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Editorial
News & Letters, July 2001


Europeans challenge Bush's arrogance

The day before George W. Bush started off on his whirlwind Grand Tour of Europe to Spain, Belgium, Sweden, Poland and Slovenia-the five countries carefully chosen as an audience for his blatant right-wing agenda-he held an ostentatious Rose Garden press briefing to make it clear that he had no intention of reversing his opposition to the global warming accord supported by the European leaders he was about to meet with.

The day after his return he made clear that he intended to proceed with his plans for missile defense "with or without Russia," as his National Security Advisor Condoleezza Rice put it bluntly. Secretary of State Colin Powell echoed this the same day: "We will get out of the constraints of the (1972 Anti-Ballistic Missile) treaty when those constraints do not allow us to move forward with our technology."

There was no mistaking the Reaganesque arrogance of what Bush was planning for the world. What his trip, however, also made abundantly clear was the depth of the European opposition to those plans.

In Spain, chosen as a "friendly" starting point, the private meetings with Prime Minister Jose Maria Aznar were described as "diplomatic disagreements," but the demonstrations at the U.S. Embassy were vigorous against Bush as the "champion of the death penalty." The meetings, friendly or not, were heavily guarded as protesters hounded Bush wherever he went.

In Belgium, where Bush met with l8 fellow leaders of NATO, his insistence that the l972 ABM Treaty with Russia was "outdated" and that the U.S. intended to develop a "missile defense shield" drew sharply undiplomatic critiques from both German Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder and French President Jacques Chirac, who called it a "fantastic incentive to proliferate" weapons of destruction throughout the world. As in Spain, the demonstrations and protests continued outside of the heavily guarded meetings.

WIDE SPECTRUM OF OPPOSITION

But it was Sweden, where Bush appeared at a summit meeting of the European Union, that showed the great difference between the resistance to Bush's plans for the world expressed by all the other leaders and the protests in the streets, which had grown massive in Sweden. Tens of thousands filled the streets and parks of Gothenburg, challenging Bush on global warming, his proposed missile defense system and his support for the death penalty. The demonstrators included all the forces we have previously seen in Seattle and Quebec-from feminists and environmentalists to the whole spectrum of anti-globalization activists. The total contempt they had for Bush was most dramatically displayed when dozens of protesters participated in a coordinated mooning.

That it was in Sweden, of all places, that police for the first time opened fire, felling three demonstrators, marks the increasingly ferocious response of the authorities to the growing movement. What the thousands of young people in the streets were making clear-as one protester summed it up, explaining the long list of complaints on her poster-was that "the capitalist system" was "a way of living" they would no longer accept. That they were protesting not only Bush but the EU leaders as well was made evident as the demonstrations continued long after Bush had left Gothenburg. Indeed, they did not allow the leaders to ignore that, while Bush made it arrogantly clear he had no intentions of ratifying the Kyoto Protocol on global warming, not a single European nation has yet ratified it, either.

The week finally ended with "summit talks" between Bush and Vladimir Putin in Slovenia, where those two "hardliners" told the world they had come to look each other in the eye, and Bush announced that in his two hour private talk with Putin, he had been "able to get a sense of his soul." Putin did not say what he might or might not have been able to sense of Bush's soul. But the day after Bush returned to the U.S. and made his missile defense pronouncement, Putin responded that Russia could be counted on to ensure thatit would be able to overwhelm any such a shield by upgrading its strategic nuclear arsenal with multiple warheads.

More important, Putin had made it a point to fly to his meeting with Bush in Slovenia from China, where he and Chinese President Jiang Zemin had met to discuss their common opposition to any U.S. missile shield. They had, in fact, signed the founding charter for a Shanghai Cooperation Organization, and planned to hold regular summits between them, the next one to be held next summer in Moscow.

MORE PROTESTS TO COME

Meanwhile, more and more demonstrations against the "international elite" were being promised for this summer. But in the wake of Sweden, the meeting of the World Bank in Barcelona was quickly cancelled, while Silvio Berlusconi's Italian government made it known that it plans to shut down Genoa completely for four days in an unprecedented security crackdown on any anti-globalization protesters that might be headed for the Group of Eight summit in that city.

There is no question that the increasing opposition from below-which is the only real challenge being made to the plans our rulers have to destroy us all, one way or the other-will continue to grow. The imperative challenge, however, to the new movement that has arisen since Seattle, is how it can self-develop to become a movement that not only knows what it opposes but finds a way to create, out of its uprooting, a new, truly human world.

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