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flashl Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Jan-16-08 02:46 PM
Original message
7-year plan aligns U.S. with Europe's economy
Rules, regs to be integrated without congressional review

Six U.S. senators and 49 House members are advisers for a group working toward a Transatlantic Common Market between the U.S. and the European Union by 2015.

The Transatlantic Policy Network – a non-governmental organization headquartered in Washington and Brussels – is advised by the bi-partisan congressional TPN policy group, chaired by Sen. Robert Bennett, R-Utah.

The plan – currently being implemented by the Bush administration with the formation of the Transatlantic Economic Council in April 2007 – appears to be following a plan written in 1939 by a world-government advocate who sought to create a Transatlantic Union as an international governing body.

An economist from the World Bank has argued in print that the formation of the Transatlantic Common Market is designed to follow the blueprint of Jean Monnet, a key intellectual architect of the European Union, recognizing that economic integration must inevitably lead to political integration.

Writing in the Fall 2007 issue of the Streit Council journal "Freedom and Union," Rep. Jim Costa, D-Calif., a member of the TPN advisory group, affirmed the target date of 2015 for the creation of a Transatlantic Common Market.

Costa said the Transatlantic Economic Council is tasked with creating the Transatlantic Common Market regulatory infrastructure. The infrastructure would not require congressional approval, like a new free-trade agreement would.

WND


This is my first introduction to the "Transatlantic Policy Network". Anyone hear of it?
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BadgerKid Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Jan-19-08 09:18 PM
Response to Original message
1. How to wrap one's head around this?
Edited on Sat Jan-19-08 09:23 PM by BadgerKid
Global government...in the Star Trek world it was idyllic; people saw past the need to greedily accumulate wealth and impoverish classes of people. People there could then focus on personal enrichment, etc. On the other hand, one government means there's no escape, possibly in that "it's their way or no way".

*scratches head*

Edit: I'm leary when it sounded as if this would be an end-run around Congress.
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flashl Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Jan-20-08 08:12 AM
Response to Reply #1
2. NGOs are independent

The TPN Mission
Building Tomorrow's Partnership Today

The Transatlantic Policy Network (TPN) is a non-governmental network firmly rooted in the worlds of business and politics, but also open to administrators and academics on both sides of the Atlantic .

Its mission statement is built on four central purposes, to:

  • help to define the transatlantic relationship in the post-Cold War world and to promote the closest possible partnership between the governments and peoples of the European Union and the United States to ensure global security, economic growth and stability and the enhancement of democratic values;

  • use dialogue, debate and study to help both transatlantic partners to adjust to new challenges and opportunities, to identify their common interests and to minimise actual or potential misunderstandings between governments and between business and governments;

  • look beyond current issues towards new structures and forms of cooperation between the European Union and the United States;

  • work creatively and effectively through the network with other institutions and organisations with complementary purposes


Transatlantic Policy Network Mission
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CGowen Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Jan-20-08 12:21 PM
Response to Reply #1
3. US and EU agree 'single market'
Edited on Sun Jan-20-08 12:22 PM by CGowen


Last Updated: Monday, 30 April 2007, 23:21 GMT 00:21 UK


The United States and the European Union have signed up to a new transatlantic economic partnership at a summit in Washington.

The pact is designed to boost trade and investment by harmonising regulatory standards, laying the basis for a US-EU single market.

The two sides also signed an Open Skies deal, designed to reduce fares and boost traffic on transatlantic flights.

...

Richest regions

Economics rather than the environment or politics was the focus of the summit, says the BBC's Europe correspondent, Jonny Dymond, from Washington.

The two sides agreed to set up an "economic council" to push ahead with regulatory convergence in nearly 40 areas, including intellectual property, financial services, business takeovers and the motor industry.

...

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/6607757.stm
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flashl Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Jan-20-08 01:27 PM
Response to Reply #3
4. So, that agreement to this partnership
The Transatlantic Partnership

Working together during the last 60 years, the United States and the countries of Western Europe have reshaped the world: strengthening global peace and security, preserving and promoting democracy, opening up trade and promoting higher standards of living for more people, in more countries, more quickly than at any time in history.

