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● 09.10.11

●● Cablegate: US Government Assesses Value of New EU Commission to Itself

Posted in America, Cablegate, Europe at 9:44 am by Dr. Roy Schestowitz

Summary: A look at how the United States views the newly-elected (2010) European Commission

“Barroso’s announced line-up of the policy portfolios for the new Commission that takes office on/about February 1 has mostly good implications for U.S. economic policy interests,” asserts a cable from just over a year ago (marked “SENSITIVE”). There is no smoking gun that we can see there, but it helps to know how the US portrays politicians who sell Europe out.

Take for example Mr. ACTA (Karel de Gucht). The cable says: “New Trade Commissioner Karel de Gucht (Belgian Foreign Minister until September) takes over the Transatlantic Economic Council; known for his straight-talk, de Gucht is also seen as someone who can close deals” (no matter how bad they are).

=> Mr. ACTA (Karel de Gucht)

Mr. EU Patent (software patents) Michel Barnier, whom we wrote about here, here, here, here and here, is said to “bring a decidedly French and political approach to the internal market and financial services, but will be offset by a new British Director General, Jonathan Faull” (we cannot find his position on patents anywhere).

=> here | here | here | here | here | ↺ Jonathan Faull

“Spanish Commissioner Joaquin Almunia moves from ECFIN to Competition,” says the cable, “where he will bring his economics background to touchy competition policy cases (such as Oracle/Sun) and will likely continue Neelie Kroes’s tough line on bank state aids” (Neelie Kroes is talked about later and we already know that the US called her "sensitive")

=> that the US called her "sensitive"

Then it speaks about Siim Kallas, who has been helping Microsoft. We quite like the part about Vassallo, whom Microsoft hired to help lobby the EU after OOXML corruption and it evidently worked based on other diplomatic cables. The following Cablegate cable points out that “[c]ertainly this is the view of the current President of Amcham EU, Vassallo before he joined General Electric and now Microsoft, who knows Dalli well.”

=> Siim Kallas | helping Microsoft | Microsoft hired to help lobby the EU | evidently worked based on other diplomatic cables

Here is the full text.

VZCZCXRO5031

RR RUEHIK

DE RUEHBS #1616/01 3351625

ZNR UUUUU ZZH

R 011625Z DEC 09 ZDK DUE TO ZES-2

FM USEU BRUSSELS

TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC

INFO RUCNMEM/EU MEMBER STATES COLLECTIVE

RUEHMO/AMEMBASSY MOSCOW

RUEHOT/AMEMBASSY OTTAWA

RUEHKO/AMEMBASSY TOKYO

UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 10 BRUSSELS 001616

SENSITIVE

SIPDIS

STATE PASS TO NSC KVIEN, BELL, AND OMB/OIRA

E.O. 12958: N/A

TAGS: ECON [Economic Conditions], ETRD [Foreign Trade],

ECIN [Economic Integration and Cooperation],

EFIN [Financial and Monetary Affairs], EINV [Foreign Investments],

EAGR [Agriculture and Forestry], EIND [Industry and Manufacturing],

ENRG [Energy and Power], ECPS [Communications and Postal Systems],

EAIR [Civil Aviation], EWWT [Waterborne Transportation],

KIPR [Intellectual Property Rights], KSCT,

SENV [Environmental Affairs], EUN [European Union]

SUBJECT: BARROSO'S NEW COMMISSION SHOULD BE GOOD

FOR U.S. ECONOMIC POLICY INTERESTS

BRUSSELS 00001616 001.4 OF 010

¶1. (SBU) Summary: EU Commission President

Barroso's announced line-up of the policy

portfolios for the new Commission that takes

office on/about February 1 has mostly good

implications for U.S. economic policy interests:

-- New Trade Commissioner Karel de Gucht (Belgian

Foreign Minister until September) takes over the

Transatlantic Economic Council; known for his

straight-talk, de Gucht is also seen as someone

who can close deals;

-- On capital markets, Frenchman Michel Barnier

may bring a decidedly French and political

approach to the internal market and financial

services, but will be offset by a new British

Director General, Jonathan Faull;

-- Finn Ollie Rehn will bring his Oxford PhD in

economics to his new Economic and Finance

position, where he'll play a role in the G-20 even

as he tries to manage winding down member state

deficits;

