Why it's over for America
An inability to protect its citizens. The belief that it is
above the law. A lack of democracy. Three defining
characteristics of the 'failed state'. And that, says Noam
Chomsky, is exactly what the US is becoming. In an exclusive
extract from his devastating new book, America's leading thinker
explains how his country lost its way
By Noam Chomsky
05/30/06 "The
Independent" -- --
The selection of issues that should rank high on the agenda of
concern for human welfare and rights is, naturally, a subjective
matter. But there are a few choices that seem unavoidable,
because they bear so directly on the prospects for decent
survival. Among them are at least these three: nuclear war,
environmental disaster, and the fact that the government of the
world's leading power is acting in ways that increase the
likelihood of these catastrophes. It is important to stress the
government, because the population, not surprisingly, does not
agree.
That brings up a fourth issue that should deeply concern
Americans, and the world: the sharp divide between public
opinion and public policy, one of the reasons for the fear,
which cannot casually be put aside, that, as Gar Alperowitz puts
it in America Beyond Capitalism, "the American 'system' as a
whole is in real trouble - that it is heading in a direction
that spells the end of its historic values [of] equality,
liberty, and meaningful democracy".
The "system" is coming to have some of the features of failed
states, to adopt a currently fashionable notion that is
conventionally applied to states regarded as potential threats
to our security (like Iraq) or as needing our intervention to
rescue the population from severe internal threats (like Haiti).
Though the concept is recognised to be, according to the journal
Foreign Affairs, "frustratingly imprecise", some of the primary
characteristics of failed states can be identified. One is their
inability or unwillingness to protect their citizens from
violence and perhaps even destruction. Another is their tendency
to regard themselves as beyond the reach of domestic or
international law, and hence free to carry out aggression and
violence. And if they have democratic forms, they suffer from a
serious "democratic deficit" that deprives their formal
democratic institutions of real substance.
Among the hardest tasks that anyone can undertake, and one of
the most important, is to look honestly in the mirror. If we
allow ourselves to do so, we should have little difficulty in
finding the characteristics of "failed states" right at home.
No one familiar with history should be surprised that the
growing democratic deficit in the United States is accompanied
by declaration of messianic missions to bring democracy to a
suffering world. Declarations of noble intent by systems of
power are rarely complete fabrication, and the same is true in
this case. Under some conditions, forms of democracy are indeed
acceptable. Abroad, as the leading scholar-advocate of
"democracy promotion" concludes, we find a "strong line of
continuity": democracy is acceptable if and only if it is
consistent with strategic and economic interests (Thomas
Carothers). In modified form, the doctrine holds at home as
well.
The basic dilemma facing policymakers is sometimes candidly
recognised at the dovish liberal extreme of the spectrum, for
example, by Robert Pastor, President Carter's national security
adviser for Latin America. He explained why the administration
had to support the murderous and corrupt Somoza regime in
Nicaragua, and, when that proved impossible, to try at least to
maintain the US-trained National Guard even as it was massacring
the population "with a brutality a nation usually reserves for
its enemy", killing some 40,000 people. The reason was the
familiar one: "The United States did not want to control
Nicaragua or the other nations of the region, but it also did
not want developments to get out of control. It wanted
Nicaraguans to act independently, except when doing so would
affect US interests adversely."
Similar dilemmas faced Bush administration planners after their
invasion of Iraq. They want Iraqis "to act independently, except
when doing so would affect US interests adversely". Iraq must
therefore be sovereign and democratic, but within limits. It
must somehow be constructed as an obedient client state, much in
the manner of the traditional order in Central America. At a
general level, the pattern is familiar, reaching to the opposite
extreme of institutional structures. The Kremlin was able to
maintain satellites that were run by domestic political and
military forces, with the iron fist poised. Germany was able to
do much the same in occupied Europe even while it was at war, as
did fascist Japan in Man-churia (its Manchukuo). Fascist Italy
achieved similar results in North Africa while carrying out
virtual genocide that in no way harmed its favourable image in
the West and possibly inspired Hitler. Traditional imperial and
neocolonial systems illustrate many variations on similar
themes.
