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We are
meeting at a moment of world history that is in many ways unique – a
moment that is ominous, but also full of hope.
The most powerful state in history has proclaimed, loud and clear,
that it intends to rule the world by force, the dimension in which it
reigns supreme. Apart from the conventional bow to noble intentions
that is the standard (hence meaningless) accompaniment of coercion,
its leaders are committed to pursuit of their “imperial ambition,” as
it is frankly described in the leading journal of the foreign policy
establishment – critically, an important matter. They have also
declared that they will tolerate no competitors, now or in the
future. They evidently believe that the means of violence in their
hands are so extraordinary that they can dismiss with contempt anyone
who stands in their way. There is good reason to believe that the
war with Iraq is intended, in part, to teach the world some lessons
about what lies ahead when the empire decides to strike a blow --
though “war” is hardly the proper term, given the array of forces.
The
doctrine is not entirely new, nor unique to the US, but it has never
before been proclaimed with such brazen arrogance – at least not by
anyone we would care to remember.
I am not
going to try to answer the question posed for this meeting: How to
confront the empire. The reason is that most of you know the answers
as well or better than I do, through your own lives and work. The way
to “confront the empire” is to create a different world, one that is
not based on violence and subjugation, hate and fear. That is why we
are here, and the WSF offers hope that these are not idle dreams.
Yesterday I had the rare privilege of seeing some very inspiring work
to achieve these goals, at the international gathering of the Via
Campesina at a community of the MST, which I think is the most
important and exciting popular movement in the world. With
constructive local actions such as those of the MST, and international
organization of the kind illustrated by the Via Campesina and the WSF,
with sympathy and solidarity and mutual aid, there is real hope for a
decent future.
I have
also had some other recent experiences that give a vivid picture of
what the world may be like if imperial violence is not limited and
dismantled. Last month I was in southeastern Turkey, the scene of
some of the worst atrocities of the grisly 1990s, still continuing:
just a few hours ago we were informed of renewed atrocities by the
army near Diyarbakir, the unofficial capital of the Kurdish regions.
Through the 1990s, millions of people were driven out of the
devastated countryside, with tens of thousands killed and every
imaginable form of barbaric torture. They try to survive in caves
outside the walls of Diyarbakir, in condemned buildings in miserable
slums in Istanbul, or wherever they can find refuge, barred from
returning to their villages despite new legislation that theoretically
permits return. 80% of the weapons came from the US. In the year
1997 alone, Clinton sent more arms to Turkey than in the entire Cold
War period combined up to the onset of the state terror campaign –
called “counterterror” by the perpetrators and their supporters,
another convention. Turkey became the leading recipient of US arms as
atrocities peaked (apart from Israel-Egypt, a separate category).
In 1999, Turkey relinquished this position to Colombia. The reason is
that in Turkey, US-backed state terror had largely succeeded, while in
Colombia it had not. Colombia had the worst human rights record in
the Western hemisphere in the 1990s and was by far the leading
recipient of US arms and military training, and now leads the world.
It also leads the world by other measures, for example, murder of
labor activists: more than half of those killed worldwide in the last
decade were in Colombia. Close to ½ million people were driven from
their land last year, a new record. The displaced population is now
estimated at 2.7 million. Political killings have risen to 20 a day;
5 years ago it was half that.
I
visited Cauca in southern Colombia, which had the worst human rights
record in the country in 2001, quite an achievement. There I listened
to hours of testimony by peasants who were driven from their lands by
chemical warfare – called “fumigation” under the pretext of a US-run
“drug war” that few take seriously and that would be obscene if that
were the intent. Their lives and lands are destroyed, children are
dying, they suffer from sickness and wounds. Peasant agriculture is
based on a rich tradition of knowledge and experience gained over many
centuries, in much of the world passed on from mother to daughter.
Though a remarkable human achievement, it is very fragile, and can be
destroyed forever in a single generation. Also being destroyed is
some of the richest biodiversity in the world, similar to neighboring
regions of Brazil. Campesinos, indigenous people, Afro-Colombians can
join the millions in rotting slums and camps. With the people gone,
multinationals can come in to strip the mountains for coal and to
extract oil and other resources, and to convert what is left of the
land to monocrop agroexport using laboratory-produced seeds in an
environment shorn of its treasures and variety.
