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Return to Socialist Register: The New Imperial Challenge GLOBAL CAPITALISM AND AMERICAN EMPIRELeo Panitch and Sam Gindin
American imperialism
has been made plausible and attractive in part by
the insistence that it is not imperialistic. Harold Innis,
1948[1] The American empire is no longer concealed. In March 1999, the cover of the New York
Times Magazine displayed a giant clenched fist painted in the stars and stripes of the
US flag above the words: What The World Needs Now: For globalization to work,
America cant be afraid to act like the almighty superpower that it is. Thus
was featured Thomas Friedmans Manifesto for a Fast World, which urged
the United States to embrace its role as enforcer of the capitalist global order:
the hidden hand of the market will never work without a hidden fist.... The
hidden fist that keeps the world safe for Silicon Valleys technologies is called the
United States Army, Air Force, Navy and Marine Corps. Four years later, in January
2003, when there was no longer any point in pretending the fist was hidden, the Magazine
featured an essay by Michael Ignatieff entitled The Burden:
[W]hat
word but empire describes the awesome thing that America is becoming?
Being an imperial power
means enforcing such order as there is in the world
and doing so in the American interest.[2]
The words, The American Empire: (Get Used To It), took up the whole cover of the Magazine.
Of course, the American states geopolitical
strategists had already taken this tack. Among those closest to the Democratic Party wing
of the state, Zbigniew Brzezinski did not mince words in his 1997 book, The Grand
Chessboard: American Primacy and Its Geostrategic Imperatives, asserting that
the three great imperatives of geo-political strategy are to prevent collusion and
maintain security dependence amongst the vassals, to keep tributaries pliant, and to keep
the barbarians from coming together.[3] In the same year the
Republican intellectuals who eventually would write the Bush White Houses National
Security Strategy founded the Project for a New American Century, with the goal of making
imperial statecraft the explicit guiding principle of American policy.[4] Most of what passes more generally for serious analysis
in justifying the use of the term empire in relation to the US today is really
just an analogy, implicit or explicit, with imperial Rome. On the face of it, this is by
no means absurd since, as an excellent recent book on the Roman Empire says,
Romanization could indeed be understood as the assimilation of the
conquered nations to Roman culture and political worldview. The conquered became partners
in running the empire. It was a selective process that applied directly only to the upper
level of subject societies but it trickled down to all classes with benefits for some,
negative consequences for others
. Roman supremacy was based on a masterful
combination of violence and psychological persuasion -- the harshest punishment for those
who challenged it, the perception that their power knew no limits and that rewards were
given to those who conformed.[5] But an analogy is not a theory. The neglect of any
serious political economy or pattern of historical determination that would explain the
emergence and reproduction of todays American empire, and the dimensions of
structural oppression and exploitation pertaining to it, is striking. It serves as a
poignant reminder of why it was Marxism that made the running in theorizing imperialism
for most of the twentieth century. Yet as a leading Indian Marxist, Prabhat Patnaik, noted
in his essay Whatever Happened to Imperialism?, by 1990 the topic had also
virtually disappeared from the pages of Marxist journals and even Marxists
looked bemused when the term was mentioned. The costs of this for the left
were severe. The concept of imperialism has always been especially important as much for
its emotive and mobilizing qualities as for its analytic ones. Indeed, in Patnaiks
view, rather than a theoretically self-conscious silence, the very fact
that imperialism has become so adept at managing potential challenges to its
hegemony made us indifferent to its ubiquitous presence.[6]
Yet the lefts silence on imperialism also reflected severe analytic problems in the
Marxist theory of imperialism. Indeed, this was obvious by the beginning of the 1970s --
the last time the concept of imperialism had much currency -- amidst complaints that the
Marxist treatment of imperialism as an undifferentiated global product of a certain
stage of capitalism reflected its lack of any serious historical or
sociological dimensions.[7] As Giovanni Arrighi noted in
1978, by the end of the 60s, what had once been the pride of Marxism -- the
theory of imperialism -- had become a tower of Babel, in which not even Marxists knew any
longer how to find their way.[8] The confusion was apparent in debates in the early 1970s
over the location of contemporary capitalisms contradictions. There were those who
focused almost exclusively on the third world, and saw its resistance to
imperialism as the sole source of transformation.[9] Others emphasized increasing
contradictions within the developed capitalist world, fostering the impression that
American hegemony was in decline. This became the prevalent view, and by the
mid-1980s the notion that the erosion of American economic, political, and military
power is unmistakable grew into a commonplace.[10] Although very few went back
to that aspect of the Marxist theory of inter-imperial rivalry that suggested a military
trial of strength, an era of intense regional economic rivalry was expected. As Glyn and
Sutcliffe put it, all it was safe to predict was that without a hegemonic power the
world economy will continue without a clear leader...[11] There was indeed no little irony in the fact that so many
continued to turn away from what they thought was the old-fashioned notion of imperialism,
just when the ground was being laid for its renewed fashionability in the New York
Times. Even after the 1990-91 Gulf War which, as Bruce Cumings pointed out, had
the important goal of assuring American control of
Middle Eastern oil, you
still needed an electron microscope to find imperialism used to describe
the U.S. role in the world. The Gulf War, he noted, went forward under a
virtual obliteration of critical discourse egged on by a complacent media in what can only
be called an atmosphere of liberal totalism.[12] This continued through the
1990s, even while, as the recent book by the conservative Andrew Bacevich has amply
documented, the Clinton Administration often outdid its Republican predecessors in
unleashing military power to quell resistance to the continuing aggressive American
pursuit of an open and integrated international order based on the principles of
democratic capitalism. Quoting Madeleine Albright, Clintons Secretary
of State, saying in 1998: If we have to use force, it is because we are
America. We are the indispensable nation.; and, in 2000, Richard Haas, the State
Departments Director of Policy Planning in the incoming Bush Administration, calling
on Americans finally to reconceive their states global role from one of
a traditional nation state to an imperial power, Bacevich argues that the continuing
avoidance of the term imperialism could not last. It was at best an
astigmatism, and at worst an abiding preference for averting our eyes
from the unflagging self-interest and large ambitions underlying all U.S. policy.[13] By the turn of the century, and most obviously once the
authors of the Project for a New American Century were invested with power in Washington
D.C., the term imperialism was finally back on even a good many liberals lips. The
popularity of Hardt and Negris tome, Empire, had caught the new
conjuncture even before the second war on Iraq. But their insistence (reflecting the
widespread notion that the power of all nation states had withered in the era of
globalization) that the United States does not, and indeed no nation state can
today, form the center of an imperialist project was itself bizarrely out of
sync with the times.[14] The left needs a new theorization of imperialism, one
that will transcend the limitations of the old Marxist stagist theory of
inter-imperial rivalry, and allow for a full appreciation of the historical factors that
have led to the formation of a unique American informal empire. This will involve
understanding how the American state developed the capacity to eventually incorporate its
capitalist rivals, and oversee and police globalization -- i.e. the spread of
capitalist social relations to every corner of the world. The theory must be able to
answer the question of what made plausible the American states insistence that it
was not imperialistic, and how this was put into practice and institutionalized; and,
conversely, what today makes implausible the American states insistence that
it is not imperialistic, and what effects its lack of concealment might have in terms of
its attractiveness and its capacity to manage global capitalism and sustain its global
empire. RETHINKING IMPERIALISM
What this erratic trajectory from the nineteenth to the twenty-first century
suggests is that the process of globalization is neither inevitable (as was conventionally
assumed in the latter part of the nineteenth century and as is generally assumed again
today), nor impossible to sustain (as Lenin and Polanyi, in their different ways, both
contended). The point is that we need to distinguish between the expansive tendency of
capitalism and its actual history. A global capitalist order is always a contingent social
construct: the actual development and continuity of such an order must be problematized.
There is a tendency within certain strains of
Marxism, as in much bourgeois analysis, to write theory in the present tense. We must not
theorize history in such a way that the trajectory of capitalism is seen as a simple
derivative of abstract economic laws. Rather, it is crucial to adhere to the Marxist
methodological insight that insists, as Philip McMichael has argued, that it is necessary
to historicize theory, that is to
problematize globalization as a relation immanent in capitalism, but with quite distinct
material (social, political and environmental) relations across time and time-space
Globalization is not simply the unfolding of capitalist tendencies but a historically
distinct project shaped, or complicated, by the contradictory relations of previous
episodes of globalization.[16]
Above all, the [s1] realization
-- or frustration -- of capitalisms globalizing tendencies cannot be
understood apart from the role played by the states that have historically constituted the
capitalist world. The rise of capitalism is inconceivable without the role that European
states played in establishing the legal and infrastructural frameworks for property,
contract, currency, competition and wage-labour within their own borders, while also
generating a process of uneven development (and the attendant construction of race) in the
modern world. This had gone so far by the mid-to late nineteenth century that when capital
expanded beyond the borders of a given European nation-state, it could do so within new
capitalist social orders that had been -- or were just being -- established by other
states, or it expanded within a framework of formal or informal empire. Yet this was not
enough to sustain capitals tendency to global expansion. No adequate means of
overall global capitalist regulation existed, leaving the
international economy and its patterns of accumulation fragmented, and thus fuelling the
inter-imperial rivalry that led to World War I.
The classical theories of imperialism developed at the time, from Hobsons to
Lenins, were founded on a theorization of capitalist economic stages and crises.
This was a fundamental mistake that has, ever since, continued to plague proper
understanding.[17] The classical theories were
defective in their historical reading of imperialism, in their treatment of the dynamics
of capital accumulation, and in their elevation of a conjunctural moment of inter-imperial
rivalry to an immutable law of capitalist globalization. A distinctive capitalist version
of imperialism did not suddenly arrive with the so-called monopoly or finance-capital
stage of capitalism in the late nineteenth century, as we argue below. Moreover, the theory of crisis derived from the classical
understanding of this period was mistakenly used to explain capitalisms expansionist
tendencies. If capitalists looked to the export of capital as well as trade in foreign
markets, it was not so much because centralization and concentration of capital had
ushered in a new stage marked by the falling rate of profit, overaccumulation and/or
underconsumption. Rather, akin to the process that had earlier led individual units of
capital to move out of their original location in a given village or town, it was the
accelerated competitive pressures and opportunities, and the attendant strategies and
emerging capacities of a developing capitalism, that pushed and facilitated the
international expansionism of the late nineteenth and early twentieth
centuries.
The classical theorists of imperialism also failed to apprehend adequately the
spatial dimensions of this internationalization. They made too much of the export of goods
and capital to what we now call the third world, because the latters
very underdevelopment limited its capacity to absorb such flows. And they failed
to discern two key developments in the leading capitalist countries themselves. Rather
than an exhaustion of consumption possibilities within the leading capitalist countries --
a premise based on what Lenins pamphlet Imperialism called the
semi-starvation level of existence of the masses -- more and more Western working
classes were then achieving increasing levels of private and public consumption.[18]
And rather than the concentration of capital in these countries limiting the introduction
of new products so that capital cannot find a field for profitable investment,[19]
the very unevenness of on-going competition and technological development was introducing
new prospects for internal accumulation. There was a deepening of capital at home, not
just a spreading of capital abroad.
Far from being the highest stage of capitalism, what these theorists were observing
was (as is now obvious) a relatively early phase of capitalism. This was so not
just in terms of consumption patterns, financial flows and competition, but also in terms
of the limited degree of foreign direct investment at the time, and the very rudimentary
means that had then been developed for managing the contradictions associated with
capitalisms internationalization.
It was, however, in their reductionist and instrumental treatment of the state that
these theorists were especially defective.[20] Imperialism is not
reducible to an economic explanation, even if economic forces are always a large part of
it. We need, in this respect, to keep imperialism and capitalism as two distinct concepts.
Competition amongst capitalists in the international arena, unequal exchange and uneven
development are all aspects of capitalism itself, and their relationship to imperialism
can only be understood through a theorization of the state. When states pave the way for
their national capitals expansion abroad, or even when they follow and manage that
expansion, this can only be understood in terms of these states relatively
autonomous role in maintaining social order and securing the conditions of capital
accumulation; and we must therefore factor state administrative capacities as well as
class, cultural and military determinations into the explanation of the imperial aspect of
this role.
Capitalist imperialism, then, needs to be understood through an extension of the
theory of the capitalist state, rather than derived directly from the theory of economic
stages or crises. And such a theory needs to comprise not only inter-imperial rivalry,
and the conjunctural predominance of one imperial state, but also the structural
penetration of former rivals by one imperial state. This means we need to historicize the
theory, beginning by breaking with the conventional notion that the nature of modern
imperialism was once and for all determined by the kinds of economic rivalries attending
the stage of industrial concentration and financialization associated with
turn-of-the-century monopoly capital.
