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Well, At Least He's Not A War Criminal*
Well, at least he's not a war criminal.
George Bush's new selection to head the World Bank, Robert Zoellick has that over his predecessor, Paul Wolfowitz.
But can't the world demand a slightly higher standard?
The selection process for chief of the World Bank, which claims to be the world's preeminent anti-poverty institution, is preposterous. By tradition, the post goes to a U.S. citizen, to be selected by the U.S. President. There is no pretense of democracy at this international institution. Nor is there any pretense of demanding relevant development experience. None of the past presidents of the Bank, including Wolfowitz and Zoellick, has had any meaningful experience in development policy. There have been longstanding calls by people who actually care about development, and do have relevant expertise, to reform the Bank's archaic government structure.
But more important than the Bank's governing process are its policies.
The World Bank's great failings over the last decades are rooted in its commitment to the market fundamentalism known as "the Washington consensus." This is a set of maniacal market-oriented policies including: deregulation of the economy, opening countries up to capital inflows and outflows, removing all trade barriers and orienting economies to support exports, massive privatization (including even of such traditional government functions as customs collection), eliminating subsidies for basic necessities, rolling back legally guaranteed labor rights, cutting back on government services and restricting government spending. The Bank has also maintained a penchant for environmentally and socially destructive mega-development projects: big dams, oil and gas projects, road-building. The result has been a literal human disaster: the developing countries that have most closely hued to policies imposed by the World Bank (and its sister institution, the International Monetary Fund) have found themselves much poorer, less healthy and less educated than countries that have resisted Bank recommendations.
In one notable example, the Bank's historic support for user fees for education and healthcare has denied millions of children the right to schooling, and deprived millions of people access to healthcare.
The Wolfowitz controversy obscured the bigger issues at the Bank, and the questions now facing Zoellick:
- Will Zoellick oppose user fees for healthcare?
- Will he end the Bank's heinous opposition to labor rights in its influential Doing Business report?
As the U.S. Trade Representative, Robert Zoellick pushed market extremist policies akin to those of the Bank, in World Trade Organization negotiations, and especially in bilateral and regional trade agreement negotiations.
His very aggressive agenda as USTR included advocating for increased monopoly rights for drug companies, eliminating precautionary health measures, removing protections for small farmers and eliminating protective industrial tariffs in developing countries (a key element of the misnamed "Doha Development Round" of World Trade Organization talks that Zoellick helped kick off).
To be fair to Zoellick, every recent person in his post, Republican or Democrat, has pushed the same Big Business agenda that he did. And on pharmaceutical and patent issues -- some of the key considerations at USTR -- he did not do everything Big Pharma wanted, and sometimes really pushed against the industry's interests (until overridden by the White House.)
On the other hand, the fact that other former U.S. Trade Representatives pushed a broad Big Business agenda is hardly an argument for why Zoellick should be rewarded with the World Bank post. It is a better argument for why no former USTRs should be given the job.
And even though Zoellick had major conflicts with Big Pharma, he did at the end of the day deliver on almost everything the companies wanted. As my colleague Asia Russell of the AIDS activist organization Health GAP says, "It's very difficult to imagine the same Bob Zoellick who carried water for Big Pharma being the kind of advocate ministers of health need in order to expand their investments in salaries for doctors and nurses to address 6,000 preventable AIDS deaths each day in Africa alone."
The same point could be echoed about the rest of Zoellick's performance as USTR.
Unless Zoellick makes a break from market fundamentalism, expect the World Bank to continue to generate rather than reduce poverty.
And yes, the world should demand better. For the immediate term, Zoellick should be pressed to make specific commitments to abandon key components of the Bank's failed preferred policy set. The longer term agenda must involve achieving not just better governance at the Bank, but a completely refashioned orientation.
* Zoellick does not seem to have been an active part of the Cheney-Rumsfeld cabal that concocted the case for the Iraq war and then carried it out, but he was (along with Paul Wolfowitz and others) a signer of the 1998 letter from the Project for a New American Century to Bill Clinton, urging Clinton "to turn your Administration's attention to implementing a strategy for removing Saddam's regime from power. This will require a full complement of diplomatic, political and military efforts."
Robert Weissman is editor of the Washington, D.C.-based Multinational Monitor, and director of Essential Action.
© 2007 Robert Weissman
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12 Comments so far
Show AllZoellick is nothing more and nothing less than a neocon. His selection by Bush's handlers is the slap in the face which the whole world anticipated after the Wolfowitz removal. The well-worn low road will see no appreciable decrease in traffic as long as the neocons are in power. And they will remain in power regardless of election results and party control. They are the eminences grises behind all the rot in Washington. They are the zionist/militarist/corporatist brain trust which has driven America to this sickly point in our degradation. And they are not finished.
Zoellick may not be a war criminal, but...
I just read that he was one of the signers to a letter to President Clinton in 1998 urging the removal of Saddam Hussein.
Maybe he is a premature war criminal.
Is that better or worse?
The letter had some other interesting signers.
-bluebird
In my last comment to Thom Hartman's essay, I defined my concept of the Death Party. Weissman's short article provides substantial support for that concept. US Trade/World Bank policies cause death and destabilization , and thus constitute Crimes Agaainst Humanity, and are explicitly counter to the UN Universal Declaration of Human Rights. Thus, I think it fair to call Zoellick a war criminal.
