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A Bailout and a
New World By
Pepe Escobar
26/09/08 "Asia Times" --
WASHINGTON and SAO PAULO - The George W Bush administration's
US$700 billion no-accountability scheme, globally, informally
dubbed "cash for trash", is making all the headlines.
Simultaneously, there's the small matter of the United Nations
General Assembly sanctioning the troubled birth of a new, multipolar world. As a 21st-century counterpart to the Dadaist
Manifesto, this chain of events is priceless.
One just had to listen to the speeches. Brazilian President Lula
da Silva passionately expounded the new political, economic and
commercial geography of the multipolar world. He praised the
Union of Latin American Nations (UNASUR) - the first treaty
uniting all South American nations in 200 years. He blasted
supranational economic institutions that now have no authority -
and no policies - to prevent "speculative anarchy".
French President Nicolas Sarkozy correctly described the Wall
Street meltdown as the biggest crisis since the 1930s. He is
proposing to "rebuild" capitalism - in fact, in his original
French, to "moralize" capitalism, not subjected to wily market
operators, with banks financing development and not engaging in
speculation, and with firm control of credit agencies. Sarkozy
described speculators as "the new terrorists". US Republicans of
course call Sarkozy's plan socialism - as if the Ben Bernanke-Hank
Paulson bailout scheme was not no-holds-barred socialism for the
wealthy.
UN general secretary Ban Ki-moon
urged the democratization of the UN. This would mean in practice
a new International Monetary Fund and a new World Bank - both
still controlled by the US and Western Europe.
And then Bolivian President Evo Morales nailed it. The new
multipolar world should get rid of imperialism and colonialism.
Evo stressed there's no possible social peace under hardcore
capitalism - the global masses would heartily agree. Of course
Evo didn't fail to recall the longtime, concerted Bush
administration campaign against him - once dubbed "the bin Laden
from the Andes" by a former US ambassador. He stressed there was
not a single word of condemnation by the US of relentless
right-wing terrorism in Bolivia, unlike all the nations of South
America talking with one voice via UNASUR.
Evo also revealed that Bush sent him a message - "If I'm not
your friend, I'm your enemy". Evo's response: "I'm a friend of
the American people, I'm anti-imperialist. If they like me, OK;
if not, it's also OK."
What the UN is NOT talking about is how the US will be able to
sustain wars in Iraq and Afghanistan and go against Iran, the
Pashtuns in Pakistan or Russia if the Chinese, the Japanese and
sovereign wealth funds of the Gulf petromonarchies decide to
stop financing these demented adventures. That's the
larger-than-life elephant in the UN house: everybody knows that
the end of the unipolar world is tied to the fact that
Washington simply cannot continue to be a superpower financed by
foreigners.
The Bush administration would do anything to push Georgia into
the North Atlantic Treaty Organization and totally choke off
Russia. Bush himself still referred to Iran at the UN as
"terrorists". But Iranian President Mahmud Ahmadinejad, after
proclaiming that the American empire is waning, preferred to
stress conciliation - he would rather have a "friendly" relation
with Washington. He would meet Barack Obama or John McCain -
whoever is elected to the White House. His beef is with Zionists
- not the Jewish people. He said the Israeli regime would
disappear in the same way as apartheid South Africa and the
Soviet Union - maybe after what he called a "humanitarian"
solution, a referendum in Palestine where Palestinians would
decide their own future.
Burn, baby, burn
And while Rome - that is, Wall Street plus Washington - burns,
Russia sends the mighty Peter the Great - with 20 nuclear
missiles - plus an anti-sub destroyer for military exercises
with Venezuela in the Caribbean. The flamboyant Venezuelan
President Hugo Chavez didn't even show up at the UN - he's busy
doing mega-deals with another emerging superpower, China. The US
Navy's 4th fleet - disbanded in the 1950 - is back to police
South America; the Brazilian military wasted no time launching
their own military exercises to protect what they call the Blue
Amazon, their new, huge offshore oil fields.
And then, live from New York, there was Republican vice
presidential nominee Sarah Palin's speed-dial diplomacy - from
Henry the K Kissinger - did they talk about Metternich and
Clausewitz? - to Hamid "mayor of Kabul" Karzai and Colombian
friend of Bush Alvaro Uribe. The media had literally a few
seconds (29 with Karzai, 20 with Uribe) for a photo op, and that
was it.
Did the beehived, bespectacled creationist hockey mom learn
anything about foreign policy? The mystery remains. She may be
cursing the cancellation of her meeting with Irish pop
icon/world leader Bono. They won't be singing One
together. Blogger Andrew Sullivan nailed it: "Since Sarah Palin
was selected for the vice presidential nomination, Mahmud
Ahmadinejad has given more press conferences than she has."
With the meltdown on Wall Street, it will be very hard for
Republican candidate McCain to pay for his "vision" of America
as world's top dog/policeman. In a dramatic gesture, he has
"suspended" his campaign and bailed out of Friday's presidential
debate as well (late night talk show icon David Letterman nailed
this one: "What are you going to do if you're elected and things
get tough? Suspend being president? We've got a guy like that
now!"
It took "maverick" McCain roughly over a week to go from a "the
fundamentals of the economy are strong" deregulation mantra to
Great Depression gloom and finally to bail himself out from his
own campaign and a debate to boot. Not bad for a self-confessed
ignoramus in economic matters. McCain anyway still counts on the
Bernanke-Paulson $700 billion scheme - and he'll still be
pushing for even lower taxes for the US ultra-wealthy.
And while the new multipolar world was being sketched out in
midtown Manhattan, and McCain was busy trying to run away from
his own presidential campaign, the US took a few more steps to
quickly become the new Brazil - appalling social inequality,
tremendous concentration of wealth, in sum, the law of the
jungle. Call it the revenge of the developing world.
Pepe Escobar is the author of
Globalistan: How the Globalized World is Dissolving into Liquid
War (Nimble Books, 2007) and
Red Zone Blues: a snapshot of Baghdad during the surge.
He may be reached at pepeasia@yahoo.com.
Copyright 2008 Asia Times Online (Holdings) Ltd.
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