|
The meaning of war: A heterodox perspective
James Petras
Rebelión
Introduction
This paper will discuss the social, political, economic, psychological
and ideological causes and impacts of war in contemporary history.
Obviously we cannot explore all of these dimensions in detail; instead
we will focus on what we consider the most important dimensions of
these general categories.
The first question that requires clarification is "what wars?" There
are at least four kinds of war which have global significance. First
and most significant in terms of the present and future configuration
of inter-state relations are imperialist wars - such as the US
invasion of Yugoslavia, Afghanistan and Iraq, leading to the forced
imposition of direct or indirect colonial rule, military bases and
appropriation of strategic resources and/or water or overland routes.
The second type of war is "separatist-ethnic conflicts" such as
the Albanian seizure of Yugoslav Kosovo, or the Kurdish seizure of
Northern Iraq. While separatist conflicts are played out within the
larger Imperial strategic framework, the local participants bring
their own "historical claims" to justify their war on the existing
central government.
The third type of war is the "colonial-territorial" wars, best
exemplified by the Israel expulsion of Palestinians, the arbitrary
appropriation of land and resources, their denial of self-government
and the settlement of Jews on Palestinian land seized through armed
force.
The fourth type of war is "regional wars", found mainly in Africa and
Asia, where aggressive regimes invade neighboring countries especially
adjoining territory - usually containing precious metals. This is
the issue in Southern Africa, where Rwanda has occupied a significant
swathe of Eastern Zaire.
While each of these wars has its specificities - the question arises
as to whether these wars are linked to the empire building projects
of the US, European Union (EU) or other emerging imperial powers? The
answer is complex and contingent on the level of analysis at which
the problem is posed. Many of these conflicts predate current empire
building efforts by the US; in many cases, local elites visualize
war as a source of class, personal or national enrichment. We can
speculate that conflicts of this sort will continue at some (distant)
future in a "post-imperial" period, as local satraps attempt to seize
'fragments' of a declining world empire.
Nevertheless whatever the `historical claims' and local interests
involved, all these contemporary wars are linked in specific ways
with the ongoing empire building of the US and the EU. The US has
consistently supported separatist ethnic-based movements, like the
Kosova Liberation Army or the Chechen terrorists to weaken nationalstates
(Yugoslavia, Russia) which Washington targeted. As a
consequence Washington secures a new client regime, major military
bases and strategic geopolitical advantages while undermining an
enemy to its uni-polar pretensions. The US provides arms and financial
aid to Israeli colonial expansion and war against Palestinians and
Arab countries. This has both weakened the Arab states opposed to
US empire building and provoked greater mass popular resistance.
The ideological influence and political and financial power of the
pro-Israeli organizations and individuals inside and outside the
government have reinforced the most bellicose and militarist wing of
the US empire builders, especially in the Middle East, often times
at the expense of US multi-national corporations seeking to enter in
agreements with local regimes.
US imperialism has a contradictory relationship with the separatists
and colonial states: on the one hand they undermine anti-imperialist
nationalists and on the other hand, their territorial claims threaten
to undermine imperial ties with client regimes (as in the case of
Iraqi Kurdistan and the Republic of Turkey). Moreover the imperial
strategy of supporting Islamic nationalists against secular leftists
(as in the case of Afghanistan and Yugoslavia) has led to new violent
confrontations between the empire and former Islamic 'allies' as
Washington attempted to use and discard them for more docile neoliberal
puppet regimes.
Under conditions in which US and European empire building is driven
by a doctrine of permanent wars, there are few if any regional,
local or separatist wars which are purely local - in their causes or
consequences.
Driving Force of War: Inter-Imperial Collaboration and Competition
The key to the accelerated pace of empire building over the past
decade is the "open spaces" resulting from the demise of the
collectivist states (USSR, Eastern Europe and Asia) and their
overseas dependencies and allies in Africa and elsewhere. Both the
US and the EU successfully incorporated these 'ex-collectivist'
countries into their sphere of domination - militarily, economically
and culturally. Europe gained control of strategic resources, cheap
skilled labor and major industries, incorporating these countries
as subordinates within the European Union. The US secured similar
economic advantages but also established military bases and recruited
mercenary military forces for its imperial invasions (in Yugoslavia,
Afghanistan and Iraq) and political supporters in the United Nations.
Washington backed the illegal seizure of power by Yeltsin and then
provided backing for his corrupt, destructive, oligarchic regime that
literally destroyed the Russian economy and society. In the course
of supporting Yeltsin, the US financial system received hundreds
of billions of dollars in illegal transfers by US backed oligarchs.
Europe and the US joined in partnership with the oligarchs to
plunder Russia's oil and gas resources. The US secured world military
supremacy and proceeded to construct an "arc of encirclement" around
the weakened Russian state via its new client states incorporated
into NATO. From the Baltic States through Central-Eastern Europe to
the Balkans and across the Caucuses to Central and Southern Asia,
Washington has established local armies and military bases under US
command.
Europe, concentrating on economic dominance, penetrated these same
regions, relying on aid and financing of their multi-nationals and
the corruption of the new capitalist politicians.
The 'co-operative' joint conquest by the US and the EU of Eastern
Europe, Balkans and Baltic countries was based on "shared decisions
and shared division of the spoils of conquest". This re-division of
the world between the US and the EU however came to an end with the
most recent wave of imperial wars, beginning with the US invasions of
Afghanistan and Iraq. Washington decided to act unilaterally in order
to monopolize decision-making and the colonial occupation of these
countries, relegating Europe to a subordinate role under US command
and with few claims on the spoils of conquest. The two leading EU
powers, France and Germany, conceded US supremacy in Afghanistan but
balked over the US monopoly of Iraqi oil wealth. The US-EU conflict
over Iraq illustrates inter-imperialist competition in the re-division
of the world's wealth and neo-colonies. The EU imperial states,
relying mostly on their economic instruments - banks, multi-national
corporations, state-sponsored trade and investment agreements - was
challenging US attempts to establish regional and world supremacy and
subordination of Europe via a monopoly of energy resources.
In Iran, Iraq, Libya, Russia, the Caucasus and Latin America, EU
multi-national oil and gas companies have secured long-term energy
supplies via direct investments or state-to-state agreements. The
architects of US global power decided to undercut stiff economic
competition from the EU by relying on Washington's "comparative
advantage" in military power - to unilaterally launch the Iraq
invasion, to monopolize Iraq's oil wealth and to prepare for
future oil wars in the Middle East (Iran and others) and elsewhere
(Venezuela).
Washington's permanent war doctrine was in strategic opposition to
the EU's doctrine of `economic imperialism' and selective and limited
military intervention. Despite the significant differences in the
Middle East, both the EU and the US still find room to co-operate in
imposing spheres of joint influence in several countries and regions,
namely in Afghanistan, Haiti and in Africa. Co-operation and conflict
between the great imperial powers in re-dividing the world into
spheres of colonization, domination and influence are the key to
understanding the meaning of war in the late 20th century and into
the new millennium.
Erosion and "Reversal of Historical Memory
The re-emergence of colonial wars and colonial rule in the 21st
century and the growth of national liberation movements and anticolonial
resistance reflects the erosion of historical memory
in the imperial countries, among Western intellectuals as well as
sectors of the masses (especially in the US) and the elites.
The "erosion of historical memory" was evident in Europe between
the two world wars, as Germany re-armed and prepared to conquer and
colonize Europe. Germany's pacifist, and even revolutionary, antimilitary
consciousness immediately following World War I lasted at
most 15 years, after which the Nazis were able to launch Germany
into a new frenzy of re-armament and territorial conquest. In the
post-WWII period, US mass anti-war sentiment reflecting the horrors
of death and disability have been of short duration: A brief 5-year
period after World War II (1945-49) before launching war on the
Korean peninsula (1950-53); followed by mass "anti-war" sentiment
from 1953-1963; the US invasion of Indo-China and the 12-year war
(1963-1975) led to the re-emergence of very extensive mass anti-war
sentiment which continued for 15 years till the First Gulf War. During
the 1990's, US anti-war sentiment temporarily re-emerged just prior
to the Second Gulf War (January-February 2003) and then virtually
disappeared, at least from the streets. "Mass historical memory",
history teaches us, can be a temporarily powerful sentiment in
imposing restraint on the militarist side of imperialist expansion,
but history also demonstrates that "memory" can be eroded and overcome
over time (shorter or longer) by determined imperial decision-makers
and propagandists.