In December 1995, the two sides signed a practical, step by step work plan: the New Transatlantic Agenda. In it, they pledged close collaboration to:
  • promote peace and stability, democracy and development;
  • expand world trade;
  • grow their own commercial ties and build bridges between industries, companies and peoples in Europe and the US;
  • respond to new global challenges like drug trafficking and terrorism.
The transatlantic partnership is now looking to the future. There has been renewed interest to strengthen the EU/US relationship, as shown by the visit of President Bush in February 2005 to the EU institutions, the first US President to do so. As a result, there is a growing impetus to remove the remaining barriers to trade and investment through the Transatlantic Economic Initiative (2005) as well to increasingly work together to face global challenges. Detailed conclusions agreed at the recent US-EU Summits testify to this deepening relationship


Means, we have 'rollback' to pre-Boston Tea Party?
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Joanne98 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Jan-20-08 03:21 PM
Response to Original message
5. Brussels will force the EU into American style poverty. Not the other way around.
The people in Europe better wake up fast. Bad bad things coming their way!
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Joanne98 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Jan-20-08 03:28 PM
Response to Original message
6. Jean Monnet
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jean_Monnet

Jean Omer Marie Gabriel Monnet (November 9, 1888 – March 16, 1979) is regarded by many as a chief architect of European Unity. Never elected to public office, Monnet worked behind the scenes of American and European governments as a well-connected pragmatic internationalist.

Contents
1 Early years
2 World War I
3 World War II
4 The Monnet Plan
5 A European ideal
6 European Coal and Steel Community
7 Common Market
8 Marriage
9 Quotes
10 Influence
11 See also
12 References
13 External links



Early years
Monnet was born in Cognac, France, into a family of cognac merchants. At the age of sixteen, he abandoned his university-entrance examinations part way through and moved to London where he spent some years in the City of London with Mr. Chaplin, the agent of his father's company. Subsequently, he travelled widely — to Scandinavia, Russia, Egypt, Canada, the United States — for the family business.


World War I
In 1914, Monnet was excused from military duty for health reasons but he set to making himself useful in other ways, namely by tackling the looming problem of organizing supplies, which the Allies were unable to resolve and which could have compromised the outcome of the conflict. Monnet believed that the only path that would lead to an Allied victory lay in the merging of France and Britain's war efforts and he proposed a plan that would co-ordinate war resources. The French government agreed upon its implementation : in 1914, he met French Premier René Viviani on this issue.

Due to his success in the war efforts, Monnet, at the age of thirty-one, was named Deputy Secretary General of the League of Nations upon its creation in 1919 by French premier Georges Clemenceau and British statesman Arthur Balfour.

Soon disillusioned with the League because of its laborious unanimous decision-making processes, Monnet resigned in 1923 in order to devote himself to managing the family business, which was experiencing difficulties. Later, as an international financier, he proved to be instrumental in the economic recovery of several Central and Eastern European nations, helping to stabilise the Polish zloty in 1927 and the Romanian leu in 1928. In 1929, his experience in international finance led him to found and co-manage the Bancamerica-Blair, a bank in San Francisco. From 1934 to 1936, at the invitation of Chiang Kai-shek, Monnet lived in China, assisting with the reorganization of the Chinese railway network.


World War II
In December, 1939, Jean Monnet was sent to London to oversee the collectivization of the two countries' war production capacities. When the French government fell in June 1940, Monnet's influence inspired Charles de Gaulle and Winston Churchill to accept a plan for a union of France and the United Kingdom to enable the two countries to stand up to Nazism.

In August 1940, Jean Monnet was sent to the United States by the British government as a member of the British Supply Council, in order to negotiate the purchase of war supplies. Soon after his arrival in Washington, D.C., he became an advisor to President Franklin Delano Roosevelt. Convinced that America could serve as "the great arsenal of democracy" he persuaded the president to launch a massive arms production program to supply the Allies with military material. Shortly thereafter, in 1941, Roosevelt, with Churchill's agreement, launched the Victory Program, which represented the entry of the United States into the war effort. After the war, the British economist John Maynard Keynes was to say that through his co-ordinating Monnet had probably shortened World War II by one year.

In 1943, Monnet became a member of the National Liberation Committee, the French government in exile in Algiers. During a meeting on 5 August 1943, Monnet declared to the Committee:

"There will be no peace in Europe, if the states are reconstituted on the basis of national sovereignty... The countries of Europe are too small to guarantee their peoples the necessary prosperity and social development. The European states must constitute themselves into a federation..."


The Monnet Plan
Following World War II France was in severe need of reconstruction. To rebuild, France was completely dependent on coal from Germany's main remaining coal-mining areas, the Ruhr area and the Saar area (The German coal fields in Upper Silesia had been handed over for "Polish administration" by the Allies in 1945, see Oder-Neisse line).

In 1945 Monnet proposed the Monnet plan, not to be confused with Schuman plan, to take control of the remaining coal producing German areas and redirect the production away from German industry and into French industry instead, permanently weakening Germany and raising the French Economy considerably above its pre-war levels. The plan was adopted by Charles de Gaulle in early 1946.

