China is open to scientific cooperation, but rejects any political-driven investigation

By H.E. Dr. Xu Hong, Ambassador of the People’s Republic of China.

Recently, certain countries have called for an “independent international investigation” on issues such as whether COVID-19 originated in a laboratory in Wuhan and China’s initial response to the pandemic. In my view, this is nothing but another political trick to mislead the public and stigmatize China.

However China is open to scientific cooperation on matters such as tracing the origin of the novel coronavirus. After sequencing and sharing with the world the genome of the new virus at full speed, China has maintained good communication with the World Health Organization and other countries. Scientists around the world, including top US expert Dr. Anthony Fauci, share the consensus that the virus originated from nature rather than a laboratory in Wuhan. Those who made such claims are only a handful of politicians who have demonstrated little respect for science, and have not been backed up even by their own intelligence agencies. 

Tracing the origin of a virus is a complicated and rigorous process, in which scientific principles should be followed. We should leave these tasks to scientists instead of presupposing conclusions for political purposes. 

It should be noted that the place where COVID-19 was first reported is not necessarily the origin of the virus. More and more cases are being discovered outside China, which suggests the disease might have appeared in other countries earlier than people thought. For example, an American mayor claimed to have been infected with the virus as early as last November.  The specific types of virus found in China, the US and Europe are also different, making it necessary for the tracing work to be carried out on a global scale, instead of just focusing on China.

Therefore, in order for the effort to succeed, we hope all countries concerned can be open to such cooperation. 

Of course, experiences and lessons from this pandamic should be learned at both international and domestic levels. Therefore, in addition to being open to international cooperation to find out the origin of the virus, China has also expressed support for relevant international review with the coordination of the WHO.

China has nothing to hide or be shameful of in how it handled the pandemic. Giving top priority to people’s lives and health, China has fulfilled its obligations under the International Health Regulations. People from around the world and relevant international organizations such as the WHO have expressed their admiration in China’s efforts in containing the virus and engaging in international assistance and cooperation. 

The work of international review shall follow the principles of equality, objectivity and fairness, with the goal of improving global health governance and be conducted at an appropriate time when the global pandemic has been effectively brought under control. 

At present, all countries should concentrate on stepping up international solidarity to contain the pandemic as soon as possible. This is the consensus of the vast majority of members of the international community, including China and the Netherlands.

China supports international scientific cooperation and professional review, but firmly opposes any dirty political trick for political gains under the disguise of an “international investigation”.  

We all remember the one on Iraq in search of “weapons of massive destruction”, prior to US’s invasion of the country in 2003. Certain politicians seem to be orchestrating the same trick again.

In their scenario, China is the “guilty one”, and an “international investigation” will produce “proof” for final conviction and basis for compensation. Their true aim is to deflect from their failure in response to the pandemic and stay in power. 

From a legal perspective, such an approach has serious flaws and will be rejected by countries and conscionable persons upholding the international rule of law.

Firstly, to trigger such an “international investigation” against a certain country for the purpose of accountability, there must be sufficient grounds to make the case that the country has committed “international wrongful acts”.  Secondly, any investigation shall be duly authorized by mandated international mechanisms, meet relevant requirements and follow due procedures. Otherwise, such an act will severely harm the existing international order. 

The government trying to hype this issue should first reflect on its own behavior: has it fulfilled its “responsibility to protect” its own people? Why it has been creating obstacles to block international cooperation, such as withholding funding for international organizations? How many secrets are being kept in the dark?  Before we talk about an “independent investigation” on China, the world deserves to know the answers to these questions.

In the picture, the Ambassador of China H.E. Dr. Xu Hong. (Den Haag 09-01-20) Foto: Frank Jansen

The delight of Letters at the Embassy of Iran

Calligraphy and paintings from Iran

In the picture, His Excellency, Dr. Alireza Kazemi Abadi, Ambassador of Iran.

An outstanding performance of visual arts, music, talent, and Persian tradition; it was a discovery for many and a new connection with Persian Culture. The Ambassador of Iran, His Excellency, Dr. Alireza Kazemi Abadi, brought to The Hague the Persian calligraphy master Mr. Seyed Hossein Fadaei for an exclusive performance and exhibition of his artwork at the Embassy premises. 

Iranian calligrapher Mr. Seyed Hossein Fadaei.

The exhibition was open to the public for one week, ambassadors from many countries, diplomats, journalists, Dutch friends of Iran, and members of the diaspora attended in big numbers.

Ambassador Abadi welcomed his guests, and introduced Seyed Hossein Fadaei, during his speech, he talked about Iranian art expressions.

Archbishop Aldo Cavalli, Apostolic Nuncio and the Ambassador of Iraq, H.E. Dr. Hisham Al-Alawi during the opening.

Seyed Hossein Fadaei is an Iranian artist who has studied industrial design at the University of Fine Arts. He teaches calligraphy and painting in his gallery in Ahwaz, while also working for the Ministry of Culture.

Ambassador Abadi said, “Fadaei, is a well-known artist in Iran, especially among the larger community of calligraphers and painters, and is considered as one of the leading calligraphers, following the traditional school of Persian calligraphy.” This outstanding visual arts exhibition honnored the Persian tradition alongside its talents, its colours, its flavours and its music. 

“What we are aiming at here in this Iranian House, is to present a cultural dialogue, as we believe once different cultures meet each other they can, above political sensitivities, cherish the value of the human person and life and break stereotypes. One of the strongest messages we want to give across the audience of the exhibition is to show importance of culture and art in the life of Iranians.”

After the Ambassador speech, there was a live music performance by an Iranian duo and Persian dishes served for the guests. During the evening, the audience had the change to interact with Seyed Hossein Fadaei who also signed autographs. After The Hague, Iranian Letters exhibition also went to Maastricht, Munich and Paris.

H.E. Dr. Hisham Al-Alawi, Ambassador of Iraq, H.E. Dr. Alireza Kazemi Abadi, Ambassador of Iran, Archbishop Aldo Cavalli, Apostolic Nuncio and H.E. I Gusti Wesaka Puma, Ambassador of Indonesia.

___________________

Photography by Catherine Dailey.

Statement to the United Nations Security Council on the Situation in Libya

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Given the exceptional circumstances in which we currently find ourselves due to the COVID-19 pandemic, I am pleased to appear before this Council via video conference to deliver my Office’s nineteenth report on the situation in Libya, pursuant to Resolution 1970. 

I congratulate Estonia on assuming the presidency of the Council for the month of May and express my gratitude to the Council for facilitating today’s remote briefing.

Allow me at the outset to also express my condolences to Council members and indeed all members of the United Nations family for the untimely deaths of their respective citizens caused by this global pandemic, and express our solidarity in the fight to contain the spread of the virus.  

Relatedly, let me also emphasise that, despite some inevitable limitations caused by the COVID-19 pandemic, my Office’s Libya team is forging ahead with its judicial work and investigations, managing to remain active and productive in these exceptional times. The Libya situation remains a priority for my Office, and I seize the opportunity in this forum to announce that my team is working on applications for new warrants of arrest.

This Council is well aware that, since my last report, serious violence related to the armed conflict in Libya, particularly in and around Tripoli, has regrettably not abated. It is now over a year since the offensive on Tripoli by the eastern-based militia known as the Libyan National Army, headed by General Khalifa Haftar, started. My Office continues to carefully monitor the unfolding events. Of particular concern to my Office are the high numbers of civilian casualties, largely reported to be resulting from airstrikes and shelling operations.

My team continues to gather and analyse information about incidents that have occurred during the recent period of armed conflict that may constitute crimes under the Rome Statute.

I reiterate that intentionally directing attacks against the civilian population, or against individual civilians not taking direct part in hostilities, is a war crime under the Rome Statute. Likewise, the Rome Statute prohibits the intentional directing of attacks against hospitals and other buildings protected under international law, such as those dedicated to religion or education, when they are not military objectives. Even where military targets are involved, the principle of proportionality applies.

I have previously also highlighted to your attention the issue of arbitrary detention and serious mistreatment of migrants and refugees attempting to transit through Libya.

This is a grave and persistent problem, and my Office continues to dedicate resources to investigating this matter. In particular, important progress has been achieved through the adoption of a cooperation strategy by my Office, which focusses on the exchange of evidence and information with relevant States and organisations. This activity is conducted with a view to seize synergies and support investigations and prosecutions in domestic jurisdictions. These efforts, I am pleased to report, are producing helpful results.

It is worth stressing that the issue of arbitrary detention and serious mistreatment of detainees affects not only migrants and refugees, but also thousands of other people detained in prisons and detention centres across Libya. 

Latest figures indicate that the detention of persons without due process is widespread. Many people are being detained without lawful basis or denied their fundamental procedural rights.

Persons detained without the proper protection of the law are at greater risk of serious forms of mistreatment, including murder, torture, rape and other forms of sexual violence.

