EU leaders have forgotten about something kind of important
By: Rachel Marsden
People are only ready to sacrifice so much ‘for Ukraine’ before they realize
their leaders don’t care about them
Brussels overlords and assorted EU leaders, taking turns at the UN General
Assembly podium beating the Western war-drums against Russia — all in the
interest of “peace”, neglect to ascertain what the average European citizen
actually wants.
Contrary to their leaders’ desires, the average European is only willing to
personally give up so much “for Ukraine” — whatever that means, since it’s
pretty obvious that the people of Ukraine aren’t benefiting from the current
state of perpetual conflict the EU and the US are enabling, either.
It’s one thing for the average EU citizen to get behind lofty values, voiced
from high above the daily struggles, if it doesn’t cost them anything. Or at
least if the waters are sufficiently muddied that citizens can’t easily connect
the dots from their wallet to their leaders’ relentless spending. Selling this
seemingly endless conflict in Ukraine, a notoriously corrupt country, as a
defense of “democracy”, only works until it means choosing between paying your
own bills and paying for all the blank cheques that you’re writing to Kyiv.
In his UN address this week, French President Emmanuel Macron said with respect
to countries sitting out the Ukraine conflict that “those who are silent today
are serving — whether against their will or secretly with a certain complicity —
the cause of a new imperialism.” Macron then paid lip-service to the “feeling of
injustice” felt by those paying the price in rising food, energy, and inflation
costs. The message is clear: The average Western citizen must tolerate these
demands foisted on them by Western elites because it’s a moral imperative. Those
citizens have heard that before, with Covid restrictions and climate change
regulations. Now it’s come full circle, setting limits on home heating and
cooling, but this time “for Ukraine”.
It’s no wonder that Macron is trying to chastise the global South, which has
largely opted out of the current fiasco and refused to participate in the
Western anti-Russian sanctions. Nations of the South is actually doing what they
figure is best for their own citizens, unlike the EU. Their approach is likely
to make their own countries and people more prosperous, which risks being
noticed by Europeans as their bills pile up and everyday life becomes
increasingly taxing. So it makes total sense that Macron and his fellow EU
leaders would want everyone in the same sinking boat. If only because it’s tough
to argue that Ukraine is a world problem that requires more imperialism
disguised as Western-led global governance when a huge swath of the world isn’t
buying into it.
During a visit to Mexico City this week, German President Frank-Walter
Steinmeier also tried to browbeat Mexican President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador
into abandoning his non-aligned position and refusal to impose anti-Russian
sanctions. It must be a bad look for Germany that Mexico, having stayed out of
the fray, is now in a position to offer Germany cooperation on gas (even if it
won’t flow for a few more years), all while Germany is facing
deindustrialization, rationing, and has just been forced to nationalize its own
gas company, Uniper.
Meanwhile, German Chancellor Olaf Scholz expressed his annoyance that NATO
member Turkey was planning to wriggle out of the Western straightjacket and join
the Russian and China-led Shanghai Cooperation Organisation, which would
effectively allow it to diversify its interests away from the West and therefore
reduce its exposure to any pressure. “I'm very irritated about this
development,” Scholz said. “But at the end, it's important to agree on what is
driving us to make clear that the Russian war on Ukraine may not be successful.”
In other words, “I don’t like it. But whatever — as long as you’re not
abandoning the sinking ship of our Western ideology.”
Scholz should be more concerned with the average Germans who are irritated that
he isn’t as keen on ensuring his country's own energy security as he is on
making knee-jerk moves to cut off their own supplies.
Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez was also working the EU’s blame-shifting
rhetoric on the sidelines of the UN assembly this week, telling the press that
Russian President Vladimir Putin is using energy as a “war tool” against Europe.
In reality, it’s European elites whose policies towards Russia have stuck their
own citizens with the bill — and now desperately need Europeans to believe that
it’s Putin’s fault. But if populist surges in recent elections across the bloc
are any indication, resentment is growing towards the EU establishment. If they
continue to ignore the will of the people, then they shouldn’t be surprised when
it turns out to be at their own political peril.
COPYRIGHT 2022 RACHEL MARSDEN