(see French proposal from September 1945).
In 1947 France, with U.S. support, removed the Saar from Germany and turned it into the Saar protectorate, nominally politically independent and under complete French economic control. The area returned to German political administration in 1957 (economic reunification would take many years longer), but France retained the right to mine from its coal mines until 1981. (see The Europeanization of the Saarland).

The Ruhr Agreement was imposed on the Germans as a condition for permitting them to establish the Federal Republic of Germany.<1> (see also the International Authority for the Ruhr (IAR)). The IAR controlled production levels, pricing, and to where the output was to be sold, thus ensuring that France received a large potion of the Ruhr coal production at low prices.

With the 1951 German agreement to join the European Coal and Steel Community (the "Schuman plan") the ongoing Allied dismantling of German industry was finally stopped and some of the restrictions placed on German industrial output were lifted.

(see The British foreign ministers 1949 letter to Schuman)
With the entry into force of the ECSC in 1952 the last civilian production limitations placed on German industry were lifted, and the role of the IAR was taken over by the ECSC<2> (See The industrial plans for Germany)


A European ideal
The neutrality of this section is disputed.
Please see the discussion on the talk page.
This section has been tagged since December 2007.
This article has been nominated to be checked for its neutrality.
Discussion of this nomination can be found on the talk page.

As the head of France's General Planning Commission, Monnet was the real author of what has become known as the 1950 "Schuman Plan" to create the European Coal and Steel Community (ECSC), forerunner of the Common Market. Merry and Serge Bromberger write in their admiring biography of Monnet that the ECSC scheme was "an idea of revolutionary daring" aimed at the gradual creation of a "superstate". They note that Monnet and his fellow insiders planned for national governments to make "a whole series of concessions in regard to their sovereign rights until, having been finally stripped, they committed hara-kiri by accepting the merger."


The following quote is often misascribed<3> to Jean Monnet — in fact it is by the British Conservative Adrian Hilton:

"Europe's nations should be guided towards a super state without their people understanding what is happening. This can be accomplished by successive steps each disguised as having an economic purpose, but which will eventually and irreversibly lead to federation."

<4>

The single currency was the most important of these steps: as Monnet said, "Via money Europe could become political in five years." (Christopher Booker and Richard North in their book "The great deception").


European Coal and Steel Community
Following liberation, Monnet proposed a "global plan for modernization and economic development" to the French government. Appointed Planning Commissioner by de Gaulle, he oversaw the revitalization of the French economy. It was from this position that, in 1949, Monnet realized that the friction between Germany and France for control of the Ruhr, the important coal and steel region, was rising to dangerous levels, presaging a possible return to hostilities as had happened after the First World War. Monnet and his associates conceived the idea of a European Community. On 9 May 1950, with the agreement of Chancellor Konrad Adenauer of West Germany, French Minister of Foreign Affairs Robert Schuman made a declaration in the name of the French government. This declaration, prepared by Monnet for Schuman, proposed integration of the French and German coal and steel industries under joint control, a so-called High Authority, and open to the other countries of Europe. Schuman declared:

"Through the consolidation of basic production and the institution of a new High Authority, whose decisions will bind France, Germany and the other countries that join, this proposal represents the first concrete step towards a European federation, imperative for the preservation of peace." <1>

Shortly thereafter, West Germany, Italy, Belgium, Luxembourg, and the Netherlands responded favorably, the European Coal and Steel Community (ECSC) was born. Britain was invited to participate, but it refused on grounds of national sovereignty. In 1952, Jean Monnet became the first president of the High Authority. In 1953 Monnet was awarded the Karlspreis by the city of Aachen in recognition of his achievements.


Common Market
In 1955, Monnet founded the Action Committee for the United States of Europe in order to revive European construction following the failure of the European Defense Community (EDC). It brought political parties and European trade unions together to become a driving force behind the initiatives which laid the foundation for the European Union as it eventually emerged: first the European Economic Community (EEC) (1958) (known commonly as the "Common Market"), which was established by the Treaty of Rome of 1957; later the European Community (1967) with its corresponding bodies, the European Commission and the European Council of Ministers, British membership in the Community (1973), the European Council (1974), the European Monetary System (1979), and the European Parliament (1979). This process reflected Monnet's belief in a gradualist approach for constructing European unity.

After retiring to his home in Houjarray, Monnet wrote his memoirs. He died in 1979 at the age of ninety. In 1988, by order of the president François Mitterrand, Jean Monnet's remains were transferred to the Panthéon of Paris.


