The
Imperial System: Hierarchy, Networks and Clients
The Case
of Somalia
By James Petras
Introduction:
02/18/07 "ICH"
-- --
The imperial system is much more complex than what is
commonly referred to as the “US Empire”. The US Empire, with
its vast network of financial investments, military bases,
multi-national corporations and client states, is the single
most important component of the global imperial system (1).
Nevertheless, it is overly simplistic to overlook the
complex hierarchies, networks, follower states and clients
that define the contemporary imperial system (2). To
understand empire and imperialism today requires us to look
at the complex and changing system of imperial
stratification.
Hierarchy of Empire
The
structure of power of the world imperial system can best be
understood through a classification of countries according
to their political, economic, diplomatic and military
organization. The following is a schema of this system:
I. Hierarchy of
Empire (from top to bottom)
A.
Central Imperial States (CIS)
B. Newly Emerging Imperial Powers (NEIP)
C. Semi-autonomous Client Regimes (SACR)
D. Client Collaborator Regimes (CCR)
II. Independent
States:
A.
Revolutionary
Cuba and Venezuela
B. Nationalist
Sudan, Iran, Zimbabwe, North Korea
III. Contested
Terrain and Regimes in Transition
Armed resistance, elected regimes, social movements
At the top of the imperial system are those imperial states
whose power is projected on a world scale, whose ruling
classes dominate investment and financial markets and who
penetrate the economies of the rest of the world. At the
apex of the imperial system stand the US, the European Union
(itself highly stratified) and Japan. Led by the US they
have established networks of ‘follower imperial states’
(largely regional hegemons) and client or vassal states
which frequently act as surrogate military forces. Imperial
states act in concert to break down barriers to penetration
and takeovers, while at the same time, competing to gain
advantages for their own state and multinational interests.
Just below the central imperial states are newly emerging
imperial powers (NEIP), namely China, India, Canada, Russia
and Australia. The NEIP states are subject to imperial
penetration, as well as expanding into neighboring and
overseas underdeveloped states and countries rich in
extractive resources. The NEIP are linked to the central
imperial states (CIS) through joint ventures in their home
states, while they increasingly compete for control over
extractive resources in the underdeveloped countries. They
frequently ‘follow’ in the footsteps of the imperial powers,
and in some cases take advantage of conflicts to better
their own position.
For example China and India’s overseas expansion focuses on
investments in extractive mineral and energy sectors to fuel
domestic industrialization, similar to the earlier
(1880-1950’s) imperial practices of the US and Europe.
Similarly China invests in African countries, which are in
conflict with the US and EU, just as the US developed ties
with anti-colonial regimes (Algeria, Kenya and Francophone
Africa) in conflict with their former European colonial
rulers in the 1950’ and 1960’s.
Further down the hierarchy of the imperial system are the
‘semi-autonomous client regimes’ (SACR). These include
Brazil, South Korea, South Africa, Taiwan, Argentina, Saudi
Arabia, Chile and lately Bolivia. These states have a
substantial national economic base of support, through
public or private ownership of key economic sectors. They
are governed by regimes, which pursue diversified markets,
though highly dependent on exports to the emerging imperial
states. On the other hand these states are highly dependent
on imperial state military protection (Taiwan, South Korea
and Saudi Arabia) and provide regional military bases for
imperial operations. Many are resource-dependent exporters
(Saudi Arabia, Chile, Nigeria and Bolivia) who share
revenues and profits with the multi-nationals of the
imperial states. They include rapidly industrialized
countries (Taiwan and South Korea), as well as relatively
agro-mineral export states (Brazil, Argentina and Chile).
The wealthy oil states have close ties with the financial
ruling classes of the imperial counties and invest heavily
in real estate, financial instruments and Treasury notes
which finance the deficits in the US and England.
