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Can the US Brace Its Fall?
WASHINGTON - "Is the American era over?" That was the big question that launched a lengthy analysis by veteran international affairs reporter James Kitfield in the influential 'National Journal' last May. Significantly, the article -- which featured interviews with an all-star cast of former top U.S. policy-makers -- was titled "The Decline Begins."
Nine months later, the notion that Washington has entered a "New American Century" -- a phrase used by the nationalist and neo-conservative unilateralists who championed the Iraq war -- in which the U.S. can do whatever it wants, where it wants, and when it wants, without consulting anyone else, seems largely to have gone the way of the dodo bird.
"We are in a multi-polar world," Defence Secretary Robert Gates told a Washington Post columnist recently in what has to be considered the ultimate heresy to pro-war hawks led by the likes of Vice President Dick Cheney and Gates' predecessor, Donald Rumsfeld.
Indeed, last month's image of President George W. Bush imploring King Abdullah of Saudi Arabia to increase oil production to boost the battered U.S. economy helped bring home the notion that the commander-in-chief's word no longer serves as an imperial command.
"It's affected our families. Paying more for gasoline hurts some of the American families," Bush told reporters just before his meeting with the king. After the meeting Saudi Arabia's oil minister made clear that Riyadh would increase production only "when the market justifies it" and not before.
Almost as pathetic in their own way were the recent exhortations by Gates -- the steward of a military establishment that spends more money each year than the combined defence budgets of all of the world's other nations -- for Washington's NATO allies to contribute 7,000 more troops to help U.S. forces pacify Afghanistan six years after Rumsfeld and his neo-conservative advisers contemptuously spurned their offers of help.
That the response Gates received was not much more favourable than that delivered by Saudi Arabia's oil minister to Bush's entreaties spoke volumes not only about the way that his administration has both misunderstood and mishandled its "global war on terror", but, more ominously, about the weakness and fragility of the alliance which Washington led to victory against the Soviet Union in the Cold War.
The last time that policy circles buzzed about Washington's "decline" came during the waning years of the Cold War, when Yale Professor Paul Kennedy published 'The Rise and Fall of the Great Powers'. The study argued that the U.S. was falling into a familiar historical pattern where the combination of huge military budgets and ever-larger deficits led inevitably to the kind of "imperial overstretch" that transformed once-mighty empires into shadows of their former selves.
Kennedy's theory, however, did not anticipate the sudden collapse of the Soviet Union, an earth-shaking event that, combined with Washington's decisive victory in the first Gulf War, left the U.S. as the world's undisputed "hyperpower". This status was celebrated by neo-conservatives like Washington Post columnist Charles Krauthammer who, at the time, coined the phrase, "The Unipolar Moment". The status was also reflected in the Pentagon's draft 1992 Defence Planning Guidance (DPG), which, in turn, became the inspiration for the Project for the New American Century (PNAC) in 1997 and Bush's first National Security Strategy (NSS) released six months before the Iraq invasion.
At the time, Kennedy himself suggested that Washington may have somehow escaped the laws of history, noting that the sheer size of the U.S. economy, its technological prowess, and military dominance were unprecedented. "I've gone back in history and never seen anything like it," he exclaimed at one seminar.
"People are now coming out of the closet on the word 'empire'," exulted Krauthammer. "The fact is no country has been as dominant culturally, economically, technologically, and militarily in the history of the world since the Roman Empire."
What a difference five years and an invasion and bungled occupation of Iraq make! References to the Roman Empire at this point are more likely to refer to its decline than to its power -- an observation confirmed even by Donald Kagan, a dean of neo-conservatism and Kennedy's colleague at Yale, whose sons, Robert and Frederick, have been champions of the Bush Doctrine and the Iraq War.
"I've argued that not since the Roman Empire has anyone had such extraordinary power as the United States after the Cold War," Kagan told Kitfield. "But all of the elements of our strength are now being challenged, and it's perfectly possible that we are seeing a relative decline in U.S. power that will prove lasting."
Indeed, that possibility has been transformed into a probability, if not a certainty, by a growing number of policy analysts who see major structural shifts in the distribution of global power -- both "hard" and "soft" -- none of which are likely to lead to the maintenance, let alone the enhancement of Washington's post-Cold War dominance.
Not only have both Iraq and Afghanistan shown the world the limits of U.S. military power, but they are also exacting an increasingly fearsome toll on Washington's ability to wage war.
Despite gains in the security situation in Iraq over the past year, top Pentagon brass and independent experts are warning that the current pace of deployments is creating a "hollow force" both in terms of personnel and equipment. In an echo of Kennedy 20 years ago, "overstretched" is the adjective most frequently associated with the U.S. military.
Just as Kennedy had warned against the deadly long-term impact on empires of budgetary deficits, the Bush years have seen an explosion not just of government debt -- currently more than nine trillion dollars -- but also of trade and balance-of-payments deficits. Much of this is due to the high price of oil and gas imports -- which a growing number of experts now believe has become a permanent fixture of the international economy.
