Black Agenda Report
Black Agenda Report
News, commentary and analysis from the black left.

  • Home
  • Africa
  • African America
  • Education
  • Environment
  • International
  • Media and Culture
  • Political Economy
  • Radio
  • US Politics
  • War and Empire

Everything Must Change: Roles Reversed as Western Imperialist’s Gory, Glory Days Come to an End
Jon Jeter
03 Dec 2025
🖨️ Print Article
Macron in Gabon

Europe celebrated defeating fascism in 1945 but immediately resumed its colonial control of the Global South. Now, eighty years later, the West is bankrupt financially and morally and is discovering that colonialism’s bill has finally come due.

The Nazis’ unconditional surrender on May 7, 1945, triggered a bacchanal across the West and parts of the East as millions poured into the streets to celebrate on the following day, singing, dancing, hugging, and famously, kissing.  From Winnipeg to Warsaw, and Chicago to Copenhagen to Cape Town, the jubilation expressed on Victory in Europe Day-- or VE Day as it came to be known—represents a singular, unifying moment for the world community.

The Allies’ victory over fascism did not mean, however, that all fascism was banned, just fascism against white people, as the Algerians quickly discovered on the occasion of VE Day. Five-thousand emboldened Algerians took to the streets of two towns in the country’s north, Sétif and Guelma, to press the French for independence from colonial rule.

The French gendarmerie opened fire on the indigenous dissidents, sparking a nationwide uprising that would plant the seeds for the Algerian resistance and its war against white settler rule nearly a decade later. In a May 11 telegram, General Charles de Gaulle, then head of the provisional French government, instructed the settler government in Algeria:

 “Take all necessary measures to repress all anti-French acts by a minority of agitators.”

When the guns finally fell silent a month later, an estimated 45,000 Algerian civilians lay dead or buried in mass graves, their bodies often cremated so that their next-of-kin could not identify them.

Eighty years after Victory in Europe Day, the world is closing in on a day to commemorate Victory over Europe and its homicidal, kleptocratic settler class.

Everywhere, the evidence of the collective West’s collapse abounds.

Portraying it as a reset of France’s imperialist relationship with Africa, President Emmanuel Macron last week completed a five-day tour of Mauritius, South Africa, Gabon and Angola. Political analysts are keen to note France’s crumbling economy that accrues largely from its lost access to cheap energy from its former colonies in Africa’s Sahel region; in recent years, nationalist governments in Mali, Burkina Faso and Niger have expelled French troops, declaring an end to settler colonialism.

Saddled with higher energy costs, France is forced to borrow more and more money to make ends meet. Servicing its national debt this year will cost French taxpayers $78 billion, more than any government department other than education and defense.

In October, the ratings agency Fitch downgraded French debt, potentially making it more expensive for the French government to borrow. Some economists speculate that France may have to turn to the International Monetary Fund for a bailout similar to Greece in 2013. That context led Wongel Zelalem, a correspondent for the African Diaspora News Channel, to say this last week upon Macron’s return:

“We are calling this (the) ‘begging tour’ because the agenda for this tour that Macron communicated with the world is that he plans to strengthen France’s influence in Africa and we all know why that is. France has been losing popularity in African countries left and right…Chad, Senegal, Cote d’Ivoire, Mali, Burkina Faso, Niger.

Basically, it's losing its grip, its power, its influence. So now Macron has this bright idea to focus on other countries in Africa.”

Also, last week, Britain’s Chancellor of the Exchequer, Rachel Reeves, announced tax increases of nearly $34 billion—mostly on personal income taxes-- by 2030. That follows a tax increase of about $53 billion last year. The UK’s economy is, in fact, more pitiful even than France, registering the second weakest economic performance among the Group of Seven, or G7, countries in the post-pandemic era. Between the final quarter of 2019 and the first quarter of 2024, Gross Domestic Product in the UK grew just 1.7 percent,  compared with 5.1 percent in Canada, and 4.6 percent in Italy, according to government data. Economic growth slowed to an imperceptible 0.1 percent in the quarter ending in September.

Simultaneously, borrowing costs in the UK have skyrocketed, with interest rates on long-term government bonds in September soaring to their highest level in nearly 30 years. In the month of October alone, the UK government borrowed $23 billion to cover its budget deficit.

Central to the West’s financial crisis is the white settler’s illogical—and unsustainable—rent seeking schemes to squeeze more and more money out of workers, particularly people of color, as evidenced by the impending collapse of the subprime auto lending bubble in the U.S. targeting African Americans, just as the subprime housing bubble did nearly 20 years ago.

Concomitantly, the West continues to organize its economies around guns rather than butter to affect a militarized policy of primitive accumulation such as that deployed by France in colonized Algeria. Prodded by the United States’ proxy war in Ukraine, Europe increased its military spending by 17 per cent to $693 billion in 2024. All European countries increased their military spending in 2024 except Malta. Military expenditures by NATO members in 2024 accounted for 55 percent of global spending, or $1506 billion; Europe’s 32 NATO members spent $454 billion in total; 18 spent at least 2 per cent of GDP on weapons in 2024, up from 11 in 2023.

 That is money that could be better spent on affordable housing, healthcare, green technologies and industrial development. This is especially true of Germany, which is Europe’s largest economy. The bombing of Russia’s Nord Stream pipeline cut off Germany’s supply of cheap gas that literally fueled the country’s manufacturing sector. The ensuing increase in energy costs have combined with inflation, increased military spending, growing competition from China and the Trump administration’s tariffs to shrink consumer demand for German products.

