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Washington on the Rocks: An Empire of Autocrats, Aristocrats, and Uniformed Thugs Begins to Totter
In one of history’s lucky accidents, the juxtaposition of two extraordinary events has stripped the architecture of American global power bare for all to see. Last November, WikiLeaks splashed snippets from U.S. embassy cables, loaded with scurrilous comments about national leaders from Argentina to Zimbabwe, on the front pages of newspapers worldwide. Then just a few weeks later, the Middle East erupted in pro-democracy protests against the region’s autocratic leaders, many of whom were close U.S. allies whose foibles had been so conveniently detailed in those same diplomatic cables.
Suddenly, it was possible to see the foundations of a U.S. world order that rested significantly on national leaders who serve Washington as loyal “subordinate elites” and who are, in reality, a motley collection of autocrats, aristocrats, and uniformed thugs. Visible as well was the larger logic of otherwise inexplicable U.S. foreign policy choices over the past half-century.
Why would the CIA risk controversy in 1965, at the height of the Cold War, by overthrowing an accepted leader like Sukarno in Indonesia or encouraging the assassination of the Catholic autocrat Ngo Dinh Diem in Saigon in 1963? The answer -- and thanks to WikiLeaks and the “Arab spring,” this is now so much clearer -- is that both were Washington’s chosen subordinates until each became insubordinate and expendable.
Why, half a century later, would Washington betray its stated democratic principles by backing Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak against millions of demonstrators and then, when he faltered, use its leverage to replace him, at least initially with his intelligence chief Omar Suleiman, a man best known for running Cairo’s torture chambers (and lending them out to Washington)? The answer again: because both were reliable subordinates who had long served Washington’s interests well in this key Arab state.
Across the Greater Middle East from Tunisia and Egypt to Bahrain and Yemen, democratic protests are threatening to sweep away subordinate elites crucial to the wielding of American power. Of course, all modern empires have relied on dependable surrogates to translate their global power into local control -- and for most of them, the moment when those elites began to stir, talk back, and set their own agendas was also the moment when it became clear that imperial collapse was in the cards.
If the "velvet revolutions” that swept Eastern Europe in 1989 tolled the death knell for the Soviet empire, then the "jasmine revolutions" now spreading across the Middle East may well mark the beginning of the end for American global power.
Putting the Military in Charge
To understand the importance of local elites, look back to the Cold War’s early days when a desperate White House was searching for something, anything that could halt the seemingly unstoppable spread of what Washington saw as anti-American and pro-communist sentiment. In December 1954, the National Security Council (NSC) met in the White House to stake out a strategy that could tame the powerful nationalist forces of change then sweeping the globe.
Across Asia and Africa, a half-dozen European empires that had guaranteed global order for more than a century were giving way to 100 new nations, many -- as Washington saw it -- susceptible to “communist subversion.” In Latin America, there were stirrings of leftist opposition to the region’s growing urban poverty and rural landlessness.
After a review of the “threats” facing the U.S. in Latin America, influential Treasury Secretary George Humphrey informed his NSC colleagues that they should “stop talking so much about democracy” and instead “support dictatorships of the right if their policies are pro-American.” At that moment with a flash of strategic insight, Dwight Eisenhower interrupted to observe that Humphrey was, in effect, saying, “They’re OK if they’re our s.o.b.’s.”
It was a moment to remember, for the President of the United States had just articulated with crystalline clarity the system of global dominion that Washington would implement for the next 50 years -- setting aside democratic principles for a tough realpolitik policy of backing any reliable leader willing to support the U.S., thereby building a worldwide network of national (and often nationalist) leaders who would, in a pinch, put Washington’s needs above local ones.
Throughout the Cold War, the U.S. would favor military autocrats in Latin America, aristocrats across the Middle East, and a mixture of democrats and dictators in Asia. In 1958, military coups in Thailand and Iraq suddenly put the spotlight on Third World militaries as forces to be reckoned with. It was then that the Eisenhower administration decided to bring foreign military leaders to the U.S. for further “training” to facilitate “the ‘management’ of the forces of change released by the development” of these emerging nations. Henceforth, Washington would pour military aid into the cultivation of the armed forces of allies and potential allies worldwide, while “training missions” would be used to create crucial ties between the U.S. military and the officer corps in country after country -- or where subordinate elites did not seem subordinate enough, help identify alternative leaders.
When civilian presidents proved insubordinate, the Central Intelligence Agency went to work, promoting coups that would install reliable military successors --replacing Iranian Prime Minister Mohammad Mossadeq, who tried to nationalize his country's oil, with General Fazlollah Zahedi (and then the young Shah) in 1953; President Sukarno with General Suharto in Indonesia during the next decade; and of course President Salvador Allende with General Augusto Pinochet in Chile in 1973, to name just three such moments.
In the first years of the twenty-first century, Washington’s trust in the militaries of its client states would only grow. The U.S. was, for example, lavishing $1.3 billion in aid on Egypt’s military annually, but investing only $250 million a year in the country’s economic development. As a result, when demonstrations rocked the regime in Cairo last January, as the New York Times reported, “a 30-year investment paid off as American generals... and intelligence officers quietly called... friends they had trained with,” successfully urging the army’s support for a “peaceful transition” to, yes indeed, military rule.
