by Richard Mellor
Afscme Local 444, retired
We have always argued on this blog that the so-called
diplomacy of the world’s nations is phony. It is the pretense that good
intentions between states are the norm and negotiations around issues like
trade or territory take place in an atmosphere of trust with a goal of
benefiting all parties, the goal is harmony.
The reality is the opposite as Wikileaks has shown and why
Wikileaks’ founder Julian Assange, NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden, Chelsea Manning and others like them are so
despised by those participating in this diplomacy of thieves.
The fact is that capitalism is a permanent state of war. The
relations between capitalist states are one of permanent war as nations
struggle to gain a competitive edge over their rivals through bullying, lying,
plunder and robbery under the cloak of diplomacy. When this doesn’t work, then they resort to
what they call hard power as opposed to soft and mass violence ensues.
The hypocrisy is incredible.
Despite all the talk from the US spin doctors about wanting
the rest of the world to develop, this only applies to nations that are
dependent on US power and US money for their development and as long as they
have valuable resources that US and western capitalism needs. Most importantly, they cannot rival US military power and global influence.
The rise of China has always been a major concern for the
western powers and is particularly threatening to US imperialism and its
position as the number one global power. While US imperialism’s global
influence has declined somewhat it is still a power armed to the teeth, with
the ability to blow us all up; it’s a deteriorating regime with the big guns.
The creation of an Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank
(AIID), a multilateral development bank led by China with a $50 billion kick in
has war profiteers in Washington and the Pentagon all flustered. What’s worse, the Chinese have managed to get
26 Asian countries to support the venture. And worse still, a number of
important US allies are on board, including the UK, France and Germany, New Zealand,
Italy. Even South Korea has joined and
Japan and Australia are considering it. Readers may remember that prior to this period of
decline and stagnation, Japan was enemy number one in the world when it came to
US competitors, its decline has opened up doors for the Chinese. Allies these countries may be, but there is no honor
among thieves and the US spying on their leaders, taping their phone calls and
screening their e mails is not an activity that strengthens friendships. It’s
not cool to get caught at this stuff. But arrogance leads to carelessness.
Reading a Wall Street Journal editorial last week I had to
laugh. The leading mouthpiece of US capitalism and its plunder around the world
is astonished that its allies and other would be proxies in Asia are supporting
the AIID despite Washington’s protestations. “Beijing has never
made a secret of its belief in checkbook politics, and in recent years it has
spent vast sums in pursuit of its regional ambitions….” the WSJ editorial
states. In another WSJ article on the subject, Andrew Browne writes
that Washington is “…concerned that the
lender will act as a tool of Chinese foreign policy, albeit it in a more sophisticate way”. (My added emphasis)*
Well Browne and the WSJ do have one point; “sophisticated” is not the term that
comes to mind when discussing the US bourgeois and their foreign policy. One million dead in Iraq, a lost war that is
splitting the country in to three parts and these also fragmented. Creating the
Islamic State. Failing to defeat the
Taliban, provoking war in Eastern Europe, supporting every rotten regime around
the world that advances Wall Street’s interests. And, how does the conversation between
Netanyahu and Obama go?:
“Barack, we’ve killed 500 Palestinian women and children, we’re running out of bullets. Can you send more?”
“Barack, we’ve killed 500 Palestinian women and children, we’re running out of bullets. Can you send more?”
“No problem Bibi,
we’ve got your back. Even Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth warren are on board”
“We are wary about a trend toward constant accommodation of
China, which is not the best way to engage a rising power,” a senior US
official tells the UK’s Financial Times.
British imperialism, a tenth rate power these days, has really hurt some
feelings among the US 1%. The British bourgeois has been one of the staunchest
lapdogs when it comes to US aggression but “Appeasing
China for commercial purposes…” the WSJ editorial says, is tantamount to
London, abandoning, its historic “….responsibility
to speak up for the freedom of its former colony Hong Kong.”
The Chinese are in every continent; they own the largest African
Bank. They have built railroads, infrastructure, factories, bridges throughout
Africa and Latin America which is considered by the US 1% to be their back yard. They have funded projects in Vietnam, a traditional
enemy and that country has joined the AIIB. Now, one of China’s foremost
Vietnamese critics, economist, Lee Dang Doanh has praised the venture as a “clever idea because it will soothe
anxieties as China deploys its vast wealth around the world.” writes
Browne. Doanh also “praises western powers for breaking ranks with Washington” and joining the bank.
This is not good for US imperialism.
Naturally, all the powerful capitalist economies pursue
these goals. The US doesn’t practice “Checkbook politics”? This is the land of checkbook politics, ask
any American. The US bribes UN representatives to vote its way at the UN. Where
it can’t buy or bribe allies it will throw some violence at them as it does at
home. It will use its vast wealth and huge secret spying apparatus to
infiltrate and destabilize regimes that refuse to allow US capitalism access to
its markets and raw materials. The first Americans in Vietnam were CIA operatives used to
destabilize the country and deter any opposition to its polices.
