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FIVE STAR PIECE:
Axis Of Evil -- in Washington, D.C., Edward Herman -- March 15,
2002
Suzanne's comments: Wow. This is a
pull-no-puncher. It's hard to read because it rings so true -- a truth telling
that Michael Moore does funnier, but it is the same story. We are imperiled by
this administration, and you will never get a clearer picture than this. Put it
in the treasure chest of the new uprising of true patriotism to create the world
that conscious, heartful people want.
"What is notable about their agenda is that it flies in the face of all of the
requirements for peace, global democracy, economic equity and justice,
ecological and environmental protection, and global stability. It represents the
choice of an overpowerful country's elite, determined to consolidate their
economic and political advantage in the short run, at whatever cost to global
society."
Coup d'etat president George W. Bush has
designated three poor and unconnected states as an "axis of evil," reflecting
this great moralist's sensitivity to good and evil. He has been subjected to a
certain amount of criticism for this strong language even in the mainstream
press, but nobody there has suggested that, as so common in this post-Orwellian
world, such language might better fit its author and his
associates.
There IS a political axis of evil running strong in the United States
that underpins the Bush regime, which includes the oil industry,
military-industrial complex (MIC), other transnationals, and the Christian
Right, all important contributors to the Bush electoral triumph, and each of
which has high level representation in the administration including, besides
Bush himself, Cheney, Rumsfeld, O'Neill and Ashcroft.
This REAL axis of
evil is using 9/11 and the "war on terrorism" to carry out its foreign and
domestic agenda on a truly impressive scale, and so far without much impediment
at home or abroad.
What is notable about their agenda is that it
flies in the face of all of the requirements for peace, global democracy,
economic equity and justice, ecological and environmental protection, and global
stability. It represents the choice of an overpowerful country's elite,
determined to consolidate their economic and political advantage in the short
run, at whatever cost to global society.
They are accelerating all the
ugly trends of militarization and globalization that have led to increasing
violence, income polarization, and the vigorous protests against the World Trade
Organization, IMF and World Bank.
Consider the
following:
1. New arms race:
Even before 9/11 the Bush government
was pushing for a larger arms budget and that gigantic boondoggle and offensive
military threat, the National Missile Defense.
With 9/11 and the collapse
of the Democrats, they are allocating many billions to anything the MIC wants,
and with their more violent behavior and threats abroad, other countries will
have to follow. This takes enormous resources from the civil society, and will
exacerbate conflict based on cutbacks and pain for ordinary citizens. The same
will be true across the globe.
Thus, the polarization of income effects
of corporate globalization will be increased by this diversion of resources to
weapons. As Jim Lobe notes, "Whatever hopes existed in the late 1990s
for a new era of global cooperation in combating poverty, disease, and threats
to the environment seem to have evaporated" (Dawn [Pakistan], Jan. 23,
2002).
The complete irrationality and irresponsibility of this arms
budget surge is reflected in the fact that almost none of it has to do with any
threat from Bin Laden and his forces. Weapons designed to combat Soviet tanks
are going forward, as well as advanced new aircraft and a missile defense system
that are hardly answering Bin Laden, but represent instead MIC boondoggles and a
rush for complete global "full spectrum" military hegemony.
2. The new
violence:
The Washington Axis has found that war and wrapping themselves
in the flag is just what was needed to divert the public from bread and butter
issues, inducing the public to revel instead in the game of war, rooting for our
side while we beat up yet another small adversary, with perhaps others to
follow.
As the great political economist Thorstein Veblen wrote with
irony almost a century ago, "sensational appeals to patriotic pride and
animosity made by victories and defeats...[helps] direct the popular interest to
other, nobler, institutionally less hazardous matters than the unequal
distribution of wealth or of creature comforts. Warlike and patriotic
preoccupations fortify the barbarian virtues of subordination and prescriptive
authority...Such is the promise held out by a strenuous national policy" (Theory
of Business Enterprise [1904]).
The Bush team is threatening to beat up
anybody who "harbors terrorists" or aims to build "weapons of mass destruction"
without our approval. Israel is of course exempt from this rule and has been
given carte blanche to smash the Palestinian civil society.
Bush and his
handlers will decide who are terrorists, who harbors them, and who can build
weapons. It is easily predictable that anybody who resists the corporate
globalization process and tries to pursue an independent development path, will
be found to violate human rights, harbor terrorists, or otherwise threaten U.S.
"national security," with dire consequences.
Because the ongoing
globalization process is increasing inequality and poverty, protests and
insurgencies will continue to arise. The U.S. answer is spelled out clearly in
the "war on terrorism" and simultaneous push for "free trade" and cutbacks in
spending for the civil society at home and abroad.
The Washington Axis is
also pursuing a "war on the poor" that will merge easily into the "war on
terrorism," as the poor will be driven to resist and resistance will be
interpreted as terrorism.