The
scenes in Cauca and Southeastern Turkey are very different from the
celebrations of the Via Campesina gathering at the MST community. But
Turkey and Colombia are inspiring and hopeful in different ways,
because of the courage and dedication of people struggling for justice
and freedom, confronting the empire where it is killing and
destroying.
These are some of the signs of the future if “imperial ambition”
proceeds on its normal course, now to be accelerated by the grand
strategy of global rule by force. None of this is inevitable, and
among the good models for ending these crimes are the ones I
mentioned: the MST, the Via Campesina, and the WSF.
At the
WSF, the range of issues and problems under intense discussion is very
broad, remarkably so, but I think we can identify two main themes.
One is global justice and Life after Capitalism – or to put it more
simply, life, because it is not so clear that the human species can
survive very long under existing state capitalist institutions. The
second theme is related: war and peace, and more specifically, the war
in Iraq that Washington and London are desperately seeking to carry
out, virtually alone.
Let’s start with some
good news about these basic themes. As you know, there is also a
conference of the World Economic Forum going on right now, in Davos.
Here in Porto Alegre, the mood is hopeful, vigorous, exciting. In
Davos, the New York Times tells us, “the mood has darkened.” For the
“movers and shakers,” it is not “global party time” any more. In
fact, the founder of the Forum has conceded defeat: “The power of
corporations has completely disappeared,” he said. So we have won.
There is nothing left for us to do but pick up the pieces -- not only
to talk about a vision of the future that is just and humane, but to
move on to create it.
Of course, we should
not let the praise go to our heads. There are still a few
difficulties ahead.
The main theme of the
WEF is “Building Trust.” There is a reason for that. The “masters of
the universe,” as they liked to call themselves in more exuberant
days, know that they are in serious trouble. They recently released a
poll showing that trust in leaders has severely declined. Only the
leaders of NGOs had the trust of a clear majority, followed by UN and
spiritual/religious leaders, then leaders of Western Europe and
economic managers, below them corporate executives, and well below
them, at the bottom, leaders of the US, with about 25% trust. That
may well mean virtually no trust: when people are asked whether they
trust leaders with power, they usually say “Yes,” out of habit.
It gets worse. A few
days ago a poll in Canada found that over 1/3 of the population regard
the US as the greatest threat to world peace. The US ranks more than
twice as high as Iraq or North Korea, and far higher than al-Qaeda as
well. A poll without careful controls, by Time magazine, found that
over 80% of respondents in Europe regarded the US as the greatest
threat to world peace, compared with less than 10% for Iraq or North
Korea. Even if these numbers are wrong by some substantial factor,
they are dramatic.
Without going on, the
corporate leaders who paid $30,000 to attend the somber meetings in
Davos have good reasons to take as their theme: “Building Trust.”
The coming war with
Iraq is undoubtedly contributing to these interesting and important
developments. Opposition to the war is completely without historical
precedent. In Europe it is so high that Secretary of “Defense” Donald
Rumsfeld dismissed Germany and France as just the “old Europe,”
plainly of no concern because of their disobedience. The “vast
numbers of other countries in Europe [are] with the United States,” he
assured foreign journalists. These vast numbers are the “new Europe,”
symbolized by Italy’s Berlusconi, soon to visit the White House,
praying that he will be invited to be the third of the “three B’s”:
Bush-Blair-Berlusconi – assuming that he can stay out of jail. Italy
is on board, the White House tells us. It is apparently not a problem
that over 80% of the public is opposed to the war, according to recent
polls. That just shows that the people of Italy also belong to the
“old Europe,” and can be sent to the ashcan of history along with
France and Germany, and others who do not know their place.
Spain is hailed as
another prominent member of the new Europe -- with 75% totally opposed
to the war, according to an international Gallup poll. According to
the leading foreign policy analyst of Newsweek, pretty much the same
is true of the most hopeful part of the new Europe, the former
Communist countries that are counted on (quite openly) to serve US
interests and undermine Europe’s despised social market and welfare
states. He reports that in Czechoslovakia, 2/3 of the population
oppose participation in a war, while in Poland only ¼ would support a
war even if the UN inspectors “prove that Iraq possesses weapons of
mass destruction.” The Polish press reports 37% approval in this case,
still extremely low, at the heart of the “new Europe.”
