INTERVIEW
‘It is impossible for regional countries to go back to the normalization formula that existed before October 7th’
Published
on

David Hearst, Middle East Eye Editor-in-Chief spoke to Harici. Hearst said that it is impossible for the countries in the region to go back to the normalization process with Israel, which was initiated during the Trump era, and it is now reverted to the Arab peace initiative which was one of the things that Saudi Arabia created in 2002.
David Hearst is the editor-in-chief and co-founder of the London-based Middle East Eye. He is a commentator and speaker on the region and analyst on Saudi Arabia. He was the Guardian’s foreign leader writer, and was correspondent in Russia, Europe, and Belfast. Hearst answered our questions on the Gaza war, the two-state solution, the possibility of war with Hezbollah and the role of regional actors.
Let’s start talking about the last massacre of Israel. 112 civilians were killed while they were expecting humanitarian aid. Do you think Israel’s attack in Gaza will increase pressure on Tel Aviv by the international community?
I would like to say “yes” but my brain says “no”, because so many massacres have happened over the last 5 months. It’s made the word meaningless. The massacres have become normalized in Gaza. If you look at the way, for instance, organizations like the BBC will report massacres, they will use the passive tense. They say “hundreds of Palestinians are dead” as if the bombs were coming from the cloud. As if actually, there was no agency involved in it. There were. Still less are they likely to repeat the idea that these Palestinians were actually targeted as they were searching for food. And we know that they are targeted. We know that absolutely nothing happens in Gaza without someone thinking about it, and with extremely accurate weapons, the accuracy of which, of course, America is helping Israel with. Your heart says “this has to stop” because we’re now over 30,000, by some calculations we could even be 100,000 casualties. And this is not my idea. This is the data that the 30,000 being counted are only the ones being reported to the Palestinian Ministry of Health each day. What that body count doesn’t count are the number of bodies under the rubble that have still yet to be accounted for or indeed the number of Palestinians who die because there’s no treatment in hospital because the hospital system has been destroyed. It only counts the number of people who die on a particular day as a direct result of Israeli strikes. It doesn’t count the casualties that are created when simple people die of their wounds because they’re simply not being treated. So, the casualty count could be much higher than 30,000.
What we’re seeing is a process, which none of us, I think, were prepared for 5 months ago. 5 months ago, we thought that time was not on Netanyahu’s side or the Israeli army’s side. It had a limited window in which to achieve its military objectives, which all of us thought, couldn’t be achieved anyway. The dismantle or as they said the collapsing of Hamas. But as this war has gone on, and one of the assumptions was that Israel would have until the 1st of January, if you remember, Israel would have until the end of January to do what it did and then Joe Biden would call time and say “Khalas” enough. “Now, you’ve got to let the humanitarian agencies in and now you’ve got to ceasefire”. This never happened and the more it never happens, the longer this goes on, the more it can happen. And so that what we’re having is a process where massacres, individual massacres are being normalized. Shifa hospital… Look what happened to all the hospitals. Look what happened to the UN shelters… This is becoming so normal that it is simply being brushed over as a state of war. Collateral damage in a state of war… And if you listen carefully to how Western politicians describe these massacres, they don’t use the word “massacre”. These are only the words that we use here. But a lot of people who support Israel don’t use the word “massacre” or they say “Hey, it’s a war! What do you expect? It’s collateral damage”. We know it’s not collateral damage because these bombs are aimed and this is done to make Gaza unlivable and it is done to terrify civilians into fleeing, even fleeing into the sea. We got to be clear about this. You have an Israeli mainstream where you have mainstream politicians -I’m not talking about Itamar Ben-Gvir or etc. I’m talking about mainstream Likhud politicians who say “every Gazan who gets a bullet in the head deserves it”. And this is showing the absolute brutality of the impunity that we are giving people who are literally trying to kill as many civilians as they can and to terrorize them.
There were scenarios that Israel would confront Hezbollah and when the war in Gaza comes to a halt? Do you see this as realistic?
I haven’t really decided about that. There are arguments on both sides of whether or not they will confront. For a start, this is an Israeli government that is not thinking rationally. It would not be rational to attack Hezbollah for a whole number of reasons but that doesn’t mean that they wouldn’t do it. They could argue to themselves that “now is the time to defy Hezbollah and to push it 6, 7 kilometers back from the border and if we don’t do it now, we’ve missed an opportunity of a generation.” Hezbollah themselves say and have made it really clear that they will not get engaged in a war, if they are not directly attacked if Israel doesn’t invade. However if they are attacked, then it really does become a regional war, because it will really involve Iran, it will involve Iraq. It will involve the Shia groups there. There’ll be a complete state of war along the entire border, not just that border but also the Jordanian one as well. Would Israel attack Hezbollah? There are lots of people who are convinced that it’s just a question of time. I think the Lebanese themselves are cautioning against this and there are quite a few people who know their stuff about Lebanon who actually say “No, Israel won’t”. There have been some interesting exchanges of fire along the border. One of them was the demonstration by Hezbollah of long range anti-tank missiles that went under Iron Dome that Israel could not knock out. And they demonstrated that firepower to send a message that actually fighting Hezbollah, particularly in the mountainous hilly areas of southern Lebanon, would be a completely different thing to fighting Hamas. So there are a number of arguments in the air. What actually will happen? I don’t know. But again we’re not in the realm of the rational. There are some who say that Hezbollah has a level of deterrence that has been established between the two armies and there are other people who would say “No, the residents of Northern Israel will not return to their houses until Hezbollah has been dealt with.”
