Germans Have Right
to Oppose Migration, Greece Threatened by NATO Takeover. One of the most
intelligent and interesting Greek politicians talks on different topics and
today`s main geopolitical issues.
17-21 March 2016 gianalytics.org
One year ago, while in
Athens, Greece, I interviewed Mr. Dimitris Kazakis, leader of United Popular
Front (EPAM), a popular Left movement that emerged from the anti-memorandum
protests of 2011. Mr. Kazakis is an erudite speaker, a socialist economist, and
one who knows both the terrain of the social struggle and the high-end banking
sector in London where he worked for many years.
At the time, Mr. Kazakis was not very
optimistic about Syriza – the Left party governing Greece, if to say the least.
He warned that Prime Minister Tsipras has no intention of breaking with
austerity and that he will take on a new contract that will enslave the country
further. The interview was conducted in February 2015, but it took me months to
publish it since I wanted to give Syriza a chance. Mr. Kazakis was right. It
happened exactly as he said. One year later, on February 17, 2016, I met Mr.
Kazakis at the offices of EPAM in Athens again. Things are much worse in Athens
now.
Mr. Kazakis covered almost all issues
under the sun. He talked about the migration crisis, why he supports a Brexit,
Greece’s economic predicament, the world economy, NATO in the Aegean, Erdogan
and Merkel, NGOs dubious roles, nationalism, why cosmopolitanism is dangerous,
the Germans, perpetual war, Venezuela and Cuba. Below is the full interview.
You actually predicted
what will happen at the time because at the time what you said was that these
negotiations are a sham, they are going to sign on another contract and so on.
At the time when I wanted to publish the article, many people were warning me
not to publish it, not to bring down Syriza, and it turned out that it happened
exactly as you said. So that's why I published it later, but at least, I
published it before basically what was a betrayal of a promise.
I can understand that because when I went
to a conference in Nice, in November, they asked me to explain what happened to
Greece, what happened to the Left party, or to the Left government of Syriza.
And I told them what exactly happened from day one. Right after the elections
of the 25th of January, back in 2015. Everyone was astonished. There were
French, Spanish, Italians, Germans. Everybody. And of course, afterwards,
everybody came to me and told me that we are very very sorry. We were totally
wrong in our estimation about Syriza the Left government.
The problem is that by
then it was too late...
Yeah, exactly. Too late for us,
especially. And for Europe. Because the system invested in the Syriza
government, to show everybody, every European person, that no one can do
anything with the whole system, the system of the European regime, of the
banks, of the Euro. And in that way, they were trying to disappoint the
society. Especially Greece and, of course, all over Europe. No one could
understand what happened here in Greece. How the anti-memorandum coalition of
Syriza and Kammenos [the Independent Greeks –ANEL] can do such things as sign a
third memorandum against the people and produce such a politically incorrect
situation here in Greece.
This brings me to a
related question which I think is relevant. In Britain, the UK, the place where
you lived in the past and also worked, there will be a vote on Britain leaving
the European Union. So, if I may ask, do you support Britain leaving the
European Union?
Yeah, of course.
And does that mean you
would also support UKIP and the Eurosceptical people?
As EPAM, we have relations with the
umbrella of the movements against the European Union in Britain. And I was
asked by British colleagues, fighters against the EU, to go there on a speech
tour. I don't know if I can do that because of the political situation here in
Greece...
Schengen, because of the
everyday situation?
Exactly. And now we have a social - we are
in the process of a social resurrection of the Greek society, so we have a lot
to do in Greece. I don't know if we have the spare time to go over in Britain
on a speech tour. But, anyway, we support any movement that is against the
European Union in terms of democracy. We are fighting for democracy. And in
order to fight for democracy you have to fight for national sovereignty. That's
the basis of democracy. You cannot have democracy without national sovereignty
of any people. British people, Greek people, the German people. And that's the
only way. So, yes. We support the NO campaign against the European Union. And
we have discussed with certain members of the UKIP.
Of course we are on a different page in
terms of social and economic policy. But that's our difference. But we support
them for Britain to leave the European Union. And they have to leave. Because
otherwise they will face one way or the other the same sort of situation that
we are facing.
How so? If you can
elaborate on that a little bit....
You cannot have a European Union, you
cannot participate in a union and have mainly the banks, patrons, and of course
the banking elite, or the financial elite - the engine of the financial elite -
as first and foremost against the people, and against the interests of the
people, and on the same page have social security, or social insurance or a
social security state, or provide for the unemployed and the poverty-stricken
population. You cannot have social labor and democratic rights in a state that
is participating in the European Union. Because the European Union was built
from day one to support the financial elites’ interests. That's why we believe
that Britain has to go. It has to leave the European Union. It will make
our struggle much easier. Because if Britain decides to get rid of the European
Union, it will be much easier for us, to convince the Greeks that you don't
have to be afraid of anything. You see, bigger countries, huge economies, like
the British, are leaving EU. So why not you? Simple.
As you told me
one year ago, that basically the EU-led austerity - "made us less than
human." This is a general question. What is the current situation with
pensions, social security, farmers? What is the economic situation in Greece at
the moment since the past year?
I'll give you official data: Now, if we
take the middle family income, the average family budget. The income of this
middle family budget is calculated according to the official data of 2014,
because we don't have any new data. We're talking about 18,000 Euro per year.
Ok? Back in 2010, it was 23,000. Now, we are at 18,000. Of course, you
have enough money to buy the things you need, the consumer products, the things
you need to support the family. To provide your family's basic needs, you need
47,000 Euro. And you have an income of 18,000.
Is that all? No. You also have to pay for
the bank loans another 2,500 per year. You have to pay extra taxes on your
income. That's another 3,700 per year. You also have to pay social insurance
fees. That's another 3,500 per year. If you put all this down, you'll see that
on an income basis of 18,000 per year, the obligations of the middle family,
are up to 36,000-37,000 per year. Give me a situation similar to this and
provide me with an alternative... There is no way you can get rid of that economic
circumstances. You cannot even imagine how you can get rid of the depression we
have here in Greece, and of course, how will the economy turn around. There is
no way. There is just no way. We need more than double of the income for the
middle family to keep up with the obligations. There is no way you can have
that because we have to withstand austerity, we have the memorandums. Now in
2016, they say they need more than 2 to 4 billion more taxes out of the family
budget, and this will destroy the basis of the social insurance system in order
for the beneficiary to pay more fees and get less in pensions, in social
security support.
What is the situation of
homelessness at the moment?
We have a problem of homelessness, but
right now because of the dispersion of the homes, in Greece, more than 75% of
the population owns the apartments or the houses that they live in, so there is
no huge problem. Of course, most of the families now own the houses of the
apartments, but they were taken through loans from the banks, so the banks now
are trying to confiscate the private property from them, but they didn't dare,
up till now, to do what they did in Spain or in the US.
Of course, they have the laws now. When we
talked one year ago, they didn't have the law, but now the banks do have the
law on their side. The Left government provided the bankers with the legal
status of what they have for foreclosures and confiscation, the same type of
legal status they have in the US. This is the product of the Left government,
not of the rightist or the Left government we had back then. The current Left
government provides the legal tool for the banksters for foreclosures and to
confiscate private property. It was out of the question, if we go back two or
three years.
The Syriza government has been
waiting for this issue of enacting foreclosures. And at some point, they will
be forced to take action probably.
Yes, they will try. And they even voted
for a law that allows the banks to sell overdue loans for the funds we call
vultures. And right now one bank, one systemic bank, the Alpha bank, sold a
package of overdue loans to a private fund for 3% of the nominal value. 3%.
Right now in Greece we have 100 billion of overdue loans. Now, the bankers will
sell these 100 billion overdue loans to vulture funds. For how much? For 3-5
billion. And I proposed to the government a simple solution: give the bankers
the 3-5 billion, take the 100 billion nominal value of overdue loans and
destroy them.
But they are not doing
that...
