An unrelenting holiday season
Victor Ângelo
This
could be a troubled end of the year, on the international scene. There are
three major crises looming - Iran, Russia, and the new variant of the pandemic.
These things tend to erupt at the worst of times, when politicians are out
celebrating the holidays, skiing, or sunbathing away from their offices. To say
that we are entering a period when a lot can happen is not pessimism. It is
simply a sign that we are paying attention to a particularly complex reality.
Let
us start with Iran. This week's UN Security Council debate on Iran's nuclear
programme showed that the conditions are not in place to revive the agreement
signed in 2015 between Tehran and the five permanent members of the Security
Council, plus Germany and the European Union. The US continues to impose an
extremely tight regime of economic sanctions. And although Iran has turned to
China, the truth is that American sanctions have a huge impact.
On
the other hand, the new Iranian government has been accelerating its uranium
enrichment programme, in clear violation of the 2015 Plan of Action. By now, it
has accumulated enough fissile material to be able to produce several nuclear
weapons. At the same time, it has accelerated the production of ballistic
missiles and air assets capable of carrying a nuclear payload. All this is very
serious and raises many red flags in the usual places.
At
the time of the Council meeting, the permanent representatives of Germany,
France and the United Kingdom to the UN issued a joint statement expressing their
governments' deep concern. The final sentence of that statement says it all:
"Iran's continued nuclear escalation means that we are rapidly reaching
the end of the road." Such a statement sends the signal that it will soon
be time to opt for solutions other than diplomacy. The probability is now
stronger.
As
far as Russia is concerned, President Putin met on Wednesday with his Chinese
counterpart, Xi Jinping, by video conference. The main objective seems to have
been to show a united front against the Westerners. It would be too farfetched
to see in this summit a coordination effort to link the tension around Taiwan
with a possible offensive by the Russians against Ukraine. The timetables do
not coincide, it is not credible to think of simultaneous operations. The
American response would be different, in one case fundamentally economic and
financial - against Russia - and in the other, with military means.
In
any case, the most immediate threat is still the Russian one. Vladimir Putin
made the foreboding even more real by speaking of "genocide" that
would be in preparation against the ethnically Russian population of Eastern
Ukraine. This would be the justification for a military intrusion, an invention
easy to propagandise internally and in some international circles.
Meanwhile,
this week, Putin again insisted on the urgency of talks with the Americans and
NATO. What for? Essentially, for the West to approve Moscow's demands and its
vision of geopolitical relations with Ukraine, Georgia and Moldova, among
others. Washington and Brussels do not seem willing to accept these
impositions. Which means that tension will continue and the possibility of
destabilising action in Ukraine is quite high.
Omicron
is also complicating the end of the year. Apart from its health dimensions, it
has serious economic costs, at a time when the most developed states are
experiencing exceptional levels of public debt and budget deficit. In several
European countries, it also has a political impact that cannot be ignored. The
restrictions it imposes have given segments of the European radical right the
opportunity to mobilise. These are minority groups. Even so, they worry the
democratic leaderships of the countries where this is happening. The pandemic
and the denialists remind us that the fight against radicalism cannot have a
truce. Not even during the festive season.
(Automatic translation of the opinion piece I published in the Diário de
Notícias, the old and prestigious Lisbon newspaper. Edition dated 17 December
2021)
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