Abdeslam, Europe's most wanted fugitive after the Paris terrorist attacks, was finally located and arrested. The raid was fast and ,more important, Abdeslam is in custody. He now has a sterling lawyer. After months of frustration and often unpleasant comments from abroad, the Belgian authorities finally got their act together.
Nevertheless, the time it took the Belgian police to get him is more remarkable than the arrest itself. The episode shows the weakness of Belgian intelligence and counter-terrorism. Law enforcement is as divided as the country. At a time when forces need to come together, there should not be room for competing smallish petty territorial jealousies.
Brussels which hosts (often poorly) so many international organizations also scores badly in the control by CCTV surveillance. There are more garden dwarfs than cameras! The Belgians were helped by the French and other EU partners. They should learn from this bitter experience. The Brussels governance is a remnant of the past and should finally be sent to the shredder machine. I realize that too many parochial interests stand against a modern efficient apparatus and that international pressure might even backfire, but in an emergency only surgery works. One Bloomberg is better than 18 or so mayors. True, New York is an other world.
Abdeslam hid in Molenbeek, a Brussels borough which is considered by some as the continent's Gaza. This is unfair but the local authority has always been devoid of any sense of public relations or social engineering. It was interesting to see the photos of the many onlookers at the scene of the arrest. Only the police dog looked like a "native" Belgian. The poor assimilation of first-generation immigrants is rendered all the more difficult since the ghetto syndrome only aggrandizes their common frustration, as could have been expected. In this incoherent socio-urban situation in free-fall, only terrorism, support channels and infiltration strive.
Paradoxically, the Belgian Minister of the Interior belongs to the separatist Flemish ideology. Now he can measure the consequences of transferring too much power to constitutional partners who are too small. The EU can help but will never come up with a credible answer (see immigration). There is a need for more Belgium than for less! I defended this ten years ago in my little essay TRACES. Devolution is a useful, very contemporary tool where and when it can be applied without further weakening the patient. The principle of subsidiarity can act as reference. Limbs are a bad policy tool.
The Belgian Prime Minister, Charles Michel, is obviously a personality with the right political instinct. His coalition formula might be the better one in economic and financial matters but the constitutional pause that was achieved for the duration of his government might not survive his four-year mandate. The Flemish nationalists might take up their confederate mantle again and further reduce the powers of the federal state. In the present and, unfortunately, in foreseeable circumstances this would be a most unwelcome development.
Now a lot is said about Abdeslam. I hope the individual under arrest will not distract from the many hundreds who plot. He had better be extradited soon to France. Furthermore, the Molenbeek and French banlieux syndrom both need to be addressed rather than continue to be ignored. Jihadism and Salafism go hand-and-hand with petty crime in "no go" zones. The secular, more wealthy environment only aggravates the negative, since the positive looks unattainable. There is a need for "crative Society architects" who can try to reverse, adapt, diversify, and encourage free-enterprise and investment. They need unrestricted space. The question in Belgium is whether the little bourgeois politicians can give up their small backyards for a larger, longer view!
Saturday, March 19, 2016
Thursday, March 17, 2016
US PRIMARIES: "WE HAVE SEEN BETTER DAYS" (As You Like It, II.7.121.)
The Super Tuesday primaries were "full of sound and fury" (Macbeth, V, 5.23).
Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton won the numbers, if not the hearts and minds.
A lot is being said about both contenders. Trump is hard to swallow even for his "fellow" Republicans. Clinton's "Mary Stuart" act comes over as totally phony in the eyes of millennial Democrats.
Both are the victims of their own script. Trump is responsible for a tone and a tenure not heard or seen since the Goldwater days. The difference being that, contrary to the former, the latter probably hardly believes in his promises. Once elected, the wall might become an allegory, the trade wars a skirmish, the ostracism not more than a bureaucratic measure. Unfortunately, he is giving free-reign to the many who feel left out, ignored or snubbed in an economy which seems stalled in the dry-dock. This "Weimar tide" will not lead to a Big Brother, authoritarian-type of presidency but it will be an uphill battle to respond to the falsely created expectations if Trump were elected.
