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|
Eastern Europe –
The World’s Last Underachiever
Prof. Anis H.
Bajrektarević

25 years ago, the Russian historical empire melted
down. Although often underreported, this also marked the end of
alternative society in Europe. Collapse of the II world, made the 3rd
way (of Yugoslavia and further, beyond Europe – globally, of the
Nonaligned Movement) obsolete.
That 9/11 was a moment when the end of history
rested upon all of us, the day when the world became flat.
The EU entered East, but only as a ‘stalking horse’ of NATO. No
surprise that Eastern Europe –following the slaughter of its pivot,
Yugoslavia – has soon after abandoned its identity quest, and
capitulated. Its final civilizational defeat came along: the Eastern
Europe’s peoples, primarily Slavs, have silently handed over their
most important debates – that of Slavism, anti-fascism and of own
identity – solely to the recuperating Russophone Europe.
Terrified and rarified underachievers
Is today’s Eastern Europe a classic case of indirect
rule? Is that a deep imperial periphery of nominally independent
native rulers, while in reality the true power holder resides
outside, although is domestically supported by a dense web of NGOs,
multinational corporations and locally handpicked ‘elites’?


** ** ** **
Everything in between Central Europe and Russia is
Eastern Europe, rather a historic novelty on the political map of
Europe (see four maps above). Very formation of the Atlantic
Europe’s present shape dates back to 14th–15th
century, of Central Europe to the mid-late 19th
century, while a contemporary Eastern Europe only started emerging
between the end of WWI and the collapse of the Soviet Union –
meaning, less than 100 years in best cases, slightly over two
decades in the most cases. No wonder that the dominant political
culture of the Eastern Europeans resonates residual fears and
reflects deeply insecure small nations. Captive and restive, they
are short in territorial depth, in demographic projection, in
natural resources and in a direct access to open (warm) seas. After
all, these are short in historio-cultural verticals, and in the
bigger picture-driven long-term policies. They are exercising the
nationhood and sovereignty from quite a recently, thus, too often
uncertain over the side and page of history. Therefore, they are
often dismissive, hectic and suspectful, nearly neuralgic and
xenophobic, with frequent overtones.
The creation of a nation-state (on linguistic
grounds) in the Atlantic, Scandinavian and Central Europe was
relatively a success-story. However, in Eastern Europe it repeatedly
suffered setbacks, culminating in the Balkans, Caucasus and the
Middle East, but also remains evident in the central or Baltic part
of Eastern Europe.
Above statement might come as a shock for many. Why?
For the last 25 years, our reporting on Eastern Europe was rather a
matter of faith than a reflection of the empirical reality. This
‘rhetoric’ was dominated by fragmented intellectual trends that are
more cultural (e.g. poetry, paintings, film, etc.) than coherently
economic and geo-political in focus as they should be.
How one defines a challenge largely determines
the response – effectively points out Brzezinski. Hence, the
arts will always elaborate on emotions, science will search for and
examine the facts.
If the front of
Atlantic-Central Europe lately suffered (an economic) problem which
has been diagnosed as a distributional and compositional, than who
and when is holistically and scientifically to examine the Eastern-Rusophone
Europe and its burning geo-economic (distributional, compositional),
socio-political/ideological (space-time in history) and geopolitical
(logical and areal) problem? Where is a serious research on that?
If the equality of
outcome (income) was a communist egalitarian dogma, is the
belief in equality of opportunity a tangible reality offered
to Eastern Europe or just a deceiving utopia sold to the conquered,
plundered, ridiculed and cannibalized countries in transition?
What is the current
standing of Eastern Europe – state of its economy, the health of its
society and the efficiency of its governance?
By contrasting and
comparing available HDI data (UN DP’s Human Development Index) and
all relevant WB, OECD, UNCTAD, ILO and WHO socio-economic and health
indexes including the demographic trends of last two decades, we can
easily spot a considerable green, economic and socio-human growth in
Asia, in Latin America and moderate growth elsewhere. The single
trend of negative growth (incl. the suicide and functional
illiteracy figures) comparable by its duration and severity to this
of Eastern Europe, is situated only in the sub-Saharan Africa
(precisely the CHAD-lake region and partially between Grand lakes
and Horn of Africa). Further on, recent generational accounting
figures illuminate a highly disturbing future prospect for the youth
of Eastern Europe. Neither their economic performance nor birth
rates would sustain the financial burden left for the future by the
present, irresponsible and defeatist, generation.
Ergo, euphemisms such as
countries in transition
or new
Europe
cannot hide a
disconsolate fact that Eastern Europe has been treated for 25 years
as defeated belligerent, as spoils of war which the West won in its
war against communist Russia.[1]
It concludes that
(self-)fragmented, deindustrialized, rapidly aged rarified and
depopulated, (and de-Slavicized) Eastern Europe is probably the
least influential region of the world – one of the very few
underachievers. Obediently submissive and therefore, rigid in
dynamic environment of the promising 21st
century, Eastern
Europeans are among last remaining passive downloaders and
slow-receivers on the otherwise blossoming stage of the world’s
creativity, politics and economy.[2]
East does not exercise its
political sovereignty (gone with the EU), its military sovereignty
(gone with the NATO), its economic and monetary sovereignty (gone
with the massive domestic de-industrialization ‘preached’ by the
IMF, EBRD, EIB and eventually ECB),[3]
and its financial
sovereignty (gone by full penetration of German, Austrian and
Swedish banks).[4]
Those national
currencies still existing in Eastern Europe lost – for already long
ago – the vital substance: their anthropological and economic
function.
Most of the Eastern
European states do not control a single commercial bank on their
territory.[5]
East does not
control its own narrative or (interpretation of) history: Due to the
massive penetration of Central Europe, East grossly relativized,
trivialized and silenced its own past and present anti-fascism.
Additionally, this region does not effectively control its media
space. Media there (of too-often dubious orientation and ownership)
is discouraging, disorienting and silencing any sense of national
pride, influence over destiny direction and to it related calls for
self-(re)assessment.
East is sharply aged and
depopulated –the worst of its kind ever – which in return will make
any future prospect of a full and decisive generational interval
simply impossible.[6]
Honduras-ization
of Eastern Europe is
full and complete.[7]
If the post-WWII
Soviet occupation of Eastern Europe was overt and brutal, this one
is tacit but subversive and deeply corrosive.[8]
East between
Ukrainization and Pakistanization
It is worth reminding that
the NATO remains to be an instrument of the US physical, military
presence in Europe. Or, as Lord Ismay defined it in 1949: ‘to keep
the Russians out, the Americans in, and the Germans down’. The fact
that the US remained in Western Germany, and that the Soviet Army
pulled out from Eastern Germany did not mean ‘democratization’ or
‘transition’. It represented a direct military defeat of the
Gorbachev Russia in the duel over the core sectors of Central and
Eastern Europe. As direct spoils of war, DDR disappeared from the
political map of Europe being absorbed by Western Germany, while the
American Army still resides in unified Germany.[9]
In fact, more than
half of the US 75 major overseas military bases are situated in
Europe. Up to this day, Germany hosts 25 of them.
Admittedly, by the early
1990s, the ‘security hole’– Eastern Europe, has been approached in
multifold fashion: Besides the (pre-Maastricht EC and
post-Maastricht) EU and NATO, there was the Council of Europe, the
CSCE (after the 1993 Budapest summit, OSCE), the EBRD and EIB. All
of them were sending the political, economic, human dimension,
commercial signals, assistance and expertise.[10]
These moves were
