Coercive
Engineered Migration: Zionism’s War on Europe
Is Victor Orban the 'Chavez of Europe? (Part 1 of an
11 part series)
By Gearóid Ó Colmáin
"If
aggression against another foreign country means
that it strains its social structure, that it
ruins its finances, that is has to give up its
territory for sheltering refugees, what is the
difference between that kind of aggression and
the other type, the more classical type, when
someone declares war, or something of that
sort."
— Sawer Sen, India’s Ambassador to the UN
February
01, 2016 "Information
Clearing House"
-
"Dissident
Voice"
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In an EU press
conference on September 3rd, 2015 Hungarian Prime
Minister Victor Orban candidly referred to the
current refugee crisis in Europe as “Germany’s
problem”. Orban was referring to the fact that
refugees amassing at the border of Hungary were
heading, for the most part, to Germany. The
Hungarian Prime Minister stressed that most of the
refugees did not intend to stay in Hungary. Orban
has come under criticism for his decision to erect a
security fence on the Hungarian/Serbian border in
order to stem the flow of migrants entering
Hungarian territory illegally.
While most
of the European media have portrayed Orban as a
xenophobic, far right dictator, the decision to
erect a fence was carried out in compliance with EU
regulations, which require that all immigrants
entering the Shengen zone be registered by the
police at the border. Yet, paradoxically, Brussels
is criticizing the Hungarian Prime Minister for
attempting to comply with EU laws!
France’s
daily Le Monde refers to the Hungarian
Prime Minister as the man who is attempting to ‘criminalise‘
illegal immigrants. It is indeed a strange country
that would criminalize those who break its laws!
So why is
Orban coming under fire? Since coming to power in
2010 Victor Orban has implemented domestic, social
and political policies that run counter to those
dictated by the EU commission. In 2013 Hungary
closed down the office of the International
Monetary Fund, bringing the country’s finance under
state control.
The
International Monetary Fund is a key institution of
US/Zionist global governance and there are few
countries who have escaped its clutches of permanent
debt. Therefore, the decision of the Hungarian
government to show the IMF the door was nothing
short than an act of bold insubordination to US
imperialism.
Hungary has
also come under criticism for media laws which ban
foreign interference from US propaganda outlets such
as Voice of America, which the Hungarian
government deems to be contrary to the public
interest. Consequently, the European Union, which is
perfectly happy to ban Iranian television stations,
has criticized Hungary for violations of ‘freedom of
speech’.
Orban told
an audience in Chatham House in 2013 that he
believed there was a “leftist and green conspiracy”
in Europe against “traditional values”. Orban is no
doubt referring to the constant tirades made by war
mongering ‘leftist’ zionists such as EU MP Daniel
Cohen Bendit against Hungary. Bendit has ironically
called Orban the “Chavez of Europe”. This example of
ideological name-calling epitomises the
meaninglessness of the left/right political paradigm
in the post-Soviet era.
Orban’s
‘nationalism’ is not an imperial project. It is,
rather, a national philosophy which goes against,
and weakens, imperialism. It is nationalism in the
sense of national liberation from neo-colonial
oppression in the form of international financial
institutions and the EU.
Orban’s
defense of ‘traditional values’ has brought him
ideologically closer to the foreign policy agenda of
Russian President Vladimir Putin, who visited the
country in 2014. During Putin’s visit to Hungary,
Orban praised the Russian leader’s role in
attempting to find a peaceful solution to the Syrian
war. In 2014 Orban told Hungarian media that the
Ukrainian war was caused by the desire of the United
States to gain control of Eastern Europe. He also
pointed out that the United States wanted to draw
Hungary into the crisis.
The
Hungarian Prime Minister has made no secret of his
desire to pursue an independent domestic and foreign
policy. Hungary also has close ties to China and
Iran. Therefore, to attempt, as some analysts have
done, to portray Victor Orban as part of the
reactionary, imperialist, xenophobic right is to
oversimplify the complex interplay of ideological
and geopolitical forces in the current global
political arena and, in particular, the deep forces
determining the generation and management of the
refugee/migrant crisis. Therefore, to compare
Orban’s opposition to immigration to that of British
Prime Minister David Cameron is to oversimplify the
matter.
British
Prime Minister David Cameron plays up his opposition
to immigration. But this has nothing to do with the
real agenda of the British government. Cameron’s
anti-immigration policies are simply the appeal to
xenophobia which the Tories require to maintain
their electoral votes. Cameron’s regime serves
international finance capitalism in its most brutal
form and finance capitalism needs constant
immigration. Orban’s objections are based more on
his conflict with finance capitalism and his
criticisms of the liberal ideology driving
globalisation.
Victor
Orban has proposed that the refugees/migrants be
sent back to Turkey until the end of the war in
Syria. This is a sensible proposal. The ‘Refugees
are Welcome’ slogan and the subsequent marches in
favour of immigration served US/Israeli geostrategic
objectives. Currently, few people seem to realise
that and, as in the Arab Spring of 2011, the
bandwagon of US imperialism has no shortage of
passengers.