Alas, progress in the modern world, a simple thing like theft now has so many "legal" excuses, explanations, and protocols attached to it!
Right, progress?? I think not. The World Bank cannot be used in the same sentence as progress. However we can substitute the word "endentured servitude" or "co-option" or "enslavement" when referring the WB. As soon as this organization is shut down the better for the rest of the WORLD. Americans need to wake up to the extortion and greed that is the reality of the WB as it seeks to hold small 3rd world nations hostage for their resources and play with the local currency.
WE liberal/progressives need some humor! Neoconned, it was a JOKE on progress! That so many legal distortions now mask the obvious rape of others' necessary resources. Hello...
Like every loyal Bushie, Zoellick will do exactly as he's told. Which in no way will be good for anyone anywhere except loyal Bushies. But it's nice to have hope.
Like any mob movie Ive ever seen. The top dog gets "whacked" and another gets "made." BTW when's the coup...........??
As if Bush was ever going to pick anyone who didn't have a corporate agenda.
Some of the policies described by Mr. Weisserman and carried out daily by the WB and IMF go a long way in explaining why "they hate us". As opposed to "they hate us for our freedom". This institution is nothing more than a predatory lending, resource pilfering, representation of America to the countries it does business with.
Promoting democracy, American style, by bribing desperate leaders and funding necessary projects now, in return for US market advantages that wreak havoc on citizens it pretends to help is it's modus operandi. Where ever there are resources and profit to be obtained be it rubber in Brazil or diamonds in Africa, the World Bank is there, as always thwarting workers rights, monopolizing once fair markets, and in the end, destroying the livelihoods of citizenry.
This current resident of the Whitehouse, who was born on third base and thinks he hit a triple, has nothing more in mind to do with his power and authority than to squeeze every last dollar out of his 8 years that he can. With that end in mind, it is clear that he will hire, appoint, or otherwise align himself with only like-minded people, regardless of experience, expertise, or competence, or obvious lack thereof. Every appointment he has made has been ridiculously self serving, and this one of course is no different. It's pretty damned easy to amass a fortune if you make the laws and control all the money. For us to expect the rich and powerful to relinquish this control is absurd.
Siouxrose, it worries me more than a little that people cannot grasp a little off-handed sarcastic humor. It indicates how little we think and how literal we need everything to be. Your one sentence said that you cringe at the prospect of so called progress and called on readers to consider the current state of affairs. Please be patient with us as we have been taught to be workers not thinkers.
Progress... it all started with the invention of the plow allowing one person to grow food for many, thus allowing others some free time to devote to creative thinking. We've all heard the old adage, "An idle mind is the Devil's workshop". Until we figure a way to elect non billionaires, we can expect the Devil's workshop to continue it's expansion.
Peace!
Marctileston: thank you for being kind enough to explain. I don't take offense, as this forum allows us a place to vent. The Scott Ritter discussion (at least on my computer) is impassable at the moment, but in that forum someone stated that we should save our comments for mass media, letters to editor and such. I have taken that approach, too. As an example of life in the Bible belt, the University of Florida at Gainesville has its newspaper, The Alligator. When Michael Moore spoke at the college last year, EVERY comment was negative! Another example of right wing Fox style "news" in its "fair and balanced" expression. It's like WHO counts the votes, who guards the guards, who decides what's fit to print!
On your comment regarding progress, I often muse how different history may have run had gun powder never been invented. For all the considerable strides of the modern world, the focus on (and unbearable investment in) weaponry probably takes the prize.
Karlof1 has been speaking metaphorically about a death party, but to the astrologer, most who identify with raw power are also unconsciously adopting homage to Mars, the ancient warrior. On a pragmatic level, with so much infrastructure directed at weapons (and/or products that harm), the fiscal/economic factors that maintain this abhorrent status quo remain in place. As I've shared before, this world is writ in a sacred binary code. It begins with DNA which is a marriage of forces from the Yin and Yang. There IS no life without the dance, and the cosmic counterpart to Mars is Venus. The adage, "law of war" is its own oxymoron. Venus is law and Mars is war, and they are intended to counterbalance one another. Mars relates to the human ego and its wish to survive and procreate; whereas Venus relates to our need to be social beings who enjoy benefits of reasonably sane and harmonious societies. The loss of the perspective of the astro-logos for centuries has made this language that integrates human life with larger cycles very alien, if not falsely objectionable to some. ANY who study the subject with an open mind see the congruences and I prefer to recognize, particularly in a time of massive chaos (such as our own) that there IS a Divine Order. When people proclaim they are atheists, I feel they are rebelling against their religion of origin; and also applying human traits to the Creator. Remember: this planet is Earth School 101 and the chief lesson: learning to get along. "And a new commandment I give thee, that ye love one another." Happy full moon everyone... there is always light even in the darkest of times!
Arundhati Roy has been a consistent critic of the WB and IMF (see her collection of essays "War Talk")pointing out that these are unelected bodies with essentially life and death, dictatorial power over the economies of underdeveloped countries.
But what stuns me is the blatant inconsistency in the World Bank's position: they insist that underdeveloped countries adopt a "market fundamentalist" approach and open themselves up to a flood of heavily subsidized US agricultural goods. Why isn't "market fundamentalism" required or expected of the US? Since when does a "market fundamentalist" encourage subsidies?