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Was Europe Ever United?

 


A missile tore through Kyiv’s night sky and left a diplomatic mission in ruins. Men, women, and children were killed. The European Union’s response came quickly: “Russia’s strikes on Kyiv will only strengthen Europe’s unity and Ukraine’s defiance.”

Strong words. But do they match reality? Was Europe ever truly united?


Unity or just the illusion of it

The idea of a united Europe has always been more fragile than Brussels admits. In moments of crisis the statements sound bold, yet history shows the cracks.

In 2003, Europe split wide open over Iraq. Tony Blair marched with Washington. Jacques Chirac bristled and said of smaller states backing the war, “They missed a good opportunity to keep quiet.” Germany’s Gerhard Schröder flatly refused to join the invasion. The supposed unity of the continent collapsed into rival camps.

The refugee crisis in 2015 told a similar story. Angela Merkel told her people “Wir schaffen das”—we can manage. Viktor Orbán of Hungary built fences and warned, “We do not want to change our country’s cultural identity.” It was not solidarity. It was survival, each state on its own terms.


A war that shook the ground

Russia’s full invasion of Ukraine forced another reckoning. This time the reaction felt different. Olaf Scholz told the Bundestag: “We are living through a Zeitenwende, a historic turning point.” He promised weapons and a shift away from Russian gas. Emmanuel Macron, once accused of softness, said bluntly: “We must help Ukraine to resist, because the security of Europe is at stake here.”

Even Sweden and Finland abandoned neutrality to join NATO. Fear had forced movement where decades of debate had failed.

But the chorus was not flawless. Orbán said, “We will not give up Hungarian interests for Ukraine. We cannot cut ourselves off from Russian energy.” That was enough to remind everyone that unity in Europe is often conditional.


Kyiv as Europe’s mirror

Every missile that hits Kyiv is also aimed at Europe’s conscience. The staff hiding in bunkers are more than diplomats. They are a test. If they are killed, will Brussels call it an attack on Europe itself, or just another grim headline?

Josep Borrell tried to sound certain: “This is Europe’s war. Ukraine is fighting for us, for our values.” His words rang strong, but they also carried a nervous undertone. Europe keeps declaring its unity because it knows how easily silence could return.


The promise is that Russia’s bombs will harden Europe’s resolve. History suggests otherwise. The continent has often been united only by shock, never by steady conviction.

Perhaps that is what Moscow failed to grasp. Even a quarrelsome Europe, for one bitter season, can stand firm.

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