Remaining wary of geopolitics, Germany has been carrying its weight on internal EU political matters, pointing to a potential division of labor between itself and France in the future. The question is can Europe  find ways to preserve both its own autonomy and its close partnership with America.
      
    
    
      “The UN was not founded to take mankind to heaven, but to save 
humanity from hell,” the United Nations’ first secretary-general, Dag 
Hammarskjöld, once 
said.
 The hell he had in mind, of course, was World War II and the Shoah, 
next to which most of today’s challenges pale in comparison. 
Nonetheless, disruptions like the COVID-19 pandemic and Britain’s 
withdrawal from the European Union have called into question many 
beliefs that Europeans previously took for granted.
With his
 push for European “strategic autonomy,” Macron is vying to fill the 
geopolitical leadership gap that has been created by the UK’s departure 
and Germany’s ongoing refusal to engage with geopolitical issues. As 
Europe’s remaining nuclear power and permanent member of the UN Security
 Council, France is obviously the most appropriate candidate for the 
job; but it cannot go it alone.
Germany has at least pulled its 
weight when it comes to internal political issues, particularly 
concerning the preservation of European unity. Merkel demonstrated this 
recently by brokering a compromise with Hungary and Poland, which had 
threatened to veto the recovery fund and the seven-year EU budget over a
 new “rule of law mechanism” for the disbursement of EU funds. The 
German government has also repeatedly stressed that any push for 
“strategic autonomy” must complement and strengthen, rather than 
jeopardize, the transatlantic partnership.Brexit raises long-dormant 
strategic questions about Europe’s internal unity and external position,
 and few of these are likely to be decided quickly. As such, France and 
Germany must seek out common paths for Europe, seizing on the 
opportunities that autonomy offers while remaining mindful of the 
limits. Even the most starry-eyed Euro-optimists cannot reasonably claim
 that Europe can succeed in the twenty-first century without a close 
strategic partnership with the US.
      
      
      
      
        © Project Syndicate
     
      
      
      
      
      
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