making both sides very nervous; Russia becoming assertive (on its
former peripheries) and Eastern Europe defiantly dismissive. Until
this very day, each of them is portraying the NATO enterprise as the
central security consideration: One as a must-go, and another as a
no-go.
No wonder that the absolute
pivot of Eastern Europe – Ukraine, is a grand hostage of that very
dilemma: Between the eastern pan-Slavic hegemony and western
‘imperialism of free market’.[11]
For Ukraine, Russia
is a geographic, socio-historic, cultural and linguistic reality.
These days, this reality is far less reflected upon than the
seducing, but distant Euro-Atlantic club. Ukraine for Russia is more
than a lame western-flank’ geopolitical pivot, or to say, the first
collateral in the infamous policy of containment that the West had
continuously pursued against Russia ever since the 18th century. For
Moscow, Kiev is an emotional place – an indispensable bond of
historio-civilizational attachment – something that makes and
sustains Russia both Christian and European. Putin clearly redlined
it: Sudden annexation of Crimea (return to its pre-1954 status) was
an unpleasant and humiliating surprise that brings a lot of foreign
policy hangover for both the NATO and EU.
Thus drifting chopped off
and away, a failed state beyond rehabilitation, Ukraine itself is a
prisoner of this domesticated security drama. Yet again, the false
dilemma so tragically imploded within this blue state, of a 50:50
polarized population, over the question where the country belongs –
in space, time and side of history. Conclusively, Eastern Europe is
further twisting, while gradually combusted between Ukrainization
and Pakistanization.[12]
The rest of Europe
is already shifting the costs of its own foreign policy journey by
‘fracking’ its households with a considerably higher energy bills.
In short, Atlantic Europe
is a political powerhouse, with two of three European nuclear powers
and 2 out of five permanent members of the UN Security Council, P-5.
Central Europe is an economic powerhouse, Russophone Europe is an
energy powerhouse, Scandinavian Europe is all of that a bit, and
Eastern Europe is none of it.
Prof. Anis H.
Bajrektarević
Vienna, 26 MAR 2015
Contact:
anis@bajrektarevic.eu
Author is chairperson and
professor in international law and global political studies, IMC
Krems University of Austria. His previous book FB – Geopolitics
of Technology was published by the New York’s Addleton Academic
Publishers. His forthcoming book Geopolitics – Europe
100 years later is coming soon.
All displayed maps
per the author’s idea made by Anneliese Gattringer.
References:
1.
Bajrektarević, A. (2013), Future of Europe (Of Lisbon and
Generational Interval), EU Journal Europe’s World, Brussels
2. Brzezinski, Z.
(1997), The Grand Chessboard, Basic Books (Perseus);
3. Fukuyama, F.
(2012), The Future of History, Foreign Affairs Magazine 91(1)
2012
4. Friedman, G.
(2009), The Next 100 Years, Anchor Books/Random House NY;
5. Ferguson, N.
(2005), Colossus – The Rise and Fall of the American Empire,
Penguin Books (page 255)
6. Bajrektarević, A.
(2005), Green/Policy Paper Submitted to the closing plenary of
the Ministerial (Chairmanship summarizing the recommendations and
conclusions of the OSCE Ministerial Summit Prague 2005), OSCE
Documents/EEA 2005/05/14857/En
7. Clark, C. (2013),
The Sleepwalkers: How Europe Went to War in 1914,
HarperCollins Publishers
8. Eco, U. (2001),
Eternal Fascism: 14 way of looking at a Blackshirt, Five Moral
Pieces – Essays (orig. Cinque Scritti Morali, 1997), Essay first
published in the NY Review of Books, 22 VI 1995 (pp.12-15)
9. Stiglitz, J.E.
(2012), The Price of Inequality, Penguin Economics
10. Wallerstein, I.
(1999), The End of the World as We Know it: Social Science for
the XXI century, Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press
11. OECD (2014),
Society at a Glance 2014 – The Crisis and its Aftermath (OECD
Social Indicators), OECD Paris Publications
12. World Bank (2014),
World Development Report 2014: Risk and Opportunity – Managing
Risk for Development, WB Publications
13. Mead, W.R. (2014),
The Return of Geopolitics – The Revenge of the Revisionist Powers,
Foreign Affairs Magazine 93(2) 2014
14. Greco, T.H. (2009),
The End of Money and the Future of Civilization, Chelsea
Green Publishing
15. Serfaty, S. (2014)
Why we need to be patient with Russia, Europe’s World – the
EU Foreign Policy Journal, Brussels (page 73)
16. Bajrektarević, A.
(2013), Multiculturalism is D(r)ead in Europe – MENA Oil and the
(hidden) political prize Europe pays for it, Nordic Page, Oslo
Norway
17. Ikenberry, G.J.
(2014), The Illusion of Geopolitics, Foreign Affairs Magazine
93(3) 2014
18. Kagan, R. (2004),
Of Paradise and Power, Vintage Books (page 85)
[1] A sharp drop in LE
(life expectancy) in Russia, from age 72 to 59, is something faced
only by nations at war. The evidence that Russia has suffered such a
steep decline, unreversed ever since the collapse of the Soviet
Union, is unprecedented in a peace-time history of any
industrialized nation. Although not so alarming like in the post-SU
Russia, the rest of post-Soviet republics and Eastern Europe closely
follow the same LE pattern – not to mention devastating birth rates,
brain drain and other demographic data. E.g. the projected LE
of the today’s born Berliner is around 100 years, while of Muscovite
is only 67 years. Simply, the East is unable to (re-)produce its own
life. Or, once it is conceived, to keep (the best of) that life at
home. Some would argue that it again is the war for a lebensraum,
but this time of the self-imposed Endlösung (final solution).
[2] With some exceptions of Visegrád
countries (such as Poland or Czech Republic, and lately Hungary)
sporadically opposing a constant bandwagoning (but even that only in
the domain of narrow EU fiscal or economic matters), Eastern Europe
of today is unable to conceive and effectively promulgate a
self-emancipating, balanced and multivector foreign policy.
Fergusson goes as far as to claim for Eastern Europeans that: “they
looked at Brussels (of NATO) the way former British colonies obeyed
everything said and done in London.”
[3]
“The entry criteria for Eastern European states was particularly
costly: the so-called small and open economies, de-industrialized
and over-indebted didn’t have any chance to be equal partners. For
most of them, FDI (Foreign Direct Investment) is the only economic
solution, which turned them into colonies…” – admitted even the
Nobel laureate, economist Stiglitz in his The Price of Inequality.
Moreover, the overly strong and rigid exchange rate of the domestic
currencies in Eastern Europe is good only for foreign landers. It
awards importers while disadvantages domestic manufacturing base and
home exporters. This outdated anti-growth and anti-green economic
policy has been universally abandoned long ago, even by the LDC (the
UN-listed Least developed countries). No wonder that the GDP in the
most of Eastern European states is well below its pre-1990s levels,
and their ecological footprint index is of an alarming trend.
[4]
According to findings of the Budapest Institute of Economics (Corvinus
University), for the past two decades, the volume of Austrian
banking sector has increased 370%. How is this spectacular
percentage achievable for the country of a flat domestic economic
and negative demographic growth? This covert occupation of
south-eastern Europe by the foreign financial sector did not create
new jobs or re-create any industrial base there. As the Budapest
Institute concluded aftermath, it was only meant to dry-out the
remaining liquid assets (and private savings) from the rapidly
pauperized, defeated belligerent. In 1914, Austria controlled banks
as well; in Croatia, Bosnia, western Romania, northern Serbia,
Hungary, southern Poland and western Ukraine. However, at that time,
it also had a strict governing obligation as all of them were a part
of the Monarchy. By having recognized the formal sovereignty to each
of these entities, Austria today (like Sweden towards the three
Baltic States in the northeast flank of Europe, and Germany in the
central sector of Eastern Europe) has no governing obligations
whatsoever. It can easily externally socialize (externalize) all its
costs including banking risks, and individualize all profits
(internalize), yielding it only for itself. Hence, the EU accession
criteria, combined with a nominal independence of Eastern European
entities (pacified by the pre-paid media and guided by the
post-paid ‘elites’), means that the economic and other assets
are syphoned out, but the countries have to take a burden of the