To achieve the traditional goals in Iraq has proven to be
surprisingly difficult, despite unusually favourable
circumstances. The dilemma of combining a measure of
independence with firm control arose in a stark form not long
after the invasion, as mass non-violent resistance compelled the
invaders to accept far more Iraqi initiative than they had
anticipated. The outcome even evoked the nightmarish prospect of
a more or less democratic and sovereign Iraq taking its place in
a loose Shiite alliance comprising Iran, Shiite Iraq, and
possibly the nearby Shiite-dominated regions of Saudi Arabia,
controlling most of the world's oil and independent of
Washington.
The situation could get worse. Iran might give up on hopes that
Europe could become independent of the United States, and turn
eastward. Highly relevant background is discussed by Selig
Harrison, a leading specialist on these topics. "The nuclear
negotiations between Iran and the European Union were based on a
bargain that the EU, held back by the US, has failed to honour,"
Harrison observes.
"The bargain was that Iran would suspend uranium enrichment, and
the EU would undertake security guarantees. The language of the
joint declaration was "unambiguous. 'A mutually acceptable
agreement,' it said, would not only provide 'objective
guarantees' that Iran's nuclear programme is 'exclusively for
peaceful purposes' but would 'equally provide firm commitments
on security issues.'"
The phrase "security issues" is a thinly veiled reference to the
threats by the United States and Israel to bomb Iran, and
preparations to do so. The model regularly adduced is Israel's
bombing of Iraq's Osirak reactor in 1981, which appears to have
initiated Saddam's nuclear weapons programs, another
demonstration that violence tends to elicit violence. Any
attempt to execute similar plans against Iran could lead to
immediate violence, as is surely understood in Washington.
During a visit to Tehran, the influential Shiite cleric Muqtada
al-Sadr warned that his militia would defend Iran in the case of
any attack, "one of the strongest signs yet", the Washington
Post reported, "that Iraq could become a battleground in any
Western conflict with Iran, raising the spectre of Iraqi Shiite
militias - or perhaps even the US-trained Shiite-dominated
military - taking on American troops here in sympathy with
Iran." The Sadrist bloc, which registered substantial gains in
the December 2005 elections, may soon become the most powerful
single political force in Iraq. It is consciously pursuing the
model of other successful Islamist groups, such as Hamas in
Palestine, combining strong resistance to military occupation
with grassroots social organising and service to the poor.
Washington's unwillingness to allow regional security issues to
be considered is nothing new. It has also arisen repeatedly in
the confrontation with Iraq. In the background is the matter of
Israeli nuclear weapons, a topic that Washington bars from
international consideration. Beyond that lurks what Harrison
rightly describes as "the central problem facing the global
non-proliferation regime": the failure of the nuclear states to
live up to their nuclear Non Proliferation Treaty (NPT)
obligation "to phase out their own nuclear weapons" - and, in
Washington's case, formal rejection of the obligation.
Unlike Europe, China refuses to be intimidated by Washington, a
primary reason for the growing fear of China on the part of US
planners. Much of Iran's oil already goes to China, and China is
providing Iran with weapons, presumably considered a deterrent
to US threats. Still more uncomfortable for Washington is the
fact that, according to the Financial Times, "the Sino-Saudi
relationship has developed dramatically", including Chinese
military aid to Saudi Arabia and gas exploration rights for
China. By 2005, Saudi Arabia provided about 17 per cent of
China's oil imports. Chinese and Saudi oil companies have signed
deals for drilling and construction of a huge refinery (with
Exxon Mobil as a partner). A January 2006 visit by Saudi king
Abdullah to Beijing was expected to lead to a Sino-Saudi
memorandum of understanding calling for "increased cooperation
and investment between the two countries in oil, natural gas,
and minerals".
Indian analyst Aijaz Ahmad observes that Iran could "emerge as
the virtual linchpin in the making, over the next decade or so,
of what China and Russia have come to regard as an absolutely
indispensable Asian Energy Security Grid, for breaking Western
control of the world's energy supplies and securing the great
industrial revolution of Asia". South Korea and southeast Asian
countries are likely to join, possibly Japan as well. A crucial
question is how India will react. It rejected US pressures to
withdraw from an oil pipeline deal with Iran. On the other hand,
India joined the United States and the EU in voting for an
anti-Iranian resolution at the IAEA, joining also in their
hypocrisy, since India rejects the NPT regime to which Iran, so
far, appears to be largely conforming. Ahmad reports that India
may have secretly reversed its stand under Iranian threats to
terminate a $20bn gas deal. Washington later warned India that
its "nuclear deal with the US could be ditched" if India did not
go along with US demands, eliciting a sharp rejoinder from the
Indian foreign ministry and an evasive tempering of the warning
by the US embassy.
