What Comes After The U.S. Empire?
Introductory Speech at the TRANSCEND
International Meeting - 6-12 June 2007, Vienna, Austria
By
Johan Galtung
07/20/07 "ICH" -- - I first want to say a few words about the
current G8 meeting, and then talk about major conflicts in
the world. This will cover much of the world situation, a
reflection on global capitalism, and the US Empire and its
imminent demise and what will happen after that.
The G8 meeting is actually an act of
sabotage, and in my view a deliberate one. It sabotages and
undermines the UN. In 1975, the meeting was established as a
small forum for intimate meetings between 3 leaders from
each participating country. However, from a purely economic
agenda it has become much more, incorporating a lot of UN
agenda items (security issues and global warming etc.) and
thereby actually hijacking the subjects of global importance
to about 8 countries only. Russia, which was invited under
Yeltsin, is the black sheep in the community. Also, not
inviting Chindia is a guarantee for sabotage, as is talking
about Africa without having even one African representative
present. The good news is that there were 100'000
demonstrators, and the bad news is that there were some
violent idiots.
If the nonviolent majority could practice the
technique of 20 nonviolent encircling every violent one in a
nonviolent way, incapacitating their capacity for violence,
it would be an enormous feat. There is, however another
piece of what I would call bad news; the 100'000 without
constructive, positive ideas. I've gone through the whole
rigmarole of the slogans. Personally, I don't like the
slogans against globalization; there is no way in the world
to stop globalization because it is driven by things we all
love: communication and transportation. We are not going to
turn that backwards. A good slogan would be "another
globalization is possible" and spelling out that better
globalization as opposed to the economically exploitative
process we know.
So, having said that, we have dark days in
front of us. We have impending climate and economic disaster
and on top of that a political military issue, the so-called
Shield. There isn't hardly a person in the world who
believes it is against Iran. It is a part of a policy
started in 1996, counter-posing against each other, on the
one hand NATO and AMPO (the US-JAPAN arrangement), and on
the other hand the SCO countries, the biggest alliance in
human history: the Shanghai Cooperation Organization, with 6
full members and 3 observers. The 6 members are China,
Russia and four of the former Central Asian republics,
excluding Turkmenistan. The three observers are India,
Pakistan and Iran. Together, it's about 50% of humanity,
confronting a relatively small country called the United
States of America, with only 300'000'000, not a very
impressive size these days.
I have said this, knowing that of the 10
points of the Project for the New American Century--written
by people who are still in power, although there is an
erosion among them--point number 7 is to change regime in
China. I am of the opinion that whatever be the method, that
the Chinese will rather do the change of regime themselves,
and are not enthusiastic about being encircled. It is the
major conflict confrontation of the world today, between
NATO/AMPO and SCO, and since it is the major one, it is also
the one least talked about. The Shield has to neutralize
missiles from Russia and China. I think Putin understood it
correctly in Munich, and sees it in the light of the
cancellation of the ABM treaty, which was a cornerstone of
the peaceful development during the Cold War. It was
canceled unilaterally by the United States, The anti-missile
capacities in the Czech Republic and Poland come on top of
the US and NATO breaking the promises made to Gorbachev at
the end of the Cold War: that the Soviet Union would
withdraw from Eastern Europe, including Eastern Germany, and
the United States would not follow suit, whereupon the
United States had filled almost every base opportunity, and
enrolled practically speaking all the countries in NATO.
That has heightened the tension immensely. Whether it will
dominate the Heiligendamm [G8 meeting] meeting, I don't
know, but I would imagine that it could be quite important.
The guess is that the US would do anything they can in order
to bribe the citizens of the villages selected in Poland and
the Czech Republic with high amounts of money in order not
to demonstrate against. So, G8 spells only bad news, as
introduction to the six conflicts:
1. Economic Contradiction: Global Capitalism
Let me just say a word about global
capitalism. The two antidotes to the market mechanism that
have been effective have been, on the one hand, a welfare
state, and on the other hand, protectionism. Microcredit,
you can forget about it, these are small drops in the
bucket, giving relief to some small groups. The countries
that practice it most, Bangladesh and Bolivia, are still at
the bottom, economically speaking. The combination of
selective protectionism and welfare state, that is the real
stuff. The way Japan did it, the way Taiwan did it, the way
South Korea did it, the way Hong Kong did it, the way
Singapore did it, the way Malaysia did it, with considerable
success. You find in the whole of the East Asia/South East
Asia conglomerate countries that have been doing exactly
this. That is important, and the neo-liberal free market
syndrome is of course against that. They are doing
everything they can to eliminate the two factors. That means
that the global market place becomes a vertical assembly
line for the transportation of capital from the bottom to
the top. And this works with three mechanisms: monetization,
privatization and globalization, border-free market, of
which globalization is the least important. The most
important is monetization, setting a monetary price on
everything. It is the most important because it means that
those who have no money have no chance, and they are about
1'000'000'000. Their option, that is very clear, is to join
the ranks of the dying; 125'000 dying every day with 25'000
starving and 100'000 dying from preventable and curable
diseases, for which cures exist, but they are monetized.