-- Spanish Commissioner Joaquin Almunia moves from

ECFIN to Competition, where he will bring his

economics background to touchy competition policy

cases (such as Oracle/Sun) and will likely

continue Neelie Kroes's tough line on bank state

aids;

-- Kroes herself takes up the information and

communications technologies Q including a new ten-

year digital economy plan and telecoms

liberalization -- from Viviane Reding;

-- Climate change may be a problem with Dane

Connie Hedegaard in the lead, but environment

otherwise may be less problematic with Slovene

(and former S&T Commissioner) Potocnik;

-- Energy will be with the new German

Commissioner, Gunther Oettinger, who may try to

smooth over some of the EU-Russia tensions over

supply disruptions;

-- Estonian Commissioner Siim Kallas takes up the

transport portfolio (minus space), along with the

U.S.-EU aviation negotiations;

-- Agricultural policy goes to Romania's former

agricultural minister; this, and the shift of

biotech away from DG ENV to DG SANCO (and former

Research Commissioner Potocnik) may bode well on

biotech;

-- Industry and entrepreneurship, supplemented

with space, goes to the Italian Tajani, who will

bring a lower-profile to a portfolio now focused

on the woes of the auto sector; and

-- Regulatory cooperation is more strongly

centralized in the SecGen's office; the Maltese

Commissioner who will have the re-combined Health

and Consumer portfolio, where so many

transatlantic regulatory issues lie (food safety,

consumer protection) is well respected by the

Amcham President. End Summary.

¶2. (U) EU Commission President Barroso announced

his new Commission on Friday, November 27, just

three days after the Netherlands nominated the

last of the Commissioners-designate. The new

line-up, which goes into effect only after

extensive hearings before and approval by

Parliament in January, has significant

implications for U.S. economic policy, since the

Commission has a lead policy role in the European

Union Q itself the world's largest economy,

largest trader, largest donor and heavy-weight in

virtually all international economic fora, even

where not directly a member.

¶3. (U) Of the 27 EU Commissioners (one per member

state), 18 have portfolios with significant

economic policy content, affecting member state

fiscal policy, financial services, trade, aid,

competition policy, climate and environment,

energy, telecommunications and many other areas.

In each of these, the Commissioner proposes both

policy initiatives and EU legislation, and must

then get measures approved by the 27 member states

in the EU Council and the European Parliament

all the while negotiating or talking to us and the

many other countries affected by the EU's policy

BRUSSELS 00001616 002.4 OF 010

choices.

¶4. (U) This cable provides a brief resume of the

key economic policy Commissioners and the top

U.S.-EU issues they will handle by policy area,

divided into four themes: external (trade,

customs/taxation); fiscal/macro; "horizontal"

policies; and sector-specific portfolios

(agriculture, industry and the like). The new

High Representative for Foreign Affairs and

Security Policy, Cathy Ashton, who will also have

a significant economic policy role especially with

respect to U.S.-EU cooperation on third country

issues, is not covered here; see London 2623.

Similarly, the new Commissioners for Justice and

Home Affairs, and for enlargement and development,

will be treated separately, although all deal with

economic policy issues, including the increasingly

difficult one of data privacy.

General Assessment


¶5. (SBU) In terms of economic policy, Barroso's

apportionment of the portfolios strikes us as

being generally favorable to U.S. interests:

Barroso appears to have reinforced both his

generally liberal economic reform instincts and to

have struck a note of independence from the big

four member states. The two areas where we see

the greatest potential for problems are in

internal markets and services, where Paris appears

to have wrested for Michel Barnier the control it

sought over capital markets (although Barroso

offset this by appointing a well-respected Brit as

the new DG MARKT Director General under Barnier),

and in climate change. Interestingly, none of the

four big member states got the high-profile trade

and competition policy portfolios, which went to

the relatively strong Belgian and Spanish

Commissioners.

External Economic Policy Q Trade, Customs


¶6. (U) The Commissioner for Trade is our key

economic policy interlocutor in the Commission.

