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Shift of power in EU corridors

This is Plymouth --

It seems clear to me that a major link-up between the two top Teutonic powers of Europe – Britain and Germany along with lesser like-minded powers to the north and east is taking place.

This will be viewed with horror in Paris. The tectonic plates of Europe are on the move in a way that may prove irreversible.

That invitation from Angela Merkel for David Cameron to come and visit her at her home north of Berlin and to bring his wife and children has, I believe, great implications. She even wheeled out her hermit husband for the weekend soiree.

It had all the characteristics of a love-in. No other European leader has had such an invitation or been accorded such warmth and hospitality. It is known that the pastor's daughter holds Cameron in the highest esteem – perhaps that Eton grooming helps – and it will have been reinforced, I'm sure, by the shy, but charming Sam Cam. And her equally delightful children. Such personal chemistry and bonhomie really does matter. The invite, in my opinion, speaks volumes.

But equally importantly, her whole philosophy of life gels with that of the foreign leader she is said to have once described as 'her naughty, but charming nephew'. Naughty because, at a time of huge difficulty for her beloved Euro Project, he has rocked the boat by demanding fundamental changes to the way the EU goes about its business.

It is not as if she disagrees with much of what he committed to put before the British people in a 2017 Referendum, should he retain power, but because it's complicated and will take a lot of what she does not have... time. As it happens, most of her fellow countrymen agree with David Cameron. They, too, dislike much of what is coming out of Brussels and would like to see things done differently. But she wants to keep her eye on the Euro ball, whose solution – if there is one – is also complicated. She feels she cannot afford the distraction of a major re-negotiation of EU treaties at this time. There is also the added factor that she is up for re-election in September and has all that circus ballyhoo to worry about. Cool and detached, as Angela famously is, she is in danger of becoming stressed and Davy boy, right now, isn't helping.

What with France's weak and hopelessly left-leaning 'leader' – distracted as he is with woman problems – who cannot see the necessity for tough measures in France, she is at her wits end.

The Franco-German axis, which has been the engine of the EU since its beginning, is unravelling.

France, under Hollande, seems destined to be the flag-bearer of a southern rim of EU countries which will put up with no more belt tightening. Merkel admires little Ireland's heroic acceptance of the need to pay off its debts, but she is fast losing patience with the other PIGS -Portugal, Greece and Spain, that is. She is full of praise for Cameron's recognition that sound money and balancing the books is central to everything. Also his open trading outlook and market philosophy equates exactly with her own. She has no truck with spending your way out of debt. She sees David Cameron as an economic soul mate.

Germany herself, has still not shaken off the terrible legacy of WWII and she is unwilling to take the lead in Europe on her own, for fear of cries of a Fourth Reich being hurled about. She feels she has to have a partner who is 'respectable' and can front up everything diplomatically while she can make the running economically. France, for fifty years, has been that partner. Now the dice have rolled in another direction and an alignment of Teutonic powers seems in the offing. Is this a good thing? It certainly will not seem so in Paris, which will be outraged at its relegation and see the hand of perfidious Albion at work all over again. As virtually the creator of the EU, which she saw primarily as a means of controlling German ambitions, she has seen her dominance slide inexorably. That is why, originally, she was so keen to keep 'interfering' Britain out. But this proved impossible in the end, especially when you had a British leader, in Edward Heath, who was prepared to sell the pass and demean himself as a wretched supplicant, to get in.

Now, more and more countries have been allowed to join the original Club of Six – chiefly at the instigation of Britain – France's position has weakened with each new entrant. Most infuriating of all, they seem to want to use English in preference to French in the corridors of Brussels power. Once you could not get a job anywhere – even a lowly one – if you were not fluent in French, but now the point had been reached in which the Brussels power brokers actually had the audacity to appoint a Union foreign minister who spoke no other language but English. That was the ultimate insult.

I have no doubt that Europe has the capability to become the dominant power in the world if only it can get its act together. Its GDP is already way ahead of Uncle Sam's and it will only widen. In terms of any numbers you care to look at it is perfectly within its reach to see off competition from the east for the rest of this century.

I look to the day when Russia itself comes knocking at the EU door. It is essentially a European country. Europe's cultural dominance is already unassailable; its music; its art; its literature; its universities; its history; its multiplicity of matchless ancient cities. Even its science is on a par with the US. I see no reason for us to be downcast. All things come to an end, including this wretched recession.

So will David Cameron get his deal, which will persuade enough Britons to back him in the referendum? I think he will. Angela will see to that, one way or another and she will be assisted by Britain's many other friends in Europe. France will be incandescent. Germany does not wish to lose a country which she sees as pivotal to Europe's future; one that has played so crucial a role in its past. America will be delighted, for she will feel that in the coming difficult world, where a resurgent east, after 500 years, threatens to displace a weary west, a half a billion people, all speaking its own language – as a back up – and mentored by his closest ally and friend, will be there to stiffen its own resolve. And that same Europe may well be a Europe fashioned after the Anglo Saxon model; one very much to the US liking. Rest assured, too, that Uncle Sam himself is far from finished. He will come bouncing back, I am sure, with all that energy we are so familiar with. Together with Europe, it will be a bloc more than capable of looking after itself in a fast changing world. Reported by This is 23 hours ago.

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