The prospect that Europe and Asia might move toward greater
independence has seriously troubled US planners since World War
II, and concerns have significantly increased as the tripolar
order has continued to evolve, along with new south-south
interactions and rapidly growing EU engagement with China.
US intelligence has projected that the United States, while
controlling Middle East oil for the traditional reasons, will
itself rely mainly on more stable Atlantic Basin resources (West
Africa, western hemisphere). Control of Middle East oil is now
far from a sure thing, and these expectations are also
threatened by developments in the western hemisphere,
accelerated by Bush administration policies that have left the
United States remarkably isolated in the global arena. The Bush
administration has even succeeded in alienating Canada, an
impressive feat.
Canada's minister of natural resources said that within a few
years one quarter of the oil that Canada now sends to the United
States may go to China instead. In a further blow to
Washington's energy policies, the leading oil exporter in the
hemisphere, Venezuela, has forged probably the closest relations
with China of any Latin American country, and is planning to
sell increasing amounts of oil to China as part of its effort to
reduce dependence on the openly hostile US government. Latin
America as a whole is increasing trade and other relations with
China, with some setbacks, but likely expansion, in particular
for raw materials exporters like Brazil and Chile.
Meanwhile, Cuba-Venezuela relations are becoming very close,
each relying on its comparative advantage. Venezuela is
providing low-cost oil while in return Cuba organises literacy
and health programs, sending thousands of highly skilled
professionals, teachers, and doctors, who work in the poorest
and most neglected areas, as they do elsewhere in the Third
World. Cuba-Venezuela projects are extending to the Caribbean
countries, where Cuban doctors are providing healthcare to
thousands of people with Venezuelan funding. Operation Miracle,
as it is called, is described by Jamaica's ambassador to Cuba as
"an example of integration and south-south cooperation", and is
generating great enthusiasm among the poor majority. Cuban
medical assistance is also being welcomed elsewhere. One of the
most horrendous tragedies of recent years was the October 2005
earthquake in Pakistan. In addition to the huge toll, unknown
numbers of survivors have to face brutal winter weather with
little shelter, food, or medical assistance. One has to turn to
the South Asian press to read that "Cuba has provided the
largest contingent of doctors and paramedics to Pakistan",
paying all the costs (perhaps with Venezuelan funding), and that
President Musharraf expressed his "deep gratitude" for the
"spirit and compassion" of the Cuban medical teams.
Some analysts have suggested that Cuba and Venezuela might even
unite, a step towards further integration of Latin America in a
bloc that is more independent from the United States. Venezuela
has joined Mercosur, the South American customs union, a move
described by Argentine president Nestor Kirchner as "a
milestone" in the development of this trading bloc, and welcomed
as opening "a new chapter in our integration" by Brazilian
president Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva. Independent experts say
that "adding Venezuela to the bloc furthers its geopolitical
vision of eventually spreading Mercosur to the rest of the
region".
At a meeting to mark Venezuela's entry into Mercosur, Venezuelan
president Hugo Chavez said, "We cannot allow this to be purely
an economic project, one for the elites and for the
transnational companies," a not very oblique reference to the
US-sponsored "Free Trade Agreement for the Americas", which has
aroused strong public opposition. Venezuela also supplied
Argentina with fuel oil to help stave off an energy crisis, and
bought almost a third of Argentine debt issued in 2005, one
element of a region-wide effort to free the countries from the
control of the US-dominated IMF after two decades of disastrous
effects of conformity to its rules. The IMF has "acted towards
our country as a promoter and a vehicle of policies that caused
poverty and pain among the Argentine people", President Kirchner
said in announcing his decision to pay almost $1 trillion to rid
itself of the IMF forever. Radically violating IMF rules,
Argentina enjoyed a substantial recovery from the disaster left
by IMF policies.
Steps toward independent regional integration advanced further
with the election of Evo Morales in Bolivia in December 2005,
the first president from the indigenous majority. Morales moved
quickly to reach energy accords with Venezuela.