Information obtained by my Office indicates that such crimes are all too common. Former detainees report brutal methods of torture. Detention-related victims of rape and other forms of sexual violence include men, women and children. Detainees have died from injuries sustained through torture, and from the failure to provide proper and timely medical care.

My Office is aware of allegations of serious violations in many prisons and detention facilities throughout Libya. Of particular note are Al-Kuweifiya and Gernada Prisons located in eastern Libya. These allegations also extend to Mitiga Prison in Tripoli, which is controlled by an armed group known as the Special Deterrence Force. This group officially falls under the authority of the Ministry of Interior of the Government of National Accord.

Serious and urgent reforms in many Libyan prisons and detention facilities appear necessary to prevent future crimes. Accountability for alleged past violations is equally important. Primary responsibility for investigating and prosecuting these alleged crimes rests on Libya. My Office continues to closely follow-up on these allegations.

Reports received by my Office also indicate increasing numbers of cases of enforced disappearance, committed with close to total impunity.

The crime against humanity of enforced disappearance entails the refusal to provide information on the fate or whereabouts of persons who have been arrested and detained by a State or political organisation, or with its authorisation, support or acquiescence. 

The crime of enforced disappearance inflicts severe suffering on the family of the missing person. It can also spread terror within a society. When targeted against prominent members of the community, such as political activists, human rights defenders and journalists, it sends a strong message that voices of dissent will not be tolerated.

For these reasons, and others, the crime of enforced disappearance has grave consequences for both individuals and communities.

Emblematic of this disturbing trend is the case of Ms Siham Sergewa, a member of the Libyan House of Representatives. Ms Sergewa has been missing since 17 July 2019 when armed men allegedly kidnapped her from her home in Benghazi. Her fate and whereabouts remain unknown.

Recent information obtained by my Office may point to those responsible for Ms Sergewa’s disappearance. Investigations to verify this information are continuing.

Hate speech in Libya also appears to be on the rise. Derogatory and dehumanising language targeted at certain individuals or groups of people is now pervasive in both traditional and social media.

This is cause for concern. This type of language generates both hatred and fear in the community, and deepens divisions within society. It sows the seeds for crimes against targeted groups and individuals, and foments conditions in which mass atrocity crimes can occur.

Under the Rome Statute, a person who instigates the commission of crimes by others is also responsible for those crimes. Such instigation can include the making of public statements inciting attacks on specific ethnic or social groups.

Leaders and prominent members of the community have a special responsibility to lead by example and to refrain from hate speech. Anyone who incites fear, hatred and division in the community causes harm not only to those targeted, but also to the society as a whole.

I turn now to the case of Mr Saif Al-Islam Gaddafi. The second round of litigation in relation to the admissibility of Mr Gaddafi’s case has now concluded. On 9 March 2020, the Appeals Chamber unanimously ruled that Mr Gaddafi’s case is admissible before the International Criminal Court.

Accordingly, the arrest warrant for Mr Gaddafi remains enforceable. Libya continues to be under an obligation to arrest and surrender Mr Gaddafi to the Court.

In its judgment, the Appeals Chamber found that the International Criminal Court is barred from trying someone who has already been tried in a national jurisdiction with respect to the same conduct only if the proceedings in the other court are final.

The Libyan domestic proceedings against Mr Gaddafi are not final. Given that he was convicted in absentia, if Mr Gaddafi surrenders himself or is arrested, Libyan law provides that he must be retried. If sentenced to death for a second time, review by the Libyan Court of Cassation would be mandatory. Furthermore, the Libyan amnesty law, Law No. 6 of 2015, does not apply to his case.

In the course of the admissibility proceedings, Mr Gaddafi stated that he was released from detention on or about 12 April 2016. He has made no effort to surrender himself. Mr Gaddafi is a wilful fugitive, actively evading justice both in Libya and before the International Criminal Court.

Neither case can progress, nor can the victims of Mr Gaddafi’s alleged crimes receive justice, whilst he remains at large.

The Appeals Chamber’s judgment provides valuable guidance on some important points of international criminal law. Notably, Judge Ibåñez Carranza, in her Separate and Concurring Opinion, found that amnesties or similar measures that prevent the investigation, prosecution, and punishment of international core crimes that amount to grave human rights violations and grave breaches of international humanitarian law are incompatible with international law.

Accordingly, Judge Ibåñez Carranza found that such measures appear to be contrary to the object and purpose of the Rome Statute, although this issue must ultimately be determined on a case-by-case basis.

This is a significant legal development with respect to the obligation of States to investigate, prosecute and, if appropriate, punish perpetrators of mass atrocities.

Allow me to also recall that the arrest warrants for Mr Al-Tuhamy Khaled and Mr Mahmoud Al-Werfalli are yet to be executed. The Arab Republic of Egypt, where Mr Al-Tuhamy is believed to reside, has not arrested and surrendered him to the Court. 

General Khalifa Haftar’s Libyan National Army has neither facilitated the arrest and surrender of Mr Al-Werfalli to the ICC nor ensured his genuine investigation and prosecution in Libya. Mr Al-Werfalli is reported to be under the command of General Haftar. 

While my Office continues to meet its obligations under the Rome Statute by advancing its investigations despite resource constraints and a challenging operational environment, the course of justice cannot make further progress without the arrest and surrender of ICC suspects. This is a responsibility that neither rests on my Office nor the Court, but other actors in the Rome Statute system, namely States.

As I have repeatedly stated before this august body, the Council and its members also have a special responsibility to support and urge cooperation with the Court pursuant to the resolution that referred this situation to my Office back in 2011.

Fatou Bensouda, ICC Prosecutor.

I would be remiss if at the same time I do not acknowledge the excellent cooperation my Office continues to receive in support of our investigations from numerous States and stakeholders, and in particular from the Government of National Accord and the Libyan Prosecutor-General’s office.

Nonetheless, on the most crucial cooperation matter – the arrest and surrender of ICC fugitives – the Libyan people’s calls for justice remain unheeded. It is my sincere hope that this state of impunity will not remain the status quo and that the victims of Rome Statute crimes committed in Libya will have justice.

Justice for such crimes, including those I have elaborated upon today, is crucial to the rule of law and stability in Libya. Where appropriate, accountability for such crimes must extend to those in positions of authority. 

I take this opportunity to once again stress that military commanders may be held responsible for crimes committed by forces under their effective command and control. Military commanders have a responsibility both to prevent or repress the commission of crimes by their forces, and to submit any such crimes for investigation and prosecution.

In conclusion, international criminal justice is a necessary force of accountability and deterrence – these are pillars upon which stability, progress and prosperity can be built and thrive. I call on this Council, the Court’s States Parties and the international community more broadly, to stand firmly by the ICC and its crucial mandate to end impunity for the world’s gravest crimes.   

Return of the Wir wussten nicht / The equation of Communism with Nazism

By Prof. Anis H. Bajrektarević.

“He who does not wish to speak of capitalism should remain forever silent about Nazism”

I quoted West Germany’s Max Horkheimer just few months ago discussing the disastrous, cynical and absolutely unnecessary attempts towards the equation of communism with Nazism, of fascism and anti-fascism.

Right than – in that text – I also borrowed from yet another Frankfurter, Herbert Marcuse on the self-entrapment of Western society. Back in 1960s, it was him labelling as “repressive tolerance” if someone in future ever considers a dangerous and ahistorical equitation between Nazism and anything else, least with Communism. Regrettably enough, that future of de-evolution started pouring in by 1990s – culminating with the current Covid-19 iron fist.

Umberto Eco – in his ur-fascism of 1995 – of course, didn’t see the entire world arrested on one pathogen, one narrative about it, one solution mandated for all, along with suppression of any debate about it. Back then in mid-1990’s, Eco didn’t visualise it but he well sensed where it might but should never go: Trivialisation of our important contents will brutally hit us back. (Immunisation of herd – as tirelessly agitated via media, inevitable ends up in herd loyalty: From pandemia to plundermia. 1930s are powerful reminder: From Reichstags Fire to Kristallnacht and on, and on, and on.)

Here we are today; 75 years after the glorious Victory Day, fighting (again) invisible enemy within. Therefore, the antifascist fundaments of modern Europe are today relevant more than ever. This is not our (political) choice, it is the only way to survive. Surely, any equitation attempt is a beginning of infection. And immuno-fascism, be it of 1930’s or of 2020’s always starts with silence, which is both an acceptance and accomplice. In vain a self-comforting excuse; Wir wussten nicht (it was others, not us).