"Historical memory" plays a positive role in limiting imperial wars
under certain conditions and within a limited time frame. Memory
of large scale deaths and casualties among imperial soldiers,
deep economic crises resulting from military spending and loss
of commercial markets, profound internal political conflicts and
instability, demoralization and discontent among soldiers impose
serious, but time-bound, constraints on imperial war-making capacity.
The mass anti-war syndrome is anathema to imperialist ideologues,
policymakers and international corporations. As a consequence, a
conscious deliberate process of erosion is set in place. "Historical
Memory" is modified by a cumulative set of events, ambiguous
ideological pronouncements and small-scale military actions which
over time lead to the resurgence of pro-war mass sentiment and the
eclipse of historical memory.
"Historical memory" is strongest among those who most closely
experienced and lived through the devastating consequences of
a 'losing imperialist war'. The high point of "memory" is the
moment immediately following a destructive, costly, imperial war.
Subsequently, the memory erodes over time, as a new generation
emerges and ideology overcomes experiences and beliefs transmitted
between generations.
The US experience following the imperial defeat in the Indo-Chinese
war is illustrative of the mechanisms of "memory erosion".
The first steps toward erosion took place right after the end of the
Vietnam War during the presidency of James Carter (1976-80). Carter
developed the doctrine of human rights intervention - selectively
applying "humanitarian" rhetoric to attempt to re-legitimate US
'intervention' at a time in which mass consciousness was deeply
opposed to new imperialist wars but responsive to appeals for human
rights. Secondly Carter financed and backed a series of surrogate
terrorist movements and regimes in Central America (Nicaragua,
Southern Africa and Afghanistan) which allowed Washington to continue
its quest for empire building. Thirdly Carter provoked a major
confrontation with Iran by providing asylum to the deposed and
despised Shah - leading to the seizure of the US Embassy. Carter used
the incident to reverse the decline in military spending. Fourthly,
the Carter Administration, with financial backing from Saudi Arabia
and logistical support from Pakistan, recruited and armed tens of
thousands of Islamic fundamentalists to join forces with indigenous
Afghan landlords, warlords and mullahs in an attack on the secular,
reform-minded pro-Soviet Afghan regime. The Carter regime's purpose
was to provoke large-scale Soviet military assistance to the
beleaguered Afghan regime, as a pretext for re-launching a "Second
Cold War" - and accelerate the re-militarization of the US Empire.
Through propaganda moves and indirect military engagement, Carter
began the gradual process of gaining adherents for imperial wars and
foremost eroding the powerful `historical memory' of opposition to
war.
President Reagan extended and deepened this process by accelerating
the arms build-up, engaging in a mercenary war against Nicaragua,
and deepening the surrogate wars in Afghanistan and Southern Africa.
Under Reagan and subsequently Bush (father) the US launched imperial
wars against Grenada and Panama - weak, small countries - which
Washington succeeded in conquering with a minimum of casualties.
Given the 'low costs' in US lives lost and the rapid and successful
outcomes, mass historical consciousness was `modified'_to accept
or acquiesce once more in the use of war to establish US power, in
specific circumstances. Yet historical memory was still a majoritarian
sentiment in the lead up to the first Gulf War: most of the US public
was opposed to the Gulf War in 1990 until it began. Once again the
overwhelming military triumph and the minimum loss of US lives led to
a dramatic shift toward mass support for the war.
President Clinton continued the aerial war against Iraq and the
military occupation of Northern Iraq. Historical memory was eroding.
Clinton faced no opposition to the aerial war but when he sent
US troops to Somalia and nearly two-dozen US soldiers were killed,
"memories" re-emerged and Clinton quickly withdrew forces.
One of the greatest blows to `historical memory' and an event which
cleared the way for the subsequent imperial wars against Afghanistan
and Iraq, was Clinton's war against Yugoslavia. Clinton, aided by a
massive falsification propaganda campaign, declared that the Yugoslav
government was practicing genocide against the Bosnian Moslems and
the Kosovo Albanians. Hence the imperialist war was transformed into
a "humanitarian war". Cities, hospitals, factories, radio stations
and civilian population centers were bombed and the US/NATO alliance
broke up Yugoslavia into client mini-states. Once again there was
mass public support, as humanitarian" imperialism, the small number
of US casualties and an early quick victory eroded the last traces of
historical memory. The ideological and political basis for mass-backed
imperialist policies were in place - but lacked a "trigger event".
The events of September 11, 2001 provided the Second Bush
Administration, composed of extremists civilian militarists and
Zionist fanatics, the pretext to launch the first in a series of
wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, and to enunciate the totalitarian
doctrines of permanent wars, preventive wars and the
extraterritoriality of US imperial laws. The best evidence
available suggests that the Bush Administration was deeply
complicit in the 9/11 events leading up to the final destruction
of historical memory.
However unlike other recent imperialist wars, the Iraq War is
a prolonged peoples war (there are no quick and easy victories)
resulting in large-scale death and casualties of US soldiers and
out of control spending with no end in sight. A new "historical
memory" may be in the making based on the new realities in Iraq.
War: Political Institutions and Social Movements
Historical consciousness is embodied by activists sustained by
political organizations. Based on historical experience, we can
say that social movements have great capacity to 'create' the
memory in the course of dynamic mobilizations and memorable mass
meeting, but it is political institutions which will sustain or
erode that historical memory.
The principle political institutions (particularly in the United
States), including the mass media, have consistently worked to
dissolve historical consciousness of the death and destruction
caused by imperialist wars. While they claim to "honor the dead
soldiers" they do so only in so far as they served the empire,
their "heroism" is praised in sacrificing their lives to further
the global reach of imperial institutions. The electoral process
is not used to advance an anti-militarist agenda but to eliminate
independent mass mobilizations which act directly against the
instruments of imperial wars.
As anti-war activity moves toward electoral politics, it is
absorbed by the established electoral parties and politicians, who
opportunistically tip their hat to anti-war sentiment in exchange
for diluting anti-war consciousness. The electoral process involves
anti-war social movements making deep compromises with the pro-war
financiers of campaigns, with politicians articulating ambiguous and
inconsistent positions and with political parties having long-time,
large-scale allegiances to imperial policies and interests. Such
is the experience in the US and elsewhere: Established political
institutions bend sufficiently to question an unpopular war in order
to attract the mass opposition, and once capturing their allegiance,
return to re-building the military capacity for imperial wars. The
moment in which the movements dissolve into established political
parties, competing in electoral campaigns through "dissident"
politicians, "historical consciousness" is severely eroded.
The original impetus for organizing mass anti-war movements came
precisely through the recognition that existing political parties
and 'normal political processes' are deeply immersed and corrupted
by their structural ties to imperial interests. By returning
to these institutions, with new personalities and slogans, mass
consciousness lost sight of its historical insights into the nature
of imperial power.
In contrast "historical consciousness" emerged with great power when
masses of people moved into direct collective action, taking local
initiatives and linking the economic and political institutions
directing imperial wars. Action and knowledge grew into collective
anti-militarist consciousness which over time evolved from awareness
of everyday present-day destruction ("empirical consciousness") into
"historical consciousness", understanding of the systemic pillage
by imperialism over time and space.
Direct action movements bypass the distorting influence of the
"political guardians" (conventional politicians, accepted ideologues
and media pundits) and directly articulate the anti-war ideas and
anti-militarist interests of the mass of the people. Movements acted
directly against the militarist policies which negatively impacted on
the populations - conscription, forced and extended war duties - and
against the policy-makers who sent hundreds of thousands to death and
disability.
In this conflict between the anti-war movements and pro-war political
institutions, the pre-eminence of the former was most evident in
time of imperial defeat, soldier discontent, and political leaders in
disgrace for lies and broken promises. These are crucial moments, but
they are short-lived. Pro-war political institutions, that outlive
and/or overcome the crisis of imperial war, re-group, absorb the
'best' of their adversaries in the anti-war opposition and return
to pursue the policy of imperial war - until the next crisis --
ultimately asserting a dominant position. Historical consciousness
becomes a "footnote" to conventional history of "Great Wars".
"Historical consciousness" of anti-imperialist wars retains
continuity when it leads to a large-scale, long-term transformation
of the political institutions. The continued process of struggle
links generations, and the transmission of anti-militarist ideas.