The Commissioner, who negotiates trade agreements

on behalf of the EU and its 27 member states, is

the U.S. Trade Representative's primary European

contact, although the remit also covers other

aspects of bilateral and multilateral economic

relations. This broader role expands with the new

Commission Q President Barroso used the occasion

to assign responsibility for the Transatlantic

Economic Council (TEC) Q the U.S.-EU

"intergovernmental cabinet meeting" on economic

policy Q to the Trade Commissioner. In addition,

the Lisbon Treaty that goes into effect December 1

gives the incoming Commissioner a major new policy

area Q negotiating international investment

protection agreements, previously the purview of

the member states, anda new political headache: a

significantly inceased role for the European

parliament in trae negotiations (septel).

¶7. (SBU) Karel de Gucht, the Belgian who has been

Development Commissioner for only two months (he

replaced Louis Michel when the latter joined the

European Parliament this summer), was a surprise

choice for the Trade Commissioner position, not

least as he comes from a small member state. A

Flemish Liberal (center-right, with more free

trade tendencies), the 55 year-old de Gucht has

been Belgium's Foreign Minister for the past five

years; he also has extensive EU experience through

14 years in the European Parliament. De Gucht has

won a reputation as a straight-talker (including

with blunt statements about human rights in some

developing countries), but he's also portrayed as

politician who can reach compromises. De Gucht's

Chief of Staff, Marc Van Heukelen, an economist

who is extremely close to de Gucht and who headed

the U.S. Office in the Commission's External

Relations Department for the past two years, will

BRUSSELS 00001616 003.4 OF 010

bring a strong interest in transatlantic relations

as well as extensive experience in the TEC to the

new Commissioner.

Taxation/Customs:

¶8. (U) The Commissioner for Taxation and Customs

(TAXUD) works more with DHS and CBP on border

security issues than with Treasury on taxation,

where the EU's role is generally limited to

internal indirect taxes (VAT). Current

Commissioner Kovacs has focused in his dealings

with us on our 100 percent container scanning

requirement, but at the last TEC meeting he was

more balanced, underlining the EU's equally strong

interest in preserving the integrity of the

container system. We have a fairly good working

relationship with the Commissioner's services, DG

TAXUD, on such things as WCO rules (where the EU

has become less helpful recently) and on IPR

enforcement, where we've done a joint seizures of

counterfeit semi-conductors under Operation

Infrastructure.

¶9. (SBU) Lithuanian Algirdas Semeta may bring a

slightly more fiscal-oriented approach to the

TAXUD role. A Member of the European Commission

since July 2009, the 47 year-old Semeta graduated

as an economic mathematician from the "Faculty of

Economic Cybernetics and Finance" of Vilnius

University in 1985 and found himself Chairman of

the Securities Commission from 1992-1997 and

Minister of Finance from 1997 to 1999, a position

he held again before being appointed, in July

2009, to the European Commission responsible for

Financial Programming and Budget.

Overall Economic Policy Q ECFIN, Budget and

Regional Policy


--

ECFIN:

¶10. (SBU) The Commissioner in charge of Economic

and Finance issues helps guide EU member state

fiscal and Eurozone monetary policy, although more

through suasion than direct control. The

Commissioner lays out the broad economic policy

guidelines meant to direct member state fiscal

policy; issues warnings about, and recommends

corrective steps for, "excessive" member state

deficits; and represents the Commission in the

Eurogroup "troika" (with Eurogroup Chair Juncker

and ECB President Trichet), including in the G-20

and in IMF-related issues such as balance of

payments support. Spaniard Joaquin Almunia, the

outgoing ECFIN Commissioner, developed credibility

in this role, including in bringing excessive

deficit procedures against the UK, France and

Italy. Indeed many thought it likely Almunia

would remain at ECFIN, although this may have

become uncomfortable for him with the tough

measures ECFIN may have to bring against Madrid

for its growing fiscal problems.

¶11. (SBU) Certainly Finnish Commissioner Olli Rehn

was not the first name that leapt to mind as

Almunia's replacement, but as Enlargement

Commissioner he too has developed a reputation as

a strong character, openly disagreeing with even

big member states on such sensitive issues as

Turkey's EU accession and the Balkans. Rehn, 46,

is in the Liberal group. He was a member of the

Finnish Parliament from 1991 to 1995, and a Member

of the European Parliament (MEP) from 1995-1996,

becoming head of Cabinet for Enterprise and

Information Society Commissioner Liikanen from

1998 to 2002. Liikanen has headed the Finnish

Central Bank since Rehn became Commissioner in

2004, following a year as Economic Adviser to the

Finnish Prime Minister. Rehn, who comes into his

position representing one of the EU member states

seen as innovative, competitive and well-managed,

studied economics, international relations and

BRUSSELS 00001616 004.2 OF 010

journalism at Macalester College in Minnesota, and

has a PhD in international economics from Oxford.