How do you take the Hezbollah targeting Kiryat Shimona with missiles and Iraqi Shiite group hitting the power plants at Israel’s Haifa Airport? Can we say that this is the sign of your foresight about many parties involved in a greater war following Hezbollah?
Islamic Resistance in Iraq, an umbrealla group of Shia militias took responsibility for hitting the power station at Haifa airport with drones. Last week, the group mounted a similar drone attack on a chemical plant in the port of Haifa. This is the same group that killed three US soldiers at an attack at a US base on the border between Jordan and Syria. And it is undeterred by the way of airstrikes that the US launched in response. As some of us predicted, the northern as well as the southern borders of Israel have now become hot. And the ability of Hezbollah allied militias in Iraq to sustain these attacks which fly under the Iron Dome missile defense system and hit the targets with a pin-point accuracy can not be in doubt.
Do you think a solution without Hamas in Gaza is possible? What do you think about the renewed Palestinian Authority envisioned by the US for Gaza? Do you take this plan as possible for the future of Gaza?
I don’t think Hamas can be defeated in the sense that Hamas is an idea and it is part of the people of Gaza. It isn’t a militia that can be detached from Gaza. So, it could be forced out of Gaza but I don’t think it can be defeated. I think for that, you have to look elsewhere and find out the enormous popularity of Hamas in areas which are generally not associated with them at all. For instance, in Jordan, they’ve become enormously popular, not only amongst the Palestinians in Jordan, but also the East Bankers as well. That is very interesting and I think Hamas expresses as, indeed, the resistance groups express a resistance to occupation that has been completely abandoned by the Palestinian Authority. The idea of the Palestinian Authority taking over Gaza is being scorched by Israel because Israelis particularly want the Palestinian Authority in there. But also it is on its knees in the West Bank itself. When you go around the West Bank, it doesn’t extend to Nablus, it doesn’t extend to Janine. And the next generation, the sons and daughters of Fatah are joining in armed resistance as well. So, generationally, it’s also not working. Ultimately the only thing that will work, if you’re thinking about peace, is a fundamental change in the whole post-Oslo thinking, which is you actually allow Palestinians to choose their own leadership, that the factions become united in a government of National Unity and that there are free elections. There haven’t been free elections there for 17 years.
What are you talking about? If you want to build a Palestinian state of whatever dimensions, you have to allow UNRWA for the education system. You have to stop destroying it. But you also have to allow the political process going on. And that involves a government of national unity. Now, everything that Israel has done, everything America has done, and Britain has done, has been to prevent a government of national unity from forming. So, we have to change all our habits because there’s a formula: you exclude Hamas or exclude all armed resistance until they give up their arms. That is not what happened in Northern Ireland. What happened in Northern Ireland was that decommissioning happened after there was a clear political vision given to the republican movement that they could, then, share power with the unionists. Decommissioning didn’t happen before then. So, we’re asking Hamas to decommission before there’s any vision of a political future. If you want to stop the fighting, then you have to start talking about how you engineer the conditions for a long-term consistency.
The two State solution that the US has been pushing in rhetoric, let’s say, so far has not been successful. Do you think it’s realistic to insist on a two-state solution?
If you’re serious about a two-state solution, you’ve also got to be serious about what sort of state you are going to create for Palestine, which actually has sovereignty, which has contiguity, and which has control over its own borders. And none of that is being envisioned by the map which we saw during Erdogan’s speech. That’s what the state of Palestine actually looks like. It looks like a bunch of stones. So, if you’re talking about a two-state solution, the people who propose it, what sort of state are you talking about because it is a deeply deceptive word. The two-state solution implies a level of reciprocation of balance, of symmetry between two equal states. And what you’ve got is one enormous state. And a whole bunch of locked up prisons around it, and without any ability to commit to even get out of their village, and go from one village to another. They’re completely locked up and it is a total apartheid system.
