By Prof. James Petras
December 10, 2011
After suffering major military and
political defeats in bloody ground wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, failing to
buttress long-standing clients in Yemen, Egypt and Tunisia and witnessing the
disintegration of puppet regimes in Somalia and South Sudan, the Obama regime
has learned nothing:
Instead he has turned toward greater military confrontation with global powers, namely Russia and China. Obama has adopted a provocative offensive military strategy right on the frontiers of both China and Russia.
After going from defeat to defeat on
the periphery of world power and not satisfied with running treasury-busting
deficits in pursuit of empire building against economically weak countries,
Obama has embraced a policy of encirclement and provocations against China, the
world’s second largest economy and the US’s most important creditor, and
Russia, the European Union’s principle oil and gas provider and the world’s second
most powerful nuclear weapons power.
This paper addresses the Obama
regime’s highly irrational and world-threatening escalation of imperial
militarism. We examine the global military, economic and domestic political
context that gives rise to these policies.
We then examine the multiple points
of conflict and intervention in which Washington is engaged, from Pakistan, Iran,
Libya, Venezuela, Cuba and beyond.
We will then analyze the rationale
for military escalation against Russia and China as part of a new offensive
moving beyond the Arab world (Syria, Libya) and in the face of the declining
economic position of the EU and the US in the global economy.
We will then outline the strategies
of a declining empire, nurtured on perpetual wars, facing global economic
decline, domestic discredit and a working population reeling from the
long-term, large-scale dismantling of its basic social programs.
THE TURN FROM MILITARISM IN THE
PERIPHERY TO GLOBAL MILITARY CONFRONTATION
November 2011 is a moment of great
historical import:
Obama declared two major policy positions, both having tremendous strategic consequences affecting competing world powers.
Obama pronounced a policy of military
encirclement of China based on stationing a maritime and aerial armada facing
the Chinese coast ~ an overt policy designed to weaken and disrupt China ’s
access to raw materials and commercial and financial ties in Asia .
Obama’s declaration that Asia is the
priority region for US military expansion, base-building and economic alliances
was directed against China, challenging Beijing in its own backyard. Obama’s
iron fist policy statement, addressed to the Australian Parliament, was crystal
clear in defining US imperial goals.
“Our enduring interests in the region [Asia Pacific] demands our enduring presence in this region ... The United States is a Pacific power and we are here to stay ... As we end today’s wars [i.e. the defeats and retreats from Iraq and Afghanistan]... I have directed my national security team to make our presence and missions in the Asia Pacific a top priority ... As a result, reduction in US defense spending will not ... come at the expense of the Asia Pacific” (CNN.com, Nov. 16, 2011).
The precise nature of what Obama
called our “presence and mission” was underlined by the new military agreement
with Australia to dispatch warships, warplanes and 2500 marines to the northern
most city of Australia (Darwin) directed at China.
Secretary of State Clinton has spent
the better part of 2011 making highly provocative overtures to Asian countries
that have maritime border conflicts with China. Clinton has forcibly injected
the US into these disputes, encouraging and exacerbating the demands of Vietnam,
Philippines, and Brunei in the South China Sea.
Even more seriously, Washington is
bolstering its military ties and sales with Japan, Taiwan, Singapore and South Korea,
as well as increasing the presence of battleships, nuclear submarines and over
flights of war planes along China’s coastal waters.
In line with the policy of military
encirclement and provocation, the Obama-Clinton regime is promoting Asian
multi-lateral trade agreements that exclude China and privilege US
multi-national corporations, bankers and exporters, dubbed the “Trans-Pacific
Partnership”. It currently includes mostly smaller countries, but Obama has
hopes of enticing Japan and Canada to join.
Obama’s presence at the APEC meeting
of East Asian leader and his visit to Indonesia in November 2011 all revolve
around efforts to secure US hegemony. Obama-Clinton hope to counter the
relative decline of US economic links in the face of the geometrical growth of
trade and investment ties between East Asia and China.