Germany shed 120,000 manufacturing jobs in 2024 alone, and a leading trade association, the Federation of German Industries, forecast that industrial production will decline in 2025 for the fourth consecutive year. In a press statement released December 2nd, Peter Liese, president of the Federation, described Germany’s finances as the worst crisis in the postwar era.

Continuing, he said:

This “is not a temporary economic downturn, but a structural decline.”

Western nations on both sides of the Atlantic might take a page from China’s playbook in pursuing a mixed economy–similar, ironically enough, to Franklin D. Rosevelt’s New Deal and its redistributive Keynesian policies– that are capitalist but not imperialist and acknowledge consumer buying power as the key to a sustainable demand economy. But if to a hammer every problem resembles a nail, then to the European imperialist no problem is so great that it can’t be solved with more larceny or more murder. There is not much hope that Western political elites will modernize their systems of deep economic exploitation without being made to do so by organized and populist revolts in their countries. 

Jon Jeter is a former foreign correspondent for the Washington Post. He is the author of Flat Broke in the Free Market: How Globalization Fleeced Working People and the co-author of A Day Late and a Dollar Short: Dark Days and Bright Nights in Obama's Postracial America. His work can be found on Patreon as well as Black Republic Media.

Europe
Fascism
Colonialism
France
United Kingdom
Alliance of Sahel States
Neo-colonialism

Do you need and appreciate Black Agenda Report articles? Please click on the DONATE icon, and help us out, if you can.


Related Stories

Margaret Kimberley, BAR Executive Editor and Senior Columnist
Racist, Imperialist U.S. Vassal Denmark Now Cries Over Greenland
21 January 2026
Donald Trump and other U.S. presidents are gangsters who will sometimes steal from their own crew.
​​​​​​​ Ajamu Baraka, BAR editor and columnist
Lifting the Veil on International Human Rights Day: How Gaza Exposed the Oxymoron of Western Values and Human Rights
10 December 2025
The genocide in Gaza has torn off the West’s human rights mask.
Brahim Rouabah , Corinna Mullin
On the Coloniality of Solidarity: Iran, Imperialist Aggression, and the Western Left’s Blind Spot
03 December 2025
The 'pure' leftism of the Western academy denounces Iran's state while ignoring its real crime: defying imperialism.
​​​​​​​ Ajamu Baraka, BAR editor and columnist
United Nations Security Council Resolution on Gaza is a Surrender to U.S. Led Global Fascism
26 November 2025
By approving a U.S.
Editors, The Black Agenda Review
ESSAY: Europe's Other Self, Stuart Hall, 1991
19 November 2025
“The story of European identity is often told as if it had no exterior.”
Gary Wilson
Palestinians Reject U.S.–Backed U.N. Plan: ‘A new form of occupation’
19 November 2025
The so-called 'peace plan' resolution passed by the UN Security Council is nothing more than a newly branded occupation and the Palestinian peo
​​​​​​​ Ajamu Baraka, BAR editor and columnist
Fascism Born in the Colonies, Not Europe
05 November 2025
Europe refined fascism in its colonies long before bringing the model home.
Clau O'Brien Moscoso
Peru's Executive in Crisis: The Anti-Democratic Legacy of Fujimori's '93 Constitution
29 October 2025
Peru's congress has perfected the art of the constitutional coup, disposing of presidents the moment their usefulness expires.
Margaret Kimberley, BAR Executive Editor and Senior Columnist
"Left" Except for Haiti
08 October 2025
The latest interference from the United Nations ensures that Haiti’s “gang” problem will continue and that its cause, an illegitimate
​​​​​​​ Ajamu Baraka, BAR editor and columnist
Trump “Peace Plan” A Cynical Cover to Continue Campaign of Palestinian Extermination
01 October 2025
The so-called "peace deal" does not offer peace; it demands surrender.

More Stories


  • Anthony Rogers-Wright
    Preserving the Legacy of Martin Luther King and The Black Radical Tradition Requires Saving Both from the Congressional Black Caucus More than from white moderates and white supremacists (Or, I said what I said)
    21 Jan 2026
    Preserving the Black Radical Tradition demands struggle not only against white supremacists, but also against the co-opted Black political class who actively support the very evils Dr. King named.
  • Mark P. Fancher
    A Role for Africans In Exile: “Revolutionaries at Large”
    21 Jan 2026
    Africans in the U.S. must weaponize their position and sabotage imperial projects from the inside. Black revolutionaries must modify traditional strategy.
  • Jamal Abdulahi
    Saudi Arabia Asserts Dominant Role in the Horn of Africa and the Red Sea 
    21 Jan 2026
    Israel's recognition of a breakaway region in Somalia has redrawn the map of the Horn of Africa, pitting two oil-rich Gulf powers against each other and forcing the U.S. to delay its imperial plans…
  • Monique Welch-Rutherford
    This Texas County Is the Deadliest Place in the U.S. for Black Mothers to Give Birth
    21 Jan 2026
    Harris County, home to a world-renowned medical center, holds the worst maternal death rate for Black women in the entire nation. This staggering statistic represents a systemic failure that subjects…
  • x
    Orinoco Tribune
    Venezuela Rejects CIA Award Rumors While President Maduro’s Son Sparks Backlash Over Comments Suggesting to Resume Diplomatic Ties with ‘Israel’
    21 Jan 2026
    Venezuela's official stance remains one of principled anti-imperialism. Internal discussions reflect the complex realities of navigating a crisis.
  • Load More
Subscribe
connect with us
about us
contact us