Sunday 15th of December 2024

the relevance of europe is vanishing fast....

Well, what a few wild weeks it has been for Europe watchers, firstly, the eruption of violent protests in Tbilisi Georgia, and the only to be expected cries of “respect peaceful protesters” and “It’s undemocratic to arrest peaceful protesters” from the usual suspects in the EU, who seem happy to ignore the fact that protesters have been shooting fireworks at police, and lobbing “peaceful” Molotov cocktails and cobblestones, bottles and anything that they can find.

 

Macron Fiddles While the EU Burns: Georgia Protests, Romanian Elections ‒ Blame it on “Russian Interference!”

   BY Seth Ferris

 

So far, and counting, resulting in the injury of more than 150 police officers.

Anti-EU and anti-NATO sentiments are growing rapidly across eastern and southern Europe

This was soon followed by the surprise win in the first round of the Romanian presidential elections by Călin Georgescu, a noted critic of both the EU and NATO, and vocal opponent of support for Ukraine.

The result seemed to come as a surprise to Western pundits, who, needless to say, immediately began to label Georgescu as “far-right” and “pro-Putin”, and there was immediately the usual wave of western media articles decrying “Russian interference and dirty dealings, with especial handwringing that the western backed pro-EU “favorite” Marcel Ciolacu came third and was eliminated from the second round.

Queue the “defenders of democracy” leaping into action, with an appeal to the Romanian Constitutional Court to overturn the first-round election results. On the 2nd of December, the Constitutional court upheld the first round results in a ruling that shook the EU to its core, ruling that the first round results were valid. Combined with the parliamentary elections, which saw a large increase in conservative parties holding seats in the parliament, which, combined with an anti-EU President would make life hell for pro-western MPs in the nations parliament.

The news for the EU kept getting worse, with the French Prime Minister Michel Barnier using special powers to force through a budget that would beggar ordinary French people to allow the government to continue sending money to Ukraine (seriously, does nobody teach history in France anymore? The last time that happened was when the French king Louis XVI pulled the same trick to support the American rebellion against the British, and ended up with the French Revolution….).

No Confidence among mortal enemies 

These “special powers” were intended to bypass a parliamentary vote on the budget, but his attempt to use them so enraged the French “opposition” (who in fact make up a significant majority of seats in the French parliament) that formerly mortal enemies in both the left-wing New Popular Front (NFP) and right-wing National Rally (NR) agreed common cause and tabled a no-confidence motion that received 331 votes, far more than the 288 required, which means that the Barnier government is no more.

This marks the first time a French government has failed a no-confidence vote since 1962, and could well mark the collapse of the 5th republic as well.

Needless to say, the ever-democratic Macron, who selected Barnier to lead a minority government despite the NFP winning the parliamentary elections, and the NR coming second, has stated he has no intention of resigning, continuing his usual raping of French democracy (such as it is).

Macron promises to consult all major parties before appointing a new PM, but given his previous track record, I wouldn’t hold my breath on a result any more democratic, or acceptable to the opposition, than the debacle that proceeded from his choice of Barnier to lead a minority government.

Out with the election results! 

In a shock announcement on December 6th, the Romanian Constitutional court annulled the election result based on claims of, you guessed it, “Russian interference”, claiming they did it to “to ensure the correctness and legality of the electoral process”

Needless to say, this has caused widespread anger in Romania amongst voters, and, quite surprisingly, Georgescu’s opponent in the second round, Elena Lasconi of the Save Romania Union party, also expressed her outrage at the decision saying

“the constitutional court’s decision is illegal, amoral and crushes the very essence of democracy: voting”

And here we see it, the essence of European “democratic values”, if you don’t get the right result, claim “Russian interference” and keep holding elections until the slaves…. I mean the public, vote the right way. After all, we can’t have the public having a say, whatever would happen to Ukraine! What would happen to the lucrative EU gravy train that they all gorge from like pigs?

It is especially vile, given that polling showed 63% would vote for Georgescu. As so usual, the EU’s motto seems to be “You will vote until you get it right!”

Western-led Coup

The main thing I take from this court led coup, and the Western support for it, is that the house of cards is crumbling. Anti-EU and anti-NATO sentiments are growing rapidly across eastern and Southern Europe, as various national publics awaken to the realization that they are little more than cheap labor and a captive market for their imperial overlords in Brussels, Berlin, Paris, and Washington.

