Edward Timmins: Europe at Risk - Call to Strengthen Defence and DRAGU
Edward Timmins argues that Ireland and the European Union must strengthen defence and implement the DRAGU report to protect freedom and boost growth. He draws on personal experience living across Europe to explain why the continent's prosperity is at stake.
Edward Timmins recalls how EU membership has transformed Ireland economically, culturally and educationally, citing structural funds, multinational investment and the Erasmus programme. He reflects on his own years living in France, Germany and Switzerland and traces Ireland's long contribution to European culture.
Timmins warns that the freedoms won in 1990 are under threat from Vladimir Putin's attempts to reimpose a totalitarian order. He says European countries must be prepared to defend themselves and highlights the strategic role Germany must play in building credible defence capability.
Turning to economics, Timmins urges Ireland to use its upcoming EU presidency to push for implementation of the DRAGU report. He argues Europe lags the US and China on productivity and technology, is dependent on foreign cloud providers, and needs a coherent policy to restore growth and strategic autonomy.
Europe's transformation and personal testimony
Edward Timmins recalls how EU membership has transformed Ireland economically, culturally and educationally, citing structural funds, multinational investment and the Erasmus programme. He reflects on his own years living in France, Germany and Switzerland and traces Ireland's long contribution to European culture.
Security risks and the return of totalitarian ambition
Timmins warns that the freedoms won in 1990 are under threat from Vladimir Putin's attempts to reimpose a totalitarian order. He says European countries must be prepared to defend themselves and highlights the strategic role Germany must play in building credible defence capability.
Economic competitiveness and the DRAGU report
Turning to economics, Timmins urges Ireland to use its upcoming EU presidency to push for implementation of the DRAGU report. He argues Europe lags the US and China on productivity and technology, is dependent on foreign cloud providers, and needs a coherent policy to restore growth and strategic autonomy.
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Transcript
Ireland has benefited enormously from our membership of the European Union. From the huge value of structural funds, to the attraction for American multinationals, to having an English-speaking base in the EU, Ireland has been transformed for the better by this membership. This has led to a standard of living which our grandparents could never imagine. But not only economically, also culturally, socially and educationally, witness the enormous success of the Erasmus programme. I'm going to refer to the huge positives I have experienced personally in Europe. As a young man, I lived for a number of years in the 1980s on mainland Europe, in France, Germany and Switzerland, and experienced the extraordinary culture and history of many European countries. In Switzerland, I lived in Saint Gallen, a city which was founded by an Irish monk, Saint Gaul, after whom the city is called. Ireland contributed enormously to the common European culture, heritage and values to go back a very long way. We were known as the island of saints and scholars. Saint Columban and other monks founded monasteries all over Europe. One of the founders of the European Union, the French statesman Robert Schuman, in 1950, described Saint Columban as the patron saint of all those who wish to build a united Europe. I lived in Hanover in what was then West Germany during the Cold War. Nearby was the so-called German Democratic Republic, more accurately called East Germany. I crossed over the Iron Curtain, as it was called then, a number of times and visited the totalitarian states on the other side. I shared an apartment with a young man who was caught trying to escape over the Berlin Wall, only to be caught and imprisoned for a year and then allowed to leave. This division ended in 1990 and Eastern Europe was freed. But today that freedom is under serious threat. Vladimir Putin, who lived in Dresden in East Germany in the 1980s, wants to recreate that totalitarian world. The evidence is there. This can only be stopped by European countries being prepared to defend themselves. If this does not happen, our way of life may disappear. It is especially important that Germany, always the political and strategic focal point of Europe, builds its defence capability. This is not anything like the 1930s. This is Germany using its economic strength to defend European values and deter an aggressor. There was a phrase used in Europe called Realpolitik. The Realpolitik of today is that Europe is under threat and it must be prepared to defend itself. With Ireland holding the EU presidency shortly, we need to stamp our mark on European policy. For me, the standout one is to push for implementation of the DRAGU report, which addresses the European Union's lagging productivity and economic growth relative to the US and China. As the most successful economy in the European Union, we are well placed to push for the DRAGU report's implementation. Europe is lagging behind and has become enormously dependent on the US. We rely on Amazon and Microsoft for cloud services. We are very few at the forefront of AI. Regulation, while maybe justified on a one-by-one basis, but taken together, has stopped business development and has made us dependent on the US. We must look to implement the DRAGU report. Ireland has a proud European history and we are European, but we have a unique perspective in Europe and we have a unique link to the US. We should use these factors to foster continued prosperity in Europe.