#ThisIsACoup
The humiliating offer presented by Eurozone finance ministers to the Greek government is designed to bring down Syriza - discussed by Dimitri Lascaris and Michalis Spourdalakis, interviewed by Paul Jay
Syriza's climbdown: Greek control handed to Europe - Paul Mason
Greece
put its faith in democracy but Europe has vetoed the result
Paul
Mason
13
July, 2015
The
only thing certain about the aftermath of Sunday’s Euro summit is
the disgrace of the political leaderships. The EU’s main powers
tried to ritually humiliate the Greek government, but ruthlessness of
intent was matched by incompetence when it came to execution. The
German finance minister, Wolfgang Schäuble, threw on to the table a
suggestion for Greece to leave the single currency for five years.
Senior MPs from his coalition partner, the socialist SPD, screamed
from the sidelines that they had not agreed to this – yet enough of
Germany’s partners did agree to get the proposal into the final
ultimatum.
The
Greeks were negotiating under threat of their banking system being
allowed to collapse, a threat made by the very regulator supposed to
maintain financial stability.
For
the Greek leadership, it has also been a week of miscalculation.
Armed, they thought, with a mandate for less austerity, they listened
once again to the French, whose technocrats actually helped design
the Greek offer going into the Brussels summit, only to see that
offer ripped apart and replaced with a demand for the reversal of
every measure against austerity the government has ever taken.
But
the real problem is not the politicians. It is the eurozone’s
inability to contain the democratic wishes of 19 electorates. When
the Finnish government threatened to collapse the talks, it was only
expressing the wishes of the 38% of voters who backed the nationalist
rightwingers of Finns Party. Likewise, when Schäuble sprang his
temporary Grexit plan, he was expressing the demand of 52% of German
voters, who want Greece to leave.
As
for the Greeks, having tramped the streets of Athens alongside them
for the best part of two months, I am certain that the “Oxi”
movement was essentially a demand to stay in the Euro on different
terms. You cannot get 70-80% of people in the working-class suburbs
of Athens turning out – in the face of a rightwing media
bombardment – on far-left anti-Euro sentiment alone.
Now
it seems that both sides of the Greek referendum were voting for an
illusion. One of the most touching aspects of Greek life is people’s
obsessional respect for parliamentary democracy. Syriza itself is the
embodiment of a leftism that always believed you could achieve more
in parliament than on the streets. For the leftwing half of Greek
society, though, the result is people continually voting for things
more radical than they are prepared to fight for.
I
asked one of Syriza’s grassroots organisers, a tough party cadre
who had been agitating for a “rupture” with lenders for weeks,
whether he could put his members onto the streets to keep order
outside besieged pharmacies and supermarkets. He shook his head. The
police, or more probably the conscript army would have to do it.
Columnist Jonathan
Freedland and economics editor Larry Elliott discuss the late-night
deal that the Greek prime minister Alexis Tsipras has agreed to
When
it comes to the now-abandoned Thessaloniki Programme, the radical
manifesto on which Alexis Tsipras came to power, there is always talk
of implementing it “from below”: that is, demanding so many
workers’ rights inside the industries designated for privatisation
that it becomes impossible; or implementing the minimum wage through
wildcat strikes. But it never happens. When strikes are called, it’s
by the communists. When riots happen, it’s the anarchists. The rest
of leftwing Greece is mesmerised by parliament.
Little
does it understand how scant was the power its ministers actually
wielded from their offices. And now the realisation dawns: the Greek
parliament has no power inside the eurozone at all. It has the power
only to implement what its lenders want.
And
what of rightwing and centrist Greece? Its party structures are
already shattered by the political defeats of January and the
referendum. But here, too, the mass base is prone to voting for an
illusion. When they went on to the streets with their badly
translated red-baiting placards in mid-June, the Greek right claimed
to be for nothing more than “Europe”. But the Europe they want is
the Europe that tolerated corruption and fiscal profligacy, and
indeed paid for it. The Europe of the submarines purchased from
Germany, under conditions which put a former Greek defence minister
in jail for taking bribes. Peoples with sovereignty have the right to
vote for illusory things. But the Euro took sovereignty away.
I
followed the summit in a bar, with a bunch of young Greek freelancers
– photographers, fashion magazine journalists, speakers of perfect
English who could work anywhere, but choose to tote their DSLRs and
laptops here. They know they’re sitting on the most visually
stunning and compelling story in the developed world. We watched the
hashtag #ThisIsACoup proliferate until our eyes could not stay open.
Then, said one: “Let’s go to the beach. Let’s bring women that
look like supermodels and a bunch of handsome guys and let’s flip
the finger at the world, saying: ‘We’re still Greece’. That
will go viral.” It probably would, but the Greece they’re part of
is shattered. The economy can and will rebound. Syriza will purge
itself and be reformed. The right will find leaders who don’t look
bewildered by their own defeats.
The
problem is with democracy. If democracy cannot express illusions and
crazy hopes; if it cannot contain narratives of emotion and ideals,
it dies. By countermanding first the landslide victory of an elected
government and then a 61% plebiscite majority, the EU functionally
vetoed the outcomes of Greek democracy. If the democratic spirit now
dies in Greece – and it might – we had better hope that
phenomenon too does not go viral.
The
problem of Greece is not only a tragedy. It is a lie
John
Pilger
13
July, 2015
An
historic betrayal has consumed Greece. Having set aside the mandate
of the Greek electorate, the Syriza government has willfully ignored
last week's landslide "No" vote and secretly agreed a raft
of repressive, impoverishing measures in return for a "bailout"
that means sinister foreign control and a warning to the world.