Elsewhere in the Middle East, Washington has, since the 1950s, followed the British imperial preference for Arab aristocrats by cultivating allies that included a shah (Iran), sultans (Abu Dhabi, Oman), emirs (Bahrain, Kuwait, Qatar, Dubai), and kings (Saudi Arabia, Jordan, Morocco). Across this vast, volatile region from Morocco to Iran, Washington courted these royalist regimes with military alliances, U.S. weapons systems, CIA support for local security, a safe American haven for their capital, and special favors for their elites, including access to educational institutions in the U.S. or Department of Defense overseas schools for their children.
In 2005, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice summed up this record thusly: “For 60 years, the United States pursued stability at the expense of democracy… in the Middle East, and we achieved neither.”
How It Used to Work
America is by no means the first hegemon to build its global power on the gossamer threads of personal ties to local leaders. In the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, Britain may have ruled the waves (as America would later rule the skies), but when it came to the ground, like empires past it needed local allies who could serve as intermediaries in controlling complex, volatile societies. Otherwise, how in 1900 could a small island nation of just 40 million with an army of only 99,000 men rule a global empire of some 400 million, nearly a quarter of all humanity?
From 1850 to 1950, Britain controlled its formal colonies through an extraordinary array of local allies -- from Fiji island chiefs and Malay sultans to Indian maharajas and African emirs. Simultaneously, through subordinate elites Britain reigned over an even larger “informal empire” that encompassed emperors (from Beijing to Istanbul), kings (from Bangkok to Cairo), and presidents (from Buenos Aires to Caracas). At its peak in 1880, Britain's informal empire in Latin America, the Middle East, and China was larger, in population, than its formal colonial holdings in India and Africa. Its entire global empire, encompassing nearly half of humanity, rested on these slender ties of cooperation to loyal local elites.
Following four centuries of relentless imperial expansion, however, Europe’s five major overseas empires were suddenly erased from the globe in a quarter-century of decolonization. Between 1947 and 1974, the Belgian, British, Dutch, French, and Portuguese empires faded fast from Asia and Africa, giving way to a hundred new nations, more than half of today’s sovereign states. In searching for an explanation for this sudden, sweeping change, most scholars agree with British imperial historian Ronald Robinson who famously argued that “when colonial rulers had run out of indigenous collaborators,” their power began to fade.
During the Cold War that coincided with this era of rapid decolonization, the world’s two superpowers turned to the same methods regularly using their espionage agencies to manipulate the leaders of newly independent states. The Soviet Union’s KGB and its surrogates like the Stasi in East Germany and the Securitate in Romania enforced political conformity among the 14 Soviet satellite states in Eastern Europe and challenged the U.S. for loyal allies across the Third World. Simultaneously, the CIA monitored the loyalties of presidents, autocrats, and dictators on four continents, employing coups, bribery, and covert penetration to control and, when necessary, remove nettlesome leaders.
In an era of nationalist feeling, however, the loyalty of local elites proved a complex matter indeed. Many of them were driven by conflicting loyalties and often deep feelings of nationalism, which meant that they had to be monitored closely. So critical were these subordinate elites, and so troublesome were their insubordinate iterations, that the CIA repeatedly launched risky covert operations to bring them to heel, sparking some of the great crises of the Cold War.
Given the rise of its system of global control in a post-World War II age of independence, Washington had little choice but to work not simply with surrogates or puppets, but with allies who -- admittedly from weaker positions -- still sought to maximize what they saw as their nations’ interests (as well as their own). Even at the height of American global power in the 1950s, when its dominance was relatively unquestioned, Washington was forced into hard bargaining with the likes of the Philippines’ Raymond Magsaysay, South Korean autocrat Syngman Rhee, and South Vietnam’s Ngo Dinh Diem.
In South Korea during the 1960s, for instance, General Park Chung Hee, then president, bartered troop deployments to Vietnam for billions of U.S. development dollars, which helped spark the country's economic "miracle." In the process, Washington paid up, but got what it most wanted: 50,000 of those tough Korean troops as guns-for-hire helpers in its unpopular war in Vietnam.
Post-Cold War World
After the Berlin Wall came down in 1989, ending the Cold War, Moscow quickly lost its satellite states from Estonia to Azerbaijan, as once-loyal Soviet surrogates were ousted or leapt off the sinking ship of empire. For Washington, the “victor” and soon to be the “sole superpower” on planet Earth, the same process would begin to happen, but at a far slower pace.
Over the next two decades, globalization fostered a multipolar system of rising powers in Beijing, New Delhi, Moscow, Ankara, and Brasilia, even as a denationalized system of corporate power reduced the dependency of developing economies on any single state, however imperial. With its capacity for controlling elites receding, Washington has faced ideological competition from Islamic fundamentalism, European regulatory regimes, Chinese state capitalism, and a rising tide of economic nationalism in Latin America.
As U.S. power and influence declined, Washington’s attempts to control its subordinate elites began to fail, often spectacularly -- including its efforts to topple bête noire Hugo Chavez of Venezuela in a badly bungled 2002 coup, to detach ally Mikheil Saakashvili of Georgia from Russia’s orbit in 2008, and to oust nemesis Mahmoud Ahmadinejad in the 2009 Iranian elections. Where a CIA coup or covert cash once sufficed to defeat an antagonist, the Bush administration needed a massive invasion to topple just one troublesome dictator, Saddam Hussein. Even then, it found its plans for subsequent regime change in Syria and Iran blocked when these states instead aided a devastating insurgency against U.S. forces inside Iraq.