No… not even to help the citizens who
cannot pay for the labor men. They cannot provide because they don't have jobs,
they don't have income. So, we pay the recapitalization of the banking system
more than 60 billion Euros as taxpayers. 60 billion. And now Mr. Draghi
wants the Greek taxpayer to pay another 14 billion Euros for the
recapitalization of the bank system in Greece. Why don’t they give to the
bankers at least 3 to 5 billion - that's nothing, compared to what we gave
already to the banks and what they are asking for - and take the bloody overdue
loans and get rid of them. Leave the people alone.
But they aren't doing
it...
No. This government doesn't do it.
I think it's not even possible for
the Government to take unilateral actions without the approval of the Troika...
Exactly. Because that's the new matter
about the Third Memorandum. We have a new memorandum, the third section of it.
If you go back to the law that was passed by the Greek parliament on the 14 of
August 2015, you will see in the third section of the memorandum that the
government cannot do anything without the approval of the IMF or the European
Commission and the European Central Bank. We are under an occupation regime. We
are less than a colony. And we cannot provide even for the borders, to guard
the borders of Greece. No. We do not even have a right to say a word about this
thing. That is why we are less than a state, in international law terms.
This brings me to the question of
the migration crisis which is facing Europe now. Obviously Greece has already
so many big economic problems; now it also has to deal with Hotspots which are
being imposed by the European Union, besides the fact that NATO decided to
patrol in the Aegean supposedly to stop the coming of the migrants. This brings
me to ask what do you think Greece should do about it if it could.
The first thing Greece has to do is to get
rid of the Schengen Treaty and the Dublin Treaty in order to provide for the
migrants and of course for the refugees coming from Syria. More than 60% of
those coming from Syria, up to now, are refugees coming from the war. The first
thing you have to do is to follow international law. And if you cannot afford
to deal with the whole situation, if you have more than 1 million, a half a
million refugees and migrants, call the United Nations agency to come in and
provide financial help, provide for the infrastructure you need to provide for
the refugees and migrants.
The first thing that you have to do is to
get rid of the Dublin and the Schengen treaties, in order to follow
international law. Let me give you an example: the same situation happened in
Lebanon. Right now Lebanon is providing for more than 1,250,000 refugees. We're
talking about 25% of the Lebanon population. Who is talking about Lebanon?
Nobody. Because Lebanon follows international law.
How so?
Since it is not a member of the European
Union, Lebanon does not want to create a slave labor out of the refugees, and
what they are doing is what international law provides in a similar situation.
Draghi does not want that. The European Union also does not want that. They
want to take the refugees and of course the migrants and provide their own
labor markets with slave labor. And that's the whole situation...
Let's look at the things logically. The
refugee coming from Syria or Iraq is going through the trouble. The first thing
a law abiding state has to do is to provide him with all the papers the refugee
needs, all the papers that say who a refugee is and who he is not.
Draghi does not do that. They subsidize
the whole industry of providing slave labor to the EU through Greece. And of
course, Greece as a state has to go to international bodies, like the
International Maritime Organization and say: “look at Turkey, what are they
doing? They are creating a situation in the Aegean. You have to take measures
against that.”
Turkey is a member of the International
Maritime Organization. The International Maritime Organization can decide that
"we have a situation - a crisis - that is created by a member state, and
we have to do something about it." Now, Greece does not do that because
it's a member of the European Union. And the European Union decides what will happen
to the Greek islands. And Greece is only a member of the whole thing. It is
only to abide by the decisions made by Mr. Tusk, Mr. Juncker and Mr. Erdogan.
That's what we have right now. If we decide to provide the refugees the same
type of asylum and infrastructure Lebanon provides it would be not a problem.
Because you would give the refugee the same kind of international treatment as
the international law provides and let him go wherever he likes. He wants to go
to Germany - he may go to Germany.
And, we even could say that "Ok, we
have refugees. From where? Syria. Who destroyed Syria? The United States. Ok,
the United States must take 80% or 90% or 100% of the refugees from Syria.” You
cannot destroy through war - a whole country - and then say “Oh, I have nothing
to do with the refugee situation from that country.”
The same thing with Afghanistan and with
Iraq. That's the international law. If you remember back in Vietnam days when
the southern Vietnam collapsed, what did the US do? They took more than a million
Vietnamese refugees, I don't remember for whatever reason, they took the
Vietnamese refugees because they were involved in the Vietnam war. Now, what is
going on in Syria? The same thing.
And I believe that the first countries
that have to deal with the refugee problem are the United States and Russia.
Because they are fighting on Syrian soil. And on top of that we need the Greek
government, if we have a democratic government of course, to say, Ok, first and
foremost, in order to deal with the refugee program, we need to stop the war in
Syria. And of course, not only to stop the war, like they are doing right now,
but establish law and order in Syria. And give back the situation to the lawful
government - the Assad regime. Ok, I don't believe in the Assad regime. But
that's the lawful government. And who is Mr. Obama or Mr. Putin or whoever to
decide how many parts will be dissected, that Syria must be dissected, and for
what reason...
Give back the national sovereignty to
Syria. Take out the foreign armies and the mercenaries, everybody. And of
course then you will see all the refugees, or most of the refugees, coming back
to Syria. And let us provide investment infrastructure to Syria in order
to rebuild Syria because they demolished the whole country. That's how you deal
with the refugee problem.
So I'm just trying to
understand. This is a simple question. So the difference between Lebanon and
Greece is that in the case of Lebanon, refugees are free to go elsewhere and in
the case of Greece, the European Union...
They don't have Hotspots. Of course, they
do have infrastructure to provide for the refugees, with the help of the UN.
But they are trying to deal with the problem in terms of the international law.
With what international law provides for the refugee. A refugee is a sacred
person. He's escaping war or a regime. So you have to deal with him as a sacred
person, to provide for him, and, of course, to give him the opportunity to go
back to the country. He didn't leave on his free will; he escaped from a
situation. It's not an opportunity for Germany or for France or for Poland or
for the EU to have 2 million slave labor for their own labor market in order to
bring down the wages and destroy the social infrastructure of the country so
that the labor or the working class cannot fight against their own government
or the European elite. A refugee is a sacred person. And you need to provide
for him. And of course, do whatever you can, to stop the situation or to alter
the situation that the refugee is escaping from. That's our opinion.
How do you think the
mechanism of the Hotspots will work in terms of slave labor?
It's simple.In Greece, we already have a
law passed back in 2012 that provides the ability for the government to take
from the Hotspots whoever it is, either he's an outlaw migrant or a refugee,
and to provide labor supply in terms of whatever the government decides. For
example, now we have a big situation with the farmers all over Greece. The
government proposes to the farmers to give them free - without any charge -
free slave labor from the Hotspots, and the government will subsidize the
farmers for the slave labor of the migrants and the refugees working for them.
That's a way to buy out; it 's a way to buy the social consciousness of the farmers.
So why is the government
subsidizing it, because it ends up being much cheaper?
Yes, of course. You'll have cheap labor
for yourself, and on top of that you'll have all the income coming from the
government, that normally will go for the refugees and the migrants - for the
Hotspots - you'll get the revenue as a farmer. And you'll be provided with more
income out of the slave labor you are using for every migrant or refugee you
are occupying. It's policy. It's a policy proposition from the Greek
government, the Left government for the farmers to keep them quiet and not to
revolt against the memorandum policies. "I'll provide for you slave labor,
don't worry. Go back to your farms." That's what the Left government is
saying right now to the farmers.
But obviously
for Greece to treat the refugees according to international law it would mean
to leave the European Union first, but that's impossible...
Yes. Because you have to get rid of
Schengen Treaty and Dublin Treaty. The Dublin Treaty created a special
situation in dealing with refugees and migrants for the EU. It created an
international situation, because back then when they provided refugees with
international law, back in the protocols in the 1950s, they thought of the
refugee and the migrant situation as an international problem, not a European
problem. An international problem. Now, the EU wanted to refurbish the whole
situation as a European problem, which it isn't.
That's why they created the Dublin I and
Dublin II treaties. For members of the EU to decide themselves what to do with
refugees and migrants. Not according to international laws and protocols. No.
But through their own private interests. That's the privatization of an
international problem.
