Greece’s Balkan identity may obliterate Brussels link

Greece letter: Specific regional geopolitics lurk behind the goal of a unified Europe

A state school teacher shouts slogans in front of a banner that reads “No to the civil mobilisation” during a peaceful protest in central Athens on May 13th. Greece’s conservative-led government issued a civil mobilisation order forcing state school teachers to work during university entrance exams. Photograph: AP Photo/Kostas Tsironis

Imagine an EU member state where the public service relied, for its efficiency, on bribery and corruption. Imagine a state where the hospital service was so underresourced that patients had to bring a friend or relative to undertake their feeding, washing and basic nursing. Imagine a state where shops that traditionally sold handcrafted goods now promoted Taiwanese dreamcatchers.

Are we talking about Greece? Well no, actually. These are the thoughts of novelist Donna Leon’s Venetian detective, Commisario Guido Brunetti as he walks his native city, wondering how to bring to justice criminals whom the law and its administrators protect.

But they also apply to Greece, and one wonders whether they are true of the other "Pigs" – Portugal and Spain. In a sense it's a relief to read Brunetti's disillusionment with his environment, since it suggests that Greece's problems are not unique. Do all Europe's southern states really have these dysfunctional characteristics?


Troika control
That question presupposes that we subscribe to the Eurocentric view of what constitutes a responsible and efficient member of the EU and the euro zone. Greeks seem to have become passive onlookers of the troika's insistence on austerity measures, reduction in public service numbers and the sale of state assets. Trade union activity is at an all-time low.

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There is very little to alert holidaymakers to the unrest which nevertheless festers beneath the social surface. To most holidaymakers, Greece represents sun, sea, and prices that remain low. But essential Greek characteristics are the signs of differences, as any holidaymaker from northern Europe will immediately recognise, and those differences are not only what makes Greece (and of course Italy, Spain and Portugal) attractive as holiday destinations but indicate precisely why Greece finds it so difficult to fit into the euro norm.

As I wrote previously, a former Greek president, on the eve of Greek accession to the EU, pointed out the time-warp between the southern and northern states, and the fact that they had a lot of catching up to do. If, that is, they wanted to be good members of the club. Former prime minister George Papandreou tried to drag Greece into the club – and failed, because there are basic elements of Greek society that cannot be changed. Bribery and corruption may be part of this, but they are "normal" rather than exceptional.

Which brings me to the basic flaw in the Eurocentric argument: that what is being lost sight of is the geopolitics of Europe’s southeast, which for centuries has been a cockpit of east/west and north/south tensions. Greece is essentially a Balkan country, with the continuing – and growing – problems of Cyprus and complex relations with Turkey. The “Great Powers” which brought Greece and most of the Balkan states into existence, were exercised by the threat of Russian influence in the region, a factor which remains a player in today’s geopolitics, with Russian investment in Cyprus seeping into Greece itself.

In April, the ambassadors to Greece of the 10 states which joined the EU in 2003-2004 (Czech Republic, Slovakia, Hungary, Slovenia, Poland, Malta, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, and Cyprus) co-signed a letter to the Athens newspapers stressing the significance of “the vital strategic goal” of unifying Europe in the aftermath of the second World War and the economic benefits of an open market. These are almost all countries still staggering from the effects of Soviet domination, with Cyprus becoming the only EU member state to have been illegally occupied since 1974 by a neighbouring force (Turkey).

Yet, as Paul Gillespie recently wrote in this paper ("Loss of confidence is eating away at EU"), there are growing signs among the major players that all is far from well. The former Italian prime minister, Mario Monti, spoke of the "dramatically declining" public support for EU reforms and the EU itself; Luxembourg's Jean-Claude Juncker foresaw the possibility of "a social revolution"; and France's finance minister warned of a "loss of social and political confidence". These have all been defining characteristics of Balkan history for 150 years, with fragmentation along ethnic and religious lines bedevilling any unity.


Southern difference
To stress unity of purpose presupposes common characteristics and identity of skills and resources. If Leon's Guido Brunetti sees Italy correctly, then at least two of the EU's southern states cannot subscribe to Eurocentrism. Greece's Balkan situation (especially with the Turkish dimension) suggests that its current misfit with the aims of Eurospeak will continue to be the norm.