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Empire Foreclosed?
Not long ago, excitement over American imperialism reached levels not seen in a century. "People are coming out of the closet on the word 'empire,'" the right-wing columnist Charles Krauthammer told The New York Times in early 2002. Neoconservatives were on the rise in Washington, and their leading propagandists were not shy in making the case for aggressive expansionism.
Wall Street Journal editor Max Boot, for instance, took issue with Pat Buchanan's belief that the United States should be a "republic, not an empire." "This analysis is exactly backward," Boot wrote. "[T]he Sept. 11 attack was a result of insufficient American involvement and ambition; the solution is to be more expansive in our goals and more assertive in their implementation." He added, "troubled lands today cry out for the sort of enlightened foreign administration once provided by self-confident Englishmen in jodhpurs and pith helmets."
It's hard to believe those sentiments, hallmarks of George W. Bush's first term, were features of our very recent history. The debate they were a part of now seems distinctly strange and foreign. Since then, the world has experienced a catastrophic occupation in Iraq, and voters have ousted the Republican vanguard of the "War on Terror." Overt defenders of imperialism have found good reason to creep back into their wardrobes.
And that, of course, is to say nothing of the bursting of the housing bubble, the fall of Lehman, and the end of the hedge fund era. With unemployment rising and Wall Street shamed, we have entered a period of economic downturn acute enough to raise serious questions about the viability of U.S. power. The pressing issue today is: How will the economic crisis affect our country's role in the world? Or, more bluntly: Is America's empire facing foreclosure?
The answer involves more than just quibbles over the semantics of U.S. dominance. Together, the fallout from the imperial hubris of the Bush administration and the discrediting of the deregulated market fundamentalism that thrived even under Bill Clinton have opened new possibilities for reshaping the global order in the Obama years.
Stretched Beyond the Limits?
The theory of imperial decline that has become standard over the past two decades is known as "overreach" or "overstretch." Historian Paul Kennedy most famously described the concept in his 1988 book, The Rise and Fall of the Great Powers. Kennedy argued that, historically, dominant world powers doomed themselves by engaging in overseas adventures that drained their strength and strained their finances. His analysis, with its implication that the United States could well follow the pattern of past empires, proved influential. The term "imperial overstretch" quickly became a fixture in mainstream political discussion.
At the time, American conservatives fumed. They argued that the British-born professor was a doomsdayer who did not appreciate America's unmatched power. When the Soviet Union collapsed and the American economy took off in the 1990s, they considered themselves vindicated. However, it appears that Kennedy may yet have the last laugh.
Today, the pricetag on America's global military posture looks more imposing than ever. Even under President Barack Obama - whose administration has proposed cutting a few costly and outmoded weapons systems - the United States will spend upwards of a half-trillion dollars per year to fund its armed forces and keep up its "Baseworld." This is what author and foreign policy analyst Chalmers Johnson named the country's sprawling network of overseas encampments, rarely noticed by citizens at home but bitterly resented by much of the world. The United States officially owns 737 bases worldwide, worth more than $127 billion and covering at least 687,347 acres in some 130 foreign countries. "Once upon a time, you could trace the spread of imperialism by counting up colonies," Johnson writes in his 2007 book, Nemesis: The Last Days of the American Republic. "America's version of the colony is the military base."
Johnson explains, "The purpose of all these bases is 'force projection,' or the maintenance of American military hegemony over the rest of the world. They facilitate our 'policing' of the globe and are meant to ensure that no other nation, friendly or hostile, can ever challenge us militarily." Since the end of the Cold War, holding such unrivalled power has been a stated cornerstone of U.S. defense policy.
We must now ask: Can such hegemony plausibly be maintained? On the objective level, President Bush made the strains on empire more severe by occupying multiple countries and creating a need for more troops than the military could recruit. Highlighting this dilemma, Kennedy argued in a 2006 interview, "U.S. Army generals would definitely say that America is overstretched."