state maintenance solely on themselves. “Creating the market economy
attractive for FDI (foreign direct investments) in our case meant a
de-industrialization, pauperisation, which eventually led to
defunding of most of the state social activities. When someone dare
say ‘our education, housing and health sectors are knocked down due
to this’, they are quickly denounced as socio-romantics and
accused for the social conservatism…” says Head of the Croatia’s
Economic Institute prof. Slavko Kulic, and concludes: “…suffering of
ever larger segments of societies means nothing to the architects of
misery, to those Talibans of neoliberalism.” Recently
released edition of the Oxfam study on the wealth distribution
worldwide, unfortunately, confirms this bleak picture.
[5]
Current labor relations in the most of Eastern Europe (Rusophone
Europe, too) resembles pictures of the 18th
rather than of the 21st
century’s conditions, especially in the private sector of
employment. It is all with a weak or even totally absent trade
unionism, dismal labor standards, as well as the poor protection of
other essential social, environmental and health rights. “We have
stringent labor conditions to the unbearable maximum, so that the
few self-styled ‘top managers’ can play golf more frequently and for
a longer time… How can you possibly build any social cohesion when
disproportionately many suffer for the dubious benefit of the
asocial, predatory few…” – confessed to me the Ambassador of one of
the largest Eastern European countries who served as a mayor of his
country’s capital, before his ambassadorship in Vienna.
[6]
Some ten years ago, at the special OSCE forum for demographics, I
warned: “…lasting political, social and economic changes including
very important technological breakthroughs – throughout our history
– primarily occurred at generational intervals. This was an engine
of our evolution…Presently, with demographically collapsing East
European societies (natality rates, generational and brain drain),
the young cohort will never constitute more than a tiny minority –
in the sea of aged, backward-looking, psychologically defeatistic
and biologically incapable, conservative status quo keepers.
Hence, neither the generational change that brings fresh
socio-political ideas, nor technological breakthrough –which usually
comes along – will successfully ever take place in future of such
demographies.” (For a detailed demographic outlook and tentative
recommendations/ conclusions, see: Bajrektarevic, A. (2005), Our
Common Futures: EURO-MED Human Capital beyond 2020, Crans
Montana Forum, Monaco, 2005, as well as Bajrektarevic, A. (2005),
Green/Policy Paper Submitted to the closing plenary of the
Ministerial (Chairmanship summarizing the recommendations and
conclusions of the OSCE Ministerial Summit Prague 2005), OSCE
Documents EEA 2005.)
[7]
Eastern Europe is Hondurized – this term refers to an
operationalization of Monroe Doctrine in Central America, by which
Washington allows its strategic neighborhood to choose their own
domestic political and economic systems to an acceptable degree,
while the US maintains its final (hemispheric) say over their
external orientation. The so-called Brezhnev doctrine (of
irreversibility of communist gains) postulated the Soviet (Suslov-Stalin)
equivalent to Honduras-ization – Finlandization.
[8]
Eastern Europe, the (under-)world of dramatic aging which, is
additionally demographically knocked down by the massive
generational and brain drain. Passed the dismantling of the
communist order, these emerging economies, countries in
transition of the new Europe contain reactionary forces
(often glorifying the wrong side of history), predatory ‘elites’ and
masses of disillusioned (in a life without respect and dignity,
humiliated and ridiculed in the triviality of their lasting
decline). Even if the new jobs are created or old kept, they are in
fact smoke screens: Mostly a (foreign-loans financed)
state-sponsored poverty programs where armies of the underemployed
and misemployed cry out miserable wages in dead-end jobs. Former
Slovakian cabinet minister laments in private: “Our ‘liberated East’
lives on foreign loans, or in the best case as the industrial
suburbia of West Europe, having these few ‘generously’ franchised
factories like Renault, VW or Hugo Boss. Actually,
these are just automotive assembly lines and tailor shops –
something formally done only in the III World countries. Apart from
the Russian Energia-Soyuz (space-program related) delivery
system, what else do we have domestically created anywhere from
Bratislava to Pacific? Is there any indigenous high-end technical
product of past decades known? ... Our EU accession deals are worse
than all Capitulation agreements combined that the Ottomans
and Imperial China have ever signed in their history.”
[9]
Gorbachev’s capitulation helped Germans to further gain confidence:
Once territorially extended (or to euphemistically say; unified),
Western Germany transposed that new size and its centrality into the
advanced version of Machtpolitik – drang nach
export-based über-economy. No wonder that the über-Mutti’s
cabinet is gradually maneuvering the country out of the
NATO-enforced Westbindung (an alliance, it does not see any
more as its strategic necessity) towards an old, solely/unilaterally
determined Ostpolitik of Wandel durch Kopf-Handel
(change via altered mindset). Chancellor Markel’s ambassador Michael
Schäfer is even more forthcoming on this eventual post-Western
Made in Deutschland foreign policy. In the interview for the
leading Chinese press he concludes: ‘I do not think there is such a
thing as the West anymore.‘ /Kundnani, H. (2015), Leaving the West
Behind – Germany Looks East, Foreign Affairs Magazine 94(1) 2015/
[10]
Through the EBRD–EIB conditionalities and EU accession criteria,
Eastern Europe was dictated to practically dismantle its essential
industrial and service base. This dictatum upon defeated belligerent
– euphemistically called countries in transition or new
Europe – was followed by loans and assets received from the EU
Accession and Structural funds. It was ‘sold’ to the East as award
and as such presented to the deceived population. (However, it was
rather to tranquilize the population at large and to pacify their
local scenes, not at all aimed to modernize, re-industrialize or
diversify economy, or to make production and service sector more
efficient or competitive. Consequently, it was merely to subsidize
the deteriorating purchasing power of the East – to make the peoples
there accustomed to and encouraged for the foreign goods and
services.) Thus, the funds were predominantly consumed for the
western commodities. Ergo, Atlantic and Central Europe extended
themselves geographically, while economically they skillfully
managed to subsidize their own industrial base. To this very end,
Eastern Europe’s elites readily took loans, while –in return– laying
down sovereignty by issuing the state-debt guaranties. By doing so,
they indebted their own states beyond bearing, and hence, they
finally eliminated their own countries as any current or future
economic competitor or politico-military challenger.
[11]
This is further burdened by the imperialism in a hurry – an
inflammable mix of the Lithuanian-Polish past traumas and German
‘manifest destiny’ of being historically yet again ill-fated;
impatient for quick results – simply, unable to capitalize on
its previous successes. One of my German students recently very
vividly satirized: “The irony of unintended consequence is that the
intense relationship between Über-mutti (Chancellor Merkel)
and boxman at large Klitschko is interpreted by Moscow as asexual,
but not as apolitical.” To say, overly
cosmopolitan interest for a faith of foreigners living in Germany
for someone who infamously said: “multiculturalism is dead in
Europe…” (Sarkozy, Cameron and Merkel openly and repeatedly viewed
and diagnosed ‘death of multiculturalism’), as if the cluster of
Atlantic-Central Europe’s national-states lived a long, cordial and
credible history of multiculturalism on its soil.
[12]
Ukrainization could be attributed
to eastern and western Slavs– who are fighting distinctions without
significant difference. Pakistanization
itself should describe the
southern Slavs’ scenery: In lieu of truth and reconciliation, guilt
is offered as a control mechanism, following the period of an
unchecked escalation, ranging from a hysteria-of-a-small-difference
to a crime-of-otherness purge.
Vienna, March 26, 2015
Yemenisation or Confederalisation of Saudi Arabia?
By Brian Whitaker