In fact, the transition to the modern form of imperialism may be located in the
British states articulation of its old mercantile formal empire with the informal
empire it spawned in the mid-nineteenth century during the era of free trade.
Schumpeters theory of imperialism as reflecting the
atavistic role within capitalism of pre-capitalist exploiting and warrior classes, and
both Kautskys and Lenins conception that mid-nineteenth century British
industrial capital and its policy of free trade reflected a pure capitalism
antithetical or at least indifferent to imperial expansion,[21]
all derived from too crude an understanding of the separation of the economic from the
political under capitalism. This lay at the root of the notion that the replacement of the
era of free competition by the era of finance capital had ended that separation, leading
to imperialist expansion, rivalry and war among the leading capitalist states.
Like contemporary discussions of globalization in the context of neoliberal
free market policies, the classical Marxist accounts of the nineteenth century
era of free trade and its supersession by the era of inter-imperial rivalry also
confusingly counterposed states and markets. In both cases there
is a failure to appreciate the crucial role of the state in making free
markets possible and then to make them work. Just as the emergence of so-called
laissez faire under mid-nineteenth century industrial capitalism entailed a
highly active state to effect the formal separation of the polity and economy, and to
define and police the domestic social relations of a fully capitalist order, so did the
external policy of free trade entail an extension of the imperial role along all of these
dimensions on the part of the first state that created a form of imperialism driven
by the logic of capitalism.[22]
As Gallagher and Robinson showed 50 years ago, in a seminal essay entitled
The Imperialism of Free Trade, the conventional notion (shared by Kautsky,
Lenin and Schumpeter) that British free trade and imperialism did not mix was belied by
innumerable occupations and annexations, the addition of new colonies, and especially by
the importance of India to the Empire, between the 1840s and the 1870s. It was belied even
more by the immense extension, for both economic and strategic reasons, of Britains
informal empire via foreign investment, bilateral trade,
friendship treaties and gunboat diplomacy, so that mercantilist
techniques of formal empire were being employed in the mid-Victorian age at the same time
as informal techniques of free trade were being used in Latin America. It is for this
reason that attempts to make phases of imperialism correspond directly to phases in the
economic growth of the metropolitan economy are likely to prove in vain
[23]
Gallagher and Robinson defined imperialism in terms of a variable political function
of integrating new regions into the expanding economy; its character is largely
decided by the various and changing relationships between the political and economic
elements of expansion in any particular region and time.
In
other words, it is the politics as well as the economics of the informal empire which we
have to include in the account... The type of political lien between the expanding economy
and its formal and informal dependencies
has tended to vary with the economic value
of the territory, the strength of its political structure, the readiness of its rulers to
collaborate with British commercial and strategic purposes, the ability of the native
society to undergo economic change without external control, the extent to which domestic
and foreign political situations permitted British intervention, and, finally, how far
European rivals allowed British policy a free hand.[24]
This is not to say there are not important differences between informal and formal
empire. Informal empire requires the economic and cultural penetration of other states to
be sustained by political and military coordination with other independent governments.
The main factor that determined the shift to the extension of formal empires after the
1880s was not the inadequacy of Britains relationship with its own informal empire,
nor the emergence of the stage of monopoly or finance capital, but rather Britains
inability to incorporate the newly emerging capitalist powers of Germany, the US and Japan
into free trade imperialism. Various factors determined this, including
pre-capitalist social forces that did indeed remain important in some of these countries,
nationalist sentiments that accompanied the development of capitalist nation-states,
strategic responses to domestic class struggles as well geo-political and military
rivalries, and especially the limited ability of the British state -- reflecting also the
growing separation between British financial and industrial capital -- to prevent these
other states trying to overturn the consequences of uneven development. What ensued was
the rush for colonies and the increasing organization of trade competition via
protectionism (tariffs served as the main tax base of these states as well as protective
devices for nascent industrial bourgeoisies and working classes). In this context, the international
institutional apparatuses of diplomacy and alliances, British naval supremacy and the Gold
Standard were too fragile even to guarantee equal treatment of foreign capital with
national capital within each state (the key prerequisite of capitalist globalization), let
alone to mediate the conflicts and manage the contradictions associated with the
development of global capitalism by the late nineteenth century.
No less than Lenin, by 1914 Kautsky had
accepted, following Hilferdings Finance Capital, that a brutal and
violent form of imperialist competition was a product of highly developed
industrial capitalism.[25] Kautsky was right to
perceive, however, that even if inter-imperial rivalry had led to war between the major
capitalist powers, this was not an inevitable characteristic of capitalist globalization.
What so incensed Lenin, with his proclivity for over-politicizing theory, was that Kautsky
thought that all the major capitalist ruling classes, after having learned the
lesson of the world war, might eventually come to revive capitalist globalization
through a collaborative ultra-imperialism in face of the increasing strength
of an industrial proletariat that nevertheless still fell short of the capacity to effect
a socialist transformation. But Kautsky himself made his case reductively, that is, by
conceiving his notion of ultra-imperialism from, as he repeatedly put it, a purely
economic standpoint, rather than in terms of any serious theory of the state.
Moreover, had Kautsky put greater stress on his earlier perception (in 1911) that
the United States is the country that shows us our social future in
capitalism, and discerned the capacity of the newly emerging informal American
empire for eventually penetrating and coordinating the other leading capitalist states,
rather than anticipating an equal alliance amongst them, he might have been closer to the
mark in terms of what finally actually happened after 1945. But what could hardly yet be
clearly foreseen were the developments, both inside the American social formation and
state as well as internationally, that allowed American policy makers to think that
only the US had the power to grab hold of history and make it conform.[26]
THE AMERICAN REPUBLIC: EXTENSIVE EMPIRE AND
SELF-GOVERNMENT
The central place the United States now occupies within global capitalism rests on
a particular convergence of structure and history. In the abstract, we can identify
specific institutions as reflecting the structural power of capitalism. But what blocks
such institutions from emerging and what, if anything, opens the door to their
development, is a matter of historical conjunctures. The crucial phase in the
reconstruction of global capitalism -- after the
earlier breakdowns and before the reconstitution of the last quarter of the twentieth
century -- occurred during and after World War II. It was only after (and as a
state-learned response to) the disasters of Depression and the Second World War that
capitalist globalization obtained a new life. This depended, however, on the emergence and uneven
historical evolution of a set of structures developed under the leadership of a unique agent: the American imperial state.
The role the United States came to play in world capitalism was not inevitable but
nor was it merely accidental: it was not a matter of teleology but of capitalist history.
The capacity it developed to conjugate its particular power with
the general task of coordination in a manner that reflected the
particular matrix of its own social history, as Perry Anderson has recently put it,
was founded on the attractive power of US models of production and culture
increasingly unified in the sphere of consumption. Coming together here were, on the
one hand, the invention in the US of the modern corporate form, scientific
management of the labour process, and assembly-line mass production; and, on the
other, Hollywood-style narrative and visual schemas stripped to their most
abstract, appealing to and aggregating waves of immigrants through the
dramatic simplification and repetition.[27] The dynamism of American
capitalism and its worldwide appeal combined with the universalistic language of American
liberal democratic ideology to underpin a capacity for informal empire far beyond that of
nineteenth century Britains. Moreover, by spawning the modern multinational
corporation, with foreign direct investment in production and services the American
informal empire was to prove much more penetrative of other social formations.
Yet it was not only the economic and cultural formation of American capitalism, but
also the formation of the American state that facilitated a new informal empire. Against
Andersons impression that the American states constitutional structures lack
the carrying power of its economic and cultural ones (by virtue of being
moored to eighteenth century arrangements)[28]
stands Thomas Jeffersons observation in 1809 that no constitution was ever
before as well-calculated for extensive empire and self-government.[29]
Hardt and Negri were right to trace the pre-figuration of what they call
Empire today back to the American constitutions incorporation of
Madisonian network power.[30] This entailed not only
checks and balances within the state apparatus, but the notion that the greater plurality
of interests incorporated within an extensive and expansive state would guarantee that the
masses would have no common motive or capacity to come together to check the ruling class.[31]
Yet far from anticipating the sort of decentred and amorphous power that Hardt and Negri
imagine characterized the US historically (and characterizes Empire today),
the constitutional framework of the new American state gave great powers to the central
government to expand trade and make war. As early as 1783, what George Washington already
spoke of ambitiously as a rising empire[32] was captured in the
Federalist Paper XI image of one great American system superior to the control of
all transatlantic force or influence and able to dictate the terms of connection between
the old and the new world![33]
The notion of empire employed here was conceived, of course, in relation to the
other mercantile empires of the eighteenth century. But the state which emerged out of the
ambitions of the expansionist colonial elite,[34]
with Northern merchants (supported by artisans and commercial farmers) and the Southern
plantation-owners allying against Britains formal mercantile empire, evinced from
its beginnings a trajectory leading to capitalist development and informal empire. The
initial form this took was through territorial expansion westward, largely through the
extermination of the native population, and blatant exploitation not only of the black
slave population but also debt-ridden subsistence farmers and, from at least the 1820s on,
an emerging industrial working class. Yet the new American state could still conceive of
itself as embodying republican liberty, and be widely admired for it, largely due to the
link between extensive empire and self-government embedded in the federal
constitution. In Bernard DeVotos words, The American empire would not be
mercantilist but in still another respect something new under the sun: the West was not to
be colonies but states.[35]
And the state rights of these states were no mirage: they reflected the
two different types of social relations -- slave and free -- that composed each successive
wave of new states and by 1830 limited the activist economic role of the federal state.
After the domestic inter-state struggles that eventually led to civil war, the defeat of
the plantocracy and the dissolution of slavery, the federal constitution provided a
framework for the unfettered domination of an industrial capitalism with the largest
domestic market in the world, obviating any temptation towards formal imperialism via
territorial conquest abroad.[36] The outcome of the Civil War allowed for a reconstruction
of the relationship between financial and industrial capital and the federal state,
inclining state administrative capacities and policies away from mercantilism and towards
extended capitalist reproduction.[37] Herein lies the
significance that Anderson himself attaches to the evolving juridical form of the American
state, whereby unencumbered property rights, untrammeled litigation, the invention
of the corporation led to what Polanyi most feared, a
juridical system disembedding the market as far as possible from ties of custom, tradition
or solidarity, whose very abstraction from them later proved -- American firms like American films -- exportable and
reproducible across the world, in a way that no other competitor could quite match. The
steady transformation of international merchant law and arbitration in conformity with US
standards is witness to the process.[38]
The expansionist tendencies of American capitalism in the latter half of the
nineteenth century (reflecting pressures from domestic commercial farmers as much as from
the industrialists and financiers of the post-civil war era) were even more apt to take
informal forms than had those of British capitalism, even though they were not based on a
policy of free trade. The modalities were initially similar, and they began long before
the Spanish-American War of 1898, which is usually seen as the start of US imperial
expansion. This was amply documented in a paper boldly called An Indicator of
Informal Empire prepared for the US Center for Naval Analysis: between 1869 and 1897 the
US Navy made no less than 5,980 ports of call to protect American commercial shipping in
Argentina, Brazil Chile, Nicaragua, Panama, Columbia and elsewhere in Latin America.[39]
Yet the establishment of colonies in Puerto Rico and the Philippines and the annexation of
Hawaii was a deviation
from the typical economic, political and ideological
forms of domination already characteristic of American imperialism.[40]
Rather, it was through American foreign direct investment and the modern corporate form -- epitomized by the Singer Company
establishing itself as the first multinational corporation when it jumped the Canadian
tariff barrier to establish a subsidiary to produce sewing machines for prosperous Ontario
wheat farmers -- that the American informal empire soon took shape in a
manner quite distinct from the British one.[41]
The articulation of the new informal American empire with military intervention was
expressed by Theodore Roosevelt in 1904 in terms of the exercise of international
police power, in the absence of other means of international control, to the end of
establishing regimes that know how to act with reasonable efficiency and decency in
social and political matters and to ensure that each such regime keeps order
and pays its obligations: [A] nation desirous both of securing respect for
itself and of doing good to others [Teddy Roosevelt
declared, in language that has now been made very familiar again] must have a force
adequate for the work which it feels is allotted to it as its part of the general world
duty
A great free people owes to itself and to all mankind not to sink into
helplessness before the powers of evil.[42]
The American genius for presenting its informal empire in terms of the framework of
universal rights reached its apogee under Woodrow Wilson. It also reached the apogee of
hypocrisy, especially at the Paris Peace Conference, where Keynes concluded Wilson was
the greatest fraud on earth.[43] Indeed, it was not only the
US Congresss isolationist tendencies, but the incapacity of the American
presidential, treasury and military apparatuses, that explained the failure of the United
States to take responsibility for leading European reconstruction after World War One. The
administrative and regulatory expansion of the American state under the impact of
corporate liberalism in the Progressive era,[44] and the spread of American
direct investment through the 1920s (highlighted by General Motors purchase of Opel
immediately before the Great Depression, completing the virtual division of
the German auto industry between GM and Ford)[45] were significant
developments. Yet it was only during the New Deal that the US state really began to develop the modern planning capacities
that would, once they were redeployed in World War II, transform and vastly extend
Americas informal imperialism.[46]
Amidst the remarkable depression-era class struggles these capacities were
limited by political fragmentation, expressed especially in executive-congressional
conflict, combined with deepening tensions between business and government...[47]
Americas entry into World War II, however, not only
resolved the statebuilding impasse of the late 1930s but also provided
the essential underpinnings for postwar U.S. governance. As Brian Waddell notes in his
outstanding study of the transition from the state-building of the Depression to that of
World War II: The
requirements of total war
revived corporate political leverage, allowing corporate
executives inside and outside the state extensive influence over wartime mobilization
policies
Assertive corporate executives and military officials formed a very
effective wartime alliance that not only blocked any augmentation of the New Dealer
authority but also organized a powerful alternative to the New Deal. International
activism displaced and supplanted New Deal domestic activism. Thus was the stage finally
set for a vastly extended and much more powerful informal US empire outside its own
hemisphere. THE AMERICAN RECONSTRUCTION
OF A CAPITALIST WORLD ORDER
The shift of U.S. state capacities towards realizing
internationally-interventionist goals versus domestically-interventionist ones[48]
was crucial to the revival of capitalisms globalizing tendencies after World War II.