But even more significantly, Bush upped the political and economic costs of empire by engendering ill-will and resistance to the United States throughout the world. A key aspect of imperial overstretch is that it must be measured relatively. It depends not only on objective factors, like the size of the U.S. military, but also on how other international actors choose to respond to America's foreign policy prerogatives. Ironically, as the neoconservative "imperial globalists" of the Bush administration placed ever more stock in America's hard power, they only ended up demonstrating its impotence. In Iraq and Afghanistan, the United States has shown itself unable to create stability or suppress insurgency with its might. Like its failure in Vietnam, the fiasco in the Middle East has emboldened opposition. The neocons dreamed of Iraq as a democratic ally and platform for U.S. power in the region. Instead, the country is now a symbol of the superpower's weakness.
Democratic resistance also determines the relative limits of empire. Among our allies, the Bush administration's "with us or against us" attacks on multilateralism diminished the willingness of other powers to shoulder part of the burden of America's overseas adventures. Members of the international community, disgusted by imperial globalism's failure to produce real security, increasingly refused to go along. This left a politically isolated United States with the stark and foreboding prospect of policing the world alone - a humbling proposition even to an administration notably lacking in humility.
Dangling the Dollar
Obama may be able to reverse some of the diplomatic damage of the Bush years, but his administration faces problems of its own. Global force projection requires not only a huge amount of political capital; at a most fundamental level, it demands financial treasure. Thus, degrees of overstretch must also be gauged relative to economic health - something which is now in short supply. Many would think that America, in the throes of financial crisis, would be destined for imperial bankruptcy.
The United States, accustomed over the past 15 years to running a large current account deficit, has clearly been living beyond its means. While its bubble economy was expanding, the government relied on foreign investors to pay for its excessive military spending. And on the consumer level, families went into credit card debt and borrowed against the value of their homes to keep consuming.
It was an unsustainable state of affairs, and most nations would never have been allowed to maintain it. The International Monetary Fund (IMF) would have railed against wanton economic mismanagement and warned creditors not to invest in that country unless the government promised sweeping reforms. Even without the institution's influence, textbook economics holds that, on seeing such signs of economic weakness, investors would shy away from the country, its currency would fall, consumers would no longer be able to afford as many foreign goods, and the economy would undergo a necessary, if painful, "correction." Financial hardship and declining standards of living would logically prompt a country to scale back pricey involvements abroad.
Now that crisis has struck, it would seem that we are overdue for a tough reckoning with imperial costs. However, the state of the markets isn't the only factor in play. Like in the political sphere, the ability of the United States to survive economically as a hegemon depends in large part on whether others decide to support, tolerate, or resist the present order.
What makes the United States different than other countries? As the world's political superpower and largest economy, America's dollars serve as the reserve currency for the rest of the world. Foreign countries keep their money in dollars because they believe they are more dependable than any alternative. As long as other nations are willing to keep pouring money into the dollar, the United States can finance ever-larger deficits.
Ironically, one effect of the crisis thus far has been to sustain high demand for the dollar. The logic is simple. In a chaotic economy, many investors consider U.S. Treasury bonds the only safe place to hold their money - even if interest rates are low. But this won't last forever. Already noises of discontent have come from major investors. As world leaders were gathering in London for the recent G20 summit, Zhou Xiaochuan, the governor of China's central bank, called for a new "super-sovereign reserve currency," which would displace the dollar.
Progressive economists such as Paul Krugman and Dean Baker have debated the significance of China's latest posturing, and it's doubtful that an immediate abandoning of the dollar is in the offing. But when other countries do decide to change economic strategies and turn to a new reserve currency, it could be a tipping point for America's imperial designs. Washington need only consult London about the gravity of this problem. As many historians have observed, the unraveling of the British Empire came hard on the heels of the shift away from pounds sterling as the global currency of choice.
The Promise and Perils of Multipolarity
Even if the United States weathers the crisis with its economy more or less intact, most political observers believe that its power will diminish in coming years, at least relative to that of other countries. "Multipolarity" has become the watchword of the day. In a multipolar order, there will no longer be a sole superpower, the United States, calling the shots. Instead, America will have to function within a constellation of regional political and economic powerbrokers.
Even before the financial crisis, U.S. government intelligence sources predicted a significant international realignment over the next two decades. In early 2005, the National Intelligence Council released a 119-page report entitled Mapping the Global Future. As Slate reported, the document argued that in the year 2020 "the United States will remain 'an important shaper of the international order' - probably the single most powerful country - but its 'relative power position' will have 'eroded.' The new 'arriviste powers' - not only China and India, but also Brazil, Indonesia, and perhaps others - will accelerate this erosion by pursuing 'strategies designed to exclude or isolate the United States' in order to 'force or cajole' us into playing by their rules."