A most recent example of
Obama-Clinton’s delusional, but destructive, efforts to deliberately disrupt China’s
economic ties in Asia, is taking place in Myanmar (Burma). Clinton’s December
2011 visit to Myanmar was preceded by a decision by the Thein Sein regime to
suspend a China Power Investment-funded dam project in the north of the
country.
According to official confidential
documents released by WilkiLeaks the “Burmese NGO’s, which organized and led
the campaign against the dam, were heavily funded by the US government” (Financial
Times, Dec. 2, 2011, p. 2). This and other provocative activity and Clinton’s
speeches condemning Chinese “tied aid” pale in comparison with the long-term,
large-scale interests which link Myanmar with China.
China is Myanmar’s biggest trading
partner and investor, including six other dam projects. Chinese companies are
building new highways and rail lines across the country, opening southwestern
China up for Burmese products and China is constructing oil pipelines and
ports. There is a powerful dynamic of mutual economic interests that will not
be disturbed by one dispute (FT, December 2, 2011, p.2).
Clinton’s critique of China’s
billion-dollar investments in Myanmar’s infrastructure is one of the most
bizarre in world history, coming in the aftermath of Washington’s brutal
eight-year military presence in Iraq which destroyed $500 billion dollars of
Iraqi infrastructure, according to Baghdad official estimates.
Only a delusional administration
could imagine that rhetorical flourishes, a three day visit and the bankrolling
of an NGO is an adequate counter-weight to deep economic ties linking Myanmar
to China. The same delusional posture underlies the entire repertoire of
policies informing the Obama regime’s efforts to displace China’s predominant
role in Asia.
While any one policy adopted by the
Obama regime does not, in itself, present an immediate threat to peace, the
cumulative impact of all these policy pronouncements and the projections of
military power add up to an all out comprehensive effort to isolate, intimidate
and degrade China’s rise as a regional and global power.
Military encirclement and alliances,
exclusion of China in proposed regional economic associations, partisan
intervention in regional maritime disputes and positioning technologically
advanced warplanes, are all aimed to undermine China’s competitiveness and to
compensate for US economic inferiority via closed political and economic
networks.
Clearly White House military and
economic moves and US Congressional anti-China demagogy are aimed at weakening China’s
trading position and forcing its business-minded leaders into privileging US
banking and business interests over and above their own enterprises.
Pushed to its limits, Obama’s
prioritizing a big military push could lead to a catastrophic rupture in
US-Chinese economic relations. This would result in dire consequences,
especially but not exclusively, on the US economy and particularly its
financial system.
China holds over $1.5 trillion dollars in US debt, mainly Treasury Notes, and each year purchases from $200 to $300 billion in new issues, a vital source in financing the US deficit.
If Obama provokes a serious threat to
China’s security interests and Beijing is forced to respond, it will not be
military but economic retaliation: the sell-off of a few hundred billion
dollars in T-notes and the curtailment of new purchases of US debt.
The US deficit will skyrocket, its
credit ratings will descend to ‘junk’, and the financial system will ‘tremble
onto collapse’. Interest rates to attract new buyers of US debt will approach
double digits. Chinese exports to the US will suffer and losses will incur due
to the devaluation of the T-notes in Chinese hands.
China has been diversifying its
markets around the world and its huge domestic market could probably absorb
most of what China loses abroad in the course of a pull-back from the US
market.
While Obama strays across the Pacific
to announce his military threats to China and strives to economically isolate
China from the rest of Asia, the US economic presence is fast fading in what
used to be its “backyard”:
Quoting one Financial Times
journalist, “China is the only show [in town] for Latin America” (Financial
Times, Nov. 23, 2011, p.6).
China has displaced the US and the EU
as Latin America’s principle trading partner; Beijing has poured billions in
new investments and provides low interest loans.
China’s trade with India, Indonesia, Japan,
Pakistan and Vietnam is increasing at a far faster rate than that of the US. The
US effort to build an imperial-centered security alliance in Asia is based on
fragile economic foundations. Even Australia, the anchor and linchpin of the US
military thrust in Asia, is heavily dependent on mineral exports to China. Any
military interruption would send the Australian economy into a tailspin.