The combination of Rehn's representing fiscally-

prudential Finland and his own strength of

character should help him push fiscal laggards

towards consolidation across the EU, although he

will likely also listen closely to the political

guidance of Barroso.

Budget and Regional Policy:

¶12. (SBU) At about $150 billion Euros, the EU

budget does not have much macro impact in the EU

economy Q in fact, it's explicitly limited to just

over 1.2 percent of EU GDP (while the member state

governments collectively spend closer to 50

percent) and the EU has a constitutional balanced

budget requirement. That said, EU funds and

guarantees can play an important role in EU

support for third countries, and have a

significant impact in supporting the new Central

European members (see USEU Brussels 382). And

because the budget is a zero-sum game, negotiating

any changes in it with the European Parliament can

be extremely difficult.

¶13. (SBU) In this sense, Barroso's decision to

appoint Poland's Janusz Lewandowski as Budget

Commissioner is significant. A 58 year-old

economist who was active in the Solidarity

movement and who has lectured at Harvard,

Lewandowski became Chair of the EP's Budget

Committee when he became an MEP in 2004, and by

this time knows the ins and outs, as well as the

institutional tensions, of the brief. Assigning

regional policy (the manager of the substantial

amount of the EU budget that goes to Central

Europe and other poorer regions) to Austrian

Johannes Hahn also makes sense, as Austria has a

strong interest in the health of the Central

European economies and Hahn will also wield the

funds that go toward rural development, an

important consideration for the Austrian

agricultural sector. Hahn, who has a doctorate in

Philosophy and who often goes by the nickname

"Gio," has served as Austria's Federal Minister

for Science and Research since 2007.

Horizontal Policies Q Competition, Internal

Market, S&T, Climate, Environment, Health and

Consumer Affairs


¶14. (U) The main "horizontal" EU economic policies

are competition, internal markets, research and

development, environment, health and consumer

protection (as well as labor and education, but

these two policy areas are not considered in this

cable), all issue areas of increasing importance

to transatlantic economic relations.

Competition:

¶15. (SBU) The Competition Commissioner is

generally seen as the most powerful economic-

policy person in the Commission behind the

President, as this is the one area where the

Commission has autonomous power. Current ECFIN

Commissioner Joaquin Almunia thus joins a long

line of well-known predecessors: Neelie Kroes,

Mauro Monti, Karel van Miert, Sir Leon Brittan and

Peter Sutherland to name the most recent. Many

of these fought and won highly-publicized battles

with U.S. giants (Microsoft, Intel, Oracle, Sun,

GE, Honeywell, Boeing) over the impact of mergers

or dominant positions in the EU market, but they

have been equally tough on many top European

firms. More recently, the Competition

Commissioner has also played a key role in

ensuring that massive state aid flowing to

European banks and other firms (including General

Motors) in the wake of the crisis do not distort

competition, often ordering remedies that could,

for example, decrease the EU presence in U.S.

BRUSSELS 00001616 005.4 OF 010

financial service markets.

¶16. (SBU) As an economist and Commissioner who has

been deeply engaged in the EU response to the

financial and economic crisis, Almunia, 61, is

certainly well-versed in many of these issues. He

is expected to take a lower-profile on many of the

competition and state aids cases, and his presence

may well help strengthen the voice of the Chief

Economist in DG COMP (potentially to the benefit

of U.S. firms under scrutiny). Before coming to

Brussels, Almunia was twice a Minister in Felipe

Gonzalez's Socialist government, and indeed led

the party for three years, standing unsuccessfully

for Prime Minister in 2000. Some wonder whether

he won't be softer on state aids given his

political past, but his job is to ensure bigger

member states don't support their industry to the

disadvantage of weaker. And, as one of the older

Commissioners, he may not anticipate returning to

political life.