In this
sense, Victor Orban of Hungary is, in a very limited
way, worthy of the epithet ‘Hugo Chavez of Europe’.
While many of Victor Orban’s political policies are
far from left-wing, (for example, the banning of
communist symbols) his embrace of a traditionalist,
dirigiste form of capitalism with strong pro-family
social policies and a multi-vectored foreign policy
brings his country closer to countries such as
Venezuela, Belarus, Eritrea and other nation-states
attempting to maintain their sovereignty in the face
of imperialism.
A deeply
biased and hostile article on Le Monde
nevertheless accurately describes Orban’s politics
as ‘economically left wing while culturally right
wing’. However, qualification is needed here. His
policies are ‘left-wing’ from the point of view of
global corporate finance but Orban’s economic
policies
favour the national, patriotic bourgeoisie and
are therefore right-wing from the perspective of the
working class.
Hungary’s
multi-vectored foreign policy has had benefits for
the country and especially for other Southern
Hemisphere partner countries such as Venezuela. For
example, a photo-voltaic energy technology product
developed in Hungary and financed by China, was
exported to Venezuela in 2013. It is believed
that the new Hungarian technology could not only
enable Venezuela to become self-sufficient in
electricity, it could turn the country into a major
exporter of electricity. Venezuela’s cooperation
with Hungary is vital to the country’s
industrialisation.
What all
the countries mentioned above have in common is an
attempt to construct a national voluntarism in order
to stem the tide of ‘globalisation’ and all its
concomitant social and economic ills. This involves
a national, patriotic bourgeoisie in alliance with
the working class against the ‘internationalist’
compradore bourgeoisie and the ‘New World Order’. It
is, in many respects, a reversal of the class
dynamics of the Second World War when the Soviet
Union led an organised international working class
in alliance with the remnants of the democratic
bourgeoisie against international fascism.
Hungarian
Prime Minister Victor Orban came to power in a
country that had been ravaged by the IMF and a
deeply corrupt ‘socialist’ party that had emerged
from decades of welfare state capitalism under Janos
Kadar. Kadar, a liberal, replaced the communist
Rakossi during the counter-revolution in Eastern
Europe in the 1950s, when capitalism with ‘socialist
‘ characteristics replaced Cominform socialism. The
process was euphemistically referred to as
‘de-Stalinisation’ but was, in fact, an attempt to
restore capitalist modes of production.
Hungary’s
ideological crisis culminated in the attempted coup
of 1956, when the CIA, operating out of Vienna,
attempted to overthrow the embattled regime with the
help of former Nazi collaborators. The 1956
‘Hungarian Revolution’ was, in many respects, an
intelligence prototype for many US orchestrated
regime change operations to follow decades later.
Although,
Orban is said to have ‘fought against communism’ as
a student, he was, like many others of his
generation, a fighter against a particular type of
capitalism which he perceived as a “leftist
conspiracy” against the people. Marxist Leninists
have always considered the triumph of Khrushchevite
revisionism in the USSR in 1956 and the subsequent
‘de-stalinisation’ of the USSR and of the Popular
Democracies of Eastern Europe to have constituted a
counter-revolution against the dictatorship of the
proletariat.
Khrushchev’s reforms involved abandoning
state-centralised planning, the re-introduction of
profit as the regulator of production, combined with
a cynical and anti-Marxist foreign policy of
‘peaceful co-existence’ between capitalism and
socialism. In order to justify these policies
Khrushchev wrote a long mendacious speech slandering
Stalin. Every claim against Stalin in Khrushchev’s
speech has since been proven to have been a lie.
Soviet revisionism killed not only socialism in the
USSR but, with the notable exception of Albania, the
hope of socialism throughout the world. This
destruction of Marxism Leninism by the Soviet and
later Chinese revisionists led to a revival of
Trotskyism in Western imperial countries. And it is
this ‘New Left’ that constitutes the vanguard of
contemporary Western imperialism.
In this
sense, Orban is correct in his analysis of a
“leftist” conspiracy against civilization, for what
we see today is the triumph of Trotskyist ideology
in the form of Zionism and neo-conservativism, where
proletarian internationalism has been subsumed by
the ‘human rights’ international on the one hand and
‘islamist jihad’ on the other, a new ‘revolutionary’
alliance waging war against the working class.
One only
has to observe the clenched fist of the US colour
revolutions and the constant appeal to youthful
rebellion to understand how capitalism is now
deepening its grip on humanity through the
appropriation of leftist, revolutionary symbology.
Indeed, contemporary US capitalism is, to employ a
phrase of Trotsky’s, ‘permanent revolution’. Or, in
the
words of US Grand Strategist General Thomas
Barnett, “US-style globalisation is pure
socio-economic revolution.”
But it is a
revolution which wages war on the working class. One
of the results of the ‘Arab Spring’ in Egypt was the
abrogation of labour laws requiring companies to pay
workers during periods of factory closure due to
lack of product demand. Many of the strikes that
resulted in the overthrow of Mubarak’s regime were
led by US funded ‘independent’ labour organisations.