The US economy is in no condition to
replace China as a market for Asian or Australian commodity and manufacturing
exports. The Asian countries must be acutely aware that there is no future
advantage in tying themselves to a declining, highly militarized, empire. Obama
and Clinton deceive themselves if they think they can entice Asia into a
long-term alliance.
The Asian’s are simply using the Obama regime’s friendly overtures as a ‘tactical device’, a negotiating ploy, to leverage better terms in securing maritime and territorial boundaries with China.
Washington is delusional if it
believes that it can convince Asia to break long-term large-scale lucrative
economic ties to China in order to join an exclusive economic association with
such dubious prospects. Any ‘reorientation’ of Asia, from China to the US,
would require more than the presence of an American naval and airborne armada
pointed at China.
It would require the total
restructuring of the Asian countries’ economies, class structure and political
and military elite. The most powerful economic entrepreneurial groups in Asia
have deep and growing ties with China/Hong Kong, especially among the dynamic
transnational Chinese business elites in the region. A turn toward Washington
entails a massive counter-revolution, which substitutes colonial ‘traders’
(compradors) for established entrepreneurs.
A turn to the US would require a
dictatorial elite willing to cut strategic trading and investment linkages,
displacing millions of workers and professionals. As much as some US-trained
Asian military officers, economists and former Wall Street financiers and
billionaires might seek to ‘balance’ a US military presence with Chinese
economic power, they must realize that ultimately advantage resides in working
out an Asian solution.
The age of Asian “comprador
capitalists”, willing to sell out national industry and sovereignty in exchange
for privileged access to US markets, is ancient history. Whatever the boundless
enthusiasm for conspicuous consumerism and Western lifestyles, which Asia and
China’s new rich mindlessly celebrate, whatever the embrace of inequalities and
savage capitalist exploitation of labor, there is recognition that the past
history of US and European dominance precluded the growth and enrichment of an
indigenous bourgeoisie and middle class.
The speeches and pronouncements of
Obama and Clinton reek of nostalgia for a past of neo-colonial overseers and
comprador collaborators ~ a mindless delusion.
Their attempts at political realism,
in finally recognizing Asia as the economic pivot of the present world order,
takes a bizarre turn in imagining that military posturing and projections of
armed force will reduce China to a marginal player in the region.
OBAMA’S ESCALATION OF
CONFRONTATION WITH RUSSIA
The Obama regime has launched a major
frontal military thrust on Russia’s borders. The US has moved forward missile
sites and Air Force bases in Poland, Rumania, Turkey, Spain, Czech Republic and
Bulgaria: Patriot PAC-3 anti-aircraft missile complexes in Poland; advanced
radar AN/TPY-2 in Turkey; and several missile (SM-3 IA) loaded warships in
Spain are among the prominent weapons encircling Russia, most only minutes away
from its strategic heartland.
Secondly, the Obama regime has mounted
an all-out effort to secure and expand US military bases in Central Asia among
former Soviet republics.
Thirdly, Washington, via NATO, has
launched major economic and military operations against Russia’s major trading
partners in North Africa and the Middle East. The NATO war against Libya, which
ousted the Gadhafi regime, has paralyzed or nullified multi-billion dollar
Russian oil and gas investments, arms sales and substituted a NATO puppet for
the former Russia-friendly regime.
The UN-NATO economic sanctions and
US-Israeli clandestine terrorist activity aimed at Iran has undermined Russia’s
lucrative billion-dollar nuclear trade and joint oil ventures.
NATO, including Turkey, backed by the Gulf monarchical dictatorships, has implemented harsh sanctions and funded terrorist assaults on Syria, Russia’s last remaining ally in the region and where it has a sole naval facility (Tartus) on the Mediterranean Sea.
Russia’s previous collaboration with
NATO in weakening its own economic and security position is a product of the
monumental misreading of NATO and especially Obama’s imperial policies. Russian
President Medvedev and his Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov mistakenly assumed
(like Gorbachev and Yeltsin before them) that backing US-NATO policies against Russia’s
trading partners would result in some sort of “reciprocity”: US dismantling its
offensive “missile shield” on its frontiers and support for Russia’s admission
into the World Trade Organization.