This continual renewal of historical consciousness depends on, in
part, the active role of anti-imperialist intellectuals.
War and Intellectuals
Left intellectuals have been fervent critics of war in general,
until they face the reality of their country engaging in war - and
then opposition gives way to evasive statements, ambiguous moral
temporizing and, among the most "courageous", a condemnation of the
violence of the aggressor and as well as the victim. Even worst,
many left and progressive intellectuals have argued for, defended and
propagated the doctrine of "humanitarian intervention (imperialism)".
This moral betrayal was evident during the US invasion and destruction
of Yugoslavia, and support for the terrorist Kosovo Liberation (sic)
Army and the "ethnic cleansing" of hundreds of thousands of Serbs
from Kosovo, Croatia and elsewhere. US progressive intellectuals were
conspicuously silent. The "progressive intellectuals" repeated their
performance: providing tendentious political justifications for the
invasion of Afghanistan and Iraq -- though in the latter case, up
until the start of the war, a minority of intellectuals condemned the
war and the victimized regime. Even those progressive intellectuals,
who criticized the imperialist wars, refused to support the anticolonial
resistance and many opposed the immediate withdrawal of the
colonial armies.
The question of war and peace is a momentous issue. In the events
leading up to an imperialist war, all the propaganda machinery is set
in motion, the mass media dramatize the righteousness of the imperial
cause and the evil of the country which is to be invaded. Repressive
legislation ("security measures") is enacted by large congressional
majorities. Publicists, religious notables, demagogues, statesmen,
and respectable leaders of civil society find lofty moral purposes to
laud "this war". The latent chauvinist "instincts" of the masses are
aroused. The progressive intellectuals become fearful; the repressive
legislation may ruin a career and undermine everyday routines -
their classes, seminars and completion of their latest article or
book. Their professional colleagues eye them with suspicion unless
they openly pledge allegiance - "beyond any criticism in other times,
in time of our survival, we must join forces" - with the military
invaders. It is not merely fear of material losses or disruption
of everyday routines which causes our progressive intellectuals
to embrace the war or remain silent or (in the case of the most
courageous minority) to condemn both sides, but the sense of being
left out of national history, of being shunned by neighbors and
colleagues, of having to accept the consequences of living in a
savage imperial civilization that thrives on war, especially a
successful war. The progressive intellectuals respond far more
often to the pressures of their milieu than to the suffering of the
colonized people.
The commitment of the progressive intellectual is not fixed in stone -
they change with the conditions of their milieu and the strength and
fortunes of the imperial government. With the colonial occupation,
and the graphic visuals of death and destruction of the colonized
countries, the progressive intellectuals argue for a humanitarian
mission, to correct the excesses of the war. They even raise their
voices a few decibels before the abuse and torture of certain
prisoners in certain prisons. But rarely do progressive intellectuals
dare to transgress the colonial frontiers to publicly support the
anti-colonial resistance. They claim that to commit to the resistance
would call into question their "moral credentials" with the moderate
imperial institutional power wielders.
Since the end of the Vietnam War, Western intellectuals have not
expressed solidarity with the popular resistance to any of the
imperialist invasions. Grenada, Panama, Somalia, Yugoslavia,
Afghanistan, Iraq, Palestine and Lebanon, the imperial wars are
numerous, but the list of committed intellectuals is short.
The principle reason that many of the intellectuals oppose prolonged
imperialist wars is because of the casualties to US soldiers and the
cost to the US treasury. There is a kind of political narcissism in
the slogan "Bring our boys home" in which the center of attention is
on the invading troops not on the anti-colonial resistance. Even in
"opposition" the Western intellectuals derive their politics from an
ethno-centric view of the world.
At a deeper level this political narcissism is also a way of making
concessions to the chauvinist fever which grips much of their
countrymen: "We too share you concern, for our imperialist country -
but lets not spend "our boys" lives on this". Of course if and when
the imperial rulers recruit mercenaries, client regimes and local
collaborators to murder resistance fighters - nothing will be said of
any consequence because "our boys" will be home safe_
The historical shift of intellectuals from opposition to pro-war
politics and support of imperial candidates is not simply a
"pragmatic choice" of the lesser evil against the greater evil.
The transformation is the result of fear, fear of those in power --
even as they face no real threat to their lives, careers or living
standards. But intellectuals imagine a threat, and they concoct wild
scenarios of "fascist" repression to hide their moral cowardice. This
imagined fear is magnified by the possible threat to personal safety,
security, and property if the imperial force is defeated and the
rulers "take their revenge" against internal critics. Supporting the
war or "opposing both sides" as the moral hypocrites prefer it, is
insurance for the future. In the black fantasy world of intellectuals,
when the imagined state investigation takes place, they can always
present as evidence in their favor, their articles and speeches
condemning the "moral barbarians" who attacked "our boys".
But if there is one universal truth about our progressive
intellectuals it is that they do no "stand in one place" - they
move with the times - they gauge the changing winds of political
fortune.
When those suffering the war, the "average people" turn against the
war, when the imperial regime is split with elite conflicts, when the
soldiers question their orders, their officers, the war, the president
and the generals, then our moral intellectuals concoct a new set of
moral imperatives, adding their voices to the multitudes who question
the war. Once it is safe, once the ravages of a losing imperial war
have torn asunder the tissues of official lies, out bold progressive
intellectuals step up, seize the center stage and proclaim their
opposition to war. Intellectuals never sell-out, they are rented
to the strongest party, the rising new political configuration. As
opposition to the imperial war grows our progressive intellectuals
become bolder.
In the war of words, the ideological warfare in the cultural sphere,
our progressive intellectuals take on the neo-conservatives, they
expose the lies of the mass media, they become the self-promoted "face
of the opposition" to the outside world, even if their claims have
little merit.
Even as the intellectuals diagnose the sources of wars, they overlook
the specific and concrete configurations of power in favor of focusing
on easy targets, ones which offer no threats to their professional
careers and intellectual acceptance.
War and Oil
Let us turn to a specific imperialist war, the US invasion and
colonial occupation of Iraq to illustrate how the progressive
intellectual opposition to the war is profoundly influenced by
a unique set of political allegiances.
Conventional wisdom among progressive intellectuals argues that
the US invasion of Iraq is driven by US multinational oil companies
seeking to control that country's oil resources. A more sophisticated
version of this hypothesis argues that the war is directed by a
strategic policy to monopolize oil as a weapon and hence dominate its
imperial rivals in Europe and Asia. In both cases, the economic and
strategic hypothesis, fail to take account of the political loyalties
of the specific policymakers who designed the war, propagandized
in favor of the war and became its most fanatical and influential
executioners. Few if any of the progressive intellectuals examined the
political loyalties of the key militarist policymakers.
The hypothesis that "oil" and the US petroleum multinationals were
the main force behind the Iraq war fails every empirical test. If we
examine the policy statements of the major oil companies and their
public spokespeople in the five years leading up to the war we find
no systematic political and propaganda campaign in favor of war.
One looks in vain through all the major financial and specialized
petroleum journals for evidence of organized pro-war politics. The
reason is that the major oil companies were doing quite well with
the status quo: profits and prices were reasonably high, investments
were relatively secure, anti-imperialist sentiment was extensive
but not intense and, most of all, opportunities for important new
investments were opening in Saudi Arabia, Iran, Libya and possibly
(via third parties) in Iraq.
The US war in Iraq and Afghanistan reversed the picture creating a
very hostile environment, increasing dangers of destructive attacks,
insecurity of Western personnel, and augmenting the power of OPEC
against the major private US companies. Only a very few oil-related
companies can be said to have benefited from the war - Haliburton,
for example -most of which had direct ties to Vice President Cheney.
They are the exception that proves the rule. The oil industry as
an investor, producer and seller have not really benefited from the
war. Even after the colonial occupation of Iraq, (and even after the
illegal privatization of Iraq's state oil companies) the predominant
sentiment among oil companies is at best ambivalent: while future
opportunities may have increased so have the present threats to supply
and transport.
The war has created greater volatility, favoring speculators over
long-term oil investors. Moreover, rising prices prejudice the overall
performance of the imperialist economies, adding costs, increasing
trade imbalances and making the oil companies conspicuous targets
of public ire. Moreover the unconditional support for Israel within
the Bush Administration in the context of the Iraq war, has created
a difficult climate for high level negotiations between the petroleum
CEO's and the oil-rich Arab leaders.
