THE GEOPOLITICS OF THE WORLD CUP
By Pepe Escobar
[Extract]
That other World Cup
And then, just two days after the start of the World Cup, Brazilian neighbor Bolivia hosts no less than a G-77+ China summit - actually 133 UN member-nations, the whole thing presided over by Evo Morales, who is a sort of Andean distant cousin of the Pataxos who so fascinated the Germans.
Call it also the meeting of ALBA (the Bolivarian Alternative
to the Americas, which includes Cuba) and the BRICS (only Russia won't be
present). American exceptionalists are furious that the BRICS are spearheading
the transition towards a multipolar world - something that's already at play in
football (think Spain, Germany, Italy on one side, Brazil, Argentina and
Uruguay on another).
Emulating football, a South-to-South counterpunch to the
hegemony of the industrialized North is also in play. Brazil, China, and
Russia, in their different strategies, are all betting on more South-South
integration - from the Banco del Sur (the Bank of the South) to the upcoming BRICS
development bank (there's a crucial BRICS summit next month in Brasilia), on
the way to a more egalitarian system that ideally could be financed by a
percentage of foreign debt, a percentage of military expenditure and a global
tax on speculative financial transactions.
And it's never enough to remember that the G-77 is about
decolonization; no Empire of Bases; and no interference of the NSA-coordinated
Orwellian/Panopticon complex in the Global South.
Now compare it with the official Adidas Coca-Cola Hyundai
Kia Motors Emirates Sony Visa Anheuser-Busch InBev (Budweiser) Castrol
Continental Johnson & Johnson McDonald's Itau FIFA-sanctioned entertainment
and fun 2014 World Cup Brazil - which industry bible AdvertisingAge broke down
as "the
Super Bowl every day for an entire month".
Firmly opposing it, we find an array of South-South
associations/solidarity/social movements denouncing everything arguably
embedded with the mighty enterprise, from hardcore post-capitalist
neo-colonization to outright criminalization of the poor.
And among these movements we find, not surprisingly, Global
South icon Diego "Hand of God" Maradona, who said this week,
"FIFA gets $4 billion (out of the Cup) while the champion nation gets $35
million. This is wrong. The corporation is delivering a death blow to
football".
Football is war
Football is war
Much has also been made of the parallel between
hyper-capitalist globalization - as graphically expressed by the World Cup and
the mega-business of contemporary football - and nationalism.
Well, the world is not and will never be flat; it's a
Himalaya/Pamir/Hindu Kush of varied inequality altitudes, subjected to snow
avalanches including trade, commerce, immigration flows and technology
breakthroughs. None of these are able to shatter national fibers. It's still
"us" against "them", as much in the Global South defining
Americans and Europeans as "gringos" as in swathes of the
industrialized North patronizing/profiting from the "exotic" Global
South.
There's nothing post-national about the World Cup. In the
terrain of hardcore geopolitics, the highly centralized European Union is
fragmenting under the weight of a bunch of right-wing or extreme right-wing
nationalist parties; in football, the major difference, compared to hardcore
geopolitics, is that there's not only one exceptionalist power but a handful,
from Spain to Brazil, from Germany to Italy, from Argentina to France.
Rinus Michels, coach of the Clockwork Orange, the Dutch
national team that startled the world in 1974 (alas, they didn't win), once
said that football is war (compare it to maverick director Samuel Fuller, who
said cinema is a battlefield). The World Cup is war by other means; an
officially sanctioned, ritualized clash of nationalisms. So it's all about Pick
your Tribe; only that after your tribe is out of play you switch to another,
replacement tribe - which any effete epicurean would arguably define as Italy.
After all they have the most stirring national anthem. They've got the best
food and the best clothes. And of course, they've got Andrea "the
Magician" Pirlo.
A new way of playing ball?
A new way of playing ball?
Brazil, widely praised as The Land of Football, also happens
to be the global leader in reduction of carbon emissions, according to recent
research published by Science magazine, managing at the same time to increase
agricultural production while saving more rainforest.
And yet, and as usual with all things Brazil, all things
World Cup got incredibly messy - a running metaphor of the typical assortment
of ills faced by the struggling Global South. Brazilian President Dilma
Rousseff has been forced to appeal to the historical stereotype of the
Brazilian "cordial man" and stress tolerance, diversity, dialogue and
even sustainability, as well as condemning racism and prejudice, to exhort the
population to forget about their troubles and welcome an army of foreign
visitors.
That's a given, considering the average Brazilian is
heartwarming and exceedingly friendly; the devil is in the details - as in, for
instance, at least 200,000 poor people evicted from their places or at least
threatened with eviction, to make way for major works bound to increase "urban
mobility". Well, only 10% of these works were finished, due in most cases
to massive corruption. In Rio, not a single real was invested in a chaotic
transport system serving the proletarian peripheral sprawl.
Wildly popular Lula, when he was still the president of
Brazil in 2009, said that no taxpayer money would be spent on the World Cup.
Well, not directly; most of the funding came from the National Bank for
Economic Development, a bank that lends money to banks. Builders of new stadia
also benefited from generous tax exemptions.
The bottom line is that Rousseff's government ended up
losing the media battle. Over and over, Rousseff has had to explain that the
Cup will cost a fraction of what is invested in health and education (that's
open to debate.) Virtually half of the Brazilian population is not convinced.
And still what's certain is that a Brazilian World Cup win automatically
ensures Rousseff's re-election.
But the recent wave after wave of protests has in fact
transcended the current administration. It's as if all these diverse social
movements have been manifesting the ultimate utopian desire; to erase, in one
go, centuries of injustice perpetrated by Brazil's notoriously rapacious and
arrogant/ignorant elites - which have always implemented total political and
economic exclusion based on noxious race and class prejudice.
So this whole drama is not simply about
"anti-neoliberal" or "anti-capitalist" stirrings. It goes
way beyond nationalism. And it could be way more transcending than the textbook
for a revolution using football as a pretext. Whatever the final result of this
war revolving around a football, Brazil could yet teach a lesson to the whole
Global South.
In victory, and even in glorious defeat, Brazil may end up
finding the stamina to pursue a new strategic overture - a new, non-arrogant,
non- neocolonial, non-weaponized, non-exceptionalist way to lead and exercise
power, build alliances and clinch grand geopolitical agreements in a multipolar
world. A new way of playing ball. So let this New Great Game begin.
=========
No hay comentarios:
Publicar un comentario