User's fees in Africa are a disaster. All of this is known
today! Adam Smith warned against unmitigated markets; David
Ricardo warned against unmitigated labor markets in periods
with high labor supply, saying that it would have lasting
unemployment as a result, and extreme poverty among the
labor.
From global capitalism as it is operating
today, we can expect no solution to these problems. So let
me then add the kind of approach that I, as one person,
would advocate; taming capitalism, by introducing at the
same time about 14 other types of economies. In other words,
it is a little bit like the thinking about energy: we don't
say an unconditional no to hydrocarbons, but we introduce 6,
7, 8 other methods. The energy profile becomes complex. Time
does not permit me to get into all 14, I'll not do it, some
of you have the manuscript and the book A Life-Sustaining
Economy is close to completion. The point I am arguing
is a pluralistic economy. There is no single formula that
covers all the alternatives, and the pluralistic profile
must be adjusted to the preconditions in space and time.
2. Military Contradiction: Terrorism and State
Terrorism
Number two on this list is the military
contradiction between terrorism and state terrorism. The USA
state contradiction on terrorism has now entered military
intervention number 73 since the Second World War; Number 73
being what they are doing in Lebanon right now: killing
Palestinians. There are 470'000 Palestinian refugees in
Lebanon, almost half a million, scattered in camps from the
north to the south. We now know the number of the people who
were driven out of the territory that became the Jewish
state during the Naqba, the Catastrophe: the number of
Palestinians driven out was 711'000, very far from 'a couple
of thousand'. It is a very major number for a small nation.
Some of them, not necessarily in that period, found their
way to Lebanon. This is number 73 and the number of people
killed in overt Pentagon-driven military action after
the Second World War is now between 13 and 17 million. The
number of people killed in covert action is at least
6 million. The number of people killed by structural
violence could be 125'000 people per day, but for
that the USA is not alone responsible. What the USA is
responsible for is giving the military cover for that
economic system. You can go through the total amount of
interventions, 243, since Thomas Jefferson started, and you
will find that almost without exception the interventions
are triggered by some political action that sounds like or
might lead to redistribution of wealth and power somewhere
in the world. So, you get this endless pairing: intervening
when the Sandinistas are in power but not when Somoza is in
power, intervening when Chavez is in power but not when, for
instance, Jimenez is in power. Both of them were darlings of
the International Monetary Fund, a solid pillar of
exploitation.
Iraq
Right now the major arena is Iraq, the coming
arena may be Iran. One particularly gifted journalist,
Andreas Zumach, has written an article saying that for the
Iran war everything is prepared. It is totally wrong to
assume that because the US has problems in Iraq it will not
attack Iran. I will also say that it is totally wrong to
assume that the US is losing in Iraq. You will only assume
that if you assume that the major goal of the United States
is a cohesive Iraq entity that has some semblance to
parliamentary democracy. If you look at the real goals, oil
and military bases, they may ever be winning. There could be
an oil law, the chances that it could be passed are not that
small. And it is the Paul Bremer concept they are working on
that essentially presupposes that the oil resources are put
on the global market, bought up by the 5 big companies, with
100% repatriation of profit.
It is sometimes pointed out that the US
Empire is not colonial. That is correct. They had colonies
in the past, after they in 1898 stepped into the Spanish
empire and acquired some major indigenous problems. One
interesting thing about colonialism, however, is that it
gave colonizers some paternalistic sense of responsibility
that you can forget about when it comes to what's going on
under imperialism.
Let me just add one point to that. I find the
idea of pulling out of Iraq one of the most cowardly,
dishonorable ideas I can imagine, so let me immediately
formulate an alternative. Shed the uniform, and start
helping the Iraqi people you have brutalized. Compensate,
apologize, you have a lot of infrastructure at your
disposal, you US army could still do a decent job. And one
of the worst proposals in addition to that is to say "Just
go to your bases and stay there". Those bases are for the
coming war with SCO, that's why they are there. Have a look
at the analysis of the length of the runways and you will
see the purpose behind them.
Let me come back for a second to the idea of
pulling out, which in my mind is such a bad idea that we
could expect it from the US. What it means is that you pull
out so that you don't suffer any humiliating defeat. You
make yourself unavailable for defeat. I can understand the
reason, it is not difficult. The 30th April 1975, the
humiliating defeat in Vietnam became a major trauma. To
avoid that situation is the priority of course, pulling out
better than to continue killing, but, I just think one
should call a spade a spade, and no way I see cut and run as
peaceful action. We shouldn't, I would say, contaminate the
concept of peace with cowardice, trying to "save face" after
having killed 750'000 so far. Multiply that by 10 for the
bereaved--the persons who feel the loss of a friend, a
spouse, a brother, a sister, a child, a parent, a colleague,
a neighbor--multiply 750'000 by 10 and you have an estimate
of the hatred that has been created. Add to that the 4
million who are displaced, some of them among the 7,5
million I just mentioned; and add to that the psychosis
induced in the high number of US military who have been to
Iraq; and add to that the about 25'000 wounded who have come
back to the US and you may probably add 10% of them dying.
