Conrad Black: Making the Anglosphere great again.
  The greatest significance in last week’s  decisive and seminal British election is the victory it contains for the  solidarity of the English-speaking peoples and the strength, coherence,  and legitimacy of what Europeans frequently refer to as the  Anglo-Saxons. Of course, broadly, the English-speaking advanced democracies have  much in common with Western Europe, and to a slightly reduced degree  with Eastern Europe and westernized nations in other regions, most  conspicuously Japan, South Korea, Taiwan, Israel, South Africa, the  Emirates, and parts of Latin America.
   But the substantial detachment of the United Kingdom from an  integrated Europe so it may retain the primacy of the political  institutions and the legal system it has developed over many centuries,  and align itself, implicitly, more closely to its senior Commonwealth  associates, Canada and Australia, as well as to its sometime senior  partner in the modern world’s greatest crises, the United States, is a  geostrategic development of the first importance.
           In the evolution of the balance of power between nations and  alliances, it ranks with the unification of the German Empire by  Bismarck in 1871 upon Prussia’s defeat of France, which immediately made  Germany the most powerful country in Europe and produced the close  alliance of Great Britain, France, and Russia—countries which had more  often been hostile to each other.
   No such dramatic shift in the world’s political equilibrium portends  now, but as President Trump entered office nearly three years ago, China  was widely presumed to be over-taking the United States as a military  and economic power and in its political influence, at least in the Far  Pacific. Though the European Union had obvious problems, it was  generally assumed that it would continue to add countries, become more  centralized in pursuit of its declared goal of “an ever closer union,”  and—as had often been declared to be its objective—resume Europe’s  position of a century before, as one of, if not the principal, source of  political, economic, and cultural influence in the world. Americans generally favored the progressive federalization of Europe  towards a single continental state, at first to strengthen it against  the temptations and occasional outright threats of Soviet Communism, and  eventually, when that threat had dissolved, as a strong ally in the  advance of the general Western interest in the whole world. These were  reasonable conceptions, but few American officials—and essentially only  the senior echelons of the Nixon, Reagan, and Trump  administrations—recognized the extent to which a united Europe was in  some measure an anti-American enterprise.
   Europe can scarcely deny that it desperately needed the intervention  of the United States to defeat the Nazis and fascists, and very few  would dispute the utility of the American alliance in deterring Soviet  aggression against Western Europe during the Cold War. But once these  benign missions of rescue and protection had been accomplished, the  Euro-integrationists—who sometimes, in their more lyrically deluded  moments, assimilated the American liberation and protection of western  Europe to the repayment of parents for the gift of life even though  North America was peopled by masses fleeing Europe—and Europe’s  leaders mused about the phoenix-like reemergence of Europe as the light  of the world. There was always some condescension to the United States  in the European idea, and after the Cold War ended, a good deal of  resentful rivalry as well.
   Alas, there was also a full measure of hypocrisy and political  cowardice. German Chancellor Angela Merkel could have been the first  German leader to govern Germany responsibly as Europe’s strongest nation  since Bismarck. Wilhelm II and Hitler pushed the world into terrible  wars, (and the Third Reich committed unimaginable genocidal atrocities),  and the distinguished statesmen of divided Germany, especially Konrad  Adenauer and Helmut Kohl, were leading a truncated state with  approximately 1 million members of the armed forces of its former  enemies encamped in East and West Germany. Instead of seizing that  opportunity, Chancellor Merkel has admitted over 1 million desperate  fugitives from unassimilable and backward cultures, shut down Germany’s  nuclear program and made her country an energy vassal of Putin’s Russian  paper tiger, has reduced her country’s military to a token, and  squandered her Christian Democrats’ ability to assure stable government.
   Germany is a mute effigy of the third or fourth power in the world  that it should be, and is overtly somewhat hostile to the United States,  from whose hand it was fed for half a century. President Truman  protected West Berlin just three years after the death of Hitler a block  from the Brandenburg Gate; President Eisenhower brought West Germany  into the Western Alliance over the objections of France and the  misgivings of Britain. Presidents Reagan and George H.W. Bush were  instrumental in Germany’s reunification.
           France has the opposite problem to Germany’s: it is too active and intrusive for the power it possesses.
   France has seen the movement to a federal European Union as a method  for the enhancement of French influence in Europe. It twice vetoed  British entry, schemed to encourage French Canada to secede from Canada,  opposed almost every foreign policy the United States has undertaken in  60 years, particularly direct negotiations with the USSR, and today is  trying to set itself at the head of a neutralist officially  French-speaking, post-British Europe. This is the point of the British  election: the Europeans are stagnant and unreliable, arm-flapping  moralists waffling and posturing and without political will. Britain’s  exit is the loss of their second economy, most distinguished  nationality, and it is emancipating itself from the dead hand of  Eurosocialism as it rejected the Neanderthal Corbyn version of it at  home. It is, moreover, setting a parallel course with its natural and  historic allies.
   The United States, the UK, Canada, and Australia together have a GDP  twice as great as China’s and 150 percent of the ramshackle post-British  Europe. They are no longer losing economic ground to China. None of the  Anglo-Saxon countries has to unwind absurd socialist overindulgence  amidst endless strikes and minor mob violence as France is trying to do.  As a bloc, it has good economic growth rates and thanks to the  Americans, (but the British are pulling their weight), it is armed to  the teeth.
   In a word, the hackneyed nonsense of recent decades about the  post-Reagan-Thatcher decline of the Anglo-Saxons—beloved of the Chinese,  French, Russians, Arabs, and Iranians—is shown, yet again in modern  history to be bunk. Three of the G-7 are now floating together and the  EU has suffered a loss as great as the loss of all the Pacific Coast  states would be to America.
   In domestic political terms, the parallel between Trump and Boris  Johnson can be overstressed. The issue of relations with Europe was so  important it cut through and divided the British parties. The chief  argument against was the undemocratic nature of the Brussels  commissioners, who aren’t answerable to anyone. Uncontrollable  immigration was a distant second.
   Johnson has, like Trump, fashioned an alliance of traditional  conservatives with angry lower-middle class and blue-collar workers who  resented the elites. His flamboyant personality can be pitched to such a  wide following but he will have to make Brexit work economically.
   Like the dire threats of economic calamity with a Trump victory,  Project Fear, a farrago of blood-curdling Jeremiads from treasury and  central bank officials about post-Brexit gloom, will prove to be just  hot air. As in Elizabethan times (16th-17th centuries), under Walpole  and Pitt (18th century) and under Palmerston and Disraeli (19th  century), Britain has again chosen immersion in blue water rather than  Europe. They are right again and the United States will benefit from it.
   On his first meeting with a British leader, Theresa May, President  Trump said, “a strong and independent Britain is a treasure to the  world.” The times and personalities are vastly different but the  geopolitical realities are not so much changed: Trump and Johnson should  get on as well and benignly as did Roosevelt and Churchill and Reagan  and Thatcher.
         
          Conrad Black       Conrad Black has been one of Canada’s most prominent financiers for 40  years, and was one of the leading newspaper publishers in the world  as...        
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