New Europe soon
identified itself in an open letter in the Wall Street Journal: along
with Italy, Spain, Poland and Czechoslovakia – the leaders, that is,
not the people – it includes Denmark (with popular opinion on the war
about the same as Germany, therefore “old Europe”), Portugal (53%
opposed to war under any circumstances, 96% opposed to war by the US
and its allies unilaterally), Britain (40% opposed to war under any
circumstances, 90% opposed to war by the US and its allies
unilaterally), and Hungary (no figures available).
In brief, the
exciting “new Europe” consists of some leaders who are willing to defy
their populations.
Old Europe reacted
with some annoyance to Rumsfeld’s declaration that they are “problem”
countries, not modern states. Their reaction was explained by
thoughtful US commentators. Keeping just to the national press, we
learn that “world-weary European allies” do not appreciate the “moral
rectitude” of the President. The evidence for his “moral rectitude”
is that “his advisors say the evangelical zeal” comes directly from
the simple man who is dedicated to driving evil from the world. Since
that is surely the most reliable and objective evidence that can be
imagined, it would be improper to express slight skepticism, let alone
to react as we would to similar performances by others. The cynical
Europeans, we are told, misinterpret Bush’s purity of soul as “moral
naiveté” – without a thought that the administration’s PR specialists
might have a hand in creating imagery that will sell. We are informed
further that there is a great divide between world-weary Europe and
the “idealistic New World bent on ending inhumanity." That this is the
driving purpose of the idealistic New World we also know for certain,
because so our leaders proclaim. What more in the way of proof could
one seek?
The rare mention of
public opinion in the new Europe treats it as a problem of marketing;
the product being sold is necessarily right and honorable, given its
source. The willingness of the leaders of the new Europe to prefer
Washington to their own populations “threatens to isolate the Germans
and French,” who are exhibiting retrograde democratic tendencies, and
shows that Germany and France cannot “say that they are speaking for
Europe.” They are merely speaking for the people of old and new
Europe, who – the same commentators acknowledge -- express “strong
opposition” to the policies of the new Europe.
The official
pronouncements and the reaction to them are illuminating. They
demonstrate with some clarity the contempt for democracy that is
rather typical, historically, among those who feel that they rule the
world by right.
There are many other
illustrations. When German Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder dared to take
the position of the overwhelming majority of voters in the last
election, that was described as a shocking failure of leadership, a
serious problem that Germany must overcome if it wants to be accepted
in the civilized world. The problem lies with Germany, not elites of
the Anglo-American democracies. Germany’s problem is that “the
government lives in fear of the voters, and that is causing it to make
mistake after mistake” – the spokesperson for the right-wing Christian
Social Union party, who understands the real nature of democracy.
The case of Turkey is
even more revealing. As throughout the region, Turks are very
strongly opposed to the war – about 90% according to the most recent
polls. And so far the government has irresponsibly paid some
attention to the people who elected it. It has not bowed completely
to the intense pressure and threats that Washington is exerting to
compel it to heed the master’s voice. This reluctance of the elected
government to follow orders from on high proves that its leaders are
not true democrats. For those who may be too dull to comprehend these
subtleties, they are explained by former Ambassador to Turkey Morton
Abramowitz, now a distinguished senior statesman and commentator. Ten
years ago, he explained, Turkey was governed by a real democrat,
Turgut Ozal, who “overrode his countrymen’s pronounced preference to
stay out of the Gulf war.” But democracy has declined in Turkey. The
current leadership “is following the people,” revealing its lack of
“democratic credentials.” “Regrettably,” he says, “for the US there is
no Ozal around.” So it will be necessary to bring authentic democracy
to Turkey by economic strangulation and other coercive means –
regrettably, but that is demanded by what the elite press calls our
“yearning for democracy.”
