2026-06-11

Why do I like the EU?

  For me, this question has a rather simple answer.

Because I like the Benelux countries and continental Western Europe…


    European Union 

   

     The Benelux countries, as well as France and continental Western Europe as a whole, represent regions that have historically been very closely interconnected. Strong economic ties, intensive trade relations, and the gradual removal of barriers between states created an environment in which the idea of deeper European cooperation found natural support. Today, people primarily associate openness without border controls with the Schengen Area, but the roots of this effort to connect European countries reach much further back into history.

It is therefore not surprising that many of the fundamental pillars of European integration emerged largely within the Benelux environment. In this sense, Benelux became something of a laboratory for European unification and a model for several mechanisms that were later applied on a broader European scale. France also played an important role in shaping the early stages of European integration.

It was precisely the combination of idealism and pragmatic politics that helped bring the European project to life. Without the conviction held in the Benelux countries and much of France that European nations could cooperate more closely than ever before, the process of integration would probably never have begun. At the same time, however, it could not have succeeded without the realistic balancing of national interests and the search for compromises acceptable to all parties involved.

European integration therefore did not emerge solely as a result of lofty ideals, nor merely as an exercise in cold political calculation. It was a product of both. Benelux and France were among the regions and states that significantly shaped this historical process and gave it a form.

Of course, Italy and West Germany were also closely associated with the origins of the European project. The beginning of European integration is generally considered to be the establishment of the European Coal and Steel Community in 1951. Its founding members were Belgium, the Netherlands, Luxembourg, France, West Germany, and Italy.

The European Union itself, however, was formally established much later through the Maastricht Treaty, which was signed in 1992 and entered into force in 1993. This treaty transformed the existing European Communities into a broader political framework and introduced new areas of cooperation, including common foreign and security policies and closer coordination in matters of justice and home affairs.

For this reason, when I say that I like the European Union, I am referring not only to the institutions created by the Maastricht Treaty, but also to the longer historical process that made them possible. It is the story of neighbouring countries choosing cooperation over rivalry, compromise over confrontation, and the belief that shared interests can provide a foundation for lasting peace and prosperity.