To prevent it, revisiting the most relevant chapters of our near history is worth of doing: No llores porque ya se terminĂł, sonrĂ­e porque sucediĂł[2]

In fact, the 1930s were full of public admirations of and frequent official visits to an Austrian-born Hitler. It was not only reserved for the British Royal family (e.g. Edward VIII), but for many more prominents from both sides of the Atlantic (e.g. Henry Ford). By 1938 in Munich, this ‘spirit of Locarno’ has been confirmed in practice when French President Daladier and British PM Chamberlain (Atlantic Europe) jointly paid a visit to Germany and gave concessions – practically a free hand – to Hitler and Mussolini (Central Europe) on gains in Eastern Europe (Istria, Czechoslovakia and beyond). Neither Atlantic Europe objected to the pre-Munich solidification of Central Europe: Hitler–Mussolini pact and absorption of Austria, following a massive domestic Austrian support to Nazism of its well-educated and well-informed 719,000 members of the Nazi party (nearly a third of a that-time total Austrian electorate), as well as a huge ring of sympathizers. In a referendum organised by the Austro-Nazis a month after the Anschluss, 99.7% of Austrians voted ‘Yes’ to annexation.[3]

By brokering the Ribbentrop-Molotov non-aggression deal between Berlin and Moscow, but only a year after the Munich-shame – in 1939 (incl. the stipulations on Finland, Baltic states and Poland), Stalin desperately tried to preempt the imminent. That was a horror of an uncontrolled expansion of Central onto Eastern Europe and closer to Russia – something already largely blessed and encouraged by Atlantic Europe.[4]

This chapter would be definitely one of the possible spots for a thorough examination, if we only wish to diligently elaborate why Atlantic and Scandinavian Europe scored so much of Nazi-collaboration while Eastern and Russophone Europe opposed and fiercely resisted.[5]

For some 300 years, Russia and the Ottomans – like no other European belligerents – have fought series of bitter wars over the control of the Black Sea plateau and Caucasus – sectors, which both sides (especially the Ottomans) have considered as geopolitically pivotal for their posture. Still, neither party has ever progressed at the battlefield as to seriously jeopardize the existence of the other. However, Russia has experienced such moves several times from within Europe. Three of them were critical for the very survival of Russia, and the forth was rather instructive: the Napoleonic wars, Hitler’s Drang nach Osten, the so-called ‘contra-revolutionary’ intervention,[6] and finally the brief but deeply humiliating war with Poland (1919-21). 

In absence of acceptance, quest for the strategic depth

Small wonder, that in 1945, when Russians– suffering over 20 millions of mostly civilian casualties (practically, an extermination of the entire population in many parts of the western Soviet Union), and by far the heaviest continental burden of the war against Nazism – arrived on wings of their tanks and ideology to Central Europe, they decided to stay.[7] Extending their strategic depth westwards–southwestwards, and fortifying their presence in the heart of Europe,[8] was morally an occupation. Still, it was geopolitically the single option left, which Stalin as a ruthless person but an excellent geo-strategist perfectly understood. 

Just a quick look at the geographic map of Europe would show that the low-laying areas of western Russia, Belorussia, Ukraine and Eastern Europe are practically non-fortifiable and indefensible. Their topography exposes the metropolitan area and city of Moscow to an extreme vulnerability. So, the geostrategic dictatum is that in absence of any deep canyon, serious ridge or mountain chain, the only protection is either a huge standing army (expensive and badly needed in other corners of this vast country) and/or an extension of the strategic depth. 

Indeed, if we truly want to elaborate on why Atlantic and Scandinavian Europe bred so much obedience and Nazi-collaboration (with Central Europe) and largely passively stood by, while Eastern and Russophone Europe (solely) fiercely resisted and fought, we should advisably examine the financial, moral, demographic and politico-military cost-benefit ratio of the WWII, too. The subsequent, sudden and lasting Cold War era has prevented any comprehensive scientific consensus. The unbiased, de-ideologized and objective view on the WWII was systematically discouraged. Soviets consistently equated Nazism and imperialism while the US, for its part, equated fascism and communism. Until this very day, we do not have a full accord on causes and consequences of events in years before, during and after the WWII.[9] Therefore the paradox – the holocaust denial is a criminal offense, but all other important things surrounding Nazism and its principal European victims; Slavs and their states, are tentative and negotiable, elastic and eligible for a periodic political re-engineering.

The same applies to the comparative analysis of the economic performance of East and West.[10] E.g. was the much-celebrated Truman’s Marshall aid to the post-WWII western Europe, originally meant to be the US reimbursement to the Soviets for the enormous burden they took throughout the WWII – the financial assistance that was repeatedly promised by Roosevelt to Stalin, but never delivered past his death in spring 1945? Saturated by the Nazi Germany beyond comprehension, the Soviet Union was rebuilding alone itself and Eastern Europe, while the moderately damaged Western Europe got – including Germany – a massive, ideologically conditioned, financial help.  

In a nutshell; if we disaggregate Europe into its compounding historical components, it is safe to say the following: The very epilogue of both WWs in Europe was a defeat of the Central (status quo challenger) against Atlantic Europe (status quo defender). All this with the relatively absent, neutral Scandinavian Europe, of Eastern Europe being more an object than a subject of these mega-confrontations, and finally with a variable success of Russophone Europe. 

Finally, back to Franco-German post-WWII re-rapprochement.

Obviously, that was far more than just a story about the two countries signing d’accord. It truly marked a final decisive reconciliation of two Europes, the Atlantic and Central one. The status quo Europe has won on the continent but has soon lost its overseas colonies. Once realizing it, the road for ‘unification’ of the equally weakened protagonists in a close proximity was wide open. This is the full meaning of the 1961ElysĂ©e. 

About the author:

Prof. Anis H. Bajrektarević is professor in international law and global political studies, based in Vienna, Austria. His 7th book From WWI to www. 1918-2018 is published by the New York’s Addleton Academic Publishers last winter.  anis@corpsdiplomatique.cd


[1] In translation it means: “We didn’t know”. This was a classic phrase of denial and excuse used by many Germans after being confronted with the mass atrocities and WWII war crimes evidences. 

[2] Much quoted line of Gabriel GarcĂ­a MĂĄrquez; from Spanish: ‘Don’t cry because it’s over, smile because it happened’.

[3] In his luminary piece, Rolf Soderlind states: “
unlike other countries occupied by the Nazis in the ensuing WWII, Austria embraced the March 12, 1938 invasion with an enthusiasm that surprised the Germans and which still affects the country.

The role as victim-turned-accomplice in Hitler’s crimes against humanity was a taboo for decades after the war in Austria
 After all, Hitler was born in Austria, which historians say was the cradle of Nazism at the start of the century. Hitler merely took the ideas with him to Munich and, later, Berlin.” No wonder that a disproportionately high number of Austrians, including war criminals such as (Adolf) Eichmann and (Ernst) Kaltenbrunner, took active part in the systematic exterminations of Slavic peoples, Jews, Romas and other racially or politically ‘impure’ segments, manly from the Europe’s East. “Austrian Nazis, quickly proving to be even more brutal than their ruthless German masters, hit the streets after the invasion to intimidate, beat up and rob mainly Jews but also to settle the account with Social Democrats and Communists — their political opponents.” – describes Soderlind.

“This was not on Hitler’s orders. It was a spontaneous pogrom. It was popular among Austrians to go after the Jews,” says Gerhard Botz, professor of contemporary history at the University of Vienna. On the account, American journalist Shirer reported: “For the first few weeks the behaviour of the Vienna Nazis was worse than anything I had seen in Germany,” and concludes: “there was an orgy of sadism.” A day after, already by March 13, 1938, Jews and other racial or political ‘inappropriates’ were forced to scrub the pavements and clean the gutters of the Austrian capital, the elegant cafe society that was world-wide admired as a stage for classical music, wise humanity and a shining example of Baroque architecture.

“As they worked on their hands and knees with jeering storm troopers standing over them, crowds gathered to taunt them,” Shirer wrote. While the Nazi Party was banned in post-war Austria, most veteran Nazis were highly educated people who found a new career in politics and government. Professor Wolfgang Neugebauer says: “They could not remove the entire leadership, because then the state would no longer be able to function. Even in the first government of Social Democratic Chancellor Bruno Kreisky in 1970s, four ministers were former Nazis
 Chancellor Franz Vranitzky in a speech to parliament in 1991 became the first Austrian leader to admit that his country was a servant of Nazism.” Interestingly, German and Austrian leaders apologized to Israel (or generally to Jews) repeatedly, but not really to the peoples of Eastern Europe who were by far the largest Nazi victim.

Illuminating the origins of wealth of Central Europe, Neugebauer admits: ”It was not until 1995 (time when all three Slavic multinational states have undergone the dissolution, and disappeared from the map, rem. aut.) that Austria started paying compensation to surviving victims of Austrian Nazi aggression.” In the same fashion, Germany – considered as the Europe’s economic miracle – in essence an overbearing Mitteleuropear that dragged world into the two devastating world wars, is a serial defaulter which received debt relief four times in the 20th century (1924, 1929, 1932 and 1953). E.g. by the letter of London Agreement on German External Debts (Londoner Schuldenabkommen) over 60% of German reparations for the colossal atrocities committed in both WW were forgiven (or generously reprogramed) by their former European victims.  