Click on Picture
Read more on the next page:
Bosnia as Wunderkind –
Corruption from Kosovo to Germany
Gerald Knaus
Ugly ducklings,
fairy tales and Bosnia in 2015
ESI newsletter 3/2015 - If corruption is
serious business, its assessment should be as well.
Read more on the next page:
March
19, 2015
Imperative
of an EU-Russia strategic reset
Eirini Patsea
Russia vs. the European Union. It is relationship
based and built upon a long history of protracted political
conflict. Lately, with the crisis in Ukraine and the subsequent
sanctions imposed to Russia, the diplomatic relations between the
two sides have reached a new historical low. But more importantly,
the mistrust among the peoples residing in both sides has reached a
new high. Unavoidably so. Since the Western and Russian media
started to be viciously launching campaign-like news reports, there
is nothing but confusion and loss of perspective by both the peoples
and their representatives. The big question is whether this would be
the case if the US politics were not involved in the game. Would
still Russia and the EU have so many excuses to be driven apart;
politically, culturally and ideologically?
After the warmhearted welcome by Peter Haider, UPF
Austria President, Prof. Bajrektarevic made more than a challenging
opening:
“The lonely superpower (US) vs. the bear of
the permafrost (Russia), with the world’s last cosmopolite
(EU) in between. Is the ongoing calamity at the eastern flank of
the EU a conflict, recalibration, imperialism in hurry,
exaggerated anti-Russian xenophobia or last gasp of
confrontational nostalgia?
Eirini Patsea is a
Guest Editor in ModernDiplomacy, and specialist in Cultural
Diplomacy and Faith-based Mediation.
First published by
www.moderndiplomacy.eu
Read more on the next page:
March 3, 2015
All European shades
of ISIL colour black: Neonazism of Europe and Fascism in the Arab
World
By Allan Bogle

