no scruples, he can be ruthless, but he is
a judo expert, not a sadist—so the economic weakness and the aggressive
behavior are entirely self-consistent.
Schmitz:
How should Europe respond to it?
Soros: It
needs to be more united, especially in response to Russian aggression in Ukraine . Putin
prides himself on being a geopolitical realist. He respects strength and is
emboldened by weakness. Yet there is no need to be permanently adversarial.
Notwithstanding the current situation in Ukraine ,
the European Union and Russia
are in many ways complementary; they both need each other. There is plenty of
room for Russia to play a
constructive role in the world, exactly because both Europe and the United States
are so preoccupied with their internal problems.
Schmitz:
How does that translate into practice, particularly in the Middle
East ?
Soros: It
has totally transformed the geopolitical situation. I have some specific ideas
on this subject, but it is very complicated. I can’t possibly explain it in
full because there are too many countries involved and they are all
interconnected.
Schmitz:
Give it a try.
Soros: I
should start with a general observation. There are a growing number of
unresolved political crises in the world. That is a symptom of a breakdown in
global governance. We have a very rudimentary system in place. Basically, there
is only one international institution of hard power: the UN Security Council.
If the five permanent members agree, they can impose their will on any part of
the world. But there are many sovereign states with armies; and there are
failed states that are unable to protect their monopoly over the use of lethal
force or hard power.
The cold
war was a stable system. The two superpowers were stalemated by the threat of
mutually assured destruction, and they had to restrain their satellites. So
wars were fought mainly at the edges. After the collapse of the Soviet Union,
there was a brief moment when the United States emerged as the
undisputed leader of the world. But it abused its power. Under the influence of
the neocons, who argued that the United States
should use its power to impose its will on the world, President George W. Bush
declared “war on terror” and invaded Iraq under false pretenses.
That was a tragic misinterpretation of the
proper role of hegemonic or imperial power. It is the power of attraction—soft
power—that ensures the stability of empires. Hard power may be needed for
conquest and self-protection, but the hegemon must look after the interests of
those who depend on it in order to secure their allegiance instead of promoting
only its own interests. The United
States did that very well after World War
II, when it established the United Nations and embarked on the Marshall Plan.
But President Bush forgot that lesson and destroyed American supremacy in no
time. The neocons’ dream of a “new American century” lasted less than ten
years. President Obama then brought American policy back to reality. His record
in foreign policy is better than generally recognized. He accepted the
tremendous loss of power and influence and tried to “lead from behind.” In any
case, he is more preoccupied with domestic than foreign policy. In that respect
America is in the same
position as Europe , although for different
reasons. People are inward-looking and tired of war. This has created a power
vacuum, which has allowed conflicts to fester unresolved all over the world.
Recently, Russia has moved into this power
vacuum, trying to reassert itself as a geopolitical player. That was a bold
maneuver, inspired by Putin’s internal weakness, and it has paid off in Syria because
of the weakness of the West. Russia
could do what the Western powers couldn’t: persuade Assad to “voluntarily”
surrender his chemical weapons. That has radically changed the geopolitical
landscape. Suddenly, the prospect of a solution has emerged for the three major
unresolved conflicts in the Middle East—Palestine ,
Iran , and Syria —when one would
have least expected it.
The Syrian crisis is by far the worst,
especially in humanitarian consequences. Russia ’s entry as a major supplier
of arms, coupled with Hezbollah’s entry as a supplier of troops, has turned the
tables in favor of Assad. The fighting can be brought to an end only by a
political settlement imposed and guaranteed by the international community.
Without it, the two sides will continue to fight indefinitely with the help of
their outside supporters. But a political settlement will take months or years
to negotiate. In the meantime, Assad is following a deliberate policy of
denying food and destroying the medical system as a way of subduing the
civilian population. “Starve or surrender” is his motto.
This raises the specter of a human
catastrophe. Unless humanitarian assistance can be delivered across battle
lines, more people will have died from illness and starvation during the winter
than from actual fighting.
Schmitz: What about Iran ?