These predictions are proving to be well founded. According to the London Independent, the G20 summit put a version of a multipolar order on display; it was "a summit that show[ed] the new balance of power." There, "the voice of the United States was one, albeit an influential one, among others.... By inclination or by necessity, the post-Bush United States seems to see its place in the world a little differently: less American exceptionalism, more consensus-seeking. In the G20, the presence of China, India and Indonesia, among others, gives a foretaste of a future world order." Standing out among other nations, "China made its shy debut as a rising power."
Debates rage about the implications of the multipolar shift. Some commentators have worried that, paralleling the rise of fascism in the interwar period, a global economic collapse could bring reactionary, xenophobic movements to power in many countries. And already in the Bush years, conservative defenders of empire, such as Harvard historian Niall Ferguson, spread fear about the prospects of unipolarity's end. "If the United States retreats from global hegemony - its fragile self-image dented by minor setbacks on the imperial frontier - its critics at home and abroad must not pretend that they are ushering in a new era of multipolar harmony, or even a return to the good old balance of power," he wrote in Foreign Policy. "Unfortunately, the alternative to a single superpower is not a multilateral utopia, but the anarchic nightmare of a new Dark Age." The historian warned of "Waning empires. Religious revivals. Incipient anarchy. A coming retreat into fortified cities. These are the Dark Age experiences that a world without a hyperpower might quickly find itself reliving."
Of course, those who most bemoan the loss of "hyperpower" are the same people who cheered the invasion of Iraq. And unfortunately, in its tenure as a global hegemon, the United States bolstered repressive and undemocratic governments at least as often as it thwarted them. Yet there is some amount of justified caveat here for multipolarists: Imperial decline doesn't guarantee progress. Certainly, other rising powers will need to be subjected to the same level of public scrutiny and democratic criticism as past goliaths.
But while the rejection of both corporate and imperial models of globalization may not be sufficient for creating a more just global order, it is necessary. Today's economic crisis, global in scope, will mean real pain for working people and for economically vulnerable communities throughout the world, those who will suffer most during a "Great Recession." But there is also hope in this time of crisis. The dual delegitimization of empire and of market fundamentalism has created more space for global alternatives than has existed since the end of the Cold War. Now is a moment ripe for the spread of political and economic visions emerging from below. And it's an opportunity for the United States to craft a vision of international relations more humble, more egalitarian, and more democratic than what has previously been pursued in freedom's name.
A Softer Power?
The United States, whatever its troubles, is not going to disappear. Predictions of collapse from the left and right alike usually imagine imperial decline as a more fixed and predetermined process than it is. Economic weakness in the United States, even the displacement of the dollar on the world scene, won't mean that America will fade into irrelevance in one swift, dramatic gesture. The United States remains by far the world's largest economy, and its military might will dwarf that of up-and-coming rivals for the foreseeable future. Even in a multipolar environment, the United States could hold a status as "first among equals" for decades to come.
More pressing, then, than determining whether the United States is an empire is the question of how Washington will manage the transition to a situation where its relative dominance has diminished. Because the contours of this decline are highly variable, the foreign policy decisions of the Obama administration remain very relevant.
One current danger is that Obama, while rejecting the brash unilateralism of the Bush administration and pulling back the fist of U.S. hard power, will return to a softer form of imperial power. Under Bill Clinton, the United States used multilateral institutions such as the IMF, the World Bank, and the World Trade Organization (WTO) as primary instruments of foreign policy. While staffed with economists in business suits rather than grunts in fatigues, these bodies exerted considerable control over foreign peoples.
The international financial institutions forced developing countries to comply with the prescriptions of the "Washington Consensus" in order to receive economic support. These market fundamentalist policies benefited the corporate elite, while deepening inequalities and producing very limited growth in the countries where they were implemented. Corporate globalization's deregulated markets also proved crisis-prone, producing systemic shocks ranging from the Asian financial crisis of 1998 and 1999, to Argentina's economic collapse in 2001, to the crisis that began with the collapse of America's subprime housing sector.