The definition of a person of the US army personnel killed
in the war is that he dies in Iraq, that means "Put them on
the plane get them to Walter Ried as quickly as possible,
don't let them die in Iraq". I am not saying that to get
somewhere closer to realism when discussing this enormity.
Why don't the USA with some allies win?
Because they are against an enemy that is unconquerable, and
why is that? Because of "asymmetric warfare" is too sterile.
Of course they are using "improvised explosive" devices
against these sophisticated things that the US army used.
But they have two more arms at their disposal: time and
space.
An unlimited time perspective. There is no
point called "capitulation" in their rules, that can just be
forgotten, it belonged to the old days. We are dealing with
a type of warfare where what used to be called the weaker
party has any amount of time at its disposal. These people
are trained in fighting a government empire for 400, 500
years, like the Serbs were fighting the Turks for 500 years.
The Orthodox, among the three Christianities, have a time
perspective very similar to the Islamic one. I don't think
you will find 500 years patience in Washington, maybe not
even 5 months for that matter.
And, they have space, there are 57 members of
the OIC, the Organization of the Islamic Conference. 56 of
them are states, number 57 are the 160 million or so Muslims
in India. Most of the borders of the 56 countries are drawn
by the West; they are borders that make no sense to Islam at
all. That doesn't mean there are no fault lines inside
Islam. More important than Shia-Sunni is probably
Arab-non-Arab. The non-Arab countries are in the majority,
of the 56 only 22 are Arab. Of the 1.350.000.000 Muslims,
300.000.000 are Arab. If the Arabs feel that the religion is
essentially theirs, then they are in a minority position.
That is becoming something interesting, and of course the US
plays on those fault lines. It seemed to work as long as
they were dealing with Khomeini, he is a Shia, the "bad"
Islam. But, bin Laden, a Wahab, was a Sunni, and didn't look
much more attractive than Khomeini. So something went wrong
somehow with that Harvard University distinction.
Harvard University, by the way, is the
university that by far has contributed most economists to
the neo-liberal attack on humanity. Like Jeffrey Sachs, a
major person in the destruction of Bolivia and of Russia,
and now proceeding to the whole world. He has changed his
rhetoric, even humanized the rhetoric. But if we look at the
measures, they look very much like what he did to Bolivia
and Russia.
Having said that, if you have time and space
on your side, then you are dealing with enormous resources.
In principle, the whole Islamic world is on the other side.
This constitutes the "Clash of Civilizations" that Samuel
Huntington's publisher stole from Bernard Lewis, a far more
important intellectual, professor at Princeton University,
and a major advisor to Cheney. One of those who, more than
anybody else, has whispered in Cheney's ears "Attack Iraq!".
Everybody is blaming Samuel Huntington, best read the book,
you'll find almost nothing about civilization. Read Bernard
Lewis, and you will find quite a lot, particularly about
Islam.
It is a complete mistake to talk about this
as a civilizational-religious clash only. It's economic,
military, political, it's the full house. The more one says
the "clash of civilizations", the more is one inclined to
forget the economic, political, military interests hidden
underneath. It must be wonderful for Washington to have all
this clash-of-civilization-talk and establish 14 military
bases, and then try to put your paw on all the oil. "Keep
them discussing civilization". And this of courseis why we
need the concept of imperialism, because it is holistic, one
reason why the concept does not have a very high standing in
the USA. The war of state terrorism against terrorism is an
elitist warfare against peoples warfare. The people's war is
close to unbeatable, but it may take time. That holds for
Iraq and it holds for Afghanistan. Anybody who knows a
little bit of the history of Afghanistan and the British
attacks in 1838 and 1878 and the Soviet attack in 1978, also
know how it ended; with humiliating defeats. The one in 1878
ended even with the massacre in the British embassy in Kabul
in 1883. I think they would have wished for good life
insurances for those people.
How is it possible to enter a thing when so
much knowledge would indicate otherwise, with all these
negative indicators? Is it permissible to be that ignorant
of history? To deny entirely a whole lot of facts that
nevertheless somehow play a role? I myself think we give
much too much credit to facts, but some facts are quite
useful. It tells a lot to have a President who has both
ignorance and denial fitted into his mental framework, but I
would warn strongly against associating the calamity with
Bush alone.
The US empire is resting on a deep structure
and a deep culture. Let me take the deep culture first.
There is both Chosenness, the vision of past and present
glory, and a strong sense of trauma. There is Dualism,
Manichaeism, and the sense that Armageddon will solve it.
But, this is no Republican monopoly. It is found in both
corporate parties, with some fringes that feel some
uneasiness. And, of course, of those, the Republicans have
suffered the humiliation of losing the elections. But the
two parties re-cohered, voted for the "surge", voted for 100
billion more money, adding some clauses. In other words, we
are faced with a Republican Democrat entity, a Repucrat,
Repurat, whatever we want to call it; a single-party
coalition with two wings. That was the bad news, the good
news are the 50% who don't vote. Somewhere in those 50%
there is a solution, not as one person. In other words,
there is good news and bad news.
