Former foreign secretary Sir Geoffrey Howe admits that the Brussels Agreement was a SELL OUT ! |
From "Panorama" 13th November 1994
The Anglo-Spanish agreement over Gibraltar's future. otherwise known
as the Brussels Agreement, "laid the way for talks about the
sovereignty of the colony, "says Sir Geoffrey Howe, who signed the
deal when foreign secretary. Howe's confirmation of what the
Brussels Agreement is all about makes the deal even less credible
and more unacceptable to the vast majority of Gibraltarians.
The former foreign secretary confirms that Brussels is about
sovereignty in his memoirs. which have just been published.
He writes of the efforts made to clear the way for Spanish membership
of NATO and the European Community. And adds: "That was made
possible only with the strenuous help of my opposite number,
Fernando Moran, with whom I had found at least a partial solution to
the historic Gibraltar dispute."
Howe continues: "After fifteen rough negotiating months we had the
previous February signed an agreement for the reopening of Spain's
land border with the tiny colony (it had been closed by General
Franco in 1969) AND LAID THE WAY FOR TALKS ABOUT THE SOVEREIGNTY OF
THE COLONY." As a result. "Anglo-Spanish relations were greatly
enhanced by this undertaking." Indeed, at Gibraltar's epense!
The Brussels Agreement though implemented in Febuary 1985. was in
fact signed in November 1984 - even if Howe has got the dates
wrong, but then, did he get anything right for Gibraltar?
The co-signatory of the agreement the ex Spanish Foreign minister
Fernando Moran. also makes clear in his own memoirs what the deal
was all about, as revealed recently in a PANORAMA extract of his
book. The deal over Gibraltar, clearly against the wishes of its
people, was struck the year after Howe became foreign secretary.
Gibraltar, he writes, was of pressing practical importance "since it
could all too easily become an embarrassment in the context of
negotiations for Spain's accession to the Community." He reveals
that with colleagues and experts in the Foreign Office ex-imperial
"problems left over by history" had been considered on the basis of
the principle of a "realistic appraisal of Britain's interests."
He says that "my proposed approach" was endorsed virtually without
comment: To punctiliously discharge our obligations over the
Falklands and Cyprus, and over the next 5 years, to make a real
effort to bring about solutions or at least to create the framework
for solutions in those cases were this appears a real possibility.
His suggestion was that the Gibraltar issue could probably not
be solved "but we must use the EC accession negotiations as a
vehicle to find a new plateau of stability in our relations with
Spain, in which Gibraltar does not overshadow everything else
as it does now."
That is how the clear sell-out of the people of Gibraltar was begun.
His memoirs' title 'Conflict of Loyalty' is specifically about his
row with Margaret Thatcher - but it could have been about Gibraltar.
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