[Salon] Meloni and her lieutenants plan their takeover of Europe - The Spectator World



I like to read The Spectator, along with The American Conservative magazine, as I once did “People’s World,” as the latter provided an advance preview of propaganda memes of the Communist Party USA on US foreign policy in the 1980s. Many of which would then be picked up by other publications, as my one time “Political Warfare” mentor, Antonio Ybarra, told me, as could be seen in literature of far-left-wing political activist organizations. And his experience as a political warfare specialist (more than mere “propagandist") for the Sandinistas, first, and then the CIA, should have taught him something about political warfare that he could pass on. In fact, I was introduced to him by Caesar Sereseres a consultant to the USG on Guatemala, also a political warfare expert, as that’s defined, in which he was alleged to have designed so much of the US’ directed own terrorism in Guatemala. Whom I also got to know well, in promoting US "Low-Intensity Conflict” policies in MN as a National Security Conservative in the 1980s.

Some, not all, of which I have to atone for today. Which has been on my mind this week as a group whose founders I once worked with in the 1980s, the Center for the American Experiment, while I was helping found the MN Association of Scholars, and working with the local Air Force Association chapter on LIC issues, held its annual dinner this past week in Minneapolis with Naftali Bennett their featured speaker: https://www.fox9.com/news/former-israel-prime-minister-met-protesters-minneapolis. I was on the other side of the “battlelines,” from some of my one-time friends, who I broke off any association with shortly after 9/11, with their support of policies like Traditional Conservative Sen. Jeff Sessions and the Heritage Foundation promoted so heavily, such as torture, suppression of speech/dissent, the Iraq War, etc., all as much as or more than their “Neoconservative” counterparts were doing. In fact, in my opinion, Sen. Jeff Sessions, favorite of Traditional Conservatives here, should have been charged with “Crimes Against Humanity,” as much as Bush, Cheney, et al., should have been! So no more s**t about “virtuous Traditional Conservatives,” as opposed to to non-virtuous Neoconservatives! If anything, the former are worse than the later, if only because the latter are off-shoots of the former, and always have been worse as the “”Founders” of each. And have been since ex-Trotskyites Kendall and Burnham joined with fascist admirer William F. Buckley, to found “Traditional Conservatism” as the Conservative Movement! 

For anyone curious, below is a bit on Sereseres, and this link on the policies he helped devise: 

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Title: Meloni and her lieutenants plan their takeover of Europe - The Spectator World

The counterparts to the People’s World then, from the “Extreme Right,” were “Commentary Magazine,” which an IDF officer teaching Political Science at the University of Minnesota counseled me to read. As well as to read National Review magazine (in its original “Traditional Conservative” form, indistinguishable from its later “NeoConservative” form, given William Buckley did all the hiring for each generation, and the two were and are identical in “political theory.”  With both these right-wing publications key, pro-Israel, extreme right-wing, publications, providing ideological instruction for “Conservatives,” and “NeoConservatives,” aimed at different audiences, but identical ideologically. In the 1980s, and now. 

But with the counterparts to the People’s World today, from the “Extreme Right,” fulfilling the same function as People’s World did in the Cold War as ideological indoctrinators and “explainers,” are the aforementioned The Spectator and The American Conservative magazine. 

I have felt pity toward those people who have “hope” that with the election of Trump (so zealously worked toward by the latter two), that the US war on Russia begun at least two decades ago, with Republicans in their usual lead position in promoting war), the war against Russia will conclude. I call B.S. to that, as it goes against what Trump himself has made clear with his promotion of Poland’s extreme-right president Duda and the Three Seas Initiative they both advanced so zealously (with Biden, as usual only half a step behind Trump on that, and is promoting the TSI now as well.) And the Duda/Trump collaboration in providing arms to Ukraine from the beginning of 2017! 

But here is that other Great Restrainer of the New Right, that NatCons/TradCons here love so dearly"
BLUF: "It’s not just EU leaders who have praised Meloni. Her decision to exit Italy from China’s Belt and Road Initiative won large support from American leaders on both sides of the political aisle.
"Meloni’s statecraft, far less bombastic than that of other right-wing nationalists, is helping to set the agenda in Europe, rather than just screaming into the wind."

So what is that agenda, other than the one exploiting grievances? 

"Earlier this year, Meloni was able to convince right-wing Hungarian firebrand, Viktor Orbán, to support a €50 billion aid package to Ukraine. This a shocking change in ideology for both politicians, as both have a history of support for Russia.” 

