Fortress Europe

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Cherbourg peninsula
) in Normandy

Fortress Europe (

World War II which referred to the areas of Continental Europe occupied by Nazi Germany, as opposed to the United Kingdom across the Channel
.

World War II defenses

D-day assault map of Normandy and northwest coastal France

In British phraseology, Fortress Europe meant the

]

Simultaneously, the term Festung Europa was being used by Nazi propaganda, namely to refer to

Atlantic wall, along with the reorganization of the Luftwaffe for air defense. This use of the term Fortress Europe was subsequently adopted by correspondents and historians in the English language to describe the military efforts of the Axis powers at defending the continent from the Allies.[citation needed
]

Postwar usage

Identitarian Movement of Austria
rally in Vienna on 10 November 2013.

Currently, within Europe, the term is used either to describe dumping effect of external borders in commercial matters,[1] or as a pejorative description of the state of immigration into the European Union. This can be in reference either to attitudes toward immigration, to border fortification policies pursued for instance in the Spanish North African enclaves of Ceuta and Melilla[2] or to increasing level of externalization of borders that is used to help prevent asylum seekers and other migrants from entering the European Union.[3]

For right-wing and nationalist parties such as the Freedom Party of Austria, 'Fortress Europe' is a positive term. They mostly claim that such a fortress does not really exist yet, and that immigrants can enter Europe far too easily. They often charge the southern states with insufficient border control, claiming that the latter are acting on the knowledge that immigrants tend to be more attracted to western/northern states with more generous welfare systems such as Switzerland, Germany, Austria, and Sweden.[4]

Controlled external borders

See also

  • Hindenburg Line, German defences on the Western Front of World War I
  • Siegfried Line, German defences against France in World War II
  • Maginot Line, French defenses against Germany constructed for World War II
  • Salpa Line, The last fortified defence line of Finland against the Soviet Union in World War II
  • Iron Curtain, dividing line through Europe during the Cold War

References