This not only took place through the wartime reconstruction of the American state, but
also through the more radical postwar reconstruction of all the states at the core of the
old inter-imperial rivalry. And it also took place alongside -- indeed it led to -- the multiplication of new states out of their old
colonial empires. Among the various dimensions of this new relationship between capitalism
and imperialism, the most important was that the densest imperial networks and
institutional linkages, which had earlier run north-south between imperial states and
their formal or informal colonies, now came to run between the US and the other major
capitalist states.
What Britains informal empire had been unable to manage (indeed hardly to
even contemplate) in the nineteenth century was now accomplished by the American informal
empire, which succeeded in integrating all the other capitalist powers into an effective
system of coordination under its aegis. Even apart from the U.S. military occupations, the
devastation of the European and Japanese economies and the weak political legitimacy of
their ruling classes at the wars end created an unprecedented opportunity which the
American state was now ready and willing to exploit. In these conditions, moreover, the
expansion of the informal American
empire after World War II was hardly a one-way (let alone solely coercive) imposition --
it was often imperialism by invitation.[49]
However important was the development of the national security state apparatus and
the geostrategic planning that framed the division of the world with the USSR at Yalta,[50]
no less important was the close attention the Treasury and State Department paid during
the war to plans for relaunching a coordinated liberal trading regime and a rule-based
financial order. This was accomplished by manipulating the debtor status of the USs
main allies, assisted by the complete domination of the dollar as a world currency and the
fact that 50% of world production was now accounted for by the U.S. economy. The American
state had learned well the lesson of its post-World War I incapacity to combine liberal
internationalist rhetoric with an institutional commitment to manage an international
capitalist order. Through the very intricate joint planning of the British and American
Treasuries during the war[51] -- i.e. through
the process that led to Bretton Woods --
the Americans not only ensured that the British were accepting some obligation to
modify their domestic policy in light of its international effects on stability, but
also ensured the liquidation of the British Empire by throwing Britain into the arms
of America as a supplicant, and therefore subordinate; a subordination masked by the
illusion of a special relationship which continues to this day.[52]
But it was by no means only the US dollars that were decisive here, nor was Britain
the only object of Americas new informal empire. A pamphlet inserted in Fortune
magazine in May 1942 on The U.S. in a New World: Relations with Britain set
out a program for the integration of the American and British economic systems as
the foundation for a wider postwar integration:
if a world order is to arise
out of this war, it is realistic to believe that it will not spring full-blown from a
conference of fifty states held at given date to draw up a World Constitution. It is more
likely to be the gradual outgrowth of the wartime procedures now being developed
If
the U.S. rejects a lone-wolf imperialism and faces the fact that a League of Nations or
some other universal parliament cannot be set up in the near future
[this] does not
prevent America from approaching Britain with a proposal for economic integration as a
first step towards a general reconstruction procedure. Unless we can reach a meeting of
minds with Britain and the Dominions on these questions it is utopian to expect wider
agreement among all the United Nations.[53]
This pamphlet was accompanied by a lengthy collective statement[54]
by the editors of Fortune and Time and Life magazines which began
with the premise that America will emerge as the strongest single power in the
postwar world, and
it is therefore up to it to decide what kind of postwar world it
wants. They called, in this context, for mutual trust between the businessman
and his government after the tensions of the New Deal, so that government could
exercise its responsibilities both to use its fiscal policy as a balance wheel, and
to use its legislative and administrative power to promote and foster private enterprise,
by removing barriers to its natural expansion
This would produce an
expansionist context in which tariffs, subsidies, monopolies, restrictive labor rules,
plantation feudalism, poll taxes, technological backwardness, obsolete tax laws, and all
other barriers to further expansion can be removed. While recognizing that the
uprising of [the] international proletariat... the most significant fact of the last
twenty years
means that complete international free trade, as Cobden used to preach
it and Britain used to practice it, is no longer an immediate political possibility,
nevertheless free trade between the US and the Britain would be a jolt both
economies need and on this basis the area of freedom would spread -- gradually
through the British Dominions, through Latin America, perhaps someday through the world.
For universal free trade, not bristling nationalism, is the ultimate goal of a
rational world. And in terms that were uncharacteristically direct, the editors
called this a new imperialism: Thus, a new
American imperialism, if it is to be called that, will --
or rather can -- be quite different from the British type. It can also be different from
the premature American type that followed our expansion in the Spanish war. American
imperialism can afford to complete the work the British started; instead of salesmen and
planters, its representatives can be brains and bulldozers, technicians and machine tools.
American imperialism does not need extra-territoriality; it can get along better in Asia
if the tuans and sahibs stay home
Nor is the U.S. afraid to help build up industrial
rivals to its own power
because we know industrialization stimulates rather than
limits international trade... This American imperialism sounds very abstemious and
high-minded. It is nevertheless a feasible policy for America, because friendship, not
food, is what we need most from the rest of the world.
The immense managerial capacity the American state had developed to make this
perspective a reality was nowhere more clearly confirmed than at the Bretton Woods
conference in 1944. The Commission responsible for establishing the IMF was chaired and
tightly controlled by the New Dealer Harry Dexter White for the American
Treasury, and even though Keynes chaired the Commission responsible for planning what
eventually became the World Bank, and though the various committees under him were also
chaired by non-Americans, they had American rapporteurs and secretaries, appointed
and briefed by White, who also arranged for a conference journal to be
produced every day to keep everyone informed of the main decisions. At his disposal were
the mass of stenographers working day and night [and] the boy scouts acting as pages
and distributors of papers -- all written in a legal language which made
everything difficult to understand [amidst] the great variety of unintelligible
tongues. This was the controlled Bedlam the American Treasury wanted in
order to make easier the imposition of a fait accompli. It was
in this context that every delegation finally decided it was better to run with the
US Treasury than its disgruntled critics, who [Keynes put it] do not know their own
mind and have no power whatever to implement their promises. The conference
ended with Keyness tribute to a process in which 44 countries had been
learning to work together so that the brotherhood of man will become more than a
phrase. The delegates applauded wildly. The Star Spangled Banner was
played.[55]
With the IMF and World Bank headquarters established at American insistence in
Washington, D.C., a pattern was set for international economic management among all the
leading capitalist countries that continues to this day, one in which even when European
or Japanese finance ministries and central banks propose, the US Treasury and Federal
Reserve dispose.[56] The dense institutional
linkages binding these states to the American empire were also institutionalized, of
course, through the institutions of NATO, not to
mention the hub-and-spokes networks binding each of the other leading capitalist states to
the intelligence and security apparatuses of the US as part of the strategy of containment
of Communism during the Cold War. These interacted with economic networks, as well with
new propaganda, intellectual and media networks, to explain, justify and promote the new
imperial reality.
Most of those who stress the American states military and intelligence links
with the coercive apparatuses of Europe and Japan tend to see the roots of this in the
dynamics of the Cold War[57]. Yet as Bacevich, looking
at American policy from the perspective of the collapse of the USSR, has recently said: To conceive of US grand strategy from the late
1940s through the 1980s as containment -- with no purpose apart
from resisting the spread of Soviet power -- is not wrong, but it is
incomplete
[S]uch a cramped conception of Cold War strategy actively impedes our
understanding of current US policy
No strategy worthy of the name is exclusively
passive or defensive in orientation
US grand strategy during the Cold War required
not only containing communism but also taking active measures to open up the world
politically, culturally, and, above all, economically -- which is precisely what
policymakers said they intended to do.[58]
What an exclusive concentration on the foreign policy, intelligence and coercive
apparatuses also obscures is how far the American Protectorate System (as
Peter Gowan calls it), was part of actually alter[ing] the character of the
capitalist core. For it entailed the internal transformation of social
relations within the protectorates in the direction of the American Fordist
system of accumulation [that] opened up the possibility of a vast extension of their internal
markets, with the working class not only as source of expanded surplus value but also
an increasingly important consumption centre for realizing surplus value.[59]
While the new informal empire still provided room for the other core states to act as
autonomous organizing centres of capital accumulation, the emulation of US
technological and managerial Fordist forms (initially organized and channelled
through the post-war joint productivity councils) was massively reinforced by
American foreign direct investment. Here too, the core of the American imperial network
shifted towards to the advanced capitalist countries, so that between 1950 and 1970 Latin
Americas share of total American FDI fell from 40 to under 20 percent,
while Western Europes more than doubled to match the Canadian share of over 30
percent.[60]
It was hardly surprising that acute outside observers such as Raymond Aron and Nicos
Poulantzas saw in Europe a tendential Canadianization as the model form of
integration into the American empire.[61]
None of this meant, of course, that the north-south dimension of imperialism became
unimportant. But it did mean that the other core capitalist countries relationships
with the third world, including their ex-colonies, were imbricated with American informal
imperial rule. The core capitalist countries might continue to benefit from the
north-south divide, but any interventions had to be either American-initiated or at least
have American approval (as Suez proved). Only the American state could arrogate to itself
the right to intervene against the sovereignty of other states (which it repeatedly did
around the world) and only the American state reserved for itself the
sovereign right to reject international rules and norms when necessary. It is
in this sense that only the American state was actively imperialist.
Though informal imperial rule
seemed to place the third world and the core capitalist countries on the same
political and economic footing, both the legacy of the old imperialism and the vast
imbalance in resources between the Marshall Plan and third world development aid
reproduced global inequalities. The space was afforded the European states to develop
internal economic coherence and growing domestic markets in the post-war era, and European
economic integration was also explicitly encouraged by the US precisely as a mechanism for the European rescue of
the nation-state, in Alan Milwards apt formulation.[62]
But this contrasted with American dislike of
import-substitution industrialization strategies adopted by states in the south, not to
mention US hostility to planned approaches to developing the kind of auto-centric economic
base that the advanced capitalist states had created for themselves before they embraced a
liberal international economic order. (Unlike the kind of geostrategic concerns that
predominated in the American wars in Korea and Vietnam, it was opposition to economic
nationalism that determined the US states involvement in the overthrow of numerous
governments from Iran to Chile.). The predictable result -- given limits on most of the third worlds
internal markets, and the implications of all the third world states competing to break
into international markets -- was that
global inequalities increased, even though a few third world states, such as South Korea,
were able to use the geostrategic space that the new empire afforded them to develop
rapidly and narrow the gap.
Still, in general terms, the new informal form of imperial rule, not only in the
advanced capitalist world but also in those regions of the third world where it held sway,
was characterized by the penetration of borders, not their dissolution. It was not through
formal empire, but rather through the reconstitution of states as integral elements of an
informal American empire, that the international capitalist order was now organized and
regulated. Nation states remained the primary vehicles through which (a) the social
relations and institutions of class, property, currency, contract and markets were
established and reproduced; and (b) the international accumulation of capital was carried
out. The vast expansion of direct foreign investment worldwide, whatever the shifting
regional shares of the total, meant that far from capital escaping the state, it expanded
its dependence on many states. At the same
time, capital as an effective social force within any given state now tended to include
both foreign capital and domestic capital with international linkages and ambitions. Their
interpenetration made the notion of distinct national bourgeoisies --
let alone rivalries between them in any sense analogous to those that led to World War I -- increasingly anachronistic.
