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Au Revoir Britannia by Sylvie Bermann sampler

From her unique perspective as former French ambassador to the UK, Sylvie Bermann examines the mistruths told by politicians surrounding the fateful 2016 Brexit referendum. Au Revoir Britannia asks the question ‘How did this happen?’ and exposes what she sees as the ‘unrepenting’ and ‘inveterate’ lies of the now pm, Boris Johnson. This first English edition includes a new preface exploring the future of post-Brexit Europe and Britain, and the uncertain implications of the Russian invasion of Ukraine.

From her unique perspective as former French ambassador to the UK, Sylvie Bermann examines the mistruths told by politicians surrounding the fateful 2016 Brexit referendum. Au Revoir Britannia asks the question ‘How did this happen?’ and exposes what she sees as the ‘unrepenting’ and ‘inveterate’ lies of the now pm, Boris Johnson. This first English edition includes a new preface exploring the future of post-Brexit Europe and Britain, and the uncertain implications of the Russian invasion of Ukraine.

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introduction<br />

same Asian values as opposed to the perceived individualism of<br />

Westerners. But unlike China, they did not link them to any particular<br />

political system.<br />

For its part, Beijing considers that the superiority of its<br />

authoritarian regime has been proved and that these values<br />

are embodied in the Communist Party, which is totally at one<br />

with Xi Jinping’s vision of China. This is in no way a Communist<br />

ideal, but a system of reinforced internal control of a<br />

Leninist variety designed to win and retain power above all<br />

else. We are very far from the Cherno<strong>by</strong>l effect predicted <strong>by</strong> the<br />

Western press at the beginning of the pandemic, since the perestroika<br />

(restructuring) and glasnost (openness) which resulted<br />

from that event were analysed in Beijing as the reason why<br />

the Soviet Union exploded and why the Communist Party disappeared.<br />

May God, Mao or the Yellow Emperor save China<br />

from such a fate! When Xi Jinping was the party’s school director,<br />

the collapse of the USSR was regarded as a case study, the<br />

conclusion being that everything must be done to prevent the<br />

same thing happening in China.<br />

On the international scene, China will no doubt continue<br />

with its vision of power and the preservation of its interests,<br />

now present in most of the world. The ambitious project of<br />

establishing new silk roads will remain at the heart of its international<br />

policy, despite the inevitable temporary hold because<br />

of the post-COVID economic crisis. The increasing involvement<br />

of Beijing in the United Nations system, which the West sees as<br />

‘entryism’, will also continue. This is not illegitimate, whatever<br />

is said about it, except in the case of Interpol, when its Chinese<br />

president was recalled to Beijing in somewhat mysterious circumstances<br />

and convicted of corruption. It is a logical development<br />

for the world’s second power, which for so long remained<br />

on the margins of the system monopolised <strong>by</strong> the West, and has<br />

significantly increased its contributions at the request of those<br />

same Western countries that had also regularly expressed the<br />

wish that China would take on more responsibilities.<br />

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