By Boaventura de Sousa Santos
August 19, 2022:
Information Clearing House
-- "Globetrotter"
- It is becoming clear that U.S.
neoconservatives have succeeded in creating a
warmongering, anti-Russian mood in Europe
through an unprecedented information war, the
consequences of which will take some time to
assess. It is, however, possible to identify the
signs of what is to come.
Losers: We do not yet know who will
win this war (or if anyone will win it, apart
from the arms industry). But we do know who will
lose the most: the Ukrainian and European
people. Parts of Ukraine are in ruins, millions
of people have been displaced, and the euro has
fallen; these are signs of defeat. In the seven
decades since the destruction caused by World
War II, Europe had risen again. Led by
high-profile politicians and supported by the
United States in its anti-communist crusade,
Western Europe managed to establish itself as a
region of peace and development (even if, alas,
at the expense of colonial and neocolonial
violence and appropriation). All it took to put
the peace and development at risk was one ghost
war: fought in Europe, but not led by Europe,
and not even in the interest of Europeans.
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Energy transition: Carbon dioxide
(CO2), which is responsible for global warming,
remains in the atmosphere for many thousands of
years. It is estimated that 40 percent of the
CO2 emitted by humans since 1850 remains in the
atmosphere, according to a
Deutsche Welle report that cited the 2020
international
Global Carbon Budget study. So, although
China is the largest emitter of CO2 today, the
fact is that, if we look at the CO2 emissions
data for 1750 to 2019 (from
Deutsche Welle’s analysis of
Our World in Data figures), Europe was
responsible for 32.6 percent of emissions, the
U.S. for 25.5 percent, China for 13.7 percent,
Africa for 2.8 percent, and South America for
2.6 percent of the total emissions during that
period. Given the cumulative emissions debt that
Europe has rung up over the course of 269 years,
the story of its recent credit toward balancing
the global carbon budget by
leading the fight for renewable energy in
recent decades is a qualified success—it is the
least they can do. We may be critical of an
energy transition that is underpinned by the
ecology of the (mostly European) rich, but at
least it was heading in the right direction. The
war in Ukraine and the fossil fuel energy crisis
it triggered were enough to make all projects
related to this energy transition evaporate.
Coal has
returned from exile, and oil and nuclear
energy are being rehabilitated. Why is
perpetuating the war more important than
advancing the energy transition? What democratic
majority has decided to follow in that
direction?
Political spectrum: The approaching
economic and social crisis will have an impact
on the political spectrum in European countries.
On the one hand, it is worth noting that it is
the most authoritarian governments (like Hungary
and Turkey) and far-right parties that have
shown the least enthusiasm for the warmongering,
which is encapsulated in the anti-Russian
triumphalism that has dominated European
politics in recent months. On the other hand,
the left-wing parties, with few exceptions, have
given up their own (left-wing) position on the
war. Some of those parties who had distinguished
themselves in the past with their stance against
NATO have remained silent in the face of its
senseless and dangerous expansion to all
continents. When the continuation of the war and
the expansion of military budgets begin to cause
the impoverishment of families, what will the
citizens think in terms of political choices
made in the name of protecting them? Will they
not be attracted to opt for the parties that
have shown the least enthusiasm for the
warmongering jingoism that caused their
impoverishment?
Citizen safety: In June 2022, Interpol
made public its
concern that a large number of the weapons
supplied to Ukraine could enter the illegal arms
market and end up in the hands of criminals.
This situation is all the more serious since
some of the equipment provided to Ukraine
includes heavy artillery. The experience of what
has happened in the past in other theaters of
war justifies this concern. For example, much of
the war material supplied by the U.S. to
Afghanistan ended up in the hands of the Taliban
against whom the U.S. army was fighting. The
U.S. tragedy of successive massacres caused by
armed civilians is well known. What will happen
in Europe if the easy accessibility of these
weapons leads to them ending up in the wrong
hands?
Normalization of Nazism: Shortly
before the war in Ukraine, several
intelligence services and security think
tanks had been warning about the strong presence
of neo-Nazi groups in Ukraine, their military
training and equipment, and the way they were
being integrated into the regular military
forces, which is unprecedented. Understandably,
the outbreak of war has put this concern to
rest. What is at issue now is whether Nazism can
be turned into a nationalist ideology like any
other and whether its recurrent attacks on
progressive politicians in Ukraine can be
converted into patriotic acts. It remains to be
seen what impact this will have in Europe,
against the background of the growth of the
extreme right.
Phantom anti-communism: The
anti-Russian hatred that has been exacerbated in
Europe by the invasion of Ukraine subliminally
contains anti-communist hatred, even if it is
known that the Communist Party is a minority in
Russia and that President Vladimir Putin is a
right-wing politician who is a friend of the
European far right. For sectors of the
ultra-right, communism is now an empty signifier
and serves as a weapon to demonize political
opponents, to justify canceling those opponents
on social media, and to promote hate speech. It
is to be feared that this hangover will remain
in political life beyond the war in Ukraine.
Crime and injustice in the Balkans:
The war in Ukraine has had the effect of
bringing to the attention of more informed
Europeans the arbitrary way Yugoslavia was
destroyed, the NATO bombing of civilian targets
in 1999, and the war crimes that were committed
by all sides in former Yugoslavia. Historical
and religious anti-Balkan prejudice—Chancellor
Klemens von Metternich of the Austrian Empire
(in office 1821-1848) used to say that Asia
began on Landstrasse, the street in Vienna where
Balkan immigrants lived—has come to be reflected
in the way
some countries in the region have been
waiting for many years to join the EU.
It is too early for a general assessment of
the times we are living through, but the signs
are disturbing and do not bode well.
Boaventura de Sousa Santos is the emeritus
professor of sociology at the University of
Coimbra in Portugal
Views expressed in this article are
solely those of the author and do not necessarily
reflect the opinions of Information Clearing House.
in this article are
solely those of the author and do not necessarily
reflect the opinions of Information Clearing House.
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