So, how can you turn an apartheid system into a genuine two states. If you’re talking a Palestinian state, and if you’re talking about the land on which a Palestinian state would be, you’ve got to ask yourself, is there a politician who’s been born in Israel, who is prepared to order the eviction of something up to a million settlers. If you’re being serious, what do you do with the settlers? Because is now not a small number… It is anywhere between 700 to up to a million people. Now, if you count the settlements in the West Bank, in East Jerusalem and the Golan heights, 750 thousand more. That’s a large number of people. And it’s not just their houses but it’s also their businesses because there are now 18 different industrial zones that link them. They don’t have to travel to 1948 Israel for their jobs. They’ve got their jobs right there. They’ve got all their businesses right there. They are totally protected and now they’ve been given heavy arms as well. So, who’s going to evict them? However, you know, the Turkish Foreign Ministry is very much their line that if you confront people about a two-state solution and you promote it, you’re actually challenging the world to think about the sort of questions that are going to stop it. And, you would provoke Israel into saying “we won’t accept a state under any condition” which is what Netanyahu has said, so Israel can’t pretend it’s for a two-state solution only. They’ve got no one on the other end of the negotiation table to negotiate with. The further down the line you push for an autonomous contiguous Palestinian state with a capital in East Jerusalem, the more you’re going to confront the myth that Israel is going to tolerate that.
What about all other global powers should they involve to solve this crisis? Do you think they could have a role in this?
I think what has to happen is that the whole debate about Israel has to change and I think the involvement of South Africa is incredibly important. Because they have huge moral force, because they changed the system from within and they changed the system from without. It has become a global campaign now. What has happened as the only positive thing that has happened in the last 5 months is that Palestine has become a global moral issue in the way that Ukraine is not. Ukraine is a regional war but it’s not a global issue. However, Gaza is a global issue now but it hasn’t actually changed the regional dynamics or not yet. And now, what has to happen is the regional dynamics have to start changing and have to start happening the world’s got the climate that allows Israel to do what it does, has change and it’s got to become much colder for people who use phenomenal brutality and who have shown the brutality that they’re using against ordinary civilians, and and the mask of liberal Zionism has slipped. You can no longer use the fig leaf that Israel is behaving morally because it’s so obvious that it’s not.
Middle East was having a normalization process before the war? Do you expect this process to continue after the war? What’s going to happen after the war in the region?
Normalization came from a basically an Israeli idea under the Trump administration that you could jump over the heads of the Palestinian issue and normalize with the Arab states. It was taking the Arab peace initiative on its head and producing the end- first, and building an enormous highway over the heads of the Palestinians and then offering them the status of being a sort of “Gasterbeiter” (guest workers). The status of being workers in their own land without any political rights… I think the Gaza War has turned that on its head. I think, in particular, one of the nations that could have been about to sign the treaty with Israel and normalized with Saudi Arabia under pressure of Gaza, and also under the pressure of Arab opinion. That’s now changed. And it is now reverted to the Arab peace initiative which was one of the things that Saudi Arabia created in 2002. There, the logic was inversed. “First, you have a solution on Palestine, and then we will normalize relations”. So, the logic of normalization has been reversed. That is not to say that the Arab regimes will cut ties with Israel because they are elites. They have a very ambivalent attitude to the Palestinian question, because the Palestinian question was the Arab Spring at large. It was the first real Arab Spring. The Intifadas were really the first signs of a model that was then repeated with the overthrow of Mubarak in Egypt and the whole wave of revolutions that threatened them. They’re still threatened. They’re still threatened by that feeling and so the idea that somehow they’re going to become great supporters of a “New Palestine”, I’m very doubtful about. However, I don’t think that they can go back to the normalization formula that existed before October 7th. I think that’s impossible now.
So, they’re frozen in a position in which they say normally “we need a Palestinian state”. So, that’s why it is important to test everyone’s mind and say “what sort of Palestine?” Any Palestine are you prepared to create and in what time frame… Because if you look at the history of Israeli settlement, most of the settlement in the West Bank happened not before Oslo but after it. So, it was Oslo that allowed a huge expansion of settlement in the West Bank which we’re now dealing with. Therefore, you say “we should go back to Oslo” but this is not the same map that’s now we’re talking about, that was introduced, for instance, in the last round of talks which ended in Taba. So, one advantage of talking about a Palestinian state of any form, is to make the world conscious of exactly what is blocking the creation of a Palestinian state of any size. And that in itself is a salutary process. I don’t believe that this will work. But it’s still worth confronting the world community with the obstacles that any Palestinian State would create. I don’t think that Israel is prepared to tolerate an autonomous state living anywhere next to it. I simply don’t believe that. They believe in total domination from “The River To The Sea”. They’re prepared to accept small enclaves around them they can control. But they’re not prepared to accept free elections. But we have to go through that process before we can actually come to the solution that would last, which would be to keep the settlers where they are, but to introduce the right of return and to go for an equality of citizenship based on keeping everyone where they were but that would be a very very different state of Israel, and a very very different state of Palestine…
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INTERVIEW
German economist: Militarization of industry is a path to disaster
Published
1 month agoon
17/02/2025By
Tunç Akkoç
Lucas Zeise, a German economist and co-founder of Financial Times Deutschland, shared his views on the militarization of industry in a recent interview. Zeise said, “If more and more is being spent on the defense industry, this is actually a loss. Because this is a production that exists only for destruction. This is a sign of a general decline and at the same time an indication of the road to disaster.”