Though Central America was largely disciplined by Reaganite
violence and terror, the rest of the hemisphere is falling out
of control, particularly from Venezuela to Argentina, which was
the poster child of the IMF and the Treasury Department until
its economy collapsed under the policies they imposed. Much of
the region has left-centre governments. The indigenous
populations have become much more active and influential,
particularly in Bolivia and Ecuador, both major energy
producers, where they either want oil and gas to be domestically
controlled or, in some cases, oppose production altogether. Many
indigenous people apparently do not see any reason why their
lives, societies, and cultures should be disrupted or destroyed
so that New Yorkers can sit in SUVs in traffic gridlock. Some
are even calling for an "Indian nation" in South America.
Meanwhile the economic integration that is under way is
reversing patterns that trace back to the Spanish conquests,
with Latin American elites and economies linked to the imperial
powers but not to one another. Along with growing south-south
interaction on a broader scale, these developments are strongly
influenced by popular organisations that are coming together in
the unprecedented international global justice movements,
ludicrously called "anti-globalisation" because they favour
globalisation that privileges the interests of people, not
investors and financial institutions. For many reasons, the
system of US global dominance is fragile, even apart from the
damage inflicted by Bush planners.
One consequence is that the Bush administration's pursuit of the
traditional policies of deterring democracy faces new obstacles.
It is no longer as easy as before to resort to military coups
and international terrorism to overthrow democratically elected
governments, as Bush planners learnt ruefully in 2002 in
Venezuela. The "strong line of continuity" must be pursued in
other ways, for the most part. In Iraq, as we have seen, mass
nonviolent resistance compelled Washington and London to permit
the elections they had sought to evade. The subsequent effort to
subvert the elections by providing substantial advantages to the
administration's favourite candidate, and expelling the
independent media, also failed. Washington faces further
problems. The Iraqi labor movement is making considerable
progress despite the opposition of the occupation authorities.
The situation is rather like Europe and Japan after World War
II, when a primary goal of the United States and United Kingdom
was to undermine independent labour movements - as at home, for
similar reasons: organised labour contributes in essential ways
to functioning democracy with popular engagement. Many of the
measures adopted at that time - withholding food, supporting
fascist police - are no longer available. Nor is it possible
today to rely on the labour bureaucracy of the American
Institute for Free Labor Development to help undermine unions.
Today, some American unions are supporting Iraqi workers, just
as they do in Colombia, where more union activists are murdered
than anywhere in the world. At least the unions now receive
support from the United Steelworkers of America and others,
while Washington continues to provide enormous funding for the
government, which bears a large part of the responsibility.
The problem of elections arose in Palestine much in the way it
did in Iraq. As already discussed, the Bush administration
refused to permit elections until the death of Yasser Arafat,
aware that the wrong man would win. After his death, the
administration agreed to permit elections, expecting the victory
of its favoured Palestinian Authority candidates. To promote
this outcome, Washington resorted to much the same modes of
subversion as in Iraq, and often before. Washington used the US
Agency for International Development as an "invisible conduit"
in an effort to "increase the popularity of the Palestinian
Authority on the eve of crucial elections in which the governing
party faces a serious challenge from the radical Islamic group
Hamas" (Washington Post), spending almost $2m "on dozens of
quick projects before elections this week to bolster the
governing Fatah faction's image with voters" (New York Times).
In the United States, or any Western country, even a hint of
such foreign interference would destroy a candidate, but deeply
rooted imperial mentality legitimates such routine measures
elsewhere. However, the attempt to subvert the elections again
resoundingly failed.
The US and Israeli governments now have to adjust to dealing
somehow with a radical Islamic party that approaches their
traditional rejectionist stance, though not entirely, at least
if Hamas really does mean to agree to an indefinite truce on the
international border as its leaders state. The US and Israel, in
contrast, insist that Israel must take over substantial parts of
the West Bank (and the forgotten Golan Heights). Hamas's refusal
to accept Israel's "right to exist" mirrors the refusal of
Washington and Jerusalem to accept Palestine's "right to exist"
- a concept unknown in international affairs; Mexico accepts the
existence of the United States but not its abstract "right to
exist" on almost half of Mexico, acquired by conquest. Hamas's
formal commitment to "destroy Israel" places it on a par with
the United States and Israel, which vowed formally that there
could be no "additional Palestinian state" (in addition to
Jordan) until they relaxed their extreme rejectionist stand
partially in the past few years, in the manner already reviewed.