[4] It should be kept in mind that for the very objective of lebensraum policy (character and size of space needed for Germanophones to unhindered, live and prosper), the Jews, Roma and behavioristic minorities were the non-territorial obstacle. However, Slavs and their respective Slavic states in Eastern Europe were the prime territorial target of Hitler-led Central Europe’s ‘final solution’. Therefore, no wonder why so much fifth column crop among Slavs. For the speeding and smoothening of the lebensraum objective, Quisling was needed as PM in Norway, but Slavic quisling-elites were cattled in each and every of that time major Slavic states – useful idiots in Poland, in Ukraine, in Czechoslovakia, in Yugoslavia, in Bulgaria, etc.).  

[5] One of the possible reasons was a fact that the Atlanstist nobility, wealth-clans and dynasties were mingled and intermarried with those same from Central and Scandinavian Europe. That was only sporadic in case of Eastern Europe, and totally absent in case of Russophone Europe.   

[6] The 6-year-long insurgencies was largely financed and inspired by Western Europe as an overt ‘regime change’ intervention. It came at the time of the young Bolshevik Russia, and it subsequently saturated the country, bringing the unbearable levels of starvation and hunger up to cases of cannibalism. It took away 5 million mostly civilian lives, and eventually set the stage for a ‘red terror’.

[7] The same applies to the Atlantic (Anglo-French and American) lasting occupation of Central Europe, which along with the Soviet one was the only guaranty for the full and decisive de-Nazification of the core sectors of continental Europe.

[8] With the politico-military settlement of the Teheran and Yalta Conference (1943), and finally by the accord of the Potsdam Conference (1945), the US, UK and the SU unanimously agreed to reduce the size of Germany by 25% (comparable to its size of 1937), to recreate Austria, and to divide both of them on four occupation zones. The European sections of the Soviet borders were extended westwards (as far as to Kaliningrad), and Poland was compensated by territorial gains in former Eastern Prussia/Germany. The Americans and Britons in Potsdam unanimously confirmed the pre-WWII inclusion of the three Baltic republics into the Soviet Union, too. Practically, Russians managed to eliminate Germany from Eastern Europe (and of its access to central and eastern portions of Baltic, too), and to place it closer to the Atlantic Europe’s proper.

[9] Sadly enough, most of the popular Atlantist literature or movies elaborating on topics of the WWII are biased and misleading on the role of the Red Army, and are generally disrespectful towards the enormous suffering of the Soviet and Yugoslav peoples at that time.  

[10] Comparing and contrasting the economic performance of East and West, many western scholars in 1950s and 1960s argued that the Soviet socio-economic model is superior to that of its western archrival. The superpower’s space-race was usually the most quoted argument for this claim. Indeed, some dozens of Soviet space-race victories were so magnificent that it was impossible to hide them, as the ideological dictum would suggested. E.g. the first orbiting satellite (Sputnik 1, 1957); the first animal, the first man, and the first women in orbit (Laika 1957, Gagarin 1961, Tereshkova 1963); the first over-24 hours stay in space (Titov, 1961); first images of the dark side of moon (1959); the first man-made device to enter the atmosphere of another planet, and to achieve the soft landing on Venus and images sent from there (Venera 4, 1967; Venera 7, 1970); the first space-walk (Leonov,1965); the first space station (Salyut, 1971); the first probe to ever land on Mars (Mars 3, 1971); the first permanently manned space station including the longest stays in space (Mir, 1989-99), etc.   

Netherlands to open first Dutch Embassy in Yerevan

For the first time in history the Netherlands will have its resident Embassy in Armenia. H.E. Mr. Nico Schermers is designated as the first resident Ambassador of the Kingdom of the Netherlands in Yerevan, the capital city of Armenia.

His Excellency Mr. Tigran Balayan, Ambassador of the Republic of Armenia to the Kingdom of the Netherlands commented on this decision: â€œThe opening of the Dutch resident Embassy in Yerevan is a manifestation of intensification of relations and will contribute to the strengthening of centuries-old bonds. I am confident that Ambassador Nico Schermers will be an important ally in expanding bilateral cooperation in all possible fields.”

His Excellency Mr. Nico Schermers, first designated resident Ambassador told us: â€œFor me, the opening of this embassy could not come at a more interesting and important time. Not only is it a key step in further enhancing our bilateral relations it is also a testament to the trust we have in Armenia’s future. Two years after the Velvet Revolution the country is in the middle of an impressive political transition. A lot has been achieved in only a short span of time. Ahead now lies the task of implementing reforms, which will at times be challenging. As my Minister already noted during his excellent visit to Yerevan last January, the Netherlands will be an ally in these reform-efforts. I am truly excited that as an ambassador I will be able to play my part.”  

On December 5, 2019 Tweede Kamer (the Dutch House of Representatives) has allocated necessary funding (2 million Euro)  for establishing the resident Dutch Embassy in Yerevan, Armenia by adopting an amendment to 2020 Dutch MFA budget.

The website of the Dutch foreign ministry elaborates on this decision: â€˜â€™Armenia is wedged between Russia, Turkey and Iran and is therefore of strategic importance. Since the so-called “velvet revolution” in April 2018, the new government has been modernizing the country and fighting corruption. The Netherlands can support this process. At the moment Armenia is the only country in that region where the Netherlands has no embassy. The House of Representatives also wants an embassy in Yerevan’’ .

H.E. Mr Tigran Balayan, Ambassador of the Republic of Armenia in The Netherlands.

Diplomatic relations between the Republic of Armenia and the Kingdom of the Netherlands were established on 30 January 1992. Before establishing a Dutch Embassy in Armenia, Dutch Ambassadors to Armenia resided in Tbilissi, Georgia.

The recent Ambassador of Kingdom of the Netherlands to Armenia (with residence in Tbilisi) ambassador Maria Christina Koldam, presented her credentials to the President of the Republic of Armenia, Armen Sarkissian on 12 November 2019.

____________________

Yerevan, Armenia, The Republic Square. Photography by Makalu.

Serbia celebrates Statehood Day

The Ambassador of the Republic of Serbia, H.E. Mrs. Ksenija Milenković.

On the occasion of the Statehood Day, the Ambassador of the Republic of Serbia H.E. Mrs. Ksenija Milenković hosted a special reception at her residence. Hundreds of guests attended the festive event on a warm afternoon in late February.

Among them were numerous diplomats and head of missions, Dutch officials, many from the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, the Senate and the parliament; judges of international courts, artists, members of different international organizations, the Serbian embassy staff, as well as many friends of Serbia, and representatives of the Serbian Community.

The Ambassador of Tunisia, H.E. Mr. Elyes Ghariani, the Ambassador of the Republic of Yemen, H.E. Ms. Sahar Ghanem, the ambassador of Mexico, H.E. Mr. Jose Antonio Zabalgoitia Trejo and the Ambassador of the Kingdom of Morocco, H.E. Mr. Abdelouahab Bellouki at Serbian residence.

Following the anthems of the Republic of Serbia and the Kingdom of the Netherlands, Ambassador Ksenija Milenković addressed the audience.

Capitalizing on the long history of bilateral cooperation with The Netherlands, Milenković said, “Serbia and the Netherlands have a long history of bilateral relations. After Serbia reestablished its independence in 1878, we established diplomatic relations with the Netherlands already in 1899 – which made the Netherlands one of the first countries to establish relations with us. Last year it was indeed the 120th anniversary of our bilateral relations: a long tradition and we keep working to intensify those ties.” 

The Statehood Day marks the 106th anniversary of the First Serbian Uprising, which led with time to the adoption of the modern Serbian Constitution on this day in 1835.

On February 15th, 1835, Serbia promulgated its first modern European constitution, drawing inspiration from the French constitutional charter of 1814 and the Belgian constitution of 1831. “In those times, unfortunately” Ambassador Milenković explained to Diplomat Magazine, “Serbia was still under the rulership of the Ottoman Empire, and therefore the constitution, which is usually a symbol of an independent state, was not enforced for a very long time. It took us then until 1878 to regain our independence, in the context of the Berlin Congress. 

While our first modern constitution was drafted in 1835, it is worth noting that our first codified act was drafted already in the Medieval Ages, before falling under Ottoman rule. This was the time of the Kingdom of Serbia, and the document is known as the “DuĆĄan’s Code”, from the name of the then-ruler, Emperor DuĆĄan. This was back in the 14th century. After that, however, we fell under the Ottoman Empire, and remained under their rulership for a while. 

The Ambassador of Serbia welcomed H.E. Ms. Mirsada Čolaković,, Ambassador of Bosnia Herzegovina.

Moreover, it should also be stressed that there is a degree of symbolism in the date of February 15th, which is a very famous religious holiday in Serbia. Back then, when the State was separated from the Church, the date of February 15th was deliberately chosen for the adoption of the constitution.