On key issues such as imperial wars in the Middle East, the
invasion of Haiti, destabilizing regimes in Africa, support
for global neo-liberal policies and imperial takeovers of
strategic sectors, they collaborate with rulers from the CIS
and the NEIP. Nevertheless, because of powerful elite
interests and in some cases of powerful national social
movements, they come into limited conflicts with the
imperial powers. For example, Brazil, Chile and Argentina
disagree with the US efforts to undermine the nationalist
Venezuelan government. They have lucrative trade, energy and
investment relations with Venezuela. In addition they do not
wish to legitimize military coups, which might threaten
their own rule and legitimacy in the eyes of an electorate
partial to President Chavez. While structurally deeply
integrated into the imperial system, the SACR regimes retain
a degree of autonomy in formulating foreign and domestic
policy, which may even conflict or compete with imperial
interests.
Despite their ‘relative autonomy’, the regimes also provide
military and political mercenaries to serve the imperialist
countries. This is best illustrated in the case of Haiti.
Subsequent to the US invasion and overthrow of the elected
Aristide Government in 2004, the US succeeded in securing an
occupation force from its outright client and
‘semi-autonomous’ client regimes. President Lula of Brazil
sent a major contingent. A Brazilian General headed the
entire mercenary military force. Chile’s Gabriel Valdez
headed the United Nations occupation administration as the
senior official overseeing the bloody repression of Haitian
resistance movements. Other ‘semi-autonomous’ clients, such
as Uruguay and Bolivia, added military contingents along
with soldiers from client regimes such as Panama, Paraguay,
Colombia and Peru. President Evo Morales justified Bolivia’s
continued military collaboration with the US in Haiti under
his presidency by citing its ‘peacekeeping role’, knowing
full well that between December 2006 and February 2007
scores of Haitian poor were slaughtered during a full-scale
UN invasion of Haiti’s poorest and most densely populated
slums.
The key theoretical point is that given Washington current
state of being tied down in two wars in the Middle East and
West Asia, it depends on its clients to police and repress
anti-imperialist movements elsewhere. Somalia, as in Haiti,
was invaded by mercenaries by Ethiopia, trained, financed,
armed and directed by US military advisers. Subsequently,
during the occupation, Washington succeeded in securing its
African clients (via the so-called Organization of African
Unity according to the White House’s stooge, Ugandan Army
spokesman Captain Paddy Ankunda) to send a mercenary
occupation army to prop up its unpopular client Somali
warlord ruler. Despite opposition from its Parliament,
Uganda is sending 1500 mercenaries along with contingents
from Nigeria, Burundi, Ghana and Malawi.
At the bottom of the imperial hierarchy are the client
collaborator regimes (CCR). These include Egypt, Jordan, the
Gulf States, Central American and Caribbean Island states,
the Axis of Sub-Saharan States (ASS) (namely Kenya, Uganda,
Ethiopia, Rwanda and Ghana), Colombia, Peru, Paraguay,
Mexico, Eastern European states (in and out of the European
Union), former states of the USSR (Georgia, Ukraine,
Kazakhstan, Latvia, etc), Philippines, Indonesia, North
Africa and Pakistan. These countries are governed by
authoritarian political elites dependent on the imperial or
NEIP states for arms, financing and political support. They
provide vast opportunities for exploitation and export of
raw materials. Unlike the SACR, exports from client regimes
have little value added, as industrial processing of raw
materials takes place in the imperial countries,
particularly in the NEIP. Predator, rentier, comprador and
kleptocratic elites who lack any entrepreneurial vocation
rule the CCR. They frequently provide mercenary soldiers to
service imperial countries intervening, conquering,
occupying and imposing client regimes in imperial targeted
countries. The client regimes thus are subordinate
collaborators of the imperial powers in the plunder of
wealth, the exploitation of billions of workers and the
displacement of peasants and destruction of the environment.
The structure of the imperial system is based on the power
of ruling classes to exercise and project state and market
power, retain control of exploitative class relations at
home and abroad and to organize mercenary armies from among
its client states. Led and directed by imperial officials,
mercenary armies collaborate in destroying autonomous
popular, nationalist movements and independent states.
