The Peter Zeihan Podcast Series - Assassination Attempt on Slovakia's Prime Minister Fico || Peter Zeihan
Episode Date: May 17, 2024On Wednesday May 15, there was an assassination attempt on Slovakia's Prime Minister, Robert Fico. At the time of recording, the PM was still in critical condition and there's no clear political group... or foreign entity claiming responsibility. Full Newsletter: https://mailchi.mp/zeihan/assassination-attempt-on-slovakias-prime-minister
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Hey everyone, Peter Zine here coming to you from the new airport in Berlin.
It is sleek, it is efficient, it is secure.
It's amazing.
For those of you have been to the U.S. airport in Charlotte, you know what I'm talking about here.
It's the opposite of that.
Anyway, the news today is that Robert Fico, the prime minister of Slovakia,
has been the target of an assassination attempt.
It's too early to know if he's going to live, although he did make it through the night.
At the moment, while it does look that like the attack was politically motivated,
it doesn't seem to involve a formal political grouping or a foreign country,
so at least we have that going for us.
But I honestly can't remember the last time that a sitting political leader
was the target of an assassination attempt in Europe.
What we're seeing here is a combination of personality politics and economic politics
and geopolitics all mashed together to make an increasingly volatile situation.
There's no perfect.
comparison to any other country, Slovakia, is its own thing. So let me just kind of give you
the rundown of how we got to where we are. Robert Fico started out as somebody who was desperate
to get into the communist hierarchy during the Cold War, and he had just finished training
when the Cold War ended, and all of a sudden he found himself adrifted a new system. And unlike
a lot of the other countries in Central Europe, who immediately surged towards the European
Union and NATO, Slovakia took a few years to figure out what it wanted to.
to do. The issue is that Slovakia used to be part of Czechoslovakia. And when the Czechs and the
Slovaks had their political divorce back in 1993, Slovakia, kind of the rump state, the poorer
part, was adrift. And a lot of people in rural Slovakia specifically were really upset with
what had gone down. Because at the time, their part of the country, charged word, was a little
but socialist, but it's like Venezuelan socialist, where there's a lot of crony activity and a lot of
theft. And so you had people in a relatively economically depressed area who were dependent upon the
state for their livelihood. Well, when the Czech Republic separated, they took most of the industrialized
part of the country with them, leaving behind Bratislava, the largest city, and then a large swath of
people who were more rural. So it is generally considered to be the most rural.
of the countries in Europe with about half the population still living in very small towns
or on farms.
And so you get this urban, rural split where the urbanites were desperate to follow the checks
and the rest of Central Europe into NATO and EU structures to join modern Europe, where you
had half the population living in a relatively depressed area, wanting to go the other direction
and yearning for strongman rule and a state handout.
So basically, Euro socialism on one hand, Venezuela.
socialism on the other. Into this, Robert Fico comes. And as you have seen in the United States,
with the Trumpists, rural folks who are angry, regardless of why they are angry, can be a potent
political force. And unlike the United States, where the populist conservative rural group is
less than a fifth of the population, here they're closer to half. So the sort of vitriol that we've
seen in the United States in the last five years, that has existed in
Slovakian politics for the past 35 years.
And Fico has eroded that over and over and over again.
That doesn't mean that the Europeanists in Slovakia have been great because the bad blood
started so long ago.
And because the economic split is so deep, we've seen an ossification of really, really
rough politics on both sides of the Slovak political aisle.
It's kind of like if you let morally vacuous gun nuts like Lauren Bobart be the media personalities on both sides.
And that has eventually generated a culture of political violence in the country that has now resulted in a shooting of the prime minister.
Probably. We're assuming at the moment that there's not any foreign intervention in this.
If that changes, I will be recording a very different video.
