Tuesday, November 12, 2019

Comment du Jour




Central Europe’s 1989 Freedom Tsunami




Thirty years ago on 9 November 1989, the world suddenly changed.  Mass civil and religious demonstrations rocking East German cities created a political Tsunami which soon reached Berlin.   

Berlin, the divided city and German capital at the epicenter of the Cold War, would see an
unexpected performance of Beethoven’s “Ode to Joy” as throngs of East German comrades
suddenly rushed towards the Berlin Wall and finally breached the barrier.

Yes on that November night, the Joshua Trumpet sounded, and the Wall came tumbling down.  As in a Fairy Tale the Wall had fallen…the evil force was seemingly gone, banished.  Germany would become reunited a year later in peace and freedom.  Europe would be whole and free.

Yet these extraordinary events just didn’t happen by chance but through a rare combination of 
Spiritual, Political and Economic factors.  The stars had to be aligned just right!

What were called the socialist states, those counties abandoned to Stalin’s charms at Yalta and condemned to a forgotten fate behind what Churchill would call the Iron Curtain, suddenly erupted in a frenzy of freedom to break away from Moscow’s icy grip.

The election of Pope John Paul II, a Polish pontiff was the first step.  This was a decade earlier in 1978 when he became the first non-Italian Pontiff in 400 years and energized a religious  reawakening in Poland where the People’s Republic could never totally subdue the Catholic Church.  Besides a Polish Pope, Central Europe’s largest nation also saw a free trade union movement Solidarity emboldened.   

Ronald Reagan, elected president of the USA in 1980, formed the second building block.  
The Reagan Administration unapologetically confronted Soviet communism and didn’t flinch
in supporting NATO.  Standing before the Berlin Wall in June 1987, President Reagan challenged the new Soviet leader, “Mr. Gorbachev, Tear down this Wall.”  At the time the speech was largely met with smirking contempt on both sides of the Atlantic.     

Indeed Mikhail Gorbachev, the reformist Soviet leader wavered and then blinked at the critical moment.  And West Germany’s  Chancellor Helmut Kohl focused his vision on reunification, again at the crucial moment.  Freedom would soon prevail from Poland, to Hungary, Czechoslovakia and East Germany.      

German President Frank-Walter Steinmeier paid particular tribute to Germany’s neighbors;
“Without the courage of the will to freedom of the Poles and Hungarians, the Czechs and Slovaks, the peaceful revolutions in Eastern Europe and Germany's reunification would not have been possible.”

Having seen the Berlin Wall a decade before these momentous events it would be nearly inconceivable that this austere and brutal cold concrete barrier which ripped through the heart of one of  Europe’s great cities would ever fall, short of a major conflict.  

The Wall and the entire formidable inter-German barrier dividing the country for that matter, solidified systems and ossified ideologies.  It stood as a silent testament to terror for a quarter century.

Behind the Wall stood the German Democratic Republic, the dour socialist satrap which
needed a barrier to keep its comrades in. 

U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo in a momentous and memorable address in Berlin stated, 
“East Germans knew they weren’t alone.  They knew they had a partner.  And they took heart from the soaring words of leaders and deeds of Presidents Truman and Kennedy and Reagan.”

“They saw kindred spirits all across the world.  They saw them in Poland, the march for Solidarity. They felt the prayers of Pope John Paul II,” he added. 

Yet German Chancellor Angela Merkel warned, “the values on which Europe is founded, freedom, democracy, equality, rule of law, human rights, they are anything but self-evident and they have to be revitalized and defended time and time again.”

Secretary Pompeo added, “let us also not take lightly the threats to our freedoms, the challenges that we all face from regimes, regimes that rule instead of govern, regimes that crush rights instead of protect them, regimes for which this anniversary is a fearful warning, not a cause for celebration.”

Transatlantic solidarity and values bound the U.S. and Europe together during the Cold War.  Sadly, over the past twenty years the focus of shared security and political interests has blurred. 


Clearly, the USA working in multilateral tandem with our NATO partners still offers the best defense for America’s own security. 

Saturday, October 26, 2019

Comment du Jour



The Bears of the Goblins!

After a long hot Summer and a beautiful Autumn, the Bears of the Goblins
in Paris are exhausted!!  (see earlier blogs) 

The iconic Nounours are resting up for a new Season.

They will be back I'm certain next year.  




Wednesday, October 23, 2019

Comment du Jour






Hungarian Revolution Remembered

               1956-2019


On 23 October 1956, Hungarians rose up en masse against the Soviet- installed
communist regime.   For ten glorious days, Hungary thought they would prevail 
in their epic Fight for Freedom!

Sadly the Soviets counterattacked and the Revolution was crushed and Hungary
was returned to a reign of terror.  By November a gloom descended which would only
totally pass in 1989 when Hungary regained its sovereignty.  

The picture above shows the Hungarian Flag, the communist icon torn from the
center.   This flag symbolizes 1956.  The Anthem of the uprising was Beethoven's
5th Symphony!


Remember 1956!


Sunday, September 22, 2019

Comment du Jour

New York's Steuben Day Parade




The 62nd Steuben Day Parade marched up Fifth Avenue in New York.
Thousands of participants from the USA, Germany and Austria took part in
the annual celebration of German/American friendship.

Under clear blue skies participants ranging from the US Military Academy at
West Point, to the New York City Fire Department and bands from Austria,
Germany and metropolitan New York participated.



             New York's expanding list of Beer Halls were represented too!!





As were local German language schools both in Westchester and Connecticut.