In summary, there is no empirical evidence that the major oil
companies drove US war policy either before or after the colonial
occupation.
The second hypothesis argues that the war was part of a strategic
policy to monopolize oil supply toward establishing the US as the
undisputed world power, and subordinating Europe and Asia to its
command. A corollary to this argument is that in the recent past US
political and military triumphs, had been accompanied by a policy
of sharing the spoils of imperial victories with their European and
Japanese allies. The new US military doctrine of unilateral offensive
wars (euphemistically referred to as "preventive wars") was designed
to seize strategic advantage and claim exclusive control over the
spoils of war: petroleum, military bases and trade routes. Imperialist
strategic planners miscalculated, presuming an easy military victory
over "the Arabs" and a rapid seizure and privatization of public
enterprises and unhindered exploitation of oil wealth.
This hypothesis has a lot of merit in explaining some of the
motivations - especially by focusing on the importance of the
political decision-makers within the imperial state apparatus.
However there are several important weaknesses in this hypothesis.
For one, there was and is sharp differences between different
power centers in the imperial state apparatus and even within
each "center". For example, many of the top professional military
commanders were opposed to the war, as were members of the State
Department. CIA analysts did not share the assumptions that the
colonized people would welcome the imperial armies. Numerous former
high military, CIA officials, and United Nations weapons inspectors
challenged the pretext put forth by the pro-war sectors of the US
imperial state, that Iraq possessed weapons of mass destruction and
posed a threat to the United States.
If the imperial state itself was divided and some sectors were not
convinced of the need to go to war, which group was able to overcome
that resistance, by-pass established intelligence channels (and create
its own circuit), fabricate its own "intelligence and successfully
lead the US to war? If war was not promoted by and in the interests
of the US oil companies, and contrary to military doctrine of fighting
two wars simultaneously, in whose geo-political interests was the war?
The War and the Israel-Zionist Hypothesis
The hypothesis which most fits the data is the Israel hypothesis specifically
that the principal architects and theoreticians of
US world supremacy and the principal promoters of sequential wars,
particularly in the Middle East, were influential Zionists in the
top echelons of the Pentagon, National Security Council and in wellconnected
research centers "advising" the government while acting
on behalf of the expansionist interests of the State of Israel.
The key author of the strategic doctrine of undisputed US world power
was Wolfowitz, back in the first Bush Administration (1991). He joined
with other influential Zionists like Richard Perle, Douglas Feith and
a host of pro-Israel extremists to prepare a strategy paper for the
Israeli state (1996) in which the Palestinians were to be physically
driven from all of Palestine and Israel would become the regional
power in the Middle East. Both Feith and Wolfowitz, early in their
public careers were accused and chastised for turning US government
documents over to the Israeli government. For at least twenty years
they have been actively collaborating over Israeli policy and, in and
out of government, they have worked intimately with Israeli officials
in the United States and Israel.
The Zionist influentials, even before securing high positions in the
Pentagon and State Department, were strong proponents of US military
attacks against Israel's Middle East adversaries, which included
Lebanon, Syria, Iran, Saudi Arabia and, of course, Iraq. Their
militarist advocacy was independent of how such wars would affect US
oil interests, regional stability, relations with Europe, the Muslim
countries or the rest of the world. The Pentagon Zionists were among
the first to link Iraq with the events of 9/11 in an attempt to
manipulate US public anger against the secular Iraqi state. They were
responsible for fabricating the story that Iraq was importing uranium
from Niger for the purposes of developing nuclear weapons. Wolfowitz
admitted that he promoted the false pretext that Iraq possessed
weapons of mass destruction to create a "consensus" to go to war -
and every major Zionist writer and `expert' pushed the same line.
The principal pro-Israeli lobby in the US, AIPEC, worked intensely
and closely with the State of Israel, and the key Zionists in the
Pentagon and their advisory groups in pushing for the US invasion of
Iraq. Major Jewish organizations and influential propagandists in the
mass media promoted the war, demonizing Iraq and fabricating stories
of imminent threats.
The only major beneficiary of the US war in Iraq is the State of
Israel: The war destroyed a major supporter of the Palestinian
Intifada and Israel got a free hand in its terror and territorial
colonization Palestinian land.
The US, isolated from almost all the major European powers and Islamic
countries, because of its pro-Israel agenda, took on the pariah status
of the Israeli clerical colonial regime. All the predictions and
assumptions of the pro-war, anti-Arab Zionists were proven false. The
Iraqi Arabs did not submit to the US occupation - they formed a potent
resistance which engages the US in an increasingly prolonged war of
attrition. The US intervention did not secure an oil monopoly; it
has jeopardized its supply of oil in the Middle East by intensifying
instability in Saudi Arabia. The war has soured US oil dealings
in the Caucuses and resulted in speculative oil price increases,
increasing the US trade deficit. Equally significant while the US
is immersed in the Iraq War, China, India and Japan secure strategic
oil and gas contracts in Asia and Latin America.
The Zionists were wrong in envisioning that the US would proceed to
a series of successful wars with Israel's other enemies in the Middle
East - Iran, Syria, Lebanon and Saudi Arabia. The Iraq invasion has
tied down the vast majority of US active ground troops in a losing war
with high casualties, thus at least, temporarily limiting its capacity
to start new wars on behalf of the Empire or Israel. This has not
prevented the Pentagon Zionists and their AIPEC allies from pushing
for a new military attack on Iran and Syria.
Apart from England, Israel has been the major supporter and ally
in the US conquest of Iraq for good reason: They are the principle
beneficiaries.
The Pentagon Zionists and their zealous ideological allies have
weakened the US economy by widening the trade deficit (via higher
oil prices) and increasing the budget deficit (because of war
spending). Israel has not suffered at all -- on the contrary
military sales to the US increased as well as revenues from the
Pentagon for military advisory and training, missions to Iraq and
elsewhere.
The US war in Iraq has several particularities as well as common
characteristics with other wars. In the first place it demonstrates
how a highly organized, ideologically coherent, financially powerful
minority with highly placed co-thinkers in the top policy-making
institutions of the imperial state can twist policy to suit the needs
of a foreign power over and against established economic interests.
Secondly the decisions about imperialist wars, though they usually
serve the long-term interests of the dominant sectors of the
capitalist class, are "made" by politicians, who have their own
agendas, ideological and political loyalties which may or may not
benefit (or prejudice) the ruling class.
The war in Iraq is a clear case in which the loyalties of the key
architects of the war were distinct from those of the ruling class,
who were barely taken into account, let alone consulted. The ruling
ideology of the architects of war was `Israel First, Last and Always'.
To cover the Israel-centered war plans, the Zionists fabricated a
series of "threats" to US interests which were made to parallel those
faced by Israel: threats of weapons of mass destruction, terrorism
and Muslim fundamentalism. Anti-Arab and anti-Muslim hate literature
circulated in the mass media, in influential journals and talk shows
as an army of Zionists ideologues went into an ideological frenzy -
infecting the US body politic - and setting off a secondary wave of
vituperative froth from fundamentalist Christians, neo-conservative
allies and liberal congress-people.
The generalized attack by the Zionists against Arab states and people
was directed toward the strategic goal of extending Israeli domination
beyond Palestine ("Greater Israel") not through direct colonization
but via a series of client regimes beholden to the US - a US whose
major foreign policy institutions would be subject to Zionist
influence. The ideological formulae adopted to promote US-Israel
dominance in the Arab world was "A Middle East Common Market" based
on a campaign to "democratize the region". Both formulae served
as the ideological basis for permanent war in the Middle East, the
installment of dual purpose puppet regimes willing to serve both US
energy interests and Israel's market penetration.
The Zionist ideologues' manipulation of "free market" and "democratic"
rhetoric resonated widely among liberal and conservative imperialists,
even as the US imperial state and Israel was denying Iraqi and
Palestinians their elementary democratic rights and domestic markets.
The tactics of the influential Zionists and their extensive networks
in the US were directed at fusing Israeli expansionist interests with
US imperialist goals, in order to legitimate their pursuit of Israeli
state policies - a position echoed by President-elect Bush.
