A Page on the World: Why Europe Will Run the 21st Century

4 minutes read time

Mark Leonard makes the case for a Europe that few Americans will regard as reality.

Why does World News and Prophecy publish so much material about Europe? Kirsty Milne, a British expatriate living in Boston and teaching at Harvard, recently observed: "It is astonishing how little Americans know or care about the European Union... The brutal truth is that most Americans do not think about Europe very much at all" (Scotland on Sunday, April 24, 2005). Yet our regular readers will understand that Bible prophecy shows that European affairs should be of the greatest concern to all Americans, not to mention the rest of the world. We hope to spread this vital message to as many readers as possible.

Mark Leonard, author of a new paperback, Why Europe Will Run the 21st Century, is director of foreign policy at the Centre for European Reform, where he covers transatlantic relations, the Mideast and the relationship between China and the European Union. He paints a completely different futuristic picture of Europe from that of the biblical book of Revelation.

A new kind of power

He writes: "We can see a new kind of power [in the EU] has evolved that cannot be measured in terms of military budgets or smart missile technology. It works in the long term, and is about reshaping the world rather than winning short-term tussles [an oblique reference to the war in Iraq]" (p. 5).

This book sees each EU nation as subservient to the sovereignty of Brussels. For instance, "The British House of Commons, the British law courts and British civil servants are still there, but they have all become agents of the European Union" (p. 6, emphasis added throughout review). This is a frightening thought for those Britons who really understand the origins and prophetic destiny of the English-speaking peoples.

Further, the new European century is almost pictured as a coming utopia. "Imagine a world of peace, prosperity and democracy. A world where small countries are as sovereign as large ones, a world where what matters is that you obey the law—rather than whether you are with us or against us" (pp. 7-8).

From the point of view of biblical prophecy, this paperback draws deceptive conclusions like the following: "No one fears a rising Germany or France because all the countries of Europe have formed themselves into a network that is bound together by laws and regulations" (p. 27). (See the booklets advertised below.)

Trouble is, when an enormous crisis emerges in a key European country, the practical effectiveness of all these laws can virtually disappear almost overnight. All the democratic countries surrounding Nazi Germany could not stop Hitler from swallowing up Europe in the 1930s.

Still, Mr. Leonard insists that "the European project is based on a desire to move beyond a world of power politics, where 'might makes right,' to a community based on the rule of law" (p. 41). More utopianism!

Critical of the United States

The European agenda is constantly contrasted with the foreign policy of the United States. "The Bush Doctrine" comes under continuous criticism. According to Mr. Leonard, Europe seeks to escape from the shadow of American military doctrine. "Europe will never need to fight against the American military machine,'" he says. "Europeans can build peace through military interventions without mimicking the American way of war" (p. 66). How can one be so sure?

According to this author, we are entering a "post-American world." He writes: "American hegemony contains the seeds of its own destruction, and is already driving its own retreat" (p. 131). He further asserts: "The country most damaged by anti-Europeanism is America itself. Its need for Europe has never been greater: in Afghanistan the mission is under French command; in Iran, it is the Europeans who are leading the talks on WMD" (p. 132). There is an appendix (pp. 145-146) that shows the 109 countries the author considers to be part of the "Eurosphere"—meaning those nations already influenced to some degree by the EU.

Mark Leonard does not consider himself anti-American, but sees the United States as inevitably being "sucked into the process of integration" (p. 143), led by a new Euro World Order—heralding the emergence of a "New European Century."

This is not the only book published in the last few years espousing these views. Another one, Free World by noted British writer Timothy Garton Ash, is much less radical in approach, but still sees Europe as the answer to the world's problems. Still another one, written by an American, is as critical of the United States as Mr. Leonard's paperback.

These efforts to unify and exalt Europe among the nations—and to extend the influence of the EU far beyond its borders—will inevitably lead to a place where today's European intelligentsia would not go. To understand further, please request or download our free booklets You Can Understand Bible Prophecy and Are We Living in the Time of the End?

Why Europe Will Run the 21st Century is published by Fourth Estate, a division of Harper Collins with offices in London and New York, copyright 2005. WNP

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John Ross Schroeder

John died on March 8, 2014, in Oxford, England, four days after suffering cardiac arrest while returning home from a press event in London. John was 77 and still going strong.

Some of John's work for The Good News appeared under his byline, but much didn't. He wrote more than a thousand articles over the years, but also wrote the Questions and Answers section of the magazine, compiled our Letters From Our Readers, and wrote many of the items in the Current Events and Trends section. He also contributed greatly to a number of our study guides and Bible Study Course lessons. His writing has touched the lives of literally millions of people over the years.

John traveled widely over the years as an accredited journalist, especially in Europe. His knowledge of European and Middle East history added a great deal to his articles on history and Bible prophecy.

In his later years he also pastored congregations in Northern Ireland and East Sussex, and that experience added another dimension to his writing. He and his wife Jan were an effective team in our British Isles office near their home.

John was a humble servant who dedicated his life to sharing the gospel—the good news—of Jesus Christ and the Kingdom of God to all the world, and his work was known to readers in nearly every country of the world.