Soros: There has been an actual
breakthrough in the Iranian crisis in the form of a temporary agreement on
nuclear weapons with the new president Hassan Rouhani. The sanctions imposed by
the Western powers have been very effective. The Iranian revolution itself
advanced to the point where it fell into the hands of a narrow clique, the Revolutionary
Guard; the mullahs were largely pushed out of power. As head of the mullahs,
the Supreme Leader could not have been pleased. He must also be aware that the
large majority of the population has been profoundly dissatisfied with the
regime. In contrast with previous attempts at negotiations, he seems to be in
favor of reaching an accommodation with the United States . That improves the
prospects for a final agreement. We must take into account, as Vali Nasr
recently wrote, that Iran
has, after Russia , the
world’s second-largest reserves of natural gas; and it potentially might
compete with Russia in
supplying gas to Europe .
Schmitz: That leaves the longest-lasting
crisis, Palestine .
Soros: Recent developments in Egypt have
improved the chances of progress in the long-festering Palestinian crisis. The
army, with the active support of Saudi Arabia
and the Gulf states ,
has removed the legally elected president and is engaged in the brutal
suppression of the Muslim Brotherhood. This otherwise disturbing development
has a potentially benign side effect: it raises the possibility of a peace
settlement between the Palestinian Authority and Israel , to the exclusion of Hamas.
This would have been inconceivable a few months ago. Secretary of State John
Kerry became engaged in the Palestinian negotiations well before this window of
opportunity opened, so he is ahead of the game. Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu is very suspicious but, for all his intransigence, cannot openly
oppose negotiations because, having openly supported Mitt Romney in the
American elections, he holds a relatively weak hand. Negotiations are making
progress, but very slowly indeed.
If all three crises were resolved, a new
order would emerge in the Middle East . There
is a long way to go because the various conflicts are interconnected, and the
potential losers in one conflict may act as spoilers in another. Netanyahu, for
instance, is dead set against a deal with Iran
because peace with Palestine would end his
political career in Israel .
Nevertheless, the broad outlines of a potential new order can already be
discerned, although we cannot know the effects of the current crisis in Ukraine . Russia could become more influential, relations
between Saudi Arabia and the
United States may become
strained, and Iran may
emerge as America ’s closest
ally, second only to Israel .
But the situation remains fluid and may change from one day to the next.
Schmitz: Recently the crisis in Ukraine has
overshadowed all the others.
Soros: Indeed. Ukraine
and in particular Crimea are of much greater interest to Russia than anything in the Middle
East . Putin woefully misjudged the situation. Last autumn he had
no difficulty in outmaneuvering the European Union, which was hamstrung by its
internal political and financial problems. Under German leadership it offered
too little and demanded too much. Putin could easily offer a better deal to
Ukrainian President Yanukovych. But the Ukrainian people rebelled, upsetting
the calculations of both sides.
The rebellion wounded Putin in his Achilles
heel. The idea of a spontaneous rebellion simply did not enter into his
calculations. In his view the world is ruled by power and those in power can
easily manipulate public opinion. Failure to control the people is a sign of weakness.
Accordingly, he made it a condition of his
assistance that Yanukovych should repress the rebellion. But the use of force
aroused the public and eventually Yanukovych was forced to capitulate. This
could have resulted in a stalemate and the preservation of the status quo with Ukraine precariously balanced between Russia and Europe ,
and a corrupt and inept government pitted against civil society. It would have
been an inferior equilibrium with the costs exceeding the benefits for all
parties concerned.
But Putin persisted in his
counterproductive approach. Yanukovych was first hospitalized and then sent to Sochi to be dressed down
by Putin. Putin’s instructions brought the confrontation to a climax. Contrary
to all rational expectations, a group of citizens armed with not much more than
sticks and shields made of cardboard boxes and metal garbage can lids
overwhelmed a police force firing live ammunition. There were many casualties,
but the citizens prevailed. It was a veritable miracle.
Schmitz: How could such a thing happen? How
do you explain it?