In the real world however, as the US continued to suffer heavy
casualties in Iraq and the war debt grew by billions of dollars a
day, and as its `coalition partners' abandoned the war, the Zionist
influentials inside and outside of the government intensified their
pressure on the US to escalate its troop commitments in Iraq and to
engage in new Middle East wars. The acid test of Zionist loyalties
to Israeli interests is found in the fact that they pursued the
war policy even as it weakened the US strategic global position,
heightened discontent in the military and in elite civilian circles
and increased the probability of an economic crisis resulting from
the war deficits and weakening dollar. The Zionists in power are
so embedded in the Israeli matrix, that they are totally impervious
to the effects which their policies have on the US Empire, domestic
economy or civil society.
In effect the US imperial attack of Iraq can be understood as
a surrogate war for a regional power, designed and executed by
influential policy-makers whose primary allegiance is to defend
the interests of the regional power. The Zionist zealots have
incorporated the same pathological style of mass paranoid politics
prevalent in Israel to the US: the politics of permanent terrorist
threats, of pervasive fear, of a hostile world, of unreliable
allies... The Zionist zealots have led the ideological charge
poisoning relations with France and other European countries which
fail to respond favorable to the bloody repression of occupied
peoples. No policy group has done more to weaken the sustainability
of the US Empire than the Zionist zealots in government and the
massive well-financed pro-Israel networks through the US. The
Congress, the Executive branch, state and local governments, and
national and local media have all come under the influence of the
Jewish "lobby's" pro-Israel agenda to the point that none or few
dare to criticize Israel or its US representatives.
The overweening power of the pro-Israel power configuration has
inevitable provoked opposition - mainly from non-elected officials.
The FBI (Federal Bureau of Investigation) is preparing to indict
several high official from AIPEC, the most powerful representative
of Israel's interests in the US, for spying on the US for Israel.
Almost all the major Jewish organizations are preparing to defend
AIPEC and its practice of twisting US policy toward the "Israel
First" agenda. By early 2005, it was clear that the Zionist power
structure had paralyzed the investigation. Numerous retired military
and CIA officials have denounced Zionist power in designing and
promoting the interests of Israel over US imperial interests.
Meantime the Zionists along with the neo-conservatives successfully
purged or "neutralized" independent analysts in the CIA, Defense
and State Department who questioned the doctrine of sequential wars
against Israel's adversaries in the Middle East. The Second Bush
administration is completely controlled by the neo-conservativeZionist
extremists.
The conventional wisdom which perceives world imperial powers
dictating policy to lesser regional powers clearly fails to deal
with the US Middle East Wars. The reason why this common sense
notion is inadequate is because it fails to deal with a series of
unique (at least in modern history) phenomena affecting the policymaking
structure of the US Empire - the active role of a privileged
and influential minority deeply embedded in the decision-making
structure and whose primary loyalty is to another state. It is as
if the State of Israel has `colonized' the main spheres of political
power in the imperial state. These `colons' however are not exactly
transplants or emigrants from their "mother country". Rather they
have mostly grown up and have been educated in the imperial center,
they have pursued lucrative careers in the US and have, in most
instances, been strong supporters of US imperial expansion and
militarism. They have risen to and influenced the highest spheres of
political power. They have not been discriminated against, nor have
they suffered any economic, social or political exclusion. They have
not been marginalized - they are integrated in the centers of power.
Yet they have set themselves apart from the rest of the US citizens
and conceive of themselves as having a special mission -- of being
first Jews who unconditionally support the State of Israel and all
of its international projections of power. How can we explain this
irrational embrace of a militarist state by a set of individuals who
only vicariously share its life and destiny?
War in the 21st Century: Atavistic Behavior
Schumpeter in his book, Imperialism and Social Class, written shortly
after the First World War, attempted to square his argument that
capitalism is opposed to war by citing the re-emergence of residual
"atavistic" traits, embedded in previous feudal warrior societies,
as the cause of war. While I do not share Schumpeter's view of
the peaceful evolution of capitalism, particularly in the face of
a series of imperialist wars in Asia, Africa, Latin America and
Europe, his concept of atavistic behavior is useful in explaining
the irrational embrace of Israel by otherwise affluent, educated and
highly influential Jews. Their embrace of Israel is certainly not
for reasons of monetary remuneration, though Israel financially
rewarded American-Jewish spies like Jonathan Pollard. What causes a
modern or post- modern elite group to exhibit patterns of fanatical
loyalty to a foreign militarist colonial power engaged in ethnic
cleansing?
The Jewish-led and financed Zionist movement and its influential and
wealthy supporters and leaders are a highly cohesive and disciplined
group which exhibits zero tolerance against any Jewish dissidents or
other critics of the warrior state or of their supporters anywhere in
the world. What accounts for the apparent anomaly of highly educated
professors, doctors, lawyers, investment bankers, media moguls and
billionaire real estate tycoons giving unconditional support to
a state engaged in primitive vindictive acts, of mass torture of
prisoners, of collective punishment and guilt (destroying family
homes of guerrilla suspects, taking family members hostage),
systematically destroying farmland and uprooting hundreds of
thousands of farmers, communities for almost six decades? They
embrace ancient land claims and the vindictive and gratuitous
humiliation of subjugated people based on mythological religious
beliefs. The primitive belief in a "superior" or special people
used to justify blood crimes harks back to the ritual barbarities of
ancient tribal justice. This atavistic behavior is, however, tied to
the most modern military technology in the hands of highly trained
technical experts. The combination of tribal cohesion, religious
mythology, high-tech weaponry and an overweening desire to exercise
power on behalf of a military state based on `racial-religious'
exclusivity, is a potent concoction for US Zionists to inhale. Yet
there are immense psychological satisfactions from being part of a
powerful closed in-group, with a vision or fantasy of the revival
of a lost 'kingdom', a sense of being part of superior people,
members of a survivalist culture which has endured a unique suffering,
and therefore possesses the righteousness to commit violence and
use power to strike down adversaries anywhere and not to be bound
by conventional international laws which only serve to limit the
prerogatives of a 'righteous people'.
Tribal loyalties have tight rules of conduct for all who are
considered members, whether they are active practitioners of Zionist
politics or even critics of the State of Israel - home of the chosen
people. Tribal rules are interpreted in different ways by different
segments of the Jewish Diaspora. For the Presidents of the Major
Jewish Organizations and their functionaries there are Five
- Commandments
- (1) 'thou shalt not criticize any action by any Israeli
leader at any time, no matter how heinous the crime, nor
how often it is repeated, irregardless of how vast or
intense world opprobrium',
(2) 'Thou shall not allow any others to criticize or act contrary
to Jewish State interests or to organizations which embrace the
Zionist ideal,'
(3) 'Every weapon, financial, physical, psychological, ideological
and economic can be legitimately wielded to weaken, isolate,
discredit or stigmatize critics of the Tribal Homeland or any of
the overseas Tribal Organizations,'
(4) 'Thou shall raise funds from all sources (legal or illegal),
public, social or private to finance the military machine of the
Tribal leaders - tribute secured from lesser "others" must enhance
the security and living standards of the chosen people' and
(5) 'Thou shall declare loyalty first and foremost to the tribal
identity, then to the powers which support "our tribe" and lastly
to "universal values"'.
Despite sharp criticism from a minority of dissident Jews, both in
Israel, the US and elsewhere, there are certain unstated codes which
are observed even by the most critical commentators. One is to never
criticize or identify the power of the Jewish organizations in the
US and their influence in the government. Jewish progressives de
facto denial of Jewish power in shaping US war policy in the Middle
East severely restricts the effectiveness of the anti-war movement
by exonerating one of the key ideological props of the imperial
war machine. The second unstated code followed by the "observant"
progressive Jewish intellectuals is a denial that Israel has an
important influence on US Middle East and global policy via its
tribal loyalists in the US. Jewish progressives deliberately and
systematically exclude any mention of Jewish power and influence in
shaping US policy in the Middle East by focusing exclusively on "oil
interests" or "neo-conservative ideologues" (who just coincidently
are mostly tribespeople and their camp-followers). In deference to
or more precisely because they share a deep underlying identity with
the tribe - they refuse to include any systematic study of the very
obvious and blatant exercise of power in every branch of government,
electoral processes and media reports. Likewise with the Middle East,
Israel is considered by progressive Jews as an "instrument" of US
imperialism even as the instrument cuts both ways - as Israel uses
the US to savage its adversaries, to build up its military machine
and to manufacture its commercial weapons systems to sell even to US
competitors (i.e. China).