Similarly, despite the infusions of billions of dollars in foreign aid, Washington has found it nearly impossible to control the Afghan president it installed in power, Hamid Karzai, who memorably summed up his fractious relationship with Washington to American envoys this way: “If you're looking for a stooge and calling a stooge a partner, no. If you're looking for a partner, yes.”
Then, late in 2010, WikiLeaks began distributing those thousands of U.S. diplomatic cables that offer uncensored insights into Washington’s weakening control over the system of surrogate power that it had built up for 50 years. In reading these documents, Israeli journalist Aluf Benn of Haaretz could see “the fall of the American empire, the decline of a superpower that ruled the world by the dint of its military and economic supremacy.” No longer, he added, are “American ambassadors… received in world capitals as ‘high commissioners'... [instead they are] tired bureaucrats [who] spend their days listening wearily to their hosts' talking points, never reminding them who is the superpower and who the client state.”
Indeed, what the WikiLeaks documents show is a State Department struggling to manage an unruly global system of increasingly insubordinate elites by any means possible -- via intrigue to collect needed information and intelligence, friendly acts meant to coax compliance, threats to coerce cooperation, and billions of dollars in misspent aid to court influence. In early 2009, for instance, the State Department instructed its embassies worldwide to play imperial police by collecting comprehensive data on local leaders, including “email addresses, telephone and fax numbers, fingerprints, facial images, DNA, and iris scans.” Showing its need, like some colonial governor, for incriminating information on the locals, the State Department also pressed its Bahrain embassy for sordid details, damaging in an Islamic society, about the kingdom’s crown princes, asking: “Is there any derogatory information on either prince? Does either prince drink alcohol? Does either one use drugs?"
With the hauteur of latter-day imperial envoys, U.S. diplomats seemed to empower themselves for dominance by dismissing “the Turks neo-Ottoman posturing around the Middle East and Balkans,” or by knowing the weaknesses of their subordinate elites, notably Colonel Muammar Gaddafi’s “voluptuous blonde” nurse, Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari’s morbid fear of military coups, or Afghan Vice President Ahmad Zia Massoud’s $52 million in stolen funds.
As its influence declines, however, Washington is finding many of its chosen local allies either increasingly insubordinate or irrelevant, particularly in the strategic Middle East. In mid-2009, for instance, the U.S. ambassador to Tunisia reported that “President Ben Ali… and his regime have lost touch with the Tunisian people,” relying “on the police for control,” while “corruption in the inner circle is growing” and “the risks to the regime's long-term stability are increasing.” Even so, the U.S. envoy could only recommend that Washington “dial back the public criticism” and instead rely only on “frequent high-level private candor” -- a policy that failed to produce any reforms before demonstrations toppled the regime just 18 months later.
Similarly, in late 2008 the American Embassy in Cairo feared that “Egyptian democracy and human rights efforts... are being suffocated.” However, as the embassy admitted, “we would not like to contemplate complications for U.S. regional interests should the U.S.-Egyptian bond be seriously weakened.” When Mubarak visited Washington a few months later, the Embassy urged the White House “to restore the sense of warmth that has traditionally characterized the U.S.-Egyptian partnership.” And so in June 2009, just 18 months before the Egyptian president’s downfall, President Obama hailed this useful dictator as “a stalwart ally... a force for stability and good in the region."
As the crisis in Cairo’s Tahrir Square unfolded, respected opposition leader Mohamed ElBaradei complained bitterly that Washington was pushing “the whole Arab world into radicalization with this inept policy of supporting repression.” After 40 years of U.S. dominion, the Middle East was, he said, “a collection of failed states that add nothing to humanity or science” because “people were taught not to think or to act, and were consistently given an inferior education.”
Absent a global war capable of simply sweeping away an empire, the decline of a great power is often a fitful, painful, drawn-out affair. In addition to the two American wars in Iraq and Afghanistan winding down to something not so far short of defeat, the nation’s capital is now writhing in fiscal crisis, the coin of the realm is losing its creditworthiness, and longtime allies are forging economic and even military ties to rival China. To all of this, we must now add the possible loss of loyal surrogates across the Middle East.
For more than 50 years, Washington has been served well by a system of global power based on subordinate elites. That system once facilitated the extension of American influence worldwide with a surprising efficiency and (relatively speaking) an economy of force. Now, however, those loyal allies increasingly look like an empire of failed or insubordinate states. Make no mistake: the degradation of, or ending of, half a century of such ties is likely to leave Washington on the rocks.

64 Comments so far
Show AllExcellent companion piece to Chomsky's "Too Big to Fail?" from two days ago.
Stop screaming at each other about which party politician to not vote for! Work with people you know to build shared understanding such as this, and fight for a chance to build something decent that takes care of people and respects the Earth.
After 40 years of U.S. dominion, the Middle East was, he said, “a collection of failed states that add nothing to humanity or science” because “people were taught not to think or to act, and were consistently given an inferior education.”
Sound like America.
well, in the USA, the Elites are given the best education available in the country...unfortunately that education does not include critical thinking.
Agree! also the parts about a regime losing touch with the people and relying on police more and more to maintain order..
What goes around comes around! lol
>^^<
Right on!
A movement for a new Constitutional Convention could be both the push and the glue needed to bring the full diversity of Citizens together to topple the Empire.
