Countries can leverage their diaspora populations as strategic assets in international negotiations by using the threat of exposing mistreatment to gain political leverage, as demonstrated by Syria's claim that migrants in Germany are a strategic asset, which creates a complex diplomatic situation where host countries face political pressure from both their own opposition parties and the diaspora's home country.
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Syria Calls Migrants In Germany A Strategic Asset
Added:Ooh, what happened here?
Apparently, Syria calls uh migrants in Germany a strategic asset. Uh isn't uh Syria upset that it's losing its strength? Right? Cuz like diversity is our strength, and now the strength belongs to Germany. And if anything, like Syria should be panicking. It's like our doctors, our engineers, our human capital. Like, why are you keeping them there? Give them back.
But no, Syria is uh calling the migrants a strategic asset.
In reality, where's the lie?
Like, how is the Syrian president lying about this? Because what does it mean it's a strategic asset? Well, it means that the migrants over there >> [snorts] >> they're going to send money back home.
So, either they have jobs in Germany or they get welfare, they're going to send money back home.
If you oppress them, Syria can go and have the victim narrative and be, you know, look look how awful Germany is.
Oh, it's bringing back the past, and all the leftists get energized. Right? So, like, if the government oppresses the Syrian migrants, all of a sudden the Greens, the Left, you know, they they rise in the polls.
And uh there's also the fact that uh they are a strategic asset in the sense that uh they get to follow, you know, the Syrian policy.
Uh this is something that the Turkish government has also said. I don't know how many of you follow international law, but Erdogan genuinely said it's like yes, like people like Turkish individuals in the UK like they will follow Turkish interests.
Why? Because they have relatives and family members in Turkey.
The Turkish government gets to push its policy and its ideology on the people in Turkey, which in exchange push the policy and ideology uh to the people in the UK that happen to be Turkish nationalists.
Like, obviously, if I was a world leader that is looking at his nation as a power base? Like, yes, they they absolutely are a strategic asset. Like, you historically speaking, uh this was also the best way to have cause belli in Europe.
So, you encourage migration to happen, or migrants just happen to be there, and all of a sudden, OH, GOODNESS GRACIOUS, OUR OUR MIGRANTS, OUR OUR OUR ethnical people are oppressed. We need to go to war to liberate them. Huh? You guys Have you heard this before? Last time we heard it was from Russia, right? But, Germany also during World War II. It's a European tradition, actually. When you want to make up a cause belli, and you don't really have anything concrete, they're oppressing our ethnical people.
We need to go and RESCUE THEM. BRING THE TANKS. Bring the planes. Bring the genocide.
Uh and so, obviously, like, Syria is not going to invade Germany, right? Uh but, as I mentioned, it is uh a good way of having political leverage. Like, you can discuss with the German government, and you can be uh Schulz.
Or, sorry, Merz. Yeah, not not Schulz.
Merz. My brother in Muhammad. Uh Do what we want, or we start crying. And if we start crying, your political opponents on the left start winning.
Right? So, all the abuses that you're doing against our poor Syrian migrants, oh, it would be a shame if someone was to expose them.
This is how the policy works, right?
So, it puts Germany in an interesting uh conundrum, because uh the German way of doing politics is like this. They ignore the opposition until they can't. So, uh if we turn time back to the moment that Germany decided to destroy its uh nuclear power stations, uh you would notice that the left, the environmentalist left, were treated as fringe lunatics. Like, these were the guys that were championing pedophilia.
I'm not kidding. You can look it up.
Uh they wanted a scandal. Like, they operated kindergartens and Seriously, this is like don't look at me like I'm a crazy person. Like, Google it.
Green Party Germany pedophilia scandal.
Press enter, see what comes up.
Uh and because of that, they were marginalized. They were treated as mentally ill people, right?
But then, you have the Fukushima incident, and the environmentalists actually managed to uh sway public opinion.
And Merkel's party, realizing that uh she's going to lose the next elections, what she does is she steals the environmentalist platform.
And she generally shuts down the reactors. But, she remains in power, right? Uh and so, this is uh Germany's way of doing business as politics, right? Like, they will be for migration until they realize that the AfD is actually getting uh too much in power.
And when that happens, the next move is to uh steal the AfD's platform.
And all of a sudden, you'll see that Merkel's is actually for deportations.
The problem is that deportations is not so simple, right? It's a very that like a lot of right-wingers, like people that genuinely and sincerely wanted deportations, when they actually have to do them, they realize that it's a little bit more difficult. Why is it more difficult?
Well, you have an army of activists and lawyers that will challenge almost every single deportation, but that's not even the the worst part. The The worst part is deport them where?
Where are you deporting them? Like, what happens if Syria doesn't want them?
Like, how how do you force them to return to Syria? What what exactly do you do? Do you teleport them there?
Like, no. Do you fly a plane a commercial plane over there? They shoot you.
Right? Like, the Syrian government doesn't have the same principles and the same compassion and human rights like Germany does. What What even if they don't shoot you, they arrest your people.
It's Syria, right? Like you you send individuals to fly a plane over there with uh refugees, they land at the airport, they arrest your people, and they seize the plane as well.
Uh the boats, same thing. They can seize the boats, and they arrest your people.
By the way, like Germany could also do this. Well, not Germany cuz it's not uh Uh but the UK, right? Like if the UK genuinely didn't want immigration, like if [snorts] they were like, "Okay, no more illegal immigration."
They would arrest everyone on the boat, especially the driver of the boat, and seize the boat.
Right? And like after you arrest thousands of drivers, eventually they get the message.
Uh Syria would do this, right? So, uh the president of Syria, yes, apparently does have a president now. [laughter] Who voted for him, by the way? Huh?
Did the Syrian people vote?
He's basically saying he doesn't want deportations. Now, uh this could be um interesting move. Number one, >> [snorts] >> the move is uh a negotiation tactic. Like he is willing to get deportations, but he's showing uh the German Chancellor that uh look, you don't really have anything. Like I I you don't have the cards.
[clears throat] I have all the cards.
You don't have the cards. So, like what are you going to give me?
Uh or the second, what he generally doesn't want his people back. Now, the reason that he should want his people back uh [snorts] is because the people fled the previous regime, right? And now he is uh the person bringing stability and order, allegedly.
>> [snorts] >> And so, uh the people want to come back to the homes that they grew up in, right? Like he's like, "Nah, you guys are now a strategic asset."
Uh the reality with the asylum law should be like that, yes? Like you have a natural disaster, you're fleeing it, and then you once the disaster is over and there is no more disaster, you're supposed to return.
That's not what we're seeing here.
Well, anyway, uh Germany is indeed in a conundrum. Uh We'll see what happens.
Probably uh the AfD is going to get more votes.
And when the AfD goes in power, it will encounter this exact similar scenario.
Let me know what you guys think, and as usual, we'll see each other in the comment section.
Take care.
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