Born in 1944, Lucas Zeise is a financial journalist with a background in philosophy and economics. His career includes positions with the Japanese Ministry of Economics, the German aluminum industry, the Frankfurt-based Börsen-Zeitung, and the Financial Times Deutschland, which he co-founded. Until 2017, he served as editor-in-chief of UZ, the weekly newspaper of the German Communist Party (DKP). He currently writes a regular column for Junge Welt and contributes articles to various publications.
Lucas Zeise answered Tunç Akkoç’s questions about the debate on German industry and economy and global developments.
Tunç Akkoç: First of all, is deindustrialization a reality?
Lucas Zeise: Yes, I think so, but of course it is a long-lasting reality. Deindustrialization is a process that coincides with capitalist development in general. Industry has been the main surplus-value-producing element of capitalism in all countries, and in some of the more developed countries, notably Britain, deindustrialization has reached a more advanced level. Since Britain was the first fully developed capitalist country, this process started earlier.
Economists often refer to this process as the tertiary sector, i.e. the service sector in general. In capitalist countries, the share of services in the economy is steadily increasing. This is a general trend that can be observed everywhere, and is particularly related to the fact that developed countries are gradually shifting their industries to other regions, especially South-East Asia, by exporting capital. While industrialization is taking place in these regions, the process of deindustrialization in developed countries has accelerated.
In addition, the process of financialization has also accelerated and the financial sector has become stronger. However, the finance sector is a service sector, not an industry. Nevertheless, all these service sectors depend on industry remaining strong. When we analyze the UK, we can see that the country has experienced a relative decline compared to other regions. For example, Germany had overtaken the UK in the industrialization process and even surpassed it before the First World War. Likewise, the US has also overtaken the UK in terms of industrialization.
This is a long-term trend. However, two major industrialized countries, Germany and Japan, have managed to resist this process for a long time. The recent economic shocks, however, have accelerated Germany’s deindustrialization process, which has brought about an inevitable crisis. This is the essence of the whole issue.
Tunç Akkoç: Some influential figures in the European Union, such as Mario Draghi, have argued that Germany should move away from the car industry and invest in new technologies such as artificial intelligence. What do you think about such proposals for structural change?
Lucas Zeise: I think such proposals for structural change will happen spontaneously on the one hand. I mean, this process is already going on naturally. China has already overtaken Germany in the car industry. Therefore, Mario Draghi’s advice on this issue is actually a cheap suggestion. It is easy to suggest something like this and then say ‘Great job!'”
On the other hand, it would be ridiculous to think that it is possible to steer the economy in this way. It is not enough to say, ‘OK, now we are investing heavily in artificial intelligence and we will get ahead in this field.’ Moreover, it is debatable whether artificial intelligence is really a great revolution or just a passing fad. Artificial intelligence can actually be considered as a sub-branch of the semiconductor industry, i.e. microelectronics.
Of course, the development of microelectronics is important and all countries are making state-sponsored investments in this field. The European Union and Germany are already encouraging this. However, this is not something that is unique to Germany or something that makes Germany different from others. While it is possible to make great progress in this area, this alone is not the final solution to a problem.
Tunç Akkoç: In general, how do you assess Germany’s future energy supply strategy?
Lucas Zeise: Obviously, I am not an expert in this field, so it is difficult for me to give a really good assessment. But it seems very clear to me that all states have to pay attention to such a central sector of the economy.
Germany was already in a different position in that it did not have its own oil companies. This has become a historical tradition. As for natural gas, there used to be two big centers: one centered around BASF, the other around Ruhrgas. These two structures were interconnected and worked well for a while. Over time, however, this system changed and other areas of the energy sector, especially electricity generation, were restructured.
However, this does not change the fact that the energy sector must be guided by the state. Energy policy should be managed by the state in a holistic manner. Developing a common energy policy in the European Union already seems unlikely. However, such a policy should have been mandatory for such a large common market.
At this point, if we look at the example of Turkey, the energy sector there is handled, managed and coordinated in a relatively centralized manner. In Germany, and at the EU level in general, there is a major deficiency in this respect. The state does not really take enough ownership of the energy issue.
Tunç Akkoç: On the other hand, German industry is increasingly turning to the defense industry. Some see in the militarization of the economy the potential for a kind of ‘re-industrialization’. After the war in Ukraine, more and more German companies are breaking the taboo on supplying the defense industry and entering the military equipment sector. How should we assess this development?
Lucas Zeise: On the one hand, this is clearly a sign of the collapse of the still developing and relatively well-functioning global economy. If more and more of it is being spent on the defense industry, this is actually a loss. Because this activity is a production that exists only for destruction. This is a sign of a general decline and at the same time an indication of a road to disaster.
It is also clear that there is competition for the best defense tenders in the international arena. That is why everyone feels that it needs to enter this field strongly. Nobody just wants to buy aircraft from the US, but wants to build their own defense industry. Germany was already taking part in this process. Although not always at the forefront, tank production in particular has long been strong. This sector was progressing steadily, albeit at a slow pace.
