Is
Global Establishment In For Surprise In France Too?
Saeed Naqvi
Accustomed either to isolation or global
dominance, the US has in recent years been playing a third role. Eversince its
power diminished following the 2008 meltdown, it finds itself running around to
block political forces which are ascendant everywhere almost independent of its
authority.
Brexit happened despite the US. The
country itself has a President it did not want. And now, the weight of its
establishment is behind the centrist banker, Emmanuel Macron in France. But
will that suffice to keep the ultranationalist Marine Le Pen at bay? The falcon
cannot see the falconer.
Electoral eruptions are taking place
everywhere almost in defiance of American will. In some instances it is
difficult to fathom what possible interest the US might have had in a certain
outcome until the truth suddenly leaps out of the thicket, in sharp silhouette.
Why, for instances, would the CIA exert
every muscle to support the Right Wing Guillermo Lasso in Ecuador, a country of
16 million people? In the event, a rank Leftist with a menacing name, Lenin
Moreno, won.
World Affairs these days are sometimes
like a game of billiards. That roughly is the effect of Lenin Moreno’s victory
in Quito. The consequence of this outcome is that Julian Assange, who controls
the nightmare called Wikileaks, now cannot be dispatched to Sweden for trial.
He can live for the next few years in the comfort of the Ecuador Embassy in
London. That clearly is an affront to the US establishment.
Worse maybe on its way in Mexico, Monroe
doctrine or no Monroe doctrine. Come the 2018 elections, President Enrique
Nieto will by all accounts be hit for a six, to be replaced by Leftist Lopez
Obrador, if not something more radical. “Building the wall” rhetoric is not the
only humiliation that has registered with the Mexican electorate.
So, scramble CIA; reversal in Mexico has
to be averted at all costs just as one has to be speeded up in Venezuela.
You may sail the world’s most powerful
Armada to threaten Kim Jong-un, but every school boy in Seoul knows that US
troops in Panmunjom and at nearby Okinawa Island would be exposed to even hand
carried ordnance in the unlikely event of hostilities.
Then why all this bluster on the part of
Secretary of State Rex Tillerson, Vice President Mike Pence and President Trump
himself? The US has patronized many corrupt regimes in Seoul, but the disgrace
in which President Park Geun-hye had to leave office has left South Koreans
shattered. Is the US influence with the regime that comes in after May 9
elections about to plummet?
Is all this muscle flexing, then mixing
hot and cold (Trump says he would meet Kim Jong-un), designed to somehow psyche
Korean voting intentions. South Korea is not exempt from anti Americanism. An
outcome conditioned by this factor will clearly be advantageous to China and
Russia.
The global establishment is on sixes and
sevens on which way the cookie might crumble in France. At the outset Macron
seemed a clever idea, responding to the universal quest for something new,
different from the established parties. But as the date of elections
approaches, the idea begins to look too clever by half.
A 39 year old, married to a grandmother,
branches out with his own party, En Marche, or March Ahead has considerable
novelty attached to it. But on close scrutiny he is a Rothschild banker, a
former member of the most unpopular Francois Hollande government. Establishment
to the core. Old wine in new bottle. Le Pen tattooed him with punches on that
count in the TV debate the other night.
Suddenly imagination transports me to
that Dumbo Loft under the Brooklyn Bridge on the evening of November 8. Hillary
Clinton was the front runner. It was an impressive assembly of World bankers,
State Department officials, artists, journalists, friends Saeed Raza and Nusrat
Durrani from Lucknow (to underscore my parochialism), all eager to celebrate a
Clinton victory. But we all know what happened. (for the rest of the drama read
my November 10, blog.)
Does Macron’s fate on election day
resemble Clinton’s. American establishment shows traces of Joseph McCarthy in
its DNA at the sight of anything resembling the classical left. Comfort level
with a Bertolt Brecht and Arthur Miller is confined to Broadway shows. Little
wonder, Bernie Sanders was grounded by the Democratic Establishment when he was
miles ahead in the race.
In the French campaign, the communist
Jean-Luc Melenchon surged with lightening speed, but French public were witness
to his brilliant presentation only towards the end of the campaign. Imagine
where he might have been had a viscerally anti Left media placed the spotlight
on him earlier. Even so, he got 20 percent of the first round votes as against
Le Pen’s 21 and Macron’s 23 percent.
All sorts of calculations are afoot: if
90 percent of Le Pen’s supporter turned out but only 65 of Macron’s were
mobilized, she would win.
The trophy for prescience on the US
elections clearly belonged to the film maker Michael Moore:
“This election is only about who gets
who out to vote, who gets the most rabid supporters, the mind of candidate who
gets people out of bed at 5.00 am on Election Day.”
Moore added: “So many people have given
up on the system because the system has given up on them. They know it is all
bullshit: politics, politicians, elections. People want to tear down
establishments.” And Macron sadly, is “the” establishment in very thin
disguise.
In an insightful piece, Ross Douthat
wrote in the New York Times, that Le Pen has with great deliberation distanced
herself from the anti Semitism of her father Jean-Marie Le Pen. This brings her
closer to the middle.
According to Douthat, “Nobody seriously
doubts Le Pen’s competence, her command of policy, her ability to serve as
President without turning the office into a Reality – TV thunderdrome.” Trump’s
inability to master his own turbulent emotions is not an issue with his Gallic
counterpart.
In the US, the media (except Fox News)
threw its total weight behind Clinton. It had egg on its face. The French
media, likewise, is supporting Macron to the hilt. In our perverse times, is
that not a good omen for Le Pen?
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