The Iraq War is a Huge Success
The Economics of Creative Destruction
By Aseem Shrivastava
“If he that shared the danger enjoyed the profit, and, after
bleeding in the battle, grew rich by the victory, he might show his
gains without envy. But, at the conclusion of a ten years' war, how
are we recompensed for the death of multitudes, and the expense of
millions, but by contemplating the sudden glories of paymasters and
agents, contractors and commissaries, whose equipages shine like
meteors, and whose palaces rise like exhalations!
“These are the men who, without virtue, labour, or hazard, are
growing rich, as their country is impoverished; they rejoice, when
obstinacy or ambition adds another year to slaughter and
devastation; and laugh, from their desks, at bravery and science,
while they are adding figure to figure, and cipher to cipher, hoping
for a new contract from a new armament, and computing the profits of
a siege or tempest.” Samuel Johnson
07/29/06 "Information
Clearing House" -- - The secret of capitalist
success, the great economist Joseph Schumpeter famously argued, is
“creative destruction”. The dynamics of capitalist competition
generate technological innovations at a rapid clip, each superior
method causing the obsolescence of prevailing techniques, old
machines giving way to new in a ceaseless cycle of growth and
prosperity.
Imperialistic wars, Schumpeter believed, were signs of atavism,
harking back to humanity’s more anachronistic, primitive impulses.
However, he failed to see that such wars brought forth another form
of creative destruction which capitalism finds most handy in its
onward march.
The reigning view among most critics of the war on Iraq is that it
has been a fiasco. No weapons of mass destruction were found, nor
any link with the terrorists who plotted 9 -- 11. Most importantly,
more than 3 years after Bush declared the end of the war, the
insurgency in Iraq is stronger than ever. Undeclared civil war is
threatening to break up the country. Hundreds of thousands of
innocents may have been murdered by the American invasion, in
addition to the deaths of over 2500 US soldiers, and the end is not
in sight. So, it has become a commonplace to suggest that the whole
enterprise has been a disaster from all possible points of view.
This is a fundamentally mistaken view, a victim of the red herrings
thrown at the public by Washington warlords and their ideologues.
Is there reason to believe that the war, far from being a disaster,
has actually proceeded quite well from Washington’s point of view?
That the view that the war has been a fiasco is merely a convenient
smokescreen of innocence helpful to keep in check public perceptions
of the monstrous crimes of leaders in Washington and London?
First, and easily forgotten, the obvious success of the Iraq
adventure has been to get rid of that rotten dictator Saddam
Hussein. Democracy has dawned on an Islamic land. Thanks to American
blessings, people can now elect their own representatives to govern
them, even if they get their heads blown off every now and then when
they step on to the streets.
Looking beyond that, however, there are some sobering facts. Let’s
begin with the lessons history teaches. The dominant view is that
the Vietnam War was lost by the US. It was driven out of Vietnam.
58,000 Americans died in the war, apart from the millions of Indo --
Chinese. All this may be true. However, if you look at it from the
perspective of American corporate elites, rather than from the
perspective of the majority of Americans, Washington succeeded in
its primary goal, which was to prevent an alternative model of
independent Third World development (something like what Cuba has
tried and Venezuela is trying these days) from taking root. Vietnam
was not allowed to set an example which might have generated a
domino effect across the developing world, much to the loss of the
United States, which would have become a less indispensable nation.
True to American plans, Vietnam is an open -- market economy today,
dependent on a globalized economy led by the US.
Moreover, the military spending on the Vietnam War consolidated the
policy framework of Military Keynesianism which had been learnt to
be of great economic use since the days of World War II. Key to this
approach is the enrichment of weapons manufacturers and
reconstruction industries who have an assured market. The military
purchases are deficit -- financed by the Federal government at the
cost of the tax -- paying public. Reconstruction costs are levied on
the tax -- paying public of the destroyed nation. Weapons dealers
like Lockheed -- Martin and United Technologies got handsome
contracts from the Pentagon. Companies like Kellogg, Brown and Root
and The Louis Berger Group (both invited to bid for reconstruction
contracts in Iraq) got plenty of business when they were asked to
build harbors, roads, bridges, airports and military bases in the
period of post -- war reconstruction in Vietnam.
The hidden agenda of the US government in Iraq has been three --
fold. Firstly, to take control of the world’s second largest oil
reserves, thereby seizing one of the key oil spigots of competitors
like Japan, China and the EU. Secondly, to prevent the dollar --
based world oil market from transacting in Euros, something Iran,
Iraq and Venezuela were attempting since 2002, when the Euro was
launched. Thirdly, the establishment of permanent US military bases
in the strategic heart of the world. (The US has built the world’s
largest embassy – employing 5000 people – in Baghdad).
In all three respects, the war has been a resounding success. US oil
companies have taken charge of Iraqi oil. In the future it is
through them that Japan, China, EU and any other competitors will
have to buy oil from the region, something that gives the US
formidable leverage. The oil market continues to transact in
dollars, fragile as it is as a global reserve currency. Iranian
experiments with the Euro Bourse have not taken off.
The war has also achieved some other remarkable, unmentionable goals
for Washington. Firstly, it has managed to demonstrate the
“credibility” of its military intentions of gaining full -- spectrum
dominance in the post Cold War world. It has been, as one journalist
puts it, a successful “global experiment in behaviour modification.”