This is in a great U.S. tradition, brought to a
high level in the overthrow of the democratic government of Iran in 1953 and
installation of the Shah, the assassination of Guatemalan democracy by
Eisenhower and Dulles in 1954, the war against Vietnam, and the U.S.-sponsored
displacement of democratic governments by National Security States throughout
South America in the 1960s and 1970s. They were wars allegedly against the
"Soviet Threat," but really against the poor and the populist threat to "free
trade.."
The Bush team obviously threatens even more violence than we
witnessed in that earlier era. The military force they control is relatively
stronger and without the Soviet constraint. With the help of the more
centralized and commercialized media they have worked the populace into a state
of war-game fervor.
They have brought back into the government some of
the most fervent supporters of terrorism and death squads from the Reagan years
in Otto Reich, Richard Perle, Paul Wolfowitz, John Negroponte, Elliott Abrams,
and Lino Guterriez; men who can now work in a more killer- friendly
environment.
3. Escalated support for authoritarian regimes.
The
United States actively helped bring to power and supported large numbers of
murderous regimes in the years 1945-1990, on the excuse of the Soviet Threat,
but really because those regimes were suitably subservient to U.S. interests and
willingly provided that crucial "favorable climate of investment" (especially,
union-busting). With the Soviet Threat gone, for a while there was a problem
finding rationalizations for the long-standing and structurally-rooted
anti-populist and anti-democratic bias, but now we have the "war on terrorism,"
which will do quite nicely.
The Washington Axis has already leapt to the
support of the military dictator of Pakistan, the ex-Stalinist boss of
Uzbekistan, and it is clear that willingness to serve the "war on terrorism"
will override any nasty political leadership qualities.
At the same time,
as with Sharon in his escalated crackdown on the Palestinians and Putin in
Chechnya, cooperation with the war will mean support for internal violence
against dissidents and minorities, forms of state terrorism that will readily be
interpreted as part of the "war on terrorism." Just as militarization and war do
not conduce to democracy, the effects of mobilization of countries to support
the Washington Axis of Evil's war will damage democracy globally.
4.
Destabilization effects.
Corporate globalization has had a major
destabilizing effect in the global economy, causing increased unemployment,
civilian budget cuts, large-scale internal and external migrations, and
environmental destruction. The more aggressive penetration of oil interests, in
collusion with local governments in Nigeria, Colombia, and now Central Asia, and
the new war on terrorism, should intensify destabilization trends.
5. The
fight against democracy at home.
At every level the Bush team has
fought against the basics of democracy and attempted to concentrate
unaccountable governmental authority in its own hands. Militarization
itself is anti-democratic, but the team has attempted to loosen constraints on
the CIA and police, reduce public access to every kind of information, and
constrain free speech.
They have put in place a secret government and are
moving the country toward a more openly authoritarian government, and, if they
can keep it going, their planned open-ended war on terrorism should serve this
end well.
6. The Bush "vision" versus the "End of History."
This
process does not comport well with Francis Fukayama's vision of the new
peaceful, democratic order that would follow the death of the Soviet Union and
triumph of capitalism.
Fukayama missed the boat on three counts. He
failed to see that the end of the Soviet Union and termination of a socialist
threat would also end the need to accommodate labor with social welfare
concessions--in other words, that there could be a return to a pure capitalism
such as Karl Marx described in the first volume of Capital.
Second, he
failed to see that corporate globalization and greater capital mobility would
make for a global "reserve army of labor" and weaken labor's bargaining power
and political position.
Finally, he failed to recognize that without the
Soviet Union's "containment" the United States would be freer to use force in
serving its transnationals, forcing Third World countries to join the "free
trade" nexus, and preventing them from serving the needs of their citizens (as
opposed to the needs of the transnational corporate community).
As this
entire process will involve further polarization and immiseration of large
numbers, insurgencies are inevitable, justifying more militarization and an
escalated war on "terrorism" in a vicious cycle.
What can be more
frightening and dangerous to the world than facing the Washington Axis of Evil
as the overwhelmingly dominant holder of "weapons of mass destruction," which it
is seeking to improve and make more usable, with the elite's longstanding
arrogance and self-righteousness at an all-time high, and with no countervailing
force in sight? Bin Laden's threat is nothing by
comparison.
What is more, the Bin Laden threat flows from U.S.
actions, which played a crucial role in building up the Al-Qaeda network, and
policies which have made a hell of the Middle East and polarized incomes and
wealth across the globe. The cycle of violence will only be broken if
the Washington Axis of Evil is defeated, removed from office, and replaced by a
regime that aims to serve a broader constituency than oil, the MIC, the other
transnationals, and the Christian Right.
[This piece
originally appeared on Zmag.org and was sent to us by Wade
Frazier, in our Joe Simonetta
conversation: "...the
latest from one of the greatest
dissident Scholars America has produced, Ed Herman. He'll always
be Uncle Ed to me. He and Chomsky have been my two biggest scholarly
influences on the American media and
politics."]
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