The US bourgeois’ fear that behind Chinese foreign policy
and the creation of the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank is an attempt to
increase China’s global influence is valid. But it is this Chinese
sophistication that worries them, “Poor
regimes willing to stay on Beijing’s good side will earn cheap loans on lax
terms, but the bank will promote a version of China’s state capitalism, not
transparent markets.” the Wall Street Journal warns its readers. For some, the Chinese are not tarnished with quite the same colonialist brush as the Europeans and Americans.
The Chinese bureaucracy has been fairly successful so far
when it comes to running a market economy alongside a huge state owned
sector. This is the problem for the US
capitalist class. For them, everything
must be privatized, education, health care, transportation, the banks,
infrastructure, agriculture. As in the US, any state intervention that crowds
out private capital or appears in the slightest to provide a service has to be
abandoned, vilified, privatized--------the market rules and cannot be
undermined as profits come first.
The Journal's editorial warns, “The trillions of dollars Asia needs for public works will never
materialize unless private investors see reliable,
non-corrupt opportunities for returns. Easy public loans that perpetuate
cronyism don’t help.”
Readers should think about this statement for a minute. The US social infrastructure is a disaster, The U.S. needs to spend a staggering $2 trillion to rebuild infrastructure Business Insider wrote in 2011. Try getting that from the hedge fund managers. US capitalism has more than two trillion dollars stashed away refusing to invest until its profitable enough to do so. Private individuals have some $32 trillion stashed in offshore accounts avoiding taxes according to a study published in 2013, and that’s private not corporate funds. And US capitalism has received trillions in "cheap money". It grew to a great extent thanks to African slave labor that received no wages for 300 years.
The Journal's editorial warns, “The trillions of dollars Asia needs for public works will never
source Business insider |
Readers should think about this statement for a minute. The US social infrastructure is a disaster, The U.S. needs to spend a staggering $2 trillion to rebuild infrastructure Business Insider wrote in 2011. Try getting that from the hedge fund managers. US capitalism has more than two trillion dollars stashed away refusing to invest until its profitable enough to do so. Private individuals have some $32 trillion stashed in offshore accounts avoiding taxes according to a study published in 2013, and that’s private not corporate funds. And US capitalism has received trillions in "cheap money". It grew to a great extent thanks to African slave labor that received no wages for 300 years.
The continuing decline in US living standards will continue
until public control and production of social needs including
infrastructure, replaces the private. The journal editorial could apply to any
world power but there is no doubt that among the world’s working class
billions, it is the US that is feared the most, the US that is seen as the
warmonger.
It is difficult to say how far China can go along the
capitalist road. Dominant sectors of the
economy including the finance sector are state run. There are hundreds of thousands of protests
and strikes every year against land grabs, environmental damage and working
conditions. There is massive
overcapacity and a real estate bubble.
Whole projects have been abandoned.
Strikes have won major wage increases and we have seen the huge protests
in Hong Kong. The Chinese bureaucracy
has an advantage in that they are all familiar with Marx’s economic writings
for one thing. They are trying to
balance and ease the worst effects of the market. How successful they will be remains to be
seen.
There are huge clashes ahead in China as far as I can see,
particularly as the economy slows.
Clashes between the aspirations of the rising capitalist class and the
Communist Party bureaucrats. Clashes between the state and the massive working
class, the rural workers and the urban.
And further clashes between workers and the private sector. The environmental crisis is acute in China
and there will inevitably be huge battles around this issue.
In relation to China, it is also important to remember that if in 1985 one had asked the academic experts on the Soviet Union how long
this dictatorship would last they might well have said 1000 years; such was the
power and crushing weight of the dictatorship, by the late 80’s it was gone.The bureaucracy was no longer feared.
The last point I would like to make is that these conditions
of constant war, tension and conflict will never end until capitalism is
overthrown; it is the modern era’s new normal. The world is far more unstable today
than during the cold war when two global powers had a relationship of carving
up spheres of influence that brought relative calm by today’s standards. Now,
the existence of nation states within an integrated world economy is emerging
once again as a source of conflict on a major scale alongside the
disintegration of former states, or failed states as they call them today. Capitalism is truly in deep crisis.
It is not that working class people of any nation don’t
understand this in a sense, that the world and the governments of nations
are rotten. But with no national or international working class movements and
organizations that can cut through the confusion and explain these developments
in a political way, unite workers along economic, political and of course class lines, the tendency is for people to buckle up for the ride and take the
position that better it’s our rotten bastards than theirs. This writer is no expert, just sharing my views on the subject from a worker's perspective.
It is exactly such a movement that is necessary if we are to
survive on this planet. We have not yet run out of time, but we will.
* US Hard Line on Bank Sets Up Rifts: WSJ World News, 3-25-15
This is a brilliant article Richard. Thank you. Sean.
ReplyDeleteWell written article. You'l be interested in this one from Jack Rasmus: http://jackrasmus.com/2015/03/29/chinas-bank-waning-usa-hegemony-2/
ReplyDeleteThanks Richard, the article really provides a great insight of the world we are living in, and why we need to change it
ReplyDeleteRe-blogged the article with thanks
ReplyDeletehttps://workerscentre.wordpress.com
Thank you Surendra. Mind you, I thought you died in 1997
ReplyDelete