Secondly, the war industry has made huge profits as military orders
have grown, Bush repeatedly asking Congress for more, almost $ 0.3
trillion having already been spent on the war. Nobel -- Laureate
Joseph Stiglitz estimates the war to cost (and the weapons
manufacturers to get) between $1 and 2 trillion over the next
several years. Thirdly, firms from the reconstruction industry have
been having a field day, the costs of reconstruction (which are
effectively benefits for the US corporations, at the expense of the
Iraqi public: “we destroy, we rebuild, you pay”) are estimated at
somewhere between $10 and $60 billion over the next several years,
most of it to be levied – with typically imperial justice – on the
tax -- paying public of Iraq, the punishment for enduring a CIA --
installed dictator for decades.
The Economist had described Iraq sometime back as “a capitalist
dream.” Senator John McCain had called it “a huge pot of honey
that’s attracting a lot of flies.” The Halliburtons and the Bechtels,
as much as venture capitalists have been dipping greedily into the
pot for sometime already, their access cleared and guarded by the US
military. After a long period of economic seclusion under Saddam
Hussein, followed by the decade of UN sanctions that strangled the
country, the resources, the markets and the labor of the country
have been put at the disposal of “the international community” (that
is, Americans, occasionally including the British).
Among those who know, the accepted view is that Iraq has suffered
two assaults, the military and the corporate , both filling the
coffers of Washington’s patron corporations at the expense of epic
human misery. Reviewing the enormous corruption and the no -- bid
contracts handed out to companies like Halliburton and Bechtel, The
Boston Globe recently suggested that the American involvement
“amounts to two invasions. First the bombs. Then the banks. This is
robbery, not reconstruction.” To add insult to these injuries, all
US oil corporations operating in Iraq have been granted total legal
immunity from prosecution for any crime -- involving labor, human
rights or environmental law or any other violations -- under an
Executive Order issued by the President a few years ago. For all
that the “international community” cares about human rights and the
environment, Exxon -- Mobil or Chevron -- Texaco could use slave
labor or spill their oil off the coast of Basra without having to
worry about any sort of prosecution whatsoever. Rule of law in the
new, democratic Iraq.
In yet another, sinister, sense the war has been a remarkable
success from Washington’s angle. It may succeed in dividing forever
the three main communities in Iraq, Shia, Sunni and Kurds, enough to
sustain the justification for a permanent US military presence in
the country. Keeping a devastated nation on the brink of chaos may
be part of a more or less conscious (if obviously secret) strategy
to secure the long -- term benefits of military and economic
occupation. This is an old -- divide and rule -- tactic of colonial
powers, aimed at making the country ungovernable from within. The
Americans have learnt it from the British. The logic was often given
in the case of Hindus and Muslims in India by the British in the
early part of the last century, Churchill always eager to point out
that Indians will not be able to govern themselves in the absence of
the British. All imperial powers are devilishly driven to create
vacuums which they alone can occupy.
Other little successes have been notched up. Security corporations
-- with their hired mercenaries from all over the world -- have been
used on an unprecedented scale. Poor young men from regions as far
afield as the Far East, South Asia and Central America have been
tempted with dollars and possibilities of US citizenship to fight
white men’s wars. The racism and the cowardice are old. The
corporate technique is new. Global security is one of the fastest
growing industries today. It is already $100 billion in size and
growing at 7 -- 8% annually, expected to double in size by 2010.
From Washington’s point of view, perhaps the most significant
success of the Iraq venture is that the experiment with the
two-pronged --destroy and reconstruct -- approach to enriching US
corporations has worked with even greater success than in Vietnam.
Now this cash -- generating capitalist module can be deployed with
as much profit elsewhere. Iran? Venezuela? The more oil the country
has, the better from the US point of view.
Neither the loss of lives, American or otherwise, nor the
unprecedented fiscal crisis in Washington is going to stop the
empire from enlarging the scope and scale of its global operations.
No imperial overstretch yet, it seems. The US Federal Reserve can
be, literally, banked on to print the necessary currency to finance
any number of wars – and get the American and world public to pay
for them. A great, but little -- known secret about the Federal
Reserve, America’s central bank, is that it is ultimately owned and
controlled by shareholders belonging to large, private commercial
banks (several of them non -- American) like Lehmann Brothers and
Rothschilds. So while private bankers make huge amounts of money by
merely printing and lending it to the government, the ignorant tax
-- paying public must keep footing the bill of war expenses: a long
-- standing, built -- in mechanism for organized graft.
Loss of American lives can be minimized – and the dreaded Vietnam
syndrome be avoided – by using the hired guns of security
corporations from other countries, whose deaths do not even have to
be reported. Money for more wars can be borrowed from East Asians
and others too, who don’t look like they are going to stop their
purchase of US Treasury bonds anytime soon.
The day is not far when, as the American historian Theodore Roszak
has recently suggested:
“The American imperium becomes a private, for profit, off -- the --
shelf, regime -- change industry. There will be firms standing ready
to fight the wars, organize the occupation that follows, rebuild the
ruined infrastructure that results from the wars, recruit new
governments, and manage the post -- war economy. There may even be
private educational services hired to train the conquered population
in the rudiments of high -- consumption democracy, and hoards the
evangelical true believers eager to save heathen souls from
damnation.”
Aseem Shrivastava can be reached at
aseem62@yahoo.com
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