A further dimension of the new relationship between capitalism and empire was thus
the internationalization of the state, understood as a states acceptance of
responsibility for managing its domestic capitalist order in way that contributes to
managing the international capitalist order.[63] For the American imperial
state, however, the internationalization of the state had a special quality. It entailed
defining the American national interest in terms of acting not only on behalf of its own
capitalist class but also on behalf of the extension and reproduction of global
capitalism. The determination of what this required continued to reflect the particularity
of the American state and social formation, but it was increasingly inflected towards a
conception of the American states role as that of ensuring the survival of
free enterprise in the US itself through its promotion of free enterprise and
free trade internationally. This was classically articulated in President Trumans
famous speech against isolationism at Baylor University in March 1947: Now, as in the year 1920, we have reached a turning
point in history. National economies have been disrupted by the war. The future is
uncertain everywhere. Economic policies are in a state of flux. In this atmosphere of
doubt and hesitation, the decisive factor will be the type of leadership that the United
States gives the world. We are the giant of the economic world. Whether we like it or not,
the future pattern of economic relations depends upon us
Our foreign relations,
political and economic, are indivisible.[64] The
internationalization of the Americans state was fully encapsulated in National Security
Council document NSC-68 of 1950, which (although it remained Top Secret until 1975)
Kolko calls the most important of all postwar policy documents. It articulated most clearly the goal of constructing a
world environment in which the American system can survive and flourish
Even
if there were no Soviet Union we would face the great problem
[that] the absence of
order among nations is becoming less and less tolerable.[65]
THE RECONSTITUTION FO
AMERICAN EMPIRE IN THE NEOLIBERAL ERA This pattern of imperial rule was established in the
post-war period of reconstruction, a period that, for all of the economic dynamism of
the golden age, was inherently transitional. The very notion of
reconstruction posed the question of what might follow once the European and
Japanese economies were rebuilt and became competitive with the American, and once the
benign circumstances of the post-war years were exhausted.[66]
Moreover, peasants and workers struggles and rising economic nationalism
in the third world, and growing working class militancy in the core capitalist countries,
were bound to have an impact both on capitals profits and on the institutions of the
post-war institutional order. In less than a generation, the contradictions inherent in
the Bretton Woods agreement were exposed. By the time European currencies became fully
convertible in 1958, almost all the premises of the 1944 agreement were already in
question. The fixed exchange rates established by that agreement depended on the capital
controls that most countries other than the US maintained after the war.[67]
Yet the very internationalization of trade and direct foreign investment that Bretton
Woods promoted (along with domestic innovations and competition in mortgages, credit,
investment banking and brokerage that strengthened the capacity of the financial sector
within the United States) contributed to the restoration of a global financial market, the
corresponding erosion of capital controls, and the vulnerability of fixed exchange rates.[68] Serious concerns over a return to the international
economic fragmentation and collapse of the interwar period were voiced by the early
sixties as the American economy went from creditor to debtor status, the dollar moved from
a currency in desperately short supply to one in surplus, and the dollar-gold standard,
which had been embedded in Bretton Woods, began to crumble.[69]
But in spite of new tensions between the US and Europe and Japan, the past was not
replayed. American dominance, never fundamentally challenged, would come to be reorganized
on a new basis, and international integration was not rolled back but intensified. This
reconstitution of the global order, like earlier developments within global capitalism,
was not inevitable. What made it possible -- what provided the American state the time and
political space to renew its global ambitions -- was that by the time of the crisis of the
early seventies, American ideological and material penetration of, and integration with,
Europe and Japan was sufficiently strong to rule out any retreat from the international
economy or any fundamental challenge to the leadership of the American state.
The United States had, of course, established itself as the military protectorate
of Europe and Japan, and this was maintained while both were increasingly making their way
into American markets. But the crucial factor in cementing the new imperial bond was
foreign direct investment as the main form now taken by capital export and international
integration in the post-war period. American corporations, in particular, were evolving
into the hubs of increasingly dense host-country and cross-border networks amongst
suppliers, financiers, and final markets (thereby further enhancing the liberalized
trading order as a means of securing even tighter international networks of production).
Even where the initial response to the growth of such American investment was hostile,
this generally gave way to competition to attract that investment, and then emulation to
meet the American challenge through counter-investments in the United States.
Unlike trade, American FDI directly affected the class structures and state
formations of the other core countries.[70] Tensions and alliances that
emerged within domestic capitalist classes could no longer be understood in purely
national terms. German auto companies, for example, followed American auto
companies in wanting European-wide markets; and they shared mutual concerns with the
American companies inside Germany, such as over the cost of European steel. They had
reason to be wary of policies that discriminated in favour of European companies but
might, as a consequence, compromise the treatment of their own growing interest in markets
and investments in the United States. And if instability in Latin America or other
trouble spots threatened their own international investments, they looked
primarily to the US rather than their own states to defend them. With American capital a
social force within each European country, domestic capital tended to be
dis-articulated and no longer represented by a coherent and independent
national bourgeoisie.[71] The likelihood that
domestic capital might challenge American dominance -- as opposed to merely seeking to renegotiate
the terms of American leadership -- was
considerably diminished. Although the West European and Japanese economies had been
rebuilt in the post-war period, the nature of their integration into the global economy
tended to tie the successful reproduction of their own social formations to the rules and
structures of the American-led global order. However much the European and Japanese states
may have wanted to renegotiate the arrangements struck in 1945, now that only 25% of world
production was located in the U.S. proper, neither they nor their bourgeoisies were
remotely interested in challenging the hegemony that the American informal empire had
established over them. The question for them, as Poulantzas put it in the
early seventies, is rather to reorganize a hegemony that they still accept
;
what the battle is actually over is the share of the cake.[72]
It was in this context that
the internationalization of the state became particularly important. In the course of the
protracted and often confused renegotiations in the 1970s of the terms that had, since the end of World War II, bound
Europe and Japan to the American empire, all the nation states involved came to
accept a responsibility for creating the necessary internal conditions for
sustained international accumulation, such as stable prices, constraints on labour
militancy, national treatment of foreign investment and no restrictions on capital
outflows. The real tendencies that emerged out of the crisis of the 1970s were (to quote
Poulantzas again) the internalized transformations of the national state itself,
aimed at taking charge of the internationalization of public functions on capitals
behalf.[73] Nation states were thus not
fading away, but adding to their responsibilities. Not that they saw clearly
what exactly needed to be done. The established structures of the post-1945 order
did not, in themselves, provide a resolution to the generalized pressures on profit rates
in the United States and Europe. They did not suggest how the U.S. might revive its
economic base so as to consolidate its rule. Nor did they provide an answer to how
tensions and instabilities would be managed in a world in which the American state was not
omnipotent but rather depended, for its rule, on working through other states. The
contingent nature of the new order was evidenced by the fact that a solution
only emerged at the end of the seventies, two full decades after the first signs of
trouble, almost a decade after the dollar crisis of the early seventies, and after a
sustained period of false starts, confusions, and uncertain experimentation.[74]
The first and most crucial
response of the Nixon administration, the dramatic end to the convertibility of the
American dollar in 1971, restored the American states economic autonomy in the face
of a threatened rush to gold; and the subsequent devaluation of the American dollar did,
at least temporarily, correct the American balance of trade deficit. Yet that response
hardly qualified as a solution to the larger issues involved. The American state took
advantage of its still dominant position to defend its own economic base, but this
defensive posture could not provide a general solution to the problems facing all the
developed capitalist economies, nor even create the basis for renewed US economic
dynamism.[75] By the end of the
seventies, with the American economy facing a flight of capital (both domestic and
foreign), a Presidential report to Congress (describing itself as the most
comprehensive and detailed analysis of the competitive position of the United
States) confirmed a steep decline in competitiveness -- one that it advised could
be corrected, but not without a radical reorientation in economic policy to address the
persistence of domestic inflation and the need for greater access to savings so as to
accelerate investment.[76] The concern with retaining
capital and attracting new capital was especially crucial to what followed. The opening up
of domestic and global capital markets was both an opportunity and a constraint for the
American state. Liberalized finance held out the option of shifting an important aspect of
competition to the very terrain on which the American economy potentially had its
greatest advantages, yet those advantages could not become an effective instrument of
American power until other economic and political changes had occurred. The American
states ambivalence about how to deal with the growing strength of financial capital
was reflected in its policies: capital controls were introduced in 1963, but were made
open to significant exceptions; the Euro-dollar market was a source of
concern, but also recognized as making dollar holdings more attractive and subsequently
encouraging the important recycling of petro-dollars to the third world. The liberalization
of finance enormously strengthened Wall Street through the 1970s and, as Duménil and Lévy
have persuasively
shown, proved crucial to the broader changes that followed.[77]
But this should not be seen as being at the expense of industrial capital. What was
involved was not a financial coup, but rather a (somewhat belated)
recognition on the part of American capital generally that the strengthening of finance
was an essential, if sometimes painful, price to be paid for reconstituting American
economic power.[78] The critical turning
point in policy orientation came in 1979 with the Volcker shock -- the
American states self-imposed structural adjustment program. The Federal
Reserves determination to establish internal economic discipline by allowing
interest rates to rise to historically unprecedented levels led to the vital restructuring
of labour and industry and brought the confidence that the money markets and central
bankers were looking for. Along with the more general neoliberal policies that evolved
into a relatively coherent capitalist policy paradigm through the eighties, the new
state-reinforced strength of finance set the stage for what came to be popularly
known as globalization -- the
accelerated drive to a seamless world of capital accumulation. The mechanisms of
neoliberalism (the expansion and deepening of markets and competitive pressures) may be
economic, but neoliberalism was essentially a political response to the democratic
gains that had been previously achieved by subordinate classes and which had become, in a
new context and from capitals perspective, barriers to accumulation. Neoliberalism
involved not just reversing those gains, but weakening their institutional foundations -- including a shift in the hierarchy of state
apparatuses in the US towards the Treasury and Federal Reserve at the expense of the old
New Deal agencies. The US was of course not the only country to introduce neoliberal
policies, but once the American state itself moved in this direction, it had a new status:
capitalism now operated under a new form of social rule[79]
that promised, and largely delivered, (a) the revival of the productive base for American
dominance; (b) a universal model for restoring the conditions for profits in other
developed countries; and (c) the economic conditions for integrating global capitalism. In the course of the
economic restructuring that followed, American labour was further weakened,
providing American capital with an even greater competitive flexibility vis-ŕ-vis
Europe. Inefficient firms were purged -- a
process that had been limited in the seventies. Existing firms restructured internally,
outsourced processes to cheaper and more specialized suppliers, relocated to the
increasingly urban south, and merged with others -- all part of an accelerated
reallocation of capital within the American economy. The new confidence of global
investors (including Wall Street itself) in the American economy and state provided the US
with relatively cheap access to global savings and eventually made capital cheaper in the
US. The available pools of venture capital enhanced investment in the development of new
technologies (which also benefited from public subsidies via military procurement
programs), and the new technologies were in turn integrated into management restructuring
strategies and disseminated into sectors far beyond high tech. The US
proportion of world production did not further decline: it continued to account for around
one-fourth of the total right into the twenty-first century. The American economy not
only reversed its slide in the 1980s, but also set the standards for European and Japanese
capital to do the same.[80] The renewed confidence on
the part of American capital consolidated capitalism as a global project through
the development of new formal and informal mechanisms of international coordination.
Neoliberalism reinforced the material and ideological conditions for guaranteeing
national treatment for foreign capital in each social formation, and for
constitutionalizing, by way of NAFTA, European Economic and Monetary Union and
the WTO, the free flow of goods and capital (the WTO was a broader version of GATT, but
with more teeth).[81] The American economys
unique access to global savings through the central place of Wall Street within global
money markets allowed it to import freely without compromising other objectives. This
eventually brought to the American state the role, not necessarily intended, of
importer of last resort that limited the impact of slowdowns elsewhere, while
also reinforcing foreign investors and foreign exporters dependence on
American markets and state policies. The Federal Reserve, though allegedly concerned only
with domestic policies, kept a steady eye on the international context. And the Treasury,
whose relative standing within the state had varied throughout the post-war era,
increasingly took on the role of global macro-economic manager through the 1980s and
1990s, thereby enhancing its status at the top of the hierarchy of US state apparatuses.[82]
The G-7 emerged as a forum
for Ministers of Finance and Treasury officials to discuss global developments, forge
consensus on issues and direction, and address in a concrete and controlled way any
necessary exchange rate adjustments. The US allowed the Bank for International Settlements
to re-emerge as major international coordinating agency, in the context of the greater
role being played by increasingly independent central bankers, to improve
capital adequacy standards within banking systems. The IMF and the World Bank were also
restructured. The IMF shifted from the adjustment of balance of payments
problems to addressing structural economic crises in third world countries (along the
lines first imposed on Britain in 1976), and increasingly became the vehicle for imposing
a type of conditionality, in exchange for loans, that incorporated global capitals
concerns. The World Bank supported this, although by the 1990s, it also focused its
attention on capitalist state-building --
what it called effective states.[83] The reconstitution of the
American empire in this remarkably successful fashion through the last decades of the
twentieth century did not mean that global capitalism had reached a new plateau of
stability. Indeed it may be said that dynamic instability and contingency are
systematically incorporated into the reconstituted form of empire, in good part because
the intensified competition characteristic of neoliberalism and the hyper-mobility
of financial liberalization aggravate the uneven development and extreme volatility
inherent in the global order. Moreover, this instability is dramatically amplified by the
fact that the American state can only rule this order through other states, and turning
them all into effective states for global capitalism is no easy matter. It is
the attempt by the American state to address these problems, especially vis-ŕ-vis what it
calls rogue states in the third world, that leads American imperialism
today to present itself in an increasingly unconcealed manner. BEYOND INTER-IMPERIAL RIVALRY We cannot understand
imperialism today in terms of the unresolved crisis of the 1970s, with overaccumulation
and excess competition giving rise again to inter-imperial rivalry. The differences begin
with the fact that while the earlier period was characterized by the relative economic
strength of Europe and Japan, the current moment underlines their relative weakness.