Client regimes form a crucial link in sustaining the
imperial powers. They complement imperial occupation forces,
facilitating the extraction of raw materials. Without the
‘mercenaries of color’ the imperial powers would have to
extend and over-stretch their own military forces, provoking
high levels of internal opposition, and heightening overseas
resistance to overt wars of re-colonization. Moreover client
mercenaries are less costly in terms of financing and reduce
the loss of imperial soldiers. There are numerous
euphemistic terms used to describe these client mercenary
forces: United Nations, Organization of American States and
Organization of African Unity ‘peacekeepers’, the ‘Coalition
of the Willing’ among others. In many cases a few white
imperial senior officers command the lower officers and
soldiers of color of the client mercenary armies.
Independent States and
Movements
The
imperial system while it straddles the globe and penetrates
deeply into societies, economies and states is neither
omnipotent nor omniscient. Challenges to the imperial system
come from two sources: relatively independent states and
powerful social and political movements.
The ‘independent’ states are largely regimes, which are in
opposition to and targeted by the imperial states. They
include Venezuela, Cuba, Iran, North Korea, Sudan and
Zimbabwe. What defines these regimes as ‘independent’ is
their willingness to reject the policies of the imperial
powers, particularly imperial military interventions. They
also reject imperialist demands for unconditional access to
markets, resources and military bases.
These regimes differ widely in terms of social policy,
degree of popular support, secular-religious identities,
economic development and consistency in opposing imperialist
aggression. All face immediate military threats and /or
destabilization programs, designed to replace the
independent governments with client regimes.
Contested Terrain
The
imperial hierarchy and networks are based on class and
national relations of power. This means that the maintenance
of the entire system is based on the ruling classes
dominating the underlying population – a very problematical
situation given the unequal distribution of costs and
benefits between the rulers and the ruled. Today massive
armed resistance and social movements in numerous countries
challenge the imperial system.
Contested terrain includes: Iraq, Afghanistan, Colombia,
Somalia, Palestine, Sudan and Lebanon where armed resistance
is intent on defeating imperial clients. Sites of mass
confrontations include Bolivia, Ecuador, Venezuela and Iran
where the imperial powers are intent on overthrowing newly
elected independent regimes. Large scale social movements
organized to combat client regimes and the imperial patrons
have recently emerged in Mexico, Palestine, Lebanon, China,
Ecuador and elsewhere. Inside the imperial states there is
mass opposition to particular imperial wars and policies,
but only small and weak anti-imperialist movements.
The Anomaly: Israel in
the Imperial System
Israel is clearly a colonialist power, with the fourth or
fifth biggest nuclear arsenal and the second biggest arms
exporter in the world. Its population size, territorial
spread and economy however are puny in comparison with the
imperial and newly emerging imperial powers. Despite these
limitations Israel exercises supreme power in influencing
the direction of United States war policy in the Middle East
via a powerful Zionist political apparatus, which permeates
the State, the mass media, elite economic sectors and civil
society (3a). Through Israel’s direct political influence in
making US foreign policy, as well as through its overseas
military collaboration with dictatorial imperial client
regimes, Israel can be considered part of the imperial power
configuration despite its demographic constraints, its near
universal pariah diplomatic status, and its externally
sustained economy.
Regimes in Transition
The
imperial system is highly asymmetrical, in constant
disequilibrium and therefore in constant flux – as wars,
class and national struggles break out and economic crises
bring down regimes and raise new political forces to power.
In recent times we have seen the rapid conversion of Russia
from a world hegemonic contender (prior to 1989), converted
into an imperial client state subject to unprecedented
pillage (1991-1999) to its current position as a newly
emerging imperial state. While Russia is one of the most
dramatic cases of rapid and profound changes in the world
imperialist system, other historical experiences exemplify
the importance of political and social changes in shaping
countries’ relationship to the world imperial system. China
and Vietnam, former bulwarks as independent,
anti-imperialist states, have seen the rise of
liberal-capitalist elites, the dismantling of the socialized
economy and China’s incorporation as a newly emerging
imperialist power and Vietnam as a semi-autonomous client
regime.