How does a person like Andreas Zumach, very
well informed, think that the war against Iran will be? It
could be based on a provocation, constructed, fake and
false. Like Racak in Kosovo. A Finnish forensic specialist
has now released her report which was silenced by Joschka
Fischer at a critical moment, and the report on Racak is
very clear: there was a gun-powder slam, but, the slam was
on their hands and not on the neck. In other words, it was
on those who had been shooting, not on the executed victims.
Killing had been done in an ordinary manner and they then
assembled the corpses and lay them out. They need a US
ambassador to make that, it bears the stamp of William
Walker. The total number of killed in Kosovo was not
150'000, but 8'000 over the years, 5'000 Albanians and 3'000
Serbs. I am just saying that because we have been treated to
lies, and if there is the war against Iran it will be
initiated by lies. To propagate those lies we have the
corporate press, meaning press owned by the corporation.
Information is easily arranged.
From the plans that have emerged it looks as
if the 100'000 targets have been identified in Iran. These
targets include not only some nuclear arrangements, but the
total military infrastructure of the country, that means any
kind of center of command, naval points, air bases, anything
that has to do with missiles. But that would only amount to
one half of the 100'000 targets, the other targets would be
anything that has to do with civilian infrastructure in the
sense of railroads, airports, roads of course, sewerage,
bridges, canals or watering, electric power plants, anything
that keeps the civilian population going. Starting at 5 am
some morning, 100'000 targets, in association with Israel.
As far as I understand the Iranian counterattack will be
considerable. I don't know, but I could guess there could be
dirty bombs inside the US, ignited by remote control. Only
an idiot will use missiles. They will of course use totally
different methods. So I mention it as an example of what we
may be facing.
Afghanistan
In March I was invited to give a talk for
three ministries in the UK, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs,
the Ministry or Department of Defense, and the Department
for International Development (DFID). It was organized by
the latter. I was a little surprised when I was asked to
give the keynote address, and in the chair was the former
Foreign Minister. The keynote was about Afghanistan, Nepal
and Sri Lanka. And since I have just been mentioning
Afghanistan, let me say some words about what I saw as
possible solutions. The basic point I have just made: you
can forget any possibility of winning. You may have a lull,
and God bless you when it comes to what happens after the
lull: Osama bin Laden. You can also forget calling your
enemy Taliban, Talib means "student", it's a highly
anti-student type of word, you can forget about that too. We
are essentially dealing with the Afghan people. I remember a
discussion I had myself in that meeting, with an Afghan
general. He gave a talk about how many small weapons he had
confiscated, 90'000, and how his forces were fighting. And I
said to him "General, tell me a little bit more about that
fighting", and he looked at me and said, "Of course it
doesn't work. I cannot ask my Afghan troops to kill Afghans,
it makes no sense for them. The Russians, no problem." He
didn't say, but he was thinking "Americans, no problem", but
that was not politically correct at such a conference in
London. I will never forget how the twinkle in his eyes met
with the twinkle in mine, twinkle meets twinkle, and we
understood each other perfectly.
The 5 points that would give a solution to
Afghanistan would be the following from the TRANSCEND
mediation in Peshawar in February 2001.
1. Make a Coalition Government with the Taliban.
100% Taliban is intolerable. But the Taliban has a moral
fiber, which most others don't have. If you eliminate them
you will get heroin and corruption and not much more. They
are needed.
2. Afghanistan is the material from which a
Federation is made, not a unitary state, even if the
Northern Alliance based on Tadjiks and Pashtuns with Kabul
in the middle, count for half. There are at least ten
others. To call potential Prime Ministers "warlords" is an
insult. You have to be very much removed from reality
to believe that by insulting them you can eliminate them or
make them your friends.
3. A Central Asian Community surrounding Afghanistan
with the countries that contribute to the national mosaic
that is Afghanistan, the Pashtuns from Pakistan, the Tadjiks
from Tadjikistan and the Dari-speaking from Iran, and so on
and so forth, would make a lot of sense. That will include
Kashmir, and Pakistan, and Iran. The Shanghai Cooperation
Organization has almost realized it. The Shanghai
Cooperation Organization does not publish much, but moves in
very, very clever, slow, movements. It moves so slowly that
the journalists do not discover it, because it would have to
move from day to day in order for a jour-nal to
record it.
4. Make Basic Needs the leading line of the
Government policy. That means food, education, health,
clothing, whatever is needed for the somatic human being,
shared by all, and available to men and women alike. That
last problem can only be solved on a Quranic basis, and is
being solved in a number of Islamic countries. One of the
most interesting solutions was by Saddam Hussein, number 3
of the 14 good things he did. He told the Iraqi women, "From
tomorrow on you decide whether to wear the hijaab or not.
Only you. And if anybody tries to change your view come to
me." Now, to come to Saddam Hussein was not a very
appetizing invitation, so this was definitely under threat,
but it worked. It created a very, very vibrant group of
women in Iraqi society. That of courseis now all
disappearing.