This date represents the Serbian religious holiday of Sretenje, which could translate as “the meeting”, and it is really a major holiday, and especially it was so back then. Thus, this is also a reason behind why we celebrate our National Day in that date.”

The atmosphere was harmonious and welcoming. The delicious Serbian buffet kept guests indulged in the warm spirit of friendship and generous hospitality offered by Ambassador Milenković, her family, and colleagues from the Embassy of Serbia.

The wines of Serbia were in a prominent place. It was an outstanding reception, which was the first celebrated by the embassy for the last five years. 

Photography by Marian van Noort for Diplomat Magazine.

Uzbekistan in the fight against coronavirus pandemic – International and regional aspects

By H.E. Mr. Dilyor Khakimov, Ambassador of the Republic of Uzbekistan to the Kingdom of The Netherlands.

In these difficult days, the Republic of Uzbekistan, like the entire international community, takes the most serious challenge to humanity in modern history – the pandemic of the coronavirus COVID-19. At the same time, thanks to the effective anti-epidemic measures taken by the leadership of Uzbekistan in a timely manner, it can be argued that the country is able to minimize the effects of the pandemic.

In Uzbekistan, special attention is paid to such important tasks as the prevention of the spread of coronavirus infection, effective treatment of patients and laboratory tests.

Despite the fact that on April 22 this year 1692 COVID-19 cases detected in Uzbekistan, according to Worldometers (https://www.worldometers.info/coronavirus/) in the number of cases detected per million people, our country has one of the lowest rates in the world (51) – against the global level of 330, and in the number of deaths (7 people) from this dangerous infection per million people – 0.2% against the global level – 22.9%.

This result was largely facilitated by the fact that the President of Uzbekistan, Shavkat Mirziyoyev timely (January 29 this year) adopted an order to create a special republican commission to prepare a program of measures to prevent the importation and spread of a new type of coronavirus in the country, and thereby laid basis for mitigating the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on the republic.

Subsequently, decisions were made to suspend air, rail and road communication with other states, and to close pre-school, secondary and higher educational institutions. A progressive package of economic measures has been adopted to mitigate the impact of the crisis on relatively vulnerable sectors of the economy. An Anti-Crisis Fund under the Ministry of Finance has been created with an initial volume of 10 trillion soums ($ 1 billion). Business and entrepreneurship entities were granted tax holidays, a number of other tax benefits and deferred loan payments. Social assistance was organized for the most vulnerable groups of the population.

April 1 of this year in Tashkent, Nukus and in all regional centers, a regime of self-isolation of citizens was introduced for a period of 20 days, which was then extended until May 10 of this year.

At that time, when in many countries of the world the issue of the necessity of wearing masks was only discussed, in Uzbekistan on March 23 this year a decision was made to wear medical masks.

To provide the 33 million population of the republic with masks, the government adopted decisions on the mobilization of textile production located on the territory of the republic. As a result of the measures taken, the production of up to 2 million units of masks per day is currently set up in Uzbekistan, and it is planned to bring daily production to 5 million pieces.

But it is obvious that success in combating COVID-19, which has taken on the character of a pandemic, depends on the coordination of regional and international efforts of the countries of the world.

From the very beginning of the pandemic, the President of Uzbekistan held telephone conversations with all the heads of state of Central Asia and Afghanistan. During these negotiations, both the bilateral agenda and the joint response to the threat of the spread of the coronavirus pandemic in the region and the world as a whole were discussed.

Drawing attention to this fact, the American edition of The Diplomat, in its article entitled “Uzbekistan Leads Central Asian Diplomacy in the Age of COVID-19,” cites the words of Radio Liberty columnist Bruce Panier, who noted that “if there is one the person responsible for actively trying to coordinate efforts in Central Asia, then this is the President of Uzbekistan. ”

Since the outbreak of the coronavirus pandemic, Uzbekistan has provided humanitarian assistance, which includes medical products so urgently needed, to China, Afghanistan, Iran, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Belarus, Azerbaijan, Hungary, and Russia.

A special place in Uzbekistan’s international efforts in countering the spread of coronavirus was taken by the President of Uzbekistan Shavkat Mirziyoyev in the extraordinary summit of the Cooperation Council of Turkic Speaking States (Turkic Council), which took place on April 10, 2020 in a video conference format.

The head of Uzbekistan made a number of important initiatives at the summit to respond to the coronavirus pandemic.

Firstly, the President of Uzbekistan proposed creating a permanent system of monitoring, analysis and forecasting of the epidemiological situation within the framework of the Turkic Council. The pandemic we encountered showed that no one is safe from new outbreaks of infectious diseases. One should be prepared for such situations, have well-coordinated tools for anticipation and response, including at the regional and international levels.

Secondly, Uzbekistan proposed to establish joint activities of the ministries of health and leading medical institutions of Turkic-speaking countries to exchange information and experience in the prevention, diagnosis and treatment of dangerous infectious diseases.

The results of this work will make it possible to quickly study the main characteristics of the disease and methods of its treatment, solve the issues of supplies and production of antiviral protection products, as well as laboratory tools for testing the population. Considering that these actions should be taken immediately, Uzbekistan proposed holding the first video conference with the participation of leading specialized specialists, which is already being prepared and will be held in the near future.

Thirdly, the President of Uzbekistan initiated the establishment of the Ad Hoc Pandemic Coordination Group under the Secretariat of the Turkic Council. This group should establish close working contacts with the national headquarters in our countries for countering the pandemic in order to keep abreast and be able to interact quickly. It was also proposed to create a separate scientific and information resource on the CCTS website.

The resource should not only reliably inform about the situation in our countries. It is important to exchange experience on various methods of communicating to the population the rules of behavior in quarantine, the requirements of disease prevention.

Fourthly, one of the key problems in the current crisis is the uninterrupted supply of the population with necessary food, medicines and medicines.

To solve problems in the field of logistics and transport, practical assistance in the transportation of goods under quarantine and border crossing in a simplified manner, the head of state proposed to create a working group under the leadership of the CCTS under the leadership of ministers of transport.

Fifth, understanding the global nature of the threat that the world is facing, the President of Uzbekistan separately emphasized the need to strengthen international cooperation and support the activities of multilateral organizations. In particular, he advocated further strengthening the status and mandate of the World Health Organization, establishing partnerships of this organization with the CCTS.

It is important to note that all the proposals of the President of Uzbekistan are reflected in the final Declaration of the extraordinary summit of the CCTS.

As President Shavkat Mirziyoyev noted in his speech at the Summit of the CCTS: “We all well understand that no state can cope with this terrible pandemic alone. The guidelines for action for us should be the principles of unity, cooperation and mutual assistance. Together we can do a lot. ”

Vietnam’s Fight against COVID-19

By Ms. NgĂŽ Thị HĂČa – Former Ambassador of Vietnam to the Netherlands.

I completed my term as Ambassador in the Netherlands towards the end of March and was on my way back home to Vietnam. As it was in the midst of the COVID-19 pandemic, I struggled to find flights as many airlines were cancelling them and country borders were being closed. It wasn’t until the third try that I managed to book a flight from Frankfurt, Germany to VĂąn Đồn, Vietnam.

The challenges of travelling during this time were already further indications of the grave situation the world is in, especially since internationally travel is usually easy these days. Needless to say I was aware of this pressing issue having paid attention to the news, but it didn’t fully hit me until I flew back to Vietnam and was quarantined for 2 weeks.  

When I got on my Vietnam Airlines flight, I immediately felt the heat of this battle against COVID-19. All passengers were required to wear face masks, gloves and have their temperatures checked before boarding. We were each sat distant from each other, with each 3-seat row only occupied by 1 passenger to minimize contact. We were also given some disinfectant spray in addition.

I had never been on a flight like this and I was a bit nervous to see everyone act so cautiously as it was a reminder of how dangerous the disease can be.

Nevertheless, I was still more reassured than worried; I really appreciated how much the national airline was doing to ensure health and safety for everyone on board. After landing in VĂąn Đồn, all the passengers went through a very quick immigration process and were guided to government-run quarantine facilities.

As a diplomat, I actually had the option to be quarantined at home, but I thought it was important to fulfill my responsibility as a citizen and be there instead, where they can carefully monitor my health status. In addition, a small part of me was curious about Vietnam’s quarantine methods and facilities. 

Some passengers and I were arranged to stay at a 4-star hotel in HáșĄ Long Bay for our 14-day quarantine period, during which we had to follow some rather tight rules and procedures. We had to stay in our hotel rooms throughout the entire duration and avoid contact with others. This meant that I couldn’t leave to buy anything or eat out, which was why my 3 meals were brought to my room everyday by the staff.

They knew eating set meals everyday would quickly become dull and that I may need extra items, so they offered to buy anything else I requested, such as extra snacks or toiletries. I would also get daily temperature checks so my health status can be monitored; those with symptoms of COVID-19 (a fever, dry cough etc.) would immediately be transferred to hospitals for treatment.