Brazil is witnessing
another exercise of the real attitudes towards democracy among the
masters of the universe. In the most free election in the
hemisphere, a large majority voted for policies that are strongly
opposed by international finance and investors, by the IMF and the US
Treasury Department. In earlier years, that would have been the
signal for a military coup installing a murderous National Security
State, as in Brazil 40 years ago. Now that will not work; the
populations of South and North have changed, and will not easily
tolerate it. Furthermore, there are now simpler ways to undermine the
will of the people, thanks to the neoliberal instruments that have
been put in place: economic controls, capital flight, attacks on
currency, privatization, and other devices that are well-designed to
reduce the arena of popular choice. These, it is hoped, may compel
the government to follow the dictates of what international economists
call the “virtual parliament” of investors and lenders, who make the
real decisions, coercing the population, an irrelevant nuisance
according to the reigning principles of democracy.
When I was
just about to leave for the airport I received another of the many
inquiries from the press about why there is so little anti-war protest
in the US. The impressions are instructive. In fact, protest in the
US, as elsewhere, is also at levels that have no historical
precedent. Not just demonstrations, teach-ins, and other public
events. To take an example of a different kind, last week the Chicago
City Council passed an anti-war resolution, 46-1, joining 50 other
cities and towns. The same is true in other sectors, including those
that are the most highly trusted, as the WEF learned to its dismay:
NGOs and religious organizations and figures, with few exceptions.
Several months ago the biggest university in the country passed a
strong antiwar resolution – the University of Texas, right next door
to George W’s ranch. And it’s easy to continue.
So why the
widespread judgment among elites that the tradition of dissent and
protest has died? Invariably, comparisons are drawn to Vietnam, a
very revealing fact. We have just passed the 40th anniversary of the
public announcement that the Kennedy administration was sending the US
Air Force to bomb South Vietnam, also initiating plans to drive
millions of people into concentration camps and chemical warfare
programs to destroy food crops. There was no pretext of defense,
except in the sense of official rhetoric: defense against the
"internal aggression" of South Vietnamese in South Vietnam and their
"assault from the inside" (President Kennedy and his UN Ambassador,
Adlai Stevenson). Protest was non-existent. It did not reach any
meaningful level for several years. By that time hundreds of
thousands of US troops had joined the occupying army,
densely-populated areas were being demolished by saturation bombing,
and the aggression had spread to the rest of Indochina. Protest
among elite intellectuals kept primarily to “pragmatic grounds”: the
war was a “mistake” that was becoming too costly to the US. In sharp
contrast, by the late 1960s the great majority of the public had come
to oppose the war as “fundamentally wrong and immoral,” not “a
mistake,” figures that hold steady until the present.
Today, in
dramatic contrast to the 1960s, there is large-scale, committed, and
principled popular protest all over the US before the war has been
officially launched. That reflects a steady increase over these years
in unwillingness to tolerate aggression and atrocities, one of many
such changes, worldwide in fact. That’s part of the background for
what is taking place in Porto Alegre, and part of the reason for the
gloom in Davos.
The
political leadership is well aware of these developments. When a new
administration comes into office, it receives a review of the world
situation compiled by the intelligence agencies. It is secret; we
learn about these things many years later. But when Bush #1 came into
office in 1989, a small part of the review was leaked, a passage
concerned with “cases where the U.S. confronts much weaker enemies” –
the only kind one would think of fighting. Intelligence analysts
advised that in conflicts with “much weaker enemies” the US must win
“decisively and rapidly,” or popular support will collapse. It’s not
like the 1960s, when the population would tolerate a murderous and
destructive war for years without visible protest. That’s no longer
true. The activist movements of the past 40 years have had a
significant civilizing effect. By now, the only way to attack a much
weaker enemy is to construct a huge propaganda offensive depicting it
as about to commit genocide, maybe even a threat to our very survival,
then to celebrate a miraculous victory over the awesome foe, while
chanting praises to the courageous leaders who came to the rescue just
in time.
That is
the current scenario in Iraq.
Polls
reveal more support for the planned war in the US than elsewhere, but
the numbers are misleading. It is important to bear in mind that the
US is the only country outside Iraq where Saddam Hussein is not only
reviled but also feared. There is a flood of lurid propaganda warning
that if we do not stop him today he will destroy us tomorrow. The
next evidence of his weapons of mass destruction may be a “mushroom
cloud,” so National Security Adviser Condoleezza Rice announced in
September – presumably over New York. No one in Iraq’s neighborhood
seems overly concerned, much as they may hate the murderous tyrant.
