European Union


How the Euro was built on a lie

The Euro is fundamentally flawed, says Der Spiegel: built on broken promises, fudged figures and dodgy deals. An excellent analysis on everything that’s wrong with Europe’s currency — and how it might be fixed.

The secret global cyber-war between China and the West

Insiders reveal that NATO, the EU and the US are stepping up their online security, in the face of an ever-increasing number of cyber attacks from China — 1.6 billion a month on US government agencies alone.

Letter from...: Plymouth: dairy, dairy, quite contrary

UNESCO lists the Cornwall language as extinct and as of 2008 only 2000 people speak it fluently. This may soon change. The first Cornish language crèche opened a few weeks ago, writes Rafiq Copeland from Plymouth.

Guy Rundle: Bombs explode, the economy implodes

Guy Rundle is on the spot in the wake of a bombing at J.P.Morgan’s Athens office — the moment EU finance ministers set new deadlines to resurrect the Greek economy.

Guy Rundle: Rundle in Athens: Greece puts EU on the economic precipice

Greece’s economic woes has plunged the European Union into crisis. The question now is how deep it will be and how many other nations it will drag down with it.

How strong are the bonds of the European Union?

With the possibility of sovereign default by Greece on its debt and the drop of the Euro, the GFC has really tested the strength of the EU bond for the very first time. Will it hold and what is its future? asks Sam Wylie.

Merry Christmas (banana war is over)

The European Union has finally agreed to lower tariffs on banana imports, ending the 15-year “banana war” over the preferential treatment given to growers in the Caribbean and Africa over those in South America.

Neopolitan pizza: now officially protected by the EU

The EU is now enforcing strict guidelines on the creation of Neapolitan pizzas around the world: ONLY San Marzano tomatoes, buffalo-milk mozzarella, an eighth-of-an-inch-thick crust, hand-stretched dough and a wood-fired oven will suffice.

Now hear this: Greece’s debt is bigger than its economy

Greece revealed a public debt of 300 billion euros — or more than $A480 billion — overnight, leaving European leaders to contemplate a financial black hole in Athens.

Brown and Sarkozy: What the world needs now is financial regulation

Great Britain PM Gordon Brown and French president Nicolas Sarkozy join forces to pen this mission statement on the need for greater global financial regulation and supervision, foreshadowing Sarkozy’s support for Brown’s new bonus tax.

The EU plan to split Jerusalem

Hareetz has got its hands on a document drafted by the European Union calling for the division of Jerusalem between Israel and a future Palestinian state, indicating it would support a unilateral Palestinian declaration of statehood.

Greece’s economic death far from exaggerated

Greece’s economy has emerged as the sickest in Europe. And it can only get worse from here, writes Glenn Dyer.

EU Presidency: a bogus, pompous, ludicrous, overpriced job

The European Union doesn’t need a President, says George Walden: the EU is not a country, and pretending it is is a dangerous farce that will impede the body’s ability to work effectively.

Europe’s first President: Herman Van Rompuy

Belgian Prime Minister Herman Van Rompuy has been named the first President of the European Union. Former British PM Tony Blair reportedly snared the job first, but bowed out to appease Europe’s centre-right majority.

The new EU President: meet the contenders

The European Union will announce its new President this week, following a rather sketchy closed-door process. HuffPo introduces the candidates and the bookies’ odds on their chances.

Europe gets onboard the Road Train to cleaner highways

The EU is exploring a novel way of reducing fuel consumption: linking cars via wireless sensors into “road trains” on Europe’s motorways, with one lead vehicle “pulling” all the others along while the drivers kick back and save on fuel.

Europe gets a new constitution — sort of

The big news in Europe this week is the final ratification of the Lisbon treaty, which provides a new constitutional structure for the European Union. But where’s the euroscepticism gone? Has the EU proved its ‘socialist plot’ claims wrong?

Sarkozy’s £250,000 shower

French President Nicolas Sarkozy has made British MPs’ expenses look like chump change, with a new report finding he spent £160m (AU$290m) during his six-month stint in charge of the European Union, including £250,000 on a new shower that he never actually used.

Downing Street plots to buy Blair’s way into the EU Presidency

British PM Gordon Brown is planning to buy off Angela Merkel and Nikolas Sarkozy’s votes for the European Union Presidency by offering them big jobs within the Union should Tony Blair get up.

Independent: Why Blair won’t get our vote (again)

UK paper The Independent says it won’t support Tony Blair as a candidate for the Presidency of the European Union: “When the choice between Britain’s relationship with America and its relationship with the rest of Europe became unfudgeable, Mr Blair chose America”.

Why Obama doesn’t care about Europe

Barack Obama may be the most “European” President the US has had in recent memory, but that doesn’t mean he gives a rat’s about the continent itself, says Timothy Garton Ash. And unless Europe’s countries come together as a united power, that won’t change.

Europe’s plan for world domination

With the European Union set to elect its first president and foreign minister, Europe is gearing up to flex its muscles as a genuine global superpower — and it will use the “Trojan Horse” of the G20 to do it, says Gideon Rachman.

Letter from...: Brussels, home of Tintin and the EU

Last weekend, Ireland voted “yes” for the Lisbon Treaty, meaning the European Union will be getting a long-overdue structural overhaul. Grant Doyle was in Brussels for the celebrations.

Tony Blair: Europe’s first President?

Now Ireland has ratified the Lisbon Treaty, former British PM Tony Blair has all but shored up the support needed to become the first President of the European Union, inside sources tell the Times

Europeans throw Russia an olive branch

The big political story in Europe is the release of the European Union report on last year’s war between Russia and Georgia. Both sides claim a degree of vindication from it.