5. Security, provided by cooperation between the UN
Security Council and the Organization of the Islamic
Conference. The UN Security Council has a veto nucleus of 4
Christian powers, and one Confucian. It has no legitimacy
whatsoever in the Muslim world, that has to be understood.
To believe that one can organize a UNSC-sponsored security
operation in a country that hates the UN, not only because
of the composition of the Security Council, but for having
killed 1 million through the Iraq sanctions, is naive. And
they gave a very clear expression for their hatred by
killing the Secretary-General's representative in the Iraq
UN building. It doesn't help much to call the people who did
it "extremists". In the war we had against the German
occupation in Norway, the people who did violent acts were
extremists, and most people were sitting on the fence,
applauding. But, don't be confused, don't call the
fence-sitters moderates. They were waiting for the wind to
blow a little bit more clearly and then jumped down taking a
clear stand.
With those 5 points, I think one could arrive
at something. It is not for us to impose any solution on
anybody, and TRANSCEND in this case was essentially the
Canadians. I was an adjunct. One of them was an Afghan
Canadian, Seddiq Veera, of considerable diplomatic acumen.
When that report was read in front of the working groups, a
former Cabinet Member said "This is the best I've ever seen,
the only problem is it has no chance... Why, because," he
added, "the Americans will attack us in October 2001,
because they want to control pipelines, and they want
bases." So I asked him, "How do you know that?". And he
said, "Would you mind coming to my room this evening?" The
room was very dark, and had a considerable amount of
electronics, and quite good assistants who were very
discrete, and he presented quite a lot of very interesting
pictures. "When the Americans attack in October, they will
put their military bases exactly here", he took a map and
put his finger exactly where a major base is today. You will
of course remember that this was to be exact seven months
before 9/11.
But having said that, the question comes up:
"How does one move a plan like those 5 points?" Well, the
reports from the conference, with the keynote address, is
there, circulated to all kinds of governmental circles, not
only in England. I don't know, but we need a better
dissemination technique. The corporate press will do their
best to deny us that access, because we are uncontrollable,
unpredictable. And I think they want it to remain like that,
and so do we.
3. Nations and States Contradiction: 200 States,
2000 Nations
Let me go on to number three, very briefly,
200 states, 2000 nations. In Kosova they are now practicing
the principle of self-determination. They are not practicing
it in Republica Srpska, they are not practicing it in
Transdniestria, they are not practicing it for the Tamils in
Sri Lanka. They are practicing it where they want to
practice it. What TRANSCEND tries to do is to open the space
between independence and unitary states. And we have a lot
of research done and a lot of experience when it comes to
the range of in between points. And the three best known
points are of course federation, confederation and
devolution. Those are in-between parts. We did not have any
success so far in Sri Lanka. The parties are not convinced
that they can win, but they are convinced that they can
deprive the other side from winning. Not quite the same, but
almost equally good. If both of them want to deprive the
other side of winning it can go on for a considerable amount
of time, because you won't even have the mechanism of
victory or capitulation which sets some full stop, for some
period. They needed of course the cease-fire agreement
brokered by the Norwegian government in order to arm and
re-deploy, and both parties make use of it. During that
period, there was not a single serious effort to solve the
conflict; certainly not by the Norwegian government, nor by
the others. A very sad picture. And I'm afraid that whatever
beautiful peace-building efforts one can make, it has
limited impact. There has to be a solution. The good news
from my own experience: the moment you do have a solution,
it is incredible how much bad sentiment and behavior can
evaporate quickly because the solution is there.
4. Cultural Contradiction: Islam vs Christianity
Number four, the cultural one. Imagine that
you take the TRANSCEND 5 point diagram and you simply say
Islam hates Christianity, wants to kick it out, and
Christianity hates Islam, wants to kick it out. That formula
is called intolerance. We are against that. There is the
neither/nor possibility they may both conclude that there is
something crazy in both religions. Let us turn to Buddhism,
or let's become secular. Secularism, I think, can partly be
traced back to the 30 years war in Europe (1618 – 48). I
don't have the historical evidence, but I have at least the
hypothesis that a high number of people came to the
conclusion that if these are two Christianities that both
define themselves as the only correct one, and that's the
way they treat each other, there must be something basically
wrong in the whole Christian message. At the time, they did
not have alternative religion, so they turned to
secularism.
Secularism supported itself as science, and
they fell into a very deep dark hole. Science, as you know,
is based on data as the ultimate arbiter between hypotheses.
But, data come from the past. In opting for science you give
the past practically speaking 100 percent of the power. I
have been struggling almost all my life to develop
epistemology that does not take that dramatic position, but
maneuvering even-handedly between past and future. It means
that you give the potential, the negatively non-existing, as
much praise as the positively existing. The moment
secularism allies itself with science, it allies itself with
the past. It is very easy to understand why they do it:
because they are Christians, maybe Jews, maybe Muslims, and
God created the world, and if God is perfection then His
work must also be perfection. To talk about an alternative
future is to challenge the creation. Any alternative future
from a science point of view is speculation. From that point
of view Darwinism and intelligent design are very very
similar. The driving forces are in the past. What could be a
true global future of this relation? We should draw on the
potential of future wishes, of the dreams and the wishes and
the values as an equally important part of the intellectual
enterprise, and here I am not with Noam Chomsky. Brilliant,
he is a digger for facts, and I dig him too. But he is
chemically free from any concrete, constructive and creative
future. There isn't one single idea except "writing a letter
to your Congressman". And he has proven again and again and
again how futile that exercise is. He is called the major
intellectual in the world.
