Omnipotence

  Dispatch December 19, 2008
  "Pay close attention to Greece; at a time of world-wide economic upheaval, it 
might eerily presage disturbances elsewhere in 2009"
  by Robert D. Kaplan

  Those Greek Riots

  Greece has been torn apart by the worst riots in decades, now entering their 
third week. Bands of self-declared anarchist youths have rampaged through the 
streets of Athens and other major cities causing hundreds of millions of 
dollars in property damage, setting off a spiral of unrest in which the 
nation's unions, among other groups, have taken part. Both shops and hotel 
lobbies have been ransacked, and hospitals, airports, and transport have been 
brought to a standstill. What sparked the riots was the accidental police 
shooting of a 15-year-old boy, Alexandros Grigoropoulos. But as usual in such 
cases, there was much more in the way of causes lying beneath the surface.
  Youth unemployment is high throughout the European Union, but it is 
particularly high in Greece, hovering between 25 and 30 percent. With few job 
prospects, rampant poverty in the face of nouveau riche prosperity, a public 
university system in shambles, a bloated government sector in desperate need of 
an overhaul, and a weak, defensive conservative government with only a one-seat 
majority in parliament, it is a ripe period for protests, which have had as 
their aim the fall of Prime Minister Costas Karamanlis.
  Greece could now be at a crossroads, which requires a bit of history to 
explain. Following World War II, Greece had a civil war, which pitted an old 
guard pro-Soviet left against a pre-modern unenlightened right. The civil war 
left scars for decades on the country's politics, pushing left- and right-wing 
parties into ideological barricades, inflamed further by personal hatreds 
arising out of the war years. Then there was the dynastic, coffee-house 
politics of intrigue and corruption that a poor country struggling to erect a 
modern middle class was prone to. Greece's very fragility and strategic eastern 
Mediterranean position during the Cold War led to heavy-handed American 
tutelage. The Truman Doctrine might have saved Greece from the communism of its 
Balkan neighbors to the north, but Greeks were not grateful, because of the 
Latin American-style interference with which Greece was subjected to by 
America. The colonels who took power in a 1967 coup ruled Greece in a brutal 
manner that brought forth the worst kind of unregulated Third World-type 
development. They were backed by the United States, even as they were despised 
at home. The first real crack in the military regime came in November 1973, 
when protests at the Athens Polytechnic led to the downfall of one junta leader 
and the ascension of another, whose regime was toppled the next year with the 
reinstitution of democracy. >From then on, student protests in Greece have had 
a particularly poignant legitimacy to them, as well as a distinctly leftist 
edge, laced with the left's uniquely effective ability to question authority.
  The protests of today are not about America; they are about the legitimacy of 
a government that has been in power for four years without achieving much. With 
the global recession bearing down on Greece, the country is in desperate need 
of difficult reforms and privatization measures to help it in the Darwinian 
struggle to attract foreign investment, upon which much economic growth is 
dependent. The problem is that despite the probability of new elections, Greece 
seems destined to suffer through a period of weak governments, which will lack 
the political capital to do what's necessary in the way of change. The 
conservative New Democracy party has been neutered by the riots, even as the 
left-of-center Panhellenic Socialist Union (PASOK) is compromised by close ties 
to the very labor unions who would have to be challenged if meaningful reform 
is to take place. Of course, PASOK could carry out the reforms, in the manner 
of a right-wing President Richard Nixon going to China, but it could only 
conceivably do so with a strong majority in parliament, which it will probably 
not get. What's more likely is increased influence by smaller and more radical 
parties, like the communists. Thus, Greece could dither and end up politically 
paralyzed.
  It's tempting to dismiss this as a purely Greek affair that carries little 
significance to the outside world. But the global economic crisis will take 
different forms in different places in the way that it ignites political 
unrest. Yes, youth alienation in Greece is influenced by a particular local 
history that I've very briefly outlined here. But it is also influenced by 
sweeping international trends of uneven development, in which the uncontrolled 
surges and declines of capitalism have left haves and bitter have-nots, who, in 
Europe, often tend to be young people. And these young people now have the 
ability to instantaneously organize themselves through text messages and other 
new media, without waiting passively to be informed by traditional newspapers 
and television. Technology has empowered the crowd-or the mob if you will.
  Pay close attention to Greece; at a time of world-wide economic upheaval, it 
might eerily presage disturbances elsewhere in 2009.


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