Clinton still lives under the sword of Damocles of judiciary indictment. Her wins are certain but they can hardly hide the generational or other divides. Her rival, while standing for a largely discounted socialist, interventionist regulatory agenda, has a better standing and respect with many (also Republicans). Clinton is smart, informed, but is also a master of deflecting the undesirable darker corners of her bio. The two other Republican candidates look for the moment equally unelectable. Cruz because, rightly or wrongly, he is disliked by most. Kasich because he sounds too good to be true.
Both conventions will have balloons and drama. None might be worthy of respect.
The voters may well overdose on "simplifications" and head for the delete button instead!
Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton won the numbers, if not the hearts and minds.
A lot is being said about both contenders. Trump is hard to swallow even for his "fellow" Republicans. Clinton's "Mary Stuart" act comes over as totally phony in the eyes of millennial Democrats.
Both are the victims of their own script. Trump is responsible for a tone and a tenure not heard or seen since the Goldwater days. The difference being that, contrary to the former, the latter probably hardly believes in his promises. Once elected, the wall might become an allegory, the trade wars a skirmish, the ostracism not more than a bureaucratic measure. Unfortunately, he is giving free-reign to the many who feel left out, ignored or snubbed in an economy which seems stalled in the dry-dock. This "Weimar tide" will not lead to a Big Brother, authoritarian-type of presidency but it will be an uphill battle to respond to the falsely created expectations if Trump were elected.
Clinton still lives under the sword of Damocles of judiciary indictment. Her wins are certain but they can hardly hide the generational or other divides. Her rival, while standing for a largely discounted socialist, interventionist regulatory agenda, has a better standing and respect with many (also Republicans). Clinton is smart, informed, but is also a master of deflecting the undesirable darker corners of her bio. The two other Republican candidates look for the moment equally unelectable. Cruz because, rightly or wrongly, he is disliked by most. Kasich because he sounds too good to be true.
Both conventions will have balloons and drama. None might be worthy of respect.
The voters may well overdose on "simplifications" and head for the delete button instead!
Saturday, March 12, 2016
TRUMP... THE CURSE ?
Donald Trump's rally in Chicago yesterday had to be cancelled. The tensions between his supporters and the growing anti-Trump camp had to be contained to avoid nefarious consequences. Similar occurrences will happen in the future, and the protest rallies will multiply.
This Republican candidate is an arsonist. His campaign is an anti-intellectual ritual which reminds one of certain events in the '30s in Europe. In playing on the frustrations and alienation of too many, Trump has opened floodgates which threaten the American party system as a whole and put into question Tocqueville's workings of democracy in America. Two factors have contributed to this unsavory development. The Republican hatred for the President verges on the paranoid, but unfortunately Obama's own disdain only aggravates the negative factors which propel Trump as forerunner, for now.
It is hard to foresee the future. Trump might play the martyr--a surreal role, given his persona--or he might finally be seen in a less favorable light, given his boisterous, rude response to events. He acts more and more like the frog in La Fontaine, who aggrandizes himself until he explodes. The problem is that explosion or not, American politics will pay a price. If he were to be the Republican nominee, the consequences might be unforeseeable. The Sanders camp might grow incrementally on the Democrats' side. The Dow Jones would catch a cold and the world, foes and allies, would be left gasping.
Far from me to venture into the hagiography which has marked Mrs. Reagan's demise, but one has to admit that the class of yesterday's funeral was infinitesimally superior to Trump's brass aberrations. It was almost embarrassing to try to compare the mourners in the Reagan Library with the brawl in Chicago. Despite the customary low-calorie attempts for humor under stress (remember "The American Way of Death" by Jessica Mitford?) the memorial service was dignified and the audience representative of a Jamesian/California blend.
"Anyone but Trump" is less a rallying cry than an admission of a general political breakdown.
This Republican candidate is an arsonist. His campaign is an anti-intellectual ritual which reminds one of certain events in the '30s in Europe. In playing on the frustrations and alienation of too many, Trump has opened floodgates which threaten the American party system as a whole and put into question Tocqueville's workings of democracy in America. Two factors have contributed to this unsavory development. The Republican hatred for the President verges on the paranoid, but unfortunately Obama's own disdain only aggravates the negative factors which propel Trump as forerunner, for now.