So, having said that, I am very much
attracted by a statement by an Iranian, and that statement
by an Iranian is as follows. I will read it to you in
English. It is the 14th Century Persian Sufi poet Hafiz and
his ultimate words about the distinction and struggle
between Christianity and Islam:
"I have learned so much from God that I can
no longer call myself a Christian, a Hindu, a Muslim, a
Buddhist, a Jew. The truth has shed so much of itself in me
that I can no longer call myself a man, a woman...".
The latter is going a little bit too far, I'm
not sure I can follow him into that!
"...An angel or even a pure soul, love has
befriended Hafiz so completely, has turned to passion, freed
me of every concept and image my mind has ever loved...
man/woman, thing."
And that is what I for reasons of time will
say about number 5 on the list:
5. Sufism
It comes straight out of the Axis of Evil.
Ahmadinejad wrote a letter of 18 pages to Bush, a little bit
repetitive at times, but a fascinating letter. What an
indictment of the Western civilization that they are not
even able to answer that letter. Nobody is of course
expecting any answer from George Bush, but he has a couple
of people: couldn't Condi try her hand at it for instance? I
mean, she is a bright woman. Why not?
A quote from Daoism:
"Sharing the suffering of others, the life
and joy of others. Use the good fortune of others as your
own good fortune. View the losses of others as yours."
This is "we-ness", this is swinging in
harmony, two persons, or, humanity swinging in harmony,
sensing each other's delight and suffering. Compare that
with the profoundly egoistic lex talionis: "Do unto others
as you want others to do unto you." Why is it so profoundly
egoistic? Because it ends up with my ego, somebody should do
something good to me, but I'm so smart that I know that the
best way to get that is to be nice to that person, you get
much more from him with that method. If you treat him badly
you might get nothing or worse. A light-year away from the
Daoism of creating we's. This is the kind of thing
that I find fascinating in connection with religion: it is
not neither/nor, it is not the compromise, it is not one
dominating over the other. Better, try to take the both/and,
pick up the gems from all of them, make them coalesce,
cohere somehow! A fascinating challenge, a little bit ahead
of its time, or then maybe not. Maybe a lot of people think
that way, it only has to be released, perhaps, in public
space.
6. The US Empire
Let me introduce number 6, with a quotation
from the South African Nobel Prize winner in literature J.M.
Coetzee. Absolutely brilliant. The essay he wrote and
published in 1974, when he was 34 years old, was about South
Africa and the Vietnam War. He wrote a statement about the
USA, putting it in the working of a specialist in a U.S.
think tank in California, southern part. The project he is
working on is how to break the wild of the Vietcong, and
substitute for Vietcong goals goals that are compatible with
the sincere US love for the Vietnamese people. He writes:
"If the Vietnamese had come singing towards
us through the hails of bullets, we would have knelt down
and embraced them."
If they can come singing through the hails of
bullets. A good way of putting it. Yes, if only it's exactly
what happens. The idea that we can bomb the people into
submission, and make them love us, is insane. When the
Germans were "bombed into submission", it actually
strengthened the Nazi party. What then happened to the
Germans was something else. At a certain point they realized
that their whole project was doomed, the whole Nazi project
was wrong wrong wrong. They were not taught a lesson by
being bombed. "If only they would come singing through the
hail of bullets, we would go down on our knees and embrace
them." The perception of their own project came from the
inside. What Coetzee leads up to is psychosis, diagnosis
maybe a combination of narcissism, megalomania and paranoia,
maybe with elements of a fantastic detachment from reality.
But we are not dealing with psychopaths, we are dealing with
socio-paths. Maybe lovely individuals, but with an image of
the world totally devoid of any humanitarian reality when
those attacked refuse to do what Reagan said when he was
entering a helicopter, in connection with Nicaragua. "Mr.
President, what do you want them to do?" "All I want them to
do is to say 'Uncle'", meaning "I submit."
It doesn't work like that with a deep culture
and a deep structure at work. US political science and US
economics have no concept of history, and, it seems, only
two concepts of structure, hierarchy and anarchy. If you
come from a Nordic country, or from the European Union, you
have no problem what equity is about, even if I had to make
up the word "equiarchy", to add to hierarchy, polyarchy and
anarchy. Their only approach to equity was and is the signed
agreement, contract, regardless of the 2nd, 3rd, 4th level
consequences. Similarly, solution to them means settlement,
a signed document, and I would argue it isn't good enough,
solution is deeper.
So how is the US Empire performing these
days? There are 15 contradictions at the end in the
hypothesis made in the year 2000. Let me say what the basic
theory is about. An Empire is a transborder arrangement that
combines economic, military, political and cultural power.