In addition, countries like Romania are vital to two prongs of NATO imperialism, the first being Moldova, and its breakaway region of Transnistria, the second being Ukraine and the Black Sea coast. Romania is vital for both supplying Ukraine with weapons, and as an outlet for Ukrainian agricultural products, as well as providing access for NATO to the Black Sea.

There are concerns that Ukrainian naval drones used to attack Crimea and other Russian ports may be operating from Romanian ports, rather than Odessa, further raising tensions in the region.

Georgescu has promised to stop both military support for Ukraine, as well as its economic lifeline of grain exports, either of which would be enough to cause panic amongst western backers of Ukraine. Asked by the BBC whether he would stand by EU political and military commitments to support Ukraine, the candidate was unambiguous.

“Zero. Everything stops. I have to take care just about my people. We have a lot of problems ourselves,”

He went on to criticize western claims of him being a Russian agent:

“They can’t accept that the Romanian people finally said, ‘we want our life back, our country, our dignity’,” he said.

Words which echo statements by the recently reelected Georgian Prime Minister Kobakhidze, one might add.

Needless to say, it is fairly obvious that what we are seeing is a coup led by judges acting in the interest of foreign powers, not the Romanian people. In response to the court decision, Georgescu said:

“It is basically a formalized coup d’état, the rule of law is in an induced coma and justice, subordinated to political orders, has practically lost its essence, it is no longer justice,”

Surprisingly, he was supported by his opponent who would also have taken part in the second round, Elena Lasconi, who cuttingly said:

“Today is the moment when the Romanian state has trampled on democracy!”

One Giant Step Backwards!

What does this mean for Europe going forward? The next big test is the upcoming German election set for February 2025, where the “right wing” (only because they are anti-EU/NATO, their actual economic and social policies are more center left) AfD is set to cement its place as the second-biggest party, and may well ride a wave of anti-establishment anger to eclipse the CDU.

Rigged Elections and Coup Plots

Unfortunately, the prognosis isn’t good, with the stage set by staged-elections in Moldova, the attempted Maidan/Rose Revolution 2.0 in Georgia, and now the court led coup in Romania, and the ignoring of the election results in France, it appears that Europe has returned to its old autocratic, and in some case, fascistic roots.

It is highly likely that the German elections will be either rigged, or the result overturned if the result goes against the wishes of Brussels and Washington.

Meanwhile, in France, the Little Emperor Macron refuses to stand down in the face of his humiliation in the French parliamentary elections, and the failure of his self-appointed minority government under now former PM Barnier.

Macron’s near suicidal support for Ukraine at the expense of the French people, not to mention Europe at large, and his, and his fellow leaders’ undermining, some would say outright destruction, of European democracy, is almost certainly a case of Macron fiddling, while Europe burns.

 

Seth Ferris, investigative journalist and political scientist, expert on Middle Eastern affairs

 

https://journal-neo.su/2024/12/13/macron-fiddles-while-the-eu-burns-georgia-protests-romanian-elections-%e2%80%92-blame-it-on-russian-interference/

 

YOURDEMOCRACY.NET RECORDS HISTORY AS IT SHOULD BE — NOT AS THE WESTERN MEDIA WRONGLY REPORTS IT.

 

         Gus Leonisky

         POLITICAL CARTOONIST SINCE 1951.

 

PLEASE DO NOT BLAME RUSSIA IF WW3 STARTS. BLAME YOURSELF.

 

 SEE ALSO: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=49WaBG9Cljk

EU has a nightmare....

 

by Tarik Cyril Amar

 

Trump is a nightmare for the EU in more ways than one
With its submissiveness to the US and contempt for its president-elect, the bloc’s set itself up for a perfect storm of punishment

 

For a man his age, incoming US president Donald Trump has a knack for cultivating a bad-boy image. Refreshingly direct to the point of rude honesty, or dishonesty, as the case may be, he has no time for polite circumlocution. His threats are harsh, his demands unvarnished, including toward Washington’s so-called allies in Europe, which really are, at best, clients, and, more realistically, just vassals. In that spirit of candid, no-frills domination, Trump already has a long record of threatening NATO, which he sees – plausibly – as a scam in which European members fleece the US to free-ride on its insane (but that’s a different story…) military spending.