It is hard to foresee the future. Trump might play the martyr--a surreal role, given his persona--or he might finally be seen in a less favorable light, given his boisterous, rude response to events. He acts more and more like the frog in La Fontaine, who aggrandizes himself until he explodes. The problem is that explosion or not, American politics will pay a price. If he were to be the Republican nominee, the consequences might be unforeseeable. The Sanders camp might grow incrementally on the Democrats' side. The Dow Jones would catch a cold and the world, foes and allies, would be left gasping.
Far from me to venture into the hagiography which has marked Mrs. Reagan's demise, but one has to admit that the class of yesterday's funeral was infinitesimally superior to Trump's brass aberrations. It was almost embarrassing to try to compare the mourners in the Reagan Library with the brawl in Chicago. Despite the customary low-calorie attempts for humor under stress (remember "The American Way of Death" by Jessica Mitford?) the memorial service was dignified and the audience representative of a Jamesian/California blend.
"Anyone but Trump" is less a rallying cry than an admission of a general political breakdown.
Thursday, March 10, 2016
BLUEPRINT FOR AN OBAMA FOREIGN POLICY DOCTRINE ( ATLATIC MAGAZINE INTERVIEW) ?
In this totally surreal (an understatement) pre-electoral chaos, President Obama spoke candidly in the Atlantic Magazine interview to Jeffrey Goldberg about America's allies and international endeavors. While it might be refreshing to hear for once the voice of (his) reason rather than the noise of fury, this impressionistic rendering of a more elaborate Obama doctrine in foreign affairs is remarkable.
He does not spare allies, the Saudis, France, the United Kingdom, while he remains strangely aloof regarding Ukraine, China, the Middle East and ISIL, which he compares to "the Joker" (!) in a Batman movie. He also confesses to be aggravated by "Free Riders", who place constant demands on the United States.
He does not hide his contempt for an activist foreign policy establishment, defending instead a measured approach, which also takes into account geo-political realities that are close to others' interests. In proclaiming in unambiguous terms those views, he distances himself, by implication, from America's claim to "exceptionalism". In so many words, he extricates the United States from a leadership role erga omnes.
He is correct in recognizing that the unipolar world has been overtaken, but he gives the impression of capitalizing on his sole clairvoyance, and to rule by distance and not by convincing. One might argue that in doing so he goes for arrogance instead of the more messianic mantra (with successes and mistakes) of yesterday, which created nevertheless an illusion of shared vision and responsibility. He recognizes that he has failed sometimes in communicating views or sharing emotions. This should not prevent one from coming to the conclusion that facts speak louder than words: this very gifted man is a cold medium.
The Atlantic magazine interview is coherent and cerebral, as could be expected.
The contrast with what is currently being said by both campaigns is illuminating.
Unfortunately, the projectors light up a mindset more willing to ignore others than to engage. When a doctrine of sorts becomes a monologue, it dies of lack of counterpart. The President is already regretted for his touch of intellectual class.
He will be equally blamed for his lack of warmth.
He does not spare allies, the Saudis, France, the United Kingdom, while he remains strangely aloof regarding Ukraine, China, the Middle East and ISIL, which he compares to "the Joker" (!) in a Batman movie. He also confesses to be aggravated by "Free Riders", who place constant demands on the United States.
He does not hide his contempt for an activist foreign policy establishment, defending instead a measured approach, which also takes into account geo-political realities that are close to others' interests. In proclaiming in unambiguous terms those views, he distances himself, by implication, from America's claim to "exceptionalism". In so many words, he extricates the United States from a leadership role erga omnes.
He is correct in recognizing that the unipolar world has been overtaken, but he gives the impression of capitalizing on his sole clairvoyance, and to rule by distance and not by convincing. One might argue that in doing so he goes for arrogance instead of the more messianic mantra (with successes and mistakes) of yesterday, which created nevertheless an illusion of shared vision and responsibility. He recognizes that he has failed sometimes in communicating views or sharing emotions. This should not prevent one from coming to the conclusion that facts speak louder than words: this very gifted man is a cold medium.
The Atlantic magazine interview is coherent and cerebral, as could be expected.