However, this development seems to herald an impending catastrophe. It shows that everyone is preparing for war. This is very similar to the atmosphere before the First World War.
Tunç Akkoç: Elections are approaching in Germany. Do you think that after these elections, Germany’s economic policies will change with a new political order?
Lucas Zeise: More likely no, I don’t think so. I think that economic issues have become a bit more prominent, but if we look back, I remember that in the German Bundestag elections in 1969, one of the main debates in the election campaign was whether the German Mark (D-Mark) should appreciate against the US Dollar. So, a very specific and economically critical issue for Germany at that time was at the center of the election campaign. This debate was directly related to the position Germany should take vis-à-vis the US and Europe.
Today such a debate is missing. The issues that really need to be addressed —energy policy, deindustrialization— are being dealt with in a strangely distorted way. The only thing that everyone seems to agree on is the Agenda 2010 program that Gerhard Schröder launched in 2002 or 2003. This program meant lowering wages, reducing social benefits and increasing profit-making opportunities for companies.
But this approach was already wrong at the time. Schröder’s move enabled some big companies to make a big leap forward and strengthened German capital, especially in the European domestic market. This had certain advantages, but repeating it now would only worsen the situation.
That’s why I think the debate is being conducted in the wrong way and not particularly along party lines. On the contrary, there seems to be a consensus among most political actors on this issue.
Tunç Akkoç: How do you assess the first actions of the Trump administration and what will be the impact on international relations and the global economy?
Lucas Zeise: In my opinion, there is not a new wave of deregulation (liberalization). The US government’s more aggressive stance towards other great powers, or as Trump calls them, ‘shitholes’, or small states, ruthlessly suppressing and crushing them, is not deregulation. It is, in fact, a further intensification of the rivalry between the capitalist states, which are essentially allies, by any means necessary. We can see this situation clearly.
This is not deregulation; it is more like what happened during the Ronald Reagan era. At that time, the US tried to revitalize its rivalry, not with China, but especially with Japan and Western Europe. Reagan’s ruthless behavior towards his own allies was aimed at strengthening the US global position. Today, I think it has become even harsher, so much so that the President of the US can stand up and say, ‘Oh Denmark, you have to give us Greenland, or else we will buy it.’ They even imply that they can intervene directly if necessary.
This kind of behavior is actually a continuation of the past US policies towards Panama. Panama was detached from Colombia and made independent because the US wanted to build a canal there. In other words, this imperialist behavior towards weak countries is already a tradition. But the behavior towards medium-sized states such as Germany, Britain, France or Japan is becoming more and more brutal. I see this as the result of an intensifying and ever more bitter rivalry.
The US in particular is less and less reluctant to use its military power more recklessly, and this is becoming more and more prominent. This is not a new era; it is a further advance of neoliberalism and laissez-faire. The so-called ‘rules-based economic policy’ rhetoric has been completely discarded.
Tunç Akkoç: We see both overly optimistic and overly pessimistic comments about the Chinese economy. When government bonds lose value, pessimists sound the alarm; when exports break records, optimists raise their voices. Does China have the intention or the power to ‘share’ the world with the US?
Lucas Zeise: I completely agree with you; the overly optimistic comments are as exaggerated as the overly pessimistic ones. If I try to think from the point of view of the Chinese Communist Party and its leaders, their tradition has been to position China as the largest economic power and to take the first place in the capitalist world.
In the present situation, if I am the second most powerful country, naturally my goal is to equalize with the first. And I have to do this because there is almost no scenario in which the US will accept this and say, ‘OK, we can live in peace with China.’ For a while it seemed as if there was this understanding, that we were working well with China and we were happy with that. But this is clearly no longer possible.
The official US policy is based on not allowing China to become an equal power. They want to continue to set the rules and, if necessary, to violate them according to their own interests. Therefore, China is forced to act like an imperial power.
INTERVIEW
Head of Roscongress: Local currencies are used to bypass sanctions
Published
1 month agoon
16/02/2025
Alexander Stuglev, the Head of Roscongress Foundation, spoke to Harici: “For easing the sanctions regime, national currencies are currently used, and potentially in the future, a digital currency developed by the BRICS can be used.”
With the Russia-Ukraine war, Moscow has increasingly turned to business diplomacy and international trade cooperation as strategic tools to mitigate the effects of Western sanctions. Central to this effort is Roscongress Foundation, Russia’s premier organization for fostering global economic dialogue and partnerships. Established to enhance Russia’s business ties internationally, Roscongress serves as a bridge connecting Russian enterprises with global markets through high-profile forums such as the St. Petersburg International Economic Forum (SPIEF). The organization plays a critical role in reshaping Russia’s economic development by emphasizing collaboration with emerging economies, strengthening ties with traditional partners, and exploring new trade opportunities in Asia, Africa, and Latin America.
Roscongress was organized a meeting in Istanbul and Alexander Stuglev, the Head of Roscongress Foundation, replied the questions of Harici.