Perhaps that is because they know that as a result of the sanctions
“the vast majority of the country’s population has been on a
semi-starvation diet for years,” as the World Health Organization
reported, and that Iraq is one of the weakest states in the region:
its economy and military expenditures are a fraction of Kuwait’s,
which has 10% of Iraq’s population, and much farther below others
nearby.
But the US
is different. When Congress granted the President authority to go to
war last October, it was “to defend the national security of the
United States against the continuing threat posed by Iraq.” We must
tremble in fear before this awesome threat, while countries nearby
seek to reintegrate Iraq into the region, including those who were
attacked by Saddam when he was a friend and ally of those who now run
the show in Washington -- and who were happily providing him with
aid including the means to develop WMD, at a time when he was far more
dangerous than today and had already committed by far his worst
crimes.
A serious
measure of support for war in the US would have to extricate this
“fear factor,” which is genuine, and unique to the US. The residue
would give a more realistic measure of support for the resort to
violence, and would show, I think, that it is about the same as
elsewhere.
It is also
rather striking that strong opposition to the coming war extends right
through the establishment. The current issues of the two major
foreign policy journals feature articles opposing the war by leading
figures of foreign policy elites. The very respectable American
Academy of Arts and Sciences released a long monograph on the war,
trying to give the most sympathetic possible account of the Bush
administration position, then dismantling it point by point. One
respected analyst they quote is a Senior Associate of the Carnegie
Endowment for International Peace, who warns that the US is becoming
“a menace to itself and to mankind” under its current leadership.
There are no precedents for anything like this.
We should
recognize that these criticisms tend to be narrow. They are concerned
with threats to the US and its allies. They do not take into account
the likely effects on Iraqis: the warnings of the UN and aid agencies
that millions may be at very serious risk in a country that is at the
edge of survival after a terrible war that targeted its basic
infrastructure – which amounts to biological warfare -- and a decade
of devastating sanctions that have killed hundreds of thousands of
people and blocked any reconstruction, while strengthening the brutal
tyrant who rules Iraq. It is also interesting that the criticisms do
not even take the trouble to mention the lofty rhetoric about
democratization and liberation. Presumably, the critics take for
granted that the rhetoric is intended for intellectuals and editorial
writers – who are not supposed to notice that the drive to war is
accompanied by a dramatic demonstration of hatred of democracy, just
as they are supposed to forget the record of those who are leading the
campaign. That is also why none of this is ever brought up at the UN.
Nevertheless, the threats that do concern establishment critics are
very real. They were surely not surprised when the CIA informed
Congress last October that they know of no link between Iraq and al
Qaeda-style terrorism, but that an attack on Iraq would probably
increase the terrorist threat to the West, in many ways. It is likely
to inspire a new generation of terrorists bent on revenge, and it
might induce Iraq to carry out terrorist actions that are already in
place, a possibility taken very seriously by US analysts. A
high-level task force of the Council on Foreign Relations just
released a report warning of likely terrorist attacks that could be
far worse than 9-11, including possible use of WMD right within the
US, dangers that become “more urgent by the prospect of the US going
to war with Iraq.” They provide many illustrations, virtually a
cook-book for terrorists. It is not the first; similar ones were
published by prominent strategic analysts long before 9-11.
It is also
understood that an attack on Iraq may lead not just to more terror,
but also to proliferation of WMD, for a simple reason: potential
targets of the US recognize that there is no other way to deter the
most powerful state in history, which is pursuing “America’s Imperial
Ambition,” posing serious dangers to the US and the world, the author
warns in the main establishment journal, Foreign Affairs. Prominent
hawks warn that a war in Iraq might lead to the “greatest
proliferation disaster in history.” They know that if Iraq has
chemical and biological weapons, the dictatorship keeps them under
tight control. They understand further that except as a last resort
if attacked, Iraq is highly unlikely to use any WMD it has, thus
inviting instant incineration. And it is also highly unlikely to
leak them to the Osama bin Ladens of the world, which would be a
terrible threat to Saddam Hussein himself, quite apart from the
reaction if there is even a hint that this might take place. But
under attack, the society would collapse, including the controls over
WMD. These would be “privatized,” terrorism experts point out, and
offered to the huge “market for unconventional weapons, where they
will have no trouble finding buyers.” That really is a “nightmare
scenario,” just as the hawks warn.
