Boris Johnson and Joe Biden, G7 Summit 2021 Boris Johnson and Joe Biden, G7 Summit 2021. Photo: Andrew Parsons / No 10 Downing Street / Flickr / CC BY-NC-ND 2.0, license linked at bottom of article

All the talk of solving the world’s problems at the G7 summit is just that – all talk, says Lindsey German

This weekend sees the world’s most powerful leaders gathering in Cornwall for the G7 summit. With US president Joe Biden in Britain, we are being met with the usual claims that these people are meeting to solve the many problems facing the world. The truth is rather different.

The world system is faced with huge challenges – the pandemic, climate change, inequality and poverty, war and militarism. Yet we know that despite much fine talk about dealing with such issues both past performance and present promises do not augur well. After all the 2005 G8 summit in Gleneagles, Scotland, promised to make poverty history and nearly 20 years later poverty is worse. The limited promise of G7 finance ministers to make multinationals pay more taxes, made only last week, is already being kicked against both in the US and the City of London. So we should be highly sceptical about the grandiose claims which will issue from Joe Biden, Boris Johnson and the rest over the next few days. Their pledges to deal with climate change, promote international justice, end war and curb the power of the multinationals, will amount to little.

One key area of debate at the G7 will be international issues. Here the grouping is likely to spend much time talking about Russia, which it talks up as a major threat but whose military power is slim compared to that of the US alone, leaving aside the other military powers in the G7. In reality, Biden knows this but is still prepared to use the supposed threat. While we recognise a new cold war over China we should not forget that the old cold war is still in place with Russia. Biden’s presidency is hawkish over this issue and over its support for the right-wing government in Ukraine against Russia.

Despite there being a summit between Biden and Putin following the G7, there is likely to be at least a lot of rhetoric against the ‘Russian threat’ and increased commitment to military spending and deployment near Russia’s borders. The meeting of Nato in Brussels which Biden will also attend next week will echo these themes. Nato troops are now stationed and doing exercises right up to the Russian border. Nato is demanding a strengthening of its resources and enlargement of its membership.

Biden will also be trying to garner support for his new cold war with China, particularly from European leaders. China as a growing economic and military rival is a real threat to US hegemony and power, and the US fears that its trade with other countries threatens US dominance.

The Middle East will also be a major focus, especially given the recent uprising of the Palestinians which has upset all the calculations both of Netanyahu (now to be replaced as prime minister by even more right-wing Naftali Bennett) and of Biden himself, who essentially kept in place many of the policies introduced by Trump and who refused for several days to back a ceasefire through the UN.

Boris Johnson is claiming that he doesn’t want talk of a special relationship between the US and Britain because this tends to belittle Britain and suggest that it does not have an independent role. The truth however is that it doesn’t have such a role and is totally in lockstep as a very junior partner with the US – witness the US planes and troops on the new aircraft carrier’s maiden voyage to the South China Sea.

There is much to protest about at the G7, but politicians and police have done their best to curtail such activities. Policing the summit in Cornwall is costing a staggering £70 million. Roads have been closed for miles around, and the homeless moved out of hotels to make way for police and staff. They have allocated specific ‘protest zones’ miles away from the gathering, which are quite rightly being ignored by many protesters. In London a major protest about Palestine will focus on Downing Street while the G7 is on – given the role of Biden and Johnson in supporting Israel this is the key question of international justice. Stop the War will be part of these protests and of the No to Nato events in Brussels.

The summit only highlights that war, militarism, environmental destruction, poverty and global inequality are hardwired into the system. So there is much to protest about.

Reposted from Stop the War

Before you go

Counterfire is growing faster than ever before

We need to raise £20,000 as we are having to expand operations. We are moving to a bigger, better central office, upping our print run and distribution, buying a new printer, new computers and employing more staff.

Please give generously.

Lindsey German

As national convenor of the Stop the War Coalition, Lindsey was a key organiser of the largest demonstration, and one of the largest mass movements, in British history.

Her books include ‘Material Girls: Women, Men and Work’, ‘Sex, Class and Socialism’, ‘A People’s History of London’ (with John Rees) and ‘How a Century of War Changed the Lives of Women’.