The contrast with what is currently being said by both campaigns is illuminating.
Unfortunately, the projectors light up a mindset more willing to ignore others than to engage. When a doctrine of sorts becomes a monologue, it dies of lack of counterpart. The President is already regretted for his touch of intellectual class.
He will be equally blamed for his lack of warmth.
Monday, March 7, 2016
GEERT BOURGEOIS (THIRD TIME).
Ik moet toegeven dat de "Vlaamse Minister President" niet bang is om totaal belachelijk over te komen.
De man van de Vlaamse eretekens wil nu een HEIMAT grondwet opleggen op een opinie die langzaam maar zeker begint te vrezen voor een Kroatish of Servisch Bantoestan in Bosnisch Belgie.
Wij moeten het hoofd bieden aan makro problemen in Europa en in de wereld maar Geert Bourgeois blijft een "remake"van de gouden boomstoet trouw. Met zangfeesten en gouden sporen wil hij de "Flandre profonde"uit de globalisatie halen en terug voeren naar de tijden van Timmermans en Streuvels. Flanders technology wordt vervangen door Flanders theology. Hij is misschien onze Vlaamse TRUMP ! FASTEN SEATBELTS!
De man van de Vlaamse eretekens wil nu een HEIMAT grondwet opleggen op een opinie die langzaam maar zeker begint te vrezen voor een Kroatish of Servisch Bantoestan in Bosnisch Belgie.
Wij moeten het hoofd bieden aan makro problemen in Europa en in de wereld maar Geert Bourgeois blijft een "remake"van de gouden boomstoet trouw. Met zangfeesten en gouden sporen wil hij de "Flandre profonde"uit de globalisatie halen en terug voeren naar de tijden van Timmermans en Streuvels. Flanders technology wordt vervangen door Flanders theology. Hij is misschien onze Vlaamse TRUMP ! FASTEN SEATBELTS!
Sunday, March 6, 2016
NANCY REAGAN
Mrs. Reagan stood for Californian flair.
She also stood with her husband as counsellor, protector, astrologer.
She got along with Mrs.Thatcher. She had a row with Mrs. Gorbachev.
She had flair in the White House. She felt home at the ranch.
She belongs to a generation of formidable women: Pamela Harriman, Nancy Kissinger, Mrs. Annenberg...an endangered species .
A certain depasse technicolor glamour is slowly being wiped out by noise and posture. Some regret it, me too.
She also stood with her husband as counsellor, protector, astrologer.
She got along with Mrs.Thatcher. She had a row with Mrs. Gorbachev.
She had flair in the White House. She felt home at the ranch.
She belongs to a generation of formidable women: Pamela Harriman, Nancy Kissinger, Mrs. Annenberg...an endangered species .
A certain depasse technicolor glamour is slowly being wiped out by noise and posture. Some regret it, me too.
Saturday, March 5, 2016
TRUMP BLOWS HIS OWN TRUMPET !
Why Trump?
Like most Europeans I fail to understand the current Trump wave. He dominates the Republican primaries for now while remaining almost totally unaccountable. He is the ultimate non-Zen personality who gets a free-pass without even coming close to some form of "idea". His utterances are like short- lived fireworks which are unable to leave any sort of duration in the sky. Nevertheless, many Americans look up to this idol who breaks rules and conventions.
The other Republican candidates, those who have not been totally buried under Trump's insults, continue to fight but they look "small" by comparison, not because they are of an inferior caliber but because they are polite (to a point). All of them share a lack of convincing intellectual gravitas. It is hard to imagine the first world power in the hands of any of those amateurs. Obama is still compared to Hamlet. None of the Republican candidates will ever be seen walking into Shakespeare's prose or verse. The Democratic contenders are not convincing either. Sanders still swears by "isms" and Clinton only resets the truth with each time-zone she travels in. At least she has been around, like a Jules Verne heroine. She is articulate but her coiling performance is more about disclaimer than about disclosure.
Back to Trump.