During the Bush years the power of the IMF and the World Bank dramatically waned, in part because of the discrediting effects of the earlier crises and in part because of the Bush administration's disinterest in investing in multilateral structures. The Bush White House, with its penchant for unilateralist hard power, didn't appreciate the advantages of Clinton's preferred imperial instruments, and was sometimes downright dismissive of them. British journalist and Guardian columnist George Monbiot perceptively described this as "the unacknowledged paradox in neocon thinking." He wrote in an April 2005 column that the Bush foreign policy operatives
want to drag down the old, multilateral order and replace it with a new, U.S. one. What they fail to understand is that the "multilateral" system is in fact a projection of U.S. unilateralism, cleverly packaged to grant other nations just enough slack to prevent them from fighting it. Like their opponents, the neocons fail to understand how well Roosevelt and Truman stitched up the international order. They are seeking to replace a hegemonic system that is enduring and effective with one that is untested and (because other nations must fight it) unstable. Anyone who believes in global justice should wish them luck.
For critics of the IMF and World Bank, seeing these bodies diminish was a sign of progress. But it now looks like the job of dismantling the past hegemonic order was far from complete. The Bretton Woods system may be more enduring and effective than even Monbiot would have guessed.
Usual Suspects
Today, the global economic downturn is giving new life to some of the institutions that did the most to create the crisis in the first place. Critics fear that the Obama administration might use these institutions to reassert U.S. hegemony, albeit in a subtler form. In doing so, Obama would no doubt look progressive in comparison to Bush. But liberal praise would be misplaced if the multilateral institutions he reanimates hold true to past practices.
At the G20 summit, the assembled leaders vowed to channel up to $750 billion through the IMF to support developing countries, tripling the institution's resources. As the London Independent describes it, "If everyone honors their pledges, institutions that seemed on the verge of redundancy only a few years ago will soon find themselves awash with new cash and new responsibilities...The Bush-era contempt for the UN and other multilateral forums is a thing of the past. At least for now."
A positive interpretation of these events would hold that people and institutions change along with political conditions. "The Larry Summers of 2009 is not the Larry Summers of 1999," the argument goes - positing that the former Treasury secretary, a leading corporate globalist in the Clinton years, will help to advance a far more progressive economic agenda within the altered circumstances that have allowed him to become Obama's director of the National Economic Council. The IMF might optimistically be expected to undergo a similar rebirth. Although the Fund in the past worsened the Asian financial crisis by making countries cut spending and eliminate economic regulations, it will now be compelled to remake itself as an institution able to stimulate spending and distribute Keynesian largesse to those in need.
This view may not be entirely naïve. In advance of the G20 summit, British Prime Minister Gordon Brown explicitly delineated a break with former practices. "Too often," he acknowledged, "our responses to past crises have been inadequate or misdirected, promoting economic orthodoxies that we ourselves have not followed and that have condemned the world's poorest to a deepening crisis of poverty." Brown went further at the G20 summit itself, flatly declaring, "the Washington consensus is over."
The New York Times reported corresponding shifts within the IMF:
There have already been signs of change. Late last month, the IMF announced a revamp of its lending criteria so that less emphasis is placed on evaluating a borrower's ability to meet "structural performance criteria," the fund's jargon for such measures as spending cuts and tax increases. Supporters of the IMF say that the fund has learned lessons from its experience working with Asian countries after the region's financial crisis in 1998 and is now in a position to offer credit without harsh conditions.
There are, however, many reasons to be suspicious. The IMF's habit of imposing harmful conditionality is hardly ancient history. Bailout deals brokered over the past year with countries such as Hungary, Latvia, Romania, and Pakistan have called on recipient countries to drive up interest rates, reduce the wages and benefits of civil servants, or otherwise prevent their central governments from injecting money into their economies - the exact opposite of what any real "stimulus" plan would demand.
The G20's embrace of the WTO was similarly problematic. Despite this institution's history in promoting neoliberal deregulation, the G20 leaders committed to forging ahead with currently stalled negotiations there.
Commenting on the summit's final declaration, trade lawyer Lori Wallach, director of Public Citizen's Global Trade Watch, argues that "one page of the communiqué identifies 'major failures...in financial regulation and supervision' as 'fundamental causes of the crisis'...while the next page reaffirms the leaders' commitment to concluding the WTO Doha Round negotiations that require further deregulation of finance."
