The Brexiteers
are getting
increasingly vocal in their demands that
the UK should be preparing to walk away from the EU talks with no deal, keeping
the £39 billion (or whatever the final figure is) that the UK has already
agreed to pay in settlement of existing contractual commitments. They are seriously arguing that the UK’s hand
in negotiations will be strengthened if the EU believe that the UK government
is really serious about being willing to walk away with nothing at all in March
next year.
It’s an ‘interesting’
idea (Sir Humphrey would probably call it ‘brave’) that threatening to renege
on commitments already made and to walk away from treaty agreements will make
the EU27 more willing to offer a super-duper deal to the UK which surpasses
anything offered to any other non-member of the club. Because that’s what they’re actually
suggesting – under the EU treaties, the UK and the EU are obliged to negotiate terms
for withdrawal and settlement of agreed obligations; there is absolutely no
requirement for the EU27 to offer any sort of trade deal in exchange for the UK
meeting its existing treaty obligations.
In those
circumstances, it’s not at all clear to me that making such a threat will
encourage the EU27 to be more flexible in order to secure an agreement – it seems
much more likely that it will serve only to convince them that the UK’s word
cannot be trusted, and that no promise or agreement is worth the paper on which
it is written. To be blunt – who on
earth would want to negotiate with someone who sees going back on their word as a legitimate tactic? They could never be certain that any agreement would be honoured.
1 comment:
It's such a Trumpian position to take that Boris may have been right all along that the Donald should lead the negotiations. Whatever one thinks of the Iran deal, has America walking away from it improved the situation? I think not. The Brexiteers rather facile comparison that leaving the EU is like resigning from a gold club - no more membership fees - seems not to hold water when they also argue that the UK should now ask for their past financial contributions to Galileo to be returned. So leaving the golf club (their analogy) means that you can ask for all past membership fees to be reimbursed as well. On which planet do these people live?
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