                                       



And it was also time to celebrate the 30th Anniversary of the Fall of the Berlin Wall!!





Who can believe it's already 30 years??




The parade honors the central role played by German General von Steuben
in developing the Revolutionary Army during the American Revolution.
Von Steuben later founded the German language club at West Point.

The theme of the parade was "Wunderbar Together" a call for closer
ties between the USA and Germany.

Dr Emily Haber, German Ambassador to the United States served
as Grand Marshal.





                                                  Until next year, Auf Wiedersehen!!!




Tuesday, September 17, 2019

Comment du Jour



UN General Assembly Confronts Global Crisis Overload



Presidents, Prime Ministers, and Potentates are assembling in New York for the 74th General Assembly.  During this annual rite of Autumn, delegations from the UN’s 193 member states shall debate, discuss and hopefully find some common ground on a plethora of global crises ranging from bloody military conflicts, to tragic refugee outflows, and the undertow of poverty, underdevelopment and natural disasters. 

What’s known as the General Debate kicks off Tuesday September 24th with a week of high level speeches and meetings ranging from trying to secure peace, international security and engender global economic development.

President Donald Trump, Brazil’s Jair Bolsonaro, France’s Emmanuel Macron, and South Korea’s Moon Jae-in  are among the first to address the UN Assembly at a time of heightened crisis as well as elevated expectations.  

Among controversial speakers this year include leaders from Turkey, Iran and Egypt. 

Naturally while policy speeches may make headlines often the real story emerges from quiet one to one meetings on the margins of the Assembly here at the UN or at nearby diplomatic missions. Will Donald Trump meet with Iran’s Hassan Rouhani while in New York remains the big question?  

Just two years ago President Trump delivered a fire and brimstone address to the Assembly aimed at North Korea in response to that communist country’s continued nuclear testing,  intercontinental ballistic missile firings and military threats to East Asia and the USA.  North Korea’s dictator Kim Jong-un eventually blinked and a potentially deadly nuclear crisis on the Korean Peninsula was averted.  

North Korea’s nuclear proliferation was not halted nor reversed but prudent diplomacy between
Washington and Pyongyang, supported by South Korea,  stopped the clock from ticking towards explosive military confrontation.  

  
Let’s review some of the pressing political and humanitarian issues facing the renewed session.

Conflicts

The unrelenting onslaught of global conflict continues; Syria’s bloody civil war grinds on after more than eight years of unmitigated terror. More than 600,000 people have died and 5.6 million have became refugees since 2011.  Though the Assad regime remains in power backed by Russia, sadly most of the opposition comprises  jihadi and radical Islamist terrorist groups.   

Yemen’s civil war slogs on as a proxy conflict between Iranian backed factions and Saudi Arabia. The fighting has taken a dangerous new turn with Iranian supported rebels using drones to attack and disable sensitive Saudi oil terminals.   

Afghanistan’s Islamic fundamentalist Taliban forces continue to battle a weak central government, the U.S and NATO allies remain politically torn as whether to keep militarily committed to this long running South Asian war or make a deal with the devil.  

At least a dozen other lethal conflicts continue from the Congo to Libya and Mali to Ukraine.  

Refugee Outflows

Syria’s tragedy leads the list for the most tragic.  As stated 5.6 million Syrians have fled their country; most remain in neighboring Turkey, Lebanon, and Jordan. Furthermore over 6 million people have been internally displaced inside beleaguered Syria. 

Venezuela continues to percolate politically.  As the once prosperous country sinks deeper into chaos, 4 million people have fled Maduro’s socialist regime.  This is Latin America’s most pressing crisis; countries such as Colombia, Ecuador and Brazil help with the refugee overflow. 

In Southeast Asia,  Myanmar/Burma’s regime forced 900,000 Rohingya Muslims out of their homes. The UN’s World Food Program allocates $16 million monthly to help these unfortunates who mostly take refuge in neighboring Bangladesh.  

Just in time for the new session, the USA has a new Ambassador, Kelly Craft, who replaces the indefatigable Nikki Haley.  Ambassador Craft stated she will be the “voice of America’s unwavering commitment to democracy, freedom, human rights, and, whenever possible, the peaceful resolution of conflicts.” She added, “ In a world marked by humanitarian crises and geopolitical challenges, strong American leadership is absolutely critical, and I intend to provide it.”

Amb. Craft stated significantly, “I will defend America’s values and interests. I will stand by our friends and allies.” 


Off and running for an interesting and very likely unpredictable new UN session.  

Friday, August 16, 2019

Comment du Jour

                             Notre Dame Still Proudly Stands!

Four months after the devastating fire, Notre Dame cathedral, the Gothic
masterpiece in the center f Paris still stands proudly.  Yet while the facade
of this magnificent church appears unaffected by the 15 April inferno, upon
closer scrutiny one sees a fence closing off the structure.  




The fire was strongest in the rear of the cathedral along with the roof; here
one sees some new wooden braces holding up the flying buttresses along with  
metal structure where the famed spire collapsed.




Notre Dame will Rebuild!!!

Saturday, July 27, 2019

Comment du Jour





Paris When it Sizzles

Heatwave Hits France


In the midst of the current heatwave in France, a Canicule, some
Bears are taking it easy in the Sun.   Though the Temps reached 
38 on 24 July, and recorded an all time high of 42 C for Paris on the 25th,
here are some views of the NouNours de Gobelins.  The previous record was
set in 1947. 


Bears of the Goblins.   





The stuffed bears are found in the 13th Arr and  5th Arr. or District.