Prime
Minister Alexis Tsipras has pushed through parliament a proposal to
cut at least 13 billion euros from the public purse - 4 billion euros
more than the "austerity" figure rejected overwhelmingly by
the majority of the Greek population in a referendum on 5 July.
These
reportedly include a 50 per cent increase in the cost of healthcare
for pensioners, almost 40 per cent of whom live in poverty; deep cuts
in public sector wages; the complete privatization of public
facilities such as airports and ports; a rise in value added tax to
23 per cent, now applied to the Greek islands where people struggle
to eke out a living. There is more to come.
"Anti-austerity
party sweeps to stunning victory", declared a Guardian headline
on January 25. "Radical leftists" the paper called Tsipras
and his impressively-educated comrades. They wore open neck shirts,
and the finance minister rode a motorbike and was described as a
"rock star of economics". It was a façade. They were not
radical in any sense of that cliched label, neither were they "anti
austerity".
For
six months Tsipras and the recently discarded finance minister, Yanis
Varoufakis, shuttled between Athens and Brussels, Berlin and the
other centres of European money power. Instead of social justice for
Greece, they achieved a new indebtedness, a deeper impoverishment
that would merely replace a systemic rottenness based on the theft of
tax revenue by the Greek super-wealthy - in accordance with European
"neo-liberal" values - and cheap, highly profitable loans
from those now seeking Greece's scalp.
Greece's
debt, reports an audit by the Greek parliament, "is illegal,
illegitimate and odious". Proportionally, it is less than 30 per
cent that of the debit of Germany, its major creditor. It is less
than the debt of European banks whose "bailout" in 2007-8
was barely controversial and unpunished.
For
a small country such as Greece, the euro is a colonial currency: a
tether to a capitalist ideology so extreme that even the Pope
pronounces it "intolerable" and "the dung of the
devil". The euro is to Greece what the US dollar is to remote
territories in the Pacific, whose poverty and servility is guaranteed
by their dependency.
In
their travels to the court of the mighty in Brussels and Berlin,
Tsipras and Varoufakis presented themselves neither as radicals nor
"leftists" nor even honest social democrats, but as two
slightly upstart supplicants in their pleas and demands. Without
underestimating the hostility they faced, it is fair to say they
displayed no political courage. More than once, the Greek people
found out about their "secret austerity plans" in leaks to
the media: such as a 30 June letter published in the Financial Times,
in which Tsipras promised the heads of the EU, the European Central
Bank and the IMF to accept their basic, most vicious demands - which
he has now accepted.
When
the Greek electorate voted "no" on 5 July to this very kind
of rotten deal, Tsipras said, "Come Monday and the Greek
government will be at the negotiating table after the referendum with
better terms for the Greek people". Greeks had not voted for
"better terms". They had voted for justice and for
sovereignty, as they had done on January 25.
The
day after the January election a truly democratic and, yes, radical
government would have stopped every euro leaving the country,
repudiated the "illegal and odious" debt - as Argentina did
successfully - and expedited a plan to leave the crippling Eurozone.
But there was no plan. There was only a willingness to be "at
the table" seeking "better terms".
The
true nature of Syriza has been seldom examined and explained. To the
foreign media it is no more than "leftist" or "far
left" or "hardline" - the usual misleading spray. Some
of Syriza's international supporters have reached, at times, levels
of cheer leading reminiscent of the rise of Barack Obama. Few have
asked: Who are these "radicals"? What do they believe in?
In
2013, Yanis Varoufakis wrote: "Should we welcome this crisis of
European capitalism as an opportunity to replace it with a better
system? Or should we be so worried about it as to embark upon a
campaign for stabilising capitalism? To me, the answer is clear.
Europe's crisis is far less likely to give birth to a better
alternative to capitalism... I bow to the criticism that I have
campaigned on an agenda founded on the assumption that the left was,
and remains, squarely defeated... Yes, I would love to put forward
[a] radical agenda. But, no, I am not prepared to commit the [error
of the British Labour Party following Thatcher's victory]... What
good did we achieve in Britain in the early 1980s by promoting an
agenda of socialist change that British society scorned while falling
headlong into Thatcher's neoliberal trip? Precisely none. What good
will it do today to call for a dismantling of the Eurozone, of the
European Union itself...?"
Varoufakis
omits all mention of the Social Democratic Party that split the
Labour vote and led to Blairism. In suggesting people in Britain
"scorned socialist change" - when they were given no real
opportunity to bring about that change - he echoes Blair.
The
leaders of Syriza are revolutionaries of a kind - but their
revolution is the perverse, familiar appropriation of social
democratic and parliamentary movements by liberals groomed to comply
with neo-liberal drivel and a social engineering whose authentic face
is that of Wolfgang Schauble, Germany's finance minister, an imperial
thug. Like the Labour Party in Britain and its equivalents among
former social democratic parties such as the Labor Party in
Australia, still describing themselves as "liberal" or even
"left", Syriza is the product of an affluent, highly
privileged, educated middle class, "schooled in postmodernism",
as Alex Lantier wrote.
For
them, class is the unmentionable, let alone an enduring struggle,
regardless of the reality of the lives of most human beings. Syriza's
luminaries are well-groomed; they lead not the resistance that
ordinary people crave, as the Greek electorate has so bravely
demonstrated, but "better terms" of a venal status quo that
corrals and punishes the poor. When merged with "identity
politics" and its insidious distractions, the consequence is not
resistance, but subservience. "Mainstream" political life
in Britain exemplifies this.
This
is not inevitable, a done deal, if we wake up from the long,
postmodern coma and reject the myths and deceptions of those who
claim to represent us, and fight.
Follow
John Pilger on twitter @johnpilger
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