Žemaitaitis is a popular truth speaker in Lithuania,
attacked by most of Lithuanian elite, particularly by our Communist President
Nausėda.
"Europe is obsessed with external threats but is so morally
lost it isn’t even clear what it’s defending itself for any more, JD Vance
warned in an excoriating speech to the continent’s security elite on Friday.
Traditionally, applause is a well-worn gauge of how well a
message is going down in a conference-hall. In most cases an audience can bring
itself to at least raise half-hearted, polite applause but in Munich on Friday
Vance couldn’t even get that: in a room of hundreds, perhaps a thousand top
military, security, and political figures at times it seemed like there can’t
have been anyone more than Vance’s own team putting their hands together.
The response was particularly frosty mid-speech as Vance
listed some particularly egregious recent cases in European states where the
government has cracked down on liberties, from arresting Christians for silent
prayer to cancelling elections, and when he outright accused the leaders of the
continent of Communist, anti-democratic attitudes. Worst of all, he said, they
held these feelings towards their own people.
If Europe’s paternalist elites hated this shock therapy,
populists in Europe loved it. Britain’s Nigel Farage amplified the notion Vance
had better articulated the future of Europe than those elites could, while
Reform MP Rupert Lowe called it a “brutal” tour-de-force of “Truth, after
truth, after truth.”
Beyond a laundry list of failings by European governments to
respect freedom for their own people, Vance diagnosed a continent lost for its
own failure to understand what it stands for any why, and even worse one that
scorns the views of its own people. He said: “If you’re running in fear of your
own voters, there is nothing America can do for you, nor for that matter is
there anything you can do for the American people”.
Of the terror attack that took place in Germany just the day
before, Vance nodded at the long and shameful history of such assaults in
Europe, stating: “How many times must we suffer these appalling setbacks before
we change course and take our shared civilisation in a new direction?”.
“In Britain and across Europe, free speech, I fear, is in
retreat”, the Vice President said, in a rallying cry for Europe to find new
respect for democracy — real democracy, where voters have a voice to be
respected no matter if what they say is agreeable to the paternalistic elite or
not — and told leaders to have more respect for their own nations. Vance said:
“I’d ask my European friends to have some perspective. You can believe it’s
wrong for Russia to buy social media advertisements to influence your
elections. We certainly do. You can condemn it on the world stage even. But if
your democracy can be destroyed with a few hundreds-of-thousands [of dollars]
of digital advertising from a foreign country, then it wasn’t very strong to
begin with.”
But there’s good news, Vance said, because democracy can be
strong as long as the general attitude towards voters isn’t that they are bad
people with bad opinions to be denegrated and ignored. Telling European
leaders, and those in Germany in particular — which is nine days out from its
national elections — to respect populists, not fear them, he continued: “the
organizers of this very conference have banned lawmakers representing populist
parties on both the left and the right from participating in these
conversations.”
It is “incumbent” upon leaders to participate in dialogue
with this not-so-silent majority of Europeans — words carefully chosen to
nettle, no doubt, given the motto of the Munich conference is resolving
problems through dialogue — and in his most damning rhetoric Vance told his
struck-silent audience:
Now to many of us
on the other side of the Atlantic, it looks more and more like old entrenched
interests hiding behind ugly Soviet-era words like misinformation and
disinformation who simply don’t like the idea that somebody with an alternative
viewpoint might express a different opinion or, God forbid vote a different way
or even worse, win an election.
… I’m sure you all
came here prepared to talk about how exactly you intend to increase defense
spending over the next few years in line with some new target… But let me also
ask you, How will you even begin to think through the kinds of budgeting questions
if we don’t know what it is that we are defending in the first place?
… I’ve heard a lot
about what you need to defend yourselves from, and of course that’s important,
but what has seemed a little bit less clear to me, and certainly I think to many
of the citizens of Europe, is what exactly it is that you’re defending
yourselves for. What is the positive vision that animates this shared security
compact that we all believe is so important. And I believe deeply that there is
no security if you are afraid of the voices, the opinions, and the conscience
that guide your very own people.
Britain’s left-wing Guardian called the speech a
“blistering” and “chastising” attack and emphasised that it would go down well
in Moscow, playing up the old idea that Donald Trump is some sort of
crypto-Russian asset. Germany’s Die Welt notes the comments of politician
Marie-Agnes Strack-Zimmermann, of governing party the corporatist FDP,
replying: “Our liberal world is under extreme threat”.
Settling on deriding Vance’s intelligence as the most
effective line of attack — and in doing so demonstrating the haughty attitude
to populism illustrated by the Vice President in his speech — Strack-Zimmermann
said: “US Vice President Vance’s speech at the MSC was a bizarre intellectual
low-flyer and has no place at an international security conference”. The German
defence minister Boris Pistorius, who like Strack-Zimmermann is likely to see
his party booted out of government in nine days, called Vance’s comments
“unacceptable” to applause in the MSC hall.”
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