Given
Orban’s intransigence on the refugee issue, he is
likely to face a US/Israeli backed ‘popular protest
movement’ in an attempt to effect regime change.
Colour revolutions often involve the transportation
of thousands of foreigners to the place of protest
by US intelligence agencies operating through NGOS.
This happened in Belarus in 2010. Many of the youths
attempting to get into Hungary could be used as a
battering ram to destablize the Hungarian
nation-state.
Since the
fomentation of the ‘Arab Spring’ by the CIA and its
numerous NGOS in 2011, NATO’s total destruction of
Libya and its proxy war against Syria, millions of
people have been turned into refugees. That is why
they are fleeing to Europe. But it is not the
principal reason for the ‘current crisis’, or rather
the current phase of an ongoing and deepening
crisis.
NATO’s
invasion and destruction of Libya in 2011 has led to
millions of desperate people attempting to cross the
Mediterranean sea. This ongoing crisis has received
varying levels of coverage from the mass media. For
example, the sinking of a boat in the Mediterranean
in July 2015 only received a four line report in the
French Le Figaro newspaper, in spite of the
fact that a hundred people were drowned!
However,
since the publication of a drowned boy washed up on
the shores of Turkey in 2015,the refugee crisis has
entered a new phase, with the photo of the boy in
question being used as an excuse to drum up public
support for NATO air-strikes against Syria in order
to “stop the massacres”
While no
one seems to know just how many Syrians are among
the migrants fleeing to Europe, there has been a
media fixation on these particular migrants, in
spite of the fact that they only represent a
minority of the current migrants amassing at the
Hungarian border.
The debate
about what should be done to manage the
refugee/migrant crisis turns on whether or not they
should be welcomed into European countries. However,
this pro or anti migrant debate masks a new and
highly destructive phase in US/NATO geopolitical
strategy. Many of the migrants at the Hungarian
border are coming from refugee camps in Turkey.
Austrian intelligence has reportedly
revealed that US government agencies are funding
the transfer of these refugees to Europe in an
attempt to destabilize the continent. This new
geostrategic initiative involves using desperate
refugees as weapons for the purposes of US/Zionist
divide and rule of the European continent.
France’s
Radio Internationale has revealed that over
95 percent of migrants in the current flow into
Europe are young males between 20 and 35 years old.
Many are said to be fleeing conscription in the
Syrian army, which has lost thousands of brave men
and women since the start of the Zionist war on
their country. The preponderance of young, fit males
among the so-called ‘refugees’ has also been
confirmed to this author personally by researchers
of Russian state television RT. When asked about the
refugee issue on France’s BMTV, Russian Ambassador
to France Alexandre Orlov
said “All I can see are young men fleeing the
war instead of defending their country”. So, why are
there so few vulnerable women and children among the
refugees escaping the war in Syria?
The journey
across the Mediterranean to Europe can normally cost
up to 11,000 dollars, more money than most European
workers manage to save from years of hard labour,
yet we are
told that millions of war-ravaged Iraqis and
Syrians are suddenly able to pay this colossal sum
to make the journey to Europe. How is this possible?
The
glorification of the young men fleeing conscription
in Syria, coupled with the demonisation of the
heroic men and women in Syria fighting for their
country’s freedom, is deeply indicative of the moral
turpitude of our own ruling class for whom
disloyalty and cowardice are the principal
characteristics.
In
September a Hungarian camera woman was filmed
tripping a refugee carrying a child at the
Hungarian border. The video soon went viral. The
camera woman is now taking legal action against the
man she tripped as he has changed his story to the
police. Petra Laszlo has claimed that she panicked
as refugees began to charge towards her. There was
much indignation in the politically correct
corporate media. But Syrian patriots did some
research on the Laszlo’s ‘victim’. The man’s name is
apparently Osama Abdel-Muhsen Alghadab and he is a
member of Japhat Al-Nosra, the Al-Qaida affiliated
terrorist group that has massacred thousands of
innocents in Syria.
This is not
to suggest by any means that all of the refugees
attempting to enter Hungary are terrorists. But in
the context of a global war involving complex
international networks of terrorists operating under
the aegis of American, Israeli and European
intelligence agencies, this incident is another
argument in favour of Orban’s policy of implementing
normal immigration regulatory procedures.
In February
2011 Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi warned Europe
about the danger of an invasion by migrants and, in
particular, Al- Qaeda terrorists if he were to be
overthrown. Syria’s President Assad has also warned
Europe of the danger of thousands of Al-Qaeda and
Islamic State terrorists coming to Europe, disguised
as refugees. It is quite possible that a similar
scenario is now coming to pass.
Gearóid Ó
Colmáin is a journalist and political analyst based
in Paris. His work focuses on globalization,
geopolitics and class struggle. He is a regular
contributor to Dissident Voice, Global Research,
Russia Today International, Press TV, Sputnik Radio
France, Sputnik English, Al Etijah TV, Sahar TV, and
has also appeared on Al Jazeera and Al Mayadeen. He
writes in English, Gaelic, and French.
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