Even
before the Bush administration began beating the war drums about Iraq,
there were plenty of warnings that its adventurism was going to lead
to proliferation of WMD, as well as terror, simply as a deterrent.
Right now, Washington is teaching the world a very ugly and dangerous
lesson: if you want to defend yourself from us, you had better mimic
North Korea and pose a credible military threat, including WMD.
Otherwise we will demolish you in pursuit of the new “grand strategy”
that has caused shudders not only among the usual victims, and in “old
Europe,” but right at the heart of the US foreign policy elite, who
recognize that “commitment of the US to active military confrontation
for decisive national advantage will leave the world more dangerous
and the US less secure” – again, quoting respected figures in elite
journals.
Evidently,
the likely increase of terror and proliferation of WMD is of limited
concern to planners in Washington, in the context of their real
priorities. Without too much difficulty, one can think of reasons why
this might be the case, not very attractive ones.
The nature
of the threats was dramatically underscored last October, at the
summit meeting in Havana on the 40th anniversary of the
Cuban missile crisis, attended by key participants from Russia, the
US, and Cuba. Planners knew at the time that they had the fate of
the world in their hands, but new information released at the Havana
summit was truly startling. We learned that the world was saved from
nuclear devastation by one Russian submarine captain, Vasily Arkhipov,
who blocked an order to fire nuclear missiles when Russian submarines
were attacked by US destroyers near Kennedy’s “quarantine” line. Had
Arkhipov agreed, the nuclear launch would have almost certainly set
off an interchange that could have “destroyed the Northern
hemisphere,” as Eisenhower had warned.
The
dreadful revelation is particularly timely because of the
circumstances: the roots of the missile crisis lay in international
terrorism aimed at “regime change,” two concepts very much in the news
today. US terrorist attacks against Cuba began shortly after Castro
took power, and were sharply escalated by Kennedy, leading to a very
plausible fear of invasion, as Robert McNamara has acknowledged.
Kennedy resumed the terrorist war immediately after the crisis was
over; terrorist actions against Cuba, based in the US, peaked in the
late 1970s continued 20 years later. Putting aside any judgment about
the behavior of the participants in the missile crisis, the new
discoveries demonstrate with brilliant clarity the terrible and
unanticipated risks of attacks on a “much weaker enemy” aimed at
“regime change” – risks to survival, it is no exaggeration to say.
As for the fate of
the people of Iraq, no one can predict with any confidence: not the
CIA, not Donald Rumsfeld, not those who claim to be experts on Iraq,
no one. Possibilities range from the frightening prospects for which
the aid agencies are preparing, to the delightful tales spun by
administration PR specialists and their chorus. One never knows.
These are among the many reasons why decent human beings do not
contemplate the threat or use of violence, whether in personal life or
international affairs, unless reasons have been offered that have
overwhelming force. And surely nothing remotely like that has been
offered in the present case, which is why opposition to the plans of
Washington and London has reached such scale and intensity.
The timing of the
Washington-London propaganda campaign was so transparent that it too
has been a topic of discussion, and sometimes ridicule, right in the
mainstream. The campaign began in September of last year. Before
that, Saddam was a terrible guy, but not an imminent threat to the
survival of the US. The “mushroom cloud” was announced in early
September. Since then, fear that Saddam will attack the US has been
running at about 60-70% of the population. “The desperate urgency
about moving rapidly against Iraq that Bush expressed in October was
not evident from anything he said two months before,” the chief
political analyst of United Press International observed, drawing the
obvious conclusion: September marked the opening of the political
campaign for the mid-term congressional elections. The administration,
he continued, was “campaigning to sustain and increase its power on a
policy of international adventurism, new radical preemptive military
strategies, and a hunger for a politically convenient and perfectly
timed confrontation with Iraq.” As long as domestic issues were in the
forefront, Bush and his cohorts were losing ground – naturally enough,
because they are conducting a serious assault against the general
population. “But lo and behold! Though there have been no new
terrorist attacks or credible indications of imminent threat, since
the beginning of September, national security issues have been in the
driver’s seat,” not just al Qaeda but an awesome and threatening
military power, Iraq.