Absolutely right ! We need a new Constitutional Convention. By way of reintroduction, here is the symbolic meaning embodied in the flag of the United States as it was developed at the last Constitutional Convention in 1789. If we the people held ourselves and all leaders to these standards, the US would be a free nation.
Old Glory
Created in 1789
Colors:
White: Purity, innocence, lack of guile.
Red: Hardiness and Valor (worthiness)
Blue: Honor, Vigilance, Perseverance, & Justice
13 Stripes: 13 colonies
(7 red, 6 white)
A blue field with one white star for each state.
Old Glory
by
Timothy K. Price
Let me tell you a story,
About our flag, old glory,
The stars and stripes of red, white, and blue;
And of its creation,
ThIs symbol for our nation,
And what it mean to folks like me and you.
They took the purity of white,
The brightly shining light
All the colors in the spirit of our souls
For our banner of trust,
Our pledge of good intention,
For all who live beneath her to uphold.
They emblazoned her with red,
Stripes which clearly said
With a boisterous, cheering humor, “Have no fear”.
We are hardy souls of valor,
Worthy our intent,
To do good is the reason we are here.
We are many joined as one,
Honest folk, and fair,
For honor is the air that we breathe;
So to represent our nation,
Took a patch of blue sky
And placed on it a starry constellation.
With a star for every state
Each joining in its fate,
A union which no one will leave,
Finding happiness in freedom,
This flag is our dream
That none who live among us shall deceive.
Our flag is made from scraps,
For frugal is our way.
Simple living lets others simply live.
We will shame you for your riches,
Scorn your vanity,
If greed should get the better of your soul.
There’s salvation in compassion,
Poverty in greed,
So what we have we share with loving care.
We understand hard work,
Have no tolerance for cheats,
Politician in their office should beware.
When we pledge our allegiance,
We pledge a way of life,
To be true to the meaning of our flag.
We pledge a life of honor,
To be truthful and fair,
This is our way... here in the USA.
So this is my story,
About our flag, old glory,
The stars and strips of red, white, and blue.
And of its creation,
ThIs symbol of our nation,
and what it mean to folks like me and you
Excellent article. Should be read along with Mr. Y's sustainment comments http://www.wilsoncenter.org/events/docs/A%20National%20Strategic%20Narrative.pdf
It would be interesting to read the Madison authors' perspectives on whether the Wisconsin movement can be expanded to include international labor and social issues, thereby becoming a global movement. Noam Chomsky recently contrasted Wisconsin and Jasmine, as heading in opposite directions. 'Keeping what you previously gained' vs. 'gaining new rights.' However, both movements appear to have a common foe.
And, whether We are all Wisconsin and/or Jasmine can be expanded to incorporate civil unrest of the US black community.
In both scenarios, the elites are already prepared to divide and conquer using illegally-gathered "intelligence" dirt, payola, Pentagon-produced "news releases," and propaganda on all levels, especially subtle manipulation of prime time television shows (e.g., black sitcoms interspersed with Fox "news") and not-so-subtle flag-waving patriotic frenzy (flags distributed to children at mega-churches while playing Onward Christian Soldiers or Battle Hymn of the Republic). Empire depends on domestic support of its military/CIA, and will fight like a cornered wild animal.
It seems Robert Heinlien predicted this decades ago, Welcome to the Chicago Imperim, as America falls apart it will continue to balkinize, with the SW going back to Mexico. Part of Ca and Or getting togther, Wa joining Canada, and a few fools in the NE pretending America still means anything. An all without WW3.
So america dies not with a bang but a whimper!
>^^<
Bu-bye Imperial America...you will NOT be missed.
Dont let history smack you on the ass on your way out.
hey, loveitorleaveit, you old Empire troll.
You know damn well that this is a false and red-herring distractive question you pose here.
The issue is not "who they see as a replacement or why they believe "whoever" would be an upgrade?"
Your phony ploy of asking, "So who would it be?" --- is merely to divide and distract the vast majority of good, average, middle/working-class Americans (and other "democracy-thinking" citizens of the world) from the real issue, so that this stinking disguised global EMPIRE merely centered in the US can keep fooling the masses.
It's not a question of "who" (ie. what country or countries) would displace your falsely implied American Empire, but "WHAT" would replace the real Global Empire that is only hiding as a disguised cancer tumor in the US.
It's a global Empire hiding in our occupied former country, you distractive troll, not a nationalistic and specifically 'American Empire' (which shills like you think can make proud Americans falsely defend or be mistakenly patriotic toward the Empire).
The "WHAT" that will replace the 'global Empire' is 'liberty and democracy' themselves --- just as it was that replaced the British EMPIRE when the American colonists, 'minute men', and solidarity of 'democracy-thinkers' who founded and fought for liberty and democracy over the violent (British) empire (and the royalist/loyalist empire defenders, like you) kicked the 'empire-thinkers' out of our new country, our of our 'new world' American Dream --- which was a dream, a revolution, and even the first global dream for democracy over violent empire.
The real American Dream is not some kind of perverted Alfred P. Sloan or Wall Street wet dream about money --- but the dream of all people who believe in self-government, liberty and democracy over violent empire controlled by a ruling-elite Empire of elitist pricks.
That's what you either don't understand, or more likely, you are cynically trying to scam and fool others to forget, reject, and sell-out for the scraps and crumbs of Empire spoils, loveitorleaveit!
But, as that otherwise inane CSI Miami entertainment distraction song says ---- "we won't be fooled again".