Recently, as you obviously
know, terrorists were found in Greece, trying to pass through. And what is very
strange is how a caravan filled with AK47s and bullets managed to make its way,
all the way, I think it was from Western Europe - Germany and Austria, all the
way to Greece. Do you think there are flaws in the way the EU is managing its
security?
Yeah, it's a huge industry. And the
banking system that supports this, the banking logistics - is based on the
Greek bankers and the Cyprus banks. That's why they are specially protected. No
attorney, no justice system, can penetrate the banking system, and no one can
say let's see what is going on, who's laundering money. Through what
channels they are taking rights, or are there payoffs, things like that. We
know that the Greek banking system and the Cypriot banking system, the systemic
bank, they are first and foremost launderers of black money, coming from
weapons, prostitution, and of course, migrants and refugees.
So the banks are
complicit, in let's call it, intentional lack of monitoring its security,
allowing smuggling?
Exactly. That's why they keep refinancing
bankrupt institutions. Like the four systemic banks here in Greece that are
bankrupt since 2009. And we know that. But they keep them afloat, although they
are utterly bankrupt. We are under capital controls, as you know, from June
2015. Actually, we are under a banking moratorium. You cannot do free
banking, or if you go to a bank and take the money out of your private account,
you cannot do that here in Greece - since 27th of June if I remember correctly.
They closed the banks from that point and on and they didn't open them. And
they are not going to open up the banks, only until they do a haircut to
whatever they can to accounts, to whatever. So, they are totally bankrupt.
They are under - we are under - a banking
moratorium or capital control as the Europeans call it, and on top of that we
have to refinance and recapitalize the closed-down banks. That's... as an
economist I can say, that's a historical phenomenon. You cannot do that.
There is no other historical precedent... None. You cannot have a closed down
banking system and refinance... Why do they do that? Because it's the
logistical basis of this huge laundering business. ... for all Europeans. I'm
talking about the cash flow coming from this, through Turkey, to the European
banks.
The cash flow?
I'm talking about armaments, prostitution,
and the commerce of human beings - refugees and migrants.
So I'll just simplify so
that people will understand. What you are saying is that there is the network
of smuggling of prostitutions, of weapons, and also of drugs?
Yes.
Of drugs also, it goes to Turkish
banks, and from Turkish banks it gets laundered again...to the European Union.
Through Greece. They are going to the huge
banks, Deutsche Bank and others banks in the Europe.
So they carry the money on
their bodies?
Yes. They want a free market for
this kind of business. And we are a free market for this kind of business.
Because Mr. Tusk, Mr. Juncker and Mr. Erdogan decide what is going to happen.
For example, I'll give you an example you probably don't know. What Mr. Erdogan
said to Mr. Tusk and to Mr. Jucnker back in November. Probably it was Russian
intelligence that took the conversation and gave it to the Greek newspaper.
Probably Russian intelligence, I don't know. But the newspaper printed a week
ago a conversation between Mr. Tusk and Mr. Juncker with Mr. Erdogan,
discussing the situation with the Greek islands, the refugee and the migrant
problem. And Mr. Erodgan asked not 3 billion but 9 billion. And when Mr.
Juncker said to him, “I cannot provide such funds for Turkey,” Mr. Erdogan
said, "you saw the drowned body of the 4-year-old in the Greek
island"? - "Yes." "How about sending you 14,000 such
bodies to Greek islands?" - That's what Mr. Erdogan said to Mr. Juncker
and Mr.Tusk. And when Mr. Juncker said: "What do you want? Are
we dealing with like you are a prince"? And Mr. Erdogan said: "Yes, I
am a Prince. I'm an Ottoman Prince."
So, you see, we are under a political
mafia. And no one, even in Turkey or in the EU, can deal with this Mafiosi
because we don't have democracy or even parliamentarism to provide the people
with a voice, or to have some people who will deal with it. They negotiate in
the dark rooms. What the people could say a few decades ago - it is something
like Nazism. That's why we say that we are facing not the European Union but a
new European Reich. Full fledged.
So what does Erdogan do
with the money he gets?
Mr. Erdogan wants to provide new funds to
the industry we are talking about in Turkey. It's official policy. And you can
have illegal planning: take 100 refugees with your boat or whatever it is and
bring them to the Greek islands. So you have the NGOs on the Greek islands. In
my opinion, most of the NGOs working on the Greek islands are working for
smugglers. Smuggling people.
Let me give you an example: more than
10,000 children coming out of the sea and identified by NGOs -
"saved" by NGOs - they were lost afterwards. No trace. No trace at
all. While going to the EU. About 10,000 children. Who is responsible for this?
We're talking about a massacre. Because, the children up to 14, 15 years old,
are going to the European Union, for what? For prostitution and of course for
illegal forms of human organs. 10,000 children. And that's the situation the EU
created in our armed forces with the support of our own government.
What do you think can be done about
the fact that a lot of Greek people are simply apathetic and they don't see the
connection between the Euro and their own economic situation. The longer they
wait, the worse it's going to get. Because there are growing chances, the war
in Syria is going to get much worse. If that happens, Greece, as a member of
NATO will get involved in the war in Syria.
I know. And we are very very fearful right
now about the rise of that possibility. Because NATO is in the Aegean not for
the refugees or the migrants. They are here to confront Russia. Ok?
Russian forces in Syria?
Yes. We're talking about a huge naval
force from Russia coming from Crimea and the Baltics and for the first time
after the 19th century the Aegean is closed off. They cannot get safe passage
to Crimea. You can see what is going on?
But how will boats manage
to block Russian forces?
Because the Aegean is now out of reach for
the Greek government and nominally for the Turkish government. Who is going
through the Aegean is up to NATO to decide, who is to have safe passage. NATO
decides. Not Greece, not Turkey, not even international law. You can say that
according to international law I can have safe passage... No! Because NATO is
doing surveillance all over the Aegean and NATO decides who is going to pass.
Because let's say the Russian warships are working for refugees or for migrants,
whatever. They can say whatever they like. Who is going to say otherwise? -
Russia. Oh, so what. That's what happened here in Greece.
Of course, we lost our sovereignty, and on
top, we're totally involved in the war creation process of NATO against Russia.
And of course, that's why the Russians, Mr. Putin, agreed on a set-back in
Syria. Agreed on a ceasefire in Syria that provides for the mercenaries.
Because the mercenaries were to use the ceasefire situation to refurbish their
forces with new material and of course ammunition and, of course, men, coming
especially from Turkey.
Then the talks in Geneva
collapsed and then NATO decided to go to the Aegean...
Yeah, exactly.
The talks collapsed pretty
much with the support of the US...
And now, Mr. John Kerry, can go to Lavrov
and say to him: “Ok, you have two possible situations. Either your fleet is cut
off from Crimea, and we're talking about a huge fleet that's with cruise
missiles, the major ships of the Russian Crimea fleet. Either you lose your
fleet, or we decide together to get rid the Assad Regime.”
And that's right now what is happening. Of
course, Russia tries to manipulate or whatever but what is happening right now
in Syria is exactly that. Even with the declarations of Mr. Steinmeyer two days
ago. What Mr. Steinmeyer, the secretary of the foreign policy of the German
government said was that the only thing we need right now, is that Tehran and
Moscow will persuade Mr. Assad lay down his arms. That's the whole plan. To
dissect Syria, into 3 or 4 zones. Similar to what they did in Tunisia, or
Libya, or Iraq. Same situation. And after Syria, they will go on. They will go
to Jordan, they will go to Iran, they will go to Turkey itself. And they will
dissect again and again the whole Middle East region. And of course, us too…
But we are easy to be dissected.
This leads me to a
different question: The European elites must be aware of the social
unrest here, so; how do you think they plan to continue?
I believe that by the end of 2017 - this
is my own conclusion - we will not have Greek forces involved either in
national defense or security. Inner security will be provided from NATO. Even
the army of Greece will be demolished and only a few units will remain, just
like in Bulgaria or Albania. And they are going to be totally submitted to
NATO.
And right now, we have on the northern
borders of Greece, Academi and Group 4 forces, provided with Frontex budgets,
right now.
