The EU needs a new strategic agenda after June’s election while the world is burning, the bloc’s future is at stake, and Hungary’s Viktor Orbán is playing hardball – Weimar Triangle to the rescue? It is hard not to feel like the Weimar Triangle – France, Germany, and Poland – has been overdone in the media recently. It is probably safe to say that the overwhelming majority had never heard of this construct until leaders decided last year to dig it out from the closet of tried and failed post-Cold War ideas. Suddenly, the Weimar approach is being hailed everywhere as the panacea for all evil that engulfs the three countries, including curing the long-suffering Franco-German friendship. There is little, it seems, that the Weimar Triangle cannot do. But even now, after having covered countless Weimar Triangle meetings, this reporter is struggling to find a catchy description that sums up what exactly it is. Is it a forum, a diplomatic platform, a dialogue format, or an alliance? Let’s be honest – the simplest explanation is probably that whenever representatives of France, Germany, and Poland meet, they call it a Weimar Triangle meeting. Historically, it has hardly ever lived up to being more than that. |