This time, today, and in America a growing majority of real 'democracy-thinking' Americans, who are greatly concerned about their own lives and the lives of their children and future grand-children, are very aware of the deadly guiles of disguised Empire in our own country and in the world, and they are rejecting any smarmy and scheming distactions and false fears of "Who" will replace an American Empire --- because they are learning, understanding, and rising up correctly against the 'what' of "global EMPIRE" and they know that none of us in the US or anywhere in the world with this GD global Empire operating out of our country, or any other.
It's not some phony "who" battle, likeitorleaveit, it's a "what" revolution --- and the forces you shill for in the global Empire are the 'what' that we are targeting in "The Coming Insurrection" (Negri), in the coming revolution "Against Empire" (Parenti).
Alan MacDonald
Sanford, Maine
Liberty & democracy over violent empire—People’s Party 2012
Global People’s Anti-Empire Action—2011/NOW!
Thanks for "schoolin' " him, Alan. Saved me the trouble in a less articulate manner :-)
Many of us would be overjoyed with NO REPLACEMENT! we're throughly sick of self apointed Overlords of opinion,, We'd like NO GOVERNMENT! and no ELITES! with luck they'd all kill each other and their syncophants on the plain of ahr ma geton in Isreal! and be done with the lot. But that's wishing for too much. Boycott'em when you can, Smash'em when you must, do as little harm as possible on the way.
>^^<
It could be a breakaway quasi alliance(s) of corporate entities & parts of the MIC... they're already outside of our borders and more importantly, they defy all established rules of law - common, moral or legal. Held together and made operable by forces we cannot expect to find, identify or challenge.
It won't be a nation, it'll be a corporate thingy. In other words, they don't need no fucking nation. Who needs to be on a leash with by poor, uneducated, tatoo'd, owned by 14+ trillion of debt on the other end?
Nah, we've got an entirely different animal this time.
Umm,...
You HAVE heard of the United Nations, yes?
Imagine the UN without the U.S. Empire or the other 4 Permanent Members of the Security Council (Britain, France, Russia, China) mucking things up.
UN with no Permanent Security Council Members.
That's what should fill the gap left by the crumbling U.S. Empire.
-matti.
Thanks for the laugh! LOL the UN is and has been nothing but a playpen to placate the younger want to be leaders into pretending they are important, heard'em into NY where their easy to watch! Make sure they can't mess up any of the work of the imperial powers that be!
>^^<
I love the dramatically increasing number of recent CD articles specifically putting the finger on 'Empire' as the underlying cancerous cause agent of all 'symptom problems' --- abroad and at home.
This increased description, recognition, education and 'outing' of global Empire as the proximate cause of all the diverse 'identity issue politics' that the Empire used to divide and distract any solidarity of civil unrest is finally coming unglued --- and the global Empire is coming into clear view from behind the sophisticated disguise that has quelled popular revolution for these many decades.
Chomsky, Zinn, Chalmers Johnson and others who initiated the "Empire Project" many years ago were precisely on the right track of exposing and 'calling-out' Empire specifically by name --- and a broader exposure and repeated calling-out of 'Empire' itself as the seminal problem of our time is even more essential now for broad popular education, discussion, and confrontation "Against Empire" (Parenti).
The words 'corporation' or even 'corporatism' do not fully convey at the gut level to all citizens the horror that is global Empire. Corporations are do not feel fearful or confronted by people calling them 'corporations', or even complaining about corporations.
Likewise, the terms 'oligarchy', 'hegemony', 'plutocracy', and even 'authoritarianism', when used to describe oppressive government or corporate powers to people do not stir any fear in the heart of the global Empire --- because the masses generally don't understand what such perversions of government really mean, and such descriptions will not create mass popular action against 'Empire' --- and empire knows this.
The only rallying cry and protest movement for civil unrest and mass action that the 'Empire' rightly fears is the exposure of being an 'Empire' --- because the empire knows that all good, honest, average, middle/working-class Americans will rally against 'Empire' once they are alerted to its taking over of their government. This is ingrained in all non-elite Americans since 1776.
Empire, elitism, externalities, and extinction are critically connected concepts to understand if we are to survive.
Alan MacDonald
Sanford, Maine
Liberty & democracy over violent empire—People’s Party 2012
Global People’s Anti-Empire Action—2011/NOW!
You and I know this, and a lot of people who post on this site know this. What I'm trying to figure out is how to put it into language that "honest, average, middle/working-class" citizens of the U.S.A. can understand and relate to and how to put that language into the public mouths of someone they'll listen to and believe.
Paranoid Pessimist, thanks for your encouragement.
And the goal you so aptly state is the same for me.
Good luck to both of us.
Best,
Alan
The average citizen is just keeping quiet hoping not to be run over, they see the water coming up the stairwells but don't have the first idea what to do about it! There are no signs to the lifeboat deck and no lifeboat drills were ever held, Their just hoping the waters not too cold!
Meanwhile on deck many factions are runing about re-arranging the deck chairs and scheeming to steal the band insterments cause they might be worth something later.
Meanwhile those in the know are long gone to their special life boats. Charting their course to new oppertunities!
>^^<
I think that what you are describing is mostly a phantom problem created by the above mentioned "identity politics" smokescreen.
Almost all USAns know of and revere the basic outline of the Revolutionary Period. Almost all also know the basic gist of the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution, and all literate persons can read them in a short time with little effort.
