Greece: The Pearl Cast Before Swine
By Israel Shamir
July 08, 2015 "Information
Clearing House"
-
"UNZ"
- Greece is the pearl of Mediterranean, the place generations of
foreigners from Lord Byron to Graves to
Fowles have fallen in love with. From philosophy to feta, from
history to yoghurt, from poetry to honey they provided the example
to follow. Their priests preserve the pristine faith; their fighters
defeated Mussolini; their Helen is the epitome of female beauty.
They also make lousy wine called retsina and listen to loud
dreadful music called bouzouki so we would temper our
Hellenophilia.
Now they have given us another example to follow:
how to beat banksters at their own game. The spectacular victory of
the Syriza government in Greece at the national referendum was quite
unexpected: the polls wavered between an indecisive result and
straightforward support of the EU plans around 51:49. However, the
Greeks strongly confirmed the mandate of the government. The main
problem was and remains the Syriza’s resolve and determination.
The ruling party took an unnecessary risk while
calling for referendum, for they had already won the elections under
their own slogans just a few months ago. This implied their
wobbliness, as if they would prefer to lose and pass the hot potato
to somebody else. Moreover, they did not try to win the referendum:
no campaign for NO, no media coverage of demos for NO. Did they wish
to lose or to win with a slightest possible margin? Possibly. The
Greek people rejected the stratagem and called upon them to proceed.
Now it is the business of the government to
organise a smooth and fast Grexit from the Eurozone and switch to
the new Drachma. A really decisive government would leave the EU and
NATO, turning the tables completely. Refusing the bailout is good
but not enough.
The Greeks were right to reject paying the debts,
for these debts were forced upon them by the giant vampire squid,
Goldman Sachs, in words of
Matt Taibbi. “The first thing you need to know about Goldman
Sachs is that it’s everywhere. The world’s most powerful investment
bank is a great vampire squid wrapped around the face of humanity,
relentlessly jamming its blood funnel into anything that smells like
money”. As we now know, Goldman Sachs (you do not have to be an
anti-Semite to hate them) cooked the book,s falsely pretending
Greece had a high credit rating though they knew of its huge debts.
When the debts snowballed, they pulled the rug and collapsed
Greece’s rating, bailing out banks at the expense of the European
taxpayer.
Out of €320 billion, Greece received and used
about €20 billion, while the principal sum went to the banksters.
Greece could not pay it off: after five years of trying, the country
is in worse shape and in deeper debt than it ever was. Austerity has
destroyed lives and infrastructure. The bankers planned to sell all
Greek assets: harbours, railways, lands; and you can envisage
yourself who would buy it. The negotiations between the EU, IMF and
Greece were dishonest, explains
Ashoka Mody in widely read and technical essay. That’s why the
Greeks elected the far-left party Syriza and its far-right
counterpart INIL to break the rules of the rigged game.
Greece is a small country and it could not take on
the whole EU banking and political establishment on its own.
Fortunately, there is a country able and willing to help. That is
its sister in faith, Russia. Greece for Russia is like Italy for
Catholics, like England for the US: the source of culture and
religion. The Greek priests had brought their faith to what was to
become Russia. Greece and Russia share the same Byzantine legacy.
Arnold Toynbee, the British scholar of history, spoke of few
European civilisations, some abortive (Far Western and
Scandinavian), and two fully developed: Western European, based on
the Church of Rome, and Orthodox Christian, based on the Church of
Constantinople. Russia and Greece belong to the last one.
The EU is a reincarnation of the Roman Empire and
that of Charlemagne. It is at home in France and Germany, but
completely foreign for Swedes and Greeks, for Letts and Bulgars, for
Ukrainians and Russians. It has over-extended itself and brought
huge calamities upon its people and on their neighbours.
Mind you, this is not the first time the people of
the West have colonised the Orthodox Christian East: in 1204, they
smashed the Byzantine Empire and established their kingdoms and
duchies, eventually erased by the Turks. After Greece was restored
in 1821, it went back under the Western tutelage, and remained
there. In 1945, the Greeks made a heroic effort to liaise with
Russia, but Churchill employed the defeated German troops to smash
the Greek independence movement and installed his agents in Athens.
