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martingale
30th January 2005, 11:29
Michael Lind writes a compelling piece about the world's rejection of America's pretensions of global supremacy:

http://www.thewashingtonnote.com/archives/000283.html

Quote:
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Financial Times, 25 January 2005
How the U.S. Became the World's Dispensable Nation
by Michael Lind

In a second inaugural address tinged with evangelical zeal, George W. Bush declared: "Today, America speaks anew to the peoples of the world." The peoples of the world, however, do not seem to be listening. A new world order is indeed emerging - but its architecture is being drafted in Asia and Europe, at meetings to which Americans have not been invited.

Consider Asean Plus Three (APT), which unites the member countries of the Association of Southeast Asia Nations with China, Japan and South Korea. This group has the potential to be the world's largest trade bloc, dwarfing the European Union and North American Free Trade Association. The deepening ties of the APT member states represent a major diplomatic defeat for the US, which hoped to use the Asia-Pacific Economic Co-operation forum to limit the growth of Asian economic regionalism at American expense. In the same way, recent moves by South American countries to bolster an economic community represent a clear rejection of US aims to dominate a western-hemisphere free trade zone.

Consider, as well, the EU's rapid progress toward military independence. American protests failed to prevent the EU establishing its own military planning agency, independent of the Nato alliance (and thus of Washington). Europe is building up its own rapid reaction force. And despite US resistance, the EU is developing Galileo, its own satellite network, which will break the monopoly of the US global positioning satellite system.

The participation of China in Europe's Galileo project has alarmed the US military. But China shares an interest with other aspiring space powers in preventing American control of space for military and commercial uses. Even while collaborating with Europe on Galileo, China is partnering Brazil to launch satellites. And in an unprecedented move, China recently agreed to host Russian forces for joint Russo-Chinese military exercises.

The US is being sidelined even in the area that Mr Bush identified in last week's address as America's mission: the promotion of democracy and human rights. The EU has devoted far more resources to consolidating democracy in post-communist Europe than has the US. By contrast, under Mr Bush, the US hypocritically uses the promotion of democracy as the rationale for campaigns against states it opposes for strategic reasons. Washington denounces tyranny in Iran but tolerates it in Pakistan. In Iraq, the goal of democratisation was invoked only after the invasion, which was justified earlier by claims that Saddam Hussein had weapons of mass destruction and was collaborating with al-Qaeda.

Nor is American democracy a shining example to mankind. The present one-party rule in the US has been produced in part by the artificial redrawing of political districts to favour Republicans, reinforcing the domination of money in American politics. America's judges -- many of whom will be appointed by Mr Bush -- increasingly behave as partisan political activists in black robes. America's antiquated winner-take-all electoral system has been abandoned by most other democracies for more inclusive versions of proportional representation.

In other areas of global moral and institutional reform, the US today is a follower rather than a leader. Human rights? Europe has banned the death penalty and torture, while the US is a leading practitioner of execution. Under Mr Bush, the US has constructed an international military gulag in which the torture of suspects has frequently occurred. The international rule of law? For generations, promoting international law in collaboration with other nations was a US goal. But the neoconservatives who dominate Washington today mock the very idea of international law. The next US attorney general will be the White House counsel who scorned the Geneva Conventions as obsolete.

A decade ago, American triumphalists mocked those who argued that the world was becoming multipolar, rather than unipolar. Where was the evidence of balancing against the US, they asked. Today the evidence of foreign co-operation to reduce American primacy is everywhere -- from the increasing importance of regional trade blocs that exclude the US to international space projects and military exercises in which the US is conspicuous by its absence.

It is true that the US remains the only country capable of projecting military power throughout the world. But unipolarity in the military sphere, narrowly defined, is not preventing the rapid development of multipolarity in the geopolitical and economic arenas -- far from it. And the other great powers are content to let the US waste blood and treasure on its doomed attempt to recreate the post-first world war British imperium in the Middle East.

That the rest of the world is building institutions and alliances that shut out the US should come as no surprise. The view that American leaders can be trusted to use a monopoly of military and economic power for the good of humanity has never been widely shared outside of the US. The trend toward multipolarity has probably been accelerated by the truculent unilateralism of the Bush administration, whose motto seems to be that of the Hollywood mogul: "Include me out."