The major transitions during the 1980’s – 1990’s involved
the conversion of independent anti-imperialist states into
imperial client regimes. In the Western hemisphere, these
transitions include Nicaragua, Chile, Bolivia, Argentina,
Jamaica and Grenada. In Africa, they include Angola,
Mozambique, Guinea Bissau, Algeria, Ethiopia and Libya, all
converted into kleptocratic client regimes. In Asia similar
processes are afoot in Indo-China. Because of the disastrous
consequences of imperial-centered policies administered by
client regimes, the first decade of the new millennium
witnessed a series of massive popular upheavals and regime
changes, especially in Latin America. Popular insurrections
in Argentina and Bolivia led to regime shifts from client to
semi-autonomous clients. In Venezuela after a failed coup
and destabilization campaign, the Chavez regime moved
decisively from semi-autonomous client to an independent
anti-imperialist position.
Ongoing conflicts between imperial and anti-imperialist
states, between client regimes and nationalist movements,
between imperial and newly emerging imperial states, will
change the structure of the imperial system. The outcomes of
these conflicts will produce new coalitions among the
principal forces, which compose the imperial hierarchy and
its adversaries. What is clear from this account is that
there is no singular omnipotent ‘imperial state’ that
unilaterally defines the international or even the imperial
system.
Even the most powerful imperial state has proven incapable
of unilaterally (or with clients or imperial partners)
defeating or even containing the popular anti-colonial
resistance in Iraq or Afghanistan. The major imperial
political successes have occurred where the imperial states
have been able to activate the military forces of
semi-autonomous and client regimes, secure a regional (OAS,
OAU and NATO) or UN cover to legitimate its conquests.
Collaborator elites from the client and semi-autonomous
states are essential links to the maintenance and
consolidation of the imperial system and in particular the
US empire. A specific case is the US’, intervention and
overthrow of the Somali Islamic regime.
The Case of Somalia: Black Masks - White Faces
The recent Ethiopian invasion of Somalia (December 2006) and
overthrow of the de-facto governing Islamic Courts Union (ICU)or
Supreme Council of Islamic Courts and imposition of a
self-styled ‘transitional government’ of warlords is an
excellent case study of the centrality of collaborator
regimes in sustaining and expanding the US empire.
From 1991 with the overthrow of the government of Siad Barre
until the middle of 2006, Somalia was ravaged by conflicts
between feuding warlords based in clan-controlled fiefdoms
(3). During the US/UN invasion and temporary occupation of
Mogadishu in the mid-1990’s there were massacres of over
10,000 Somali civilians and the killing and wounding of a
few dozen US/UN soldiers (4). During the lawless 1990’s
small local groups, whose leaders later made up the ICU,
began organizing community-based organizations against
warlord depredations. Based on its success in building
community-based movements, which cut across tribal and clan
allegiances; the ICU began to eject the corrupt warlords
ending extortion payments imposed on businesses and
households (5). In June 2006 this loose coalition of Islamic
clerics, jurists, workers, security forces and traders drove
the most powerful warlords out of the capital, Mogadishu.
The ICU gained widespread support among a multitude of
market venders and trades people. In the total absence of
anything resembling a government, the ICU began to provide
security, the rule of law and protection of households and
property against criminal predators (6). An extensive
network of social welfare centers and programs, health
clinics, soup kitchens and primary schools, were set up
serving large numbers of refugees, displaced peasants and
the urban poor. This enhanced popular support for the ICU.
After having driven the last of the warlords from Mogadishu
and most of the countryside, the ICU established a de-facto
government, which was recognized and welcomed by the great
majority of Somalis and covered over 90% of the population
(7a). All accounts, even those hostile to the ICU, pointed
out that the Somali people welcomed the end of warlord rule
and the establishment of law and order under the ICU.