Medvedev, following his liberal
pro-western illusions, fell into line and backed US-Israeli sanctions against Iran,
believing the tales of a “nuclear weapons programs”. Then Lavrov fell for the
NATO line of “no fly zones to protect Libyan civilian lives” and voted in
favor, only to feebly “protest”, much too late, that NATO was “exceeding its
mandate” by bombing Libya into the Middle Ages and installing a pro-NATO puppet
regime of rogues and fundamentalists.
Finally when the US aimed a cleaver
at Russia’s heartland by pushing ahead with an all-out effort to install
missile launch sites 5 minutes by air from Moscow while organizing mass and
armed assaults on Syria, did the Medvedev-Lavrov duet awake from its stupor and
oppose UN sanctions. Medvedev threatened to abandon the nuclear missile
reduction treaty (START) and to place medium-range missiles with 5 minute
launch-time from Berlin, Paris and London.
Medvedev-Lavrov’s policy of
consolidation and co-operation based on Obama’s rhetoric of “resetting
relations” invited aggressive empire building: Each capitulation led to a
further aggression. As a result, Russia is surrounded by missiles on its
western frontier; it has suffered losses among its major trading partners in
the Middle East and faces US bases in southwest and Central Asia.
Belatedly Russian officials have
moved to replace the delusional Medvedev for the realist Putin, as next
President. This shift to a political realist has predictably evoked a wave of
hostility toward Putin in all the Western media.
Obama’s aggressive policy to isolate
Russia by undermining independent regimes has, however, not affected Russia’s
status as a nuclear weapons power. It has only heightened tensions in Europe
and perhaps ended any future chance of peaceful nuclear weapons reduction or
efforts to secure a UN Security Council consensus on issues of peaceful
conflict resolution.
Washington, under Obama-Clinton, has turned Russia from a pliant client to a major adversary.
Putin looks to deepening and
expanding ties with the East, namely China, in the face of threats from the
West. The combination of Russian advanced weapons technology and energy
resources and Chinese dynamic manufacturing and industrial growth are more than
a match for crisis-ridden EU-USA economies wallowing in stagnation.
Obama’s military confrontation toward
Russia will greatly prejudice access to Russian raw materials and definitively
foreclose any long-term strategic security agreement, which would be useful in
lowering the deficit and reviving the US economy.
BETWEEN REALISM AND DELUSION:
OBAMA’S STRATEGIC REALIGNMENT
Obama’s recognition that the present
and future center of political and economic power is moving inexorably to Asia,
was a flash of political realism. After a lost decade of pouring hundreds of
billions of dollars in military adventures on the margins and periphery of
world politics, Washington has finally discovered that is not where the fate of
nations, especially Great Powers, will be decided, except in a negative sense ~
of bleeding resources over lost causes. Obama’s new realism and priorities
apparently are now focused on Southeast and Northeast Asia, where dynamic
economies flourish, markets are growing at a double digit rate, investors are
ploughing tens of billions in productive activity and trade is expanding at
three times the rate of the US and the EU.
But Obama’s ‘New Realism’ is blighted
by entirely delusional assumptions, which undermine any serious effort to
realign US policy.
In the first place Obama’s effort to
‘enter’ into Asia is via a military build-up and not through a sharpening and
upgrading of US economic competitiveness. What does the US produce for the
Asian countries that will enhance its market share? Apart from arms, airplanes
and agriculture, the US has few competitive industries. The US would have to
comprehensively re-orient its economy, upgrade skilled labor, and transfer
billions from “security” and militarism to applied innovations.
But Obama works within the current military-Zionist-financial complex: He knows no other and is incapable of breaking with it.
Secondly, Obama-Clinton operate under
the delusion that the US can exclude China or minimize its role in Asia, a
policy that is undercut by the huge and growing investment and presence of all
the major US multi-national corporations in China , who use it as an export
platform to Asia and the rest of the world.
The US military build-up and policy
of intimidation will only force China to downgrade its role as creditor
financing the US debt, a policy China can pursue because the US market, while
still important, is declining, as China expands its presence in its domestic,
Asian, Latin American and European markets.
