Paul
Goble
Staunton, December 15 – The period
between the division of Poland between Nazi and Soviet forces in September 1939
and Germany’s attack on the Low Countries and then France in May 1940 is known
as “the phony war,” a period when most of the countries of Europe went about
their business as usual even though other countries were being attacked.
Ukrainian commentator Vitaly
Portnikov argues that the world has once again entered a “phony war” period,
one in which countries like Iraq and Ukraine are being attacked by dictators
but in which most of Europe is at peace and assumes that it can express its
concern about such things without having to take any additional action (graniru.org/opinion/portnikov/m.257480.html).
Looking back at
1939-1940, it is difficult to imagine that the countries living at a time of
phony war could consider themselves safe from the conflagration that soon
spread to them. But it is perhaps easier
to understand, the commentator suggests, given the futile gestures and lack of
real action now in such countries in the face of naked aggression and crimes
against humanity.
Turning off the lights of the Eiffel
Tower to show sympathy for the residents of Aleppo being destroyed by the force
of Asad and Putin is symbolic of this situation, Portnikov suggests. It shows
that people care enough to take symbolic actions but not to do anything that
might prevent the evils from spreading.
In this situation, the tower is dark
but people can be certain that their champagne will be properly chilled, a reflection
of cynicism that is hardly confined to or even most clearly manifest in
France. Not only is it time to identify
the sources of this cynicism but it is time to fight it before another and
broader kind of fight becomes unavoidable.
The fact that some dictators can act
with impunity, Portnikov argues, “is the chief result of the Western policy of
complacency in recent years.” Indeed, one can properly say that it is “the
essential feature of the foreign policy achievements of the Barack Obama administration.”
After all, if the US isn’t willing to act, why should the French or anyone
else?
That achievement has allowed for the
appearance of three “totally new rules” governing the international
system. First of all, if a country has nuclear
arms, then its regime can destroy any number of people because we do not want a
third world war.” Second, the only tool is economic sanctions which won’t last
too long lest they hurt those imposing them.
And third, the civilized world is
quite ready to teach others the rules it says it believes in but it will “allow
itself to elegantly back away from these values if they involve the lives of
others or immediate interests.” In the
future, Portnikov suggests, encyclopedias will refer to these new principles as
“’the Obama rules.’”
Under such circumstances, no one
should be surprised that ever fewer people “trust professional politicians and
ever more trust instead storytellers who simply tell them what they want to
hear.” After all, they can see that their supposed leaders are only concerned
about the modalities of reaching agreements with those committing the worst
crimes.
At present, Portnikov continues, “the
Western world is overfilled with gentlemen-Chamberlains to the point that even
the cautious Angela Merkel, who is trying simply to maintain good sense looks
epically heroic and the last hope. And that is correct, becaue our last hope as
always in times of collective slaughter really becomes the hope for good sense.”
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