Greece-Syria: The international suzerains are the common enemies

21/05/2016 17:17

Greece-Syria The international suzerains are the common enemies

The reception that the official delegation of Chryssi Avgi-Golden Dawn received in Syria, had the characteristics of the typical hospitality, expected from the inhabitants of the Middle East. The MPs who have been waiting for us in the borders were kind, yet, at first, formal. This image soon changed.
 
The elections had successfully taken place, and that subject obviously preoccupied them. Elections that had taken place in a country in a state of war, with economic and diplomatic exclusion and with the presence of foreign observers, supervising the procedures, is a noteworthy accomplishment. Not a bad record for Syria and the Assad regime. I wonder what else is needed for the West to accept the legality of the government of Damascus. The answer is, “absolutely nothing”. In the case of Syria, as in the case of Greece, the “international community” -meaning some dozens of countries from the hundreds of this world-, decided that they want to step up a little more in Syria (in Lebanon, too). Having promoted around these two countries regimes evidently more antidemocratic and violent, yet friendly and dependent on them, the countries forming the alliance against Syria favor the splitting of the country.
 
Of course these countries launched their fragmentation plan decades ago, by inciting wars and conspiring to make erupt conflicts. Now it becomes clear that, as is the case of Greece, we are standing before a new and probably the final attack. 
 
Will Assad himself and his entourage succumb to these external pressures? Syria had close bonds with Russia, thanks to the previous governance of the current President’s father, Hafez, who had strong ties with the USSR, and the current governance of the son, Bashar, with the reborn and recreated Putin’s empire. Greece lacks of such bonds. Her allies are obviously against her, since World War II, when she stood by them; these allies, in return, dragged her in a bloody fratricidal civil war, financed with British pounds, given to the rebels. The lesson has not been learned. Just as at the time, the ruling power lured the young Greeks with Churchill’s –without any practical guarantee- flatteries, of the “heroes fight like Greeks” type, now, the politicians drag themselves and drag the people of Greece from Lagarde’s “good words” regarding the “sacrifices of Greek People”, which are about to release us in …2070.
 
The Syrians made it clear to us that Assad does not intend to offer his country to the allies of the Greek political ruling class. Good for him.
 
Heading to Damascus, I asked the MP who accompanied me about what she expects from the outside world regarding Syria. She replied: “To let us be”. 
 
I’m afraid or rather I’m sure that they won’t. This is why they established the supranational organizations, the UN, the international courts, NATO, E.U., in order to lure people with the pretty words of “world peace” and “brotherhood of peoples”, into the nest of the beast.
 
Using the Bolshevik rebellious rhetoric and the capitalistic greed, the man of the West is trapped in false promises, his will is fainted and he remains unarmed, facing the fully equipped “peacemakers”. 
 
Is there any hope? 
 
Authenticity exists, and as long as it exists, the fear for the overturning of the world oppression will exist as well. This is the reason behind the arrival of masses of Asians and Africans in Europe. An unprecedented biological war in the name of this so called world peace.
 
However, the fainting of the will of the Europeans, the total depreciation of their civilization is confronted with signs of resistance. 
 
 One form, the unexpected and sinister, is the adhesion of Europeans to the Islamic Caliphate. The Islamists offer them War, the war seen for decades in the film industry, of which they have been deprived because of the political decisions, until the OK is given and these forces head to self-destruction. The man is not just flesh, he also carries ideas. Islam offers the ideas that the Christian ecclesiastic leadership is unable to. 
 
On the contrary, the sane forces of Europe, those who survived from the ruins of a Europe defeated and conquered from both Capitalism and Communism, also exist. Here is a Europe standing on her feet, yet trembling between leaders important and insignificant, selfish and romantic, honest and naïve, floundering between the acceptance of the status quo and the unavowed necessity of its overturn. It’s not an easy task, considering the omnipotence of the System, the lack of alternative power poles and the absence of significant personalities, able to put back on track the disoriented Europeans. 
 
Bashar-Al-Assad is a leader under siege. Yet, wherever we discussed him, the people of Syria and Lebanon love and admire him. They are proud of his governance, they don’t resent him, nor grumble. How long will he endure to watch the dismembered infants in Aleppo’s Maternity Hospital? How long will he endure the precariousness of the countless suicide attacks in the check points? 
 
His sending away the external mercenaries who attack and tear apart his country, depends upon his own psychological and moral endurance as well as practical issues, like the honesty of his allies, the abilities of his army, and the capability of population renewal. 
 
The war is, indeed, a meat machine. Same goes, though, for this peace of decadence. The human losses in Greece because of the abortions are infinitely larger than those suffered in the war torn Syria. So, there is no need for anyone “political correct” to speak about the respect of human life. After all, the decision of a man to either die standing and fighting for everything he considers valuable in life, or to die intubated, viewing the ceiling of a hospital, is, from my point of view, a fundamental human right.
 
 
 
IRENE DIMOPOULOU-PAPPA
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