We live in an upside-down world. The leaders of the richer nations, the old colonial powers, want to rehabilitate the language of imperialism: praise for their past, and a desire to repeat that messianism in the present.

Meanwhile, the peoples of the poorer nations agitate for peace and development, as well as for an apology for the crimes of colonialism and reparations for the plunder carried out during that period. The slogan from the people is simple: ‘Justice must come’. It rumbles now but will grow louder with time.

When officials from the United States come to Europe to talk about geopolitics, senior European officials listen intently. Last year, at the Munich Security Conference, U.S. Vice President J.D. Vance scolded the Europeans for what he called a crisis “of our own making.”

He was rebuked for being insolent toward European democracy, which he chastised for being insufficiently attentive to the ‘issue’ of migration and for being overly concerned about the rise of the far right of a special type.

European newspapers, from The Guardian to Le Monde, criticised Vance for his insolence.

However, most of the senior liberal European officials – from the European Union’s High Representative for Foreign Affairs Kaja Kallas to NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte – bowed their heads and said that Europe would do well to meet the goals set by the United States for military spending.

This drive for militarisation has gone hand in hand with a steady capitulation to the far right.