Concern with the American trade deficit seems to overlap both periods, but the context and
content of that concern has radically changed. Earlier, the American deficit was just
emerging, was generally seen as unsustainable even in the short run, and was characterized
by foreign central bankers as exporting American inflation abroad. Today, the global
economy has not only come to live with American trade deficits for a period approaching a
quarter of a century, but global stability has come to depend on these deficits and it is
the passage to their correction that is the threat -- this time a deflationary
threat. In the earlier period, global financial markets were just emerging; the issue this
raised at the time was their impact in undermining existing forms of national and
international macro-management, including the international role of the American dollar.
The consequent explosive development of financial markets has resulted in financial
structures and flows that have now, however, made finance itself a focal point
of global macro-management -- whether it
be enforcing the discipline of accumulation, reallocating capital across sectors and
regions, providing the investor/consumer credit to sustain even the modest levels of
growth that have occurred, or supporting the capacity of the US economy to attract the
global savings essential to reproducing the American empire. In this context, the extent
of the theoretically unselfconscious use of the term rivalry to label
the economic competition between the EU, Japan (or East Asia more broadly) and the United
States is remarkable. The distinctive meaning the concept had in the pre-World War I
context, when economic competition among European states was indeed imbricated with
comparable military capacities and Lenin could assert that imperialist wars are
absolutely inevitable,[84] is clearly lacking in the
contemporary context of overwhelming American military dominance. But beyond this, the
meaning it had in the past is contradicted by the distinctive economic as well as military
integration that exists between the leading capitalist powers today. The term
rivalry inflates economic competition between states far beyond what it
signifies in the real world. While the conception of a transnational capitalist class,
loosened from any state moorings or about to spawn a supranational global state, is
clearly exceedingly extravagant,[85] so too is any conception of
a return to rival national bourgeoisies. The asymmetric power relationships that emerged
out of the penetration and integration among the leading capitalist countries under the
aegis of informal American empire were not dissolved in the wake of the crisis of the
Golden Age, and the greater trade competitiveness and capital mobility that accompanied
it; rather they were refashioned and reconstituted through the era of neo-liberal
globalization. None of this means, of course, that state and economic structures have
become homogeneous or that there is no divergence in many policy areas, or that
contradiction and conflict are absent from the imperial order. But these contradictions
and conflicts are located not so much in the relationships between the advanced capitalist
states, as within these states, as they try to manage their internal processes of
accumulation, legitimation and class struggle. This is no less true of the American state
as it tries to manage and cope with the complexities of neo-imperial globalization. Nor does the evolution of
the European Union make the theory of inter-imperial rivalry relevant for our time.[86]
Encouraged at its origins by the American state, its recent development through economic
and monetary union, up to and including the launching of the Euro and the European Central
Bank, has never been opposed by American capital within Europe, or by the American state.
What it has accomplished in terms of free trade and capital mobility within its own region
has fitted, rather than challenged, the American-led new form of social rule
that neoliberalism represents. And what it has accomplished in terms of the integration of
European capital markets has not only involved the greater penetration of American
investment banking and its principle of shareholder value inside Europe, but
has, as John Grahl has shown, been based on the deregulation and
internationalization of the US financial system.[87]
The halting steps towards
an independent European military posture, entirely apart from the staggering economic cost
this would involve (all the more so in the context of relatively slow growth), were
quickly put in perspective by the war on the former Yugoslavia over Kosovo -- supported by every European government --
through which the US made it very clear that NATO would remain the ultimate policeman of
Europe.[88]
But this only drove home a point over which pragmatic European politicians had
never entertained any illusions. Dependence on American military technology and
intelligence would still be such that the US itself sees [a]n EU force that serves
as an effective, if unofficial, extension of NATO rather than a substitute [as] well worth
the trouble.[89] And on the European side,
Joschka Fischer, Germanys Foreign Minister, has similarly acknowledged that
[t]he transatlantic relationship is indispensable. The power of the United States is
a decisive factor for peace and stability in the world. I dont believe Europe will
ever be strong enough to look after its security alone.[90]
Indeed, it is likely the very appreciation of this reality within European elite circles
that lies at the heart of their oft-expressed frustrations with the current American
leaderships tendency to treat them explicitly as merely junior partners.
Though it has been argued that the end of the Cold War left Europe less dependent on the
American military umbrella and therefore freer to pursue its own interests, this same
development also left the US freer to ignore European sensitivities. As for East Asia, where
Japans highly centralized state might be thought to give it the imperial potential
that the relatively loosely-knit EU lacks, it has shown even less capacity for regional
let alone global leadership independent of the US. Its ability to penetrate East Asia
economically, moreover, has been and remains mediated by the American imperial
relationship.[91] This was particularly
rudely underlined by the actions of the American Treasury (especially through the direct
intervention of Rubin and Summers) in the East Asian crisis of 1997-98, when it
dictated a harsh conditionality right in Japans back yard.[92]
Those who interpreted Japans trade penetration of American markets and its massive
direct foreign investments in the US through the 1980s in terms of inter-imperial rivalry
betrayed a misleadingly economistic perspective. Japan remains dependent on American
markets and on the security of its investments within the US, and its central bank is
anxious to buy dollars so as limit the fall of the dollar and its impact on the Yen. And
while China may perhaps emerge eventually as a pole of inter-imperial power, it will
obviously be very far from reaching such a status for a good many decades. The fact that
certain elements in the American state are concerned to ensure that its
unipolar power today is used to prevent the possible emergence of imperial
rivals tomorrow can hardly be used as evidence that such rivals already exist. During the 1990s, not only
the literal deflation of the Japanese economy, but also the slow growth and high
unemployment in Europe stood in stark contrast with the American boom. So much was this
the case that if Donald Sassoon was right to say that how to achieve the European
version of the American society was the real political issue of the 1950s,[93]
so it once again seemed to be the case in the 1990s, at least in terms of emulation of US
economic policies and shareholder values. Now, with end of that boom, and the growing US
trade and fiscal deficit, new predictions of American decline and inter-imperial rivalry
have become commonplace. But the question of the sustainability of the American empire
cannot be answered with such short-term and economistic measures, any more than they could
in the 1970s, when Poulantzas properly disdained the various futurological
analyses of the relative strength or weakness of the American and
European economies, analyses which pose the question of inter-imperialist contradictions
in terms of the competitiveness and actual competition between
national economies. In general, these arguments are restricted to
economic criteria which, considered in themselves, do not mean very much,
and [yet such analyses] extrapolate from these in quite an arbitrary manner.[94]
This is not to say that the current economic
conjuncture does not reveal genuine economic problems for every state in global
capitalism, including the American. These problems reflect not the continuation of the
crisis of the 1970s, but rather new contradictions that the dynamic global capitalism
ushered in by neoliberalism has itself generated, including the synchronization of
recessions, the threat of deflation, the dependence of the world on American markets and
the dependence of the United States on capital inflows to cover its trade deficit. There
is indeed a systemic complexity in todays global capitalism that includes, even at
its core, instabilities and even crises. Yet this needs to be seen not so much in terms of
the old structural crisis tendencies and their outcomes, but as quotidian dimensions of
contemporary capitalisms functioning and, indeed, as we argued above, even of its
successes. The issue for capitalist
states is not preventing episodic crises -- they will inevitably occur -- but containing
them. The American imperial state has, to date, demonstrated a remarkable ability to limit
the duration, depth, and contagion of crises. And there is as yet little reason to expect
that even the pressure on the value of the dollar today has become unmanageable. This is
what lies behind the confidence of Andrew Crockett, general manager of the Bank for
International Settlements and chairman of the Financial Stability Forum (comprising
central bankers, finance ministry officials and market regulators from the G7 states) that
they have the network of contacts, [and] the contingency plans, to deal with shocks
to the markets.[95] Of course such confidence
does not itself guarantee that the US Treasury and Federal Reserve, which worked closely
with their counterparts in the other core capitalist states during the war on Iraq
(whatever their governments disagreements over that war) just as they did
immediately after the disruption of Wall Street caused by the terrorist attacks of
September 11,[96] will always have the
capacity to cope with all contingencies. We would, however, argue that the future
development of such capacities is not ruled out by any inherent economic
contradictions alone. The crisis that has
produced an unconcealed American empire today lies, then, not in overaccumulation leading
back to anything like inter-imperial rivalry, but in the limits that an informal empire
based on ruling through other states sets for a strategy of coordinated economic growth,
even among the advanced capitalist countries. In these liberal democratic states, the
strength of domestic social forces -- in
spite of, and sometimes because of, the internationalization of domestic capital and the
national state -- has limited the adoption of neoliberalism (as seen, for example, in the
difficulties experienced by the German state in introducing flexible labour markets, or
the inertia of the Japanese state in restructuring its banking system). This has
frustrated the reforms that capital sees as necessary, along the lines of the
American states own earlier restructuring, to revive economic growth in these
countries so as to allow them to share the burden of absorbing global imports and
relieving pressure on the American trade deficit. It is also by no means obvious, despite
the energy that capitalists in each country have invested in securing these
reforms, that they would, by themselves, prove to be the magic bullets that
would produce renewed growth. And their full introduction could in any case generate far
more intense class struggles from below -- though it must be said that these would need to
generate something approaching a fundamental transformation in class and state structures
to generate a new alternative to neoliberalism and break the links with the American
empire. UNCONCEALED
EMPIRE: THE
AWESOME THING AMERICA IS BECOMING To the extent that there is
a crisis of imperialism today, it is best conceived as Poulantzas conceived the earlier
crisis of the 1970s: What is currently in crisis
is not directly American hegemony, under the impact of the economic power of
the other metropolises, whose rise would, according to some people have erected them
automatically into equivalent counter-imperialisms, but rather imperialism as
a whole, as a result of the world class struggles that have already reached the
metropolitan zone itself.