Internal Markets and Financial Services:

¶17. (SBU) The Internal Markets portfolio was among

the strongest when the then-European Community

implemented the Single Market; with enlargement a

considerable amount of its authority has seeped

away to other sectoral Commissioners. It remains,

however, the voice to be reckoned with in the

Commission on Financial Services and the EU's

response to the financial crisis. Once seen as a

"liberal Anglo-Saxon" on capital markets

regulation, in the aftermath of the financial

crisis current Irish Commissioner Charlie McCreevy

demonstrated that Commissioners as politicians can

and will over-ride their professional services,

and a number of the Commission's proposals on

hedge funds and private equity, derivatives and

capital requirements have created frictions with

Washington, London and New York. In fact,

McCreevy is reported to have gone around the

Commission in getting the EP to propose an

amendment on derivatives that essentially forced

the industry to "volunteer" to commit to a central

clearing party platform.

¶18. (SBU) Michel Barnier, a French conservative

MEP who has served as Foreign Minister, EU

Minister and EU Commissioner (1999-2004), is no

stranger to Brussels or European politics. Nor is

he a stranger to transatlantic economic issues

as French Agriculture Minister in 2008, he created

the political backlash that defeated a Commission

proposal to finally end our long-standing "chicken

wars." Barnier does, however, seem a bit of a

stranger to the financial services portfolio, and

France's intense lobbying to have its Commissioner

take this up implies Paris may try to take a more

hands on approach through Barnier. This is

undoubtedly one reason why Barroso announced, when

answering questions about this assignment, that he

would assign the highly-respected Jonathan Faull,

now Director-General for Justice and Home Affairs,

to head DG MARKT under Barnier. Both men are

likely to bring a strong emphasis on general

services liberalization and IPR protection to DG

MARKT, another area of critical interest to us.

Research, Innovation and Science:

¶19. (SBU) The Research, Innovation and Science

Commissioner oversees the EU's 50 billion euro

Seventh Framework Program as well as its network

of Joint Research Centers. It is the main

counterpart for the extensive U.S.-EU Science and

Technology Agreement, has close ties to virtually

all USG scientific agencies, including NSF, NASA,

DOE and others; the Commissioner sits on the U.S.-

EU Energy Council established at this month's

U.S.-EU Summit.

¶20. (SBU) Shifting the S&T portfolio to McCreevy's

Irish successor, Maire Geoghegan Quinn, is

immediately appealing given Ireland's reputation

BRUSSELS 00001616 006.2 OF 010

(now somewhat tarnished) as a "tiger" economy with

substantial U.S. high tech investment. (Indeed,

Geoghegan Quinn was reportedly once a member of

the Board of the Ganley Group, a generally high-

tech private-equity investor owned by anti-Lisbon

Treaty activist Declan Ganley.) Geoghegan-Quinn

will bring to the Commission nearly ten years on

the EU Court of Auditors, where she gained in-

depth insights into the workings of Commission

Programs, including the Research Framework

Programs. A well-known Irish politician,

Geoghegan-Quinn, 59, became the first female

member of the Irish cabinet in 1979, and was

subsequently Minister for Tourism, Transport and

Communications and for Justice before retiring

from political life in 1997. Some of her actions

reducing sentences may come up in her EP hearings.

Climate:

¶21. (U) Although he announced some weeks ago that

he would create a "Commissioner for Climate

Action" to reinforce the EU's intention to achieve

its ambitious "20-20-20" greenhouse gas reduction

goals, Barroso used the naming of his new

Commission to spell out what this means,

transferring to the new Commissioner most of the

climate change division of DG Environment. The

Commissioner's responsibility is explicitly cross-

cutting, working most closely with the

Commissioners of Energy and the Environment.

¶22. (SBU) And Barroso could not have signaled the

seriousness of his intent more clearly than by

appointing Dane Connie Hedegaard to this position.

Now Climate and Energy Commissioner of the Nordic

country, Hedegaard has the government's lead

preparing the December Copenhagen meeting of the

parties to the UN Framework Convention for Climate

Change, COP-15. Globally well-known (one of

Time's Top 100 newsmakers for 2009), Hedegaard,

49, is seen as a dynamic if media-hungry

politician, who may run into conflicts with those

in the College who see a need to be more

"realistic" in transforming the European economy.

(These intra-college tensions will ensure that

Barroso and his Secretary General retain

considerable influence over climate policies.)