Where exactly?
Sérres and Komotini. Greece and Macedonia
- Greek Macedonia. And everybody knows that. The Greek army knows, the Greek
police knows that. But it was decided by the Europeans.
But what are their
purposes for being there exactly?
Officially to provide security service
guarding the northern borders of Greece because Greece cannot provide such
level of security. Let me give you an example of the whole situation, of how
dire it is.
In the third memorandum, you will see that
we have to provide less and less for our national defense. The state budget of
2016 provides 200 million, not billion, 200 million to the federal defense
budget. In the 2015 budget, the national defense budget was 500 million. In one
year's time, the Europeans decided that the national budget must go down by 300
million. With only 200 million Euros, you cannot even pay the wages of the
military personnel you employ as a state. On the budget of 2017, the memorandum
says that the national budget will have to go down even further.
So in the future, we will
see a situation whereamidst social unrest, Greeks will find themselves
confronted by mercenaries, Academi?
Exactly. When you will have such a
situation in Greece, I can guarantee you, the Greek people will take arms. It
was done back in the 20th century a lot of times and it will be done again. Of
course, we don't want that, to go down that road. But we will travel this road,
if we cannot do otherwise. We will fight for our country. Our forefathers
fought for our country. We will fight even with arms, if we are against foreign
troops, mercenaries or whomever. We will fight.
Of course I believe that in 2016 there
will be a social resurrection here in Greece, one way or the other. I don't
know which way the social unrest will go. But we will have social unrest. If
you walk on the streets Greece you will see a lot of people now, saying:
"Ok, the situation is over our heads. I cannot afford any longer to stay
silent. I have to do something."
Ok, we have the farmers. We have the
lawyers. We have the medical workers. All over Greece, the social rage is
climbing. We will have a social unrest... and we will try, through EPAM of
course, to make it a participation, to pave social unrest and to create a
situation that can end up in a social revolution. Because the only way we can
get rid of the whole regime is through a social and political revolution.
When we are talking about creating a
social revolution we are not talking about - in the same way - like we're
expecting an attack on the Winter Palace like the Russians did back in 1917.
No. We are talking about the organization of a huge part - a major part of the
Greek population in my opinion - that will demand the demolition of the whole
regime.
We will see that. And I believe that we
will see that in 2016. I don't believe that it will be before August. After we
see the weather in Greece opening up, you will see that most of the major
movements, the social movements here in Greece, they are coming out like when
Spring is coming. When we have spring in terms of the weather, it's the same
thing with society. Something like a natural biological process in society. You
have a spring in society. And you will have that in 2016.
Otherwise, I don't know what we will face
in 2017 and in 2018. Probably, we will have to fight through other means.
By the way,
speaking of Iran, I read a report on this on one website that Albania received
about 2,000 fighters of an Iranian opposition group.
Yeah, that's true.
But why?
Well, let me give you a scenario. I don't
know if it will come out... but it's a kind of scenario that happens in Greece
especially on a military level, and of course, with the security forces.
They are expecting some kind of a UÇK
situation on Macedonia or even closer to the Albanian border. A UÇK situation
is like a thousand, two thousand mercenaries, coming and creating a situation.
Like the UÇK did in Serbia, in Kosovo.
The KLA?
Yes, the KLA [Kosovo Liberation Army]. We
call them the UÇK. Mercenaries. NATO mercenaries. It's very easy nowadays. We
don't have the means to guard the borders of our country. By 2017, we will have
foreigners guarding our borders. Especially mercenaries, Academi and Group 4.
British multinationals and American multinationals – the corporation created
out of Blackwater. They already have an agreement with the Frontex organization
to provide security services.
So, it's quite easy. Who is going to stop
them? Nobody. Except of course the Greek people. And they have in their minds
the same situation. They will create a monstrous regiment, leading the section
of Macedonia, the mercenaries will probably invade, and come down to Athens.
And when the Greek citizen sees refugees, Greek refugees, coming... they will
be frightened so much, they will accept anything. That's the NATO scenario.
Of course, our history is quite different.
If the Greek sees a Greek citizen coming as a refugee from a foreign invasion,
you will see what will happen. You will see the same thing that happened back
in 1940. Barefoot, they went up to the Albanian mountains fighting
against the Italian fascists. No guns. No political leadership. With the
military dictatorship and fascist dictatorship here in Greece. And the Greek
people went up there without even stopping. Because back then we had more
casualties from the winter than from the Italian fascists. Because our
forefathers had nothing. And they fought back then. Nobody believed back
then...
Even Ciano who designed the Italian
offensive in Greece said back then when a British diplomat asked him, "How
sure you can be that through your offensive Greece will collapse in a few
days"? And Ciano said, "We bribe the whole regime, the Metaxas
regime." It was a fascist regime. And what happened? Every Greek, even my
grandfather, who walked with a limp, he was one leg short from birth, he went
on foot from Kalamata to the Albanian border. We are talking about more than
1,000 KM. On foot. Without even a gun. He took a gun from a dead Italian
fascist and fought down to the end. You will see the same thing happen again.
They don't know the Greek people.
Of course, it's easy to say that if you
take the Greek and close him in a dark room for days and then tell him
"You know, don't open the door because the light will blind you." Well,
probably most of the Greeks will decide not to open up the door. But when you
squeeze him against the wall, he will decide, either to be a traitor or a hero.
And most of them will decide to become heroes.
It's easier for Greek, even if you see the
history, to give up his life, rather than to give up his watches or his wallet
or whatever. It's easier for him, to decide to give up the life.
Why would NATO want to do
such a thing? To prevent a social rest?
No, no. It wants to create a corridor in
the Balkans.
NATO does?
Yeah. A corridor coming through Turkey,
Greece, Macedonia, and Albania. It's a buffer zone to control the whole
Balkans.
And then NATO will come in
to restore order...
Exactly. And through that you'll have gas
pipes, or installations, whatever. It's only for foreign forces to control the
whole Balkans. And of course, through the Balkans you control Central Europe.
You control Russia. If you'll go back you'll see the same thing as the Truman
Doctrine in the new situation. What we had back then - the Truman Doctrine that
took us into a civil war in Greece - it's the same thing.
They will create this buffer zone, they
will reduce Southern Greece, in order to provide for an installation of Israeli
forces and NATO forces, in order to have a lever, a foothold for Israeli
defense. Because they want Israel to be like it is right now. It's a constable
for the US imperialism in the Middle East. They need it. By destroying the
whole Middle East you need to provide Israel with a backbone of defense - a buffer.
Let's go back to 1967, when Israel started
the Six Day War against Egypt. The US asked the military junta we had back then
- created by NATO here in Greece, - to provide Crete for military installations
for the Israeli air force against Egypt. Back then even the military junta
thought of the political reactions here in Greece and they didn't accept. Right
now, the Left government signed an SOFA , a treaty, with Israel. And now Israel
is creating a military airport, in Kastelli in Crete, and bigger military
installation of radars in Crete. They are creating installations all over
Crete. Crete is another, you know, unsinkable airbase, it's like a...
An aircraft carrier.
An unsinkable aircraft carrier for NATO.
And the Left government signed all of this, for NATO and Israel. We are the
only state, besides the United States, to have SOFA treaty with Israel. Nobody
else, nobody else. Only us and the United States.
That's why NATO and US allies like Israel
need it: from Larissa downwards to south of Greece, for military and
geostrategic purposes. From Larissa upwards - that's Macedonian Greece – it’s
going to become a buffer zone to control the whole Balkan situation.
But that's obviously not a
long-term solution for them. It just means perpetual war and conflict.
Exactly. We have a perpetual war on the
financial market. So as long as we have that kind of functional situation of
the world economy, we have perpetual war. 100%.
And in my opinion, we have a third world
war. It started in 2014. Why? Because it was the first year that 11% of the
world population was involved in military action or worse. The first time since
the Second World War. And from that point and on, you will see every year,
2015, 2016, more people coming in... That's world war. And we will probably the
surpass the second world war.
But on a different plan, we will have
perpetual war all over the place. With Rogue states, civil wars, demolition
wars, the destruction of nations and states, things like that. That's the new
form of the world war.