As we understand, Roscongress is the main tool for business diplomacy and to eliminate the impacts of Western sanctions. Can you tell us more about the organization?
Yes, you have noticed correctly, Roscongress was established in 2007 as a non-financial development institution that deals with the organization and holding of major international economic and political events in Russia in the interests of attracting investments to the Russian Federation and developing the economy of the Russian Federation.
At the same time, while organizing events we, of course, proceed from the fact that in addition to interaction between Russia and businessmen from a particular country, direct connections can also be established with third countries, that we are also welcoming.
Could you tell us more about the opportunities and risks you see in Turkish-Russian relations in business sector?
Undoubtedly, to some extent, sanctions affect the development of Russian-Turkish relations and, in general, business relations with Russia.
Nevertheless, today, all those who use these turbulences in a pragmatic way to build their business projects in Russia are winning, occupying the vacated niches from Western countries, developing their own business. And from the point of view of easing the sanctions regime, national currencies are currently used, and potentially in the future, a digital currency developed by the BRICS association (Brazil, Russia, India, China, South Africa) can be used.
First of all, there are always risks out there, marketing risks included. Secondly, in addition to the fact that Turkish companies have occupied the niches vacated by Western companies, we see a general change in the structure of the Russian economy with a greater focus on creating products and services within Russia.
Tourism for example; the number of tourist trips that have now emerged in Russia is many times higher than there were before COVID, about 83 million trips are made by Russian citizens annually within Russia. And this requires the infrastructure development.
Taking into account the large number of support programs from the Russian state for companies that are developing tourism infrastructure, there are great chances, for foreign companies as well, if they organize a Russian legal entity in the format of an LTD and get the opportunity to develop their projects. This is one of the possibilities.
Creative industry, computer IT security, IT products; in all those areas we can cooperate completely freely. These are such cross-border industries, where, I think, it’s very difficult to be a subject for sanctions.
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan and Russian President Vladimir Putin set a goal of increasing bilateral trade volume to $100 billion. Do you see an expansion or a contraction in the Turkish-Russian trade volume in 2025?
Firstly, this is practically 100% growth to what we have now.As for the forecast for 2025-2026, the main thing is,first: in my opinion, the construction of transport and logistics projects.There is the Black Sea and the Caspian Sea for example.Second; this is cooperation in the field of energy. Thirdly, this is cooperation in the field of chemistry (creation of chemical products) from supplied raw materials, from oil and gas.This is a promising area of pharmaceuticals, supplies of medical equipment, as well as medical services in Türkiye.Undoubtedly, the development of tourism is very promising but also creative industry, IT industry, Cybersecurity.These are the areas that, in my opinion, will develop in the near future. Of course, traditional cooperation in the field of metallurgy.Traditional cooperation in the field of agriculture and food supplies will grow for sure.
What challenges do sanctions pose to bilateral relations?
The first is an axis from the sanctions regime, including through payment in national currencies and using digital currencies. The second is business, thanks to its capabilities, will find a solution to any restrictions. I do not want to go into details now, do not want to disclose the details of the opportunities that companies can use to maintain a normal trade balance.
Anti-colonial movements in Africa seem to have opened up space for Russia in both diplomatic and commercial terms. How do you assess the situation there?
This is an anti-colonialist movement not only in relation to France, but also in relation to other countries. This is also a movement in relation to proposals that are unfair to Africa, for example, on the green transition, because it will destroy African business and will give great advantages to global companies. In my opinion, it is necessary to proceed from the interests of African countries, which, in fact, Russia always does. This is the advantage of our economy and politics.
We work in a ‘win-win’ mode. In the same way, the Turkish side can work in Africa. In the same way, Chinese investors have been actively working in Africa to this day in the form of the prospects of this market. But based on common interests, on the one hand there is a creation of profitable enterprises. On the other hand – the development of the African economy. Only this will provide an opportunity for further mutual growth. If we simply export material resources from the colonies as a consumer and do not give anything in return, nothing good will come for sure.
After the fall of Assad government, does Russia have any interest in doing business in the reconstruction of Syria?
I am sure that Russian companies will take part in this process, just like other international companies. Now a period of political stabilization will pass and a period of certain growth will begin. The main thing is that extremist movements and non-constructive movements in relation to Syria and the Syrian people do not prevail in politics. I believe that politics and economics will improve in the near future.

From January 9 to 11, the World Festival of the Antifascist International took place in Caracas, Venezuela. More than 2,000 national and international guests from more than 100 countries, as well as other Venezuelan cities, attended the event. Among them were representatives of social movements, political parties, cultural and popular organizations, intellectuals, indigenous peoples, youth, students, workers, parliamentarians, communicators and other personalities. The mega activity was carried out within the framework of the Inauguration of Nicolás Maduro, who on January 10, was sworn in as President of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela for the period 2025-2031, and also served as an example of international support for the continuity of the Bolivarian Revolution under the leadership of Maduro. Another important event that surrounded the Festival was the Inauguration of Donald Trump this January 20.