The international financial institutions' continued failures relate to their woefully undemocratic structures. At the IMF, reforms of recent years have made token overtures toward increasing the voting power of developing countries. However, the United States, with more than four times the voting shares of China and with sole veto power, is still firmly at the helm. There is little evidence to suggest that either the U.S. Treasury Department or the international financial institutions are capable of nurturing a truly democratic globalization.
First Do No Harm
A key step in moving toward a post-imperial foreign policy would be to abandon the idea that the United States is at its best when it intervenes, militarily or economically. The Obama White House is right to reject Bush administration militarism. But in crafting something different it should be conscientious to "first do no harm." Reviving a version of corporate globalization under the guise of a return to multilateralism would violate this dictum.
As it considers alternatives, the Obama administration should recognize that some of the most dynamic democratic processes in the world have been taking place in Latin America, which has recently experienced a form of benign neglect. While this is a region traditionally regarded as the U.S. imperial backyard, it was often overlooked in the Bush years, when Washington focused on its engagements in the Middle East. The outcomes have been promising.
In the past decade, Latin American voters have consistently beaten Prime Minister Brown to his insight about the dysfunction of the Washington Consensus. In country after country they have elected new leaders with mandates to break with the international financial institutions and to pursue new economic policies. As a result, even before the current crisis, countries such as Bolivia, which has one of the poorest populations in the hemisphere, have been devising more equitable ways of distributing natural resource wealth - and more democratic ways of involving historically marginalized indigenous populations in the political process. Countries like Argentina, which suffered tremendously under Washington-backed neoliberalism, have worked to develop alternative, regional financial structures to allow for greater independence.
To the extent that it allows such experiments to progress, an inward focus by the Obama administration on dealing with the domestic implications of the economic crisis would be welcome. In that case, whether the still-unrivaled U.S. economy, its cultural reach, and its worldwide network of military bases will continue to qualify it as an imperial power - or whether other language more accurately describes its sway within an emerging multipolar system - will remain open to debate. But we will have moved closer to the day when "enlightened" and "self-confident" foreign administrators, whether in pith helmets or cuff links, are permanently retired.
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19 Comments so far
Show AllFor a glimpse at the consequences suffered by colonial India at the hands of " ... the sort of enlightened foreign administration once provided by self-confident Englishmen in jodhpurs and pith helmets," I urge everyone to read "Late Victorian Holocausts: El Nino Famines and the Making of the Third World" by Mike Davis.
How anyone can seriously argue that English imperialism was "enlightened," even in its own historical context, escapes me totally.
I don't know much about Max Boot, but I know enough to say that the man hasn't got the slightest notion about what "enlightened" means. For him "enlightened" simply means, "We know better", and that's based on some silly, quite changeable notions about a culture.
It's the same thinking that leads some US people to confidently and deridingly declare that other nations are not civilized because their people don't own cars, carry mortgages, dump their kitchen waste into garbage disposals, drink bottled water, and have their clothing dry cleaned.
Most of the "developed" world needs to deeply re-examine its concept of wealth and to even more carefully consider the knowledge which is at the basis of the societies.
If the US continues to hold onto the militarism under the guise of maintaining security and strength, the nation will go under more quickly.
I don't or can't think of a better description of 'history repeating itself' than what Mike Davis wrote about the old English colony of India in 'Late Victorian Holocausts' and how those english administrators time and time again with the aid of the climate would allow millions and 10s of millions of the poor and the poor farmers to starve to death for the sake of those english company's profits. This also was happening in China. Clearly demonstrating some of the earlier uses of unregulated markets. Not too mention the destruction of the land by bad farming tactics.
And the description of the El Nino and El Nina weather/climate systems is as good as it gets in trying to understand what they are and the 'shock doctrine' use they provided long before Naomi Klein was a gleam in her mother and father's eyes.
I still cannot help but think that those central bankers or at least the IMF, World Bank and WTO are more of a blight on the progress of humanity and the demise of them and all central banking will be the best place to start building the most important of economies, the local markets.
Dominance of the US and in turn the global economy by a deregulated, corrupt financial industry during the past 30 years has been the hub of the growth of US imperialism.
Rather than facilitating the emergence of a new financial paradigm, Snobama and the seven insiders are squandering trillions of US taxpayer dollars to energize the deregulated, corrupt financial industry.