Soros: It fits right into my human
uncertainty principle, but it also reveals a remarkable similarity between
human affairs and quantum physics of which I was previously unaware. According
to Max Planck, among others, subatomic phenomena have a dual character: they
can manifest themselves as particles or waves. Something similar applies to
human beings: they are partly freestanding individuals or particles and partly
components of larger entities that behave like waves. The impact they make on
reality depends on which alternative dominates their behavior. There are
potential tipping points from one alternative to the other but it is uncertain
when they will occur and the uncertainty can be resolved only in retrospect.
On February 20 a tipping point was reached
when the people on Maidan Square
were so determined to defend Ukraine
that they forgot about their individual mortality. What gave their suicidal
stand historic significance is that it succeeded. A deeply divided society was
moved from the verge of civil war to an unprecedented unity. Revolutions
usually fail. The Orange Revolution of 2004 deteriorated into a squabble
between its leaders. It would be a mistake to conclude that this revolution is
doomed to suffer the same fate. Indeed the parties participating in the interim
government are determined to avoid it. In retrospect the resistance of Maidan
may turn out to be the birth of a nation. This promising domestic development
was a direct response to foreign oppression. Unfortunately it is liable to
provoke further pressure from abroad because successful resistance by Ukraine would present an existential threat to
Putin’s continued dominance in Russia .
Schmitz: You are referring to the Russian
invasion of Crimea . How do you see it playing
out?
Soros: If it is confined to Crimea it will
serve as a further impetus to greater national cohesion in Ukraine . Crimea
is not an integral part of Ukraine .
Khrushchev transferred Crimea to Ukraine in 1954 by an administrative
decree. The majority of its population is Russian and it is the base of the
Russian Black Sea Fleet. That is exactly why Putin is liable to put military
and economic pressure on Ukraine
directly and they are not in a position to resist it on their own. They need
the support of the Western powers. So Ukraine ’s
future depends on how the Western powers, particularly Germany ,
respond.
Schmitz: What should the Western powers do?
Soros: They should focus on strengthening Ukraine rather than on punishing Russia . They
cannot prevent or reverse the annexation of Crimea .
They are bound to protest it of course because it violates the Budapest
Memorandum of 1994 that guaranteed the territorial integrity of Ukraine , including Crimea ,
but they are not in a position to oppose it by military means. Even sanctions
ought to be used sparingly in order to preserve them as a deterrent against the
real danger, namely of direct military or economic assault on Ukraine .
Russian forces have already occupied a gas plant in Ukraine
supplying Crimea and may take more territory
unless they are stopped.
Fortunately economic sanctions would be a
potent deterrent provided they are used judiciously. Freezing the foreign
assets of Russian oligarchs is the opposite of smart sanctions. Oligarchs
sending their profits and their children abroad weaken the Russian economy.
Until now capital flight was more or less offset by foreign direct investment.
Effective sanctions would discourage the inflow of funds, whether in the form
of direct investments or bank loans. Moreover, the US could release oil from its
strategic reserve and allow its sale abroad. That could put the Russian economy
into deficit. The Russian economy is fragile enough to be vulnerable to smart
sanctions.
Schmitz: Wouldn’t that be cutting off your
nose to spite your face? Germany
has a lot of investments in Russia ,
which are equally vulnerable.
Soros: Effective sanctions against Russia should
be threatened at first only as a deterrent. If the threat is effective, they
wouldn’t be applied. But Chancellor Merkel faces a fundamental choice: should Germany be
guided by its narrow national self-interests or should it assert its leadership
position within the European Union and forge a unified European response? On
her choice hinges not only the fate of Ukraine but also the future of the
European Union. Her passionate speech to the German Parliament on March 13
gives me hope that she is going to make the right choice.
Schmitz: What is your idea of the right
choice?
Soros: A large-scale technical and
financial assistance program for Ukraine . The EU and the US , under the
leadership of the International Monetary Fund, are putting together a
multibillion-dollar rescue package that will save the country from financial
collapse. But that is not enough: Ukraine also needs outside
assistance that only the EU can provide: management expertise and access to
markets.
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