The Italian-Argentine philosopher Rocco Carbone, who has delved into the discursivities and political and cultural processes of Latin America, was born in Cosenza, Calabria, in southern Italy, but has lived for more than 20 years in the Argentine capital, Buenos Aires. Carbone studied at the Università degli Studi della Calabria. He received his doctorate in Philosophy from the University of Zürich, Switzerland, and currently teaches at the National University of General Sarmiento (UNGS) and is part of the prestigious world of Argentine scientific research center CONICET.
In addition to the aforementioned International Fascist Festival, Carbone participated in other activities carried out in Caracas within the framework of the Inauguration of President Nicolás Maduro, such as the January 9 March; the Swearing-in on January 10; and, the III World Communication Congress of the University of Communications (LAUICOM) held on January 11, among others. In that sense, Harici was able to talk with the Italian-Argentine philosopher about what fascism is, who is Argentine with Javier Milei as its president, and what is coming for Latin America and the world with the arrival of Trump to the White House.
Venezuela has just celebrated the International World Anti-Fascite Festival. Can you give us a definition of what fascism is and how it is expressed today?
The first thing I would tell you is that fascism is never something new, fascism is always old. With this I want to tell you that I am a little reluctant to talk about neofascism, but rather the word fascism convinces me more. I know that, at least in Argentina, where I have lived for more than 20 years, and also in the rest of Latin America this is a difficult word. It is a difficult word from political theory, from political action, for different reasons. But, without a doubt, when we say fascism we are referring to the Italian experience, to the German experience of the 20th century, which were experiences that extended more or less between the 20s, 30s and 40s. But if one theorizes this word a little, in the 20th century we see fascism in different places, that is, fascism in the 20th century was an international force. We find fascism, for example, in Great Britain, where in the 1920s and 1930s there was the British Union of Fascists, led by Oswald Mosley, a guy who had trained with Lord Keynes, the key to economics who was part of a brain of the Blackmore Group.
For example, in old China in the 1930s, within the Kuomintang of the Chinese Nationalist Party, founded by Sun Yat-sen, there also existed a dual power apparatus called the Blue Shirt Association, which was an apparatus fascist type military politician. If we think about Our America, for example, in Cuba governed by Gerardo Machado y Morales, the greatest fact against that political experience is that he persecuted a great militant who was part of the student movement and the Cuban labor movement, Julio Antonio Mella. Being an avid writer, in some of his texts, which we can read today because they have been preserved, Mella called Machado Morales “the tropical Mussolini”, that is, Mella identified Machado as a fascist. Then Mella had to exile himself from Cuba and went to live in Mexico and Machado had him murdered.
And if we think about Argentina in the 1930s, the so-called “Infamous Decade”, there was an Argentine fascist party recognized by the Italian fascist party that had a mass experience, especially in the city of Córdoba, where it was led by a relatively important Argentine Thomist philosopher, Nimio Juan Manuel de Anquí.
And why do I say all this? Because everything that is in history, everything that is in the political history of the world and in the political history of Latin America, at some later point, that history can be reactivated again. And it seems to me that this is happening today in Our America with different expressions of politics that if we call it right or extreme right or extreme right, we say absolutely nothing, because that is an insufficient descriptive expression.
So it seems to me that using these categories says nothing, for example, about the Venezuelan opposition, about Milei, about Bolsonaro. And it seems to me that this word, fascism, has indeed been reactivated. Now you ask me to give a definition of fascism, and I believe that we can think of fascism in many ways, we can think of it in relation to statehood, but we can think of it as political power without necessarily linking it to the nation-state.
Regarding Javier Milei, you have just released a book about the type of fascism that the Argentine president characterizes. Tell us a little about that.
Yes, the book is precisely called “Flamethrower: Milei and Psychotizing Fascism.” Fascism is a psychotizing power because it is a power that tends to drive the citizen, the free organizations of the people, the political parties, and politics crazy… Fascism is a power that discursively, but also politically, when it makes policy, always says two things at the same time and these things contradict each other.
In the case of Milei we can see it clearly, for example, when he was in the middle of the presidential campaign, Milei said that the current Minister of Economy, his Minister of Economy, Luis Caputo, was a criminal and a thief, because he had requested a loan from the IMF for 45 billion dollars, which became an enormous Argentine external debt. But then, when Milei won the presidential election, he chose Caputo as economy minister and now praises him.
Well, there we effectively see a power that narratively says two things at the same time that deny each other. That is why I say that it is a psychotizing power, that is, a power that tends to drive the citizens crazy. And, from my point of view, that psychotizing style basically tends to at least inhibit the popular response to fascism. That is the psychotizing element, the permanent contradictory element, that activates fascist power. We also see it in the permanent development of policies.
In the case of Milei, before becoming president he was briefly a deputy, and when he was a parliamentarian he voted in favor of the elimination, for example, of a tax that is the Income tax (also called the tax on great wealth). Milei voted against that entry, because for him, the Argentine State is a kind of evildoer, it is a kind of thief. The State is a kind of criminal because it taxes the citizens. However, now that he is president he is reinstating the income tax. Once again we see a contradictory policy that balances between a denial and an affirmation.