In other words it is not the hegemony of American
imperialism that is in crisis, but the whole of imperialism under this hegemony.[97] The notion of world
class struggles is no doubt too loose, and in another sense too restrictive in light
of the diverse social forces now at play, to capture how the contradictions between
the third world and the American empire are currently manifesting themselves. It is
nevertheless the case that the most serious problems for imperialism as a
whole arise in relation to the states outside the capitalist core. Where these
states are -- as in much of the third
world and the former Soviet bloc --
relatively undeveloped capitalist states, yet increasingly located within the orbit of
global capital, the international financial institutions, as well as the core capitalist
states acting either in concert or on their own, have intervened to impose
economically correct neoliberal structural reforms. In the context
of financial liberalization, this has meant a steady stream of economic crises. Some of
these could be seen as a functionally necessary part of neoliberalisms success (as
may perhaps be said of South Korea after the Asian crisis of 1997-8), but all too often
these interventions have aggravated rather than solved the problem because of the abstract
universalism of the remedy. Whatever neoliberalisms successes in relation to
strengthening an already developed capitalist economy, it increasingly appears as a
misguided strategy for capitalist development itself. As for so-called rogue
states -- those which are not within
the orbit of global capitalism so that neither penetrating external economic forces nor
international institutions can effectively restructure them -- direct unilateral intervention on the part of
the American state has become increasingly tempting. It is this that has brought
the term empire back into mainstream currency, and it is fraught with all
kinds of unpredictable ramifications. In this context, the
collapse of the Communist world that stood outside the sphere of American empire and
global capitalism for so much of the post-war era has become particularly
important. On the one hand, the rapid penetration and integration by global capital and
the institutions of informal American empire (such a NATO) of so much of what had been the
Soviet bloc, and the opening of China, Vietnam, and even Cuba to foreign capital and their
integration in world markets (even if under the aegis of Communist elites), has been
remarkable. It has also removed the danger that direct US intervention in states
outside the American hemisphere would lead to World War III and nuclear Armageddon. The
fact that even liberal human rights advocates and institutions through the 1990s have
repeatedly called for the US to act as an international police power reflected the new
conjuncture. But, on the other hand, both the hubris and sense of burden that came with
the now evident unique power of the American state led it to question whether even the
limited compromises it had to make in operating through multilateral institutions were
unnecessarily constraining its strategic options, especially in relation to rogue
states outside the orbit of the informal empire. The loneliness of
power was increasingly involved here. The felt burden of ultimate responsibility
(and since 9/11 the much greater sensitivity to US vulnerability as a target of terrorism
at home as well as abroad), promotes the desire to retain full sovereignty to
act as needed. This is what underlies the increasingly unconcealed nature of American
imperialism. The problem it now faces in terms of conjugating its particular power
with the general task of coordination (to recall Andersons incisive phrase),
can clearly be seen not only in relation to the economic contradictions of
neoliberalism discussed above, but also in the growing contradictions between nature and
capitalism (as revealed, for example, not only in the severe problems of carbon emissions
that the Kyoto Accord is supposed to address, but also in the problem of oil reserves
addressed by the Cheney Report, discussed by Michael Klare in another essay in this
volume). These issues are multiplied
all the more by the role the American imperial state now has come to play (and often to be
expected to play) in maintaining social order around the whole globe. From the perspective
of creating a world environment in which
the American system can survive and flourish, the understanding of the 1950 National Security Council document NSC-68 that
[e]ven if there were no Soviet Union we would face the great problem
[that]
the absence of order among nations is becoming less and less tolerable anticipated
what has finally become fully clear to those who run the American empire. George W. Bushs
own National Security Strategy document of September 2002 (intimations of which were
surfacing inside the American state as soon as the Soviet bloc collapsed)[98]
had a long pedigree. In this context, just as
neoliberalism at home did not mean a smaller or weaker state, but rather one in which
coercive apparatuses flourished (as welfare offices emptied out, the prisons filled up),
so has neoliberalism led to the enhancement of the coercive apparatus the imperial state
needs to police social order around the world. The transformation of the American military
and security apparatus through the 1990s in such a way as to facilitate this (analyzed by
Paul Rogers elsewhere in this volume) can only be understood in this light. (US
unilateralism in the use of this apparatus internationally is hardly surprising if we
consider how the activities of the coercive apparatuses of states at a domestic level are
protected from extensive scrutiny from legislatures, and from having to negotiate what
they do with non-coercive state apparatuses.) All this was already
apparent in the responses to rogue states under the Bush I and Clinton
administrations. The US did work hard to win the UNs support for the 1990-91 Gulf
War and oversaw the long regime of sanctions against Iraq that the American state insisted
on through the 1990s. But other governments sensed a growing unilateralism on the part of
the U.S. that made them increasingly nervous, if only in terms of maintaining their own
states legitimacy. The Gulf War had shown that the United Nations could be made
to serve as an imprimatur for a policy that the United States wanted to follow and
either persuaded or coerced everybody else to support, as the Canadian ambassador to
the UN put it at the time. And thus playing fast and loose with the provisions of
the UN Charter unnerved a lot of developing countries, which were privately
outraged by what was going on but felt utterly impotent to do anything -- a demonstration
of the enormous US power and influence when it is unleashed.[99]
Yet at the very same time,
it also made American strategists aware just how little they could rely on the UN if they
had to go to such trouble to get their way. The United Nations, by its very nature as a
quasi-parliamentary and diplomatic body made up of all the worlds states, could not
be as easily restructured as were the Bretton Woods institutions after the crisis of the
1970s. This, as evidenced in the repeated use of the American veto in the Security Council
since that time, was a constant irritant. And while NATO could be relied on as a far more
reliable vehicle for the American war on the former Yugoslavia over Kosovo (with the added
benefit of making clear to the Europeans exactly who would continue to wield the
international police power in their own backyard), even here the effort entailed in having
to keep each and every NATO member onside was visibly resented within the American
state itself. Bushs isolationist
rhetoric in the 2000 election campaign, questioning the need for American troops to get
involved in remote corners of the globe, was bound to be reformulated once Bush was
actually burdened with (and appropriately socialized in) the office of a Presidency that
is now as inevitably imperial as is it domestic in nature. For this, the explicitly
imperial statecraft that the geopolitical strategists close to the Republican Party had
already fashioned was ready and waiting. September 11 alone did not determine their
ascendancy in the state, but it certainly enhanced their status. Their response has
revealed all the tensions in the American states combination of its imperial
function of general coordination with the use of its power to protect and advance its
national interests. Defining the security interests of global capitalism in a way that
also serves the needs of the American social formation and state becomes especially tricky
once the security interests involved are so manifestly revealed as primarily American.
This means that while threats to the US are still seen by it as an attack on global
capitalism in general, the American state is increasingly impatient with making any
compromises that get in the way of its acting on its own specific definition of the global
capitalist interest and the untrammelled use of its particular state power to cope with
such threats. Perhaps the most important
change in the administrative structure of the American empire in the transition from the
Clinton administration to the Bush II administration has been the displacement of the
Treasury from its pinnacle at the top of the state apparatus. The branches of the American
state that control and dispense the means of violence are now in the drivers seat;
in an Administration representing a Republican Party that has always been made up of a
coalition of free marketeers, social conservatives and military hawks, the balance has
been tilted decisively by September 11th towards the latter.[100]
But the unconcealed imperial face that the American state is now prepared to show to the
world above all pertains to the increasing difficulties of managing a truly global
informal empire -- a problem that goes well beyond any change from administration to
administration. This could turn out to be a
challenge as great as that earlier faced by formal empires with their colonial state
apparatuses. The need to try to refashion all the states of the world so that they become
at least minimally adequate for the administration of global order -- and this is now also
seen as a general condition of the reproduction and extension of global capitalism --
is now the central problem for the American state. But the immense difficulty of
constructing outside the core anything like the dense networks that the new American
imperialism succeeded in forging with the other leading capitalist states is clear from
the only halting progress that has been made in extending the G7 even to the G8, let alone
the G20. For the geopolitical stratum of the American state, this shows the limits of any
effective states approach outside the core based on economic linkages alone. This explains not only the
extension of US bases and the closer integration of intelligence and police apparatuses of
all the states in the empire in the wake of September 11, but the harkening back to the
founding moment of the post-1945 American empire in the military occupations of Japan and
Germany as providing the model for restructuring Iraq within the framework of American
empire. The logic of this posture points well beyond Iraq to all states disconnected
from globalization, as a U.S. Naval War College professor advising the Secretary of
Defense so chillingly put it: Show me where globalization
is thick with network connectivity, financial transactions, liberal media flows, and
collective security, and I will show you regions featuring stable governments, rising
standards of living, and more deaths by suicide than murder. These parts of the world I
call the Functioning Core
But show me where globalization is thinning or just plain
absent, and I will show you regions plagued by politically repressive regimes, widespread
poverty and disease, routine mass murder, and --
most important -- the chronic conflicts that incubate the next generation of global
terrorists. These parts of the world I call the non-integrating Gap
The real reason
I support a war like this is that the resulting long-term military commitment will finally
force America to deal with the entire Gap as a strategic threat environment.[101]
In this Gap are
listed Haiti, Colombia, Brazil and Argentina, Former Yugoslavia, Congo and Rwanda/Burundi,
Angola, South Africa, Israel-Palestine, Saudi Arabia, Iraq, Somalia, Iran, Afghanistan,
Pakistan, North Korea and Indonesia -- to
which China, Russia and India are added, for good measure, as new/integrating
members of the core [that] may be lost in coming years. The trouble for the American
empire as it inclines in this strategic direction is that very few of the world's
non-core states today, given their economic and political structures and the
social forces, are going to be able to be reconstructed along the lines of post-war Japan
and Germany, even if (indeed especially if) they are occupied by the US military, and even
if they are penetrated rather than marginalized by globalization. What is more, an
American imperialism that is so blatantly imperialistic risks losing the very appearance
of not being imperialist -- that appearance which historically made it plausible and
attractive. The open disagreements over
the war on Iraq between the governments of France, Germany and even Canada, on the one
hand, and the Bush administration, on the other, need to be seen in this light. These
tensions pertain very little to economic rivalries. The tensions pertain
rather more to a preference on the part of these states themselves (in good part
reflective of their relative lack of autonomous military capacity) for the use of
international financial institutions, the WTO and the UN to try to fashion the
effective states around the world that global capitalism needs. But the
bourgeoisies of the other capitalist states are even less inclined to challenge American
hegemony than they were in the 1970s. Indeed many capitalists in the other states inside
the empire were visibly troubled by -- and
increasingly complained about -- their
states not singing from the same page as the Americans. In any case, the capitalist
classes of each country, including the US (where many of the leading lights of financial
capital, such as Rubin and Volcker, were openly disturbed by the posture of the Bush
administration on the war as well as economic policy), were incapable of expressing a
unified position either for or against the war. Once again we can see that what is at play
in the current conjuncture is not contradictions between national bourgeoisies, but the
contradictions of the whole of imperialism, implicating all the
bourgeoisies that function under the American imperial umbrella. These contradictions
pertain most of all to the danger posed to the broader legitimacy of the other capitalist
states now that they are located in a framework of American imperialism that is so
unconcealed. The American empire has certainly been hegemonic vis-ŕ-vis these states,
their capitalist classes and their various elite establishments, but it has never
entailed, for all of the American economic and cultural penetration of their societies, a
transfer of direct popular loyalty to the American state itself. Indeed, the American form
of rule -- founded on the constitutional principle of extensive empire and
self-government -- has never demanded this. The
economic and cultural emulation of the American way of life by so many ordinary people
abroad may perhaps properly be spoken of as hegemony in Gramscis terms. But
however close the relationship between the American state and capitalist classes and their
counterparts in the informal empire, this did not
extend to anything like a sense of patriotic attachment to the American state among the
citizenry of the other states. Nor did the American state ever take responsibility for the
incorporation, in the Gramscian sense of hegemony, of the needs of the subordinate classes
of other states within its own construction of informal imperial rule. Their active
consent to its informal imperial rule was always mediated by the legitimacy that each
state could retain for itself and muster on behalf of any particular American state
project -- and this has often been difficult to achieve in the case of American coercive
interventions around the globe over the past fifty years. A good many of these states
thus distanced themselves from the repeated US interventions in Latin America and the
Caribbean since 1945, and indeed since 1975, not to mention the American subversion of
governments elsewhere, or the Vietnam War. In this sense the
unpopularity of American military intervention -- and even its lack of endorsement by
other advanced capitalist states -- is not
new. But this dimension of the imperial order is
proving to have particularly important consequences in the current conjuncture. The
American states war of aggression in Iraq --
so flagrantly imperial and so openly connected to a doctrine that expresses the broader
aim of securing a neoliberal capitalist order on a global scale -- has evoked an unprecedented opposition,
including within the capitalist core states. Yet even in France and Germany where the
opposition is highest, many more people today attribute the problem with the
US as due to mostly Bush
rather than to the US in general. This suggests that the possibility of a
benign imperium still exists even in the other advanced capitalist countries.[102]
But insofar as the conditions making for American military intervention clearly transcend
a given administration, and insofar as a benign imperium can hardly prove be more than an
illusion in todays world, this is a currency that could be less stable than the
American dollar. This is especially significant: since the American empire can only rule
through other states, the greatest danger to it is that the states within its orbit will
be rendered illegitimate by virtue of their articulation to the imperium. To be sure, only
a fundamental change in the domestic balance of social forces and the
transformation of the nature and role of those states can bring about their
disarticulation from the empire, but the ideological space may now be opening up for the
kind of mobilization from below, combining the domestic concerns of subordinate classes
and other oppressed social forces with the anti-globalization and anti-war movements, that
can eventually lead to this. It is the fear of this that
fuels, on the one hand, the pleas of those who entreat the imperium to be more benign and
to present itself in a more multilateralist fashion, at least symbolically; and, on the
other hand, the actions of those who are using the fear of terrorism to close the space
for public dissent within each state. This is especially so within the United States
itself. The old question posed by those who, at the founding of the American state,
questioned whether an extended empire could be consistent with republican liberty -- posed again and again over the subsequent two
centuries by those at home who stood up against American imperialism -- is back on the
agenda again. The need to sustain intervention abroad by mobilizing support and limiting
opposition through instilling fear and repression at home raises the prospect that the
American state may become more authoritarian internally as part of it becoming more
blatantly aggressive externally. But the unattractiveness of an empire that is no
longer concealed in its coercive nature at home as well as abroad suggests that
anti-imperialist struggles -- even in the
rich capitalist states at the heart of the empire as well as in the poor ones at its
extremities -- will have growing mass
appeal and force. NOTES We wish
to thank Greg Albo, Cenk Aygul, Patrick Bond, Dan Crow, Robert Cox, Bill Fletcher, Stephen
Gill, Gerard Greenfield, Khashayar Khooshiyar, Martijn Konings, Colin Leys, Eric Newstadt,
Chris Roberts, Donald Swartz and Alan Zuege for their comments on a draft of this essay. A
good many of their comments have been incorporated here; others we will only be able to
address as part of our book project on this topic. [1]
Great Britain, The United States and Canada, Twenty-First Cust
Foundation Lecture, University of Nottingham, May 21, 1948, in H. Innis, Essays in
Canadian Economic History, Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1956, p. 407. [2]
The Friedman manifesto appeared in the New York Times Magazine on March 28, 1999,
and the Ignatieff essay on January 5, 2003. Ignatieff adds: It means laying down the
rules America wants (on everything from markets to weapons of mass destruction) while
exempting itself from other rules (the Kyoto protocol on climate change and the
International Criminal Court) that go against its interests. [3]
The Grand Chessboard, New York: Basic Books, 1997, p. 40. [4]
See Rebuilding America's Defenses: Strategy, Forces and Resources For a New
Century, A Report of the Project for the New American Century. http://www.newamericancentury.org/publicationsreports.htm;
and The National Security Strategy of the United States of America, Falls Village,
Connecticut: Winterhouse, 2002. [5]
Antonio Santosuosso, Storming the Heavens: Soldiers, Emperor, and Civilians in
the Roman Empire, Westview: Boulder, 2001, pp. 151-2. [6]
Monthly Review 42(6), 1990, pp. 1-6. For two of those who insisted, from
different perspectives, on the need to retain the concept of imperialism, see Susan
Strange, Towards a Theory of Transnational Empire, in E-O. Czempiel and J.
