But the
real answer to the problem is dealing with
Europe’s support for Washington’s criminal wars.
In
other words, citizens of Europe should be
addressing the root cause of the problem, not
reacting to the symptoms. We should be shaming
the villains, not blaming the victims.
We
should be demanding legal sanctions and
prosecution of government leaders over what are
gross violations of international law.
European governments stand accused of war
crimes, yet we allow them to get away with mass
murder. Then when we incur secondary problems
such as the massive displacement of refugees
from wars and conflicts – that our governments
have fomented – we illogically and cravenly
focus on blaming the victims of our governments’
criminality.
Part of
the public shaming of the villains would involve
holding those European members of the US-led
NATO military alliance accountable to
international law. Individual government and
military leaders should be prosecuted for war
crimes and crimes against peace. The inculpating
evidence is out there. The fact that European
governments have waged dubious overseas wars –
with impunity – is the real shame and root of
the problem.
Wars in
former Yugoslavia, Afghanistan, Iraq, Libya,
Syria and Ukraine, as well as drone
assassinations in Pakistan, Somalia and Yemen,
plus covert military operations in Mali, Niger
and Ivory Coast have all involved complicity of
European member states. Britain and France in
particular have been most prominent in carrying
out US-led NATO military interventions, both
overt and covert, as in Libya and Syria,
respectively.
The
countless millions of people displaced across
Central Asia, the Middle East and Africa are a
direct result of European militarism in
conjunction with that of Washington. Even the
French intervention in Mali and Central Africa
Republic are questionable under international
law. Both were launched without United Nations
Security Council resolutions.
Over
the past five years, Libya perhaps represents
the most egregious case of illegal war conducted
by NATO and its European members, including
Norway, Denmark, Netherlands, Italy in addition
to Britain and France. Along with the US, these
countries violated a UN mandate to bomb Africa’s
most prosperous and stable country into a bloody
shambles. Thousands of civilians were killed in
the seven-month US-EU blitzkrieg, culminating in
the brutal murder of leader Muammar Gaddafi.
Libya
was ransacked into a failed state, over-run by
illegally armed extremist groups, and it was
European governments who authored the descent
into barbarism. Where are the calls for justice
for these atrocious crimes in so-called
civilized, law-abiding, Nobel-prize-winning
Europe?
Yet
last week, American and European military chiefs
were calling
for even more military intervention in Libya and
Syria. This declaration of military intervention
– regardless of its stated purpose of “fighting
terrorism” – is in itself an act of illegal
aggression under international law; according to
respected war crimes lawyer Christopher Black,
speaking to this author. So, where was the
public outrage and calls for prosecution over
this flagrant bout of more criminality by our
European governments and their American ally?
Even
where countries have not been directly hit by
NATO’s military, such as Eritrea, Sudan and
Cameroon, refugees coming from such places are
doing so largely because of the lawless
gateway-to-Europe that Libya was turned into by
NATO’s destruction.
This
week we see the Danish parliament voting
into law measures which allow its police to
confiscate assets of asylum-seekers worth more
than $1,400. The move has caused international
controversy out of concern that the Danish
authorities are infringing on human rights.
The
Danish law is only one in a litany of grim signs
that Europe is becoming an increasingly hostile
place towards refugees. Countries like Hungary,
Slovenia, Poland and Austria are closing their
borders. Even formerly more open Germany and
Sweden are restricting the intake of refugees
and sending many back to where they came from.
On one
hand, it is understandable that residents in
different countries are alarmed by the surge in
the numbers of foreign nationals. Especially
when the foreigners are visibly different in
color, dress and religious practice. Let’s cut
to the chase. Muslims from North Africa and the
Middle East are of concern for many Europeans.
The
spate of sex assaults in German and Swedish
cities allegedly carried out by “Arab-looking
young men” has fueled a popular backlash. But
there is a danger of hysterical over-reaction
that feeds political interests of racist groups.
A French magazine cartoon depicting the little
Syrian boy who died from drowning as a grown-up
sex attacker is a despicably irresponsible
incitement.
So too
is tarring refugees as “terrorist sympathizers”.
Following the jihadist terror attacks in Paris
on November 13, there has been a dramatic rise
in anti-Muslim hate assaults reported in Britain
and France. The Paris terrorists may have
infiltrated with the droves of Syrian refugees
into Europe. But surely the real focus should be
on why and how these jihadists went to Syria in
the first place. And why are millions of people
being displaced from that country.
This
week it was also reported
that asylum-seekers in Britain are being forced
to wear brightly colored wristbands in order for
them to qualify for food handouts. The visible
form of identity has led to the wearers being
abused on the streets, according to the Guardian
newspaper.
Previously, asylum-seekers in the British town
of Middlesbrough had their house doors painted
red by a local authority. Again, the
discrimination led to attacks by racist thugs.
Whether
officially or unofficially, Europe is becoming a
racist, xenophobic fortress. Given the
continent’s own history of war, displacement,
fascism and genocidal persecution it should be
deeply troubling that it is once again on a
slippery slope to such nihilistic mentality. It
is doubling worrying when we hear apologists for
hard-line measures against refugees talking
about “preserving European blood and
culture.” Given Europe’s millennia of
migrations, what “pure blood” is there
to talk of apart from malign mythical notions?
To
compare Europe to a sinking boat overloaded with
teeming migrants is also asinine and
irresponsible. Europe’s intake of one million
refugees last year amounts to 0.2 per cent of
its total 500 million population. Denmark’s
intake of 21,300 asylum-seekers last year
constitutes less than 0.4 per cent of its
national population.
Europe’s refugee “crisis” is turning into an
irrational, xenophobic panic that is not
justified by facts. It is misleading people into
dangerous political territory of persecution,
racist discrimination and ultimately fascist
societies that infringe on all our rights as
citizens.
But far
more importantly, the misplaced hysteria over
refugees is a distraction from the real issue.
Which is that European states are complicit in
illegal wars of aggression and covert
regime-change interventions.
Political leaders like Britain’s David Cameron
and France’s Francois Hollande, as well as
Nicolas Sarkozy before him should be prosecuted
in an international court for crimes against
peace. European citizens not holding their rogue
governments to account is the real problem.
Shame
the villains, don’t blame the victims. If we
don’t stand up to lawless tyranny, then we are
its next victims.