Von der Leyen wants to be a wartime president.
Now she has to convince EU leaders.
Commission president wants to use a defense boost to
help her get a second term.
MARCH 21,
2024 4:00 AM CET
BY BARBARA
MOENS AND JACOPO BARIGAZZI
https://www.politico.eu/article/ursula-von-der-leyen-wartime-president-ukraine-europe-election/
BRUSSELS —
Never waste a good crisis, especially if it is a good campaign opportunity.
President
of the European Commission since 2019, Ursula von der Leyen has steered Europe
through a pandemic, a cost of living crisis, and a war on the continent’s
doorstep.
As the
“existential threat” of the war in Ukraine shows no sign of abating, the former
German defense minister is campaigning for a second term on a platform of her
being crisis-manager-in-chief, hoping to win over European Union leaders who
themselves are making promises of financial and moral support for Ukraine. So
with the United States hesitant to continue funding the war and a looming
possible return of former President Donald Trump, this week’s summit of EU
leaders in Brussels is the perfect place for von der Leyen to make her pitch.
“Von der
Leyen is turning from president of the Commission to somebody running for
office and shifting her policies that way,” said Nicolai von Ondarza of the
German Institute for International and Security Affairs. “You can see that on
farmers, on enlargement … and on security and defense, which she is trying to
make one of her core messages in the election campaign.”
Earlier
this month, von der Leyen zoomed in on European defense during her nomination
speech for a second term, saying Europe needs “to turbocharge our defense
industrial capacity in the next five years.”
The
discussions at the European Council summit come as Paris and Berlin have feuded
over their respective Ukraine strategies. French President Emmanuel Macron’s
increasingly hawkish rhetoric has led to annoyance in Berlin, especially when
France urged Europe not to act as “cowards” in the face of Russia’s aggression.
German Chancellor Olaf Scholz has faced criticism for his refusal to send
German Taurus missiles to Ukraine.
“Von der
Leyen has tried to fill the leadership vacuum that has been there for quite
some time due to both Germany and France’s leaders focused on internal
politics,” said von Ondarza.
Franco-German squabbles
The EU
recently agreed on €5 billion to partially reimburse member states for new arms
shipments to Ukraine. But the situation on the battlefield remains dire.
“There is a
lot of fear that we could reach a tipping point where we could potentially see
some real Russian breakthroughs this summer,” said Alissa de Carbonnel, deputy
program director for Europe and Central Asia at the International Crisis Group,
an NGO.
The
Franco-German quibbling and the continued Russian threat, at a time when U.S.
support for Ukraine has been cast into question, helps von der Leyen, a former
German defense minister, in her bid to stay on as head of the EU’s executive
arm.
“The EU
simply cannot afford to have a long transition period or political insecurity
in this context,” said one senior EU official who was granted anonymity to
speak freely. “Von der Leyen has her flaws, but overall she is the right person
in the right place.”
But not all
European leaders agree with von der Leyen on how to get there. Hungarian Prime
Minister Viktor Orbán wants to change course on the EU’s Ukraine policy. And
other leaders disagree internally on how to fund more ammunition for Ukraine.
Ukraine
says the EU needs to make decisions with some urgency.
“It’s
urgent for EU partners because Ukraine has been the major security provider to
EU countries and NATO countries. And Ukraine has been showing the capability to
secure Europe and to shield Europe from the aggression. And now Ukraine is
lacking capabilities to deliver on that,” said Ukrainian Deputy Prime Minister
Olga Stefanishyna.
“So it’s
vital for all Europe and it’s extremely urgent.”
At the peak
of the pandemic, when member states were closing their borders, von der Leyen
steered through the crisis through joint vaccine procurement and joint EU debt.
Now, a number of EU countries are calling on her to take the same approach on
defense. On top of joint procurement of weapons, countries such as France,
Estonia and Poland are pushing for joint EU debt to raise more money for
weapons. European Council President Charles Michel also supports the idea.
This is a
no-go for others, including Germany, the Netherlands and the Nordics, making it
hard for von der Leyen to go this far, EU diplomats said.
“When
Germany hesitates, that’s a problem for Europe,” said Sylvie Matelly, director
of the Jacques Delors Institute. “Especially when the president of the
Commission is German.”
An external
shock, such as a poorly aimed missile that hits a European country or the risk
of the fall of Ukraine could change those red lines. “Although this time
reacting instead of acting could mean that it is too late,” said a diplomat
from Eastern Europe, granted anonymity to speak freely about a sensitive
subject.
Von der Leyen’s steps on defense
In the
short term, von der Leyen is already laying out a Europe-wide vision on
defense: announcing a new defense commissioner, more dedicated defense funding,
a bigger defense industrial base and using Russian frozen assets to finance
weapons for Ukraine.
To invest
more in weapons, von der Leyen and her foreign policy chief Josep Borrell want
to use 90 percent of the proceeds of frozen Russian assets to buy weapons for
Ukraine. But some European leaders, such as Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor
Orbán and Slovakia’s Robert Fico, fear handing ammunition to Ukraine will
contribute to a military escalation. Other countries, such as Malta and
Ireland, are not allowed to buy lethal weapons for foreign countries under
their decades-old neutrality policies.
Von der
Leyen’s plan for a European defense industrial strategy is getting pushback
from Germany who supports boosting the sector but fears the plan includes a
power grab from the Commission which they believe will not help efforts.
The same
goes for von der Leyen’s idea to appoint a defense commissioner, which was met
with grumbles in some European capitals.
“This will
work for her as an election topic. Whether she will be in a position as
Commission president if she gets elected to make good on that promise is
another question, precisely because the resistance of member states to hand
more powers to the Commission is quite strong,” said von Ondarza.
The most
sensitive issue, however, is the future financing of more defense investments,
another potential point of contention for EU leaders on Thursday.
“I don’t know if this European summit will be
the acme, or the watershed moment… but I’m fairly optimistic,” said a French
diplomat, who was granted anonymity to speak candidly about the subject.
After two
years of war and with the situation on the ground deteriorating, Ukraine’s
supporters argue the EU has to put the money where the mouth is, Latvian
Foreign Minister Krišjānis Kariņš told reporters.
While EU
leaders agree the current proposal to mobilize €1.5 billion of the EU budget
will not be enough, they disagree on where to fund the extra money, for
example, through defense bonds.
Meanwhile,
the clock is ticking for soldiers on the battlefield, Ukraine’s supporters
stress.
“This year
is critical and we must do whatever we can to provide all that we can in
support of Ukraine’s resistance on the ground,”
Romanian Foreign Minister Luminita Odobescu told POLITICO. Therefore, “time is of the essence.”
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