EU FOREIGN MINISTER WILL HAVE AUTOMATIC RIGHT TO SPEAK FOR BRITAIN AT UN
The Telegraph reports that the new EU Foreign Minister, created by the revised EU Constitution, will automatically speak for Britain at the UN Security Council when the EU has a united position on issues - despite previous assurances from the British Government that this provision had been stripped from the new treaty.
SARKOZY SUGGESTS UK AND FRANCE "HARMONISE" EU POLICY
The FT reports that Nicolas Sarkozy has suggested France and the UK hold regular meetings to "harmonise" their positions ahead of EU Council summits, reviving the idea of a "troika" of the EU's three biggest member states (the UK, France and Germany) shaping the Union's agenda. How much appeal the idea has in London is unclear: one spokesman for the British Prime Minister said, "we want a strong relationship with all our allies, not just France," while a British diplomat warned harmonising positions with France should not be at the expense of smaller EU states.
US PLANS CRACKDOWN ON EUROPEAN BUSINESSES TRADING WITH IRAN
The Times reports that a new bill attracting bipartisan support in the US Congress will impose sanctions on the US operations of EU firms who continue to trade with Iran. The article notes that whilst American companies are already banned from doing business with Iran, many European companies retain interests in the oil-rich Islamic Republic, which they regard as having the potential to become one of the world's last great emerging markets.
THE EUROPEAN COMMISSION yesterday gave the German government the go-ahead to pump €120 million into developing a European rival to Google, which the EUReferendum blog dubs "the Galileo of the internet".
IN AN INTERVIEW WITH Suddeutsche Zeitung Dr Andreas Maurer from the German Institute for International Relations and Security, argues that a "two-speed Europe" is a growing reality, and that there is a "high"risk of the EU going to war in future, for instance over energy.
MANDELSON: THERE MUST BE NO REFERENDUM AND BROWN MUST STOP BASHING THE EU
The Telegraph reports that EU Commissioner Peter Mandelson has said he sees no need for a referendum on the revised Constitutional Treaty, but urged Gordon Brown to enter the debate on Europe, saying that "ducking the issues" did the cause of Britain's membership of the EU a disservice. Mandelson said, "I don't favour a referendum because I don't believe the treaty warrants it, nor do I believe further movement towards referendums fits with parliamentary democracy."
A LEADER IN THE SUN argues that "the PM has gone back on Tony Blair's promise of a referendum on the EU treaty. Every leader in Europe admits it's the same as the Constitution. So the people MUST have a say."
EU BIOFUEL TARGETS ARE "COMPLETE LUNACY"
Christopher Booker argued in the Sunday Telegraph that the EU's 10% target for biofuel use by 2020 is "complete lunacy". He wrote that "The UK's current wheat production is 11 million tons (against our consumption of 10 million). To meet the 10 per cent target by 2020 from wheat alone would require us to grow 14 million tons of wheat a year, 3 million more than we currently grow. WORLD DEMAND FOR WHEAT IS RISING SO FAST THAT, IN THE PAST TWO YEARS, A GLOBAL SURPLUS HAS BECOME A DEFICIT. SOARING PRICES HAVE ALREADY DOUBLED. Yet it is at this very moment that the EU decides we must either turn our entire domestic wheat production into fuel (thus needing to import 13 million additional tons from the world market), or devote similar amounts of our farmland to growing other fuel crops."
US IRRITATION AT BROWN'S FOREIGN POLICY SHIFT
The Telegraph reports that there are "signs of irritation" in Washington over Gordon Brown's desire to run a foreign policy more independent of the US. US-UK relations have been made more tense by comments by Lord Malloch-Brown (Minister for Africa, Asia and the UN) and Douglas Alexander (International Development Secretary), who have respectively called for Britain to be no longer "joined at the hip" with the US and for "multi-lateralism".
HEAD OF THE ARMY WARNS BRITAIN ALMOST OUT OF TROOPS
The front page of Saturday's Telegraph, and also the Mail, reported on a leaked memo from the Head of the Army Gen Sir Richard Dannatt, which warns that BRITAIN HAS ALMOST RUN OUT OF TROOPS TO DEFEND THE COUNTRY OR FIGHT ABROAD. He has told senior commanders that reinforcements for emergencies or for operations in Iraq or Afghanistan are "now almost non-existent". A leader in the Telegraph lamented that Britain's defence spending is misallocated, spent in the interests of our defence contractors rather than our soldiers. WE THROW AWAY MONSTROUS SUMS ON WEAPONS FOR WHICH WE HAVE NO PRACTICAL USE - the Eurofighter being the supreme example - but fail to invest in modern war-fighting systems: drones, unmanned naval and aerial vehicles, communications satellites, guided missiles.
IN THE SUNDAY TIMES, MICHAEL PORTILLO ARGUED THAT OTHER EUROPEAN COUNTRIES MUST COMMIT THEIR FORCES TO COMBAT ROLES IN AFGHANISTAN: "Our European allies have failed to come up with the numbers requested by Nato, and some have heavily restricted the role their forces will play. German and Spanish politicians have allowed public disquiet over Iraq to dictate their policy in Afghanistan, even though following 9/11 we were unanimous that the Taliban be ousted?You have to wonder what the EU is for if its purposes do not include fighting together against those who wish to subvert its values and bring down its societies HOW CAN A PRIME MINISTER FACE THE GRIEVING FAMILIES OF BRITISH SERVICEMEN KILLED IN ACTION, UNLESS HE HAS TRIED BY EVERY MEANS TO REINFORCE OUR NUMBERS WITH THE THOUSANDS OF EUROPEAN TROOPS, ALREADY IN THEATRE BUT STANDING IDLY BY? Our partners want our agreement to their cherished treaty. Brown should refuse consent while they fail in their obligations to our common security."
BROWN TO HOLD SNAP ELECTION IN OCTOBER?
In Saturday's Express Patrick O'Flynn predicted that Gordon Brown will call a snap election for 25 October. Meanwhile the Guardian argues spring 2009 remains the most likely date, mainly because in the autumn the economic situation will not be so favourable for Labour.