I believe that in this way we can understand fascism: as a kind of latent political force that is present in the life of people, as a kind of small person (a dwarf) that is – to a greater or lesser extent – in each one. of us and that, appropriately stimulated, grows again.
This January 20, the White House has a new tenant. What can we expect from Trump’s international policy towards Venezuela and Latin America?
Klara Zetkin in her 1923 text: “Fight against fascism. And how to defeat it”, argues that fascism is “a tool of capitalism in crisis.” In that sense, Trump is the head of state who represents the maximum expression of capitalism, and when capitalism is in crisis (in fact, Trump feels that the United States is in crisis, is in danger) to surf that crisis and stay afloat, capitalism expands. a much more radical tool than capitalism itself: fascism. It seems to me that this is a great definition to understand what we are talking about when we talk about fascism, because as we said before, that word activates historical comparisons, which can confuse us or divert us a little. And it seems to me that if, on the contrary, we connect it with the rationality of capitalism, especially the capitalism in crisis that we are experiencing in the 21st century, that is, a capitalism that has many dimensions, there is a productive capitalism, analog capitalism, there is another platform capitalism, financial or digital, there is another type of capitalism, specifically in Latin America, the narco capitalism.
And capitalism at this moment is going through a transition phase, because there is a dispute for the hegemony of capitalism between the old US imperialism and new emerging countries, such as the BRICS. I am referring to Russia, I am thinking of China, India, Iran, which are disputing that hegemony, that leadership.
And so, because capitalism is closely linked to imperialism, the United States feels the pressure of that crisis. Trump has expressed it several times, for him American power is in crisis, in decline. So in different places in the Western world, forms of fascism are activated so that capitalism stays afloat, stays alive and reaffirms itself in this moment of transition from one hegemony to another hegemony, which we still do not know what it will be. Let’s say, this neo-hegemony or hegemonism is still uncertain, but it seems to me that the world is moving towards it, therefore, it seems to me that we must effectively understand it under that paradigm: fascism as a tool of capitalism in crisis.
As to how Trump’s arrival at the White House may affect Venezuela, this is also a bit uncertain. But the obvious thing is that the Trump administration needs an antagonist. If Israel and Gaza reach a prolonged peace agreement, beyond the circumstantial ceasefire, and if Trump manages to end the war in Ukraine. The United States will exert greater pressure and interference against Venezuela. Trump is acting psychotically against the Chinese government, his main enemy in the fight to maintain global hegemony. That is why thinking about a “reasonable capitalism” is nonsense, which is why people must unite and organize.
What do we do?
Imagining and organizing a new world, alternative to the power schemes of powers that do not fight to achieve something but rather covet everything that exists is the task of participation and struggle for the forces of emancipation that vibrate in the ideas of social justice. and egalitarianism. National and popular forces with the Latin American perspective of the great Homeland. Because, what is a town, after all? It is not a fixed or eternal idea but an idea that names and summons the possibility of being constituted in each historical stage. That idea indicates less a large number, a large conglomerate, or a conspicuous number of people mobilized than a fluctuating community experiencing an epiphany. A revelation of power, of knowledge, of beauty, of shared knowledge. A social bond, a hug. An experience: a constitutive part of what one is and without which one cannot be, nor continue to be. From Our America it must still be possible to imagine and organize an emancipatory action – spliced with the dimensions of multipolarity and the BRICS – constituted around a popular slogan: Make Antifascism Great Again, on the 80th anniversary of the subordination of archaeological fascism at the hands of the revolution.
Notes
“Flamethrower. Milei and psychotizing fascism” (2024) by Rocco Carbone. In this essay, the Italian-Argentine philosopher maintains that “fascism is a highly psychotizing or maddening political power. And this characteristic is expressed very well in Milei, because Every time Milei speaks he says two things that clash with each other, for example: First he said: ‘Pope Francis is the representative of the evil one on earth’ and then, when he makes a trip to Rome and visits the Vatican, he says: “The Pope is the most important Argentine in history.” In this text, Rocco invites us to resist and combat this political power because “fascism does not imply an idea different from our own, but the death of all ideas.” And he concludes that “Fascism is a tool of capitalism in crisis,” a thought previously postulated (1923) by the feminist and German communist deputy Klara Zetkin (1857-1933) in the text “Fight against fascism. And how to beat it.”
In “Mafia capital: The hidden logics of power” (2019) the philosopher maintains that: “Organized crime (now nationalized) has a very broad advantage over Argentine democracy and its laws.” In his text, Rocco reviews Latin American history and the recent radicalization of neoliberal governments. It also describes the development of the Mafia, from its origins and how: “in just two generations it stopped being a regional and rural organization to become another, made up of modern, cosmopolitan and refined businessmen, with doctorates, capable of expressing themselves and doing things.” His work has been published in many languages.

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