How would the EU react to the Irish unity referendum?



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Thirty years ago, at a time when some European leaders were skeptical about German reunification, Ireland made an intervention to help her that has never been forgotten in Berlin.

Dublin assumed the rotating European presidency in January 1990, shortly after the fall of the Berlin Wall. At the time, British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher and Italian Prime Minister Giulio Andreotti had reservations about the unification of the East and the West.

But Charles Haughey argued in favor, telling the Dáil that “as a divided country. . . we would have an underlying sympathy for the efforts of any other people who want to achieve their reunification. ”

He went on to chair a special European summit in Dublin which turned out to be a milestone, securing the support of member states for the unification and integration of the united Germany into what would become the modern EU.

German Chancellor Helmut Kohl’s words to Haughey were: “Germany will never forget what it has done for us.”

And in fact it has not been forgotten. Ireland’s “significant contribution to achieving German reunification” is mentioned in the second sentence of the German Ministry of Foreign Affairs page on German-Irish relations.

Could Germany or another EU state play a similar role in the event of a referendum on Irish unity?

EU policy

The EU has not formulated a common policy towards the UK’s potential breakup, as there is no room for such a conversation until highly sensitive post-Brexit negotiations are concluded. All matters relating to Great Britain and Northern Ireland are handled by the UK Relations Task Force, led by Chief Negotiator Michel Barnier, for now.

Once the transition period is over, the UK file will be handled by the bloc’s Ministry of Defense, Foreign Affairs and Diplomats, the European External Action Service. It has directors for different global regions, under which teams of desk officers dedicated to specific portfolios work.

Starting in January, a dedicated officer will cover Northern Ireland, Great Britain and the overlapping issues in the Republic, The Irish Times understands. Border problems, of course, will be part of that task.

“We are getting all these reports about the dissatisfaction in Scotland, the change of views in Northern Ireland,” said a Brussels source. “Of course we are following him.”

When it comes to Irish unity, opinions are widely benevolent across Europe, partly the legacy of decades of popular culture in which the Irish national struggle has been romantically portrayed.

“The Irish tend to be framed, to put it very crudely, like the good guys,” said Alexander Clarkson, professor of German, European and international studies at King’s College London.

European political parties on the left tend to view unification positively, while in the wake of Brexit, those leaning to the right see it increasingly pragmatic and more of a question of “when” than “if.”

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