Marriage
In August 1929, during a dinner party in Paris, the 41-year-old Monnet met the 22-year-old Italian painter Silvia Giannini (born in Bondini in 1907). She had recently (6th April 1929) married Francisco Giannini, an employee of Monnet when he was a representative in Italy.

In April 1931, Silvia had a child, Anna. Legally the father was Francisco Giannini.

Divorce was not allowed in France and many other European countries at that time. In 1934, Silvia and Jean Monnet met in Moscow; he was coming from China with the Trans-Siberian, she from Switzerland. He arranged for Silvia to obtain Soviet citizenship; she immediately divorced her husband and married Jean Monnet.

The idea for the Moscow marriage came from Dr. Ludwik Rajchman whom Monnet met during his time at the League of Nations (Rajchman was connected to the Soviet Ambassador to China, Bogomolov). It seems that the American and French ambassadors in Moscow, William Bullitt and Charles Aiphand, also played a role.

The custody of Anna was a problem; in 1935 Silvia with Anna took refuge in the Soviet consulate in Shanghai, where they were living at the time because Francisco Giannini tried to obtain custody of the child. The legal battle continued with a ruling in favour of Silvia in 1937 in New York, but this was not recognized in some other countries. The Monnet family only came back to France 1945. In 1941, they had another child, Marianne.

After the death of Francisco Giannini in 1974, they married canonically in cathedral of Lourdes; both were devoutly Catholic.


Quotes
"There is no real peace in Europe, if the states are reconstituted on a basis of national sovereignty. (...) They must have larger markets. Their prosperity is impossible, unless the States of Europe form themselves in a European Federation." — Jean Monnet (1943)
"There is no future for the people of Europe other than in union." — Jean Monnet
"Nothing is possible without men; nothing is lasting without institutions." — Jean Monnet
"People only accept change when they are faced with necessity, and only recognise necessity when a crisis is upon them." — Jean Monnet
" someone with a pragmatic view of Europe's need to escape its historical parochialism." — Dean Acheson
"Building Union among people not cooperation between states"
Credited with coining the phrase "Arsenal of Democracy" which was used by, and credited to, Franklin D. Roosevelt.<5>

Influence
The Jean Monnet Building of the European Commission, rue Albert Wehrer, L-2920 Luxembourg is named after him. The building code is JMO.

Jean Monnet's memory lives on in a considerable number of European universities including the University of Limerick, Ireland, which has a lecture theater named in honor of Jean Monnet and also holds regular summer schools upon the topic of European Integration. British universities which honor Monnet include the East Midlands Eurocenter at Loughborough University, the European Research Institute at the University of Bath, the Jean Monnet Center at the University of Birmingham, the Jean Monnet European Center of Excellence at Cambridge, the Jean Monnet European Center of Excellence at the University of Essex, the Centre for European Union Studies at the University of Hull, the Kent Centre for Europe at the University of Kent, the Jean Monnet Centre of Excellence, a partnership between the University of Manchester, Manchester Metropolitan University and the University of Salford, the Jean Monnet Centre at Newcastle University and the Jean Monnet Centre for European Studies at the University of Wales, Aberystwyth.

The European Union itself maintains his memory with the Jean Monnet Programme of the Directorate-General for Education and Culture. This aims to promote knowledge on European integration on a worldwide scale, especially at the university level.


See also
History of the European Union

References
^ Amos Yoder, "The Ruhr Authority and the German Problem", The Review of Politics, Vol. 17, No. 3 (Jul., 1955), pp. 345-358
^ Information bulletin Frankfurt, Germany: Office of the US High Commissioner for Germany Office of Public Affairs, Public Relations Division, APO 757, US Army, January 1952 "Plans for terminating international authority for the Ruhr" , pp. 61-62
^ For instance Eurofacts
^ Eurealist
^ Barnett, Richard. 1983. The Alliance: America, Europe, Japan, Makers of the Postwar World.
Jean Monnet: The First Statesman of Interdependence by Francois Duchene (1994); ISBN 0-393-03497-6
Christophe Le Dréau, « Quelle Europe ? Les projets d’Union franco-britannique (1938-1940) », dans Actes du Colloque RICHIE de mars 2005, Quelle(s) Europe(s) ? Nouvelles approches en histoire de l'intégration européenne, Bruxelles, Peter Lang, 2006.

External links
Foundation Jean Monnet for Europe
Multimedia biography
Jean Monnet - European NAvigator
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jean_Monnet
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