How did Europe manage to drag Arabs to the wrong side
of history – a confusion, pride, shame and denial – all which
resurfaces again, 75 years after. How is this possible that the
‘never-again’ takes place today? Do we fake our surprise? How
expensive is our European denial, and Monarchist Arabs claim of
innocence?
Read more on the next page:
March 4, 2015
Greed is good…but
only for cancer
Amna Whiston
Amna Whiston is a London-based writer specialising in moral
philosophy. As a PhD candidate at Reading University, UK, her main
research interests are in ethics, rationality, and moral psychology.
Don’t be bad with 1%, don’t accuse them for having it all
and doing nothing to earn it. 99% firmly believes that a greed is
good… Spoiling mood, but being good for your food, as it should?
**
** ** **
Amidst the many maladies of today’s global
society, a tide of optimism brought by the latest cancer research
news reflects a defiant response to one of the biggest challenges
facing humanity. But although massive investments that involve
venture capital companies and funds may be necessary for the pursuit
of current and future large-scale scientific projects and ambitions,
it is still sensible to ask the following questions: To what extent
should capitalism be credited for rapid progress in cancer research
and treatment? Moreover, can the profit motive, being an essential
feature of capitalism, justify future investments in bioscience and
related fields?
Read more on the next page:
14.02.2015
70 years after
Auschwitz – deliberate attempts to rewrite history
MD Editorial Board
The
last week’s Auschwitz ceremony marking 70 years since the notorious
death camp’s liberation had a huge turnout. Three hundred survivors
of the camp attended. Given the age of Holocaust survivors, the
importance of passing their story on to new generations has never
been greater. Comparing politicians to Hitler or countries to nazi
Germany has become a commonplace insult. But the unspeakable horrors
unleashed by history’s most vicious regime bear no comparison.
The Holocaust marked a systematic effort to exterminate entire
ethnic groups — most prominently the Jews but also the Roma and
Sinti — alongside the slaughter of homosexuals and the disabled.
Millions of prisoners of war from the Soviet Union, Polish civilians
and political and religious opponents of the nazis including
communists, trade unionists, Freemasons and Jehovah’s Witnesses were
also exterminated.
The world anti-fascist war which defeated the nazis resulted in
efforts to ensure such atrocities would never happen again. But the
collapse of the Soviet Union — which played by far the greatest part
in defeating the fascist menace, as well as being the liberator of
Auschwitz — has seen a deliberate attempt to rewrite history.
The European Parliament sponsors a Day of Remembrance for Victims of
Stalinism and Nazism, a pernicious attempt to equate communism with
fascism. As Russian communist Il Melnikov said yesterday, virulently
anti-Russian regimes in the Baltic states openly celebrate Waffen SS
veterans.
Read more on the next page:
11.02.2015
Géométrie variable
of a love triangle – India, Russia and the US
Written by the MD’s Board Member Rakesh Krishnan Simha
The Modi-Obama romance
won’t last as India’s relationship with the US does not have the
kind of strategic dimension and weight that marks New Delhi’s ties
with Moscow.
**** *****
******
Russia
is a country with which India has had a strategic relationship for
decades. America is a place where Indians migrate to for a better
lifestyle. That is how Indians view the world’s two leading powers.
It’s as simple as that. US President Barrack Obama’s recent visit to
India will not change that reality, and those speculating about
dramatic changes in India's foreign policy are either fools or
amateurs – or both.
“Good relations with the US reflect aspiration, ties with Russia are
hard reality,” says Bharat Karnad, professor of national security
studies at the Centre for Policy Research. “No substantive shift in
policy is on the anvil, certainly nothing at the expense of India's
relations with Moscow, especially because, unlike the US, Russia has
partnered, and continues to partner, India in strategically
sensitive technology projects ranging from missiles, ship
submersibles, ballistic, nuclear submarines to the Fifth Generation
Fighter Aircraft,” he told Defense News.
Over the decades a clutch of US presidents has visited India.
Likewise, Indian prime ministers have been to America. But the
dynamics of the India-US relationship hasn’t changed much. And why
would it? The US is the leader of the western world whose prosperity
largely rests on the domination of the rest of the world. India, on
the other hand, is a member of the BRICS (Brazil, Russia, India,
China and South Africa) grouping that aims to end the American-led
bloc’s dominance.
Modi’s operandi
Read more on the next page:
11.02.2015
Europe of the human
face… with a little help from Greece
by Dimitra Karantzeni
Days
after the last parliamentary elections, something is eventually
moving in Greece. People are hesitant and restrained, do not want to
get too excited. However, one can see that a humble smile, between
hope and faith, is on faces of Greeks. For the first time in the
post-dictatorship period, a leftist government took over the
leadership of the country, insisting on its pre-election commitments
to overthrow the corrupt political system and reverse the economic
disaster.
During the pre-election campaign, voters were bombarded with
terrifying messages concerning the day after Syriza’s victory,
describing more or less a socio-economic chaos, with banks with no
liquidity, a paralyzed public sector and markets out of stock.
However, the overall propaganda of terror and intimidation of
citizens by the predominant political Parties not only failed to
limit the social impact of SYRIZA’s actions, but it also seems that
the will of determination of the new government somehow managed to
positively affect the rest of Europe.
The negotiation process is still ongoing but what Syriza has
achieved so far is that its well prepared anti-austerity plan today
gives the impression not of just a grand-standing utopic program but
of a specific project built on realistic bases.
What is of high importance though is that this political change in
Greece has stimulated a great wave of active support from various
European leftist political parties, helping Syriza to immediately
avoid the risk of diplomatic isolation. Furthermore, for different
reasons of geopolitical importance both the US and Russia have a
very positive attitude towards the new Greek government,
strengthening its negotiating power against EU lenders. On the one
hand, a closer cooperation between the two orthodox countries would
benefit the development of Greek energy sector, even set Greece as a
major strategic player in the international negotiations field about
energy and at the same time provide Putin with a valuable European
ally. Besides, Greek refusal to approve an EU statement aiming to
expand sanctions against Moscow is a first good step in that
direction. On the other hand, Washington couldn’t but respond to
this diplomatic game by supporting the end of austerity, recalling
US bad fiscal experiences and expressing its concerns about EU,
which is currently lacking a tangible plan for growth in Europe.
Read more on the next page:
11.02.2015
The International Institute for Middle-East and Balkan Studies
(IFIMES) in Ljubljana, Slovenia, regularly analyses events in the
Middle East and the Balkans. IFIMES has analysed the current
situation in Bosnia and Herzegovina in view of the delayed process
of setting up the government following the general election that
took place on 12 October 2014. The most interesting sections from
the analysis entitled “Bosnia and Herzegovina: German-British
initiative overshadowed by party political games” are published
below.
Bosnia and
Herzegovina:
German-British initiative overshadowed by
party political games
JOINT ACTION BY SNSD AND SBB
A delay in setting up the government in Bosnia and Herzegovina
following the general election that took place on 12 October 2014 is
mostly the result of obstructions caused by Milorad Dodik's Alliance
of Independent Social Democrats (SNSD) from Republika Srpska (RS)
and Fahrudin Radončić's Union for a Better Future (SBB) and the
Social Democratic Party (SDP) from the Federation of Bosnia and
Herzegovina (FBiH). While SNSD is aguishly trying to enter the
government at the state level, SBB – being excluded from the
post-election coalition forming – is concocting plans to get hold of
power, even using its Avaz daily newspaper to create a negative
political atmosphere in Bosnia and Herzegovina, inciting riot among
the citizens and preparing last year's February protests scenario.
Clearly SNSD and SBB are making a joint action - their delegates
carried out a joint attempt to overthrow the President of the House
of Representatives of the Parliamentary Assembly of Bosnia and
Herzegovina Šefik Džaferović (SDA). Moreover, analysts have related
the activities of the outgoing Vice President of the Federation of
Bosnia and Herzegovina Mirsad Kebe with attempted obstructions aimed
at slowing down or preventing the formation of government by SDA-HDZ-DF-Alliance for Changes, thus promoting the formation of
another parliamentary coalition composed of SNSD, SBB and even SDP.
Read more on the next page:
January 31, 2015
On history and humility: What students need to know ?
Rattana Lao
Rattana
Lao holds a doctorate in Comparative and International Education
from Teachers College, Columbia University and is currently teaching
in Bangkok.
BANGKOK – Not so long ago, some Thai university students used
Hitler image as the poster child for superhero and just recently,
the Thai state used Nazi symbol in their propaganda for education.
This short documentary intends to promote the 12 values of
education. These values include respect seniority, desire for
knowledge and understand democracy.
Democracy and Hitler?
To make things worse, the director of the film gave public interview
seeing nothing wrong with it.
Kulp Kaljaruek, the director, said to Khaosod, one of the Thai
newspapers that “ I didn't think it would be an issue. As for
Hitler's portrait, I have seen so many people using it on T-Shirts
everywhere. It's even considered a fashion. It doesn't mean I agree
with it, but I didn't expect it to be an issue at all."
Seriously?
The Ambassador of Israel to Thailand, His Excellency Simon Roded,
issued a public statement on the 10th
of December 2014. It read:
“I was surprised that throughout the screening
process this movie must have gone through to be approved for public
broadcast, none of the smart, well educated people checking it had
identified it as being problematic and offensive.”
In an interview with Thailand's renown historian, professor Thanet
Aphornsuwan, the problem that has happened reflects an endemic
problem in Thailand.
Read more on the next page:
January 24, 2015.
GLOBAL MARKETS OF MISERY
Marján Attila[1]
– Szuhai Ilona[2]
Is our
The global humanitarian system in
transition? If so, what are the key issues b – Before the 2016 World
Humanitarian Summit
"Today's needs are at unprecedented levels and without more support there simply
is no way to respond to the humanitarian situations we're seeing in region after
region and in conflict after conflict."
António Guterres, the UN High Commissioner for Refugees
Abstract
The international community is preparing for the World
Humanitarian Summit. The United Nations will host the event in Istanbul, in
2016. Before the meeting, regional consultations are held in several parts of
the world. Expectations are high since the historical moment of changing the
twenty-five-year-old humanitarian system is approaching. Growing conflicts
demand growing funds for humanitarian action. The change in the trends of
conflicts demands more effective humanitarian solutions. 2014 was a dramatic
year in the number of people affected by conflict and of being forced to flee.
Unprecedentedly, more than 100 million people became dependent on humanitarian
aid for their survival. This rise is reflected in the inter-agency strategic
response and regional response plans as global financial requirements to cover
humanitarian needs rose to the highest amount ever requested in a single year.
The study forecasts how the EU can continue the donor activities in the future.
Read more on the next page:
January 24, 2015.
Human rights violations inside EU
What is the Ostrich Protocol?
H.E. Dr. Walter Schwimmer

