Apparently published in
an open letter to the Daily
Express.
AN OPEN LETTER TO GERMAN CHANCELLOR ANGELA MERKEL
Date:
December 2011
From: Frederick Forsyth
To: Angela Merkel
Dear Madam
Chancellor
PERMIT me to begin this letter with a
brief description of my knowledge of, and affection for, your
country.
I first came to Germany as a boy student aged 13 in 1952, two
years before you were born.
After three extended vacations with German families who spoke no English I found at the age of
16 and to my pleasure that I could
pass for German among Germans.
In
my 20s I was posted as a foreign correspondent to East Germany in 1963, when
you would have been a schoolgirl just north of East Berlin where I
lived.
I know Germany, Frau Merkel, from the alleys of Hamburg to the
spires of Dresden, from the Rhine to the Oder, from the bleak Baltic coast to
the snows of the Bavarian Alps. I say this only to show you that I am
neither
ignoramus nor enemy.
I also had occasion in those years to
visit the many thousands of my countrymen who held the line of the Elbe
against 50,000 Soviet main battle tanks and thus kept Germany free to
recover, modernise and prosper at no
defence cost to herself.
And
from inside the Cold War I saw our decades of effort to defeat the Soviet
empire and set your East Germany free.
I was therefore disappointed last
Friday to see you take the part of a small and vindictive Frenchman in what
can only be seen as a targeted attack on the land of my fathers.
We
both know that every country has at least one aspect of its society
or economy that is so crucial, so vital that it simply cannot be
conceded.
For Germany it is surely your automotive sector, your car
industry. Any foreign-sourced measure to target German cars and render
them unsaleable would have to be opposed to vetopoint by a German
chancellor.
For France it is the agricultural sector. For more
than 50 years members of the EU have been taxed under the
terms of the Common
Agricultural Policy in order to subsidise France's agriculture. Indeed, the
CAP has been the cornerstone of every EU budget since the first day. Attack
it and France fights back.
For us the crucial corner of our economy is
the financial services industry. Although parts of it exist all over the
country it is concentrated in that part of London known even internationally
as "the City".
It is not just a few greedy bankers; we both have those
but the City is far more. It is indeed a vast banking agglomeration of more
banks than anywhere else in the world.
But that is the tip of the
iceberg. Also in the City is the world's greatest concentration of insurance
companies. Add to that the brokers; traders in stocks and shares worldwide,
second only, and then maybe not, to Wall Street. But it is not just stocks.
The City is also home to the "exchanges" of gold and precious metals,
diamonds, base metals, commodities, futures, derivatives, coffee,
cocoa...the list goes on and on.
And it does not yet touch upon
shipping, aviation, fuels, energy, textiles... enough. Suffice to say the
City is the biggest and busiest marketplace in the world.
It makes the
Paris Bourse look like a parish council set against the United Nations and
even dwarfs your Frankfurt many times.
That, surely, is the point of
what happened in Brussels. The French wish to wreck it and you seem to have
agreed. Its contribution to the British economy is not simply useful nor even
merely valuable.
It is absolutely crucial. The financial services
industry contributes 10% of our Gross Domestic Product and 17.5 per cent of
our taxation revenue.
A direct and targeted attack on the City is an
attack on my country. But that, although devised in Paris, is what you have
chosen to support.
You seem to have decided that Britain is once again
Germany's enemy, a situation that has not existed since 1945.
I
deeply regret this but the choice was yours and entirely yours. The Transaction
Tax
or Tobin Tax you reserve the right to impose would not even generate
money for Brussels.
It would simply lead to massive emigration from
London to other havens. Long ago it was necessary to live in a city to trade
in it.
In the days when deals can flash across the world in a nanosecond
all a major brokerage needs is a suite of rooms, computers, telephones and
the talent of the young people barking offers and agreements down the
phone.
Such a suite of rooms could be in Berne, Thun, Zurich or even
Singapore. Under your Tobin Tax tens of thousands would leave London. This
would not help Brussels, it would simply help destroy the British
economy.
Your conference did not even save the euro. Permit me a few
home truths about it. The euro is a Franco-German construct.
It was a
German chancellor (Kohl) who ordered a German banker (Karl Otto Pohl) to get
together with a French civil servant (Delors) on the orders of a French
president (Mitterrand) and create a common currency.
Which they did. IT
was a flawed construct. Like a ship with a twisted hull it might float in
calm water but if it ever hit a force eight it would probably
founder.
Even then it might have worked for it was launched with a
manual of rules, the Growth And Stability Pact. If the terms of that book of
rules had been complied with the Good Ship Euro might have
survived.
But compliance was entrusted to the European Central Bank
which catastrophically failed to insist on that compliance.
Rules
governing the growing of cucumbers are more zealously enforced. This was a
European Bank in a German city under a French president and it failed in its
primary, even its sole, duty.
This had everything to do with France
and Germany and nothing whatever to do with Britain.
Yet in Brussels last week the EU pack
seemed intent only on venting its spleen on the country that wisely refused
to abolish its pound.
You did not even address yourselves to saving the
euro but only to seeking a way to ensure it might work in some future
time.
But the euro will not be saved. It is
crumbling now. And since you have now turned against my country, from this
side of the Channel, Madame Chancellor, one can only say of the euro: YOU
MADE IT, YOU MEND IT.
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