Battleground Beirut: Western colony or back to the East?
Pepe Escobar - August 12, 2020
As much as Covid-19 has been
instrumentalized by the 0.001% to social engineer a Great Reset, the Beirut tragedy is
already being instrumentalized by the usual suspects to keep Lebanon enslaved.
Facing oh so timely color
revolution-style “protests”, the current Lebanese government led by Prime
Minister Diab has already resigned. Even before the port tragedy, Beirut had
requested a $10 billion line of credit from the IMF – denied as long as
trademark, neoliberal Washington consensus “reforms” were not implemented: radical
slashing of public expenses, mass layoffs, across the board privatization.
Post-tragedy, President
Emmanuel Macron – who’s not even capable of establishing a dialogue with the
Gilets Jaunes/Yellow Vests in France - has opportunistically jumped in full
neocolonial mode to pose as “savior” of Lebanon, as long as the same “reforms”,
of course, are implemented.
On Sunday, France and the UN
organized a videoconference to coordinate donor response – in conjunction with
the European Commission (EC), the IMF and the World Bank. The result was not
exactly brilliant: a paltry 252 million euros were pledged – once again
conditioned by “institutional reforms”.
France came up with 30
million euros, Kuwait with 40 million, Qatar with 50 million and the EC with 68
million. Crucially, neither Russia nor Iran were among the donors. The US –
which is harshly sanctioning Lebanon - and GCC allies Saudi Arabia and UAE
pledged nothing. China had just a pro forma presence.
In parallel, Maronite Christians in Brazil – a very powerful community
– are sending funds for the color revolution protests. Former President Michel
Temer and industrialist tycoon Paulo Skaf even flew to Beirut. Former Lebanese
President Amin Gemayel (1982-1988) maintained a lot of businesses in Brazil with
funds he skimmed when in power.
All of the above points to neoliberalism taking no prisoners when it
comes to keeping its deadly grip on Lebanon.
The Hariri
model
Lebanon’s profound economic crisis, now aggravated by the Beirut port
blast, has nothing to do with Covid-19 or the US proxy war on Syria – which
brought a million refugees to the nation. It’s all about proverbial neoliberal
shock and awe, conducted non-stop by the Hariri clan: former Prime Ministers
Rafiq, assassinated in 2011, and Saad, chased out of power last January.
The Hariri model was focused
on real estate speculation and financialization. The Solidere group, controlled
by Arab investors and a few Lebanese, Hariri included, destroyed Beirut’s
historical downtown and rebuilt it with luxury real estate. That’s the classical
rentier neoliberalism model that always profits a tiny elite.
In parallel, the Bank of
Lebanon was attracting funds from the tony Lebanese diaspora and assorted Arab
investors by practicing very generous interest rates. Lebanon suddenly had an
artificially strong currency.
A small middle class sort of
flourished throughout the 2000s, comprising import-export traders, the tourism
sector and financial market operators. Yet, overall, inequality was the name of
the game. According to the World Inequality Database, half of Lebanon’s
population now holds less wealth that the top 0.1%.
The bubble finally burst in
September last year, when I happened to be in Beirut. With no US dollars in
circulation, the Lebanese pound started to collapse in the black market. The
Bank of Lebanon went berserk. When the Hariri racket imposed a “Whatsapp tax” over
calls, that led to massive protests in October. Capital embarked on free flight
and the currency collapsed for good.
There’s absolutely no
evidence the IMF, the World Bank and assorted Western/Arab “donors” will
extricate a now devastated Lebanon from the neoliberal logic that plunged it
into a systemic crisis in the first place.
The way out would be to
focus in productive investments, away from finance and geared towards the practical
necessities of an austerity-battered and completely impoverished population.
Yet Macron, the IMF and
their “partners” are only interested in keeping monetary “stability”; seduce
speculative foreign capital; make sure that the rapacious, Western-connected
Lebanese oligarchy will get away with murder; and on top of it buy scores of
Lebanese assets for peanuts.