In recent memory, nothing could be done without the US. Today, however, practically all new international institution-building of any long-term importance in global diplomacy and trade occurs without American participation.

In 1998 Madeleine Albright, then US secretary of state, said of the U.S.: "We are the indispensable nation." By backfiring, the unilateralism of Mr Bush has proven her wrong. The US, it turns out, is a dispensable nation.

Europe, China, Russia, Latin America and other regions and nations are quietly taking measures whose effect if not sole purpose will be to cut America down to size.

Ironically, the US, having won the cold war, is adopting the strategy that led the Soviet Union to lose it: hoping that raw military power will be sufficient to intimidate other great powers alienated by its belligerence. To compound the irony, these other great powers are drafting the blueprints for new international institutions and alliances. That is what the US did during and after the second world war.

But that was a different America, led by wise and constructive statesmen like Dean Acheson, the secretary of state who wrote of being "present at the creation." The bullying approach of the Bush administration has ensured that the US will not be invited to take part in designing the international architecture of Europe and Asia in the 21st century. This time, the US is absent at the creation.

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POFO_Communist
30th January 2005, 11:48
This time, the US is absent at the creation.

And so it should be. Imagine a future where humanity is completely overwhelmed and absorbed by the US. Imagine the greed, the backstabbing, the horrid result of capitalist imperialism on a grand scale.

Has anyone here seen Battlefield earth? The pshyclos, and their repulsive behaviour, their absolute explotation of themselves and everything around them, thats what the world would be like. A psychlo world, capitalism at it's strongest. Where the desire to profit overcomes all other desires.

We must do everything we can, to destroy this system. It is never too early or too unfavourable to start. Never.

bolshevik butcher
30th January 2005, 12:14
Most of the world is angry with the U$ after Iraq, I wish Britain would join Europe, instead of this stupid go it with America stance.

America
31st January 2005, 22:14
Glad you think so. America is an idea and you can't kill an idea. Regardless of who is president, this is the end of the 20th Century's American Century, and the beginning of the American Millenium.

What will you do when free states freely apply for United States statehood?

America

bolshevik butcher
1st February 2005, 19:46
America, what you mean like Isralel, or no wait Saudi Arabia?

October Revolution
2nd February 2005, 22:21
Originally posted by Clenched [email protected] 30 2005, 12:14 PM
Most of the world is angry with the U$ after Iraq, I wish Britain would join Europe, instead of this stupid go it with America stance.
Yeh same here, it's gunna happen and i belive that europe will get together as a collective state maybe not for a while yet. When it does thought it really will put an end to america as the worlds super power transending it in the process. The problem is itl just bring in another borgeoius soceity albeit not as bad as the US and usually not controlled by a maniac but still not good.

Ameican Millenium :lol: :lol: thats funny it really is all over for the US if some one doesn't destroy it the entire notion of capitalsim will destroy it.

bolshevik butcher
3rd February 2005, 19:04
Originally posted by October Revolution+Feb 2 2005, 10:21 PM--> (October Revolution @ Feb 2 2005, 10:21 PM)
Clenched [email protected] 30 2005, 12:14 PM
Most of the world is angry with the U$ after Iraq, I wish Britain would join Europe, instead of this stupid go it with America stance.
Yeh same here, it's gunna happen and i belive that europe will get together as a collective state maybe not for a while yet. When it does thought it really will put an end to america as the worlds super power transending it in the process. The problem is itl just bring in another borgeoius soceity albeit not as bad as the US and usually not controlled by a maniac but still not good.

Ameican Millenium :lol: :lol: thats funny it really is all over for the US if some one doesn't destroy it the entire notion of capitalsim will destroy it. [/b]
I wish, maybe not quite that, but certainly more independant of america.

October Revolution
4th February 2005, 23:49
Europe may not get rid of america in fact it probaly won't but it will become another super power, this should pretty much stop the US doing whatever it wants.

Paradox
5th February 2005, 01:53
Regardless of who is president, this is the end of the 20th Century's American Century, and the beginning of the American Millenium.