How the EU member states play ostrich when it comes to
human rights violations inside EU?
H.E. Dr. Walter Schwimmer -
Vice Chair of the Modern
Diplomacy Advisory Board, Former Secretary General of the Council of
Europe -
Chairman of the International Coordinating Committee of the World
Public Forum – Dialogue of Civilizations
The
Treaty on the European Union, in its current format also known as
the Lisbon Treaty, as well as the EU Charter of Fundamental Rights
claim to establish an area of freedom, security and justice, founded
on the values of respect for human dignity, freedom, democracy,
equality, the rule of law and the respect for human rights[1].
That sounds perfect. After centuries of inhuman treatment of people
very often by their own governments, culminating in the tyrannies of
communism and Nazism in the 20th century, EU citizens should be able
to feel safe from brutal attacks and illegal operations of a violent
state, if not ....If they are not refugees from another EU member
state and they do not try to look for protection because they were
subject in their own state to political persecution, inhuman
treatment or even torture.
The Geneva Convention about status of and asylum for
refugees, persons subject to political persecution, is one of the
great international achievements in the field of human rights. The
European Union as a successful project of peace, freedom and justice
promises in Art.18 of its Charter that "the right to asylum shall be
guaranteed with due respect for the rules of the Geneva Convention..[2]"
But why is this guarantee denied when the asylum seeker comes from
an EU country?
Read more on the next page:
January 19, 2015
FUTURE OF DAVOS IS IN
KYRGYZSTAN
Francesco Brunello
Zanitti
Francesco Brunello Zanitti,
Southern Asia Research Program’s Director, and one of the Scientific
Directors of the Italian Institute for Advanced Studies in
Geopolitics and Auxiliary Sciences (Istituto di Alti Studi in
Geopolitica e Scienze Ausiliarie – IsAG, Rome). Member of Editorial
Committee of “Geopolitica” (IsAG’s journal) Rome.
Is the new Russian
approach towards China and India, vector for a multipolar world
order? Will the new Davos – gathering between vanity fair and summit
of the mightiest – in future take place in Kyrgyzstan – Central
Asian country surrounded by the most prosperous and promising
powers?
The last months of 2014
were marked by a series of significant bilateral agreements and
summits involving Russia, India and China. According to many
international analysts, the research of better relations with the
two Asian giants by Moscow represents another further step towards
global transformation from an unipolar order ruled by United States
to a multipolar one.
A key point in order to
analyze the fundamental reasons of Moscow’s approach towards China
and India is connected to difficulties emerged in the last year with
European Union and United States. Complications in Russia-West
relations are clearly exemplified by the Ukrainian imbroglio.
However, it’s also
necessary to dwell on long-term strategic interests of the countries
involved. Despite the current shaky situation of Eastern Europe and
Middle East, generally speaking Beijing and New Delhi look at Russia
as a reliable partner with whom it’s fundamental continue to
dialogue, cooperate and trade. China-Russia dialogue is growing from
mid-nineties, while Indian strategic relationship with Moscow is
heir of the one established during Cold War with Soviet Union.
Moreover, it should not to be underestimate the fact that Russia,
India and China are already actively cooperating in other
multilateral organizations, such as BRICS forum (Brazil, Russia,
India, China, South Africa), and have the opportunity to develop new
platforms for political, economic and military cooperation, for
example within the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation
(SCO). The strategic triangle Russia-India-China (RIC), taken into
account difficulties of relations especially considering
Indo-Chinese bond characterized at the same time by cooperation and
competition, could therefore be an interesting model of dialogue in
the new multipolar world order.
Read more on the next page:
January 14, 2015
The Paris Killings: Who
Are the Real Heroes of Press Freedom?
By
Jamil Maidan Flores
 |