It is therefore not surprising that the Wall Street crowd is promoting expansion of imperialism. The message from DC is that the President and Congress will do whatever it takes to keep the existing, destructive financial industry paradigm alive.
Calling the raping and plundering of India as an enlightened example is outrageous.
But anyone who says bullshit like that is exposing himself as a mouth-piece of
imperialism and has to be dismissed and not taken seriously anymore.
The Romans were a great empire also at one time, and look how they ended up. They had the big sports arena to keep the people entertained while the ones in power wrecked their country. Will we be different?
Empire is a pathological condition, leading to slavery, decadent elites (the "havemores) in dreamy isolation and the booming madness of the havenothings.
Fun for a minute. insanity as it spins out of control. Of course the control issue is the elephant in the room. china, england usa all are implementing a global security state to grind the masses into complicity in their boring new world.
How long will the people be content with a simulated manufactured reality???
Mark Engler wrote: "Empire Foreclosed?"
Not too fast. The Empire is still here and going strong. What changed is only the style and not the substance by putting Obama as president.
The victims of the current economic debacle are not the empire but the average
Joes/Janes who will still pay the costs and do the dying.
Everybody is missing a point you accidentaly make.
For all their gain and glory everybody dies.
Which point did I arrive to by "accident"? I am not sure why you think that
I arrived to it "accidently"?! I am baffeld and confused.
Wall Street Journal editor Max Boot, for instance, took issue with Pat Buchanan's belief that the United States should be a "republic, not an empire." "This analysis is exactly backward," Boot wrote. "[T]he Sept. 11 attack was a result of insufficient American involvement and ambition; the solution is to be more expansive in our goals and more assertive in their implementation." He added, "troubled lands today cry out for the sort of enlightened foreign administration once provided by self-confident Englishmen in jodhpurs and pith helmets."
And like the British Empah, the U.S. will stop at nothing to maintain its empah, then bankrupt itself in the process and lose it anyway.
Mr. Engler's article provides a very useful "focus on foreign policy" in noting not only the obvious "bankruptcy" problems of an "over-reached" empire, but the possibility of continuation of American imperialism under a "softer" form of power. His piece quite appropriately focusses on whether in foreign policy the Obama's administration Clinton foreign policy warhorses will lead us back to Bill Clinton's "Washington Consensus" dependence on exercising U.S. power by means of internationalist agencies like the I.M.F. (and I might add, the UN). I would share Engler's skepticism that the Larry Summers of today is that different from the Summers of his B. Clinton days, and whether the IMF remains the same American wolf in the sheep's clothing of "international cooperation" that it was in an earlier time.
Useful as Engler's essay is, I think it hardly scratches the surface of the dangers that may arise from the "soft" form of power that seems to be under construction in the Obama foreign policy. Apparently one of Obama's greatest admirers is that same Joseph Nye who "wrote the book" on soft power as a more effective appoach than hard power of a country "getting its way" in international relations. Nye even defined soft power as: "the ability to obtain the outcomes one wants through attraction rather than using the carrots and sticks of payment or coercion."
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/joseph-nye/barack-obama-and-soft-pow_b_106717.html. In the source cited here, written in June 2008, Nye indicated that the election of Obama would itself be an expansion of U.S. soft power, as he would offer more "attraction" by virtue of his charismatic personality. Beyond that, Nye was already counseling the president-to-be-elected to promote such soft power measures as changing the name of our military operations from "war on terror" to a softer sounding name, perhaps the counsel behind the recent shift to "overseas contingency operations." (OCOs) I posted on my weblog last week ("Empire is Empire...Hard or Soft) http://sunstateactivist.org/ssablog/?p=224 my concern about whether OCOs would bring us back to the bad old days of U.S. interventionism in which every "overseas" event with any suggestion of a U.S. "interest" in the matter would result in every form of American "operations" from manipulating elections in Venezuela to sending in the marines to rescue American nationals in Grenada or Panama.
