Next week’s visit to Italy by Chinese
Premier Xi Jinping has nearly everyone jittery. The recent announcement by Five
Star Movement Leader Luigi Di Maio that his country is prepared to sign a
Memorandum of Understanding with China to be a part of China’s ambitious Belt
and Road Initiative has set off a firestorm of response from Donald Trump to
Angela Merkel to Di Maio’s own coalition partner, Lega leader Matteo Salvini.
But, don’t let the wrapper fool you
on this. Di Maio’s announcement I don’t think it ‘blindsided’ Salvini as this Reuters
article suggests, as
much as Merkel and Trump.
Even though Geraci is a member of the
League, the group appeared blindsided when news of an imminent deal emerged
last week, with party chief Matteo Salvini warning against the
“colonialization” of Italy by China.
“We are reviewing it,” Salvini, who serves as joint deputy prime minister with Di Maio, said on Thursday. “Before allowing someone to invest in the ports of Trieste or Genoa, I would think about it not once but a hundred times.”
“We are reviewing it,” Salvini, who serves as joint deputy prime minister with Di Maio, said on Thursday. “Before allowing someone to invest in the ports of Trieste or Genoa, I would think about it not once but a hundred times.”
If anything, this announcement is a
smart move by Di Maio. It puts Salvini a bit on the defensive who has been
setting the tempo for the coalition recently. Salvini needs Trump on his good
side to assist him in taking on Merkel and the European Union.
Merkel is trying to play hardball
with Trump over energy issues, as I discussed in a recent article, by defending the Nordstream 2 pipeline from U.S.
aggression as change the board state of geopolitics.
It’s clear that to me now that
Merkel’s priorities for what is left of her term in office are as follows:
1. Carve out an independent path for EU foreign policy from the U.S. through the creation of an EU army, obviating the need for NATO and…
2. End U.S. occupation of Germany.
3. Secure Germany’s energy future, which also secures its political future as the leader of the European Union, by stitching together the continent with Russian energy arteries — Nordstream 2, Turkstream.
4. Manage the shift away from NATO as a controlling force in Europe’s relationship with Russia which doesn’t serve Europe’s long term purposes.
This while Trump and Xi are deep in
the weeds on a trade deal that the entire world is watching the outcome of with
bated breath. Hint: Trump will fold.
The EU just put off talks with the U.S.
over the same issue,
failing to deliver an opinion on whether to re-open trade talks with the U.S.
In a confusing vote, the European
Parliament passed by a narrow majority a series of amendments against beginning
talks, but then voted down its own resolution on the topic, meaning in effect
it took no view.
The resolution would not have been binding, but parliament will have to approve any deal agreed and EU governments said they wanted to hear the view of lawmakers before deciding.
Because everything with the EU is so
crystal clear on a normal day, right?
Now, Di Maio comes in and takes a
major meeting with Xi looking for billions in Chinese investment to jump start
Italian economic prospects.
Trump is already apoplectic over
Nordstream 2 and is threatening to sanction some of the biggest companies in
the world for being a part of the project. But, that ship has mostly sailed.
The pipeline is over 70% complete.
About all the U.S. can do now is get
the EU parliament to stop the pipeline delivering gas, wasting €11 billion
building the thing. Like with Brexit or Crimea, there comes a point where those
in opposition to something in the world they don’t like has to be accepted as
de facto.
Unfortunately, the insane people who
think they run the world won’t give up as long as there are lawyers to be
deployed to complicate things.
This is why I love Di Maio’s move
here. Trump is engaged in a trade war with China while complaining bitterly
about Europe doing business with Russia. He’s even threatening them with a bill
for housing our troops that we don’t want to remove.
Di Maio says Italy would be a great
fit for China’s Belt and Road Project, which the U.S. is actively undermining
all across Asia and the Middle East.
While at the same time he is thumbing
his nose at Merkel who doesn’t want Italy to feel empowered on any level as
they enter the European Parliamentary election season. Euroskeptics could take
as much as a third of the seats, even without a hostage U.K. contingent.
Moreover, Merkel is still trying to
talk out of both sides of her mouth with the U.S.:
Stand firm on Nordstream 2, try to
save the JCPOA, on the one hand, but support the U.S.’s idiotic regime change
operation in Venezuela to appease Trump.
This is a strong statement of
independence by Italy as they join Hungary, Poland, Greece and Portugal, who
all have MOU’s with China. And it’s not like Hungary and Poland are high on
Merkel’s Christmas card list. Both are dealing with Article 7 proceedings to
strip them of their EU voting rights.
From every angle it throws a wrench
in the works internationally while being good politics domestically. If Xi
leaves Rome without a deal it doesn’t necessarily mean Italy caved to outside
pressure from Trump or Merkel, as much as it could signal that Xi simply asked
for more than Italy was willing to give at this point.
And both sides realized that they
were being used by the other as leverage with the people not in the room.
Regardless, Xi coming to Rome and meeting with these European outsiders is a
great statement on his part that China knows the imperial game Merkel and the
Gang in Brussels is playing in the long run.
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