Embassy Copenhagen notes that while Hedegaard has

been a sometime critic of U.S. climate policy, she

is conversant with U.S. domestic climate politics

and has excellent personal climate contacts on the

Hill. She has been willing to engage

constructively with the Embassy and U.S.

officials.

Environment:

¶23. (U) In ways, the EU focus on climate change

has overshadowed many of the other aspects of DG

Environment, which, like the EPA, is a major

regulator in Europe, proposing legislation and

regulations on chemicals, energy-efficiency,

biofuels sustainability, pesticides, air and water

quality and many other areas of direct relevance

to U.S. exporters and companies invested in

Europe. While splitting out climate change from

DG ENV may not be to the liking of Director

General Karl Falkenberg, it may help provide much-

needed political attention to these other areas.

¶24. (SBU) In this sense, the appointment of

Slovene Commissioner Janez Potocnik to the post of

Environment Commissioner should be positive for

us. An economist, the 51-year-old Potocnik has

done well as Science Commissioner over the past

five years, and has demonstrated a strong

transatlantic leaning, including when he co-signed

a letter in Science magazine with the head of the

National Institutes of Health on joint funding for

U.S.-EU health research projects. Whether he

wants or is able to bring a bit more sanity to the

EU's chemicals regulation Q REACH Q remains to be

seen.

BRUSSELS 00001616 007.8 OF 010

Health and Consumer Affairs:

¶25. (U) Science at times has also been lacking in

the EU's approach to consumer safety, in

particular with respect to food safety, where

political perceptions of public desires have often

held sway despite scientific evidence.

Nonetheless, key U.S. regulatory agencies like the

Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service, the

Food Safety Inspection Service, FDA, the Consumer

Product Safety Commission and the Federal Trade

Commission have established good working relations

with their EU counterparts in this and other areas

of regulation, including pharmaceuticals, medical

devices and consumer safety and information. This

despite the fact that their main EU counterpart,

DG SANCO, has had to report to two different

Commissioners since responsibilities for it were

divided between two Commissioners, now Vassiliou

and Kuneva, with enlargement in 2004.

¶26. (SBU) We expect these transatlantic regulatory

relationships to continue to grow under the new

Commissioner, John Dalli of Malta. The

reunification of health and consumer safety under

one Commissioner has been generally welcomed in EU

consumer circles, and Dalli, although unknown to r

Europe, may be a good chief. Certainly this is

the view of the current President of Amcham EU,

Malta's Ambassador to the EU before he joined

General Electric and now Microsoft, who knows

Dalli well. Malta has, however, not been an ally

on new food technologies in the past Q notably

generally opposing biotech approvals; a similar

political dynamic in her Cypriot constituency led

the previous SANCO Commissioner to be less than

courageous in supporting science over perceived

public opinion. Dalli, 61, now Malta's Social

Policy Minister with responsibility for health has

held numerous other cabinet positions in the

Maltese government, including as Minister of

Finance, Foreign Relations, and Economic Affairs.

He too may face tough questioning in the EP for

old allegations of misconduct on government

contracts; his ties to Libya may also present

concern.

Sectoral Policies


Agriculture:

¶27. (U) The agricultural sector consumes nearly

half of the EU budget, including an expenditure on

subsidies that has long been a thorn in the side

of U.S.-EU trade relations. This proportion has

been sliding as the EP Q long without a voice over

this part of EU spending Q whittled it away in

favor of internal policies. The Lisbon Treaty,

however, finally gives the EP co-decision over

agricultural spending with the member states,

adding a major new political twist with which the

new Agricultural Commissioner Q and we -- will

have to contend.

¶28. (SBU) Of the Commissioners available to him,

Barroso was right in telling the press that the

new Romanian Commissioner, Dacian Ciolos, is the

best qualified for the agricultural portfolio.

Before becoming Romania's Agricultural Minister in

late 2007, Ciolos, a 40 year-old horticultural

engineer, was Romania's representative on the EU's

sub-Ministerial Special Committee on Agriculture

and the Ministry's Under Secretary for EU affairs.

He has also worked in DG AGRI, and spent about 8

years in the 1990s working on agriculture and

rural development in France. This French

connection disturbs some, especially from the UK,

but Ciolos is also seen as someone extremely

interested in modernizing and bringing science to

the sector.