The results of the evolving global geo-economy include a much-weakened dollar and increased reliance by both the U.S. government and U.S. business on foreign creditors. Among these creditors are state-controlled agencies (or sovereign wealth funds) some of which -- notably those of China, Russia, and oil-exporting Gulf states -- are not enthralled, to say the least, with Krauthammer's unipolar vision.
If, for commercial or political reasons, any of these creditors decided to dump their hundreds of billions of dollars of dollar-denominated assets -- or in the case of key energy exporters, for example, to price their commodities in a currency other than the dollar -- the economic impact would be "grave", according to Charles Freeman, retired U.S Ambassador to Saudi Arabia. Freeman's point was echoed for the first time last week in the U.S. intelligence community's annual review of the major global threats facing the nation.
The possibility that some combination of those creditors, whose own commercial ties have been growing at an accelerating rate, could decide to act in concert in order to constrain Washington's freedom of action -- in Central Asia or Iran, for example -- is the emerging nightmare of U.S. policy- makers.
Some analysts, including the director of the Geopolitics of Energy Initiative of the New America Foundation (NAF), Flynt Leverett, profess to see the emergence of a potential counterweight to U.S. power -- one, significantly, that does not depend on the co-operation of Washington's western allies.
"A 'community' of largely non-democratic manufacturing powers and energy exporters is already laying the groundwork for real strategic collaboration, aimed at limiting America's ability to carry out [its] hegemonic agendas," Leverett, who served in the National Security Council under Bill Clinton and Bush, wrote recently in the 'National Interest' journal published by the Nixon Centre.
As a result, the degree to which Washington can slow its decline and preserve its primacy will depend increasingly on its willingness to suppress its unilateralist reflexes and "to take account of the perceptions and interests of others in its foreign-policy decision-making," according to Leverett.
© 2008 Inter Press Service
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15 Comments so far
Show AllLet us hope the US era of bullying and destroying the planet ends.
Right, so who's going to be the bully after the usa collapses?
Just asking. It's not like I'll mourn bush's amerika after its fall.
Your American wise guys believed your own myth, and your Donald Rumsfeld, your Dick Cheney and that toy puppet make a very comical three-some; it is not that the USA is weak, because you have a military that is 15 times bigger and stronger than the next 16 next biggest nations put together. Why do you then not become what you have believed that you could become, THE SOLE IMPERIAL POWER ON EARTH ? I can say it in very simple terms, it is because you spin too many fantasy in HOLLYWOOD and you got to believe that the impossible is possible and that the USA can out think everybody else.
The USA today still believe that you have won the cold war, but that is just BS and you prefer to think of the "re-badging" of the Soviet Union" into RUSSIA equates with victory for the USA and vanquished for the Russians. This is what you believed and this is what has bought you Americans to the edge of destruction because you believed that what is impossible is possible. You believed that you could trample over a 3rd world nation like Iraq and steal their oil and you got egg on your face. It may still be a mystry to you Americans why is it that you are so powerful and yet in any contest you have come out with egg on your face. The truth always evaded you and youstill believe that you are most mighty and yet you just cannot understand just why.
I have always known that the USA floating in a sea of debt must inevitably collapse and I prayed for the re-election of your President Bush because he is the biggest dreamer of all. You are still convinced that a rambo style world view is not fantasy. You of course do not think that is so. If China is able to climb out of our world ranking at 139th place in hust 2 decades then you ought to think that the American way may not be the best in this 21 Century. China is still poor but we are already catching up to you. Today China is number 3 in world trade; all in just 2 decades.
8 years ago it was still possible to have a soft landing. Economically the US was that much stronger. However, in those days it was already abundantly clear (at least to me, though not to the neocon idiots in Washingtin, DC) that countries like India and China would quickly become major players on the (economic) world scene. Economic access to resources will then become so much more important than military access to other countries.
But the US chose to walk straight to the cliff with self-delusional blinders on. Rack up debt, destroy the military, destroy the treasury, destroy the reputation of the US, destroy all the friendly relations, but "support the troops". The US will go over the cliff soon enough. Than gas is again cheap and plentiful in Europe and China, but prohibitively expensive in the US, because oil will be traded in Euros, and the dollar will have lost most of its value against the Euro and other major currencies. Same goes for all other resources, goods and services.
The only thing that can save the US is that it will become so cheap, that even Mexican industries will set up shops in the US for the cheap labor.
Yeah ..too many myths that had no basis in reality...and a people who would not look at reality.
But it could have been a chance to bring human rights to the world. The US could have done some great things...if greed had not blinded so many. We can still be a part (along with the other nations in this multi polar world) of bringing justice to an unjust world
yap.chongyee lets hope that your nation China will do something to help the people who work for so little money and have so few rights.
Do you support unions? How will the people of China get better rights?
Amerika is already in economic free fall. One in twelve yanks now works for a foreign company and the amerikan business community has sold off over 840 US companies to foreign businesses. Is it no wonder that over 28 repugs and 6 democrats have declined to run for re-election this year. The writing is on those subway walls; time to bail out and plan for the "great escape" or work for a foreign company.
We have all been conned by our masters for many years into giving to them, while letting them take from us, until we've reached the point where we have almost nothing, and when we have almost nothing we can no longer afford to buy what our masters have to sell, so, if something isn't done about this, it won't be long before neither our masters nor ourselves will have much of anything at all.