And that is inevitable
because of the financial support of the major world powers.
They need states, nations and people to be
liquid as capital.
Maybe you can talk about
that a little bit...
It's easy. If I am Mr. Buffet, I know we
are not talking about Buffet but a financial elite... in order to create new
situation of more profit for my own investment capital, I cannot deal with
different states. And I have more then, nominally, we have more than 327
trillion dollars in terms of investment capital worldwide. Controlled by 40
banks... even less. 40 banks. 327 trillion... We have a GDP, a world GDP, from
75 to 77 trillion dollars. And they are only for investment. We're not talking
about derivatives or other aspects of the financial market. We're talking about
327 trillion dollars. So in order to create opportunities for my capital to
provide new, or even more profit, for my portal, we have to destroy and
re-destroy the whole... I cannot provide more out of the normal economic cycle.
We have to destroy and recreate the cycle itself. And there's no way I can do
that if we have normal states or people or national economies, things like
that. We tried that through financial means. We saw that. And we saw how the
whole market was destroyed back in 2007 up to 2008. After that, they recreated
the whole market and right now they have even a worse situation then back in
2007. So, in order to subsist that kind of a situation in the financial market,
we need an army, we need political means - the economy cannot provide any more.
You will see that the big international corporations are avoiding from
investing. They keep the money on the coffers, and they are using it re-buying
equities in the financial market. Things like that. They cannot...
They buy what?
Equities, their own equities. You will see
the world commerce going down. So the normal world economy cannot afford to go
up on the same level as the financial market. And the difference between the
level of the real economy and of the fictitious economy is even bigger than
that. What covers the difference is the political means. Creating opportunities
for the fictitious capital. That's the only way. There's no other way.
That's why when the equities market went
down back in 2014, the US decided that "Ok, forget all about lowering the
defense budget. No. Forget all about it. Give more bills to the defense
budget." From 2014, you have the advancement of the defense budget in the
US. The same in all over neighboring countries. You will see, new wars erupting
all over the planet.
How will they happen in
NATO countries? The migrants or...
All over. Germany, went from 4 to 5
billion - if I remember the data correctly from the first budget - right now on
2015, do you know how much was the defense budget of the Federal Republic of
Germany? 162 billion euros. That's huge. And for what? To re-create a
world-class army. That's why the US wanted to give the leadership of the
maritime mission of the NATO mission in the Aegean to Germany. It's the first
time after World War II, after the Bonn Treaty of 1951, for the Germans to only
participate but to take leadership of a military mission. It's the first time.
And of course, Germany is a world class economy. And they want to keep that
kind of status in the world economy. They tried a military partnership with
Russia back in 2010. But, of course, the US destroyed that. They tried, through
the EU, to create the so-called European Army, the European military force. But
it was destroyed by NATO. And now, they are going through NATO military force
with the agreement of the US.
That's why they decided about the Aegean,
4 days after the General Secretary of NATO said it is Ok for the US to
quadruple the military installations and military personnel in Europe. Ok?
That's a huge change in the US policy of NATO. And of course, “to defend Europe
against Russian aggression.” All these political changes and developments you
will see on the background of the situation in the financial markets. And what
we have now is that even the BRICS economies cannot provide for the world
economy. After 2008, we had the collapse of the Lehman Brothers, the world
economy, even the US and, of course, the banks, the economies of capitalism and
imperialism, and they had a way out. Through BRICS they invested a lot... and
now the BRICS are coming down, especially in China or even in India, Brazil,
even in Russia they have big problems. Of course, they cannot do anything.
China cannot do anything. Because these are totally dependent on a world scale
demand. If you don't have a world demand for your own economy to grow 8% every
year or 10% every year, then you have to recreate your own economy on a basis
of a local market. But in doing that, you have to provide your own citizens
with more income. More labor rights. And more protection for social situations.
Can China, the Chinese Communist Party or the Chinese Government do such a
turn? No, I don't believe that they can do it. Because it would be a fortune
for the Chinese to get out of the economic model they had from the 1980s. They
cannot do such a social political turn for their own economy. They will destroy
the whole system, the political system in China. And if you do that, you will
have a Chinese working class demanding more and more and more. And the
capitalist world economy would lose the Chinese wage. So, the only way for the
world system to go ahead is only through war. There is no other way. They
cannot invest anymore. Only in a total destruction. Perpetual war.
But, obviously, that's not
a long-term solution. So we're just going to see more and more wars throughout
the EU?
Exactly. Or up to the point where you will
have people's revolutions – people who want to take back their own country and
rebuild it. And in order to rebuild it they have to get rid of all the
connections they have with the financial markets, the loan sharks, investment
banks, or whatever. That's the only solution. The alternative.
But any country which
would do a revolution, of some kind of gain, any country which would reclaim
its sovereignty... would find itself under attack, will find itself under debt,
so...
Well, yes. But it's difficult to find who
will fight against sovereignty. It's difficult for NATO or whomever to create a
war situation against Greece because you don't go up against people that are
united and decisive enough to fight for their own country. That's why they
didn't go against Iran. You will see them trying to use the difference between
the government and the people, like they did in Syria. You have the regime, the
Assad regime, which is not - you know - "people friendly" let's say,
and create a situation where you can demolish the social cohesion of the whole
country. So if you have a social revolution or a popular revolution in Greece
and the people are decisive enough to fight for the country, no NATO, no noone
can go up against such a people. Or of course we will face an economic war. So
what? We don't want to be part of the financial market. We are not going out on
the financial market for loans. We can do without loans. We are not in
need of them. Greece is a small economy.
... Greece can be
self-sustaining in terms of producing its own food.
Exactly. It's easy. It's easy for us to
find the oil we need for our economy. Or the industrial profits, or the
industrial technology we need. If we want to rebuild our own industries of
textiles, we'll go to Bangladesh, we won't go to the US. In Bangladesh we can
find whatever we like, in industrial technology, in the textile industry. And
we will rebuild it.
But I'm not sure how... if
you already made the case that NATO and the financial system, at the current
crisis that we're in, how it profits from and encourages and is causing more
and more wars. By that same logic then, if we follow that logic, any place that
would have a revolution, NATO would attack that place...
Yeah. They will try...
Maybe the people will
fight back, as in the case if they would have invaded Iran. But they would still try...
They will try. They will try by going from
the backdoor, you know. Not through the front door. Because by going from the
front door you risk a revolution in your own country. And they don't want that.
They want to be legitimized in the people's eyes, even in their own country. The
people would have to say that the Greeks are wrong, and NATO is right. For
what? Because the Greeks asked for the country back? And because they said no
loans, no nothing, we don't need anything from you?
“We're going to work our country and
prosper. That's the only thing we are asking for... And of course, we want
democracy.”
They need some kind of an excuse. They
cannot go and destroy... For example, in Libya, they had the excuse of Gaddafi.
In Syria, Assad. In Iraq, Saddam Hussein. In Iran, the Mullahs. In Greece,
what? They are leaving the EU? They want to rebuild their own country with
their own abilities? And to rely on whatever their own country can
provide? It's quite difficult. Of course, they can say whatever they
like. But if we do a good job, if we provide for the people, which is what we
are saying. If we create a new kind of a situation, a real democratic situation
- not, you know, a sign of democracy - but a real democracy, it's very very
difficult, even for the CIA, to create a situation like this. Even to create a
situation we see in Venezuela. They forgot that a revolution everywhere
in the world, if you want a revolution, you have to trust the people, not the
regime, whatever good it is, not the party, no. The people. The grassroots. And
if you forget that, you will pay for that. And that's what happened back in the
Chavez era in Venezuela. Now they are paying for that. Create a grassroots
democracy. Take to the people your own things. Give the people the
ability to decide...
How are they paying
for it in Venezuela?
Because they create a democratic regime,
Ok. But they have an election system that provides for someone who takes 44% of
the electorate to have 65% in the national assembly. Why? Of course, the
Chavistas say this is all work of the reactionary forces. Ok. And now they are
facing their own medicine. That's why I'm talking about going to the people,
giving them the ability to decide themselves. Through communes, through
councils, through whatever you can find. Let the people's imagination decide.
