Robert D. Kaplan
Greece is where the West both
begins and ends. The West -- as a humanist ideal -- began in ancient Athens
where compassion for the individual began to replace the crushing brutality of
the nearby civilizations of Egypt and Mesopotamia. The war that Herodotus
chronicles between Greece and Persia in the 5th century B.C. established a
contrast between West and East that has persisted for millennia. Greece is
Christian, but it is also Eastern Orthodox, as spiritually close to Russia as
it is to the West, and geographically equidistant between Brussels and Moscow.
Greece may have invented the West with the democratic innovations of the Age of
Pericles, but for more than a thousand years it was a child of Byzantine and
Turkish despotism. And while Greece was the northwestern bastion of the
anciently civilized Near East, ever since history moved north into colder
climates following the collapse of Rome, the inhabitants of Peninsular Greece
have found themselves at the poor, southeastern extremity of Europe.
Modern Greece in particular
has struggled against this bifurcated legacy. In an early 20th century replay
of the Greco-Persian Wars, Greece's post-World War I military struggle with
Turkey led to a signal Greek defeat and as a consequence, more than a million
ethnic Greeks from Asia Minor escaped to Greece proper, further impoverishing
the country. (This Greek diaspora in Asia Minor was a massive source of revenue
until the Greeks were expelled.) Not only did World War I have a bloody and
epic coda in Greece, so did World War II, which was followed by a civil war
between rightists and communists. Greece's ultimate escape from the Warsaw Pact
was a rather close-run affair: again, the effect of Greece's unstable
geographical location between East and West.
Greece struggled on. As
recently as the mid-1970s it was governed by a particularly brutal military
dictatorship (led by colonels from the backwater of the Peloponnese), which
lasted for seven years, and fear of another coup persisted during the initial
stage of its reborn democracy. Even though the Olympic tradition began in
Greece in antiquity and the first modern Olympics were held in Greece in 1896,
Greece was denied the right to host the centenary modern Olympics in 1996 owing
to the country's lack of preparedness in organization and infrastructure.
Greece did host the 2004 Olympics, but the financial strain that the games put
on Greece contributed to the country's economic fragility in the run-up to the
current debt crisis.
It is not entirely an accident
that Greece is the most economically troubled country in the European Union.
The fact that it is located at Europe's southeastern back door also has
something to do with it. For Greece's economic and political development bear
marks of a legacy not wholly in the modern West.
Roughly three-quarters of
Greek businesses are family-owned and rely on family labor, making meritocratic
promotion difficult for those outside the family. Tax cheating is rampant. The
economy suffers from a profound lack of competitiveness, even as Greece is
mainly a service economy, relying on tourism, in which manufacturing constitutes
a weak sector. Of course, these features have much to do with bad policies
enacted over the years and decades, but they are also products of history and
culture, which are, in turn, products of geography. Indeed, Greece lacks enough
productive land to be an agricultural power.
Then there is political
underdevelopment. Long into the 20th century, Greek political parties had a
paternalistic, coffeehouse quality, centered on big personalities -- chieftains
in all but name -- with little formal organizational support. George
Papandreou, the grandfather of the recent prime minister of the same name,
actually headed a party called the "George Papandreou Party."
Political parties have been family businesses to a greater extent in Greece
than in other Western democracies. The party in power not only dominated the
highest echelons of the bureaucracy, as is normal and proper in a democracy,
but the middle- and lower-echelons, too. State institutions from top to bottom
were often overly politicized.
Moreover, rather than having a
moderate left-wing party and a modern conservative one, as is common throughout
Western Europe, in Greece through the early 1990s there was a hard-left party,
the Pan-Hellenic Socialist Movement (PASOK), which during the Cold War openly
sympathized with radical Arab regimes like Hafez al Assad's Syria and Moammar
Gadhafi's Libya, and a somewhat reactionary right-wing party, New Democracy.
The drift of both those leading parties toward the center is a relatively
recent affair.
And so the creation of late of
a hard-left party, SYRIZA, and a hard-right neo-Nazi movement, Golden Dawn
(vaguely reminiscent of the military junta that ruled Greece from 1967 to
1974), both harbor distant echoes of Greece's mid-20th century past. Ironically,
while Greece's extreme economic crisis created these radical groupings in the
first place, if these new parties fare badly in the upcoming poll it might
indicate a firm rejection of extremism by Greek voters and a permanent turn
toward the center -- toward political modernity, that is.
There is a tendency in all of
this to throw one's hands up at the specter of the Greeks and declare them too
much trouble than they're worth, at least for Europe. But such an attitude
reeks of hypocrisy, even as it denies Western self-interest. When Greece joined
the European Union in 1981, its economy was manifestly not ready; Brussels had
made a rank political decision, not an economic one -- just as it would in
admitting Greece to the eurozone in 2002. In both cases, the ground-level,
domestic reality of the Greek economy was swept aside in favor of an abstract
quasi-historical vision of Europe stretching from Iberia to the eastern
Mediterranean.
Of course, Greece, during the
1980s -- when I lived there for seven years -- might have used the influx of
cash from the European Union in order to discipline and reform its economy.
Instead, then PASOK Prime Minister Andreas Papandreou used the money to swell
the ranks of the bureaucracy. Thus, did Greece remain underdeveloped, and the
dream-gamble of Brussels failed. The saddest irony is that the sins of the
hard-left Andreas Papandreou were visited upon his well-meaning, center-left
son, George, who had his short tenure as prime minister from 2009 to 2011
poisoned by his father's economic legacy.
But Western self-interest now
demands that even if Greece leaves the eurozone -- and that is a big
"if" -- it nevertheless remains anchored in the European Union and
NATO. For whether Greece drops the euro or not, it faces years of severe
economic hardship. That means, given its geographic location, Greece's
political orientation should never be taken for granted. For example, the
Chinese have invested heavily in developing part of the port of Piraeus,
adjacent to Athens, even as Russia's economic and intelligence ties to the
Greek area of Cyprus are extremely close. It has been speculated in the media
that with Greece short of cash and Russia enjoying a surplus, were the Russians
ejected from ports in Syria in the wake of a regime change there, Moscow would
find a way to eventually make use of Greek naval facilities. Remember that
Greece and Cyprus both have modern European histories mainly because they were
claimed by Western powers for strategic reasons.
In other words, from the point
of geography and geopolitics, Greece will be in play for years to come.
Robert D. Kaplan, Stratfor, June 06, 2012
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