source: WSW
Former high-level Greek diplomat Leonidas Chrysanthopoulos told the UK’s New Statesman
last week that discussions had taken place between senior Greek
politicians and the armed forces on the military’s response to what
Chrysanthopoulos described as an “explosion of social unrest” expected
to occur “quite soon.”
Chrysanthopoulos said that in the coming months, “There will be
further increases in armed actions. There will be bloody
demonstrations.”
Without giving details, he said, “There are contacts by certain
politicians with elements in the armed forces to guarantee that in the
event of major social unrest, the army will not intervene.”
This last claim was likely made for public consumption. Even if such a
request had been made, any assurances from the Greek military would be
worthless given the recent history of the country, in which the “regime
of the colonels” seized power in a military coup in 1967 that lasted
until 1974. Since the onset of mass austerity in Greece in 2010 there
have been constant rumours of coup discussions among high-ranking
military personnel.
The most significant aspect of Chrysanthopoulos’ interview is the
revelation of discussions between politicians and the military on how to
respond to the threat of social revolution.
Greek ruling circles are working on the assumption that
insurrectionary struggles are inevitable because of the intolerable
level of suffering they have imposed on the working class. Within less
than four years, the social position of the Greek working class has been
reduced to levels not seen since the Nazi occupation during World War
II.
Brutal poverty is a fact of life for millions. One major aspect of
the assault on living conditions is the removal of public health
provisions.
More than 50 pharmaceutical conglomerates have either halted or
savagely cut supplies to Greece—citing concerns for their profits. The
dangerous shortage of hundreds of basic medicines is resulting in
chaotic scenes of patients rushing from one pharmacy to another in
search of vital drugs, while public hospitals lack adequate supplies of
drugs to dispense.
Such conduct is not confined to the big pharmaceutical companies. On
Tuesday it emerged that the Swiss Red Cross, a non-profit relief agency,
is set to slash the number of blood donor packets it supplies to
Greece. It cited concerns that it has not received full payment for
previous allocations and announced that beginning in 2015 the number of
blood donor packets it sends to Greece will be halved from the current
annual level of 28,000.
As a result of the austerity policies demanded by the “troika” (the
International Monetary Fund, European Central Bank and European Union), a
staggering 4.65 million people are now either unemployed or
economically inactive. There are 450,000 households in which no one is
employed. Of the 2.6 million people employed in the private sector in
2010, 900,000 have been laid off. Because the duration of benefits has
been slashed, just 225,000 of the unemployed now receive unemployment
pay.
In the private sector, just 600,000 workers (from a total 1.6
million) now work a regularly paid eight-hour day. Professor Savas
Robolis of the University of Panteion in Athens recently said, “The
remainder—a million workers—have had their hours cut or are getting paid
late, four or five months late. They are in a state of desperation.”
This week’s annual report by the Bank of Greece found that 23 percent
of the population lived below the poverty line in 2012, compared to 16
percent in 2011. Also noted was the exponential increase in child
poverty, with the rate of families at risk reaching 31 percent in just
one year (2010-2011). In the period 2010-2012, the average gross salary
in the country was cut by 20.6 percent and labour costs for employers
decreased by 18.5 percent.
Given the austerity measures already in place, there will be an
overall reduction in labour costs in Greece for the period 2012-2014 of
17.6 percent. So savage are these measures that they are set to surpass
the 15 percent reduction in overall costs demanded by the troika.
Presenting the report, the bank’s chairman, George Provopoulos,
claimed that economic recovery would be achieved by means of austerity
and demanded that even harsher measures be imposed. “Now that the
finishing line is finally visible,” he said, “we ought to intensify
efforts, to quicken our pace to cover the final stretch and ensure that
citizens’ sacrifices have not been in vain…”
Speaking of the victims of these policies, he declared, “Extreme and
unreasonable demands from social groups do not contribute towards this
goal.”
The bank’s report was issued as representatives of the troika once
again converged on Athens to monitor the implementation of the programme
agreed with the New Democracy/PASOK/Democratic Left government.
Among the issues to be settled is how steeply this year’s
pharmaceutical budget is to be slashed. As a result of previous troika
demands, the budget was cut from €3.7 billion to €2.4 billion last year.
Reports suggest it could be cut to €2 billion this year.
With pharmaceutical firms already withholding many drugs, this is a
prescription for a health catastrophe and many needless deaths.
The troika is also set to demand a speedup in the layoff of 25,000
public sector workers this year (half by June) in order to meet the
agreed 150,000 redundancies by 2015. If Athens were to fail to impose
the cuts to the troika’s satisfaction, two tranches of loans for March
and April totalling €8.8 billion would be withheld or much reduced.
Failure to receive the finance would result in Greece defaulting on its
entire debt.
By promising if elected to reverse the austerity programme, SYRIZA
(Coalition of the Radical Left) won nearly 30 percent of the vote in
last year’s election. It is put forward by a host of pseudo-left
organizations as a progressive alternative to the pro-austerity
governing parties and the means for countering the growth of the fascist
Golden Dawn movement.
In reality, SYRIZA is no less a creature of the ruling elite than the
right-wing New Democracy party, and is no less wedded to the austerity
agenda. This week, SYRIZA press spokesman Panos Skourletis stated, “We
do not have a magic wand that will improve and change the situation from
one day to the next… We must realize that with every day this policy is
applied, things grow worse. This devastation is incalculable and,
therefore, restoration of the repercussions of this policy becomes even
more difficult.”
The meaning of such comments—that it is impossible to reverse the
austerity programme—is unmistakable. SYRIZA is readying its arguments
and preparing for what it will be called on to carry out if it achieves
its goal of entering a future anti-working class government.
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