The answer is NO. America can not brace it's fall. As Chongyee pointed out in his comment, the US military is 15 times bigger than the next 16 militaries combined. The bigger they are, the harder they fall.
What might be better here explored is how to detach from this monstrosity so as not to go down with the ship.
1) Stop paying for bombs and bullets that are being used on moms and children and peasants and dissidents. In other words, stop paying federal taxes.
2) Learn wild foods. We fast approach the end of the industrial age, the wiping from the planet of the information age, the onset of a new dark age, the crash of temperatures globally due ocean dilution set on by polar melt off caused by industrial air pollution. Agriculture is expected by the experts to soon crash from 6b people's worth of food production yearly, to 2 billion people's worth of food production.
3) Study nuclear warfare survival, (bomb shelter, filter air). The powers that be got mad itchy trigger fingers. They will eventually need to demolish vast swaths of the human population to quell the natural resistance to their mismanagement and dominance. They are building robot attack jets, aka Unmanned Combat Air Vehicles, X45. They have in years past developed laser weapons capable of evaporating people on the surface of the planet from space. They have in years past invested in space nuclear power. They have invested in Robust Nuclear Earth Penetrators. They have slowly built their militant dominance capacity and as Hillary Clinton said they "(we) Are Ready..."
We can still be a tinhorn of an "empire". For example, we can still bully the Dominican Republic around. There will always be somebody poorer than the U.S. who we can invade, and we can always torture our own weakest citizens. So the empire will go on. It just won't be real.
Average people like us -- however intelligent -- have no way to really know in detail the inner workings of world power, even though we can "home in" on the icons that emit wrongdoing. I'm not saying "don't study" or "don't pay attention"; I'm just saying that the darkness that is in the center of the blackest of whirlpools, is what it is. It is the task of the good people of the world to not spend too much time staring at that whirlpool, but instead create positive models, where we are and with whom we can, that will attract energy in the direction of peace, social justice etc.
yap.chongyee--Your observation is astute--The United States has drowned in its own mythos. However, I would posit the "American Century" of Henry Luce--his vision put forth in a 1940 issue of Life magazine (which he edited)--died in 1953 in Korea, and was immolated by the undeclared wars of regime change in Iran and Guatamala and the refusal to honor and allow the 1954 Vietnamese elections. It was these acts that showed the world the real USA, and the Soviets capitalized upon them.
In reality, nothing much has changed since then. Other than the ongoing wars against Cuba and Iran, and the Vietnam failure, look at all the other "mini-wars" waged since--and the maxi-wars against Nicaragua and Serbia. The Iraqi Holocaust started being lead by Hussein, then Bush, Clinton, Bush, 1980-2008--28 years and still going, almost as long as the Israelis have engaged in their Palestine Holocaust, sponsored by USG. The USA has never been a champion of freedom, democracy or human rights--those are the MYTHS. "The business of America is business," which is to say it's always been quasi-fascist. The British were quite similar in this regard, and aren't much different today.
This is all to say to dydymus that it is quite possible to understand "the inner workings of world power," but it does take diligent time-consuming research, the equivalent of the Red Pill.
The current paradigm is unsustainable and will die by 2100, if not before. The only real question is How will the death agony unfold.
karlof1;
You did make a mistake with the date, right? I'd say the usa will fall by 2010, the USA that the world thought we knew fell in 2000.
The US ceased to exist in November of 2000, when the Bush/Cheney regime stole the election.
As an American, I apologize to the world.
skippyagogo41--No, I said the paradigm will die by 2100, that being Business As Usual--Industrial/Finance Capitalism as seen since about 1800. As for 2010, there's a lot of inertia present in the current Empire; Rome didn't have nearly as much and it took over 100 years for it to unravel and become the seed for the Ottomans in the east and the Germanic Franks in the west, which eventually grew to their own empires. A clue is the slow slide into the Great Depression; Kunstler's term is "The Long Emergency," while another that's emerging is The Great Decline. The fundamental limiting factor to BAU is energy. With over 5 mbpd of oil extraction, still 3rd most in the world, the US Empire is capable of either doing lots of damage or slowing its decline, but not both, and it looks ever more likely the latter option will win out as the former embodied by the war-criminal neolibercons is discredited and the mythos shattered.
Change is already happening in the global arena as Lobe sketches and Gates admits. Too many US citizens know a change in direction is required, which will become more apparent as the year rolls forward, basic costs-of-living continue to escalate while the USG continues to lie about the CPI, and the so-called stimulus utterly fails.
Obama is very imperfect, but much better than the even more imperfect Clinton and disaterous McCain. A lot of deadbeat reactionaries from both parties are choosing to retire and in many instances are being replaced by candidates to their left. The most important congressional contest will be the attempt to unseat Pelosi; if Sheehan succeeds, a world of posiblities opens.
KEY INSIDE -- Yes, my heart felt condolences.
Perhaps we need to change the USA name to UCA forUnited Coporations of America
Namaste … … … … … … … … … … … … … … … … … Mahatma Gandhi … … … … … … … … … …
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