It's an enormous power display that obviously brings with it
contradictions. Contradictions are problems you cannot solve
unless you change the system, but you can coexist with a
couple of contradictions. When the contradictions start
multiplying, synchronizing and synergizing, they become
serious.
For the Empire people hit by an Empire start
understanding that they have a common cause: get rid of the
Empire – like colonialism, like slavery.
I can now pick up some of them, such as the
amount of Euros passing the Dollars in circulation last
December, Toyota passing GM in January, and you have the
number of patents in the world with the US proportion
sinking in comparison with other countries passing the US in
one domain after the other. There is all of this happening,
and much much more.
Let me point to a key factor. It hasn't
happened yet. But, many Europeans have felt bothered, and
the moment they meet people in the Iraqi resistance movement
and they compare notes, a sense of a common cause may start
arising. If I now take all of these 15 points, some of them
also inside the US, and Americans also sense that they are
better off without the US Empire, the moment that common
cause factor comes about, the US Empire is doomed. That is
what happened to the Soviet Union. My prediction made in
1980 was that the wall would fall before 1990 and that the
Soviet Empire would follow and they performed on time. The
prediction of the US Empire is by 24 October 2020, the UN
day and also my 90th anniversary, and you are all invited to
celebrate. And let us combine it with a TRANSCEND meeting,
but we need to make a jump, because they are now in odd
years.
What comes after the U.S. Empire?
A. The European Union as Successor
And then what? Three possibilities. 1) A
Successor Country or Countries, 2) A Regionalizing World, 3)
Another Globalization. Let me say a couple of words on all
three. And you will take note, of course, that the end of an
Empire is the most natural thing in the world. Empires come
and go, it's been like that all the time. No empire lasts
forever. However, this one happens to be so brutal, so
killing, so intervening, doing so much damage that you would
expect it to be more short-lived than many of the others. It
didn't have the decorum and the sense of responsibility
sometimes exercised by the English and the French, to a
large extent by the Spanish, to a minor extent also by the
Dutch, much less by the Portuguese and the Belgians. You
will of coursealso remember that the Portuguese in Brazil,
with the US, were hanging onto slavery more than any other.
So there is a tradition here.
But leaving that point aside, I think China
is one of the least likely successor candidates. On my list,
candidate number one is the European Union. You need a sense
of universalism, China has nothing of that. They are still
convinced that it is surrounded by barbarians. They are
willing to buy quite a lot. The annual global income is 54
trillion dollars, and China's reserves are more than one
trillion. The US currency reserves right now amount to 47
billion, which is nothing. That means when you want 100
billion for more fighting in Iraq and Afghanistan, you have
to take more loans. That they get those loans is something
still a little bit strange, but they do pay something in
return, namely access to the US markets. So, having said
that, a likely successor is the European Union, very
universalist, with the 11 major colonial powers all members,
and all concerned about their part of the world. And they
are willing to say "I'll not protest if you do something in
your part if you'll not protest when I do something in my
part". It is European political common market. There is much
more to the European Union, but this is one important
aspect.
We had a conference on peace studies in Hull
in England one week ago, about democracy and peace. And I
launched the idea of the European Union as a successor,
after 19 reasons why the hypothesis of "democratic peace" is
false, even a fraud, but I leave out all of that. The point
I'm making is simply that the European Union has the deep
culture and the deep structure it takes to become an empire.
There were protests to the effect that there was no such
plan also from Members of the European Parliament. Back
then, a German from the European Commission raised his hand
and said: "I'll tell you one thing, I work in the European
Commission, but occasionally I go over to the Council of
Ministers and whenever I am in the building, so many of the
people walking around are in uniform, they suddenly
disappear into some room, and it is very clear that the
doors are closed." There is of course also the Tindemans
plan, and the Tindemans plan is exactly what they need for
that successor purpose. So let me proceed to what I think is
most likely, regionalization.
B. Regionalization
We have 4 regions or maybe 5, EU, AU, SAARC
and ASEAN. Number 5 is the G8, it's not contiguous, but it
doesn't have to be contiguous to be a region. And we have 4
regions that are coming, and they have one thing in common:
they are not going to ask Washington for permission.
The first one is the Estados Unidos de
America Latina y el Caribe, the United States of Latin
America and the Caribbean. The common currency will be a
Bolivar. Nine of the countries met in La Paz in December and
drew up the basic plans for the Charter. A basic pattern of
thinking is what they call a "social economy" and about that
one I will just say one or two lines. When sanctions came to
Cuba in 1960, or 1961 rather, the only trading possibility
was with the Soviet Union, meaning sugar in return for
shoddily manufactured goods. The Soviet Union collapsed, so
did the trade, and Washington was already looking forward to
the collapse of Cuba. What did they do then? First of all
they switched to organic agriculture to be self-sufficient.
In industrial products, they have enormous shortages, but
they have some trade possibilities. And then you would
immediately say that it was obvious, but not everybody
thought about it. "We have human material, let us process
that human material to as high a level as possible." That
started university education to an extent unknown in most
other countries, with a science and training center outside
Havana for the training of doctors, dentists, engineers,
social workers, educators, teachers of all trades. Thousands
and thousands of them, ready to go to Latin America. But
they didn't have the money till Chavez. He had the money,
and a messianic complex. He is the Messiah with a budget.
