Alternative Right, November 5, 2012: Sometimes
empires just die, but often they have one last spurt before they go,
and more often than not the spurt is all part of the dying. A good
analogy is the Indian Summer, a period of unexpectedly warm weather that
appears to turn the tide of approaching Winter. Less astute minds are
sure to mistake this as proof of eternal summer and get frostbitten
later. Those believing in the permanence of American hegemony are in for
a similar nasty surprise, especially as in the coming years we are
going to see the reassertion once again of American power.
This last
hurrah won’t have the same post-9-11 naivety about turning everyone
into "instant Americans" by giving them “democracy,” “freedom,” and cell
phones over the craters of their bombed-out homes; even though that
shrill note will probably continue to resonate through the propaganda.
No, the new Neocons who will further this policy will be motivated much
more by a cynical sense of realpolitik, realfinanz, and the increasingly jarring clatter of the gears of the machine that once smoothly ran the world.
It is not
particularly important who wins the Presidential election today. Romney
is a better fit with the dynamic of a late season assertion of American
power; Obama a better fit with the economic decline powering it.
Whoever is elected President, we will see a similar trajectory, whereby
the hegemonic power of America will be asserted not as a burgeoning of
true, broad-based power as it was in the post-WWII period, but instead
as a flashy gesture disguising frailty and ultimate collapse.
Fall Guy
The
crucible for this last act of overextended power will of course be Iran,
the perfect fall guy because you just know they are not going to vary
their route – their route being the one that leads towards a nuclear
capability to balance that of Israel. Right on schedule, just when Uncle
Sam wants to remind the world of what he looked like 50 years ago with
his shirt off, the Iranians can be relied on to provide a convenient casus belli,
especially if you have a few experts and a pet media to help refine the
evidence and airbrush the fact that Israel and Pakistan have no
business owning nukes either.
There is a
tendency to view the coming war with Iran too narrowly. It is typically
presented as an issue of security for Israel with a side order of
protecting the free flow of Gulf oil and therefore that panacea of all
dreams, the global economy. The security of the cute little tyrannies
that dot the southern shore of the Gulf also gets the occasional
mention. The real issue however is the maintenance of US power vis-à-vis
its major global rivals set against a general background of its
decline.
Riddled
with flaws and weaknesses that are only getting worse, America is the
yesterday man of tomorrow, but at least today the country still has some
killer assets – and I don’t just mean its drones (either of the media
or aeronautical variety).
The growth of America’s weaknesses means that its assets can no longer be kept on the shelf to exert their silent and secret power, but must now be vigorously milked for all they are worth. This is what will determine American foreign policy in the coming years, and impel it into inevitable war.
The growth of America’s weaknesses means that its assets can no longer be kept on the shelf to exert their silent and secret power, but must now be vigorously milked for all they are worth. This is what will determine American foreign policy in the coming years, and impel it into inevitable war.
First the
weaknesses: America is not a country in the conventional sense. This
means it is held together artificially and mainly through bribery.
Ultimately this means imports from China and elsewhere. This weakness is
enshrined in the shape of the US economy. Modern Americans are
incapable of enduring a fraction of the hardship, discipline, and
endurance which workers in China, Japan, or even parts of Europe are
capable of. This means that America is fighting a natural tendency to
decline to levels of poverty where it can develop these traits again,
but such a decline would inevitably rip the country apart. So, the
inevitable must not be allowed to happen, and the only way to stop this
is with magic money. But magic money is like the emperor with no
clothes. Sooner or later the inconvenient child is bound to point the
finger, and spark off the mass perception of nudity. Already the Emperor
has unfastened his top button and unzipped his fly.
Another
important weakness that America has is the power of the Jewish or
Zionist lobby, supplemented by the religious right. This is a problem
for two reasons. First it leads to unnecessary military involvements –
both Afghanistan and Iraq can be laid at the door of this unholy
relationship. Secondly, the anti-US sentiments of the Islamic world
threaten to undermine the status of a dollar. Recent years have seen
moves to decouple oil rich economies from the petro-dollar. The
existence of a viable alternative world reserve currency in the Euro
makes these dangers very real. And later something even better may come
along.
Unused Assets
Now its
strengths: America’s main strength has always been its position, a large
secure continental landmass with unhindered access to the two largest
oceans. This has made it the ideal country to carry out Alfred Mahan’s
vision of world hegemony through sea power, something it has improved on
by bottling up other major continental powers through its alliances
with Japan and Britain, its two unsinkable aircraft carriers. Much of
the Chinese anger directed at Japan recently over the issue of the
insignificant Senkaku rocks is provoked by the way that US allies like
Japan and Taiwan effectively serve as a fleet of blockading ships. More
than this, China’s vast thirst for oil can only be quenched with
supplies from the Middle East and Africa that America can easily cut off
anytime it chooses. The main goal of Chinese foreign policy is to
overcome this strategic weakness.
Secondly,
although America is a major oil importer itself, it is relatively
self-sufficient and secure in this respect compared to other major
powers. Part of this is because it is now mainly a consumer economy rather
than an industrial one. Also, in recent years domestic oil production
has boomed to the point where the US is now tipped to overtake even
Saudi Arabia as the biggest oil producer. A good conspiracy theorist
could make much of this surprising revelation – almost as if a major
Gulf war has been in the offing for the past few years of rising
production.
A third
strength that America has is its political and economic unity. Although
the economy has major and even terminal flaws, the fact that it is
united is a clear strength, especially with regard to the Eurozone,
which is struggling in the no-man’s land between monetary union and
deeper economic union during an economically difficult period.
A fourth
strength is the US’s ability to project power. Although the campaign in
Afghanistan in particular has revealed the limitations of US military
power against Fourth Generation Warfare, the US is still able to control
much of the world’s airspace and sea lanes. Even though it would be
defeated if it entered certain of the 'houses' in the 'global village,'
it still controls most of the streets between those houses.
