HYPERBOLE WATCH: I’ve read the

HYPERBOLE WATCH: I’ve read the New York Times for long enough to pick out the good foreign correspondents from the bad ones. Elaine Sciolino is a good one. But this story about the EU leaders’ meeting in Brussels contains the following sentence: “Never before in the history of the European Union have its members had ...

By , a professor of international politics at the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy at Tufts University and co-host of the Space the Nation podcast.

HYPERBOLE WATCH: I've read the New York Times for long enough to pick out the good foreign correspondents from the bad ones. Elaine Sciolino is a good one. But this story about the EU leaders' meeting in Brussels contains the following sentence: "Never before in the history of the European Union have its members had to grapple with two more different impulses on foreign policy." First of all, the phrase "common European foreign and security policy" has been pretty much an oxymoron from its inception, so in the end the current division doesn't amount to much change from the status quo. Second of all, go back to 1989-90 and read what Thatcher and Mitterand were saying about German reunification, and you'll see that the current dust-up pales in comparison. [But the EU didn't exist then. It was called the European Community until 1992--ed. It could that Sciolino meant the sentence in this way, but it's vague enough to suggest otherwise]

HYPERBOLE WATCH: I’ve read the New York Times for long enough to pick out the good foreign correspondents from the bad ones. Elaine Sciolino is a good one. But this story about the EU leaders’ meeting in Brussels contains the following sentence: “Never before in the history of the European Union have its members had to grapple with two more different impulses on foreign policy.” First of all, the phrase “common European foreign and security policy” has been pretty much an oxymoron from its inception, so in the end the current division doesn’t amount to much change from the status quo. Second of all, go back to 1989-90 and read what Thatcher and Mitterand were saying about German reunification, and you’ll see that the current dust-up pales in comparison. [But the EU didn’t exist then. It was called the European Community until 1992–ed. It could that Sciolino meant the sentence in this way, but it’s vague enough to suggest otherwise]

Daniel W. Drezner is a professor of international politics at the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy at Tufts University and co-host of the Space the Nation podcast. Twitter: @dandrezner

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