The International Journal of INCLUSIVE DEMOCRACY, Vol. 4, No. 3 (July 2008)


The New World Order in Action: From Kosovo to Tibet*

 

TAKIS FOTOPOULOS

 

 

The recently granted “independence” to Kosovo by the transnational elite, in flagrant violation of international law and the UN, has completed the disintegration of the former Yugoslavia. As I pointed out elsewhere[1] the dismembering of Yugoslavia was an attempt by the transnational elite to fully integrate the area into the New Economic Order of the internationalised market economy. Thus, given the resurgence of nationalism in the Balkans after the collapse of socialism and the fact that the old Yugoslavia was the strongest Balkan state, with a long history of independence from both the Western and Soviet blocks, it is obvious that the transnational elite at some stage drew the conclusion that the normal  methods of economic integration, which were successfully used in the rest of the Balkans (Albania, Bulgaria, Romania) would not be sufficient to fully integrate the old Yugoslavia into the internationalised market economy and its economic and military institutions (EU/NATO). Therefore, the policy adopted by the transnational elite was one of encouraging Yugoslavia’s dismemberment through the creation of a series of protectorates. Either, on a ‘voluntary’ basis, (as in the cases of Croatia, Slovenia, Macedonia), or by force (as in the cases of Bosnia and then Kosovo). In pursuing this policy, the transnational elite, throughout the last decade, exploited in every way possible the nationalist and ethnotic divisions, which emerged after the collapse of Yugoslavian ‘socialism’.

 

 The Serbian elite was divided in this process between a nationalist part (supposedly) expressing the aspirations of lower social groups for some form of a nationally based social economy, and a “modernising” part mainly expressing the middle classes’ aspirations to join the EU and the consequent  full integration to the internationalised market economy. The barbarous bombing by the transnational elite-controlled NATO (with the full support of the European reformist Left and the European mainstream Greens) of Serbian infrastructure had the desired effect in achieving the ousting of the nationalist leadership (part of which is still being tried in the Hague by the kangaroo court established by the transnational elite) and the dominance, since then, of the modernising part of the elite. The inevitable outcome of the dismembering of Yugoslavia was the return of the Yugoslav peoples to the pre-World War II condition of dependence, which had been interrupted by their partial separation from the world market and the corresponding political independence they achieved under the Tito regime. It is therefore expected that in the short to medium term the Serbian elite, with the full support of Serbia’ s strong middle class, would be fully integrated into the New International Order, through its accession to NATO and the EU.

 

At the same time, the transnational elite (which does not consist only of the “bad” American elite, as the reformist Left simplifies the issue for obvious reasons, but also of the main European elites) has already fulfilled all its geopolitical and economic goals it had planned on launching its criminal wars over the past ten years (bombing of Yugoslavia, invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq), and the corresponding goals it aims today with respect to rising powers like China, namely:

However, the interesting element in the attainment of the above objectives by the transnational elite is not its well known military superiority, which of course was the main instrument it used in achieving most of these objectives, but also the ideology it used so effectively to stimulate the euphemistically called “world civil society” (or “world community”) of Non-Governmental Organizations (NGOs) and the “movements” of the reformist Left and Ecology, as the Tibet incident has shown.

 

As I pointed out elsewhere[5], economic and political globalisation were inevitably accompanied by a kind of ‘ideological globalisation’, i.e. a transnational ideology used to justify the decrease of national sovereignty, which complements the corresponding decrease of economic sovereignty following economic globalisation. The core of this new ideology is the doctrine of ‘limited’ sovereignty,  according to which, there are certain universal values that should take priority over other values, like that of national sovereignty. This doctrine is used to ‘justify’ military interventions/attacks against any ‘rogue’ regimes or political organisations and movements. Tony Blair's foreign policy guru Robert Cooper expressed clearly the new ideological globalisation when he argued that ‘what is needed is a new kind of imperialism, one compatible with human rights and cosmopolitan values: an imperialism which aims to bring order and organisation but which rests today on the voluntary principle.’[6]

 

Thus, NGOs (such as Human Rights Watch, etc.) and “movements”, in perfect harmony with the transnational elite, were mobilised en masse yesterday to defend the rights of Kosovars, of women in Afghanistan or of the Iraqis (before the invasions!), and of the Tibetans today, with the Green assistant mayor of Paris stating shamelessly “we stopped China pretending that it is a country like any other, a respectable country”! Obviously, for him as well as for the disgraceful Con Bendit, Joschka Fischer and similar “Euro Greens”, countries like France, Britain, the USA, etc. belong to “respectable countries”, despite their massive crimes in the past and today! By “coincidence”, however, we never have seen the same world community (NGOs and the rest) massively mobilising (apart from some feeble complaints) and demand, for instance, the sentencing of Bush, Blair, Sharon, Olmert, et.al. as criminals against humanity —as they did for Saddam or Milosevic— or against the blatant violation of individual rights by Zionists in Gaza, and by the tyrannical regimes in Egypt and Saudi Arabia. Presumably, for all these “movements” and NGOs of the reformist Left and Ecology, the human rights of some people are “more equal” than those of others...

 

 

 


* This text is partly based on an article published in the mass circulation Athens daily Eleftherotypia on 12/4/2008.
 

[1] Takis Fotopoulos, “The First War of the Internationalised Market Economy”, Democracy & Nature, Vol. 5, No. 2 (July 1999).

[2] M. Chossudovsky, “Dismantling Former Yugoslavia, Znet (April 1999).

[3] Seumas Milne, “Bush is trying to impose a classic colonial status on Iraq”, The Guardian (26/6/2008); see also Takis Fotopoulos, “Iraq: the new criminal "war" of the transnational elite”, Democracy & Nature, Vol. 9, No. 2 (July 2003).

[4] Will Hutton, The Writing on the Wall: China and the West in the 21st Century (2007).

[5] Takis Fotopoulos, “The global 'war' of the transnational elite”, Democracy & Nature, Vol. 8, No. 2 (July 2002).

[6] Robert Cooper, “Why we still need empires”, The Observer (7 April 2002).