This also
gives the US the glamour of Superpower status that helps to sustain the
perceived value of the dollar against inflationary economic policies,
and so helps the machinery of domestic bribery on which unity and
everything else depends.
These
strengths, it should be noted, really come into their own when set
against the weaknesses of America’s main rivals for global power, namely
China and the EU, whose strengths, by the way, are equally potent when
set against America’s weaknesses. These strengths and weaknesses can be
summarized as follows:
US weaknesses vis-à-vis its rivals
Ethnic disunity and the financial costs this brings (vs. China/ to a lesser extent the EU)
Lack of toughness and discipline of its people (vs. China/ to a lesser extent the EU)
Reliance on debt-financed spending (vs. China/ to a lesser extent the EU)
Resistance to the dollar caused by pro-Israel foreign policy (vs. the EU)
US strengths vis-à-vis its rivals
Military power projection and global positioning (vs. China/ to a lesser extent Russia)
Relative energy independence (vs. China and the EU)
Political and economic unity (vs. the EU)
Superpower status (vs. China/ to a lesser extent the EU)
There is a
kind of negative complementariness between America’s strengths and
those of its rivals. If Europe and China are allowed to strengthen, the
US will weaken by a similar amount.
For
example, if the Eurozone is allowed to recover and consolidate its
monetary and economic union this will provide the basis for an
alternative reserve currency that would not only be popular with Islamic
countries but also China and Russia, keen to see America weakened.
Also, any weakening in America’s power projection and global positioning
would create a vacuum that, in the Western Pacific, would be filled by
China, which is keen to protect and control the sea lanes it depends on.
Such a weakening of US prestige would also undermine the power of the
dollar and lead to a vicious cycle.
These
factors create the machinery, which, if worked one way, leads to the
collapse of American Imperial power, but if worked the other, offers the
possibility of hamstringing America’s opponents and extending US power
for a few more decades.
If
America was capable of slow and gentle decline as pre-multicultural
Britain was, it might be easy to accept the end of the American
Imperium, but the ending of Empire is also likely to have an enormous
economic and social cost, with the essential falsity of the present
economy being revealed, a process that would effectively tear the nation
apart.
The
unacceptable nature of such a fate provides the impulse for America to
move the other way, whoever gets elected today; which leads us back to
the prospect of war with Iran.
Iran
having nuclear weapons only matters to the USA because it matters to
Israel, as the Iranians would be no more likely to nuke anything than
Israel. But Iran’s nuclear ambitions provide a convenient casus belli
that can be sold to the unwarlike, consumerist masses, and which would
allow America to capitalize on its strengths relative to its main
rivals.
The
nature of such a war would be largely confined to the skies with some
peripheral naval and land operations. The war aim would be to destroy
Iran’s air force and nuclear research capabilities. The war, however,
would actually be directed at other powers, with Iran serving the role
of surrogate enemy.
It would
interrupt oil supplies possibly for weeks or even months to a degree
which the wars against Afghanistan and Iraq never did. While
post-election America would suffer from the resultant spike in oil
prices, it would bear up a lot better than either China or the EU. The
crisis would lead to a short period of intense economic dislocation as
oil prices shot up and businesses closed down, at least temporarily.
This would send a sharp signal to China that America controlled its sea
lanes and oil supply. It would also turn one of China's strengths – the
hard-working self-reliance of its population – into a weakness with
sudden unemployment possibly feeding into public unrest. Furthermore it
would also turn an American weakness – its underclass-bribing welfare
system – into a strength.
In the
Eurozone a sudden economic crisis like this would likely create enormous
strains on an already fragile and unbalanced system, causing sharp
increases in government borrowing costs for some nations, and possibly
seeing countries like Greece and Spain exiting the Euro, or even new
countries emerging like Catalonia or Northern Italy. This picture of
confusion and division would further diminish the status of the Euro as a
rival world currency to the dollar. Meanwhile the “flight to safety”
caused by the war would strengthen the dollar.
The Mighty Donut
While a
war against Iran serves a useful local goal for America’s Middle Eastern
allies, it also has clear benefits for America’s global position, on
which its domestic economy depends. Peace makes the world focus on the
hole in the American donut; war makes it focus instead on the doughy
ring.
There is a
kind of impersonal necessity at work, so forget which telegenic
narcissistic autocue-reading sociopath is riding the presidential golf
buggy.
Failing
empires cannot afford the luxury of unutilized assets because this makes
these assets effectively a punitive tax on that empire, one that its
rivals do not share. America’s control of the seas and air is more than
worthless in a world that is entirely peaceful; it is debilitating. It’s
all hole and no donut!
To
capitalize on these assets a certain amount of chaos is needed. The war
against Iran and its repercussions for China and Europe, America’s real
rivals, provides a nice, measured degree of this. For these reasons,
limited war and a period of reassertion of American power is extremely
likely.
But what
will be the unintended consequences of this? In the case of Europe,
further economic dislocation can only be good news for the continent’s
nationalists. While for China and Russia, the exercise of US power will
only impel them to strengthen their alliance and develop their ability
to project power. There will also be attempts to draw Japan away.
The consequences in the Middle East will be more complex, but America’s blatant use of power for the benefit of Israel and the Gulf states will create a deep animus that may serve to unite Sunnis and Shiites against their common enemy. In other words, short-term gains in American power will be paid for through long-term losses.
The consequences in the Middle East will be more complex, but America’s blatant use of power for the benefit of Israel and the Gulf states will create a deep animus that may serve to unite Sunnis and Shiites against their common enemy. In other words, short-term gains in American power will be paid for through long-term losses.
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