After 2 weeks of quarantine, I was officially tested negative for the disease and was allowed to go home. On my 250km journey back to the capital Hanoi, there were many checkup stations where I had to present papers showing I have completed the mandatory quarantine period. It became very clear to me that the government was and is taking many careful measures to minimize COVID-19 cases. 

Vietnam was under lockdown during this time so the streets were practically empty; all restaurants and most stores were closed and people were restricted from leaving their homes.

After 3 years I returned to a Hanoi that I didn’t recognize; the usual hustle and bustle in the streets, the familiar street food stands and popular eateries were all gone. The only time one would see such a quiet and empty Hanoi is during our Táșżt New Years, but this was the furthest thing from a celebration.

Nevertheless, it must be done to tackle the outbreak and has shown to be effective in containing the spread of COVID-19. Despite being a neighbor of China where the virus first emerged, the majority of infected cases in Vietnam have been cured; specifically 222 out of 270 confirmed cases have been successfully treated, and there have been 0 deaths.

In response to this positive direction, the lockdown is slowly being loosened. This is a major indication of the country’s success in battling the epidemic. 

One might wonder how Vietnam has achieved this in its fight against COVID-19 thus far. Some of the measures the Vietnamese government has taken in response to the outbreak include: 

1) Raising public awareness of the risks and effects of COVID-19

2) Tracing down the origins of infections and identifying disease clusters. 

Medical personnel in Vietnam trace back the steps of all COVID-19 patients to identify places they have travelled to, people they have come in contact with and possibly from who and where did they catch the disease. With this information they will check up on close contacts, test them and advise them to be in quarantine. The locations patients have been in will be released to the public so people can try to protect themselves and others. It is Vietnam’s extensive method to prevent new cases. 

3) Put in place an extended period of lockdown nationwide to prevent further spread of the disease. 

Leaving the house is limited and people should only do so when absolutely necessary, such as buying groceries. 

4) Launch information campaigns to bring the nation together in an effort to fight the epidemic. 

This includes many means of communication, such as the traditional forms of news broadcasting. Vietnam’s healthy ministry even took a creative turn by collaborating with musicians to create a song about COVID-19 prevention. It definitely caught the attention of the public as the song went viral and gathered millions of views. 

5) Advise change of daily habits and routines to adapt to the current situation: 

Many Vietnamese are encouraged to work online to reduce their time at the office and people are switching to online shopping instead of going to stores. 

It is a difficult time in which not everyone can easily adapt to this change, which is why the government is also taking the initiative to support those heavily affected by the epidemic and lockdown. This includes issuing economic incentives, such as extending deadlines for tax payments. 

It is no surprise that these methods have been implemented by many countries and some of which are considered to be very common approaches. However, I think it is important to emphasize how effective these tactics can be no matter how standard and conventional it may seem. I hope this is somehow helpful to countries worldwide fighting against COVID-19; only together can we tackle this disease and overcome the pandemic.   

High-Tech Vat Platform of DCC Simplifies Vat Service For Diplomats In The Netherlands

Diplomatic Card Co specialises in advance services for Diplomats such as Tax-Free Fuel service (Multi-brand card) and VAT service. The company’s main goal is to make the diplomat’s stay in the Netherlands as comfortable and as hassle-free as possible by reducing the administrative paperwork to a minimum. That’s why the company is constantly improving its existing services and developing new ones. This new high-tech VAT platform is its latest add-on. For Diplomatic Magazine a reason to have a chat with Manolis Arvanitis, General Manager at Diplomatic Card Co.

Fully compliant
“Diplomatic Card Co is acknowledged by the Dutch Ministry of Finance as a certified service provider for VAT services to diplomats,” starts Arvanitis the conversation. “We are a long-lasting service provider delivering user-friendly VAT services and always aim to go the extra mile for our customers. Especially in the past year has been intense in order to improve our service standards. The knowledge that we have gained with our intensive communications with the Dutch Tax authorities has enabled us to build a new high-tech VAT platform. This new VAT platform is fully compliant with the rules and regulations set by the Ministry of Finance and the Dutch Tax Office as of 1st of March 2020.”

Simple, fast and safe

One of the benefits of the new high-tech platform is the simplicity of submitting invoices/tickets. “Diplomats only have to scan their receipts and send them by email for verification and processing.
Additionally, purchases can be bundled automatically on a quarterly basis per retailer. Also, it is no longer obligatory for Diplomats to provide a hard copy of bank/credit card statements to support each transaction. This new platform enables the Dutch Tax office to validate transactions on a daily basis, instead of waiting until the end of the month. And that shortens the validation time for the diplomat, resulting in a swift refund following their approval. Less paperwork and a faster turnaround are two criteria that are valued a lot,” says Arvanitis.

Besides being user-friendly, the platform also offers a high level of security. “We wanted security to be built in, for both the diplomat and the retailer. We designed the system in such a way that it is impossible for non-beneficiaries to use,’ continuous Arvanitis. “The high level of security is reassuring, and it guarantees recognition of the diplomat’s privilege.”

Mr. Manolis Arvanitis, Director General, Diplomatic Card.

Trust

“As you can see, user-friendliness, safety, and fast refund are the main focal points in our services. We make use of the latest technology to put these into practice. We also attach great importance to dialogue and personal contact with our clients and other stakeholders. We try to involve them as much as possible to develop the best services fit for diplomats”.

“I would like to thank all our customers for their trust in our company even though the last year we have faced some unforeseen delays caused by external reasons that affected our organisation internally. With this new high-tech platform, we believe this is now a thing of the past,”

The post-Corona epilogue of an overheated Sino-American relationship: We have a Winner; Will we have a Game-changer too?

By Prof. Anis H. Bajrektarević.

Americans performed three very different policies on the People’s Republic: From a total negation (and the Mao-time mutual annihilation assurances), to Nixon’s sudden cohabitation. Finally, a Copernican-turn: the US spotted no real ideological differences between them and the post-Deng China. This signalled a ‘new opening’: West imagined China’s coastal areas as its own industrial suburbia. Soon after, both countries easily agreed on interdependence (in this marriage of convenience): Americans pleased their corporate (machine and tech) sector and unrestrained its greed, while Chinese in return offered a cheap labour, no environmental considerations and submissiveness in imitation. 

However, for both countries this was far more than economy, it was a policy – Washington read it as interdependence for transformative containment and Beijing sow it as interdependence for a (global) penetration. In the meantime, Chinese acquired more sophisticated technology, and the American Big tech sophisticated itself in digital authoritarianism – ‘technological monoculture’ met the political one.

But now with a tidal wave of Covid-19, the honeymoon is over. 

(These days, many argue that our C-19 response is a planetary fiasco, whose size is yet to surface with its mounting disproportionate and enduring secondary effects. All this illustrates – the argument goes – nothing else but the non-transparent concentration of power and our overall democracy recession; lasting consequences of cutbacks, environmental holocaust, privatisation of key intergovernmental and vital national institutions, ill-fated globalisation on (overly allopathic-cantered) healthcare and luck of pubic data commons. 

There are also growing speculations if the lockdown is invasion or protection – whether the aim is herd-immunity of herd loyalty; if is there any back-to-normal exit from the crisis or this disaster ‘turned into planetary terror, through global coup d’Ă©tat’ will be exploited to further something already pre-designed (with a fear, not as a side-effect, but rather as a manufactured tool to gain control). E.g. Le Monde Diplomatique â€“ while examining the possible merge between tech oligopoly and political monopoly – claims: “Political decisions have been central in shaping this tragedy — from the destruction of animal habitats, to the asymmetric funding of medical research, to the management of the crisis itself. They will also determine the world into which we emerge after the worst is over.” The XXI century frontline is the right to health and labour, privacy and human rights. (LMD, IV20)) 

Still to be precise, the so-called virus pandemic brought nothing truly new to the already overheated Sino-American relations: It only amplified and accelerated what was present for quite some time – a rift between alienated power centers, each on its side of Pacific, and the rest. Is this time to return to a nation-state, a great moment for all dictators-in-waiting to finally built a cult of personality? Hence, will our democracy be electro-magnetised and vaccinated for a greater good (or greedier ‘god’)? 

This text examines a prehistory of that rift; and suggests possible outcomes past the current crisis. 

*                      *                      *                      *          

Does our history only appear overheated, while it is essentially calmly predetermined? Is it directional or conceivable, dialectic and eclectic or cyclical, and therefore cynical? Surely, our history warns (no matter if the Past is seen as a destination or resource). Does it also provide for a hope? Hence, what is in front of us: destiny or future?

Theory loves to teach us that extensive debates on what kind of economic system is most conductive to human wellbeing is what consumed most of our civilizational vertical. However, our history has a different say: It seems that the manipulation of the global political economy – far more than the introduction of ideologies – is the dominant and arguably more durable way that human elites usually conspired to build or break civilizations, as planned projects. Somewhere down the process, it deceived us, becoming the self-entrapment. How?