The same observations
have been made by many others. That’s convenient for people like us:
we can just quote the mainstream instead of giving controversial
analyses. The Carnegie Endowment Senior Associate I quoted before
writes that Bush and Co. are following “the classic modern strategy of
an endangered right-wing oligarchy, which is to divert mass discontent
into nationalism," inspired by fear of enemies about to destroy us.
That strategy is of critical importance if the "radical nationalists"
setting policy in Washington hope to advance their announced plan for
"unilateral world domination through absolute military superiority,"
while conducting a major assault against the interests of the large
majority of the domestic population.
For the elections,
the strategy worked, barely. The Fall 2002 election was won by a
small number of votes, but enough to hand Congress to the executive.
Analyses of the election found that voters maintained their opposition
to the administration on social and economic issues, but suppressed
these issues in favor of security concerns, which typically lead to
support for the figure in authority – the brave cowboy who must ride
to our rescue, just in time.
As history
shows, it is all too easy for unscrupulous leaders to terrify the
public, with consequences that have not been attractive. That is the
natural method to divert attention from the fact that tax cuts for the
rich and other devices are undermining prospects for a decent life for
large majority of the population, and for future generations. When
the presidential campaign begins, Republican strategists surely do not
want people to be asking questions about their pensions, jobs, health
care, and other such matters. Rather, they should be praising their
heroic leader for rescuing them from imminent destruction by a foe of
colossal power, and marching on to confront the next powerful force
bent on our destruction. It could be Iran, or conflicts in the Andean
countries: there are lots of good choices, as long as the targets are
defenseless.
These
ideas are second nature to the current political leaders, most of them
recycled from the Reagan administration. They are replaying a
familiar script: drive the country into deficit so as to be able to
undermine social programs, declare a “war on terror” (as they did in
1981) and conjure up one devil after another to frighten the
population into obedience. In the `80s it was Libyan hit-men prowling
the streets of Washington to assassinate our leader, then the
Nicaraguan army only two-days march from Texas, a threat to survival
so severe that Reagan had to declare a national emergency. Or an
airfield in Grenada that the Russians were going to use to bomb us (if
they could find it on a map); Arab terrorists seeking to kill
Americans everywhere while Qaddafi plans to “expel America from the
world,” so Reagan wailed. Or Hispanic narcotraffickers seeking to
destroy the youth; and on, and on.
Meanwhile the
political leadership were able to carry out domestic policies that had
generally poor economic outcomes but did create wealth for narrow
sectors while harming a considerable majority of the population – the
script that is being followed once again. And since the public knows
it, they have to resort to “the classic modern strategy of an
endangered right wing oligarchy” if they hope to carry out the
domestic and international programs to which they are committed,
perhaps even to institutionalize them so they will be hard to
dismantle when they lose control.
Of course,
there is much more to it than domestic considerations – which are of
no slight importance in themselves. The September 11 terrorist
atrocities provided an opportunity and pretext to implement
long-standing plans to take control of Iraq's immense oil wealth, a
central component of the Persian Gulf resources that the State
Department, in 1945, described as "a stupendous source of strategic
power, and one of the greatest material prizes in world history." US
intelligence predicts that these will be of even greater significance
in the years ahead. The issue has never been access. The same
intelligence analyses anticipate that the US will rely on more secure
supplies in the Western hemisphere and West Africa. The same was true
after World War II. What matters is control over the "material
prize," which funnels enormous wealth to the US in many ways, Britain
as well, and the "stupendous source of strategic power," which
translates into a lever of “unilateral world domination” -- the goal
that is now openly proclaimed, and is frightening much of the world,
including “old Europe” and the conservative establishment in the US.
I think a realistic
look at the world gives a mixed picture. There are many reasons to be
encouraged, but there will be a long hard road ahead. |