Since I was there and
studied a little bit my impression of Venezuela is that... their mistake was
that they didn't follow the Cuban way. I'll tell you what I mean. Basically,
first of all, Maduro wasn't strong enough about crime, there's a lot of
hoarding done by poor people...
Exactly.
And secondly, when you
have elections every four years, and you have a socialist government running,
you create a situation where you have populism. You just give free goods to the
people and you don't try to do anything that would be painful, like cracking
down on crime. And then at some point, the more populist you become, the more
they get tired of you, and then they throw you away.
The opposition had two major weapons
against Maduro: inflation and crime. What can you do? First of all, socialize
the money circulation process. They did not do that.
How do you do that?
You take the banks and destroy the private
banking system. Destroy it. Through their own means, through money. Give money
to the people, in terms of income or in terms of jobs.
They didn't do that...
No. They let the private banking system
create money through debt. That's totally destructive. Even nowadays the
Venezuelan government is indebted to Goldman Sachs. Are you crazy? What are you
doing? And the other situation is exactly the corruption and the crime
problems.
The crime situation: You can deal with it
in two separate ways. One is the security forces problem. And they had the
security forces problem. That's why we had in 2002 and 2004 a situation of a
coup d'état, through the security forces in Venezuela. So they didn't solve
that. They did a, you know, tried to solve it through the personality of
Chavez. But that's Ok; that's one way to say "Kill my leader in order to
leave me without a head and then deal with me easily." The other way is to
provide for the society itself to fight against crime, especially in barrios,
and organize the society. We know that. Even from the US history of
fighting crime back in the Roosevelt years. The society itself. Not the
police, or the justice system. The society itself. Organize.
What would be the
incentive? You had a situation in Venezuela where people could get a PhD, they
could do a Master and instead they chose to join a gang. What would be the
incentive for communities to crack down on crime...?
You provide good jobs for the people.
When you nationalize the...
Yes. And good income out of the good jobs.
And more leisure time in order to get involved in the political situation.
Provide more of a decision-making process for the people. For, let's say, a
convention in every neighborhood. Call the people from every neighborhood to
decide what to do in the neighborhood. And whatever the people decide, it will
be implemented. They will implement their own decision. Through that, they will
fight to implement their own decision. They will be responsible for
implementing their own decision. And through that you will fight gangs,
you will fight everything. Most of the people who join gangs do that because
they want a different type of an organization. And they find that through
gangs. No. They can give them a different organization, and through that
organization, they can decide and implement what they decide. They have the
first and the last word in their own situation. In the social and political
situation they are facing. And through that, who is going to join the
opposition or to vote for multimillionaire that doesn't care even for the people
who are working for them. Nobody. Well, you know only the elite or a
quasi-elite. How much? 5% of the population? 10% of the population? Whatever.
That's the same conclusion you draw from
the revolutionary process all over Europe from day one. Even if you go back to
the great French revolution, or the Paris Commune's revolution or whatever. You
will see the same pattern. If you lose track of money, and if you lose track of
grassroot democracy, you will lose permanently. That's what happened even in the
Russian revolution.
But in Cuba they are...
Well, yeah. But in Cuba, it's a very
different story. Because what they realized, even the American elite, realized
by now is that the Cuban Revolution survived because of the encirclement of the
American hegemony. Because the people, the patriotic people, the Cuban people,
created a huge form against any foreign oppression or invasion. So even if the
Cubans have any complex about the Castro regime or whatever, Ok, leave it
aside, we'll fight against any kind of foreign invasion and recreation of the
Batista regime.
Now, the American polity, the political
elite, acknowledge that by going through the back door. They tell to Raul
Castro, “Ok. Let's talk. Let us give you a little bit of money, a few dollars.
Instead of having the Americans flying through Canada, Vancouver or Montreal
and going to Cuba, Ok, let them go in easily.” They will do the same thing, or
try - let's hope that the Cubans, or the Cuban Party, draw the conclusions we
are drawing right now. If they keep the bureaucracy, the party, the state
bureaucracy in tact, they will lose the country. One way or another. Because
when you have the bureaucracy, it's easy for someone like the US to buy out
their way into the country. No questions asked. We saw that back in the Soviet
Union. In a few years’ time, you will see the same. The same one, in a few
years’ time, I'm talking about 3 or 4 years, became the worse type of
Capitalism in Russia. Party of state bureaucrats. The same thing with Cuba.
I don't believe that Cuba has any other
way out because it has to go through negotiations with the US. But it has to
recreate the state apparatus. Give more freedom. Let go of the war-type
organization of the society and the economy. Give more space for the people. Invest
in the people's opinion and give them more. Give them more. It's the only way
to defend the regime, of course, and the party - against the new invasion, the
invasion of US "friendship" and the takeover of Cuba...
You can fight it easily, but you have to
change your own mindset. You see. The type of Ernesto Che Guevara or Fidel
Castro type with military clothes has passed... You cannot fight the
imperialism, the new stage of imperialism, through these things. Of course, you
have to keep up your military alert up to the most possible scenario... you can
have a US invasion against you in matter of days. But through that, give more
power to the people. Grassroots power, to decide their own decisions. Give them
the space to make mistakes. So what?
Going back to
Venezuela, some people suggested that if the pro-Chavista military will take
over the country that could stabilize things more, they can bring back order...
I don't know.
Because the way things are
going now the opposition will take over the country.
I know, I know. And I see Maduro's
declarations. It's a very very risky business. If the military decides to
come in, you create a precedent that everyone can use. Even the opposition. And
the opposition is far more advanced in these matters than you are, then a
movement like the Chavistas or Maduro's PSUV party. The opposition can do
whatever they like. They have the backing of the US.
But there are generals who
are different, who have good relations with Cuba, China, Russia, and Iran...
I know, I know. But what about a civil
war?
That will happen anyway.
I believe that if they try that, they will
have the possibility to create a situation of a civil war for decades. Like in
Colombia. You see, a civil war since the 1960s. It's very difficult, a
situation like this.
Either way, if the
opposition takes over the Chavistas will do a civil war...
I don't believe it's an easy way out right
now. What they had to do- they didn't do, years back. Now, it's very difficult
to choose. Whatever you chose, you'll have cons and...
But in this kind of a
situation you have to make an imperfect decision.
Yeah, exactly.
...And I think the
military can make the situation better for everyone.
If you have the military, and at the same
time you will have a popular movement, and the popular movement will try to
recreate from the bottom-up the whole situation- that's a good thing. Of
course, it's a risky business, but that's a good thing. But in order to do
that, you cannot stop at anything. If you use a knife, use it well, without any
hesitation. I'm talking in a matter of time, and I'm for it, Ok. If you have to
use it, use it. You don't mess around, use it. If you decide that the whole
situation is up to cutting some throats, cut them. No questions asked. Cut
them. In a few day's time, in order to pacify the whole situation. If you
prolong it, you create more strife. And that's my opinion. If you decide that
the only way out is using the military, do it. And do it in 24 hours, get rid
of them all. And then find a way to legitimize. Are they traitors? Ok, they are
traitors. Hang them. And let history judge.
From that time on, you will work to put
the people in front of the whole situation. And from that point on you will
recreate the whole regime, from the bottom-up. A grassroots democracy. And
through that everybody, at the end, will say, Ok, it was a situation. And of course,
go out to the people and take the blame yourself. You will say that “Ok, it was
my fault, as a movement, that we came to that point. We made certain mistakes.
We are not going to do that anymore. We will fight for our country because we
are facing an invasion, it is a new type of invasion than Syria, but we will
fight,” if you decide to use the military. And tell to the people: “Ok, we made
the situation worse but we will rectify, with you. And from that point and on,
you [the people] will decide, and we will follow.” That's the only way, if you
come to this. And that's what we said about Greece. If we come to this
situation where we have to use weapons or arms to deal with the enemy, we will
do that. No hesitation. No way around it. No. We will do that. And we will do
that with the most resourceful and efficient way we can do that. In order to
resolve the whole situation in the smallest possible time. No prolonging, no
nothing. We will fight. We will get rid of them. And then our recreate our own
country, we will build a true democracy. And that's what back in the 40s, the
national revolution movement against the Nazi occupation did. Up in the
mountains. From day one, they created a democracy for the people. It was very
good. But they did the same mistake again. They didn't trust the people, the
grassroots people. And on a specific... the leadership was not adequate to deal
with the political situation and accepted the presence of the British military
in the country and that was the start of the civil war.
