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The Czech President's Lone Stand against US Bullying

  
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Vlad Sobell lives in Prague and teaches political economy to university 
students both there and in Berlin

 

President Zeman’s demarche banishing the US Ambassador Andrew Schapiro from the 
Prague Castle is a welcome sign that at least some European leaders have drawn 
the line at Washington’s imperial-like bullying. After all there are limits to 
what they are prepared to tolerate. It is also an urgently needed reminder to 
Washington that some European leaders take seriously the values of democracy 
preached by America: genuine democracy is incompatible with the renewed 
Soviet-style practice of passing down instructions on how the foreign policy of 
putatively sovereign nations should be conducted. Although Zeman’s political 
role in the Czech Republic is honorary (rather than executive), it is to be 
hoped that the US political class will take notice and interpret his 
“disobedience” as proof that not everyone in Europe is ready to be pushed 
around without so much as a murmur.

 

Let’s briefly consider the most recent events providing the background to the 
spat – namely Moscow’s reclaiming Crimea. The peninsula was Russian from 1783 
onwards, with the vast majority of its residents being Russophone. It was 
handed over to Ukraine by a totalitarian dictator, Nikita Khrushchev, in 1954 
when he needed to strengthen his hand in Kremlin power struggles. Of course the 
Communists would not have dreamt of conducting a referendum the way Putin did – 
paying heed to legality certainly was not their style.

 

Fast forward to February 2014, when, in another illegal act, Kiev fell under 
the sway of a virulently anti-Russian US-backed regime. Anticipating trouble, 
the Kremlin swiftly responded by re-claiming Crimea. Would any self-respecting 
power risk the unleashing of terror on its fellow nationals by far-right 
“punishers”, not to mention the inevitable transfer to NATO further down the 
road of the Russia-leased Sevastopol naval base? We saw how Britain, with US 
support, acted to reclaim the Falkland Islands in 1982 (after they had been 
annexed by an Argentine fascist junta), eventually declaring its inhabitants 
British citizens. By reintegrating Crimea with Russia, Putin (like Mrs 
Thatcher) corrected a historical wrong and respected the publicly declared wish 
of the overwhelming majority of the territory’s current population.

 

The US Ambassador in Prague may consider Zeman’s intention to take part in the 
celebrations in Moscow “short-sighted” and his appearance there “awkward”. 
However, many independently thinking people, not only in this country but 
throughout Europe and even in the US, may well see Zeman’s actions as a 
desperately needed affirmation of national sovereignty and, indeed, democracy. 
As the Czech President explained, he is going to Moscow above all to honour the 
150,000 Soviet soldiers who sacrificed their lives in the liberation of this 
country from Hitler’s Nazi hordes. As he has put it, his visit to Russia will 
be a “sign of gratitude for not having to speak German in this country”. From 
an objective viewpoint, it is difficult to find anything disreputable in 
Zeman’s plans.

 

The Czech President’s stance is a courageous act in the context of the 
unashamed US/EU/NATO-supported revival of Nazi tendencies in Ukraine and 
efforts to portray the beast as a democracy-promoting force. Zeman has served 
notice that not everyone in Europe is willing to be pushed around by uncouth 
viceroys such as Victoria Nuland or the armchair warrior Senator McCain. This 
is exactly what was needed in a country long traumatised by foreign occupations 
and which has opened a new page within a supposedly democratic alliance. Zeman 
has also delivered a much-needed lesson in democracy to the increasingly 
faltering Washington. High-handed imperial-like instructions and a misplaced 
sense of solidarity in an alliance that is clearly losing its democratic ways 
have nothing to do with genuine democracy.

 

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