By Clyde Prestowitz
All my life I've
been a Europhile. My dad worked for a Belgian company. I was a high school
exchange student to Switzerland in 1958. My first posting as a Foreign Service
officer was as vice consul to Rotterdam. I lived in Brussels for five years in
the 1970s as head of Scott Paper Company's European marketing operations. I
take my family to Europe frequently and maintain a wide range of work and other
activities there.
Through all the vicissitudes of
mid-night negotiations, I admired the dedication and vision of the negotiators
who were building the European Union. I believed in the vision of a united
Europe and welcomed the advent of the Euro as a major step along the way. When
the recent crisis first broke three years ago, I welcomed it, thinking that
surely it would be a catalyst for Europe to move to full financial integration
and to greater political integration on the way toward realizing the vision of
a truly united Europe.
I was wrong, and I have come to realize
that my dream of a united Europe a la the United States, is not the
European dream. Indeed, with great disappointment I have at last concluded that
there is no European dream because a las those whom we on the outside call
Europeans are not and don't want to be Europeans.
I spent part of last weekend with a
group of leading intellectuals from various European countries. The Germans
were firm in their conviction that the primary cause of the EU crisis is the
laziness, profligacy, free rider attitude, and mendacity of the so called
Peripheral Countries ( Spain, Portugal, Ireland, Italy, Greece, and even maybe
France), especially Greece, Portugal, and Spain. They emphasized that Germans
believe in paying their way, in spending prudently, saving, investing,
producing, and maintaining sound money and strong currencies.




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