Their mistake was that they didn't believe
in the people. They fought for the people, but they didn't believe...
The people need to be
educated for you to really believe in them...
No. I believe that the people, when they
start to fight, they learn from their own experience. Let's see, you can see
the Egypt situation. When the people without a political leadership or a
political program, learn how to deal with the government, and how to dethrone a
government or a regime - the Mubarak regime - it's something that, you know,
it’s written on the genes, on the people's genes. They know the way. If they
get rid of the fear of dealing with the regime or the government, then it's
easy, to topple one government, and then topple another government. Of course,
when you have a political program it is easy to topple a government and create
a new political situation. That's the deficiency of the Egypt situation right
now. But the people know how to deal with them...
But that's only possible
when the people reclaim their rights.
Exactly. You cannot have a successful
revolution or social insurrection without a political program, a very specific
political program. Ok, we don't want them. We have to know what we want. What
will succeed after the toppling of the government or the regime.
That's where we are trying to organize,
and we are trying to educate the people politically. You know, we need
democracy. But what kind of democracy? We don't need any type of democracy; we
need grassroots democracy. We need the people to decide, not only every four
years but every time any serious situation involving the people comes. To
involve the citizens. To create a situation that even one citizen can make a
difference.
Why in the world would
Merkel want to accept millions of migrants to Germany after she said in the
past that multiculturalism failed?
The main problem of the German economy is
the export of capital. The net investment position of the German economy is
about 26% of the German GDP. It's a huge provider of capital for the national
market. 26%, out of 20% before the EU. So the main strength of the German
economy is to keep exporting capital. It's a more typically imperialist economy
compared to the US. Like an old European imperialist economy. Where I need to
export capital in order to provide for the financial and economic elite.
In order to do that, it has to squeeze
down all the labor costs and the social costs.
Ok, they did that for 20 years. Now they
are facing a social situation. They cannot squeeze now, even more, the German
labor or the German working class. They need some external force. The Germans
know. The Germans know from the 60s. In order to create a German miracle back
then they wanted millions of immigrants. That's the same thing right now. But
the difference is back then, it was a different world situation and European
situation. A different capitalism, let's say. They tried, most of them,
especially the German trade unions, they tried to take most of the immigrant
people, to take them and create a new kind of a German citizen. Now there is no
more of that. "We need, immigrants for the specific time of staying in
Germany." "We need - the German oligarchy needs – a few hundred
thousand or 1 million immigrants only for a specific time now. We need to get
rid of them as soon as they start asking for rights."
And how will they do that?
Easy. They take them back to Greece. Easy.
It will create a civil
war. You can just do that easily...
So what. They did that.
So there could be a civil
war in Germany?
Yes. Because the Germans now - the
German worker or the German middle class will lose everything. And that's why
you see Nazi parties in Germany coming up, especially in Bavaria. All over
Germany you see people, political factions, that they say that they are not
Nazis but Ok, over the political rhetoric you will see that Nazism is coming up
again in Germany. Based on the social situation created by that policy.
But not everyone who
opposes migration in Germany is a Nazi. They have a right, would you say they
have a right to oppose migration?
Yeah, of course. I do. The difference
between the Nazis, is the same thing like in the middle war years. The Nazis
weren't against migration. They were for migration, of course using them as
slave labor. During the Nazi regime there were 7.5 million migrants working in
Germany as slaves. There were more migrants than at any other time in German
history. So, they were not against migration; they were for.
Of course, you had... it was like Marx
said. The capitalists are for migration using them in order to bribe their own
working class. The same thing happened with the Nazis. They were using slave
labor in order to bribe the German working class to accept the Nazi regime.
Bribing them or through the army or providing more for the Germans against the
slave labor force from Eastern Europe or from all over Europe. They were
working for jobs the German working man didn't want; the jobs were not
respectful enough. They were working for less than trash, Ok? And of course,
all during the war, the German soldier coming from the working class, had the
ability to loot the whole Europe to provide for the family. And that's how,
more or less, it was a blind eye, even for the German working class, a blind
eye for what the Nazis did all over Europe, and of course, the death camps and
things like that. It's something you know; it was a bribe. Of course, it was
quite different under a totalitarian regime. But it was exactly the utmost
scale of what the British imperialists did with the British working class using
the slave labor of the Irish back in the 19th century. That's why Engels and
Marx said you have to get rid of the bulk of the Irish, in order for the
British working class to become revolutionary. And first and foremost, you have
to give national sovereignty for the Irish in order for them to stay in their
own country and not to come into Britain. It's the same thing.
What I found
interesting is as you said, just as there is a farmers protest here and entire
farms are being taken over by corporations and Monsanto's power grows more and
more, we're seeing the same crisis in the US. Because the government is taking
- from what I learned - the government is taking land from private farmers and
ranchers, to create a national park, and then they sell off the area to private
corporations, even areas with uranium. So what happened now in Oregon, is that
a lot of farmers and ranchers, white farmers and ranchers, came out to protest
against the government. But the interesting thing is, that the American Left
who you would think would be the first ones to join - didn't join. So what is
your opinion about that?
Well, in my opinion, most of the Left,
even in Europe and the United States, lost the ability to know or to
acknowledge the real problems. In order to provide a revolutionary movement,
let's say. If we consider the Left to be a revolutionary force, you have to
know the grassroots’ problem. You are fighting for the working class, that in
order become a dominant class, it has to be a dominant class for the nation.
That is what the Communist Manifesto said back in 1845. Marx said that the
working class doesn't have countries. But at the same time he said that since
the working class has to gain power, it must become the dominant class of the
nation. A nation is not something you sign off at the doorsteps of the country
or on the constitution. Nation is something that comes from the bottom-up that
creates a society. A place where someone can fight for rights, for the rights
to self-government. If you lose sight of that, it's easy to cross sides and to
become part of the dominant class and adopt the ideology of imperialism. See
how easy it is nowadays internationally to become mixed up with cosmopolitanism
- the ideology of imperialism. “You don't need nations.” Even in our own
country, we have Left forces, saying that because of the migrants and the
refugee crisis, “Let's get rid of the national borders.” Ok. NATO did that for
us. That's what NATO did. So, the extreme left, let's say, the most radical
left, by saying “Let’s get rid of the national borders,” invited actually NATO
to do that. That's why I went out and said that “Ok, the radicals of Left
saying that are only agents of NATO imperialism.” It's the same thing. We're
fighting for the people first and foremost, for everyone who has the right to
own a land in the country, as a farmer or as a citizen, to have his own
traditions, beliefs, even a religion. I don't believe in any religion but I
will fight to death for my people to have their right to have their own
religion. That's what Ernesto Che Guevara said about the theology of liberation
in Latin America. He was not a religious man. But he fought and said that a
revolutionary or liberation theology was part of parcel of national liberation
movements in Latin America. You can see that even in Greece.
For the people in order to become free,
first and foremost they have to have national self-determination. National
sovereignty. To become a nation. To become a nation is where the last of the
last of the citizens has the right to create the state that the citizen lives
in. That's what nations is all about. And on top of that he has the
ability, has the right, to create his own tradition, it's own art,
civilization. We don't have to earn a civilization. We have it. Human
civilization, created from different cultures, different historical types of
civilization. Every type of civilization, of people's civilization, has the
right, to become the dominant civilization in its own country. And by dominant
civilization, I don't mean “get rid of the minority.” No. Every citizen has the
right. In order to do that we have to have national sovereignty. I
believe in the Greek tradition. I'm proud of the Greek tradition. Because I
know the Greeks that have fought for, the Greeks that came out of the
revolution or war of independence, like the US historical textbook I am talking
about, and the major slogan from the period was "Freedom or Death."