By
Jamil Maidan Flores |
Placards are seen placed amongst other tributes to the satirical
magazine Charlie Hebdo on the statues at the Place de la Republique
in Paris on Saturday. (Reuters Photo/Youssef Boudlal)
In the wake of the terrorist assault last week on the
offices of the French magazine “Charlie Hebdo,” in which 12 persons
were killed, many people all over the world were moved to say, in an
outpouring of anger at the perpetrators and sympathy for the
victims, “I am Charlie.”
Apart from two police officers, who were slain as
they responded to the attack, the victims were cartoonists and
editors marked for death by Muslim extremists because of their
slanderous depiction of the Prophet of Islam in past issues of the
magazine.
Read more on the next page:
January 12, 2015
Denazification – urgently
needed in Europe
Anis H. Bajrektarevic,
There
is a claim constantly circulating the EU: ‘multiculturalism is
dead in Europe’. Dead or maybe d(r)ead?... That much comes from
a cluster of European nation-states that love to romanticize their
appearance thought the solid Union, as if they themselves lived a
long, cordial and credible history of multiculturalism. Hence, this
claim is of course false. It is also cynical because it is purposely
misleading. No wonder, as the conglomerate of nation-states/EU has
silently handed over one of its most important debates – that of
European anti-fascistic identity, or otherness – to the
wing-parties, repeatedly followed by the selective and
contra-productive foreign policy actions.
The Paris shooting, terrible beyond comprehension,
will reload and overheat those debates. However, these debates are
ill conceived, resting from the start on completely wrong and
misleading premises. Assassins in the Parisian Satirical Magazine
are Islamofascists. The fact that these individuals are
allegedly of the Arab-Muslim origins does not make them less
fascists, less European, nor does it abolish Europe from the main
responsibility in this case.
Fascism and its evil twin, Nazism are 100% European
ideologies. Neo-Nazism also originates from and lately unchecked
blossoms, primarily in Europe. (Some would say, über-economy
in the center of continent, surrounded from all sides by the
recuperating neo-fascism.) The Old continent tried to amortize its
deepening economic and demographic contraction by a constant
interference on its peripheries, especially meddling on the Balkans,
Black Sea/Caucasus and MENA (Middle East–North Africa). What is now
an epilogue? A severe democratic recession. Whom to blame for
this structural, lasting civilizational retreat that Europe suffers?
Is it accurate or only convenient to blame a bench of useful idiots
for returning home with the combating behavior?
Read more on the next page:
http://moderndiplomacy.eu/index.php?option=com_k2&view=item&id=481:den&Itemid=569
January 8, 2015
Paris Massacre and Islamic Terror
World Security Network reporting from Paris in France, January 7, 2015
Dear Friends of the World
Security Network,
What should we do, after three heavily armed and
professional gunmen killed twelve and wounded seven in the office of the French
satire magazine Chalie Hebdo today as „revenge for the Prophet“?
I. The silent majority of 1.6 billion Muslims must stand up against the tiny, but
active and dangerous minority of the radicals of maybe five percent openly and
defend the true, peaceful Islam, their Prophet and the Holy Qur’an.
Egyptian President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi did so on New Year’s Day at the
famous Al Azhar University in Cairo, demanding „a religious revolution in
Islam“. „It is inconceivable that the thinking that we hold most sacred should
cause the entire Islamic World (umma) to be a source of anxiety, danger, killing
and destruction for the rest oft he world. Impossible!“
Without fear Jordans beautiful and wise Queen
Rania told the Abu Dhabi Media Summit 2014, November 18th:
Read more on the next page:
Dr Hubertus Hoffmann President and Founder
World Security Netw
January 7, 2015
PUBLICATIONS:
Eastern Europe – The World’s Last Underachiever - Prof. Anis H.
Bajrektarević
Yemenisation or Confederalisation of Saudi Arabia? - By Brian
Whitaker
Bosnia as Wunderkind –
Corruption from Kosovo to Germany - Gerald Knaus
Imperative of an EU-Russia strategic reset - Eirini Patsea
All
European shades of ISIL colour black: Neonazism of Europe and
Fascism in the Arab World - By Allan Bogle
Greed
is good…but only for cancer - Amna Whiston
70
years after Auschwitz – deliberate attempts to rewrite history -
MD Editorial Board
Géométrie variable of a love triangle – India, Russia and the US
- Rakesh Krishnan Simha
Europe of the human face… with a little help from Greece - by
Dimitra Karantzeni
Bosnia and Herzegovina: German-British initiative overshadowed
by party political games - Bakhtyar Aljaf
On
history and humility: What students need to know? - Rattana Lao
GLOBAL MARKETS OF MISERY - Marján Attila – Szuhai Ilona
Human rights violations inside EU - H.E. Dr. Walter Schwimmer
FUTURE OF DAVOS IS IN KYRGYZSTAN - Francesco Brunello Zanitti
The
Paris Killings: Who Are the Real Heroes of Press Freedom? - By
Jamil Maidan Flores
Denazification – urgently needed in Europe - Anis H.
Bajrektarevic
Paris Massacre and Islamic Terror
- Dr Hubertus Hoffmann
COLOR REVOLUTIONS: TECHNIQUES IN BREAKING DOWN MODERN POLITICAL
REGIMES - ANDREI MANOILO[1], OLEG KARPOVICH[2]
Lima
2014: Climate Change – Humans Remain the Same - Anis H.
Bajrektarevic
THE ASIAN
SQUARE DANCE – PART IV - By Michael Akerib
NEW AGE
DIPLOMACY - Samantha Brletich
Nuclear Commerce –
essentials - Prof. Anis H. Bajrektarevic and Petra Posega
THE ASIAN
SQUARE DANCE – THIRD PART - By Michael Akerib
Vietnamese Australians’ Community: Realities and Prospect - By Prof.
Dr. Nguyen Anh Tuan

