"Peace in Europe and in the world" Speech by President of the

EN
EUROPEA COU CIL
THE PRESIDE T
Brussels, 4 November 2013
EUCO 222/13
PRESSE 454
PR PCE 197
"Peace in Europe and in the world"
Speech by President of the European Council
Herman Van Rompuy
at the International Peace Symposium
It is a great pleasure to open this International Peace Symposium today. I hope it will be a
fruitful exchange of thoughts and practices, and of past examples to the service of a better
future. I should like to share some reflections on "peace in Europe in the world", and the
role politics can play.
I fully agree with the approach taken by the organisers of this conference. A peace that is
just a signature of a treaty between political leaders, between two war chiefs, cannot be
sustainable. A lasting peace – even if it can start on paper – requires a deep transformation
of societies as a whole; and this at the very moment these societies are in deep distress. The
European experience is instructive indeed. Our Union is perhaps the most radical peacebuilding project in human history.
As so many things in life, it resulted from a positive and a negative element. On the
positive side: the Idea of Europe, as it has been cultivated during centuries by writers and
philosophers, by statesmen and poets – a most generous idea.
On the negative side: the ruins and ashes of two world wars, starting in 1914 and ending in
1945. As Prime Minister Peeters said," a period we will start commemorating next year,
also because, here in Belgium, in terms of serving as battlefield, we know what we are
talking about…."
PRESS
Dirk De Backer - Spokesperson of the President - ( +32 (0)2 281 9768 - +32 (0)497 59 99 19
Preben Aamann - Deputy Spokesperson of the President - ( +32 (0)2 281 2060 - +32 (0)476 85 05 43
[email protected] http://www.european-council.europa.eu/the-president
EUCO 222/13
1
E
The earliest European projects – such as the Coal and Steel community from 1950 – were
the encounter of these two: the positive and the negative, the Ideal and the Trauma (to use
the term of your Symposium). And nobody should underestimate the second aspect.
Sometimes Europeans have a tendency to give lessons; for sure, I, for one, hope that
European integration can inspire other experiments of regional cooperation in the world.
Yet we should not forget our post-war European peace was built on an unprecedented
graveyard of about forty million killed Europeans in the Second World War alone.
In terms of trauma, for the people on our continent, the first half of the 20th century
probably was the worst ever, at least since the 14th-century disaster of the plague, the
Black Death. (Or perhaps, for some countries, the worst since that other Thirty-Years War,
the one that ended in 1648.)
So if we Europeans want to explain the blessings of peace, we surely can, but only from a
very humble position… We do not wish that anybody else, any region in the world, to live
through such a trauma, before arriving at the conclusion that living peacefully together is
by far the best option…
Of course, peace might have come to our continent without the European Union. Maybe.
We will never know. But it would never have been of the same quality. A lasting peace,
not a frosty cease-fire.
To me, what makes it so special, is reconciliation. In politics as in life, reconciliation is the
most difficult thing. It goes beyond forgiving and forgetting, or simply turning the page. It
is one of the key themes of your Symposium, and rightly so.
In Europe, after the war, this need was felt not only by politicians, but as much by the
citizens. In these days, for people Europe was a promise, it equalled hope. When Konrad
Adenauer came to Paris to conclude the Coal and Steel Treaty, in 1951, one evening he
found a gift waiting at his hotel. It was a war medal, une Croix de Guerre, that had
belonged to a French soldier. His daughter, a young student, had left it with a little note for
the Chancellor, as a gesture of reconciliation and hope.
I told this story last year in Oslo, when the European Union received the Nobel Peace
Prize. And think of what France and Germany had gone through, and then take this step.
Signing a Treaty of Friendship. Freundschaft, Amitié… These are moving words. Private
words, not for treaties between nations. But the will to not let history repeat itself, to do
something radically new, was so strong that new words had to be found.
No doubt this political reconciliation had a deep impact on the way people perceived their
neighbours. The French intellectual Dominique Moïsi once told in a lecture, that his father,
an Auschwitz survivor, one morning back in 1963, declared at their breakfast table: "From
today, we can eat German butter again." It was the day after the signature of the Elysée
Treaty. So this beginning of a public friendship, was also the end of private bitterness…,
no doubt in many households.
EUCO 222/13
2
E
Here lies the responsibility for politics: to break the doom of history, to open up a new
perspective, to give people hope, the will to live together.
Throughout it's 60-year old history, the European Union has helped to anchor that
perspective of change, as a haven of prosperity and peace. It is true for Belgium, the
Netherlands, France, Germany, and the other founders after 1945. It is true for Greece,
Spain and Portugal after the end of their dictatorships. It is true for the former communist
countries which joined after the end of the Cold War. And, most recently, it is true for the
countries of former Yugoslavia.
Only four months ago, Croatia became the 28th member state of the Union. At the same
moment, Serbia became an official candidate country – a step made possible thanks to the
improvement in its relations with Kosovo. The entry of the countries of the Western
Balkans into the Union will seal an end to the last civil war in the long history of Europe –
no more, no less.
So to those who say that war is so far away in our past that peace cannot be a key issue in
Europe anymore, that it does not appeal to the younger generations, I always answer: just
go out there and ask the people there! And ask the young ones too!
Of course, I am deeply aware that this is not the only story about Europe and our Union to
tell, certainly not nowadays, and certainly not everywhere in Europe. We are slowly – too
slowly – getting out of the worst economic crisis in two generations. Parents struggling to
make ends meet, workers recently laid off, students who fear that, however hard they try,
they won't get that first job: when they think about Europe, peace is not the first thing that
comes to mind… And yet, and yet it remains our fundamental motive.
Europe also strives to bring some of these hard-won lessons to the rest of the world. With
our experience, of binding interests so tightly that war becomes materially impossible: not
as a recipe, but as an inspiration.
And also with actions. The European Union's foreign policy embodies this awareness of
today's conference: that winning the peace is more than ending the war. That societies need
to be mended.
Europe is represented in crisis and conflict zones, by doctors and emergency staff, by
agronomists and engineers, and also by magistrates, police officers and soldiers. They are
all there to support the efforts of their local counterparts to stabilise a country, to restore
order, the rule of law and a sense of justice, and to provide hope for the future.
Despite the financial crisis at home, the European Union has launched no fewer than five
new EU civilian or military missions in the last two years: to support reconstruction in
Mali and South Sudan, and to restore security in the Sahel, on the borders of Libya and off
the coast of Somalia. In the course of 2013 we have also renewed the mandates for
operations in Afghanistan, Georgia and the Democratic Republic of the Congo. It is all
about building peace.
EUCO 222/13
3
E
We know that rebuilding a country, rebuilding a society, rebuilding trust, takes time. But
we can do it. All is not bright, all is not rosy, yet if we look back 100 years, at the blessedly
innocent year 1913, we see real progress.
We have left behind us the battles of history between religions, nations, dynasties,
ideologies. A hundred years on, we can look at our future with confidence, and selfconfidence, even in these difficult economic times. The world is more open, more
connected, it is safer, if still unpredictable. Science and scientific research can play an
immensely positive role – and I hope this conference can identify new avenues for it to do
so.
Born in 1947, I am a post-war child. If some of you here, like myself, have grand-children,
these children are the third generation who've only known peace in Europe. Each
generation is responsible for peace in its time, and beyond. We may hold a different place
in the world today, but we live in a better Europe and in a better world. That's why I'm
ready to say: yes, humankind can make moral and political progress. That's why in these
difficult years, I remain a man of hope.
EUCO 222/13
4
E