kuro68k wrote: » The British government is going to take it right to the cliff edge and hope that someone else compromises. Of course they have their excuses already lined up if no-one does, only real question is who they will blame.
Kermit.de.frog wrote: » What do you all make of this?https://twitter.com/pmdfoster/status/1064056122146021376
Panrich wrote: » Surely a Norway type deal is not on the table as it does not satisfy the commitments given in phase 1 on the border.
ancapailldorcha wrote: » Given that the debate still, somehow hasn't advanced past the stage it was in any part of 2016, can anyone really be surprised at this?
amacca wrote: » For the layman .....does all this increase the chances of a second referendum given that its probably in everyones best interests for the Britain to remain and thats slowly becoming clearer to at least some sections of the leave cohort.....therefore both sides will find a way to extend deadlines, put a hold on the process, fudge so Britain can vote to stay in. Ive always believed that ultimately money decides issues......Brexit is costly for both sides therefore it won't happen.......(a nice free trade agreement for Britain when it leaves is unlikely too imo) Im am slowly losing confidence in my belief after what I've witnessed in the past couple of months, its not just Brinksmanship........its like a significant proportion of morons have ascended to positions of power and its not just the usual cohort of morons present in every electorate in every country in the world.
Folkstonian wrote: » I’ve heard this quite a lot recently. I’m not completely convinced that peace in Europe is something the EU can proudly claim to be the cornerstone of.
RandomName2 wrote: » Of course it's not. If any organization is deserving of that accolade it's NATO, not the EU. The concept of an occupied West Germany and France going to war were it not for the effects of the ECSC is painfully stupid. The only potential aggressor in Europe since WW2 was the USSR/ Warsaw Pact, and they were, almost by definition, not part of the EU.
Donald Trump wrote: » Military alliances come and go at the drop of a hat Successful economic and political ones not so much so
Captain Obvious wrote: » UK politicians seem to believe the UK is the real world equivalent of Wakanda and they cannot comprehend why nobody is queuing up to buy their vibranium on very favourable terms now that they have come out of the shadow of the EU.
RandomName2 wrote: » It's actually the other way around. Military alliances tend to last a minimum of decades. In the case of the French-Ottoman military alliance, that lasted two and a half centuries. The Anglo-Portuguese Alliance, signed in the 14th century, is still technically in effect. Even when there isn't a direct military alliance, mutual cooperation usually lasts a very long time. Despite not being subject to a single overarching treaty, France and the UK have fought together in every non-colonial war since the mid 19th century (and even in one colonial war with the the Suez Crisis) until the invasion of Iraq in 2003. Economic and political alliances tend to be subject to a lot more volatility.
amacca wrote: » For the layman .....does all this increase the chances of a second referendum
Sam Russell wrote: » A second referendum will only be successful if it is decisive - better than 60/40. Otherwise it is not going to be believed by the losers.
Beechwoodspark wrote: » I was just about to echo the previous post. Raab is a busted flush but he doesn’t realise it yet.
sink wrote: » You've said it yourself, 'potential aggressor' is the key term, it's impossible for EU members to go to war with one another.
sink wrote: » The Soviet Union and now Russia is not an EU member and does not share deep economic and political integration with the rest of Europe and so it remains as the only potential aggressor for that very reason.
sink wrote: » If after the collapse of the Soviet Union, the EU and the US set up a Marshall Plan for Russia with the explicit aim of integrating Russia into the western economic system and therefor binding its potential prosperity and success with the rest of Europe we would not be in the mess we are today.
20silkcut wrote: » In a corner of the world historically torn apart by conflict with some of the most historically bloodthirsty and depraved regimes in human history. Living side by side in peace and prosperity for the last 70 years.
Akrasia wrote: » Nonsense. The EU has aligned the interests of countries that used to be competing economic powers. The EU is a much closer alignment than NATO ever was or will be. NATO exists to ensure peace between the west and Russia. The EU ensures peace within the European continent which has a very long history of violent conflict
RandomName2 wrote: » Well yes, it's difficult to have a war without an aggressor, and it's difficult in envision a war between countries that don't have any military capabilities. West Germany didn't have an army, and was occupied by the United States, UK, and France. France had an army, which it was using to try (and fail) to control its colonial territories. The UK hasn't had territorial ambitions on mainland Europe since the middle ages. Maybe the Benelux countries would have launched a campaign of conquest?
RandomName2 wrote: » It has interests in eastern euope. The only thing in recent years that has been making war more likely is the EU's territorial ambitions in areas that Russia considers to be in its sphere of influence.
RandomName2 wrote: » Russia today has its own economic union, which it is quite clearly the leader of.
RandomName2 wrote: » That's an interesting thought actually