Paul
Goble
Staunton, June 26 – Most of the time
people think that tomorrow will be much like today, a reasonable assumption
much of the time but one that blinds them to radical changes that do in fact
happen. Thus, as Andrey Illarionov
points out, experts sometimes engage in “brainstorming sessions” in which they
engage in “thinking about the unthinkable.”
Such efforts are especially common
when something previously “unthinkable” already has, in this case the British
vote for leaving the European Union; and they may be particularly useful by
calling attention to underlying trends that have been ignored or neglected and
prompting actions to prevent the “unthinkable” from becoming the inevitable.
In the wake of the Brexit vote, the
Russian economist says, it is thus important “to continue to reflect about what
may be possible tomorrow that even a short time ago seemed almost or completely
unreal.” To that end, he offers a series of possible future developments that
many will dismiss as “unreal” (rufabula.com/author/aillarionov/1255).
Before doing so, Illarionov offers
the following “four disclaimers.” He doesn’t dispute the right of the British
people to vote as they see fit. He isn’t too worried about the common future of
England and Wales. His ideas about the future have no precise timetable. And
what he is offering, he specifies, is “not a prediction but rather an
irresponsible presentation of an unreal variant of one of the impossible
scenarios of the fantastic development of a completely unthinkable and
absolutely unpredictable future.”
Illarionov’s “impossible scenario”
contains the following elements:
·
Britain
leaves the EU and Scotland, Northern Ireland and Gibralter leave Great Britain
in order to join the EU as “new independent states.”
·
Scotland
declares itself “a nuclear free zone” and talks begin on dividing up the
military assets of Great Britain between the new states and Britain, which now
includes “only England and Wales.”
·
United
Russia wins the parliamentary elections, and Sergey Ivanov becomes prime
minister, with Dmitry Medvedev taking Ivanov’s old job as head of the Presidential
Administration.
·
Donald
Trump wins the presidential elections in the US and declares that the US is
pulling back from its international commitments and expects its allies to pay
for their own defense.
·
The
Netherlands votes to leave the EU. Catalonia votes to leave Spain and join the
EU. Belgium dissolves into two new states, Flanders and Wallonia, with the
formation of “a common European District of Brussels.”
·
The
“’renewed European Union’” as a result includes 31 states and one special
district – the current 28 minus Great Britain, the Netherlands and Belgium “plus
Scotland, Northern Ireland, Gibralter, Flanders, Wallonia, Catalonia, and the
District of Brussels.”
·
“The
external border of the renewed European Union begins to recall the borders of
the territory controlled by the forces of the Anti-Comintern Pact as of
November 25, 1941” except for those on the frontline in the USSR. “Evil tongues in London papers begin to call
the renewed European Union ‘the Fourth Reich.’”
·
Washington
ends its participation in NATO and brings home its forces from around the
world, given that it is focusing on “the construction of a Great Wall between
the US and Mexico and the problems of financing it out of the Mexican budget.”
·
President
Trump meets his Russian counterpart Putin in Minsk and agree to Minsk-3, in
which the US says it will end assistance to Ukraine and calls on Ukraine and
Russia to resolve their differences.
·
Trump
agrees to a Russian plan for the resolution of the Syrian conflict.
·
Germany
elects a new chancellor, Zigmar Gabriel, who becomes “the informal leader of
the renewed European Union.”
·
The
EU and the US lift sanctions on Russia.
·
In
Austria, the Freedom Party wins and declares that “Austrians are one of the
inalienable parts of the German people.” Given the absence of Britain in the
EU, the paralysis of NATP, and the disinterest of the US, “the process of
uniting Germany and Austria into a single federal state” begins.
·
“Anglo-Saxon
influence in Europe weakens,” and “old” Europe is no longer that interested in
what its “new” members in the east want, preferring instead to make deals with
Russia.
·
Vladimir
Putin wins re-election as president with 56 percent of the vote. “Foreign
observers note that the elections took place without significant violations and
therefore can be recognized as confirmation of progress” toward democracy.
·
The
budgetary balance shifts from the members of the EU to the EU itself, and
German and French replace English as the working language of EU institutions.
·
The
German leader of “the renewed EU” and the Russian leader of “renewed Russia”
agree to a strategic partnership on the basis of “the noble traditions of
preceding agreements achieved at one time in Yalta and Potsdam.”
·
Not
only do these leaders commit to recognizing German-Austrian unification, but
they recognize “the inalienable right of the peoples of Russia, Belarus,
Ukraine, Moldova, Georgia, Armenia, Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan,
Uzbekistan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, Transdniestria, Abkhazia, South Osetia,
the LDNR, the Narva Peoples Republic, the Latgale Peoples Republic, and the
Peoples Republic of Semireche” to unite for “the flourishing of their peoples.”
·
At
a press conference after these accords are reached, the leaders of Europe and
Russia “with regret note that the Anglo-Saxon countries of Britain and the US …
by their own actions have excluded themselves from participation in Eurasian
affairs.”
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