Not such a “shocking change” really, unless one is a TAC journalist disseminating misdirecting propaganda, in furthering Trump’s political fortunes as part of this “Universal Fascism.” Here’s more on Meloni, and her fellow extreme right-wing ideologue, and Trump’s:

"Poland’s ruling national-conservative Law and Justice (PiS) party, from which Duda hails, is part of the same European grouping as Meloni’s Brothers of Italy (FdI), which has its roots in post-fascist politics but has sought to distance itself from that legacy.
. . . 
"Earlier this month, Morawiecki joined Meloni, Donald Trump and Viktor Orbán in addressing a global right-wing rally in Spain. The Polish prime minister warned that “Brussels bureaucrats are…creating a transnational beast without true and traditional values, without a soul”.

"Speaking to RAI this week, Duda expressed hope that Poland and Italy can now “together change the EU into what we want it to be”, which is “a union of free nations and equal states” that cooperate but “do not interfere in each others’ affairs, such as religious, ideological and cultural issues.”

. . . 

"During a week when pro-Putin remarks by Silvio Berlusconi – a likely coalition partner in Meloni’s government – have come to light, Duda also told RAI of the importance of “stopping Russian imperialism for the security of Europe, for the security of the world”.

“We [Poles] know what a Russian attack means, what Russian occupation means,” he added. “We know that the Russians must be stopped. We support the Ukrainians because they are resisting Russian imperialism.”


However much Biden and the EU are responsible for taking us to, and into, the Nuclear abyss, these fanatics even further to the “Right,” than Goldwater Democrats, are guaranteeing us that they will not be “outflanked” on the "militaristic extremist Right,” as they have their own “war plans” for war against Russia, and China, and Iran, and have Oligarch like Koch and Thiel funding their media platforms/think tanks to incite such a war, by electing even worse militaristic fanatics than currently in office. Like the Germans and Italians did, even more than the French and British, pre-WW II, in opposing the Soviet Union, with the former two even more ideologically so than the latter two, if one reads Hitler and Mussolini. Like Duda and Meloni today, with Trump like-minded in that as the would-be “World Emperor!” 


Meloni and her lieutenants plan their takeover of Europe

Meloni

Cosenza, Italy

On a dreary afternoon in May, hundreds of well-dressed Italians crowded into a regal government building in Cosenza, aptly named The Provincial Palace of the Hall of Mirrors. It was a campaign event for Fratelli D’Italia, Italy’s ruling political party. The supporters listened attentively for more than two hours. The mood was triumphant and the politicians spoke as if victory was inevitable. They spoke about a plan for when, not if, the right assumed greater power in Europe. 

“This confidence is due to the fact that we, as Italy, have acquired centrality in a very important way,” said Giovanni Donzelli, the party’s national organization manager. 

“This centrality is all thanks to the great work done by our leader Giorgia Meloni. In just a year and a half, she has finally managed to turn Italy into a leading force in not just Europe, but across the Mediterranean and even in the West,” he went on. 

There wasn’t a single disruption or poorly matching outfit. There also weren’t enough golden chairs to seat everyone in the densely packed room, forcing some to lean on the mahogany tables lined along the scarlet-colored walls. The American mind cannot comprehend this level of style on the campaign trail. And the politics aren’t like yours either, so bear with us. 

In October 2022, Meloni was elected Italy’s prime minister on a campaign of reclaiming lost sovereignty to the European Union, clamping down on illegal immigration and upholding traditional conservative values. Since then, she has surprised many left-wing alarmists who thought Fratelli D’Italia was inextricably linked to its fascist roots of the 1930s and 40s. This is the party of Mussolini after all. But the American Democrats are the party of slavery and Jim Crow, so who’s to say change isn’t possible?

Meloni has proved to be a cooperative partner with the European Union and no longer talks of leaving it. Earlier this year, Meloni was able to convince right-wing Hungarian firebrand, Viktor Orbán, to support a €50 billion aid package to Ukraine. This a shocking change in ideology for both politicians, as both have a history of support for Russia.

meloni
Italy’s prime minister Giorgia Meloni gestures as she delivers a press conference (Getty)

Meloni has yet to accomplish the broad immigration and bureaucratic reforms that she campaigned on. But what she has accomplished, which has earned her a sufficient base of popular support, is to consolidate the previously disparate right-wing forces in Italy. In the Italian parliament, Meloni leads a coalition with the center-right Forza Italia and the far-right Lega. She now wants to do the same in Europe. 