We could simply:
1. Demonstrate that not only is the Empire not helping them, its hurting them.
2. Appeal to the above knowledge base for inspiration for collective action (i.e. start talking Constitutional Convention, stop talking Social Revolution.)
-matti.
matti, righton, you're hit the nail on the head: avoid the distraction of 'identity (and issue) politics', focus on what's bad and harmful to everyone about Empire, and then take collective action for a people's renewed Constitutional Convention to get back to liberty and democracy instead of this damn Empire.
And you made your point much more concisely and more briefly than I did!
Thanks and best,
Alan
Gee, the US Empire only started the policy of "putting the military in charge" in 1954?!? Why don't we try 1943 while Ike was topdog at SHAEF and his policy of undermining the great mass of European Resistance which was overwhelmingly socialist--first in Italy, then the Balkans, then France, and in Asia, Korea. The historian authors totally omit the documentation of the above by Gabriel Kolko's "Politics of War." Now, why would they do that? Note that Chomsky is clear about When the policy was developed--early 1942--which means that FDR is the architect of the global US Empire, not DDE and his cast of reactionaries as the authors infer in this essay. In other words, the US Imperial Project is and was bipartisan from the outset. One must wonder why the authors wished to obscure that basic fact.
Karlof1
Makes me wonder what year the infamous "School of the Americas" came into being...
1992, I've served with a few of their graduates. It's what it say's it is a school for military to create better coup's and learn more efficent ways of dealing with the sheeple after the coup is over.
They are gonna have coups anyway, might as well have professionals around to make the damage less intense.
>^^<
Here's from Wikipedia:
In 1946, in the early days of the Cold War, the Latin American Training Center – U.S. Ground Forces was established in the Atlantic sector of the Panama Canal Zone, in the US army base of Fort Amador. During 1949 it was expanded and became the U.S. Army Caribbean Training Center, seated into a former hospital building on the grounds of Fort Gulick (now housing the Melia Hotel).
It was once again expanded and renamed the U.S. Army School of the Americas in 1963. It relocated to Fort Benning in 1984, following the signing of the Panama Canal Treaty.
karlof1, you and Gabriel Kolko are right.
Kolko is fabulous, isn't he.
Yes, karlof1, I only recently came to understand how early the covert planning in the FDR administration was focusing on making the global Empire a goal for the later 20th century, through actions; geostrategic, economic, financial, political, as well as military, that they were taking during WWII. I had suspected that dropping Henry Wallace was purposeful, but the economic/trade, financial, and military plans toward the claimed goal of a facade of 'Pax Americana' was only recently revealed to me.
Best to you and yours, korlof1,
Alan
>>Suddenly, it was possible to see the foundations of a U.S. world order that rested significantly on national leaders who serve Washington as loyal “subordinate elites” and who are, in reality, a motley collection of autocrats, aristocrats, and uniformed thugs.
If one wishes to he truthful it was the United States Government that was, in reality, a motley collection of aristocrats , autocrats and uniformed thugs. It was THAT government after all issuing the orders and doing all it could to keep their underlings in power.
These thugs have ruled the United States of America since its founding. Ask the Cherokee their opinion of Andrew Jackson or the Santee Sioux that of Abraham Lincoln.
I would like to see some historical and sociological study of what the unwinding of over the border grazing (imperialism) means for those within the pasture once the empire devolves.
Connections need to be made between the decay of Detroit, Buffalo, Los Angeles- the devolution of much of America at home with empire, its pursuit and maintenance. The stagnation and neglect of home is a huge COST.
Bring the analysis home! What happens to Manchester, U.K. when India no longer buys or supplies? The flag waving yahoos, might think twice of foreign butchery if shown how it leads to their child's house foreclosure, null job prospects and stunted education.
Great article. I particularly appreciate the author's using Great Britain as the MODEL for how an empire maintains control of its intended "client" states. Amerika learned from its "parent" state.
ALAN M: Powerful posts.
PARANOID: I don't think the verbiage is half as important as ACCESS to real media channels. Given that about half the US population manages to get it right about the inanity of these foreign wars, the wrongfulness of giving huge sums to the banks that brought down the global economy, and the need for a universal health care that's instead denied... it's less about words or the right manicured message. It's more about REACHING people at all!
Siouxrose: I agree with all that you said. Someone replied to me last week saying I should go beyond Common Dreams, and put my postings on "a different type of place than one which leaves us threading our thoughts and comments forever into the oubliette." I like posting here at this oubliette; the articles and replies inspire me to have thoughts I didn't even know I had. I have occasionally posted on places other than here, but not very often. Sometimes news shows say "let's hear what you think" or "we're in touch so you be in touch" and give out an email address or contact method. I have cut and pasted my CD comments to these, but usually I don't because I think they're faking it. I don't think they care about what I think, or what anyone who isn't connected to the establishment thinks. They're placating us, they only want us to believe that they're interested in our opinions so we don't catch on to how little we really matter to them.
That reply made me think that, if my lone opinion is easy to ignore, what if the staffers on a lot of sites and shows got bombarded with lots of posts with lots of opinions from the people who usually post here? What if a bunch of us, the regulars who write long entries with many thoughts, just cc'd anybody we could? We wouldn't even have to agree about anything -- which is good because we'd never be able to do that anyway.
Maybe I'll start bothering a lot of establishment news sites by copying and pasting my CD posts there and hope others do likewise. I'm going to post mine in places where it has nothing to do with the topic at hand, not do a bunch of people regularly. But others could do it in a more organized way.