The basis of the popular support for the Islam Courts during
its short rule (from June to December 2006) rested on
several factors. The ICU was a relatively honest
administration, which ended warlord corruption and
extortion. Personal safety and property were protected,
ending arbitrary seizures and kidnappings by warlords and
their armed thugs. The ICU is a broad multi-tendency
movement that includes moderates and radical Islamists,
civilian politicians and armed fighters, liberals and
populists, electoralists and authoritarians (7). Most
important, the Courts succeeded in unifying the country and
creating some semblance of nationhood, overcoming clan
fragmentation. In the process of unifying the country, the
Islamic Courts government re-affirmed Somali sovereignty and
opposition to US imperialist intervention in the Middle East
and particularly in the Horn of Africa via its Ethiopian
client regime.
US Intervention: The
United Nations, Military Occupation, Warlords and Proxies
The
recent history of US efforts to incorporate Somalia into its
network of African client states began during the early
1990’s under President Clinton (8). While most commentators
today rightly refer to Bush as an obsessive war-monger for
his wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, they forget that President
Clinton, in his time, engaged in several overlapping and
sequential acts of war in Somalia, Iraq, Sudan and
Yugoslavia. Clinton’s military actions and the embargoes
killed and maimed thousands of Somalis, resulted in 500,000
deaths among Iraqi children alone and caused thousands of
civilian deaths and injuries in the Balkans. Clinton ordered
the destruction of Sudan’s main pharmaceutical plant
producing vital vaccines and drugs essential for both humans
and their livestock leading to a critical shortage of these
essential vaccines and treatments (9). President Clinton
dispatched thousands of US troops to Somalia to occupy the
country under the guise of a ‘humanitarian mission’ in 1994
(10). Washington intervened to bolster its favored pliant
war-lord against another, against the advice of the Italian
commanders of the UN troops in Somalia. Two-dozen US troops
were killed in a botched assassination attempt and furious
residents paraded their mutilated bodies in the streets of
the Somali capital. Washington sent helicopter gunships,
which shelled heavily, populated areas of Mogadishu, killing
and maiming thousands of civilians in retaliation.
The US was ultimately forced to withdraw its soldiers as
Congressional and public opinion turned overwhelmingly
against Clinton’s messy little war. The United Nations,
which no longed needed to provide a cover for US
intervention, also withdrew. Clinton’s policy turned toward
securing one subset of client warlords against the others, a
policy which continued under the Bush Administration. The
current ‘President’ of the US puppet regime, dubbed the
‘Transitional Federal Government’, is Abdullahi Yusuf. He is
a veteran warlord deeply involved in all of the corrupt and
lawless depredations which characterized Somalia between
1991 to 2006 (12). Yusuf had been President of the
self-styled autonomous Puntland breakaway state in the
1990’s.
Despite US and Ethiopian financial backing, Abdullahi Yusuf
and his warlord associates were finally driven out of
Mogadishu in June 2006 and out of the entire south central
part of the country. Yusuf was holed up and cornered in a
single provincial town on the Ethiopian border and lacked
any social basis of support even from most of the remaining
warlord clans in the capital (13). Some warlords had
withdrawn their support of Yusuf and accepted the ICU’s
offers to disarm and integrate into Somali society
underscoring the fact that Washington’s discredited and
isolated puppet was no longer a real political or military
factor in Somalia. Nevertheless, Washington secured a UN
Security Council resolution recognizing the warlord’s tiny
enclave of Baidoa as the legitimate government. This was
despite the fact that the TFG’s very existence depended on a
contingent of several hundred Ethiopian mercenaries financed
by the US. As the ICU troops moved westward to oust Yusuf
from his border outpost – comprising less than 5% of the
country – the US increased its funding for the dictatorial
regime of Meles Zenawi in Ethiopia to invade Somalia (14).