We were the first people who said "Freedom or Death." Not
"Patria O Muerte" [Homeland or Death] like the Latin Americans. We
said that also. But we said "Freedom or Death." We were fighting not
only against Ottomans but against all the empires of Europe, the holy alliance.
And I am proud of that tradition. And I have the right to keep to that
tradition. And to keep calling myself "I am a Greek." And since I am
a Greek I have a huge tradition looking back. And since I am a Greek, I am
living in Greece, I have to fight for democracy. Because it's my tradition.
It's not only a political demand, it's my tradition. It was here that the first
fight for democracy, real democracy, took place, going back to the classical
time. So it is my tradition.
It's only a world tradition. It's my
tradition, first and foremost. And that's why they are fighting against Greece.
They want to destroy the Greeks. That's why they slander Greeks. That they are
nowadays Jews for Europe. What the Nazis said about the Jews back in the middle
war years, they are saying now about the Greeks. Why? Because they want to
destroy the classical tradition of Greece. And the classical tradition of
Greece was about democracy. Was about how to provide for the people. Demos we
called that. The power of Demos, the power of the people. And they recreate the
whole classical tradition, through their own imperialist aims.
They say in Berlin, in Paris, in London,
and even in Washington, that they are the continuers of the classical
tradition. No, the continuers are us. That's why I see a civilizational
collusion. Different civilizations. And I'm not talking about high from
bullshit. I'm talking about real civilizations. Our civilization, even through
our religion, it's not mine but most of the Greeks, we're talking about free
will. The Greek Orthodox Church is based on free will. It's not like
Catholicism or Protestantism. We believe in free will. Because even
Christianity had to adopt to the classical Greek tradition. And that's why in
the Greek Orthodox Church you will see even the most religious person talking
about free will. The free will of the human.
For us, we are fighting for human freedom.
And we are facing the Protestant tradition in terms of economics and politics
that says first and foremost it's submission. No. For us, it's free will. It's
freedom. Freedom to do whatever we like in terms of the person inside a
society. That's the difference between the Greek culture. Even now the European
elite call us stubborn, we don't cooperate with what they say. Their vision of
cooperation is the submission of the person to the totality. A totalitarian
view of cooperation. No. We say that we can be different. Quite different. For
a different road. But we can fight together. That's how the Greek city-states
back in the fourth century BC fought against the Persians. They were fighting
each other before, but in the critical moment, the Athenians decided to leave
their own city-state in order to go to Salamis to fight effectively against the
Persians. And of course, they were fighting for freedom and democracy against
Eastern despotism. That's the whole meaning. And it's even today. We are very
different. We can fight easily each other. Easily. You can see it even in our
own close relations. But at the critical moment, we will find a way to unite
and fight the common enemy.
And that's the difficult part also. We're
not soldiers, like the Germans. Following the leader, the Führer. No. We are
quite different. You see, our national hero, one our national heroes is
Kolokotronis. Kolokotronis is like, I can translate it in English, Kolos is in
us, and kotrona is a stone. It means "us, as a stone."
Kolokotronis.
Foundation?
No. Actually, he had a forefather that
could jump easily more than 10 meters from a stationary position. And the
Albanians, the Turkish Albanians back then said - he was admired by the
Albanians, you know, back then, they were very renowned fighters. And the
Albanians called him Kolokotronis, he has an “us” out of a stone in order to
jump out of a stationary position ten meters away. That's why he was called
Kolokotronis. Kolokotronis said “it's easy.” He fought for Napoleon and for the
English as a mercenary back in the early 19th century. When he was the leader,
one of the military leaders of the Greek revolution, he said “It's easy to lead
a European army. It's easy. You are the general, you have a staff, you deploy
your plan, and then you give the orders to your staff, and the commanders and
the staff decide what to do next. It's very difficult to lead a Greek army.
Because a Greek army, you have to go out and say good things about someone, say
bad things about the other, give presents to the other, and things like that.
It's very difficult. No European can lead a Greek army.” It's the Greek
society, it's the Greek flavor, it's the Greek culture. But that's what we are.
That's our Greek temperament. That what differentiates us from all over Europe
and the Balkans. And that's what we want to keep. If we go back to the 16th
century, the 17th century, if you read the Europeans that came here as
travelers, you will see the same thing. When they were coming to Ottoman
Greece, they were expected to see philosophers discussing philosophy matters and
things like that. Instead they met poor people subjected to a very despotic
regime, the southern regime. But they liked the term “freedom.” That's why all
over the place, you'll see easily, you'll find the names Elefteris and
Eleftheria. Elefteris is a very common name, Elefteris means “free,” “freedom.”
Eleftheria means “Freedom” in Greek. And you'll see that all over even in
the 16th century. English, Germans, French travelers came here, to Ottoman
Greece, from all over the place and heard everywhere people saying to each
other “Yasu Elefteris” [Hi Eleftheria]. Elefteris is the Greek name for
freedom, or Elefteria - the female name. It's something, you know, you have
to... It goes back centuries. And, we are proud of it, we are not going to get
rid of it, and we don't want to get rid of it, to become a German type of
society. And that's why the human center of civilization started from
here, something to do with the climate, and of course, as Hippocrates said back
then, “The Greeks are much better fighters than Asians because they are not
under a despotic regime.”
It's the same thing right now. Of course
we are trying to keep up because we don't have a political situation that is
free and democratic but it's inside every Greek. And you want something like
that. They didn't have... We try to fight, our people fought for that kind…
it's easy for the Greeks when they start fighting to find a way to create a
democratic situation. It's easy for us. We did that back in the war. And if you
remember the partisans were fighting up in the mountains. And in the villages
are the most socially backward socieities, but in these villages a new kind of
democracy was created. And it was easy for the most backward village to adapt
that type of democracy, a new type. The villagers created their own judges,
they created their own political system and they decided themselves what to do.
Under an occupation. Even the intelligence secret agents that fought in Greece,
who were of course against the Partisans…
The British?
Yes. Mr. Woodhouse. Even he said, in his
own book, afterwards, that in a period of three years of fighting over the
mountains, the Greeks managed to civilize the most uncivilized place, the
mountains in Central Greece, because you know it's something with the Greek
people. It’s the same thing. The difficult thing for us to start, but after
that it's easy. It's our tradition. It will come up. We will find our way to
create the most fantastic and admirable democracy. The only problem is to
convince people you have to get rid of the whole regime, not only a party or a
government. Otherwise, you will lose and die.
Thank you very much. Efhartiso poly.
Παρακάτω τα λινκ της συνέντευξης (2 μέρη):
ΑπάντησηΔιαγραφήhttps://gianalytics.org/533-interview-with-dimitris-kazakis-leader-of-epam-part-1
https://gianalytics.org/563-interview-with-dimitris-kazakis-leader-of-epam-part-2
Προφανώς το site έχει αλλάξει.
ΑπάντησηΔιαγραφήΤα δύο μέρη της συνέντευξης βρίσκονται εδώ:
http://joshuatartakovsky.com/interview-with-dimitris-kazakis-leader-of-epam-part-1/
http://joshuatartakovsky.com/interview-with-dimitris-kazakis-leader-of-epam-part-2/
Οποιος θελει να διαβασει την πληρη θαυμασια συνεντευξη του Δ. Καζακη στον Joshua Tartakovsky, στην Αγγλικη γλωσσα, μπορει να¨την βρει εδω:
ΑπάντησηΔιαγραφήhttp://www.russianworldforums.com/viewtopic.php?p=12890#p12890
Την ανεβασα στις 24 Μαρτιου 2016. Ειναι πληρης και συνεχομενη, σε 7 μερη, λογω τεχνικων περιορισμων του Φορουμ και την στολισα με φωτογραφιες του Δ. Καζακη για καλυτερη οπτικη εμφανιση.
Τα Λινκ που εδωσε ο ΑΙΕΝ ΑΡΙΣΤΕΥΕΙΝ ειναι αυτα που λειτουργουν κανονικα.