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From today's NY Times:

https://www.nytimes.com/2019/10/03/opinion/britain-ireland-brexit.html?action=click&module=Opinion&pgtype=Homepage


DUBLIN *— *When Boris Johnson visited Ireland’s prime minister, Leo
Varadkar, in Dublin last month as part of a last-minute scramble to reach
some sort Brexit deal, the two leaders began their day with a media
briefing on the steps of one of Dublin’s grandest buildings. In the
Edwardian Baroque style, it was built by the British authorities while the
Irish were intensifying their struggle for independence. “Fortuitously,”
the Heritage Ireland website snarkily notes
<https://www.gov.ie/en/organisation-information/eff3cc-history-of-government-buildings/>,
“the complex was completed in 1922 and was available immediately to be
occupied by the new Irish Free State government.” Rarely has the word
“fortuitously” elided so much.

Mr. Johnson, shirt askew, hair a mess, shambled like a drugged bear to the
podium and gripped it. Mr. Varadkar looked on, gym fit and poised in a
sharp suit. The contrast was more than superficial. Britain has long since
lost its empire — and this prime minister looks set to break up the United
Kingdom itself. He had come to Dublin for talks about the vexed issue of
the border between the Republic of Ireland and Northern Ireland, which is
still a part of the United Kingdom. Mr. Johnson needed either to bully
Ireland into abandoning the so-called backstop, which protects the Good
Friday Agreement and the European Union’s single market, or to make Ireland
look so intransigent that it could be blamed for pushing Britain into a
no-deal Brexit.

Mr. Varadkar delivered a telling speech. He compared the tasks facing Mr.
Johnson, who must negotiate the future of a Britain outside of the European
Union, with the labors of Hercules. Ireland wished to be Britain’s “friend
and ally, your Athena,” Mr. Varadkar said.

It was an elegantly delivered kick in the arse. Hercules’s labors were
penitential — prone to fits of madness and having killed his family, he was
about to continue on a murderous rampage when Athena, goddess of wisdom,
saved him from his own folly by knocking him unconscious.


British prime ministers are not used to coming to Ireland cap in hand, and
Mr. Johnson left Ireland having achieved nothing. A few days after he had
been compared to the son of Zeus, he chose instead to invoke as his hero
the Incredible Hulk. Hulk “always escapes,” he reassured the British
public. “The madder Hulk gets, the stronger Hulk gets.” We Irish could not
resist a superior smirk.

Eight centuries after an English king invaded and subdued it, Ireland is no
longer the dominated island. Commenting on Mr. Johnson’s September visit in
the Irish Times, the author Fintan O’Toole wrote
<https://www.irishtimes.com/opinion/fintan-o-toole-for-the-first-time-since-1171-ireland-is-more-powerful-than-britain-1.4014922?mode=sample&auth-failed=1&pw-origin=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.irishtimes.com%2Fopinion%2Ffintan-o-toole-for-the-first-time-since-1171-ireland-is-more-powerful-than-britain-1.4014922>that
for the first time since 1171, Ireland is now the more powerful nation. The
Brexiteers, he wrote, approach Ireland “through a strange swamp of
contradictory impulses: rage and envy, thwarted superiority and indulgent
self-pity.”

Not long after leaving Dublin, Mr. Johnson flew off to New York, where he
maundered on about Prometheus at the United Nations Summit on Climate
Change. While he was there, the British Supreme Court ruled that his
suspension of Parliament last month had been illegal, and that he misled
the Queen. Since he swaggered into office just over two months ago, Mr.
Johnson has lost every vote. He no longer has a majority and his own party
is in open rebellion. His attempt to bulldoze through a no-deal exit has so
far been thwarted by legislators, who passed a law against it. Nonetheless,
he flew back from the United States in full Hulk mode, aggressive, bullish
and entirely unapologetic.

Mr. Johnson has tried to use the old British imperial tactic of “divide and
conquer,” traipsing around Europe trying to find someone who will break
ranks and blame the Irish for the impasse. Instead, the other 27 nations
have bonded in solidarity with Ireland and have spoken as one of the need
to uphold the Good Friday Agreement, which brought peace to Ireland by, in
part, avoiding a hard border. Today, when Mr. Varadkar says “we,” he means
we, the European Union.

After months of prevarication and bluster, Mr. Johnson this week presented
the European Union with a set of insolently half-baked proposals,
describing the question of the border as “essentially a technical
discussion.” Mr. Johnson sent an aide to Dublin to brief the Irish
government on the plan in advance. “The meeting did not go as well as
expected,” according to the Times. Dublin and Brussels were united in
expressing both dismay and disappointment. In Northern Ireland, only the
Democratic Unionist Party, which props up the beleaguered British
government, welcomed the plan.


In Ireland we can enjoy a sort of grim delight in watching Mr. Johnson’s
arrogant flounderings. But it’s tempered by the evidence that any Brexit is
bad for Ireland, north and south, and a chaotic no-deal one is nightmarish.

Those who promoted Brexit did so with grandiloquent lies, lots of dark
money and apparently very little thought to the question of Ireland and its
fragile peace, even though it was obvious that the border would be central
to the whole calamitous endeavor. Last year, Priti Patel, a Conservative
legislator, suggested that the food shortages Brexit was likely to cause
could be used as a negotiating tactic to get the Irish to relent on the
backstop. Mr. Johnson promoted her — she is now home secretary.

Mr. Johnson has no solutions. Increasingly he looks like Bob Dylan’s
rolling stone: on his own, no direction home. Brexiteers arrogantly assumed
other countries in the European Union would line up to follow Britain out.
Instead they have looked on as the United Kingdom tears itself apart.
Scotland is preparing for independence, and there is serious discussion
here about a poll to reunite Ireland within the European Union.

How does it feel, Boris?

The bloc’s new trade commissioner is, by the way, Irish. Bring on Athena.

-- 
*“In politics, abstract terms conceal treachery.” *from "The Black
Jacobins" by C. L. R. James
Check out:https:http://oaklandsocialist.com also on Facebook
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