*                      *                      *                      *          

One of the biggest (nearly schizophrenic) dilemmas of liberalism, ever since David Hume and Adam Smith, was an insight into reality: Whether the world is essentially Hobbesian or Kantian. As postulated, the main task of any liberal state is to enable and maintain wealth of its nation, which of course rests upon wealthy individuals inhabiting the particular state. That imperative brought about another dilemma: if wealthy individual, the state will rob you, but in absence of it, the pauperized masses will mob you. 

The invisible hand of Smith’s followers have found the satisfactory answer – sovereign debt. That ‘invention’ meant: relatively strong central government of the state. Instead of popular control through the democratic checks-&-balance mechanism, such a state should be rather heavily indebted. Debt – firstly to local merchants, than to foreigners – is a far more powerful deterrent, as it resides outside the popular check domain. 

With such a mixed blessing, no empire can easily demonetize its legitimacy, and abandon its hierarchical but invisible and unconstitutional controls. This is how a debtor empire was born. A blessing or totalitarian curse? Let us briefly examine it. 

The Soviet Union – much as (the pre-Deng’s) China itself – was far more of a classic continental military empire (overtly brutal; rigid, authoritative, anti-individual, apparent, secretive), while the US was more a financial-trading empire (covertly coercive; hierarchical, yet asocial, exploitive, pervasive, polarizing). On opposite sides of the globe and cognition, to each other they remained enigmatic, mysterious and incalculable: Bear of permafrost vs. Fish of the warm seas. Sparta vs. Athens. Rome vs. Phoenicia
 However, common for the both (as much as for China today) was a super-appetite for omnipresence. Along with the price to pay for it. 

Consequently, the Soviets went bankrupt by mid 1980s – they cracked under its own weight, imperially overstretched. So did the Americans – the ‘white man burden’ fractured them already by the Vietnam war, with the Nixon shock only officializing it. However, the US imperium managed to survive and to outlive the Soviets. How? 

The United States, with its financial capital (or an outfoxing illusion of it), evolved into a debtor empire through the Wall Street guaranties. Titanium-made Sputnik vs. gold mine of printed-paper
 Nothing epitomizes this better than the words of the longest serving US Federal Reserve’s boss, Alan Greenspan, who famously quoted J.B. Connally to then French President Jacques Chirac: “True, the dollar is our currency, but your problem”. Hegemony vs. hegemoney

House of Cards

Conventional economic theory teaches us that money is a universal equivalent to all goods. Historically, currencies were a space and time-related, to say locality-dependent. However, like no currency ever before, the US dollar became – past the WWII – the universal equivalent to all other moneys of the world. According to history of currencies, the core component of the non-precious metals’ money is a so-called promissory note – intangible belief that, by any given point in future, a particular shiny paper (self-styled as money) will be smoothly exchanged for real goods. 

Thus, roughly speaking, money is nothing else but a civilizational construct about imagined/projected tomorrow – that the next day (which nobody has ever seen in the history of humankind, but everybody operates with) definitely comes (i), and that this tomorrow will certainly be a better day then our yesterday or even our today (ii). 

This and similar types of collective constructs (horizontal and vertical) over our social contracts hold society together as much as its economy keeps it alive and evolving. Hence, it is money that powers economy, but our blind faith in constructed (imagined) tomorrows and its alleged certainty is what empowers money. 

Clearly, the universal equivalent of all equivalents – the US dollar – follows the same pattern: Bold and widely accepted promise. For the US, it almost instantly substantiates extraterritorial economic projection: American can print (any sum of) money without fear of inflation. (Quantitative easing is always exported, value is kept home.)

But, what does the US dollar promise when there is no gold cover attached to it ever since the time of Nixon shock of 1971? 

Pentagon promises that the oceanic sea-lanes will remain opened (read: controlled by the US Navy), pathways unhindered, and that the most traded world’s commodity – oil, will be delivered. So, it is not a crude or its delivery what is a cover to the US dollar – it is a promise that oil of tomorrow will be deliverable. That is a real might of the US dollar, which in return finances Pentagon’s massive expenditures and shoulders its supremacy. 

Admired and feared, Pentagon further fans our planetary belief in tomorrow’s deliverability – if we only keep our faith in dollar (and hydrocarbons’ energized economy), and so on and on in perpetuated circle of mutual reinforcements. 

(Supplementing the Monroe Doctrine, President Howard Taft introduced the so-called ‘dollar diplomacy’ – in early XX c. – that “substitutes dollars for bullets”. This is one of the first official acknowledgements of the Wall Street – Pentagon symbiotic link.)

These two pillars of the US might from the East coast (the US Treasury/Wall Street and Pentagon) together with the two pillars of the West coast – both financed and amplified by the US dollar, and spread through the open sea-routs (Silicone Valley and Hollywood), are an essence of the US posture. 

This very nature of power explains why the Americans have missed to take the mankind into completely other direction; towards the non-confrontational, decarbonized, de-monetized/de-financialized and de-psychologized, the self-realizing and green humankind. In short, to turn history into a moral success story. They had such a chance when, past the Gorbachev’s unconditional surrender of the Soviet bloc, and the Deng’s Copernicus-shift of China, the US – unconstrained as a lonely superpower â€“ solely dictated terms of reference; our common destiny and direction/s to our future/s.

Winner is rarely a game-changer

Sadly enough, that was not the first missed opportunity for the US to soften and delay its forthcoming, imminent multidimensional imperial retreat. The very epilogue of the WWII meant a full security guaranty for the US: Geo-economically – 54% of anything manufactured in the world was carrying the Made in USA label, and geostrategically – the US had uninterruptedly enjoyed nearly a decade of the ‘nuclear monopoly’. Up to this very day, the US scores the biggest number of N-tests conducted, the largest stockpile of nuclear weaponry, and it represents the only power ever deploying this ‘ultimate weapon’ on other nation. To complete the irony, Americans enjoy geographic advantage like no other empire before. Save the US, as Ikenberry notes: “
every major power in the world lives in a crowded geopolitical neighborhood where shifts in power routinely provoke counterbalancing”. Look the map, at Russia or China and their packed surroundings. The US is blessed with its insular position, by neighboring oceans. All that should harbor tranquility, peace and prosperity, foresightedness.  

Why the lonely might, an empire by invitation did not evolve into empire of relaxationa generator of harmony? Why does it hold (extra-judicially) captive more political prisoners on Cuban soil than the badmouthed Cuban regime has ever had? Why does it remain obsessed with armament for at home and abroad? Why existential anxieties for at home and security challenges for abroad? Eg. 78% of all weaponry at disposal in the wider MENA theater is manufactured in the US, while domestically Americans – only for their civilian purpose – have 1,2 small arms pieces per capita.)

Why the fall of Berlin Wall 30 years ago marked a beginning of decades of stagnant or failing incomes in the US (and elsewhere in the OECD world) coupled with alarming inequalities. What are we talking about here; the inadequate intensity of our tireless confrontational push or about the false course of our civilizational direction?  

Indeed, no successful and enduring empire does merely rely on coercion, be it abroad or at home. The grand design of every empire in past rested on a skillful calibration between obedience and initiative – at home, and between bandwagoning and engagement – abroad. In XXI century, one wins when one convinces not when one coerces. Hence, if unable to escape its inner logics and deeply-rooted appeal of confrontational nostalgia, the prevailing archrival is only a winner, rarely a game-changer.

A Country or a Cause, Both or None?

To sum up; After the collapse of the Soviet Union, Americans accelerated expansion while waiting for (real or imagined) adversaries to further decline, ‘liberalize’ and bandwagon behind the US. One of the instruments was to aggressively push for a greater economic integration between regional and distant states, which – as we see now, passed the ‘End-of-History’ euphoria of 1990s – brought about (irreversible) socio-political disintegration within each of these states.

Expansion is the path to security dictatum, of the post-Cold War socio-political and economic mantra, only exacerbated the problems afflicting the Pax Americana. That is how the capability of the US to maintain its order started to erode faster than the capacity of its opponents to challenge it. A classical imperial self-entrapment!! 

The repeated failure to notice and recalibrate its imperial retreat brought the painful hangovers to Washington, the most noticeably, by the last presidential elections. Inability to manage the rising costs of sustaining the imperial order only increased the domestic popular revolt and political pressure to abandon its ‘mission’ altogether. Perfectly hitting the target to miss everything else 


Hence, Americans are not fixing the world anymore. They are only managing its decline. Look at their footprint in former Yugoslavia, Afghanistan, Iraq, Pakistan, Georgia, Libya, Syria, Ukraine or Yemen – to mention but a few.

*                *                      *                      *                      

When the Soviets lost their own indigenous ideological matrix and maverick confrontational stance, and when the US dominated West missed to triumph although winning the Cold War, how to expect from the imitator to score the lasting moral or even a temporary economic victory?

