Commentary on All Ambassadors Called Back to State
February 2, 2011
Gerald Celente
KINGSTON,
NY, 1 February 2011 — When the Tunisian government toppled, the mass
media and their stable of experts – who were blindsided by these events
– quickly stepped in to proclaim the obvious: that citizens of other
Arab nations would be emboldened to challenge autocratic and corrupt
governments.
Now Egypt is in the throes of insurrection, and Algeria, Jordan,
Morocco and Yemen are already targeted for revolutionary change. The
richer and more tightly controlled Kingdoms of the Middle East will not
be immune to challenges from their citizenry to break the chains of
royal rule.
But, as I had forecast in the Trends Journal, it is not solely the
Middle East that is destined to experience episodes of violent
upheaval. What is transpiring in the Arab world will spread throughout
many European states. While the call to arms will be spoken in
different tongues, the underlying causes will be the same.
In December 2010 (before Tunisia made the headlines) we issued a
Trend Alert® titled, “Off With Their Heads!” in which we predicted a
“long war between the people and the ruling classes.” We noted that,
“Anyone questioning the intensity of the people’s seething anger is
either out of touch or in denial.”
It wasn’t Arab anger that led us to that forecast – it was the
student and worker revolts spilling into the streets of Europe. The
imposition of draconian austerity measures – higher taxes, tuition
hikes, lost benefits, curtailed services, public sector job cuts – had
young and old raging against a rigged system that paved the way for the
privileged and punished the proles.
Though millions marched through the streets of Athens, Brussels,
Dublin, Lisbon, London and Madrid, when the protests ended, the
governments were barely shaken, let alone toppled. Unlike the
autocratic Arab regimes, where the tight grip of repression could only
be broken by violence, in the “democratic” West the illusion of
representation and placating government promises mitigated the
violence.
Both the press and politicians assumed the protests would run their
course, people would accept their fate, and, like it or not, suffer the
consequences. The protests, however, have not run their course. The
economic toll of austerity and unemployment continues to ravage the
lower and middle classes. As we wrote in the Winter 2011 Trends
Journal, “It will only be a matter of time before a series of final
straw events breaks the public’s back, setting off uncontrollable
uprisings, coups (bloodless and/or military), riots and revolts
throughout the financially battered world.”
Trend Forecast: The unintended consequences of the regime changes
in North Africa and the Middle East, and the uprisings we forecast that
will roil Europe will be as fully dramatic as their intended
consequences: the overthrow of governments. The calls by Presidents,
Prime Ministers, cabinet officials and foreign policy experts for
“orderly transition of power” are nothing more than diplomatic
doublespeak and pure windbaggery. There is no such thing as a clean and
simple revolution.
As we will see in Egypt, military coups will be disguised as regime
changes. Already the public is being conditioned to view the Egyptian
military as beloved liberators. But in fact they are simply another arm
of the autocratic government, no more familiar with democratic ideals
than the dictator they replace ... who had himself been drawn from the
ranks of the military.
The world leaders and world media are not recognizing the Egyptian
uprising for what it is: a prelude to a series of civil wars that will
lead to regional wars, that will lead to the first “Great War” of the
21st century.