Despite the setbacks, scores of US military advisers
prepared the Ethiopian mercenaries for a large-scale air and
ground invasion of Somalia in order to re-impose their
puppet-warlord Yusuf. Meles Zenawi, the Ethiopian dictator,
depends heavily on US military and police weaponry, loans
and advisors to retain power for his ethnic ‘Tigrayan’ based
regime and to hold onto disputed Somali territory. The
Tigrayan ethnic group represents less than 10% of the
Ethiopian multi-ethnic population. Meles faced growing armed
opposition form the Oromo and Ogandese liberation movements
(15). His regime was despised by the influential Amhara
population in the capital for rigging the election in May
2005, for killing 200 student protesters in October 2006 and
jailing tens of thousands (16). Many military officials
opposed him for engaging in a losing border war with
Eritrea. Meles, lacking popular backing, has become the US
most loyal and subservient client in the region.
Embarrassingly parroting Washington’s imperial
‘anti-terrorist’ rhetoric for his attack on Somalia, Meles
sent over 15,000 troops, hundreds of armored vehicles,
dozens of helicopters and warplanes into Somalia (17).
Claiming that he was engaged in the ‘war against terrorism’
Meles terrorized the people of Somalia with aerial
bombardment and a scorched earth policy. In the name of
‘national security’ Meles sent his troops to the rescue of
the encircled war lord and US puppet, Abdullahi Yusuf.
Washington co-coordinated its air and naval forces with the
advance of the invading Ethiopian military juggernaut. As
the US advised-Ethiopian mercenaries advanced by land, the
US air force bombed fleeing Somalis killing scores,
supposedly in hunting ‘Al Queda; sympathizers (18).
According to reliable reports, which were confirmed later by
US and Somali puppet sources, US and Somali military forces
have failed to identify a single Al Queda leader after
examining scores of dead and captured fighters and refugees
(19). Once again the pretext to invade Somalia used by
Washington and its Ethiopian client – that the ICU was
attacked because it sheltered Al Queda terrorists - was
demonstrated to be false. US naval forces illegally
interdicted all ships off the coast of Somalia in pursuit of
fleeing Somali leaders. In Kenya, Washington directed its
Nairobi client to capture and return Somalis crossing the
border. Under Washington’s direction both the United Nations
and the Organization of African ‘Unity’ (sic) agreed to send
an occupation army of ‘peace-keepers’ to protect the
Ethiopian imposed puppet Yusuf regime.
Given Meles precarious internal position, he could not
afford to keep his occupying army of 15,000 mercenaries in
Somalia for long (20). Somali hatred for the Ethiopian
occupiers surged from the first day they entered Mogadishu.
There were massive demonstrations on a daily basis and
increasing incidents of armed resistance from the re-grouped
ICU fighters, local militants and anti-Yusuf warlords (21).
The US directed Ethiopian occupation was followed in its
wake by the return of the same warlords who had pillaged the
country between 1991-2005 (22).
Most journalists, experts and independent observers
recognize that without the presence of ‘outside’ support –
namely the presence of at least 10,000 US and EU financed
African mercenaries (‘peacekeepers’) the Yusuf regime will
collapse in a matter of days if not hours. Washington counts
on an informal coalition of African clients – a kind of
‘Association of Sub-Saharan Stooges’ (ASS) – to repress the
mass unrest of the Somali population and to prevent the
return of the popular Islamic Courts. The United Nations
declared it would not send an occupation army until the
‘ASS’ military contingents of the Organization of African
Unity had ‘pacified the country (23).
The ASS, however willing their client rulers in offering
mercenary troops to do the bidding of Washington, found it
difficult to actually send troops. Since it was
transparently a ‘made-in-Washington’ operation it was
unpopular at home and likely to set ASS forces against
growing Somali national resistance. Even Uganda’s Yoweri
Musevent, Washington’s subservient client, encountered
resistance among his ‘loyal’ rubber-stamp congress (24). The
rest of the ASS countries refused to move their troops,
until the EU and US put the money up front and the
Ethiopians secured the country for them. Facing passive
opposition from the great majority of Somalis and active
militant resistance from the Courts, the Ethiopian dictator
began to withdraw his mercenary troops. Washington,
recognizing that its Somali puppet, ‘President Yusuf’, is
totally isolated and discredited, sought to co-opt the most
conservative among the Islamic Court leaders (25). Yusuf,
ever fearful of losing his fragile hold on power, refused to
comply with Washington’s tactic of splitting the ICU.