:rolleyes:


George W. Bush declared: "Today, America speaks anew to the peoples of the world." The peoples of the world, however, do not seem to be listening

Damn straight they ain't listening. Bad enough with Iraq and Afghanistan, but then they go all out and say Venezuela, Cuba, Iran, and on and on!?! HA! Yeah, the world is really gonna listen to you then. :rolleyes:

NyChe21
5th February 2005, 21:49
Like any empire, the American Imperial Empire will fall soon. And hopefully it will bring neoliberal capitalism down with it. Like the British Empire and the Roman Empire, America will not be able to support its politics with military spending while its people and the people affected continue to live in poverty. Exciting times we are living in and now is the time to make a change, the same change that Che dreamed about.

NYer565
5th February 2005, 21:52
It's amazing someone can already judge this...considering we're only 5 years into this century.

martingale
7th February 2005, 00:15
The trends of American decline are clear. This article delineates all the tell-tale signs of an American empire in decline:

http://www.commondreams.org/views05/0121-20.htm

The only question for the rest of mankind is this: Will America's decline be a peaceful one, or will American imperialism do everything in its power to remain on top --- including endless wars of conquest (i.e. relying on the one dimension of its power in which it still reigns supreme - its military).

bolshevik butcher
7th February 2005, 15:56
Neo liberal capitalism in america today? wtf you on?

Severian
7th February 2005, 22:00
If the "American Century" was declared around 1950 or so, we have to conclude that some centuries are shorter than others...

I think Lind is dealing with an important subject here, though he overstates his case in some respects.

The U.S. is losing out on ASEAN, but in Latin America the U.S.-dominated trading bloc (FTAA etc) seems so far to be expanding faster than Latin American trade blocs.

The attempts to create a European Union multilateral forces is worth watching, to see if Washington's imperialist rivals develop the capacity to carry out overseas interventions without U.S. assistance. (France does already carry out small-scale interventions in Africa.)

The other side of this, which Lind leaves out, is that a number of minor imperialist powers are retooling their militaries to serve specialized, subordinate roles in U.S.-led interventions, giving up any hope of an independent military role. As a British government White Paper put it "Large operations, against foreign states, can only be plausibly conducted if U.S. forces are engaged, either leading a coalition or in NATO”. Canada, New Zealand, and maybe some others have also recognized this. What Britain cannot do, other imperialist powers - except maybe France - are even less able to do.

The European rivals have certain economic weaknesses as well, including higher labor costs than U.S. capitalists must pay, and the continued drag of the former East Germany on German capitalism. Japan has suffered from low or no growth since the early 90s. China's rapid economic growth cannot continue indefinitely, and it is nowhere near a global military rival to the U.S. It doesn't even have the naval and air forces to blockade, let alone invade, Taiwan....it may be trying for the capability for a submarine blockade.

And these U.S. competitors are disunited, each other's competitors as well as Washington's.

I agree that the U.S. empire is declining. But no other coalition of powers is likely to successfully fill the resulting vacuum. Much less construct a "new world order" as Lind suggests.

novemba
9th February 2005, 01:01
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Project_for_t...merican_Century (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Project_for_the_New_American_Century)

Anyone else see a pattern? Theories?

Morpheus
9th February 2005, 04:33
Originally posted by October [email protected] 4 2005, 11:49 PM
Europe may not get rid of america in fact it probaly won't but it will become another super power, this should pretty much stop the US doing whatever it wants.
Yeah, and then we'll have arms races, nationalistic demonizing of each other, proxy conflicts, the threat of nuclear war, etc. What a great future to look forward to - a new cold war.

Iepilei
9th February 2005, 09:08
You're also forgetting the power China now has since it's continued economic booms.

Severian
9th February 2005, 20:28
How much power is that, exactly? China's economy may be bigger than Italy's now, maybe about comparable to France's? But it remains far smaller than the EU total, or the US's, or even Japan.

It's the growth rate that's impressive, and the size of the economy that China might potentially have if it continues long enough. The rapid growth is fueled by a transfer of workers from agriculture to dustry, and can't continue forever.

Iepilei
9th February 2005, 23:13
They've got the people, the means, and the backup methods in which to be a formidable force.