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Rome |
Southern Europe has never had bad relations with Russia. Brussels has
stifled the ability of Mediterranean countries to pursue independent and
fraternal relations with Russia.
If the European Union was simply a way of easing trade barriers between
27/28 (Brexit depending) countries in a compact continent, it would have
a great deal of merit. But because the tin-pot imperialists of Brussels
think they can transform the EU into an empire that speaks with one
voice, tensions are inevitable. Renewed sanctions against Russia have
exposed these tensions and weakened various EU economies whilst having
little impact on Russia.
The anti-Russian sanctions were brought about because of the
neo-liberal ideological dogmas of Angela Merkel who during her time as
Chancellor has become increasingly anti-Russian. She has of course been
encouraged by a combination of hardline anti-Russian fanatics like
former Swedish Prime Minister Carl Bildt and of course the paranoid out
of touch anti-Russian hystericals in Poland and the three Baltic states.
But there’s a great deal more to Europe than that.
Mediterranean Europe does not buy into the ridiculous anti-Russian
narrative for two reasons.
First of all, because of how the neo-liberal EU has
destroyed many Mediterranean economies, the neo-liberal crusade isn’t
something most people in countries like Greece, Italy or Cyprus can
relate to in any way.
Secondly, throughout much of history, southern Europe has had good relations with Russia.
Greece and Cyprus are fraternal Orthodox nations, whilst
Italy has never had any historical disputes with Russia. Throughout the
Soviet period, most Italian governments and the majority of the Italian
people never had a ‘red scare’ the way many others in non-Communist
European countries had.
It therefore shouldn’t be surprising that Italy may lead the
way in trying to pull Brussels away from her sanctions regime against
Russia, which is doing little, other than cutting Italian producers out
of the Russian market.
Turkey, Serbia, Latin American countries and Asian countries
are all too happy to provide Russian consumers with warm weather
agricultural products and many are cheaper than those coming from the
euro-tied Italian state.
Speaking with Sputnik, Italian international relations expert Fulvio Scaglione stated that even the neo-liberal, pro-EU government of former Prime Minister Matteo Renzi was opposed to sanctioning Russia.
The current caretaker Italian government formed in the
aftermath of Renzi’s referendum defeat in December of 2016, is even more
likely to want to establish its own legitimacy by leading a pragmatic
fight against sanctions.
One of the most depressing aspects of the EU is that it
binds all member states to sign up to the will of Brussels, which
generally follows the Germany political agenda.
Had Italy or for that matter Greece, Spain, Cyprus or
Portugal not been in the EU, it is inconceivable that any of those
states would have signed up to anti-Russian sanctions.
Empires, federations and confederations cannot govern
without the consent of the governed, unless it is through force.
Increasingly, the EU is using political and economic blackmail to stifle
the wishes of member states.
This has been made clear by the economic imperialism imposed
on Greece and Cyprus, the political strait-jacket imposed over Italy
and even the politically bullying that Poland is now experiencing.
Interestingly, many of the East European countries who
instinctively (however foolishly) favour anti-Russian policies are also
worried by the aims of further political unification coming out of
Brussels. Rather than having a clear north-versus south divided, the
countries and peoples of Europe are divided on many levels.
There is little consensus over many issues ranging from
non-EU immigration, anti-Russian economic policies, hyper neo-liberal
economics to how to deal with Brexit.
Although the leaders in Brussels prefer to bury their heads
in the sand, the truth is that the centre cannot hold. They can lie to
themselves all they want but they cannot lie to the peoples of Europe
forever. Source: The Duran
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