Industry and Entrepreneurship:

BRUSSELS 00001616 008.10 OF 010

¶29. (U) Now headed by German Guenther Verheugen,

the Enterprise and Industry portfolio in the

Commission has been on the decline; Barroso

accelerated this considerably in his Friday

announcement by saying the pharmaceutical, medical

devices and cosmetics units, as well as the

European Medicines Agency, would shift to DG

SANCO. DG ENT was dealt additional blows by

losing its hold on the remainder of the Better

Regulation dossier, which has shifted to the

Secretary General's office,as well as Verheugen's

lead over the Transatlantic Economic Council.

This in many ways leaves a rump directorate that

will be focused primarily on dealing with the woes

of the auto sector, as well as "entrepreneurship".

The weaker Commissioner will still have to play a

key role in trying to support the interests of

industry in ensuring EU regulation is not overly

onerous, especially on smaller businesses.

¶30. (SBU) Italian Antonio Tajani, now Commissioner

for Transport, is at best moving laterally; some

feel the shift to Industry may be a demotion. The

56 year-old Tajani, after 15 years in the European

Parliament, is not seen as having had much impact

in the Commission, although to be fair he has been

there only seven months (he replaced Franco

Frattini when the latter became Italy's Foreign

Minister). Tajani, a career soldier journalist

and politician is close to Berlusconi and was at

the creation of the Forza Italia. DG ENT staff

are not convinced he can bring a new dynamism to

the Directorate.

Transport:

¶31. (U) The Transport Commissioner position Tajani

leaves is immediately important to us as the U.S.

and EU are negotiating the "second stage" of our

Open Skies agreement the first half of 2010.

Transport will be made into its own Directorate-

General, with the half that reported to Tajani

splitting from energy. The new Directorate

General will also oversee the European Aviation

Safety Agency, the European Railway Agency, the

European Maritime Safety Agency and the Trans-

European Transport Network Executive; it will lose

control over state aid decisions in the sector,

which will go to DG COMP. The road and rail parts

of Transport, although not now high in our

bilateral relations, may become more so with

increased U.S. interest in Europe's high speed

rail (Transport Secretary LaHood explored this

when he visited Europe in May and November, and

Federal Railroad Administrator Szabo was here two

weeks ago) and EU interest in our experience with

intelligent traffic management systems.

¶32. (SBU) The new Transport Commissioner, Estonian

Siim Kallas, 61, does not bring much specific

background to the post, but the former President,

Foreign and Finance Minister of the small Baltic

republic has built a reputation among ranking

Commission officials as a shrewd operator,

including in his oversight of the rotation of

senior Commission posts.

Maritime Affairs and Fisheries:

¶33. (U) Responsible for the Integrated Maritime

Policy and the Common Fisheries Policy, this

Commissioner is charged with balancing the

economic potential of the oceans and seas with

protecting the marine environment and meeting the

needs of coastal communities. It works closely

with the European Environmental Agency. Guiding

the Integrated Maritime Policy in the fields of

spatial planning, comprehensive marine research

and data collection, maritime surveillance, along

with economic and political concerns of the

Baltic, Mediterranean, and Arctic regions requires

a deft touch with other EU Services and agencies.

Managing the competing economic and environmental

demands of European fisheries, and the highly

charged political interaction with Member States,

BRUSSELS 00001616 009.2 OF 010

is an unenviable task.

¶34. (SBU) Putting a Greek in charge of anything

having to do with maritime affairs, as Barroso has

done with his nomination of Maria Damanaki, will

certainly bring an interesting dynamic to the

portfolio, and indeed to the College of

Commissioners. The issues that affect the

shipping industry are critical to Athens, and

Damanaki is apt to focus on commercial shipping,

as current Maltese Commissioner Borg does. A 57-

year old chemical engineer who became active in

the fight against the Greek Junta, her personality

may mesh well with Siim Kallas', helping reduce

the struggles between MARE and Transport. In

fisheries, she is likely to support France and

Spain with a continued focus on the economic

problems of the EU fishing fleets rather than on

conservation efforts, increasing US concerns about

managing endangered species and magnifying our

difference on quotas for bluefin tuna and other

commercially valuable catches.