Each one of us who did this could decide whether to include "my reply to an article dates xxx on www.commondreams.org" or just let the recipient puzzle it out. I don't know if I'll even mention this idea again. A word to the wise is said to be sufficient, but maybe not all the wise are reading today.
Great article. Historical context puts the lie to "American Exceptionalism".
Recent articles that show the cracks forming in the empire:
"China Proposes To Cut Two Thirds Of Its $3 Trillion In USD Holdings"
..."China appears to be getting ready to cut its USD reserves by roughly the amount of dollars that was recently printed by the Fed, or $2 trilion or so."
http://www.zerohedge.com/article/china-proposes-cut-two-thirds-its-3-trillion-usd-holdings
See also:
"IMF bombshell: Age of America nears end"
"According to the latest IMF official forecasts, China’s economy will surpass that of America in real terms in 2016 — just five years from now."
http://www.marketwatch.com/story/imf-bombshell-age-of-america-about-to-end-2011-04-25
Kind of funny, in a wry, ironic, not-really-funny kind of way...
i've been watching this happen throughout my life, especially since Reagan was "elected" in 1980. There've been waves of financial bubbles imploding since then, as the gutting of US industrial base, outsourcing of jobs, race-to-the-bottom globalization, financialization of the economy, tax cuts after tax cuts after tax cuts for the super-wealthy, deregulation after deregulation after deregulation of industry, finance, agriculture, patents on life, multiplication of prison population, militarization of the government, arms as our top export and war as our largest budget item spending half of the world's total war spending... and through it all, bubble after bubble, they've always managed to reinflate the thing, puff up one more bubble, one more bubble...
Throughout which time, the vast majority of people who i try to talk to about this process, these intertwined processes, this looting of our lives and planet, this creeping fascism boiling us frogs, most people have been unable and unwilling to even think these thoughts.
As if it hasn't all happened right in front of us, but now it's REALLY just right in front of us, shameless unvarnished looting and thuggishness, and THIS time, there will be no reinflating the bubble. This time, they've just barely managed to prop up the tottering, shuddering edifice of the US economy, and aside from some truly deluded true believers among them, they know this. They know what they've done, they know what comes next.
Implosion.
==Britain may have ruled the waves (as America would later rule the skies), but when it came to the ground, like empires past it needed local allies who could serve as intermediaries in controlling complex, volatile societies. Otherwise, how in 1900 could a small island nation of just 40 million with an army of only 99,000 men rule a global empire of some 400 million, nearly a quarter of all humanity?==
History overlooks one repetitive feature which characterized the British domination and social control of wogs (their term) across centuries. IMO it is particularly hideous.
Wherever and whenever it was possible, husbands and wives were placed in separate confinement - but within a short distance of each other. The powerful human desire to =be with each other= was used as Psywar, both as carrot and stick in pacification and conditioning. Under close watch and miitary guard, on a weekend husbands and wives might be marched to a Dance Hall for two hour intercourse. If either one misbehaved during the week, they would not be on the list to go to the dance.
The 1942 relocation of 21,000 Canadians of Japanese descent used this Empire technique. The wives and children were retained west of the Rockies in British Columbia Camps. The men were relocated across the Rockies into Alberta, and put to work on road construction. They were paid 75 cents per hour, with 50 cents per hour deducted for family maintenance. They could exchange one letter a month, read and censored. After one year of manual labor, men (nearly all of them born in Canada) could apply to be reunited with their families in British Columbia. Troublemakers need not apply.
Canadian history is not unblemished.
Trylon
Trylon, Thanks for the interesting, and relevant, history lesson on one of the last and most effective national empires.
But the British Empire, like the French Empire, the 19th century Russian Empire, Spanish, Dutch, etc. were all national empires of various success and duration.
Even the wannabe global Empires of the 20th century, including German/Nazi Empire, Japanese Empire, and Soviet Empire, while they aspired to global scope, were basically 'national' empires of racial and ideological focus --- but not truly global in make-up. And of course, those empires expired.
I would contend that this current, last-standing, and disguised global Empire we face today is unique in having no real allegiance to any old-fashioned nation-state.
In today's world not only the corporate world, but the entire structure of global Empire has become a class and wealth oriented concept, which utilizes and 'plays on' the peons' outdated notions and allegiances of national identity merely to leverage national income, resources, and most particularly military power for the exclusive benefit of the hidden empire it/them selves.
This modern and far more guileful disguise of the 21st century global empire is orders of multitude more effective than the Nazi Empire's crude first generation trick of setting-up the thinly veiled ONE-Party "Vichy" facade of phony national French government after the invasion and occupation ---- which only fooled the US into recognizing it first as a valid government of France.
Hell, the current ruling-elite's global corporate/financial/militarist Empire controls our former country by hiding behind the facade of its 'bought and owned' TWO-Party sophisticated "Vichy" faux-democratic government (and equally "Vichy" corporatist media), and it has effectively fooled most of the people all of the time ---- so far.
But, hopefully and in reality that old "Okie Doke" (as the current faux-emperor/president might call it) is wearing thin among more than just the highly informed people here on CD.
