Go to the Content   Friday, 10 February 2012
 

An ever-enduring Elysian entente

By John Wyles  -  19.03.2008 / 00:00 CET
DOUBTLESS a great deal of attention at this week's European Council will be focused on the body language and tone of voice in the exchanges between Angela Merkel and Nicolas Sarkozy. Their most recent spat over the French president's proposals for a Mediterranean Union has been marked up as the latest evidence that the Franco-German relationship is malfunctioning and no longer as special as it was. Should we be administering the last rites to it because of Merkel's widely-reported dislike of the French president? What would it mean for the EU if the working relationship between France and Germany was no more particular than, say, bilateral dealings between Italy and Spain? Indeed, does a Europe of 27 need, or can a Europe of 27 be driven by, close alignments on policy between Paris and Berlin?

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