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Council News
Rudolph Atallah Testifies before House Panel on Crisis in the Sahel
Rudolph Atallah, senior fellow in the Atlantic Council’s Michael S. Ansari Africa Center, testified at a House of Representatives Committee on Foreign Affairs hearing on “The Growing Crisis in Africa’s Sahel Region.”
Mihaela Carstei on the US-Canada Keystone Pipeline Project (CTV)
On the heels of Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper’s visit to the United States, Energy & Environment Program Associate Director Mihaela Carstei joins CTV to discuss the Keystone Pipeline project that would transport tar sands oil from Canada and the northern United States to refineries in the Gulf coast of Texas.
Frederic Hof on US Position in Syria Crisis (BBC World Service)
Hariri Middle East Center Senior Fellow Frederic Hof speaks with the BBC’s Tim Franks about the cautious US position with respect to resolving the Syria crisis.
Shuja Nawaz Response to Pakistan Election Results (Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty)
South Asia Center Director Shuja Nawaz joins a live Google Hangout organized by RFE/RL to discuss Pakistan’s historic elections.
The Endgame: Can Fiscal Integration Save the Euro?
December 01, 2011On December 1st, the Council’s Global Business and Economics Program hosted a conference call with André Sapir, senior fellow at Bruegel and a member of the Council’s Business and Economics Advisory Group, and Jacob Funk Kirkegaard, research fellow at the Peterson Institute on International Economics, on the latest developments in Europe’s sovereign debt crisis. Program Director Alexei Monsarrat moderated the discussion.
There finally seems to be a light at the end of the tunnel. After more than two long years of negotiations and spreading contagion, Europe’s leaders seem finally to recognize the drastic steps necessary to convince markets they have the political will to deal with the critical design flaws of the eurozone. With a properly enforced fiscal pact providing oversight of national budgets to prevent systemic risks in place, the ECB has signaled its willingness to act in the short term to ensure continued liquidity. Between the fiscal compact and ECB lifeline, the eurozone may yet rebound.
Europe is facing a clear turning point in resolving its debt crisis. Today’s speech by European Central Bank President Mario Draghi to the European Parliament made clear the ECB is willing to take stronger bond market interventions if it sees the right political actions. As France and Germany continue to debate the details of the proposed “fiscal compact” designed to ensure EU oversight of national budgets, Draghi hinted that the ECB would respond favorably to political decisions by Europe’s leaders to create a fiscal union that should have accompanied monetary union in the first place. This could mark a significant turning point in Europe.
Popular criticism of the ECB has been overblown—and misplaced. Throughout the crisis, critics have attacked the ECB for not acting swiftly or significantly enough to calm markets, and for not serving as a lender of last resort to Europe’s troubled sovereigns. Yet, as Jacob Kirkegaard noted on the call, without the ECB’s deliberate decision to delay massive interventions, fiscally unsound regimes from Italy to Spain to Greece would likely still be in power—with little incentive to resolve their underlying fiscal problems. By emphasizing the ECB’s willingness to act only after the political decisions to coordinate fiscal policy have been made final, the ECB has in fact been a powerful agent of political change towards fiscal solvency throughout Europe.
Yet, domestic politics—particularly in France—still threaten to derail a potential deal. As André Sapir pointed out, France has the most at stake in the current negotiations, yet its public debate on the issue is far less advanced than in Germany. France’s bond yields are edging higher and higher, and the pressure is mounting on Paris to act to maintain its coveted AAA bond rating. At the same time, only six years ago, France voted against the European Constitutional Treaty in part because of an unwillingness to transfer additional sovereignty to Brussels. It is a difficult tightrope for President Nicolas Sarkozy to walk in an election year to justify ceding budgetary authority and oversight to an unelected set of bureaucrats in Brussels. He will need to explain to his electorate that the future of the euro and the ability of France to maintain its leadership role in Europe depends on doing just that.
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Photo credit: Getty Images.
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FEATURED EVENTS
15th Anniversary of PDD-63: History of Cyber Critical Infrastructure Protection
On May 22, the Atlantic Council's Cyber Statecraft Initiative will hold a discussion on the history of cyber critical infrastructure protection in recognition of the 15th anniversary of Presidential Decision Directive 63 (PDD-63).
Evolving US-European Security Cooperation with the Gulf States
On May 23, the Atlantic Council’s Middle East Peace and Security Initiative at the Brent Scowcroft Center on International Security is hosting a panel discussion on new developments in security cooperation among the United States, its European allies, and the Gulf states, and how they are likely to evolve in the coming years.
The Kaleidoscope Turns Again in a Crisis-Challenged Iran
On May 30, the Atlantic Council’s South Asia Center will release a new issue brief, The Kaleidoscope Turns Again in a Crisis-Challenged Iran, a discussion of Iran’s upcoming presidential elections.
2013 Wroclaw Global Forum

From June 13-14, the 2013 Wrocław Global Forum will bring together over 350 top policy-makers and business leaders to explore the region’s impact as an actor in Europe, as well as its crucial role in the transatlantic partnership and on the global stage.
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