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Angela Merkel left office in early December
2021. She outlasted four French presidents and managed many European
crises, often in tandem with France. Yet the ‘Merkel era’ did not leave
behind any visionary European achievements. Merkel’s lack of strategic
vision has frequently been criticised in France, while her crisis
management skills and formidable flair for defending her country’s
interests were largely admired, even by those concerned by the
increasing German economic dominance in Europe. From a French
perspective, her ability to manage crises is her main legacy.
Even
more so post-Brexit, France and Germany remain Europe’s driving forces.
But the two countries often have opposing national interests. Several
crucial topics are likely to be the source of conflict in the
‘post-Merkel era’, such as financial and budgetary politics, the
European Green Deal, defence and security, migration, and EU
enlargement. The COVID-19 crisis and rising tensions between the EU,
China and the US highlight the need to progress on four issues: (i)
financial and budgetary issues; (ii) the green and digital transitions;
(iii) Europe’s role in the world; and (iv) immigration policy. On a
positive note, the new German coalition is already showing a greater
openness than its predecessor to work closely with France.
A less frugal Germany?
Financial
and budgetary issues have long been a bone of contention between France
and Germany. Reputedly frugal and uncompromising at the height of the
Greek crisis, Merkel exited the Chancellery as the advocate of fiscal
orthodoxy in the COVID-19 crisis, leaving behind other countries like
the Netherlands, Finland and Austria. Germany, alongside France, led the
way to an unprecedented recovery plan to deal with the effects of the
pandemic-induced economic crisis. For the first time ever, and together
with France, Germany agreed to the common fund, Next Generation EU. This
was primarily thanks to the Social Democrats, who were already in
Merkel’s grand coalition, and now are the largest governing party in the
new traffic-light coalition. This may be proof that the new German
coalition government is ready to find common ground with France and
other European countries.
Some uncertainty still surrounds the
new government coalition, such as on reforming the Stability and Growth
Pact. Finance minister Christian Lindner and his Free Democratic Party
(FDP) opposed changing the EU’s budgetary rules before the election.
While the recently signed coalition treaty leaves the door open for
adapting these rules, as requested by France, the FDP’s position seems
resolute. But a meeting between Lindner and his French counterpart,
Bruno Le Maire, last December suggests the possibility of agreement
between the two countries, as both ministers showed goodwill and
considered cooperation essential.
The green and digital transitions
Concerning
the EU Green Deal, on 27 April 2021, France and Germany presented their
national recovery plans, which include increased climate ambitions in
line with the objectives set by the European Commission. But in the
context of the green transition, France and Germany have made radically
different choices, particularly on nuclear power. Germany plans to phase
out nuclear power by 2022, whereas France remains one of the most
nuclear-powered countries in Europe.
On 31 December 2021, the
Commission published the EU taxonomy for sustainable investments, asking
member states to take a position on the proposal to make natural gas
and nuclear power key elements in the transition to renewable energy and
climate neutrality. President Emmanuel Macron intends to pursue nuclear
power, while Germany insists on including gas in the taxonomy. As
Germany lacks natural gas resources, it depends on Russian supplies to
carry out the energy transition. Energy policy is thus likely to remain a
source of political conflict between France and Germany.
The
2019 Aachen Treaty provides the framework to deepen Franco–German
relations in this field with new initiatives. In 2020, the Gaia-X
project, originally led by French and German companies and supported by
both governments, held out great hope for establishing rules of good
conduct in cloud infrastructure, particularly in the face of US giants.
Even if the project is now faltering and disappointing some of its
members, especially given the overly important place that would be
granted to American tech companies, the project shows that France and
Germany can play a leading role in digital matters.
Germany lags
behind other EU countries in the digital field in terms of, for example,
the modernisation of its administrative services and high-speed
internet. Via the European recovery plan, the new German coalition
intends to make digitalisation one of its priorities. In the same sense,
the French Presidency of the Council of the EU has put the digital
transition at the heart of its major ambitions. On 25 January 2022,
Macron and Chancellor Olaf Scholz met in Berlin to discuss the French
Council Presidency. They promised to coordinate, with Germany pledging
to fully support France’s development of the Council Presidency’s
priorities, particularly the digital.
Europe’s role in the world
The
subject of common defence is another long-standing source of
Franco–German conflict. In fact, it might be the area where the
dissonances are the greatest. As many observers point out, particularly
in France, Germany is far from acquiring a military power that matches
its economic strength. Despite its strong commitment to NATO, Germany
still enjoys the comfort of ‘outsourcing’ its security to not only the
US but also France (i.e. Sahel, Syria, Iraq). Berlin remains far from the NATO pledge to spend 2% of its GDP on defence and constantly postpones this objective.
Meanwhile,
Macron is pushing for stronger strategic autonomy and independent
defence at the EU level, convinced that US disengagement was not a Trump
policy but rather a general trend. From a French perspective, Germany
seemed to believe that President Joe Biden would bring back ‘normality’.
But his retreat from Afghanistan without consulting his European
allies, and the ‘sabotage’ of France’s submarine deal with Australia for
the trilateral AUKUS security pact have convinced Europe that it needs
to push for a stronger independent foreign policy....
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