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Maasmechelen Village

Maasmechelen Village


Adria


BALKAN AREA


prof. dr. Anis Bajrektarevic
Editor - Geopolitics, History, International Relations (GHIR) Addleton Academic
Publishers - New YorK
Senior Advisory board member, geopolitics of energy Canadian energy research
institute - ceri, Ottawa/Calgary
Advisory Board Chairman Modern Diplomacy & the md Tomorrow's people platform
originator
Head of mission and department head - strategic studies on Asia
Professor and Chairperson Intl. law & global pol. studies

Critical Similarities and Differences in SS of Asia and Europe - Prof.
Anis H. Bajrektarevic

MENA Saga and Lady Gaga - (Same dilemma from the MENA) - Anis H. Bajrektarevic

![Dr. Nguyen Anh Tuan, Assos. Prof.[1] Nguyen Linh[2]](images/Prof_Dr._Nguyen_Anh_Tuan_140.jpg)
HE ONGOING PUBLIC DEBT CRISIS IN THE EUROPEAN UNION: IMPACTS ON AND
LESSONS FOR VIETNAM - Dr. Nguyen Anh Tuan, Assos. Prof.[1]
Nguyen Linh[2]


Carla BAUMER
Climate
Change and Re Insurance: The Human Security Issue SC-SEA Prof. Anis
Bajrektarevic & Carla Baumer

Igor Dirgantara
(Researcher and Lecturer at the Faculty of Social and Politics,
University of Jayabaya)


Peny Sotiropoulou
Is the ‘crisis of secularism’ in Western Europe the result of
multiculturalism?


Dr. Emanuel L. Paparella
A Modest “Australian”
Proposal to Resolve our Geo-Political Problems
Were the Crusades Justified? A Revisiting - Dr. Emanuel L. Paparella


Alisa Fazleeva earned an MA in International Relations from
the University of East Anglia in Norwich, United Kingdom in 2013. Her
research interests include foreign policy decision-making, realism and
constructivism, and social psychology and constructivism.


Corinna Metz
is an independent researcher specialized in International Politics and Peace
& Conflict Studies with a regional focus on the Balkans and the Middle East.

Patricia
Galves Derolle
Founder of Internacionalista
São Paulo, Brazil
Brazil – New Age


Dimitra Karantzeni
The political character of Social Media: How do Greek Internet users perceive
and use social networks?


Michael Akerib
Vice-Rector
SWISS UMEF UNIVERSITY


Petra Posega
is a master`s
degree student on the University for Criminal justice and
Security in Ljubljana. She obtained her bachelor`s degree in
Political Science- Defense studies.
Contact:
posegap@live.com


Samantha Brletich, George Mason University School of Policy,
Government, and Intl. Relations She focuses on Russia and Central
Asia. Ms. Brletich is an employee of the US Department of Defense.

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