Rosenau, eds., Global Changes and Theoretical Challenges, Lexington: Lexington
Books, 1989, and Peter Gowan, Neo-Liberal Theory and Practice for Eastern
Europe, New Left Review, 213, 1995. [7]
Gareth Stedman Jones, The Specificity of US Imperialism New
Left Review, 60 (first series), 1970,
p. 60, n. 1. [8]
Giovanni Arrighi, The Geometry of Imperialism, London: NLB, 1978, p. 17.
What in good part lay behind the lefts disenchantment with the concept of
imperialism was the extent to which the words that opened Kautskys infamous essay in
1914 -- the one that so attracted Lenins ire -- increasingly rang true: First
of all, we need to be clear what we understand from the term imperialism. This word is
used in every which way, but the more we discuss and speak about it the more communication
and understanding becomes weakened. Der Imperialismus, Die Neue Ziet,
Year 32, XXXII/2, Sept 11th, 1914, p. 908. Only the last part of this famous essay was
translated and published in New Left Review in 1970. Thanks are due to Sabine
Neidhardt for providing us with a full translation. Note Arrighis use of almost
identical words in 1990: What happened to the term imperialism is by the time it
flourished in the early 1970s, it had come to mean everything and therefore nothing.
See Hegemony and Social Change, Mersham International Studies Review,
38, 1994, p. 365. [9]
Bob Rowthorn, Imperialism in the Seventies: Unity or Rivalry, New
Left Review, 69, 1971. [10]
In recent years no topic has occupied the attention of scholars of international relations
more than that of American hegemonic decline. The erosion of American economic political
and military power is unmistakable. The historically unprecedented resources and
capabilities that stood behind United States early postwar diplomacy, and that led Henry
Luce in the 1940s to herald an American century, have given way to an equally
remarkable and rapid redistribution of international power and wealth. In the guise of
theories of hegemonic stability, scholars have been debating the extent of
hegemonic decline and its consequences. G. John Ikenberry, Rethinking the
Origins of American Hegemony, Political Science Quarterly, 104(3), 1989, p.
375. Among the few critics of this view, see Bruce Russett, The Mysterious Case of
Vanishing Hegemony. Or is Mark Twain Really Dead?, International Organization,
39(2), 1985; Stephen Gill, American Hegemony: Its Limits and Prospects in the Reagan
Era, Millenium, 15(3), 1986; and Susan
Strange, The Persistent Myth of Lost Hegemony, International Organization,
41(4), 1987. [11]
Andrew Glyn and Bob Sutcliffe, Global But Leaderless, Socialist
Register 1992, London: Merlin, 1992, p. 93. [12]
Bruce Cumings. Global Realm with no Limit, Global Realm with no Name, Radical
History Review, 57, 1993, pp. 47-8. This issue of the journal was devoted to a debate
on Imperialism: A Useful Category of Analysis?. [13]
Andrew L. Bacevich, American Empire: The Realities and Consequences of U.S.
Diplomacy, Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2002, pp. x, 3, 219. [14]
Michael Hardt and Antonio Negri, Empire, Cambridge, MA: Harvard University
Press, 2000, p. xiv, emphasis in text. See our review essay,
Gems and Baubles in Empire, Historical Materialism, 10, 2002, pp.
17-43. [15]
The Great Transformation, Beacon, Boston: 1957, p. 18. [16]
Philip McMichael, Revisiting the Question of the Transnational State: A
Comment on William Robinsons Social theory and Globalization, Theory
and Society, 30, 2001, p. 202. [17]
Just how far this fundamental mistake continues to plague the Left can be discerned
from the fact that even those who insist today that the old theory of imperialism no
longer can be made to fit contemporary global capitalism, nevertheless accept it as
explaining the pre-World War One imperialism. This has been most recently seen in the way
Hardt and Negri completely follow Lenin and Luxemburg in this respect, arguing that capitalism by its very nature confronts a contradiction in trying to
realize surplus value: workers get less than what they produce (underconsume), so capital
must look outside its own borders for markets. Since this is a problem in each capitalist
country, the solution requires constant access to markets in non-capitalist
social formations. The focus on non-capitalist markets is reinforced by the need for the
raw materials to feed workers and supply production at home. But the successful
realization of the surplus and the expansion of production simply recreate the
contradiction or crisis of underconsumption as a crisis of overproduction. This forces
capital abroad to find outlets for its surplus capital. That overall search
for foreign markets, materials and investment opportunities involves the extension of
national sovereignty beyond its borders -- imperialism -- and at the same time tends to
bring the outside world in (i.e. into capitalism). And so the crisis of
underconsumption/overproduction is simply regenerated on a larger scale. [18]
[I]f capitalism could raise the living standards of the masses, who in spite
of the amazing technical progress are everywhere still half-starved and poverty stricken,
there could be no question of a surplus of capital
. But if capitalism did these
things it would not be capitalism; for both the uneven development and a semi-starvation
level of existence of the masses are fundamental and inevitable conditions and constitute
premises of this mode of production. V.I. Lenin, Imperialism: The Highest Stage
of Capitalism, in Selected Works, Volume I, Moscow: Progress Publishers, 1970,
p. 716. [19]
Ibid. [20]
See John Willoughby, Capitalist Imperialism: Crisis and the State, New York:
Harwood Academic Publishers, 1986, esp. pp. 7-8; and earlier, put more circumspectly,
Harry Magdoff, The Age of Imperialism, New York: Monthly Review Press, 1969, esp.
p. 13. [21]
See John Kautsky, J.A. Schumpeter and Karl Kautsky: Parallel Theories of
Imperialism, Midwest Journal of Political Science, V(2), 1961, pp. 101-128;
and Lenin, Imperialism, p. 715. [22]
Ellen Meiksins Wood, Empire of Capital, London: Verso, 2003, p. 72. [23]
John Gallagher and Ronald Robinson, The Imperialism of Free Trade, The
Economic History Review, VI(1), 1953, p. 6. They explicitly challenged Lenins
view that the move towards responsible government in the colonies that coincided with the
era of free trade did not mean that the policy of free competition entailed
that the liberation of the colonies and their complete separation from Great Britain
was inevitable and desirable in the opinion of leading bourgeois politicians. This
reflected, they argued, a conventional misconception that free trade rendered empire
superfluous, which severely misconstrued the significance of changes in
constitutional forms. As Gallagher and Robinson put it: [R]esponsible government far
from being a separatist device, was simply a change from direct to indirect methods of
maintaining British interests. By slackening the formal political bond at the appropriate
time, it was possible to rely on economic dependence and mutual good-feeling to keep the
colonies bound to Britain while still using them as agents for further British
expansion. Ibid., p. 2. [24]
Ibid., pp. 6-7. [25]
All the quotations of Karl Kautsky here are from John Kautsky, J.A.
Schumpeter and Karl Kautsky, pp. 114-116, except for the one on his economic
reductionism, where we have used the wording of New Left Reviews 1970 partial translation of Der
Imperialismus, p. 46. For the best exposition of Kautskys conception of
ultra-imperialism, see Massimo Salvadori, Karl Kautsky and the Socialist
Revolution, 1880-1933, London: NLB, 1979, pp. 169-203. [26]
These are the words of a biographer of Dean Acheson, as quoted by William Appleman
Williams, Empire as a Way of Life, New York: Oxford University Press, 1980, p. 185. [27]
Perry Anderson, Force and Consent, New Left Review, 17, 2002, p. 24. [28] Ibid., p. 25. See also Daniel Lazares The
Frozen Republic, New York: Harcourt Brace, 1996 which fails to distinguish between the
democratic constraints and domestic policy gridlocks that the old elitist system of checks
and balances produces and the remarkable informal imperial carrying power of
the American constitution in the sense argued here. [29]
Quoted in Williams, Empire as a Way of Life, p. 61. Jefferson had
already come to accept Madisons expansionist perspective that republican
liberty was not incompatible with an extended state, nor with a strong federal government.
As DeVoto sums up Jeffersons trajectory:
after 1803, the phrase
the United States in Jeffersons writings, usually plural up to now,
begins increasingly to take a singular verb. Bernard DeVoto, The Course of Empire,
Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 1983 (1952), p. 403. [30]
See Hardt and Negri, Empire, chapter 2.5. [31]
See John F. Manley, The Significance of Class in American History and
Politics, in L.C. Didd and C. Jilson, eds., New Perspectives on American Politics,
Washington, D.C.: Congressional Quarterly Press, 1994, esp. pp. 16-19. [32]
Quoted in Williams, Empire as a Way of Life, p. 43. [33]
The Federalist Papers, No. 11 (Hamilton), Clinton Rossiter, ed., New York:
Mentor, 1999, p. 59. [34]
See Marc Engel, A Mighty Empire: The Origins of the American Revolution,
Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1988. [35]
DeVoto, The Course of Empire, p. 275. [36]
See Charles C. Bright, The State in the United States During the Nineteenth
Century, in C. Bright and S. Harding, eds., Statemaking and Social Movements,
Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 1984. [37]
See the first two chapters of Gabriel Kolkos Main Currents in Modern
American History, New York: Harper & Row, 1976; and Bright, The State,
esp. pp. 145-153. [38]
Anderson, Force and Consent, p. 25. [39]
S.S. Roberts, An Indicator of Informal Empire: Patterns of U.S. Navy Cruising
on Overseas Stations, 1869-97, Center for Naval Analysis, Alexandria, Virginia,
n.d., cited in Williams, p. 122. [40]
Stedman Jones, The Specificity, p. 63. [41]
See L. Panitch, Class and Dependency in Canadian Political Economy, Studies
in Political Economy, 6, 1980, pp. 7-34; W. Clement, Continental Corporate Power,
Toronto: McLelland & Stewart, 1977; and M. Wilkins, The Emergence of Multinational
Enterprise, Cambridge, Mass: 1970. Jefferson had justified the war of 1812 (sparked by
American concerns the British were encouraging Indian resistance to western expansion) in
these terms: If the British dont give us the satisfaction we demand, we will
take Canada, which wants to enter the union; and when, together with Canada, we shall have
the Floridas, we shall no longer have any difficulties with our neighbors; and it is the
only way of preventing them. The passage from the urge to continental expansion
though internal empire to expansion through informal external empire, with Canada
representing the model of successful American imperialism in the twentieth century, was
marked, almost exactly 100 years later, when President Taft spoke in terms of
greater economic ties being the way to make Canada only an adjunct of
the USA. See Williams, pp. 63-4, 132. [42]
Quoted in G. Achcar, The Clash of Barbarisms, New York: Monthly Review
Press, 2002, p. 96. [43]
Letter to Duncan Grant, quoted in Nicholas Fraser, More Than Economist,
Harpers Magazine, November, 2001, p. 80. The issue here, of course, was the
American states refusal to forgive Allied war debts, with all the consequences this
entailed for the imposition of heavy German reparations payments. See Michael
Hudsons Super Imperialism: The Economic Strategy of American Empire, New
York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 1971. [44]
See R. Jeffery Lustig, Corporate Liberalism: The Origins of American Political
Theory 1890-1920, Berkeley: University of California Press, 1982; and Stephen
Skowronek, Building a New American State: The Expansion of National Administrative
Capacities 1877-1920, New York: Cambridge University Press, 1982. [45]
See Kees van der Pijl, The Making of an Atlantic Ruling Class, London:
Verso, 1984, p. 93. [46]
This was glimpsed by Charles and Mary Beard even before the war in their analysis
of the passage from the old Imperial Isolationism and the newer
Collective Internationalism in their America in Midpassage, New York:
Macmillan, 1939, Volume I, Ch. X, and Vol, II, Ch. XVII. [47]
This and the subsequent quotations in this section are all from Brian Waddell, The
War against the New Deal: World War II and American Democracy, De Kalb: Northern
Illinois University Press: 2001, pp. 4-5. See also, Rhonda Levine, Class Struggles and
the New Deal, Lawrence: University Press of Kansas, 1988. [48]
Brian Waddell, Corporate Influence and World War II: Resolving the New Deal
Political Stalemate, Journal of Political History, 11(3), 1999, p. 2. [49]
Geir Lundestad, Empire by Invitation? The United States and Western Europe,
1945-52, Journal of Peace Research, 23(3), September, 1986; and see van der
Pijl, The Making, chapter 6. [50]
See Gabriel Kolko, The Politics of War: The World and United States Foreign
Policy 1943-1945, New York: Random House, 1968. [51]
See Eric Helleiner, States and the Reemergence of Global Finance, Ithaca:
Cornell, 1994. [52]
Robert Skidelsky, John Maynard Keynes: Fighting for Freedom, 1937-1946, New
York: Viking, 2001, pp. xxiii. [53]
The United States in a New World: I. Relations with Britain. A series of
reports on potential courses for democratic action. Prepared under the auspices of the
Editors of Fortune, May, 1942, pp. 9-10. [54]
An American Proposal, Fortune, May 1942, pp. 59-63. [55]
All the quotations in this paragraph are derived from Skidelskys account, pp.