This is but the tip of the iceberg of my profound skepticism about the actual reduction of imperalism when the method of its administration changes from hard to soft power exercises, but I'm running against my 1000 word limit for these postings, and will close with a loud endorsement of Engler's suggestion that the real hope of a more equitable distribution of power in the world lies in some of those "Bolivarian alternative" movements that are coming out of Latin America: that is, movements that reject American dominance whether it is accomplished in hard or soft ways. Americans by and large have not, I think, gone to kindergarten, so that, where power is concerned, they never learned the lesson of "sharing."
"“Alexander, Caesar, Charlemagne, and myself founded empires; but what foundation did we rest the creations of our genius? Upon force. Jesus Christ founded an empire upon love; and at this hour millions of men would die for Him.”
Napoleon Bonaparte
“In the eyes of empire builders men are not men but instruments”
Napoleon Bonaparte
“The foundation of empire is art and science. Remove them or degrade them, and the empire is no more. Empire follows art and not vice versa as Englishmen suppose.”
William Blake
“An empire founded by war has to maintain itself by war.”
Charles de Montesquieu
When there is only one food to eat, when there is only one water to drink, when there is only one religion to pray to, when there is only one thought to think, when there is only one night to sleep, we all will.
Good Night.
Hector
"American conservatives fumed. They argued that the British-born professor was a doomsdayer who did not appreciate America's unmatched power. When the Soviet Union collapsed and the American economy took off in the 1990s, they considered themselves vindicated."
Wait -- Kennedy argued that empires overstretch themselves and for that reason fail. The Soviet empire, only a few years after the newspapers were constantly telling us that only a nuclear response could stop Soviet tanks rolling west across the plains of Europe against a badly overmatched "conventional" NATO force, "collapsed". And becasue of that "collapse" of a greatly feared, but it turns out "overstretched", empire, the neoconservatives "considered themselves vindicated"?
What am I missing in the logic here?
"The Larry Summers of 2009 is not the Larry Summers of 1999," the argument goes - positing that the former Treasury secretary, a leading corporate globalist in the Clinton years, will help to advance a far more progressive economic agenda within the altered circumstances that have allowed him to become Obama's director of the National Economic Council."
What a joke! The alleged "far more progressive economic agenda" is to dump Structured Investment Vehicle garbage onto U.S. taxpayers because Wall Street can't find any more suckers around the globe to invest in their Ponzi-scheme.
“The new rules, referred to as mark-to-market, will enable all financial institutions with such securities to report higher profits by assuming that the securities are worth more than anyone now is prepared to pay for them.”
The smoke and mirrors that Treasury and the Federal Reserve have used to fool the public into trusting the banking system have not worked and will never work. A total restructuring of the banking system is necessary to regain public confidence in this BS-laced "to-big-to-fail" public-money confiscation scheme.
"Break up the monsters... let the players get smaller... let the system get privatized, with risk allocated as it should be - to the private investors - and start again."
As long as we're on the subject of the IMF, be very afraid. Pakistan has accepted an IMF package because of the ecomomic calamity. I'll bet Obama and very few people in DC have factored in the chaos that IMF's new, improved "structural adjustments" will have on that society. And what about that surge in Afghanistan?
Watch out for this metamorphosis of American soft imperial power under Barack Obama and Joseph Nye. The American ruling class will learn to appreciate the problems faced by the ruling classes of China, India, Russia, Brazil, Indonesia, France, Britain, Japan, Germany, etc and adjust American imperial foreign policies accordingly. The American ruling class under George W. Bush made the mistake of screwing the ruling classes of other countries thinking that American imperial expansions can ride rough shod over all of their interests and still get away with it.
Under Obama and Joseph Nye the American ruling class will learn the lesson that American ruling class will sink and swim together with all the other important ruling classes around the world. They must unite in a coming "face off" against the ever-threatening billions of stupid ignorant masses under their control. This will be the new face of corporate/capitalist globalisation. The capitalists and corporations of all the ruling classes of all important countries must learn to give and take to keep this system going and forestall revolution from the dispossesed under their control.
For example, George Bush called upon the ruling class of China to turn China into a "responsible stake-holder" while in actuality he was screwing them mercilessly. Barack Obama knows better now. The ruling classes of the world must be united in their aim and pursuit. They must genuinely share a programme so that the ruling classes around the world can continue to screw their population for all eternity. This is the true lesson of corporate/capitalist globalisation that all ruling classes must understand, and policies based on that lesson must be implemented and USA must continue to lead such a world order