Friday 21 February 2025

Inside today’s Minute:

Good morning, guete morge, ohayo and welcome to The Monocle Minute, coming to you from the desks of our editors at Midori House in London and our bureaux in Asia. Be sure to tune in to The Globalist on Monocle Radio at 07.00 London time (that’s 16.00 in Tokyo) for news and views to start your day. Here’s what’s coming up:

THE OPINION: Syria welcomes traffic headache
BUSINESS: German brands back immigration
OVERHEARD AT…: Global Soft Power Summit 2025
DESIGN: Birkenstocks aren’t art
Q&A: Anwar Mohammed Gargash, former UAE foreign affairs minister

The Opinion: Affairs

The Opinion

Traffic jams are a positive sign on Syria’s road to freedom

Every road and roundabout here in the centre of Damascus is crammed with lines of cars that mingle, sometimes flow and most often come to a horn-blaring standstill. But in the new Syria, traffic means freedom. The capital’s roads were usually empty during the twilight years of Bashar al-Assad’s rule as petrol prices soared, wages plummeted and normal Damascenes took to using bicycles to get around. But since the collapse of the old regime, cars have become one of the most popular purchases for Syrians: the country’s new rulers have lifted import bans and lowered taxes. As a result, scores of vehicles have flowed in over the past month. This motorised chaos is compounded by the fact that new traffic police have only just been appointed.

Getting into gear: Traffic in Damascus

Image: Getty Images

Damascus is a city in transition. The flags of the old regime have been painted over and replaced with the new three-starred ensign of Free Syria, while anything showing Assad’s face has been torn down or vandalised. Workers are repainting buildings and replanting parks. Dollars are now traded openly; under Assad, people might have disappeared to jail for the mere mention of the US currency. These small freedoms were unimaginable just three months ago and Syrians are taking full advantage.

But the task ahead is huge. While central Damascus escaped the fighting that has destroyed huge swaths of the country, it is still blighted by frequent electricity outages and patchy internet coverage. The city has the look you would expect of somewhere that has endured a decade of war and sanctions, battered and worn. For now the euphoria of freedom – and the promise of a new car – is enough to make many Syrians positive about the country’s new rulers. But euphoria has a short shelf life. Freedom might begin with competent traffic cops but soon people will start expecting more.

Hannah Lucinda Smith is Monocle’s Istanbul correspondent. For more opinion, analysis and insight, subscribe to Monocle today.

The Briefings

Taking a stand: German brands rally against AFD and its leader Alice Weidel

Image: Getty Images

Business: Germany

German businesses unite against the rise of AFD

Under the banner “We stand for values”, some of Germany’s biggest brands have joined forces to argue that anti-immigration populism is bad for business (writes Kristina Jovanovski). Ahead of the country’s federal elections this Sunday, in which the far-right Alternative for Germany (AFD) party looks set to finish in a historic second place, about 40 companies, including Volkswagen, Bosch and Siemens, have united to dismiss anti-immigration policies as detrimental to the national economy.

“Extremists would jeopardise our democracy and, at the same moment, threaten our economic success,” Frank Wienstroth, a senior communication manager at BMW Group, tells The Monocle Minute. According to the automotive giant, a diverse workforce is crucial for an export-dependent country that develops products for an international market. “Without legal immigration of highly qualified people, we will fall behind the competition,” added BMW Group board member Ilka Horstmeier. “Xenophobia and intolerance scare off urgently needed specialists.” The German government currently estimates that the country requires another 400,000 skilled workers every year to keep its economy on track.

Despite the official position of big business in Germany, AFD has found the industrial working class to be a rich source of support. Nevertheless, BMW says that the commercial alliance has aired its campaign across 38 radio stations and run social media ads in the run-up to Sunday’s election. While stopping short of advising its staff on how to vote, the group’s members argue that immigration is just good business.

Overheard at: Global Soft Power Summit 2025

Monocle is listening: snippets from the Global Soft Power Summit 2025

The Global Soft Power Summit is an event organised by consultancy firm Brand Finance to debate and discuss soft power, international diplomacy and global trade (writes Alexis Self). This year’s edition took place at the Queen Elizabeth II Centre just off London’s Parliament Square and was preoccupied, like so much else in the world right now, with Donald Trump’s upending of international norms. Here are a few of the snippets we overheard.

“Today a lie can travel halfway around the world before the truth gets its boots on.”

Former US secretary of state John Kerry on the threat that technology poses to politics.

“That’s the Guatemalan ambassador, the one in the pink suit.”

A Brazilian delegate helping someone to find the aforementioned diplomat from Central America.

“Space is difficult, space is risky, space is expensive.”

An Emirati envoy on the topic of the UAE’s mission to Mars.

“The US is not going to dictate the rules of global trade.”

A free-trade advocate, while explaining that the fulcrum of 21st-century trade is the Afro-Eurasian landmass.