The Brexit of Britain, which
 is one of those Great European Imperial Powers that once had an empire and 
therefore it has a historic tendency to think in an imperialist manner 
and with a superiority complex. 
by Alex Naughton, editing by Earl of Cruise 
One star left the European Union
Britain for example had a superiority complex over its colonies such as
 Africa, South East Asia and the Middle East and native peoples of 
Australia and New Zealand for example. However this perceived 
superiority is misguided and wrong. All peoples are equal
 and every perspective has their opinion and that is at the heart of 
free speech and our values.
Our
 traditional distrust of China in the West is also perhaps misguided and
 clouded by our imperial mindset and superiority complex. Many of the 
European powers and America had
 trading posts / colonies in China for many years but were thrown out 
after the Opium Wars. Some countries such as Britain retained some 
territory such as Hong Kong. But this historic trauma clouded their 
perception. Since the opening up of China in the 1970s,
 despite being called the Communist Party, they have been on a 
transition towards a Chinese version of Capitalism but without the 
adverse impacts of Western Capitalism. Their governance system remains 
very centralised and state orientated but this enables them
 to plan long term and transition their economy in a very managed way. 
So arguably their economy and outlook is more capitalist than you may 
first imagine. Perhaps the Communist Party is just a political party and
 so communist in name only. President Xi recently
 at the World Economic Forum surprisingly gave a speech promoting 
globalisation and capitalism calling on countries around the world to 
stand up to rising nationalism and protectionism. A major plank of 
China's economic policy is reaching out through its One
 Road One Belt policy to create a New Silk Road to Europe, South East 
Asia and Russia. Likewise they have set up various banking and financial
 institutions to support these strategic policies and they continue to 
invest heavily in infrastructure and other activities
 in many parts of the world including Africa and elsewhere. So they 
arguably are Global China. Yes there may be scope for tension with the 
USA and Japan over certain policy positions such as South China Sea and 
so on, but China is a growing economic, political
 and military power on the world stage so there may be benefits to 
keeping a more open mind on them.
The British Empire 1915 - Source: britishempire.co.uk
Indeed
 many of the problems today in the Middle East date back to the period 
of the First World War when the Ottoman Empire was collapsing (a 
protectorate of Britain) and was being
 carved up by Britain and France. 
The construction of the Hedsha Railway and the Bagdad Railway supported and financed by the Deutsches Kaiserreich and German Banks, and the financial support by the German gouvernment, was a threat to British interests in and with the Ottoman Empire.
by Earl Cruise 
Sykes and Picot divided up the Middle 
East into British and French areas behind the backs of the Arabs. 
Through this the boundaries of the modern Middle East were created and 
all the modern day national flags were designed
 as well. It also promised Russia that it could give them Istanbul to 
maintain Russia's access to its naval bases in Crimea from the 
Mediterranean. While Britain's concern was to maintain the sea route to 
India via the Suez Canal and an overland route to India
 via Istanbul and Baghdad to Basra and then by sea through Persian Gulf.
 The French likewise wanted to protect their sea route to Indo China via
 Suez. Also another big factor was oil. The only international area on 
this map was Palestine. This was the first
 promise. The second was when Britain promised the Arab peoples a single
 nation covering the whole Middle East from modern Turkey south to 
modern Yemen. However all these promises were rescinded upon for the 
imperial interests of Britain and France. France
 got much of North Africa and Lebanon and Syria. Britain got the rest 
including Egypt, Jordan, Saudi Arabia, Yemen, Aden, United Arab 
Emirates, Oman, Bahrain, Qatar, Palestine, Iraq and Iran as "mandates" 
under agreement with the UN. Yet these were in effect
 colonies as Britain didn't feel that the Arab peoples were well trained
 enough to govern themselves yet (despite agreeing with their wish for 
independence) so felt the need to rule them as colonies for a period to 
teach them how to govern. In the 1920s Turkey
 rebelled against the European powers and Ataturk created the Republic 
of Turkey as a secular state thereby also shunning the Arabs as well. 
The third promise that Britain made under pressure from the Rothschild 
family was the Balfour Declaration which declared
 Britain's intent to support the formation of a Jewish state somewhere 
in the Middle East. This last promise was the only one implemented with 
the creation of Israel after the Second World War partly to give 
Britain's allies such as America and Russia something
 to gain from at the end of the Second World War thereby keeping them 
interested and involved in the war effort. 
These
 three "promises" especially the Sykes Picot Agreement are the root 
causes of the problems in the Middle East today. Imperial "superiority 
complexes" by Britain and France
 not willing to understand that the Arabs may know how to govern 
themselves or wish to have independence without being under their 
imperial rule. Also Britain then was driven by a strong imperial intent 
to maintain a sea route to India via the Suez Canal as
 well as an overland route to India via Istanbul, Baghdad and Basra then
 ship through Persian Gulf to India. This imperial legacy is also why 
Britain has long relationships with countries such as Egypt, Jordan, 
United Arab Emirates, Oman, Bahrain, Qatar and
 Saudi Arabia despite their authoritarian regimes. 