Soviet Russia did not object much, as under the Yalta agreement
Greece was going to the West, while Poland was going to the East.
Now the West has both Poland and Greece. The Greeks were
frog-marched to NATO and to EU, and they would have remained forever
captive but for the bankers’ greed.
Russia is the only part of the Byzantine world
that remained independent and adhered to its faith. Russia is a
natural partner for Greece and its Balkan neighbours. Now Russia can
help Greece: by buying its wine, cheese and olives that do not sell
well in the West, by sending pilgrims to venerate shrines under its
cruel blue sky, by encouraging its industries, by giving its youth a
meaning of life beyond caring for German tourists. And the Greeks
are fond of Russians, so their sympathies are mutual.
The Syriza party, and its partner ANEL were famous
(some would correct it to ‘notorious’) for their pro-Russian
sympathies. However, since they were elected, they began a game of
playing Brussels against Moscow, like a young tease who encourages
two suitors to keep both in her thrall. The Greek expert and London
Lawyer Alexander Merkoulis
listed the Russian attempts to help Greece. They offered five
billion euros to build a gas pipeline to Greece, and Greece would be
able to sell gas to Europe. Miller of Gazprom went to Athens with
prepared documents, and came back empty-handed.
Tsipras promised to come to Moscow for the May 9
celebrations, and failed to show up at the last moment. He agreed to
extend anti-Russia sanctions while sitting at the St Petersburg
forum. This undermined Russian trust. “The Russians must be getting
increasingly fed up with someone who repeatedly takes them to the
Church door – and then at the last moment runs away”, said
Merkoulis.
It appears that the Ukraine story has repeated
itself. Russia offered huge credits to the Ukraine in 2013, it could
buy its industrial output, invigorate its industry and agriculture,
but the then President Yanukovych did not dare. He ended in exile,
his country ruined; it will take them 20 years to regain the
positions they had in 2013, say the EU experts.
Greece is not likely to go for a civil war: they
had it in 1945, but the old wounds may reopen. The most pro-Russian
area of 1945 insurgency – the Isle of Crete – heavily (75%) voted
against the EU in the recent referendum. The Syriza government will
try to renegotiate with the IMF and the EU by bluffing them with the
Russian alternative. Even if they will get relief, their economy is
not likely to come back to normal.
The problem is not Greece, the problem is the EU.
This body has a triple purpose. It is (1) a union of bankers against
people, (2) a harness with which the US can drive colonised Europe,
and (3) a tool for de-industrialisation and de-education of this
most developed continent. Under the EU, masses of beggars from
Romania and African refugees descend on the North. Under the EU,
once-industrial Latvia and Hungary became basket-cases, their high
tech moved elsewhere. Under the EU, the social welfare system has
been dismantled, while sexual education of children and gender games
have gone into a high drive. That is why nations – from Sweden to
Italy, from England to Spain – call to break up the union.
Greece would be better off out of the EU.
Everybody would. Distressingly, its Minister of Finance Yanis
Varoufakis, a stubborn negotiator, a son of 1945 fighter, who could
lead his country to freedom, has been dismissed following the
referendum. Alexis Tsipras will try to negotiate himself, and he is
a smooth operator, say the Greeks.
There is just one problem, that of guts and their
lack thereof. Too many leaders hesitate and contemplate instead of
acting. We mentioned Yanukovych, but this is a long list of names,
beginning with Allende, a man of peace killed in a coup. The leaders
that stood up to the vampire squids – from Nasser to Putin – were
branded “a new Hitler”, but actually managed better. The US always
dares: to conquer Panama and Granada, to attack Afghanistan and
Iraq, and this daring is a secret of its success.
Still it is too early for despair. The referendum
was a victory, and a victory can do wonders even to wet and wobbling
leaders. It would be a shame to cast the pearl of Greece to the
banker swine.
Israel Shamir, also known by the names Jöran Jermas and Adam
Ermash, is a citizen of Sweden and Russian writer and journalist. He is a
commentator on Arab–Israeli relations and Jewish culture.
adam@israelshamir.net