“We have a clear objective — we want to do in Brussels what we did in Rome a year and a half ago; build a center-right government in Europe and finally send the leftists, reds, greens and yellows, who have caused so much damage to our continent over the years, into opposition,” Meloni said at a rally in Rome on June 1.

This weekend, Europeans will head to the ballot box to pick their members of European Parliament, who will in turn elect a president of the powerful European Commission. That position has been held for the last five years by the leader of the center-right European People’s Party or EPP, Ursula von der Leyen, who secured majority support with the help of two political blocs to her left. 

But to secure a second five-year term, von der Leyen needs to be voted in by a majority in the parliament, meaning she may need a different set of coalition partners this time around. The EPP is expected to have a decent performance this weekend, gaining a few seats and still remaining the largest party in Parliament. But her coalition allies, specifically the center-left Renew Europe, are expected to lose more than twenty-five seats. That means von der Leyen may have to form a deal with none other than Meloni, who is leader of the European Conservatives and Reformists, or ECR, the EU’s largest far-right bloc. 

Leading up to this election, von der Leyen has tacked to the right on key issues, including a major immigration pact, in hopes of courting Meloni as a potential partner. “She is clearly pro-European, against Putin, she’s been very clear on that one, and pro-rule of law, if this holds, and then we offer to work together,” von der Leyen said at an election debate in May. 

But Meloni is being courted by another suitor — leader of the further right Identity and Democracy (ID) — Marine Le Pen, who wants the ECR and ID to unite and create a “right-wing supergroup.”

This makes Meloni the most popular girl in the parliament, and if she goes with von der Leyen’s centrists, Europe’s next queenmaker. 

The constellation of political parties, their subgroups, and the various coalition possibilities in the European Parliament may seem convoluted to Americans familiar with the two-party system. But this is still the West, and the central ideologies will be very familiar. 

Giancarlo D’Amenza, vice-president of the Italian Provincial Council, rose to address the crowd in Cosenza. “We need a new Europe, one that no longer uses a philosophy that destroys families — transgender philosophy — or married with the green philosophy that is forcing our agricultural companies to make their own investments,” he said. 

You don’t even need to speak Italian to understand the tirades against transgenderism. You just catch the words LGBT… Masculo, Femino, ridicolo, followed by giggles and thunderous applause. No other issue, not even immigration, animated the crowd as much as this.

You’ll also be familiar with another central tenet of the new right: protectionism. 

“I want to talk about a different philosophy for Europe, one that is in service to the citizens, one that Giorgia taught us. We have the necessity to protect ourselves from emerging economies. It is no longer taboo to talk about protectionism,” D’Amenza said. Protectionism has been a central aspect of the ruling ideology of Fratelli D’Italia and its partners in the ECR.

“Europe can continue to open our markets to those who do not respect our same social and environmental standards, or it can protect our businesses adequately from unfair competition to defend the civilization and welfare that has been achieved over the centuries,” Meloni said back in Rome. 

But it was immigration that dominated the conversation in Cosenza and which propelled Fratelli d’Italia to power to begin with. From the very beginning of her tenure, Meloni has been determined to reduce the number of immigrants landing on Italian shores from Africa, but has faced considerable opposition from left-wing forces in Brussels. 

However, only recently in April, the EU passed The New Pact on Migration and Asylum with a slim margin and chants from pro-migrant protesters in the halls of the European Parliament. The landmark reform will change how Europe manages the migrant crisis and will enforce a shared responsibility amongst member states, a reform that Meloni has been pushing for many years. The reforms passed with majority support from the center-right and left coalition, signaling a shift in popular ideology in Brussels and Meloni’s coalition-building abilities. 

“In Europe, finally they are interested in closing the borders,” said Donzelli. 

“Have we solved everything? No, we have not, to be honest. There are so many things that are not going well, there are so many things that we still have to change,” he went on. 

There is certainly a sense in Italy that Meloni hasn’t done everything she promised on immigration. But honesty has been a good strategy, says Nicoletta Pirozzi, head of program on European Union and institutional relations manager at the Istituto Affari Internazionali. 

“She said very clearly that she didn’t manage to implement all her promises  in the field of migration, but that she will still keep trying in the next parliament,” she said.



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