What once appeared to be New Realism
is now revealed to be the recycling of Old Delusions: The notion that the US can
return to being the supreme Pacific Power it was after World War Two. The US
attempts to return to Pacific dominance under Obama-Clinton with a crippled
economy, with the overhang of an over-militarized economy, and with major
strategic handicaps:
Over the past decade the United
States foreign policy has been at the beck and call of Israel’s fifth column
(the Israel “lobby”). The entire US political class is devoid of common,
practical sense and national purpose.
They are immersed in troglodyte
debates over “indefinite detentions” and “mass immigrant expulsions”. Worse,
all are on the payrolls of private corporations who sell in the US and invest
in China.
Why would Obama abjure costly wars in
the unprofitable periphery and then promote the same military metaphysics at
the dynamic center of the world economic universe? Do Barack Obama and his
advisers believe he is the Second Coming of Admiral Commodore Perry, whose 19th
century warships and blockades forced Asia open to Western trade? Does he
believe that military alliances will be the first stage to a subsequent period
of privileged economic entry?
Does Obama believe that his regime
can blockade China, as Washington did to Japan in the lead up to World War Two?
It’s too late.
China is much more central to the
world economy, too vital even to the financing of the US debt, too bonded up
with the Forbes Five Hundred multi-national corporations.
To provoke China, to even fantasize
about economic “exclusion” to bring down China, is to pursue policies that will
totally disrupt the world economy, first and foremost the US economy!
CONCLUSION:
Obama’s ‘crackpot realism’, his shift
from wars in the Muslim world to military confrontation in Asia, has no
intrinsic worth and poses extraordinary extrinsic costs. The military methods
and economic goals are totally incompatible and beyond the capacity of the US,
as it is currently constituted.
Washington’s policies will not
‘weaken’ Russia or China, even less intimidate them. Instead it will encourage
both to adopt more adversarial positions, making it less likely that they lend
a hand to Obama’s sequential wars on behalf of Israel.
Already Russia has sent warships to
its Syrian port, refused to support an arms embargo against Syria and Iran and
(in retrospect) criticized the NATO war against Libya. China and Russia have
far too many strategic ties with the world economy to suffer any great losses
from a series of US military outposts and “exclusive” alliances. Russia can aim
just as many deadly nuclear missiles at the West as the US can mount from its
bases in Eastern Europe.
In other words, Obama’s military
escalation will not change the nuclear balance of power, but will bring Russia
and China into a closer and deeper alliance.
Gone are the days of Kissinger-Nixon’s
“divide and conquer” strategy pitting US-Chinese trade agreements against
Russian arms. Washington has a totally exaggerated significance of the current
maritime spats between China and its neighbors. What unites them in economic
terms is far more important in the medium and long-run. China’s Asian economic
ties will erode any tenuous military links to the US.
Obama’s “crackpot realism”, views the
world market through military lenses. Military arrogance toward Asia has led to
a rupture with Pakistan, its most compliant client regime in South Asia. NATO
deliberately slaughtered 24 Pakistani soldiers and thumbed their nose at the
Pakistani generals, while China and Russia condemned the attack and gained
influence.
In the end, the military and
exclusionary posture to China will fail. Washington will overplay its hand and
frighten its business-oriented erstwhile Asian partners, who only want to
play-off a US military presence to gain tactical economic advantage. They
certainly do not want a new US instigated ‘Cold War’ dividing and weakening the
dynamic intra-Asian trade and investment.
Obama and his minions will quickly
learn that Asia’s current leaders do not have permanent allies - only permanent
interests. In the final analysis, China figures prominently in configuring a
new Asia-centric world economy. Washington may claim to have a ‘permanent
Pacific presence’ but until it demonstrates it can take care of its “basic
business at home”, like arranging its own finances and balancing its current
account deficits, the US Naval command may end up renting its naval facilities
to Asian exporters and shippers, transporting goods for them, and protecting
them by pursuing pirates, contrabandists and narco-traffickers.
Come to think about it, Obama might
reduce the US trade deficit with Asia by renting out the Seventh Fleet to
patrol the Straits, instead of wasting US taxpayer money bullying successful
Asian economic powers.
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