Several years ago, during the 'Empire Project', one could almost count the number of intellectuals and academics, like; Noam Chomsky, Howard Zinn, Chalmers Johnson, Michael Parenti, Sheldon Wolin, David Korten, Andrew Bacevich, Morris Berman, and a few hundred others who recognized, fully understood, wrote about, and tried to expose the hidden global Empire (nominally and temporarily head-quartered in the US, but including elements from UK, Israel, etc.).
But now things are actually progressing quiet quickly, and that level of understanding and antipathy to global empire is growing exponentially.
Alan MacDonald
Sanford, Maine
Liberty & democracy over violent empire -- People's Party 2012
Liberty & democracy
Over
Violent
Empire
People's Party 2012
A number of the fat cat Blue-blooded Canadian families of wealth living up in the British Properties and whom have streets named after them gained that wealth through the theft of the assets of those Japanese Canadians.
Just as wealthy families from before that stole it in land frauds from our First Nations peoples.
Those ancestors of those Japanese Canadians just as a by the way , were encouraged to migrate to Canada by the owners of the Fish Canning industries on the West Coast in order to drive down the wages of the first nations peoples who worked in those same factories.
The First Nations people tended to act as a collective when bargaining for wages for their people and were really the only abundant source of labor on the West Coast at the time. By encouraging Japanese to migrate they in effect broke the "Unions" before we even had unions.
Do not take this as a slight towards those Japanese Migrants. It merely an example as how Capitalism exploits all workers and uses ethnic and cultural differences to turn the worker against one another so as to maintain the power of the "Financial Elite".
=A number of the fat cat Blue-blooded Canadian families of wealth living up in the British Properties and whom have streets named after them gained that wealth through the theft of the assets of those Japanese Canadians.=
If I recall correctly, all 4 of David Suzuki's grandparents were born in Canada, and his parents operated successful dry cleaning establishments in Vancouver, yet they were herded onto trains like cattle. So many eligible for the $80,000 recompense half a century later never lived to see the money, the distribution program being so mismanaged and slow. David has been embraced as a brother by First Nations peoples, and I wager this means more to him than awards for The Nature of Things et cetera. We corresponded, and met when I lived in Calgary.
Trylon
Good article, very derivative, but makes some good points, though not, as someone suggested, deserving to be companion piece to Chomsky's Is the World Too Big to Fail . I say this mostly since it reeks of American ignorance of the world and it's history. Since when is Iran an Arab country? Not a small point. It matters a lot in that part of the world. Estonia and Armenia were not satellites/client states of the Soviet Union. They were not states, but Soviet Socialist Republics, integral parts of the Soviet Union. To use the as examples of an "empire" wielding power in foreign lands is like accusing the US of having influence over the state governments of Maine and Arizona. And 14 Satellite states in Eastern Europe? hm...sorry chaps, to be a pundit and "expert" in an area, you need to get a firmer footing in your underlying information.
Good post. And, I think that the main point of the article, the US empire's decline, is premature as well. Britain with a relatively small force was able to dominate India for 200 years. While the US's economic influence may be waning a bit, its military power is not. As the vast disparity of wealth deepens for US citizens, the illusion of liberal democracy becomes more untenable; the machinations of global domination, will also lose their "democratic" halo. Imperial domination will become more openly coercive.
RE: All those wars have to be PAID FOR somehow.
Paid for? That's what deficits are for (as long as the dollar remains the reserve currency). What won't be paid for is any kind of social safety net.
Chicken Little Alert!
China is indeed holding on to much of that debt. However, that debt is held in dollars. In other words, China's creditors are in a conflicted position. If the dollar collapses they lose hundreds of billions. OTOH, China (and the world) would be in a better position if the US could not just print money to finance their imperial projects.
RE: At that moment it's all over.
What's all over? The Soviet Union collapsed; what did they replace it with? A oligarchy so corrupt that it has few peers. Was democracy "restored" to Russia? Not at all. The direction the US is heading now (at least domestically) is like a Banana Republic: a thin layer of corrupt super rich exploiting 99% of the population - without the illusion of liberal democracy.
What will be different for the vast majority of US citizens? Nothing, it will be more of the same: the continuation of the decline in our standard of living.
Russia, never had democracy! and whats so great about democracy anyway. Like any other system your either in or out!
Yep democracy sure was great in the US. if you were on the inside of the power structure..
>^^<
How are you liking the new handle?
Thanks, ryski, for pointing out mistakes in the article by "historians" McCoy and Reilly.
Apparently, historians can be as screwed up as economists.
Why no mention of overwhelming support for Israel as the central client state in the middle east???
Funny how that was omitted.
Dialog from the movie Syriana seems apt:
“Corruption charges...corruption? Corruption is government intrusion into market efficiencies in the form of regulation. That’s Milton Friedman. He got a goddamn Nobel Prize. We have laws against it precisely so we can get away with it. Corruption is our protection. Corruption keeps us safe and warm. Corruption is why you and I are prancing around in here instead of fighting over scraps of meat out in the street. Corruption...is why we win.”
- Tim Blake Nelson as Danny Dalton to Jeffrey Wright as Bennett Holiday
An excellent painful but satisfying article
This was a mostly good article with a lot of history which many of us are fairly well acquainted with, such as Chomsky's many books. My problem with the article is with the conclusions. The bit about "the nation’s capital is now writhing in fiscal crisis, the coin of the realm is losing its creditworthiness" is overstatement and fear-mongering. Ending with the "Washington on the rocks" bs simply piles on further hysteria. The author should stick to history. His crystal ball is cracked. I doubt if he's ever heard of macro-economics.