Count it among the worst policy failures in recent history.
Count it with Obama’s handling of the civil war in Syria. Or as a corollary to
same.
At best, it ought to be cautionary. At worst, it probably
will not. Some people never learn.
I am thinking of Angela Merkel’s open arms policy toward
Muslim refugees, now understood to be a catastrophic
failure. Of course, Obama laid the groundwork in Syria, but it took Time
Magazine Person of the Year Merkel to prove the truth of the old adage: the
road to Hell is paved with good intentions.
Formerly known as a pragmatic politician, Merkel saw the image of a suffering humanity and morphed into a humanitarian. Some even said that she was
acting like a Christian. She saw what was happening in the Middle
East and opened Germany’s borders to those who were fleeing war and famine and desolation.
She believed that it was her moral duty. She believed that it was Germany’s
moral duty. In effect, she found a way to damage her nation severely. We do not
yet know whether the damage is irrevocable.
In an excellent opinion piece for the German magazine Der
Spiegel Christiane Hoffmann takes us back to September 5, 2015—which is not
that long ago:
"The
world views Germany as a country of hope and opportunity," she had said
only a few days previously, as part of her annual summer press conference. She
also evoked the universal civil liberties that are part of the founding
principles of the European Union. It was the day when Angela Merkel decided to
follow her convictions, to replace pragmatism with idealism and to emphasize
the "Christian" in the name of her party, the Christian Democratic
Union. It was the first time in a long while that she didn't think things
through all the way to the end.
Merkel, a right-of-center politician, caved to humanitarian idealism.
She caved to sentiment. She felt badly for all of the refugees. She took on the
mantle of modern liberalism and chose to redistribute German wealth, to open
the doors of her country, to provide succor to those most in need. She yielded
to her maternal instincts. And she chose as her policy: the audacity of hope. Didn’t
the great Obama declare himself a citizen of the world in a stirring speech in
Germany?
What could go wrong?
It was a feel-good policy, a policy that would place Merkel and
her ilk on the moral high ground. It made them feel good about themselves.
After all, they were showing the proper amount of politically correct empathy.
As for the practical consequences, both for those it was intended to help, and
for those German citizens who would suffer the consequences of a calamitous mistake…
that did not enter their calculations. Normally a pragmatic politician Merkel
threw caution to the winds. She has reaped the whirlwind.
Merkel fell into the trap that eventually claims all
grandiose idealistic policies: she did not, as the article says, think things
through. Call it a lack of imagination. Call it a failure of policy analysis.
Call it an inability to see that however much humanity everyone had in common,
Muslims were, by their culture, different. They did not want to be citizens of
the world. They did not know how to be citizens of the world. Worse yet, they did
not have the cultural tools to adapt or to integrate into a free enterprise,
Western liberal democracy.
Merkel’s was a variant on a failed Bush administration
policy: bring democracy and freedom to the oppressed Muslims of Iraq and
Afghanistan and Gaza. Call it nation-building if you like, but it was really an
effort to impose a radically different culture on peoples who did not want it
and who could not absorb it. Those who were the objects of our largesse saw the
freedom agenda as a new crusade, a rejection and a discrediting of their
culture. They doubled down and fought back against it.
Hoffmann does not mention New Year’s Eve in Cologne. She
does not mention the attacks on German women or the crimes and the rapes in the
refugee centers… to say nothing of the rightist reaction within Merkel’s own
political party.
She emphasizes the conditions of refugees, many of whom have
not found a land of hope and opportunity. Anything but….
For her miscalculation, Merkel has been isolated by other
European leaders. She did not consult with them and they have not followed her lead. They have chosen not to
subject their nations to the misery that Merkel is visiting on Germany.
Other leaders have been closing their borders and building
walls. They are not their brothers’ keepers and do not consider the refugees
their brothers anyway. The European Union promise of open borders has been one
of the casualties of Merkel’s well-meaning, idealistic, humanitarian folly:
Border
controls have been reintroduced across large parts of Europe and fences are
being erected. It turns out that Merkel deceived herself about the extent of
European solidarity. There will be no harmonious distribution of refugees and
it is unlikely that Turkey will reliably protect Europe from a further influx
of refugees. That's a sad state of affairs. Indeed, nothing is as unseemly as
the gloating comments over Merkel's failure one hears these days in Bavaria and
Budapest. In Munich, Bavarian Governor Horst Seehofer has alleged that the chancellor's
Willkommenskultur for
refugees has radicalized the country, and, in Budapest, Hungarian Prime
Minister Viktor Orbán this week accused Merkel of "importing terrorism,
crime, anti-Semitism and homophobia" in an interview with
the German mass-circulation daily Bild.
The result:
In
recent days, thousands of refugees have once again been stranded along the
Balkan route, and this time they are being held back by border fences.
Desperate men, women and children can be seen camping out in central Athens.
And this time there are images that Merkel had hoped to avoid last September:
images of a Europe that is placing its bet on partition and deterrence. They
are images of defeat for the German chancellor. Merkel's humanitarian approach
in the refugee crisis has failed.
Hoffmann reports that Merkel is walking it all back… trying,
as it were, to put the toothpaste back in the tube. She is doing it slowly, but
she has recognized the error of her ways:
Conditions
for refugees are already rapidly deteriorating. Social benefits are being
reduced, limits are being placed on family reunification in a way that will
lead even more women and children to make the dangerous journey by boat to
Europe. The number of countries designated as safe will be increased, allowing
for the easier rejection and deportation of asylum applicants. And there will
be a forced repatriation of Afghan nationals -- to the very country that
Western troops were unable to pacify and is now sinking into civil war.
As of now, the flow of refugees is slowing down, but not
because of anything Merkel has done:
Currently,
significantly fewer refugees are arriving in Germany. This, however, is not the
product of Merkel's policies -- it is the result of her failure. Fewer people
are coming because Merkel's opponents have closed the borders along the Balkan
Route. Even back in the autumn when Hungary erected a border fence, the protest
from Berlin was at best cautious. And when Turkey began erecting a wall along
the Syrian border, officials expressed understanding behind the scenes.
Hoffmann concludes:
What we
are witnessing today no longer has anything to do with conviction -- it is the
return of the ultra-pragmatic Chancellor Merkel, who is paving an escape route
from her previous policies.
1 comment:
You said "Call it an inability to see that however much humanity everyone had in common, Muslims were, by their culture, different. They did not want to be citizens of the world." What they apparently want is for everyone to be in THEIR world, and subject to their culture.
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