This morning’s key headlines from GenerationalDynamics.com

Turkey and Hungary play hardball at EU-Turkey refugee summit


German Chancellor Angela Merkel talks with Turkish Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu in Brussels, on Monday

Monday’s summit in Brussels between leaders of the European Union and Turkey ended in failure, after Turkey and Hungary played hardball, dashing the hopes and dreams of the desperate European leaders that Turkey would solve the refugee crisis for them.

Turkey started the ball rolling by making some additional demands:

The issue of EU aid to Turkey was already contentious because Turkey claimed that the three billion euros should have been paid four months ago. EU rejected the claim, saying that the money had been held up because Turkey had not fulfilled its own commitments under the agreement. Turkey justified its new demands for an additional three billion euros because there were many more Syrian refugees in Turkey, with many who are not in designated refugee camps.

The purpose of the one-for-one refugee swap plan was to provide a disincentive for people smugglers. Any Syrian who came to Europe illegally would be sent back to Turkey, while Syrians resettled in Europe would come from legal Turkish refugee camps.

Hungary vetoed the one-for-one refugee swap plan, because it would presumably mean that Syrians from Turkey who resettled in the EU would be distributed among the EU nations, including Hungary. However, how the resettled refugees would be distributed would be subject to negotiation, and Hungary might be able to opt out. Kathimerini and AP

With summer approaching, European politicians may be close to panic

Theoretically, there should not be a major problem. The EU has 500 million people, so absorbing one or two million refugees really should not be so hard. But the painful lessons of World War II, incorporated into the 1957 Treaty of Rome, which led to the creation of the European Union, are forgotten. In this generational Crisis era, xenophobia and nationalism are rampant in Europe and in many countries around the world, as they were before WW II.

So now the numbers, tiny compared to the size of the entire EU population, seem staggering:

As a result, discussions among European leaders are becoming increasingly toxic. Last week, it got to the point where Greece withdrew its ambassador from Austria. Slovakia’s Prime Minister Robert Fico in turn warned Greece that if the country did not move to secure its borders, “there will be one single hotspot and it will be called Greece.” Perhaps, he added, it may be necessary to sacrifice Greece for the sake of Europe’s well-being.

Germany’s Chancellor Angela Merkel has been taking the lead in attempting to set Europe’s refugee policy. Last summer she announced that Germany would welcome refugees, but she’s been widely condemned for making the refugee problem worse with that statement. Now she’s changed her policy completely, to focus on getting an agreement with Turkey to stop the refugee exodus to Europe.

Merkel has opposed the policies of Austria and the Balkan states to close their borders, and she’s been warning of the EU’s disintegration “into small states” that will be unable to compete in a globalized world, as well as of the possibility that border controls might soon be reintroduced all across Europe. Merkel also wants to prevent Greece from drifting into chaos: “We did not keep Greece in the euro to abandon the country now.”

The problem is that Europe’s refugee crisis worsens significantly every day, and no one realistically has the vaguest idea how to fix it. BBC and Der Spiegel and Reuters

KEYS: Generational Dynamics, Turkey, Hungary, European Union, Angle Merkel, Ahmet Davutoglu, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, Syria, Afghanistan, Greece, Austria, Slovakia, Robert Fico
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