Although Hamas has not said so, it would come as no great
surprise if Hamas were to agree that Jews may remain in
scattered areas in the present Israel, while Palestine
constructs huge settlement and infrastructure projects to take
over the valuable land and resources, effectively breaking
Israel up into unviable cantons, virtually separated from one
another and from some small part of Jerusalem where Jews would
also be allowed to remain. And they might agree to call the
fragments "a state". If such proposals were made, we would -
rightly - regard them as virtually a reversion to Nazism, a fact
that might elicit some thoughts. If such proposals were made,
Hamas's position would be essentially like that of the United
States and Israel for the past five years, after they came to
tolerate some impoverished form of "statehood". It is fair to
describe Hamas as radical, extremist, and violent, and as a
serious threat to peace and a just political settlement. But the
organisation is hardly alone in this stance.
Elsewhere traditional means of undermining democracy have
succeeded. In Haiti, the Bush administration's favourite
"democracy-building group, the International Republican
Institute", worked assiduously to promote the opposition to
President Aristide, helped by the withholding of desperately
needed aid on grounds that were dubious at best. When it seemed
that Aristide would probably win any genuine election,
Washington and the opposition chose to withdraw, a standard
device to discredit elections that are going to come out the
wrong way: Nicaragua in 1984 and Venezuela in December 2005 are
examples that should be familiar. Then followed a military coup,
expulsion of the president, and a reign of terror and violence
vastly exceeding anything under the elected government.
The persistence of the strong line of continuity to the present
again reveals that the United States is very much like other
powerful states. It pursues the strategic and economic interests
of dominant sectors of the domestic population, to the
accompaniment of rhetorical flourishes about its dedication to
the highest values. That is practically a historical universal,
and the reason why sensible people pay scant attention to
declarations of noble intent by leaders, or accolades by their
followers.
One commonly hears that carping critics complain about what is
wrong, but do not present solutions. There is an accurate
translation for that charge: "They present solutions, but I
don't like them." In addition to the proposals that should be
familiar about dealing with the crises that reach to the level
of survival, a few simple suggestions for the United States have
already been mentioned: 1) accept the jurisdiction of the
International Criminal Court and the World Court; 2) sign and
carry forward the Kyoto protocols; 3) let the UN take the lead
in international crises; 4) rely on diplomatic and economic
measures rather than military ones in confronting terror; 5)
keep to the traditional interpretation of the UN Charter; 6)
give up the Security Council veto and have "a decent respect for
the opinion of mankind," as the Declaration of Independence
advises, even if power centres disagree; 7) cut back sharply on
military spending and sharply increase social spending. For
people who believe in democracy, these are very conservative
suggestions: they appear to be the opinions of the majority of
the US population, in most cases the overwhelming majority. They
are in radical opposition to public policy. To be sure, we
cannot be very confident about the state of public opinion on
such matters because of another feature of the democratic
deficit: the topics scarcely enter into public discussion and
the basic facts are little known. In a highly atomised society,
the public is therefore largely deprived of the opportunity to
form considered opinions.
Another conservative suggestion is that facts, logic, and
elementary moral principles should matter. Those who take the
trouble to adhere to that suggestion will soon be led to abandon
a good part of familiar doctrine, though it is surely much
easier to repeat self-serving mantras. Such simple truths carry
us some distance toward developing more specific and detailed
answers. More important, they open the way to implement them,
opportun- ities that are readily within our grasp if we can free
ourselves from the shackles of doctrine and imposed illusion.
Though it is natural for doctrinal systems to seek to induce
pessimism, hopelessness, and despair, reality is different.
There has been substantial progress in the unending quest for
justice and freedom in recent years, leaving a legacy that can
be carried forward from a higher plane than before.
Opportunities for education and organising abound. As in the
past, rights are not likely to be granted by benevolent
authorities, or won by intermittent actions - attending a few
demonstrations or pushing a lever in the personalised
quadrennial extravaganzas that are depicted as "democratic
politics". As always in the past, the tasks require dedicated
day-by-day engagement to create - in part recreate - the basis
for a functioning democratic culture in which the public plays
some role in determining policies, not only in the political
arena, from which it is largely excluded, but also in the
crucial economic arena, from which it is excluded in principle.
There are many ways to promote democracy at home, carrying it to
new dimensions. Opportunities are ample, and failure to grasp
them is likely to have ominous repercussions: for the country,
for the world, and for future generations.
This is an edited extract from
Failed States
by Noam Chomsky
(Hamish Hamilton)
© 2006 Independent News and Media Limited
Click on "comments" below to read or post comments -
Click Here For Comment Policy
Are Comments Offensive? Unsuitable? Email us