Home World Politics Lessons from the travails of the Bolivian president

Lessons from the travails of the Bolivian president

Details
Published on Sunday
14 July 2013 13:40
Written by Radical Socialist

Lessons from the travails of the Bolivian president
by Yakov Rabkin

The episode with the Bolivian president’s plane exposes almost as many truths as Snowden’s revelations. These truths are just as conveniently hidden from public sight. The question remains, of course, if the public really wants to know them. It may well be that developed democracies rely on the consent of people who, as the Psalmist put it, have mouths but cannot speak, and eyes but cannot see.

First, Snowden is not a fugitive from justice with an Interpol arrest warrant. The U.S. accuses him of espionage, which is a political offense that does not fall under the usual categories leading to arrest and extradition to other countries. Political refugees have occasionally been rendered to their countries of origin, but these precedents are hardly
inspiring. For example, Stalin’s NKVD handed German communists, including Jews, to the Gestapo in 1939.

Second, even assuming that Snowden is a known common law criminal fleeing from justice, it is highly unusual to violate the diplomatic immunity of a country’s president on the information, let alone the suspicion, that the fugitive is on board. This contrasts starkly with the same European countries’ connivance with the United States in its practice of extraordinary renditions pursued through their air space. This also brings to mind the prompt acquiescence of transnational financial companies, such as Visa, Mastercard and PayPal, to the U.S. request to cut funds transfer to
Wikileaks, while neither Wikileaks, nor its founder Assange had been convicted of any crime in a court of law (and even if they had been, it would have been for the political offense of espionage).

Third, this episode shows the growing irrelevance of national governments. President Hollande’s protestations about U.S. intelligence activities sound hollow and hypocritical while the French government orders that France’s air
space be closed to the Bolivian president’s plane, unless, of course, France’s military and intelligence agencies show a stronger allegiance to their American counterparts than to their country’s president. Or these agencies act altogether independently of the national government and routinely receive their orders from NATO. Supranational entities, EU, IMF as well as gigantic transnational business interests have grown accustomed to obviate national governments and the electorates that go through the regular ritual of democratic elections. No wonder that major international trade agreements are nowadays negotiated in secret.

Fourth, Snowden’s difficulty of finding an asylum shows how obedient to the one and only superpower today’s world, with very few exceptions, has become. Apparently, this obedience to the United States tramples all pretence of
maintaining international law and justice. These breaches of international law took place at the behest of a country that refused to join the International Court of Justice in The Hague and is proverbially averse to subject its citizens, particularly its military and political personnel, to foreign jurisdictions. In fact, Snowden’s and Wikileaks revelations only confirm what informed observers have assumed all along: in the absence of a credible international counterweight, the United States would commit any and all infractions of international law, including the laws of war.

Most Western elites more or less tacitly cooperate with Washington. This should not be surprising since their interests are more aligned with those of other countries’ elites than with the citizens of their own countries.
Apparently this happens not only in imposition of economic austerity measures, even by those ostensibly elected to uphold social justice (such as socialists in France). The search of Evo Morales’ plane on the tarmac in Vienna has put into focus the right of American political, business and military elites to impose their will on Europe. It makes little sense to distinguish between the overtly obsequious New Europe to the East of the Elbe from the rest of the continent no longer trying to keep up appearances.

– Yakov Rabkin, Dept of History, University of Montreal.

 

RELATED ARTICLES

WSF Declaration of the Social Movements Assembly

Details Published on Sunday 13 February 2011 17:06 Written by Radical Socialist WSF Declaration of the Social Movements Assembly 12 February 2011 As the Social Movements Assembly of the World...

Whither Tunisia?

Details Published on Thursday 20 January 2011 01:43 Written by Radical Socialist Whither Tunisia? Curfew in Tunisia! What is the political significance? January 13 by Fathi Chamkhi Just hours after his...

Tunisia, Egypt: a revolutionary process of world scope

Details Published on Monday 28 February 2011 18:16 Written by Radical Socialist Tunisia, Egypt: a revolutionary process of world scope Fourth International The International Committee of the Fourth International at...

Most Popular

Does solidarity with Palestine equal ‘anti-Semitism?’

Details Published on Wednesday 21 July 2021 02:31 Written by Radical Socialist By COOPER BARD Let’s not confuse the issue. What is happening in Palestine is not a...

The DUP-Tory Deal: A View From Irish Revolutionaries

Details Published on Thursday 22 June 2017 10:22 Written by Radical Socialist DUP / Conservative party deal The future is bright, the future is Orange! 20 June 2017 A Conservative...

Ukraine: NATO, imperialism and the war

Details Published on Sunday 20 March 2022 01:45 Written by Radical Socialist BY PHIL HEARSE   Version imprimable Russia’s brutal invasion of Ukraine seems to have caused some disorientation on the...

Reject the draft “Role and Tasks of the FI”

Details Published on Tuesday 15 December 2009 12:08 Written by Radical Socialist Brown (USA), Jette (Denmark), Andreas (Greece), Konstanitin (Germany) * Draft Motion (for the agenda item “Role and...

Islam, sexuality, and the politics of belonging in the Netherlands

Details Published on Wednesday 08 September 2010 02:21 Written by Radical Socialist Paul Mepschen Sex seems to play a key role in the Dutch politics of belonging. Sex –...

Joint Statement of Solidarity with PTM by Feminist Groups across Pakistan

Details Published on Monday 03 June 2019 17:53 Written by Radical Socialist FREE ALI WAZIR Monday 3 June 2019, by Girls at Dhabas, The Feminist Collective, Women Democratic Front, Womens Action Forum Hyderabad,Womens...

The Period and the Party

Details Published on Thursday 07 January 2010 06:23 Written by Radical Socialist Duncan Chapel   War declared on the John Rees-Lindsey German faction: impending split in the British SWP? December 28th,...

Occupy Lahore: Anti Capitalist Camp

Details Published on Saturday 22 October 2011 10:10 Written by Radical Socialist Occupy Lahore: Anti Capitalist Camp Leftwing political parties, trade unions, social activists and student groups at a...

Copenhagen Plan B : “protect the rich”

Details Published on Friday 11 December 2009 08:53 Written by Radical Socialist

UKRAINE : Class Struggle in Wartime

Details Published on Sunday 01 January 2023 09:13 Written by Radical Socialist  By Elias Vola Ten months after the beginning of a bloody conflict, Ukrainian workers are confronted...