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- THE WEEK, Page 20WORLDThe Euro-Train Is Late
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- E.C. leaders paper over differences with outdated Maastricht
- timetables
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- Could it be that the epiphany of Maastricht was only a year
- ago? As the heads of the European Community's 12 members convened
- in Edinburgh's royal Palace of Holyroodhouse, the issue was no
- longer whether the visionary 1991 draft treaty calling for
- political and monetary union by 1999 was off course. That much
- had been amply certified, first by Denmark's rejection, then by
- severe strains in an interim currency mechanism, by a festering
- budget crisis and finally, less than a week earlier, by a
- referendum in nonmember Switzerland that came down against
- experimenting even with a customs affiliation. The question
- facing the Edinburgh summit, said host John Major, was whether
- the Twelve could overcome "very real difficulties" to preserving
- Maastricht at all.
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- Very real indeed, but solvable still, the participants
- decided. Late Saturday, they cobbled together a deal allowing
- Denmark to opt out of major unified policies if it ratifies the
- treaty in a second vote. Negotiators also seemed headed toward
- a compromise on seven-year spending projections aimed at closing
- gaps in living standards among E.C. member countries. German
- Chancellor Helmut Kohl insisted that "the train to Europe will
- not be stopped." Perhaps not. But it is surely not running on
- time.
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