Dislike the relationship with the Soviets Union which was on one clear confrontational acceptance line from a start until its very last day, Americans performed three very different policies on the People’s Republic: From a total negation (and the Mao-time mutual annihilation assurances), to Nixon’s sudden cohabitation. Finally, a Copernican-turn: the US spotted no real ideological differences between them and the post-Deng China. This signalled a ‘new opening’ – China’s coastal areas to become West’s industrial suburbia. Soon after, both countries easily agreed on interdependence: Americans pleased their corporate (machine and tech) sector and unrestrained its greed, while Chinese in return offered a cheap labour, no environmental considerations and submissiveness in imitation. However, for both it was far more than economy, it was a policy – Washington read it as interdependence for transformative containment and Beijing sow it as interdependence for (global) penetration. In the meantime, Chinese acquired more sophisticated technology, and the American Big tech sophisticated itself in digital authoritarianism. 

But, the honeymoon seems over now. 

Lasting collision course already leads to the subsequent calls for a decupling of the two world’s largest economies. Besides marking the end of global capitalism which exploded since the fall of Berlin Wall, this may finally trigger a global realignment. The rest of the world would end up – willingly or not – in the rival (trade) blocks. It would not be a return to 1950s and 1960s, but to the pre-WWI constellations. Epilog is plain to see: Neither more confrontation and more carbons nor more weaponized trade and traded weapons will save our day. It failed in our past, it will fail again any given day. 

Entrapment in Imitation

Interestingly, China opposed the I World, left the II in rift, and ever since Bandung of 1955 it neither won over nor (truly) joined the III Way. Today, many see it as a main contestant. But, where is a lasting success?

There is a near consensus among the economists that China owes its economic success to three fundamental factors. Firstly, it is that the People’s Republic embraced an imitative economic policy (much like Japan, Singapore, Taiwan or ROK did before) through Deng-proclaimed opening. Second goes to a modest domestic consumption, and German-like thick home savings. Finally, as the third factor that the economists attribute to Chinese miracle, is a low production costs of Sino nation – mostly on expenses of its aging demography, and on expenses of its own labor force and country’s environment. None of it has an international appeal, nor it holds promise to an attainable future. Therefore, no wonder that the Imitative power fights – for at home and abroad – a defensive ideological battle. Such a reactive status quo has no intellectual appeal to attract and inspire beyond its borders. 

So, if for China the XIX was a “century of humiliation”, XX “century of emancipation”, should it be that the XXI gets labeled as a “century of imitation”? 

(The Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) is what the most attribute as an instrument of the Chinese planetary posture. Chinese leaders promised massive infrastructure projects all around by burning trillions of dollars. Still, numbers are more moderate. As the recent The II BRI Summit has shown, so far, Chinese companies had invested USD 90 billion worldwide. Seems, neither People’s Republic is as rich as many (wish to) think nor it will be able to finance its promised projects without seeking for a global private capital. Such a capital –if ever – will not flow without conditionalities. The Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB) and the BRICS or ‘New Development’ – Bank have some $150 billion at hand, and the Silk Road Infrastructure Fund (SRIF) has up to $40 billion. Chinese state and semi-private companies can access – according to the OECD estimates – just another $600 billion (much of it tight) from the home, state-controlled financial sector. That means that China runs short on the BRI deliveries worldwide. Ergo, either bad news to the (BRI) world or the conditionalities’ constrained China.) 

How to behave in the world in which economy is made to service trade (as it is defined by the Sino-American high priests of globalization), while trade increasingly consti-tutes a significant part of the big power’s national security strategy? And, how to define (and measure) the existential threat: by inferiority of ideological narrative – like during the Cold War; or by a size of a lagging gap in total manufacturing output – like in the Cold War aftermath. Or something third? Perhaps a return to an inclusive growth.

For sure, there is no intellectual appeal in a growth without well-being, education that does not translate into fair opportunity, lives without dignity, liberalization without personal freedom. Greening international relations along with a greening of social fabrics and its economy – geopolitical and environmental understanding, de-acidification and relaxation is that missing, third, way for tomorrow. 

This necessitates both at once: less confrontation over the art-of-day technology and their de-monopolized redistribution as well as the resolute work on the so-called Tesla-ian implosive/fusion-holistic systems. That would include the free-transfer non-Hertzian energy technologies (able to de-toxicate our troposphere from dangerous fields, waves and frequencies emittance – bringing it closer to Schumann resonance); carbon-sequestration; antigravity and self-navigational solutions; bioinformatics and nanorobotics. 

In short, more of initiative than of obedience (including more public control over data hoovering). More effort to excellence (creation) than a struggle for preeminence (partition). 

‘Do like your neighbor’ is a Biblical-sounding economic prophecy that the circles close to the IMF love to tirelessly repeat. Indeed, it is hard to imagine a formidable national economic prosperity, if the good neighborly relations are not built and maintained. Clearly, no global leader has ever in history emerged from a shaky and distrustful neighborhood, or by offering a little bit more of the same in lieu of an innovative technological advancement. 

(Eg. many see Chinese 5G – besides the hazardous electrosmog of IoT that this technology emits on Earth’s biota – as an illiberal innovation, which may end up servicing authoritarianism, anywhere. And indeed, the AI deep learning inspired by biological neurons (neural science) including its three methods: supervised, unsupervised and reinforced learning can end up by being used for the diffusion of digital authoritarianism, predictive policing and manufactured social governance based on the bonus-malus behavioral social credits.) 

Ergo, it all starts from within, from at home; socio-economically and environmentally. Without support from a home base (including that of Hong Kong, Xinjiang and Tibet), there is no game changer. China’s home is Asia. Its size and its centrality along with its impressive output is constraining it enough.

Conclusively, it is not only a new, non-imitative, turn of socioeconomics and technology what is needed. Without truly and sincerely embracing mechanisms such as the NaM, ASEAN and SAARC (eventually even the OSCE) and the main champions of multilateralism in Asia, those being India Indonesia and Japan first of all, China has no future of what is planetary awaited – the third force, a game-changer, lasting visionary and trusted global leader.

Vienna, 31 March 2020 / Post Scriptum:

To varying degrees, but all throughout a premodern and modern history, nearly every world’s major foreign policy originator was dependent (and still depends) on what happens in, and to, Russia. So, neither a structure, nor content or overall direction of world affairs for the past 300 years has been done without Russia. It is not only a size, but also a centrality of Russia that matters.

That is important as much (if not even more), as it is an omnipresence of the US or a hyperproduction of the PR China. Ergo, that is an uninterrupted flow of manufactured goods to the whole world, it is a balancing of the oversized and centrally positioned one, and it is the ability to controllably corrode the way in and insert itself of the peripheral one. The oscillatory interplay of these three is what characterizes our days. 

Therefore, reducing the world affairs to the constellation of only two super-players – China and the US is inadequate – to say least. It is usually done while superficially measuring Russia’s overall standing by merely checking its current GDP, and comparing its volume and PPP, and finding it e.g. equal to one of Italy. Through such ‘quick-fix’, Russia is automatically downgraded to a second-rank power status.

This practice is as dangerous as it is highly misleading. Still, that ill-conceived argument is one of the most favored narratives which authors in the West are tirelessly peddling. What many analysts miss to understand, is in fact plain to see; throughout the entire history of Russia: For such a big country the only way to survive – irrespectively from its relative weaknesses by many ‘economic’ parameters – is to always make an extra effort and remain great power. 

To this end, let us quickly contrast the above narrative with some key facts: Russia holds the key positions in the UN and its Agencies as one of its founding members (including the Security Council veto right as one of the P5); it has a highly skilled and mobilized population; its society has deeply rooted sense of a special historic mission (that notion is there for already several centuries – among its intellectuals and enhanced elites, probably well before the US has even appeared as a political entity in the first place).

Additionally and tellingly, Moscow possesses the world’s largest gold reserves (on surface and underground; in mines and its treasury bars); for decades, it masters its own GPS system and the most credible outer space delivery systems (including the only remaining working connection with the ISS), and has an elaborate turn-key-ready alternative internet, too.  

Finally, as the US Council of Foreign Relations’ Thomas Graham fairly admits: “with the exception of China, no country affects more issues of strategic and economic importance to the US than Russia. And no other country, it must be said, is capable of destroying the US in 30 minutes.” (FAM, 98-6-19, pg.134).

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About the Author: Prof. Anis Bajrektarevic is chairperson and professor in international law and global political studies, Vienna, Austria.  He has authored six books (for American and European publishers) and numerous articles on, mainly, geopolitics energy and technology. 

Professor Bajrektarevic is editor of the NY-based GHIR (Geopolitics, History and Intl. Relations) journal, and editorial board member of several similar specialized magazines on three continents.

His 7th book, ‘From WWI to www. – Europe and the World 1918-2018’ has been realised last winter.