I think that his "temporary longevity" results from the "stagnation" which is felt in all directions: political, social, creative, economical. People are tired of the menu they have been served all these years. The jobs are "half-time", wages are stagnant, the Americans feel as if they have lost their "shining city on the hill" and become disenchanted by Obama's baby-steps. The Republicans still crow about America as the "Numero Uno" in the world, which proves only that they don't travel enough. Trump says that he will make America "great" again. Certain people do believe in miracles and Americans are etherized by the references to god, bible, etc. which fill the electoral air. Soon we may see the candidates wearing a pious hair-cloth, a la Gladstone, to rally evangelicals and believers. Even Trump was seen in church!
Stagnation leads to ennui and Trump fills the void...for now. I hope that reason will prevail even if the other candidates fail to entrance. From the outside (for now) the former Republican candidate Mitt Romney plays Brutus to Trump's Caesar, but his biting argument might serve Trump in the end. Americans are fed up and are not given to scepticism nowadays. They are in full "receiving" mode and Trump serves them what they want to hear. Insular mindsets care little about the world outside of their limited cognizance.
Europeans (and others) tend to snub what is indeed a sorry spectacle, devoid of any politico/philosophical input but they cannot totally afford to ignore who they will have to deal with, be it Trump, Cruz or Clinton. They will prefer the former but had better be ready to deal with the latter. I hear some saying that America needs a shock to awaken, but the country should not go into some form of septic emergency. Besides, the chosen president is always different from his former candidate persona. Even Trump, if elected, might switch from bombast to reason. History teaches that, unfortunately, the opposite is often true.
America doesn't need a "remake". A shot in the arm will do if the right nurse can still be found.
Like most Europeans I fail to understand the current Trump wave. He dominates the Republican primaries for now while remaining almost totally unaccountable. He is the ultimate non-Zen personality who gets a free-pass without even coming close to some form of "idea". His utterances are like short- lived fireworks which are unable to leave any sort of duration in the sky. Nevertheless, many Americans look up to this idol who breaks rules and conventions.
The other Republican candidates, those who have not been totally buried under Trump's insults, continue to fight but they look "small" by comparison, not because they are of an inferior caliber but because they are polite (to a point). All of them share a lack of convincing intellectual gravitas. It is hard to imagine the first world power in the hands of any of those amateurs. Obama is still compared to Hamlet. None of the Republican candidates will ever be seen walking into Shakespeare's prose or verse. The Democratic contenders are not convincing either. Sanders still swears by "isms" and Clinton only resets the truth with each time-zone she travels in. At least she has been around, like a Jules Verne heroine. She is articulate but her coiling performance is more about disclaimer than about disclosure.
Back to Trump.
I think that his "temporary longevity" results from the "stagnation" which is felt in all directions: political, social, creative, economical. People are tired of the menu they have been served all these years. The jobs are "half-time", wages are stagnant, the Americans feel as if they have lost their "shining city on the hill" and become disenchanted by Obama's baby-steps. The Republicans still crow about America as the "Numero Uno" in the world, which proves only that they don't travel enough. Trump says that he will make America "great" again. Certain people do believe in miracles and Americans are etherized by the references to god, bible, etc. which fill the electoral air. Soon we may see the candidates wearing a pious hair-cloth, a la Gladstone, to rally evangelicals and believers. Even Trump was seen in church!
Stagnation leads to ennui and Trump fills the void...for now. I hope that reason will prevail even if the other candidates fail to entrance. From the outside (for now) the former Republican candidate Mitt Romney plays Brutus to Trump's Caesar, but his biting argument might serve Trump in the end. Americans are fed up and are not given to scepticism nowadays. They are in full "receiving" mode and Trump serves them what they want to hear. Insular mindsets care little about the world outside of their limited cognizance.
Europeans (and others) tend to snub what is indeed a sorry spectacle, devoid of any politico/philosophical input but they cannot totally afford to ignore who they will have to deal with, be it Trump, Cruz or Clinton. They will prefer the former but had better be ready to deal with the latter. I hear some saying that America needs a shock to awaken, but the country should not go into some form of septic emergency. Besides, the chosen president is always different from his former candidate persona. Even Trump, if elected, might switch from bombast to reason. History teaches that, unfortunately, the opposite is often true.
America doesn't need a "remake". A shot in the arm will do if the right nurse can still be found.
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