Or, in the genteel English still cultivated at The Economistthrough NATO, America is the guarantor of the continent’s security. Yeah, right, by firing missiles at Russia… The problem with Trump is that he is uncouth enough to know the real relationship is much more like Don Corleone “protecting” your funeral parlor. And he behaves accordingly: Even during his first term in the White House between 2017 and 2021, he started scaring other NATO members into higher military spending, while never allowing them to feel safe about his commitment. Art of the tough deal: Keep ‘em guessing, keep ‘em on their toes. And it worked, too: the European spongers began to pay more. So, there will be more of that, rest assured. If, that is, there will be a NATO to speak of.

Even less noticed is the fact that the new old US president – and thus capo dei capi of the West – is not much kindlier disposed toward the EU. And yet there it is: Trump’s frank, open, and long-standing dislike for that strange bureaucratic behemoth that is about as democratic as the former Soviet Union, less efficient than the Habsburg Empire, and so full of its global “norm-setting” mission that even American “indispensability” looks oddly old-fashioned by comparison.

As early as the beginning of 2017, when the great American bruiser gate-crashed the White House for the first time, The Economist warned its European readers to “be afraid” of Trump, a man harboring “indifference” and “contempt” for the EU. Really? How unheard of! The raunchy-tycoon-turned-peremptory-president, the British establishment Pravda of neoliberalism and Russophobia explained, would seek to shatter the EU by playing “bilateralism.” That, of course, is Euro-babble for respecting individual countries’ governments by taking their sovereignty more seriously than power-grabbing delusions of grandeur in Brussels. And – oh, horror! – he might even try to talk Russia. (Spoiler: back then he did not – big mistake.)

That, however, was 2017. Now, things have moved on. Even before Trump won his second presidential election by crushing his Democratic opponents, The Economistadmitted that “’Trump-proving’ Europe” is a notion doomed to fail, which means EU leaders may well become geopolitical roadkill.” How so, you may wonder?

Well, first of all there is Russia. Regarding Moscow, Trump seems ready to talk, and in a substantial manner we have not seen since the end of the Cold War: He has publicly signaled that he does not believe in trying to coerce Moscow by further escalation; his freshly appointed advisers Mike Waltz and Keith Kellogg, though known for ambiguous signals in the past, will fall into line, as they should as public servants. And if not, they’ll be fired, Trump-style, fast and without remorse.

To say the least, Trump no longer feels as restrained by Washington’s deep-state, deep-freeze Cold War re-enactors as during his first term. Sure, it’s the US: there is always the possibility someone might try to murder him, again. But if he stays among the living, which is likely, then it’s payback time: Talking to Russia now is one delicious way in which he will dish out well-deserved retribution for both the media-lawfare circus of Russia Rage (aka ‘Russiagate’) in which his opponents weaponized slander and disinformation against him. And, more importantly, Russia has been winning the war in Ukraine, not only against Kiev but also, in effect, against the West. In sum, Trump has less reason to be afraid of his own backstabbers at home, and Washington has more reason to be much more careful about Russia.

Moscow, meanwhile, has made it clear repeatedly that any new agreements would have to be mutually beneficial. The time of Gorbachevian naivete will never return. Yet, at the same time, Russia does seem open to – serious – talks: The Russian leadership does not merely carefully watch Trump, as you would expect. It also sends back calibrated pings that signal cautious appreciation of his overtures, as recently over his criticism of firing Western missiles at Russia.

Hence, nightmare number one for the EU: Trump is serious about ending US support for the failed project of inflicting a geopolitical demotion on Russia via a proxy war in Ukraine. That will leave not only the regime of Ukraine’s past-use-by-date leader Vladimir Zelensky high and dry but remaining fanatics in the EU as well. In the best-case scenario, the US will leave the European vassals with the cost of the postwar, whatever shape that may take. Trump has already said as much. In the worst-case scenario, EU elites could try going it alone. That is, worst-case for them, in every (un)imaginable way: economically, politically, and yes, militarily, too.