Imagine Jesus Christ with an oil budget? You see the
triangular theme? Chavez pays Cuba for providing the
manpower for lifting the bottom level of those 9 countries,
starting with the slums, and they pay Chavez a certain
allegiance to the Estados Unidos, which is evolving everyday
today. Venezuela then, a couple of weeks ago left the World
Bank and the IMF. You cannot leave it unless you have paid
all your debts and Venezuela paid them some time ago. The
other countries cannot leave because they haven't paid their
debts, so Venezuela is going to pay their debts for them.
The Messiah with a budget. The difficulty of it is, that
Messianism might go to his head and make his populist
democracy, as opposed to the usual Latin American elitist
democracy, similar to people's democracy in Eastern Europe,
as opposed to any democracy. As it is obvious I like his
policies, I would hate to see that happen.
The second one is an Islamic community
from Morocco to Mindanao. 1'300'000'000 Muslims crossing
almost 1'300'000'000 Hindus, from Nepal to Sri Lanka, like
two highways, but at the same level. A major potential for a
major conflict, making small riots in India look
microscopic. I use that as an exercise for diplomats and
say, "Please come up with 5 solutions for this one".
Third, an East Asia Community, without
Japan and with India, possibly combined with SCO.
And fourth, possibly, Putin could pull it
off, but he may not be the man for it, is a Russian Union
with a Chechnya having as much autonomy as the Netherlands
in the European Union. Today widely off the mark. Tomorrow?
Maybe. It would be widely in Russia's interest. The problem
is that Putin came to power by being anti-Chechen. So, let
us see. Maybe somebody can come to power by being
pro-Chechen.
In a regional world we do not have any
guarantee for peace. As a matter of fact, the country that
will benefit most from the decline and fall of the US Empire
will be the US Republic. They may start sleeping well at
night, and they might use their enormous natural and human
resources for innovative projects and their capacity for
cooperation, all of that, for better purposes, and make a
decent country out of the USA.
C. Another Globalization
That means of course a stronger UN with
globalization through the United Nations. I was advisor to
the Commission for Global Governance. They had a lot of good
ideas whose time had not come, so let me just say the three
that for me are most important.
Abolish the veto power. They may meet, in the
G8, but put their agenda on the UN agenda, and if they don't
like what they come up with, outvote them by expanding the
Security Council to 54 members like the Economic and Social
Council, and see to it that all parts of the world are
there. That's point one.
Point two, democratize the United Nations.
They can mobilize an enormous amount of initiatives through
a democratic United Nations. Maybe with one representative
for each 1 million inhabitants, some say for each 10
million.
And, point three, take the United Nations out
of the United States and put it somewhere else. Put it in a
more friendly environment. This can all be done within a
span from 5 to 20 years. If democracy is such a good idea,
then why not practice it?
My own book on The Decline and Fall of the
US Empire--And Then What? is scheduled for next Spring.
The book on alternative economics is also for next year, and
so is the book on deep culture. Books, books, books, what
matters more is peace, peace.
So let me end by simply saying that I was
asked to say something on the state of the world. I've done
that. And, if anybody can come up with ideas on how to speed
up constructive, creative, concrete development, please
don't hesitate!
Thank you.
Johan Galtung, Dr hc mult, Professor of Peace Studies;
Founder, TRANSCEND, a peace and development network (
www.transcend.org )
15 contradictions of the US
ECONOMIC
1. Between growth and distribution:
overproduction, 1.4 billion below 1 dollar a day, 100'000
die a day from preventable and curable diseases and 25'000
from hunger;
2. Between productive and finance economy:
currency, stocks, bonds, overvalued, crashes, unemployment,
contract jobs, not positions;
3. Between production/distribution/consumption and
nature:
ecocrisis, depletion/pollution, global warming;
MILITARY
4. Between US state terrorism and terrorism:
blowback;
5. Between US and allies:
except UK-Germany-Japan, allies will say "enough";
6. Between US Eurasia hegemony and Rus-Chindia
triangle with 40% of humanity;
7. Between US-led NATO and the EU army:
a Tindemans follow-up;
POLITICAL
8. Between USA and the UN:
the UN ultimately hitting back;
9. Between USA and the EU:
vying for Orthodox/Muslims support;
CULTURAL
10. Between US Judeo-Christianity and Islam:
the UNSC nucleus has four Christian, and none of 56 Muslim
countries;
11. Between US and the oldest civilizations:
Chinese, Indian, Egyptian, Mesopotamian, Aztec, Inca, Maya;
12. Between US and EU elite cultures:
France, Germany etc.
SOCIAL
13. Between state-corporate elites and working classes of unemployed and contract workers; the middle classes?
14. Between older generation and youth:
Seattle, Washington, Praha, Genova and ever younger youth.
The middle generation?
15. Between myth and realities:
the US dream and US reality.