The Somali Invasion:
the Empire and its Networks
The
Somali case illustrates the importance of client rulers,
warlords, clans and other collaborators as the first line of
defense of strategic geo-political positions for extending
and defending the US empire. The Somali experience
underlines the importance of the intervention by regional
and client rulers of neighboring states in defense of the
empire. Client regimes and collaborator elites greatly lower
the political and economic cost of maintaining the outposts
of empire. This is especially the case given the
overextension of US ground forces in Iraq, Afghanistan and
in their impending confrontation with the Islamic Republic
of Iran.
Given the ‘over-extension’ of the US ground forces, the
empire relies on air and sea assaults combined with regional
mercenary ground forces to oust an independent regime with
popular backing.
Without the Ethiopian invasion, the puppet Somali warlord
Abdullahi Yusuf would have been easily driven out of
Somalia, the country unified and Washington would no longer
control the coastal areas facing a major maritime oil
transport route. The loss of a Somali puppet regime would
have deprived Washington of a coastal platform for
threatening Sudan and Eritrea.
From a practical perspective however, Washington’s strategic
plans for control over the Horn of Africa are deeply flawed.
To secure maximum control over Somali, the White House chose
to back a deeply detested veteran warlord with no social
base in the country and dependent on discredited warring
clans and criminal warlords. Isolated and discredited puppet
rulers are a fragile thread on which to construct strategic
policies of regional intervention (military bases and
advisory missions). Secondly Washington chose to use a
neighboring country (Ethiopia) hated by the entire Somali
population to prop up its Somali puppet. Ethiopia had
attacked Somali as late as 1979 over the independence of
Ogadan, whose population is close to Somalis. Washington
relied on the invading army of a regime in Addis Ababa,
which was facing increasing popular and national unrest and
was clearly incapable of sustaining a prolonged occupation.
Finally, Washington counted on verbal assurances from the
ASS regimes to promptly send troops to protect its
re-installed client. Client regimes always tell their
imperial masters what they want to hear even if they are
incapable of prompt and full compliance. This is especially
the case when clients fear internal opposition and prolonged
costly overseas entanglements, which further discredit them.
The Somali experience demonstrates the gap between the
empire’s strategic projection of power and its actual
capacity to realize its goals. It also exemplifies how
imperialists, impressed by the number of clients,
their ‘paper’ commitments and servile behavior, fail to
recognize their strategic weakness in the face of popular
national liberation movements.
US empire building efforts in the Horn of Africa, especially
in Somalia, demonstrate that even with elite collaborators
and client regimes, mercenary armies and ASS regional
allies, the empire encounters great difficulty in containing
or defeating popular national liberation movements. The
failure of the Clinton policy of intervention in Somalia
between 1993-1994 demonstrated this.
The human and economic cost of prolonged military invasions
with ground troops has repeatedly driven the US public to
demand withdrawal (and even accept defeat) as was proven in
Korea, Indochina and increasingly in Iraq.
Financial and diplomatic support, including UN Security
Council decisions, and military advisory teams are not
sufficient to establish stable client regimes. The
precariousness of the mercenary-imposed Yusuf warlord
dictatorship demonstrates the limits of US sponsored UN
fiats.
The Somali experience in failed empire-building reveals
another even darker side of imperialism: A policy of ‘rule
or ruin’. The Clinton regime’s failure to conquer Somalia
was followed by a policy of playing off one brutal warlord
against another, terrorizing the population, destroying the
country and its economy until the ascent of the Islamic
Courts Union. The ‘rule or ruin’ policy is currently in play
in Iraq and Afghanistan and will come into force with the
impending Israeli-backed US air and sea attack on Iran.
The origins of ‘rule or ruin’ policies are rooted in the
fact that conquests by imperial armies do not result in
stable, legitimate and popular regimes. Originating as
products of imperial conquest, these client regimes are
unstable and depend on foreign armies to sustain them.