The emergence of atavistic behavior and its extension among the
Zionist elite is a relatively recent development (over the past
two decades) and goes contrary to the universalistic, secular and
socialist values and practices as well as the traditional religious
and communal practices and beliefs of many Jewish communities during
previous centuries. The embrace of imperial power, the turn from
religious communitarian values toward the embrace of the militaristic
state of Israel, the shift from internationalism and socialism
toward an unconditional embrace of a narrow exclusivist ideology
has activated the latent atavistic behavior associated with vengeful
killing of adversaries and blind singular loyalty to the idea of
Israeli supremacy in the Middle East. Translated into the US context,
it means virulent pro-war propaganda, advocacy of concentration
camps for Islamic believers (as proposed by Daniel Pipes and others)
and collaboration with Mossad agents in promoting Israel's strategic
military, economic and political goals; by utilizing all the
instruments of power within the US and with its overseas clients
(Kurdish regions of Iraq, for example).
Atavistic behavior secures its goals through the shrewd manipulation
and artificial inflation of "fears" emanating from Israel's enemies.
The purpose is to create mass support in the US for wars on Israel's
behalf. US Zionist ideologues, drawing heavily on the self-induced
political isolation which the Israeli State has brought upon itself
through its savage destruction of Arab Palestine, have elaborated
and preached a paranoid view of the world, in which all international
organizations (the UN, the World Court etc.) and forums, international
opinions surveys, Europe, Asia, Latin America and Africa are accused
of "anti-Semitism" because they recognize and condemn Israel's
violation of Palestinian political and human rights.
The greater the "justifiable" violence of Israel, the wider the
condemnation of its behavior, the more hysterical and strident the
vituperation emanating from the major Zionist centers, the greater
the concerted efforts to discredit the international bodies and to
heighten US support. Just as an imaginary Neanderthal might bellow
loudly and grab a heavy club when others protest his trespass of
territory, so too do the Zionists reach for the club of US military
power to pummel those who challenge Israel's transgressions.
"Atavistic behavior" is not confined to affluent Zionists, it is
found among civilian militarists, Christian Zionists and other
religious fundamentalists, who are defenders and practitioners of
unrestrained violence and permanent imperial wars. Under the veneer
of civilized discourse and moderate tonalities, is the barely
restrained lust for unlimited power, total warfare and uncompromising
savage torture. Atavistic behavior increasingly threatens to
overwhelm the rational basis of economic calculation. The civilian
militarist who may have originally been seen by many capitalists as
one tool among others for conquering markets and seizing strategic
resources have gradually taken a life of their own, subordinating
capitalist interests to their raging quest for unlimited power.
Atavistic behavior is both the apogee of US imperial power and its
ultimate regress to the dark ages.
Contemporary and future wars in the Middle East cannot be explained
merely by reciting an inventory of economic resources and matching
them with imperial strategic designs. This rationalist-economistic
reductionism fails to take account of specific ideological,
irrational political determinants which have demonstrated greater
explanatory power.
Privatization and War
One of the strategic goals of imperialist policy-makers is the
privatization of public resources as an "end" in itself and as
a means of securing political, social, economic and cultural
control over a country in order to enhance empire-building.
Privatization strategies are pursued by political as well as military
means, either through military invasions or via military coups by
surrogate military juntas. Privatization is a first step toward denationalization
and re-colonization of the economy and state.
De-nationalization of the economy usually follows the imposition
by imperial lending agencies of a macro-political strategy dubbed
structural adjustment policies which include among other measures
privatizations of public enterprises - especially strategies sectors
such as energy, petroleum, metals, telecommunications, finance and
banking. The move toward de-nationalization follows one of two paths -
either the direct purchase by foreign companies of national assets or
a two-step process, whereby the nationalist capitalists first buy the
public enterprise and then re-sell it to foreign capital.
Whether directly or indirectly, privatization means foreign control
over essential economic decisions (investment, marketing, transfer of
profits etc) in strategic sectors of the economy. Foreign control of
strategic industries means the power of decision over local industries
and exploitation of natural resources.
Beyond the economic consequences of privatization/de-nationalization
(P/D), it is a political instrument of empire-building strategies:
- P/D involves the recruitment of `national executives', financial
officers, publicists, managers, economists who become an active
political base in backing and promoting deeper and more extensive
colonization as well as political submission to imperial power.
- The chief executive officers of P/D enterprises play a leading
role in influencing and directing sectoral organizations
(automobile and parts manufacturers, banking associations, mineowners'
consortiums, etc.), thus "hegemonizing" the national
capitalists within the associations and securing their acquiescence
in imperial-colonial projects.
- P/D firms can work in tandem with the imperial state to pressure
a regime to follow imperial policies by decreasing economic
production or by dis-investing. For example, in the 1960's the
State Department ordered the US-owned oil refineries to refuse to
process Cuban oil imports from Russia in order to overthrow the
Castro government.
- The US government frequently plants `agents' (CIA and FBI) in
US-owned multi-national corporations (MNCs). The MNCs provide a
"legal cover" for intelligence agents involved in destabilization
campaigns, espionage and recruitment of local business and trade
union leaders to serve imperial interests.
- P/D firms provide imperialist policy-makers with additional
leverage to pressure a regime to submit to IMF policies and
to support colonial rule via ALCA.
- P/D provide a pretext for imperial intervention and conquest,
using the excuse that the invaders are "protecting the property
rights of US citizens.
- P/D provide a "beach head" for multiplying privatization using
local allies and political influence, following the initial
takeovers. P/D have a "falling dominoes" effect, leading to
cumulative power, from enterprise to enterprise, from sector to
sector, from economy to media, from economy and media to political
control. P/D has a catalytic effect in strengthening imperial
policy-makers and forcing the hand of any recalcitrant regime.
The Dialectics of Privatizations/De-nationalization and War
Wars are motivated by and result in the privatization and denationalization
of publicly owned properties. Likewise, privatizations
lead to war in order to protect and prevent the re-nationalization
of strategic industries. Privatizations are frequently accompanied
or followed by the granting of military bases, thus strengthening
the colonial presence and weakening the sovereignty of Third World
countries. At a minimum, privatizations almost always are accompanied
by military "co-operative agreements" and "mutual defense agreements"
which, in effect, allow for the presence of US military advisers in
the Ministries of Defense, the indoctrination and training of military
officials and a "legal formula" allowing US military intervention if
and when a client regime is threatened. In other words, privatization
and de-nationalization weakens the Third World state - deprives the
state of economic resources, revenues and levers of power, while
severely restricting its sovereignty. Weakened clients often supply
mercenary soldiers for future imperial wars and colonial occupation,
such as in Iraq, Afghanistan and Haiti.
Colonial Wars in the 21st Century
In the 21st century, imperial wars, especially multiple colonial
wars requiring military occupation of a colonized country, can only
be sustained by recruiting mercenary soldiers from client regimes.
The US imperial armed forces are incapable of sustaining a colonial
occupation in the face of a prolonged peoples war without large-scale
mercenary support from client regimes. This is very evident today
in Iraq (and Afghanistan), where the US colonial officials and their
puppet regime are desperately trying to assemble an army of Iraqi and
Afghan mercenaries to take the brunt of "security duties" (repression
of the colonized people). The US colonial army, particular the Army
Reservists, is demoralized and has experienced a sharp decline in reenlistment.
Given the imperialist involvement in two countries (Iraq and
Afghanistan), Washington turned to recruiting military mercenaries
from its Latin American client regimes to provide several thousand
officers and soldiers to prop up the US puppet regime in Haiti.
Since the imperial strategists particularly the neo-conservatives
and Zionists have made military conquest the centerpiece of imperial
expansion, it is the military which has paradoxically become the
"weakest link" in the imperial chain which extends from imperial war
to colonial occupation and control, to P/D to economic pillage.
In the past the US imperial state engaged in external and internal
wars to P/D strategic industries. The US overthrow of the Arbenz
regime in Guatemala (1954), the Mossadegh regime in Iran in 1953,
the failed effort to invade Cuba in 1961, the CIA engineered coup
in Chile (1973), the US Contra-War in Nicaragua (in the 1980's) were
all directed toward P/D of the economies as well as serving imperial
geo-political strategies.