Energy:

¶35. (U) Energy and energy security have loomed

large on the EU policy radar since the January 1,

2006 cut-off in Russian gas deliveries to Ukraine.

EU powers in this area, however, have been

limited: while it promoted internal energy market

liberalization through Single Market mechanisms,

the EU only gets the right to act on external

energy security issues with the Lisbon Treaty.

Barroso clearly wants a greater focus on this

issue, and used the announcement of Commissioner

portfolios to confirm that DG Transport and Energy

would be split into two, with energy under the new

German Commissioner, Gunther Oettinger.

¶36. (SBU) Oettinger, now Minister President for

the state of Baden-Wurttemberg, was named

Germany's Commission candidate in October despite

any European bona fides. Many, including in the

German community in Brussels, were disappointed in

the nomination, saying Merkel wanted only to get a

poorly performing Oettinger out of a critical

electoral state. This may be one reason Oettinger

was not given a more significant role. This,

coupled with Germany's dependence on Russian gas,

its opposition to a common energy market, and

Oettinger's statements that the Commission "not

exceed it competencies," raises questions about

how hard he will push to diversify Europe's gas

supply. Oettinger has a background in law and

economics. He entered the Baden-Wurttemberg

assembly in 1984 and became minister-president in

  1. As minister-president, he increased Baden-

Wurttemberg's 2020 renewable energy targets to 20%

note Baden-Wurttemberg's wind production is well

below the EU's average. Baden-Wurttemberg is also

home to auto manufacturers Porsche and Daimler.

Information Society Q now "Digital Agenda":

¶37. (SBU) The Digital Agenda/Information Society

portfolio has grown steadily in importance, as the

sector has expanded its weight in the EU economy.

The new Commissioner will oversee finalizing a 10-

year EU "Digital Agenda" to replace the i2010

program, in outlining the specific policy actions

needed to position the EU ICT market for the next

decade. The Digital Agenda will focus on

strengthening the EU ICT single market and using

ICT to boost economic growth and recovery. A

major task will be implementation of the newly

passed EU telecoms regulatory reform Q including

launching a new EU regulatory agency, expanding

the Commission's competition powers over the

sector and improving spectrum management. The

Digital Agenda will also cover improving broadband

access and quality, digital content, and continued

responsiveness to consumers.

¶38. (SBU) With a growing portfolio, Competition

BRUSSELS 00001616 010.4 OF 010

Commissioner Neelie Kroes' shift to Digital

Economy can be seen as lateral, though in practice

her influence will likely wane. Kroes is a strong

transatlanticist whose extensive business

credentials led to surprise when she aggressively

pursued competition cases against major U.S. ICT

firms, EU energy firms, and a number of cartels

during the first Barroso term. Kroes' extensive

familiarity with the U.S. ICT sector should be a

plus, especially given her recent make-up with

Microsoft. She has the potential to make major

headway toward an integrated EU ICT market and

will closely monitor telecoms incumbents for

market abuses and to protect consumers' rights.

Kroes likely will continue the tradition of close

consultation with the U.S. she developed as

Competition Commissioner, though with new U.S.

agencies.

Comment


¶39. (SBU) Barroso had little choice over whom the

member states would appoint to serve with him in

the College of Commissioners, and he was pushed by

all 27 capitals to give one portfolio or another

(six, for instance, reportedly vied for Energy).

¶40. (SBU) Given these constraints, Barroso has

done a good job. Some capitals will be concerned

(Nicosia, potentially Rome), and some portfolios

will probably cause problems for us, but in the

main the assignments look generally positive for

U.S. interests and transatlantic relations.

¶41. (SBU) The Commissioners, however, will all

grow into their portfolios in the coming weeks,

not least as they go through extensive hearings

through January before a stronger, and more

activist, European Parliament intent on

demonstrating its populist credentials. We do not

discount the likelihood that some of the

candidates noted above may have to withdraw before

the January 26 vote on the College, as happened in

  1. In this event, however, the portfolios are

unlikely to change.

¶42. (SBU) Given this need for confirmation, it may

be premature to reach out now to formally

congratulate the candidates, especially those who

will be new to the Commission. That said, early

contact after confirmation, and early meetings

next year, can only help smooth transatlantic

cooperation across the swathe of U.S.-EU economic

policy issues.

MURRAY

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