334, 348, 350-1, 355. [56]
The very words which senior officials at the German Bundesbank used in an interview
we conducted in October, 2002. [57]
Martin Shaw, Theory of the Global State, Cambridge, U.K.: Cambridge
University Press, 2000. [58]
Bacevich, American Empire, p. 4. [59]
Peter Gowan, The American Campaign for Global Sovereignty, Socialist
Register 2003, London: Merlin, 2003, p. 5. [60]
Michael Barratt Brown, The Economics of Imperialism, Middlesex, UK: Penguin,
1974, pp. 208-9. [61]
See Raymond Aron, The Imperial Republic: The United States and the World
1945-1973, Cambridge, MA: Winthrop, 1974, esp. pp. 168 and 217; and N. Poulantzas, Classes
in Contemporary Capitalism, London: NLB, 1974, esp. pp. 39 and 57. [62]
Alan S. Milward, The European Rescue of the Nation-State, London: Routledge,
2000. [63]
See Robert Cox, Production, Power and World Order, New York: Columbia
University Press, 1987, esp. p. 254. Cf. N. Poulantzas, Classes, p. 73. [64]
Address
on Foreign Economic Policy, Delivered at Baylor University, March 6, 1947, Public Papers
of the Presidents, http://www.trumanlibrary/.org/trumanpapers/pppus/1947/52.htm.
On the
preparations for this crucial speech see Gregory A. Fossendal, Our Finest Hour: Will
Clayton, the Marshall Plan, and the Triumph of Democracy, Stanford: Hoover Press,
1993, pp. 213-5. [65]
Quoted in Williams, p. 189; and see Gabriel Kolko, Century of War, New York:
The New Press, 1994, p. 397. [66]
The special post-war conditions included the application of technologies developed
during the war; catch up to American technology and methods (the gap had already been
rising during the thirties and obviously accelerated during the war); pent-up demand;
subsidized investments for rebuilding and the productivity effect of new facilities -- all
providing enormous scope for accumulation after the destruction of so much value during
the Depression and the War. See Moses Abramowitz, Catching Up, Forging Ahead, and
Falling Behind, Journal of Economic History, 46(2), June, 1986, and also
Rapid Growth Potential and Realization: The Experience of the Capitalist Economies
in the Postwar Period in Edmund Malinvaud, ed., Economic Growth and Resources,
London: Macmillan, 1979. Also crucial was the unique role of the American state in opening
up its market, providing critical financial assistance, and contributing to international
economic and political stability internationally. [67]
The interwar collapse of the gold standard had demonstrated that capital mobility
and democratic pressures from below, which limited any automatic adjustment
process, were incompatible with stable exchange rates. [68]
On the relationship between the collapse of the gold standard, capital mobility,
and the development of democratic pressures, see Barry Eichengreen, Globalizing
Capital: A History of the International Monetary System, Princeton: Princeton
University Press, 1996, Chapters 2-3. On the developments within US finance itself in the
1970s, and their impact abroad, see Michael Moran, The Politics of the Financial
Services Revolution, London: Macmillan, 1991. [69]
Looking back to that period, two Vice-Presidents of Citibank, observed it is
not surprising that economists were so sure in the late 60s and early 70s that
the breakdown of fixed exchange rates would further weaken economic links between
countries. See H. Cleveland and R. Bhagavatula, The Continuing World Economic
Crisis, Foreign Affairs, 59(3), 1981, p. 600. See also Louis Paulys
observation that, at the time, [i]nternational monetary disarray appeared quite
capable of restoring the world of the 1930s. Louis B. Pauly, Who Elected the
Bankers?, Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1997, p. 100. [70]
The induced reproduction of American monopoly capitalism within the other
metropolises
implies the extended reproduction within them of the political and
ideological conditions for [the] development of American imperialism. N. Poulantzas,
1974, p. 47. [71]
It is this dis-articulation and heterogeneity of the domestic bourgeoisie
that explains the weak resistance, limited to fit and starts, that European states have
put up to American capital. Ibid., p. 75. [72]
Ibid., p. 87. [73]
Ibid., p. 81. On the
internationalization of the state, see also Cox, Production, Power, And World Order,
pp. 253-267. [74]
At one time or another, policy during the seventies included import surcharges,
attempts at international co-operation on exchange rates, wage and price controls,
monetarism, and fiscal stimulus. [75]
A New York Times reporter captured the unilateralist aggressiveness driving
the American response: What is entirely clear is that the United States in a single
dramatic stroke has shown the world how powerful it still is
in breaking the link
between the dollar and gold and imposing a 10% import tax, the United States has shown who
is Gulliver and who the Lilliputians
by Lilliputians are meant not the
Nicaraguans or Gabons but West Germany, Japan, Britain, and the other leading industrial
nations, cited by H.L. Robinson, The Downfall of the Dollar in Socialist
Register 1973, London: Merlin Press,
1973, p. 417. [76]
Report of the President on U.S. Competitiveness, Washington: Office of Foreign Economic
Research, U.S. Department of Labour, September, 1980. [77]
G. Duménil and D. Lévy, The Contradictions of
Neoliberalism in Socialist Register 2002, London: Merlin, 2002. [78]
Our interviews with key industrial and financial figures, including Richard
Wagoner, CEO of General Motors, in September 2001, and Paul Volcker, the former Chairman
of the Federal Reserve who also led the negotiations with Chrysler, in March 2003,
have confirmed us in this view. In spite of the fact that the auto industry was hit
especially hard by the high interest rates, high dollar, and reduction in consumer demand
that came with the shift to financial liberalization, industry executives considered this
direction as being the only alternative through the eighties and nineties. [79] The term is from G.
Albo and T. Fasts Varieties of Neoliberalism paper presented to the
Conference on the Convergence of Capitalist Economies, Wake Forest, North Carolina September 27-29, 2002. [80]
See S. Gindin and L. Panitch, Rethinking Crisis, Monthly Review,
November, 2002. [81]
See Stephen Gill, Power and Resistance in the New World Order, London:
Palgrave-Macmillan, 2003, pp. 131ff. and pp. 174ff. [82]
See Leo Panitch, The New Imperial State, New Left Review, 2,
2000. [83]
See Leo Panitch, The State in a Changing World:
Social-Democratizing Global Capitalism?, Monthly Review, October, 1998. [84]
Lenin, preface to the French and German editions of Imperialism, p. 674. [85]
Compare W. Ruigrok and R. van Tulder, The Logic of International Restructuring,
London: Routledge, 1995 (esp. chs. 6 & 7) against W.I. Robinson, Beyond
Nation-State Paradigms, Sociological Forum, 13(4), 1998; and see the debate
on Robinsons Towards a Global Ruling Class?, Science and Society,
64(1), 2000 in the Symposium in 65(4) of that journal, 2001-2. [86]
The argument here is much further elaborated in L. Panitch and S. Gindin,
Euro-capitalism and American Empire, forthcoming in Studies in Political
Economy, Fall 2003. [87]
John Grahl, Globalized Finance: The Challenge to the Euro, New Left
Review, 8, 2001, p. 44. See also his outstanding paper, Notes on Financial
Integration and European Society, presented to conference on The Emergence of a New
Euro-Capitalism, Marburg, October 2002. On the increasing adoption of American management
practices in Europe, see M. Carpenter and S. Jefferys, Management, Work and Welfare in
Western Europe, London: Edward Elgar, 2000. [88]
See Peter Gowan, Making Sense of NATOs War on Yugoslavia, Socialist
Register 2000, London: Merlin, 2000. [89]
W.A. Hay and H. Sicherman, Europe's Rapid Reaction Force: What, Why, And
How?, Foreign Policy Research Institute, February, 2001. [90]
Economist, May 27, 2003. [91]
See Dan Bousfield, Export-Led Development and Imperialism: A Response to
Burkett and Hart-Landsberg, Historical Materialism, 11(1), 2003, pp. 147-160.
The counter argument, in terms of Japans leadership from behind was best
set out in G. Arrighi and B. Silver, ed., Chaos and Governance in the World System,
Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1999. [92]
See Panitch, The New Imperial State. [93]
Donald Sassoon, One Hundred Years of Socialism, London: I.B. Taurus, 1996,
p. 207. [94]
Poulantzas, Classes, pp. 86-7. [95]
Financial Times, March 26, 2003. [96]
Our interviews at the Bundesbank and the UK Treasury in October 2002 confirm this.
Indeed, there often appears to be more contact across the Atlantic between these
bureaucrats and their counterparts in the US than there is among the various departments
within these institutions. [97]
Classes in Contemporary Capitalism, p. 87. [98]
See Peter Gowan, The American Campaign, pp. 8-10. [99]
The United Nations after the Gulf War: A Promise Betrayed, Stephen
Lewis interviewed by Jim Wurst, World Policy Journal, Summer 1991, pp. 539-49. [100]
The increased influence gained by the military, coercive and security apparatuses
in the wake of September 11 could be seen in that the first victory of the new war was
scored at home, against the US Treasury. It involved breaking the latters
long-standing resistance (lest it would demonstrate about the continuing viability of
capital controls) to freezing bank accounts allegedly connected to terrorist organizations
(which mechanisms the US state has always known about since it was involved in
establishing these to facilitate money transfers to many of its favoured terrorists in the
past). [101]
Thomas P.M. Barnett, The Pentagons New Map: It Explains Why Were
Going to War and Why Well Keep Going to War, Esquire, March, 2003
(available at the U.S. Naval War College website at http://www.nwc.navy.mil/newrules/ThePentagonsNewMap.htm). [102]
See the report on the Pew Global Attitudes Survey in the Financial Times,
June 4, 2003, which shows that in France and Germany, where only 43% and 45% respectively
have a favourable image of the US today, 74% of respondents in each country
attribute the problem with the US to mostly Bush as opposed to only 25% to the
US in general or to both. Interestingly, in those advanced
capitalist countries where the US image is more positive (Canada 63%, the UK 70%) there is
nevertheless a higher percentage than in France or Germany who see the problem with
the US as due to the US in general or both (32%) rather than
mostly Bush (60%). As for countries like Indonesia and Turkey, where a
favourable image of the US has fallen from 75% and 53% respectively to only 15%
today in both countries, it may be worth noting that whereas 45% of Turks attribute the
problem to the US in general or both, only 27% of Indonesians do
so, in contrast with the 69% who see the problem as mostly Bush. [s1]What is link.? Is it because its historical? |