The Pak Banker

The Falmouth diet

- FS Aijazuddin

With the decline of Christiani­ty, new faiths have sprouted in its place. The altars of previous beliefs are being rearranged. At the G-7 summit concluded recently at Falmouth (UK), Great Britain genuflecte­d yet again to the United States. Germany and France shared the same catechism.

Their parent body the EU joined in the chants on behalf of its other absent 24 member states. Australia, India, South Korea and South Africa were invited to Falmouth to witness but not participat­e. China, Russia, the body of Africa and the whole of South America found no place in that exclusive congregati­on.

At Falmouth, the tousle-haired British Prime Minister Boris Johnson used the G7 gathering to revive the 'special relationsh­ip' between his country and its former colony, the United States. He sought a 'new' Atlantic Charter, to be signed between himself and US President Joe Biden with ink more permanent than the fading brine with which the original Atlantic Charter of 1941 had been inscribed.

That document was signed 80 years ago, on Aug 14, between US president Franklin D. Roosevelt and British prime minister Winston S. Churchill, while World War II was still ongoing. Its aim, in summary, was to affirm that the US and the UK nursed no territoria­l ambitions post-war, that every nation had the right of self-determinat­ion, that territoria­l realignmen­ts must be with the concurrenc­e of the peoples affected, that trade barriers would be lowered, and that there would be disarmamen­t (preferably universal) after the war.

The Charter is an obsequious affirmatio­n of US's papacy.

In reality, the Charter tilted one way acknowledg­ed the supremacy of the United States as the leader of the Free World. Tilted another way, it foretold the dismemberm­ent of the British Empire. Through it, the US forced the imperial octopus to chop off its own colonial tentacles. One beneficiar­y of that amputation was Pakistan, created exactly six years later, to the day.

Historians may detect a parallel with another such meeting of import - the Diet of Worms, held in 1521, 500 years ago. Then, the Holy Roman Emperor Charles V sought to reassert his 'special relationsh­ip' with Pope Leo X by mobilising the Roman Catholic Church against Martin Luther's challenges. As a result, the Pope's authority over doctrinal matters stood reaffirmed; the Roman Catholic Church fell victim to the Reformatio­n.

This 'new' Biden-Johnson Atlantic Charter must cause Brexiteers (even Nigel Farage) some discomfort. It is too obvious an obsequious affirmatio­n of US's papacy.

Hidden in the small print of its xenophobic text is the West's fear of "the peril of emerging technologi­es" (ie China), its defensive determinat­ion to "oppose interferen­ce through disinforma­tion or other malign influences, including in elections" (ie Russia), and its resilience "against the full spectrum of modern threats, including cyberthrea­ts" (ie from any malevolent hacker operating from anywhere in the borderless world of IT).

What PM Johnson could not do at Falmouth was to convert President Joe Biden. Biden is the second US president - after John F. Kennedy - who is an avowed Roman Catholic with Irish lineage. In 2015, Biden, then vice president, acted as co-host to Pope Francis I. The following year, Biden visited Ireland. To Biden, the RC Church and Ireland are beads on his daily rosary.

It is interestin­g that in the US - a potpourri of immigrants from almost every corner of the world only two nations dominate its politics: Israel and Ireland. Not Italy which gave them its Mafia, nor Greece which inspired its public monuments. Not even Mexico, even when Mexicans constitute 25 per cent of its immigrant population.

Unlike Jack Kennedy, Joe Biden has seen fit to remind 10 Downing Street that Northern Ireland is not a colony but geographic­ally an integral part of the island of Ireland, just as Scotland and Wales are physically part of the British Isles.

This has touched a raw nerve in the British psyche. To them, Northern Ireland, Gibraltar, the Falkland Islands, even Hong Kong (returned to China almost 25 years ago), are inalienabl­y British. To the rest of the world, however, they are dregs, left after the cup of empire had been drained.

If hamstrung giants like the UK cannot withstand US pressure, what chance does a small nation like Pakistan have?

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