In recent years however, the imperial state has increasingly relied
on financing civilian electoral politicians and pressure from the
international financial institutions to implement P/D. Only in the
Middle East where Zionist-Israeli power is factored in has military
invasion become the policy of choice. The reliance on war to privatize
and colonize continues to operate where imperial-financed civilian
electoral strategies have failed. Two recent cases come to mind.
The US 'internal' war in Venezuela, where a US-financed and directed
coup briefly (48 hours) overthrew the elected President Chavez is a
case in point. In that short period of time, the puppet Carmona regime
immediately broke relations with Cuba, withdrew from OPEC and began to
draw up plans to privatize the state petroleum company before popular
power restored Chavez and rescinded the decrees. The US-sponsored coup
and subsequent 'bosses lock-out' in the oil industry were part of an
internal war strategy designed to circumvent an unfavorable setting
for a manipulated electoral outcome.
Likewise in Yugoslavia, the US, in alliance with European imperialism,
launched an unprovoked military invasion, using Croatian and Kosovar
terrorists to destroy the Yugoslav nation and set up mini-states in
which former self-managed enterprises were P/D'd, major military bases
were established and mercenary troops were recruited for the Middle
East colonial wars.
Privatization and de-nationalization whether it occurs through
imperial wars or via subsidized client electoral politicians
however entails inter-imperialist competition and conflict over
which the imperialist states will seize the most lucrative ex-public
firms. The experience in Eastern Europe and Latin America suggests
that US political successes resulted in European powers securing most
of the privatized firms and most lucrative oil, telecommunication
and financial enterprises. Similarly in the Yugoslav break-up, the
Europeans secured influence and control over the richest mini-states,
Croatia and Slovenia, while the US colonized the poorest, mafiastates
- Kosovo, Macedonia, Montenegro and Bosnia.
The turn to unilateralist imperialist wars reflected this reality
of unequal benefits from co-operative US-EU imperial wars. The US
unilateral invasion of Iraq was designed to maximize US control
of the forthcoming privatization and de-nationalization of Iraqi
oil industry and to undercut European benefits from the post-war
"reconstruction" as well as to privilege Israeli interests in the
Middle East.
If imperialist expansion is linked to P/D, the competition and
conflict between US and EU imperialism shapes the forms and methods
through which that expansion takes place. The US resort to unilateral
(forms) and military (means) is related to its "comparative advantage"
in military weaponry and the predominance of militarist civilian
decision-makers. The doctrines of "total war", "offensive wars",
and unipolar world supremacy were all designed and implemented by a
special elite of political ideologues, with specific set of political
attributes - they lack direct ties to the traditional military
hierarchy and have demonstrated contempt for the military and
intelligence commands. These civilian militarists conceive of
themselves as an elite chosen to carry out the mission of terrorizing
real or imagined adversaries overseas and punishing, expelling or
silencing traditional military and intelligence rivals within the
state. Their extremist militarism is directly related to their
distance from the actual "blood and guts" of mass killing of civilians
and ground level military casualties and their proximity to the
Israeli State.
Their arrogance in exercising power is matched by their abject
ignorance of the political and economic conditions and consequences
of their decisions. Their blind subservience to serving Israel's
interests led them to "miscalculate" the massive degree of Iraqi
opposition to the war and occupation. Their quest for world domination
led to unsustainable multiple military invasions, leading to the
weakening of the US Empire. Their militarist logic revealed their
abysmal ignorance of the enormous destruction of lucrative Iraqi
assets and the cost of war of war to the US economy. These policies
forced sharp divisions within the imperial state. In response, the
extremists in the Pentagon have seized control over intelligence
functions and special forces operations, involving clandestine
operations. The Second Bush administration is more extreme and
even more aggressive than the first. The political conflict within
the State is extending into civil society where over half of the
population opposes the plans for new wars. Instead of adopting an
empire-building strategy mixing economic, political and diplomatic
pressures with selective wars, the civilian militarists have, in the
Middle East, relied exclusively on military strategies. Even within
this one-sided military approach, they have chosen the most extreme
measures, unilateral permanent wars, as opposed to coalitions (and
joint colonial spoils) and limited wars (in time and place). Military
extremism in pursuit of unsustainable colonial war is no virtue.
Israel's dirty little colonial war, despite its daily civilian
assassinations, terror bombings and ritual torture and humiliation
of the Palestinians has not succeeded in 60 years of warfare against
3 million Palestinians even with universal conscription and life-time
military reservists. The civilian militarists in the imperial state
have learned nothing from Israel's failures: For them Israel can do
no wrong, it can never fail, it is their living ideological model of
the military will to conquer. Our own civilian militarists, in their
exalted hubris believe that 150,000 colonial forces could defeat
200,000 armed resistance fighters backed by over 20 million fellow
citizens.
The Mind of the Civilian Militarists
One of the key aspects of the civilian militarists' rise to power
has been their ability to apply organizational principles which
further their political programs. Their procedures, while not
usually spelled out in a written document, can be deduced from
their organizational behavior. For brevity of space, we can spell
out their modus operendi:
- Precipitate war thus precluding public debate and systematic
analysis of who benefits and who loses, and the tactical gains
and strategic costs. Given that the civilian militarists came
to power with an already fixed doctrine and a disciplined cohort,
it was not difficult for them to impose their views over their
fragmented and dispersed rivals and opponents within the military
and government bureaucracy. Taking advantage of the notion of
"civil supremacy" they were able to impose their extreme militarist
war doctrines on their critics within the traditional military
leadership, whom they attacked as being "too bureaucratic and
cautious". In effect their ultra-voluntarism military doctrines
conflicted with the more rational-calculated policies of the
established military strategists.
- Facilitating an apocalyptic event was an essential element
in the ascendancy of the civil militarist in imperial policymaking
positions and the seizure of war making powers. Massive
documentation and critical analysis drawn from official
intelligence sources reveal that the civilian militarists were
knowledgeable and actively involved in facilitating the terrorist
attack on September 11, 2001. The civilian militarists, on the day
of the terrorist event, set in motion their Middle East war agenda
and proceeded to propound and implement their extremist "offensive
war" agenda. They deliberately induced and magnified a paranoid
style of politics which centered on an immediate world-wide
terrorist threat to millions of defenseless civilians based on
nuclear, biological and chemical warfare (despite that fact that
9/11 terrorist attack was carried out with cheap plastic boxcutters).
This unprecedented bizarre ideological "terror campaign"
orchestrated by the civilian militarists resonated strongly with
the paranoid politics of the Israeli regime which urged a JudeoChristian
Crusade against a worldwide Islamic terrorist threat.
- Messianic missions are a constant component of the civilian
militarist mentality. These are partly cynical exercises in the
manipulation of universal democratic ideals and partly the result
of a fervor for US world supremacy. Messianic missionary zeal has
the intended consequence of providing a self-justification for
gross violations of human rights, international and domestic laws.
The civil militarists know that their military invasions willingly
destroy democratic rights of self-determination, that their
advocacy of military occupation lead to the denial of the rights
of democratic self-government, yet they proclaim their goal is to
"democratize the Middle East", a claim which is echoed in the mass
media. Cynicism aside, the Messianic mission fuels the vituperative
attacks against real or imagined critics which accompanies
authoritarian repressive measures aimed at intimidating critics,
and inciting arbitrary arrests, indefinite jailing and the use of
torture against suspects.
- Moralistic military campaigns have the virtue of not having to
provide facts to justify violent assaults on peoples and nations.
The issue for the civilian militarists is not whether an attack
or a military threat really exists. The essential element for
them is that there is a self-defined world of "good" and "evil" --
a virtuous world power (US) united with its regional accomplice
(Israel) against an evil "other" (Muslim, Third World, independent
state) hostile to US empire building and Israeli colonization.
Moral crusaders among the civilian militarists believe that the
masses need to be deceived by a "Noble Lie", because the masses
are incapable of understanding the "higher truth" of the virtues of
permanent war to secure US world supremacy and a "Greater Israeli"
regional mini-empire. Many progressive critics have spilled gallons
of ink refuting the lies of the civilian militarists regarding
Iraq's weapons of mass destruction, Saddam's links to Al Queda.