BRI or bust
In stark contrast with the exploitative perpetuation of the Western neoliberal
model, China is offering Lebanon the chance to Go East, and be part of the New
Silk Roads.
In 2017, Lebanon signed to join the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI).
In 2018, Lebanon became the 87th member of the Asia
Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB).
Over the past few years, Lebanon was already taking part in the
internationalization of the yuan, offering bank accounts in yuan and increasing
bilateral trade in yuan.
Beijing was already engaged in discussions revolving around
the upgrading of Lebanese infrastructure – including the expansion of Beirut
harbor.
This means that now Beijing may be in the position of offering a renewed, joint
rebuilding/security deal for Beirut port – just as it was about to clinch a
smaller agreement with Diab’s government, focused only on expansion and
renovation.
The bottom line is that China has an actual Plan A to extricate Lebanon from its
current financial dead end.
And that’s exactly what was, and remains, total anathema to
US, NATO and Israel’s interests.
The Trump administration recently went no holds barred to
prevent Israel from having China develop the port of Haifa.
The same “offer you can’t refuse” tactics will be applied with
full force on whoever leads the new Lebanese government.
Beirut is an absolutely key node in BRI’s
geopolitical/geoeconomic connectivity of the Eastern Mediterranean. With Haifa
temporarily out of the picture, Beirut grows in importance as a gateway to the EU,
complementing the role of Pireus and Italian ports in the Adriatic.
It's crucial to note that the port itself was not
destroyed. The enormous crater on site replaces only a section quayside – and
the rest is on water. The buildings destroyed can be rebuilt in record time.
Reconstruction of the port is estimated at $15 billion – pocket money for an
experienced company such as China Harbor.
Meanwhile,
naval traffic is being redirected to Tripoli port, 80 km north of Beirut and only
30 km away from the Lebanon-Syria border. Its director, Ahmed Tamer, confirms “the port has witnessed
during the past years the expansion work by Chinese companies, and it has
received the largest ships from China, carrying a big number of containers”.
Add to it the fact
that Tripoli port will also be essential in the process of Syria reconstruction
– to which China is totally committed.
BRI’s
Southwest Asia connectivity network is a maze including Iran, Iraq, Syria and
Lebanon.
China is
already planning to invest in highway and railroads, further to be developed
into high-speed rail. That will connect BRI’s central China-Iran corridor – fresh
from the $400 billion, 25-year strategic partnership deal soon to be signed –
with the Eastern Mediterranean.
Add to it the role of the port of Tartus in Syria – bearing a strong
Russian naval presence. Beijing will inevitably invest in the expansion of
Tartus – which is crucially linked by highway to Lebanon. The Russia-China
strategic partnership will be involved in the protection of Tartus with S-300
and S-400 missile systems.
Historically, in a larger axis that went from Samarkand to Cordoba, with
strong nodes such as Baghdad and Damascus, what slowly evolved in this part of
Eurasia was a syncretic civilization superimposed over an ancestral regional,
rural and nomad background. The internal cohesion of the Muslim world was
forged from the 7th century to the 11th century: that was
the key factor that shaped the lineaments of a coherent Eurasia.
Apart from Islam, Arabic – the language of religion, administration,
trade and culture – was an essential unifying factor. This evolving Muslim
world was configured as a vast economic and cultural domain whose roots
connected to Greek, Semitic, Persian, Indian and Arab thought. It was a
marvelous synthesis that formed a unique civilization out of elements of
different origin – Persian, Mesopotamian, Byzantine.
The Middle East and the Eastern Mediterranean were of course part of
it, totally open towards the Indian Ocean, the Caspian routes, Central Asia and
China.
Now, centuries later, Lebanon should have everything to gain by ditching
the “Paris of the Orient” mythology and looking East – again, thus positioning itself
on the right side of History.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.