Foreign occupation and the accompanying wars on nationalist
movements provoke mass opposition. Mass resistance results
in imperial repression targeting entire populations and
infrastructure. The inability to establish a stable
occupation and client regime leads inevitable to imperial
rulers deciding to scorch the entire country with the after
thought that a weak and destroyed adversary is a consolation
for a lost imperial war.
Faced with the rise of Islamic and secular anti-imperialist
movements and states in Africa and possessing numerous
client regimes in North Africa and the ASS grouping,
Washington is establishing a US military command for Africa.
The Africa Command will serve to tighten Washington’s
control over African military forces and expedite their
dispatch to repress independence movements or to overthrow
anti-imperialist regimes. Given the expanded, highly
competitive presence of Chinese traders, investors and aid
programs, Washington is bolstering its reliable allies among
the African client elites and generals (26).
James Petras’ latest book is "The
Power of Israel in the United States"
(Clarity Press: Atlanta). His
articles in English can be found at the website –
www.petras.lahaine.org and in Spanish at -
www.rebellion.org.
Footnotes
-
Petras, James and Morris
Morley. Empire or Republic (NY: Routledge, 1995);
Petras, J. and M. Morley: “The Role of the Imperial
State” in US Hegemony Under Siege (London” Verso
Books 1990).
-
Petras, James and Morris
Morley. “The US imperial State” in James Petras et al
Class State and Power in the Third World (Allanheld,
Osmin: Montclair NJ, 1981).
-
(3A) see Petras, James
The Power of Israel in the United States (Clarity:
Atlanta 2006)
-
see Andrew England “Spectre
of Rival Clans Returns to Mogadishu”, Financial Times
(London), )December 29, 2006 p.3)
-
Financial Times
January 22, 2007 p.12.
-
Financial Times
December 29, 2006 p.3.
-
William Church: “Somalia:
CIA Blowback Weakens East Africa” Sudan Tribune
Feb 2, 2007.
-
(7A) The Transitional
government was restricted to Baldoa, a small town and
its survival depended on Addis Abbaba. Financial
Times December 29, 2006 p.3
-
Financial Times
January 31, 2007 p.2.
-
Stephan Shalom “Gravy
Train: Feeding the Pentagon by Feeding Somalia” Z
Magazine February 1993.
-
Clinton claimed the
pharmaceutical plant was producing biological and
chemical weapons – a story which was refuted by
scientific investigators.
-
Shalom ibid.
-
Mark Bowden Black Hawk
Down (Signet: New York 2002)
-
FT December 31, 2006
p.2
-
FT January 5, 2007
p. 4
-
William Church ibid.
-
“Somalia” Another War Made
in the USA” interview with Mohamed Hassan (Michel.Collon@skynet.be)
-
ibid
-
FT January 5, 2007
p.5; FT December 29, 2006 p. 3
-
BBC News “US Somali
Air Strikes ‘Kill Many’”, January 9, 2007;
aljazeera.net “US Launches Air Strikes on Somalia”
January 9, 2007
-
FT February 5, 2007
p.5 “…there has been no confirmation yet of targeted al-Queda
suspects according to Meles Zenawi, Ethiopian Prime
Minister.”
-
aljazeera.net
January 23, 2007; BBC News “More Ethiopians to
Quit Somalia” January 28, 2007.
-
aljazeera.net
December 29, 2006; aljazeera.net January 6, 2007;
BBC News January 26, 2007; Aljazeere.net
January 28, 2007, aljazeera.net February 11, 2007
-
“Looting and shooting broke
out as soon as the Islamic fighters left the crumbling
capital as militias loyal to the local clans moved on to
the streets.” FT December 29, 2006
-
BBC News January 25,
2007; BBC January 30, 2007; BBC January 5,
2007/
-
People’s Daily Online
“Ugandan Parliament halts bid to rush deployment of
peacekeepers to Somalia”. February 2, 2007
-
Financial Times
January 26, 2007 p.6
-
aljazeera.net
February 7, 2007