And behind Trump’s willingness to make good on his election promise to end the American cluster-fiasco in and over Ukraine, lurks the possibility of a much larger turn toward – wait for it! – diplomacy in the US-Russia relationship. Perhaps it is early days to mention that other long-forgotten D-word – and it would also take two to tango, of course – but a phase of détente cannot be excluded. If it were to take place, America’s European vassals would come to regret burning their bridges with Moscow to please Washington.

Then, nightmare number two, there is the economy. The US-EU relationship is the single largest trade connection in the world, worth about $11 trillion per year. That, you may think, constitutes a lot of common interest and thus reasons for treating each other if not gently then, at least, cautiously. Nope, that’s not how this works, because the relationship is lopsided, and Trump is furious about it. For him, the EU’s trade surplus with the US is yet another way in which shifty Europeans have been milking America. His weapon of choice to retaliate and rectify the situation are, of course, tariffs, the higher the better. Even before his re-election, Goldman Sachs warned that his rule could cost the EU as a whole a full percent of GDP. And yes, that’s a lot, especially for a continent already largely economically depressed, demographically declining, and with badly squeezed public finances.

What can EU leaders, those sadly submissive vassals about to be abused even worse than usual by their hegemon, do now? Frankly, not much. It’s already too late: They have made themselves dependent as never before on whoever happens to win the strange event Americans call “elections” and gets to mess with the world from the White House. And that is not at all Trump’s fault, by the way. (No, and not “the Russians!” either…).

Take, for instance, the EU’s wannabe despot Ursula von der Leyen. Building her own power grab – like Stalin, as it happens – on a mix of executive apparat overreach, crony networking, and ideological bigotry, she has made one serious mistake that may cost her dearly: She has cozied up so shamelessly to the outgoing Biden administration that, serious rumor has it, Trump cannot stand her. So, alternatives are in demand: Maybe he likes Italy’s Giorgia Meloni better? Or originally the Netherlands, now NATO’s Mark Rutte, who is constantly praised for his alleged “Trump-handling” skills?

But here is the problem with that, frankly, silly approach: Trump is not an idiot. Attempts to “handle” him are insultingly obvious and, if he tolerates them temporarily, then it’s only to handle his would-be handlers back. And then the irony is, of course, that the only EU leaders Trump respects, such as Viktor Orban of Hungary, are outcasts among their own: Good luck recruiting them now to make up for how much he disrespects all the others. Maybe they’ll even help, a little, Ursula, Olaf, and Emmanuel. But it’ll cost you, because they will – rightly – set their own conditions and gain great leverage.

What about Danegeld perhaps? Danegeld, you must know, was what the hapless inhabitants of the British Isles paid the seaborne Viking marauders in the Dark Ages. The system was simple: pay up or be plundered and slaughtered. You think that sounds a little primitive for today’s sophisticated Europeans? Never underestimate how low they will stoop. Ursula von der Leyen has already suggested that one way to mollify Trump might be to just buy even more perversely expensive LNG from the US. Christine Lagarde, head of the European Central Bank, has gone even further, pleading for a whole ‘Buy American’ program, including – surprise, surprise! – arms to assuage Trump’s ire.

Desperate? You bet. Humiliating? Obviously. Yet what’s worse, it’s not going to work. Here’s why: Even if Trump condescends to accepting such tributes from his European subjects, he will never lose sight of the one thing that really interests him (apart from his own money, power, and fame): American advantage. Whatever the Europeans will offer and however low they will kowtow, in the end, any deal will be good only for one side, the US. That’s ironic, because Russia, for one, and possibly China as well can expect the minimum of respect that makes mutual benefit at least possible. That’s because they have stood up to American bullying. For the Europeans, though, it’s a Catch 22 now. One way or the other, they will pay even more dearly than before for their historic failure after the Cold War: When they should obviously have emancipated themselves from the US, they sold out worse than ever. And without need. To paraphrase a past master of politics: It’s worse than a crime, it’s self-abuse.

 

https://www.rt.com/news/609361-trump-eu-nightmare-punishment/

 

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YOURDEMOCRACY.NET RECORDS HISTORY AS IT SHOULD BE — NOT AS THE WESTERN MEDIA WRONGLY REPORTS IT.

 

         Gus Leonisky

         POLITICAL CARTOONIST SINCE 1951.

 

PLEASE DO NOT BLAME RUSSIA IF WW3 STARTS. BLAME YOURSELF.