The
 imperial legacy of Britain also informs the underlying reasoning 
perhaps why BREXIT occurred and Britain's sometimes indecisive attitude 
towards the European Union. The British
 culture and history has ingrained in its people an imperial legacy 
including firstly a dislike of the word "Constitution" perhaps due to 
the historic trauma of America leaving the British Empire. This has led 
to an adverse reaction when the European Union
 suggested a written constitution and also perhaps is why Britain 
doesn't have a written constitution yet historically has written the 
basis to many constitutions for countries around the world! 
Secondly,
 in history Britain has been invaded from the European Continent 
including by the Vikings, Romans and Normans. This has ingrained a 
slight wariness towards the European
 Continent therefore informing perhaps out "in and out" relationship 
with the European Union. 
Also
 thirdly we have been very allergic to the idea of a federal superstate 
of the European Union perhaps due to the comparison with becoming the 
United States of America but instead
 a United States of Europe. Britain has been used to being an imperial 
power of its own so doesn't perhaps like becoming subsumed under a 
superstate of the European Union as the comparison with the USA then 
becomes too close for comfort. 
Fourthly
 there is perhaps some hint of disquiet due to the current dominance of 
Germany in the European Union both economically and politically which 
some Brits may find strange
 considering the situation around 70 years ago. Yet times change and 
countries change. Germany certainly has changed in that 70 years and 
today is an exemplar of a modern, liberal, democratic and open democracy
 which strongly upholds international values and
 freedoms. Indeed it perhaps is more cautious than many about its role 
on the world stage or any leadership due to its own turbulent history as
 it is only too aware of the consequences if its leadership goes wrong. 
Lastly
 Britain is an island nation and was centre of a global empire therefore
 tends to think as an island and globally. It is very internationalist 
in outlook because of its history
 and imperial legacy. 
The
 UK arguably is an empire of England in some ways. Wales was the 
earliest "colony" of England following the submission of the Welsh 
through King Edward I and his great Welsh
 Castles. Scotland was next beginning with the death of Queen Elizabeth I
 and succession of the Scottish king to the English throne as James I. 
Eventually the Act of Union was signed after the Scottish imperial 
misadventure which was the Darien Scheme which
 bankrupted Scotland causing them to have to be bailed out by England 
thereby leading to the Act of Union. Indeed the English imperial legacy 
is at the heart of the Irish Troubles due to mistreatment of the 
Catholics of Ulster since Elizabethan times and imposition
 and colonisation of Ulster with English and Scottish protestants. This 
led to distrust of Catholics back in England due to propaganda. Under 
King James I the crowns of England, Scotland and Ireland were united for
 the first time. Ulster was a pawn in the great
 battle for control of England in the Jacobite period after the fall of 
King James II. This religious strife continued until the 20th century 
eventually leading to Irish independence expect for the more Protestant 
dominated Northern Ireland. Thereby leading
 to the continuing troubles there until the Good Friday Agreement. 
However the BREXIT challenge could question the United Kingdom and its 
future as a country as there is a risk of break up particularly with 
Scotland and Northern Ireland.
As I keep saying we must not be complacent just because the status quo is currently that doesn't mean it will always be that.
Due
 to its imperial legacy Britain is a very multicultural and 
cosmopolitan country and welcoming to refugees and migrants from all 
over the world. Indeed every nation is a nation
 of migrants and refugees and Britain is a typical example of this fact.
 So turning our back on such groups is wrong and goes against our 
history as a human race. We are as a species are "Out of Africa" so we 
are all migrants really. Hence perhaps our yearning
 to look beyond just Europe and have relationships and trade all over 
the world. We also have a close bond with the USA and countries of the 
Commonwealth due to the legacy of the British Empire as well as being an
 inherently and geographically European country
 (we are Anglo-Saxon, Celtic, Viking, Roman, Norman, French, 
Scottish, Dutch, German, etc). 
But
 because of the EU we feel or have the perception of being constrained 
in this currently hence the wish to break free and become a global 
nation again despite us always being
 this through our history and it never having gone away.  This despite 
many of the benefits of the European Union such as the single market 
being British inspired. Indeed it was Churchill who first called for a 
United States of Europe in gathering gloom of
 the Cold War as the Iron Curtain fell across Europe. After the Second 
World War it was the imperial mindset of Britain and Russia that carved 
up Europe with many of the countries in the East being given up to 
communist rule under Russia's Soviet Union and
 Stalin. At that time it was the dominance of the Big Three - Britain, 
America and Russia that ruled the world. The occupation of Germany and 
Japan by these powers also led to their rise to economic dominance in 
more recent years as well. They were so destroyed
 that they had to work hard and rebuild from scratch. It is worth 
remembering that much of today's global order was created as a legacy of
 the Second World War by Britain and America including the World Bank, 
NATO and the United Nations. 
But
 the perception of the British people regarding the EU appears to be of 
interference and rule by Brussels thereby leading to the fear that we 
are being ruled as a colony of the
 European collective which as outlined above seems too close for comfort
 to the United States of America - the colony that escaped from the 
British Empire. We don't like being ruled by others it seems!
I
 feel that these points are at the root of our philosophy as a nation 
and culture as well as perhaps informing our BREXIT decision. When 
negotiating and developing our new role
 in the world these points would be worth keeping in mind. They are at 
our core as a nation.
I
 think it is important to learn the lessons of our history but also take
 inspiration and joy from our history to build the future.
Alex


Comments
Post a Comment