This is a worthy enterprise but one which is irrelevant to the
civilian militarists, because, for them "truth" is embodied in
their (military) actions and not in the pretext (lies) that they
expounded. Insofar as the lies "worked", that is insofar as they
were able to launch a war, prepare for other wars, terrorize the
population into supporting war, and seize control of the levers
of power, a "higher truth" became a reality: the beginning of
permanent offensive warfare.
- The doctrine of "living space" is intimately related to the
civilian militarist practice of permanent war. In their paranoid
voluntaristic vision, no place and no time is secure. Threats
exist in a series of concentric circles from the Middle East
Islamic people (surrounding Israel) outward toward Asia, North
Africa, and Western Europe_ Security threats are present among
"Old European States" and Third World countries which refuse to
subordinate themselves to US security forces. In order to achieve
"living space" in the US and wherever its business interests,
military bases and operation can (or should) have a dominant
presence, the issue of "security" becomes a code word for perpetual
overt or clandestine military, political and ideological warfare.
Ultimately, for the civilian militarists, only a world in which the
US exercises absolute supreme sovereign imperial power will result
in secure living space.
To enhance their power in the imperial state, the civilian militarists
have pursued a number of organizational reforms. For illustrative
purposes we can cite at least three types of "reforms" and their stated
rationale and real purpose:
- Organizational decentralization: Civilian militarists argue that
there are too many bureaucratic and political constraints on
timely and efficient decisions in a time of imminent threats of
terror. In a time of national emergency, established "bureaucracy"
becomes part of the threat rather than part of the solution. This
is the formal rationale to disguise the real purpose which is
to concentrate power in the hands of civilian militarists in the
Pentagon elite and among the neo-conservatives in the National
Security Council. The "reform" is designed to bypass existing
lines of command until they can be purged and replaced by civilian
militarist loyalists.
- The establishment of non-traditional sources of information
(intelligence): Civilian militarists argue that the traditional
existing intelligence agencies are ineffective, inaccurate and
cumbersome. They argue for "broadening" the basis of intelligence
gathering, "diversifying" sources and by-passing cumbersome
bureaucracies and securing "direct lines" from the field in order
to take decisive action in a timely fashion. The real purpose of
the civilian militarists is to create their own parallel "sources"
to fabricate intelligence in pursuit of their permanent war
doctrine.
- Greater 'cooperation' with acknowledged friendly states with a
long-term, in-depth experience in the area of terrorist warfare:
The formal rational for this "reform" advocating "special
relations" with overseas experts is that the imperialist state
can save time, build on existing expertise, avoid making mistakes
through trial and error and duplication by creating new
bureaucracies. In addition the civilian militarists, especially
the Zionists, look at the Israeli "anti-terrorist" apparatus
as a successful model, despite the fact that Israel is the most
likely site of terrorist action. The real purpose is to strengthen
ties with the State of Israel, to increase biased information and
disinformation flows in order to mold US imperial policies around
Israel's Middle East interests. Since the Pentagon Zionists have
the best and most intense relations with Israel who is better
placed to facilitate joint cooperation than these very same
ideologues
Conclusion
War, specifically US imperialist war, doctrine is made up of several
sub-tests and key concepts such as a "unipolar world", offensive,
permanent wars and extra-territorial jurisdiction. The doctrine is
based on the belief of imperial invincibility - based on mass media
imagery of successful US warriors-supermen representing a righteous
superpower.
The key to understanding the source and practitioners of these
doctrines is found in the ascendancy of a "new class " of civilian
militarists (CM) and their think-tank auxiliaries and civil society
supporters who have triggered catastrophic events to facilitate
their dominant position in the imperial state. The ascent of the
CM has not gone uncontested both from inside the imperial state
and from without, especially from former traditional military and
intelligence leaders.
In the new millennium a combination of circumstance and timing as
well as calculated long-term positioning, has enabled a specific
group of civilian militarists to achieve strategic positions in
the imperil state - namely Zionist ideologues intimately involved
in long-term relations with the state of Israel.
These ideologues and their civilian militarists cohort have pushed
to the limit their psychological warfare designed to terrorize the
mass of the population to follow their extremist doctrine and make
the financial and human sacrifices for on-going wars.
This paper demonstrates that the decisions to launch imperial wars
today are not simply the result of the economic interests of US
multi-nationals (petroleum or otherwise). In the case of the Middle
East, many of the decision-makers did not consult nor were they
influenced by oil or other economic interests - most of the
multinationals had on-going, lucrative and stable working relations
with conservative oil producing Arab elites. At most some oil
companies were promised future benefits via privatization of public
oil facilities.
Imperial war was designed and driven by a set of policymakers with
little interest in or no notion of the economic costs of war. The
driving force for the war is found among civilian militarists who
facilitated and capitalized on a catastrophic event (9/11) which
allowed them to bypass traditional military and intelligence
hierarchies. Internal consent for extremist militarism was induced
through massive, intense and continuous fear propaganda fomented
by the civilian militarists to consolidate their power. The
psychological-ideological campaign allowed for vast expenditures
of resources and civilian militarist monopoly over imperial policy.
War took on a special meaning for the Zionist component of the
civilian militarists - serving as a prop for enhancing Israel's
regional power.
While the ideological dominance and psychological control exercised
by the civilian militarists over the masses is formidable it is
profoundly vulnerable. The constant and irreversible defeats suffered
by the US colonial army in Iraq have demonstrated that the US imperial
army is not invincible. The incapacity for the US to move on to new
ground wars has temporarily challenged the doctrine of permanent
offensive wars. The mass discontent within the colonial army has
undercut and exposed the irrationality of the civilian militarists.
Their proposals for increasing troop levels in Iraq, augmenting the
recruitment of soldiers, that is, deepening US involvement in an
un-winnable war is leading to greater casualties, deeper discontent
at home and greater resistance in Iraq, and severely straining
the crisis-ridden US economy. Escalation of war to Iran based on
irrational voluntarism will bring the civilian militarists into
greater conflict with traditional economic and military power centers.
Capitalist rationality, based on cost-benefit calculations, is likely
to challenge the atavistic behavior of the civilian warlords, leading
to greater internal divisions within the empire and without.
Inter-elite conflicts may serve to activate sectors of the `rational'
middle class concerned with the long-term, large-scale interests of
empire against the civilian-militarists and their associated power
worshipers. "Living space" security doctrines will continue to be
played out but in more select locations and within the boundaries of
imperial capacity to recruit clients and imperial allies. Wars, which
endanger the military status of the imperial state, will be recast
in terms of spheres of influence - in which big powers interests will
marginalize the exaggerated and inflated role of Israel in world and
regional politics. Today the future of the US Empire and particularly
the future of its civilian militarists depend on how decisively the
empire is defeated in the Middle East. As goes the war in the Middle
East, so go the future methods of imperial expansion.
The total military debacle of the civilian militarists and their
Zionist core in the Middle East will probably result in a rethinking
of the meaning, purposes and goals of imperial wars. Most likely,
the economic costs and benefits of imperial wars will return to the
center of elite debate, without the bias of third countries interests.
These elite debates will attempt to forge a new more limited and
'rational' model of world empire.
The issue of turning from empire toward a more `republican' style
of politics can only be taken up in another venue, within massbased
anti-imperialist movements which will begin among the colonial
subjects of imperial centers but may include the excluded and
exploited within the imperial capitals.
14-03-2005
http://www.rebelion.org/noticia.php?id=12606
>>>-----------------------------------------------------------------<<<·
>> GIV Mailinglist : http://mailing.giv-seiten.info <<·
>>>-----------------------------------------------------------------<<<·
http://www.giv-seiten.info/www.giv-archiv.de/2002/Oktober/021031GI.010·
>> Kasnazaniya / Casnazaniyyah: http://video.giv-seiten.info <<·
>>>-----------------------------------------------------------------<<<·
>> Further Informations about Iraq and Palestine: <<·
>> <<·
>> GIV-Pages Online : http://www.giv-seiten.info <<·
>> GIV-Page : http://giv.giv-seiten.info <<·
>> Iraq-Page : http://irak.giv-seiten.info <<·
>> Jemen-Page : http://jemen.giv-seiten.info <<·
>> Jordanien-Page : http://jordanien.giv-seiten.info <<·
>> GIV-Archiv : http://archiv.giv-seiten.info <<·
>> GIV-Archiv : http://www.giv-archiv.de <<·
>>>-----------------------------------------------------------------<<<·
|