Why "Brexit" Would Be Good News
for Russia
By Finian Cunningham
February 26, 2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- "SCF"
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Britain will make a once-in-a-lifetime decision in
the coming months on whether to leave the European
Union. Both Washington and Moscow have a lot at
stake. While the US needs Britain to remain within
the EU in order to do its bidding, Russia’s
interests might be better served by a historic
split.
The referendum on the so-called «Brexit»
is to take place on June 23. It follows Conservative
Prime Minister David Cameron announcing a reform
package hammered out with other European leaders
last week. Cameron is endorsing EU membership,
claiming that his reforms have given Britons the
«best of both worlds» – that is, a measure of
national independence while retaining economic
benefits from being still part of the EU bloc.
The last time Britain held a similar
referendum was back in 1975, when a strong majority
voted in favor of remaining in the then 12-member
European Economic Community (EEC).
Four decades on, the EEC has
transformed enormously to become the European Union
of 28 member states, with a single currency for most
of those members and a series of treaties that
enshrine a project for federal political union.
Cameron’s reforms have secured a British opt-out
from the federal project of «ever closer union» as
well as limited curbs on EU migrants’ social welfare
rights.
Nevertheless, the European question
that Britons will be voting on in the forthcoming
plebiscite is very different from that of 41 years
ago when the EEC was merely a commercial trading
association. And polls show that the British public
have become increasing leery of the EU, with the
electorate now evenly divided over continued
membership. It’s going to be a close call on June
23.
As in other European countries,
British public perception of the EU and its Brussels
administration has becoming increasingly negative,
or eurosceptic. Previously, British eurosceptics
were a hardboiled minority, associated with the
rightwing of Cameron’s ruling Conservative party.
Typically, they tended to have a «little Englander»
mentality, espousing isolationism, pride in past
imperial power, and free-market capitalism
unfettered by government regulations, especially
«foreign governments» in Brussels.
While these traits persist among the
Tory party’s rightwing and in its scion of the
United Kingdom Independence Party, led by Nigel
Farage, there is also a growing disillusionment
towards the EU among centrist voters and those on
the socialist left. This is because the EU’s image
as a social democratic bloc has greatly diminished
from earlier times. It is true that the EU has over
the decades implemented many progressive laws to
uphold workers’ rights and for protection of
consumers and the environment. It can be argued that
all countries have benefited from this uniformity of
social conditions. However, in more recent years,
unbridled austerity from neoliberal economic
policies have transformed the formerly progressive
EU into a perceived bastion of corporate power, one
which is detrimental to the majority of workers.
We only have to look at how Greece is
being dragooned into adopting brutal public spending
cuts at the behest of the European Central Bank and
IMF to appreciate why many of the EU’s 500 million
citizens are alienated from what they see as a
Brussels plutocracy.
The fact that executives of Britain’s
biggest corporations, among the FTSE 100, are
lobbying Cameron to push hard to keep within the EU
is another indicator of the bloc’s alignment with
corporate interests over workers’ rights.
The EU’s now-notorious democratic
deficit, or more stridently «dictatorial tendency»,
has galvanized voters on both the right and the
left. The eurosceptics are no longer just
«reactionary little Englanders» but also include
many who view the EU as an anti-democratic machine
serving the super rich.
Moreover, Brussels is seen as being
pathetically subordinate to Washington’s economic
and foreign policies. The alignment of the EU with
the US-led NATO military alliance is a case in
point. As is the way that Brussels has meekly toed
the American line of imposing sanctions against
Russia and fostering a generally hostile climate
between Europe and Moscow.
The Brexit referendum is throwing up
some strange bedfellows. Already, the UKIP’s Nigel
Farage has shared a public platform with the avowed
socialist firebrand George Galloway in calling for a
Leave-the-EU vote.
While those calling for a
Remain-in-the-EU vote include Conservative Prime
Minister David Cameron and Labour party leader
Jeremy Corbyn.
Corbyn has distanced himself,
however, by saying that he wants to reform the EU
from within to make it a more socialist bloc. In an
article for the Guardian, he wrote:
«Labour will be running a positive
campaign for the real change we need: to unite
opposition to austerity and build a Europe of
sustainable growth, jobs and social justice».
The Scottish Nationalists led by
Nicola Sturgeon are unanimously for staying in the
EU. They have said that if Britain votes for a
Brexit, then the Scots will push again for a new
independence vote from the United Kingdom.
Cameron’s own party is deeply split
on the big question. Six of his 24 cabinet ministers
are against EU membership, which is an unprecedented
dissent from the prime minister’s authority. While
nearly half of the total Conservative party’s 329
Members of Parliament are also opposed to staying in
Europe.
The Leave Europe moral was given a
major boost when Boris Johnson, the Conservative
Mayor of London, broke ranks and declared his
support for a Brexit – much to Cameron’s chagrin.
The flamboyant Johnson is popular among voters. Some
commentators have even said that if Cameron loses
over the referendum, then Johnson is in pole
position to replace him in Downing Street.
An important weathervane is the
position of Washington on the future of Britain and
Europe. President Barack Obama has already
personally intervened to recommend Britain stay
within the EU. Washington has also taken the
extraordinary step of announcing that an independent
Britain would not avail of any special trading
privileges – meaning that it was pointedly
incentivizing continued membership of the bloc.
But the precise American interest in
Britain’s relationship with the rest of Europe was
made more explicit in a recent article by Richard
Haas, who was formerly a policy director at the
State Department and is the president of the
influential Council on Foreign Relations. Haas
wrote: «From my perspective (and that of many other
Americans), a decision by the United Kingdom to exit
the EU would be undesirable – indeed, highly
undesirable».
He went on to explain:
«One reason why the US values its
ties to the UK as much as it does is the UK’s role
in Europe. Britain is important not just as a
bilateral partner, but because more often than not
it can be counted on to argue for and support
positions in Brussels consistent with, or at least
not far from, those of the US».
In short, Britain is Washington’s
gopher in Europe. Or to put it another way: without
Britain, Washington would not be able to control
European policies as much as it has done up to now.
This has huge implications for both economic and
foreign policies.
Imagine for a moment the European
Union without Britain’s unswerving pro-Washington
agenda. There is a fair chance that the EU would not
have indulged the American regime change policies in
the Middle East and North Africa, which have
resulted in a refugee crisis tearing EU members
apart at the seams. If it were not for Britain’s
bullish advocacy of Washington’s anti-Russian
sanctions and pro-NATO militarism generally, there
is a fair chance that the current standoff between
Europe and Moscow would not have transpired.
British inclusion in Europe is of
paramount geopolitical advantage to Washington.
Britain is crucial for driving the American wedge
between Europe – especially Germany – and Russia.
That’s what Richard Haas was referring to in his
angst over a possible Brexit.
A socialist European Union
independent from American foreign policy and one
where normal relations with Russia are allowed to
prevail is a preferred objective. But is that
realistically achievable as long as Uncle Sam’s
British bulldog remains snapping at everyone’s
heels?
Perhaps the most expedient way
forward is for Britain to leave the EU. From
Russia’s point of view, a Brexit could be a lucky
break. |