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Today's commentary:
http://www.zmag.org/sustainers/content/2005-10/30prashad.cfm

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ZNet Commentary
Primacy October 30, 2005
By Vijay Prashad

Finally, from an unlikely direction, the US media has asked the question: 
why did the Bush administration take the US to war with Iraq? The timing is 
awkward. As Rove-Libbygate unravels, so does the power of the Hammer and the 
Scalpel: the executive branch's two reliable allies in Congress are 
embroiled in corruption probes. And meanwhile, in a Baghdad fantasy court, 
the US presents an unrepentant Saddam Hussein, ready to unmask his 
paymasters for their combined chemical crimes. The jubilation of this trial 
is eclipsed by the fetid smell of Washington corruption. What the 
DeLay-Frist-Rove events reveal is that there is a close connection between 
corporate and military corruption, and that the political class is simply 
the conduit for the overwhelming power of the corporate elites.

Little of that is in the papers, because it is far easier to be obsessed 
over the lies of a reporter (Judith Miller) or the downfall of a political 
titan (Rove). The tendency to see the Bush clique as a "rogue fraction" of 
the ruling class enables the establishment media to exculpate the system 
itself, and to lay the blame, as it were, on the "cabal" (as Powell's man, 
Lawrence Wilkerson, did in late October). Did the US go to war because of 
the machinations of a small fraction of intellectuals and policy hawks, or 
did the machinery go to war because of a long-standing and well-entrenched 
policy that intends to maintain US primacy across the planet?

Very useful books like James Bamford's A Pretext for War and George Packer's 
Assassin's Gate indicate that the Iraq war came as a result of deception, 
not of long-standing policy. But, if this is the case, then why did the 
establishment figures in the Democratic Party (including John Kerry) 
consider the overthrow of Saddam Hussein a fitting strategic goal? They 
disagreed in the tactics, but not in the overall strategy. In other words, 
the Democratic Party's elites would have gone to the UN for more ammunition, 
and it might have strengthened the murderous sanctions (recall: President 
Bill Clinton signed the Iraq Liberation Act of 1998 which further emboldened 
then Pentagon-neocon stooge, Ahmed Chalabi).

Either way, both political fractions dominated by the ruling class agreed on 
the strategic necessity to overthrow the inconvenient regime led by Saddam 
Hussein. Its inconvenience stemmed not only from its threat to its 
neighbors, but also to the Dollar-Wall Street Regime (a concept developed by 
Peter Gowan). On November 6, 2000, Iraq switched its oil sales from dollars 
to euros, a challenge to the dollar-Wall Street hegemony. In July 2003, 
China shifted a part of its dollar reserves into euros. These gestures 
terrified both factions of the US elite.

The view from around the former Third World is different. A series of new 
books from well-established figures in India, for example, demonstrate a 
deep suspicion of the entire strategy of US primacy. "In Cairo, Damascus, 
Teheran, Delhi, Islamabad, Djakarta, Seoul, Pyongyang, Tokyo or Tashkent, 
you will find a premonition of impending disaster in peoples' minds: a sense 
of unease at the growing awareness of a distant power's determination to 
make the world its economic and political domain." So writes Patwant Singh, 
the former editor of Design magazine, in one of the many new books (this 
one, The World According To Washington: An Asian View, has been recently 
republished by Common Courage Press in Maine).

The "unease" is well founded, not only because of the virulence of US policy 
in Asia over the past fifty years, but also because the three "axis of evil" 
nations reside in the continent. Asia, from the counter-insurgency campaign 
in the Philippines to the Iraq conflict itself, is the primary theatre for 
the US attempt to consolidate its hegemonic position: that is the simple 
fact that produces the "unease" so clearly developed in Singh's book (and in 
the work of Ninan Koshy's two books from Leftword in New Delhi).

The demand for primacy is not new. In 1947, the State Department's Policy 
Planning Staff argued, "To seek less than the preponderant power would be to 
opt for defeat. Preponderant power must be the object of US policy." In 
other words, the US must seek not only to consolidate its position of 
military and economic strength earned during World War II, but it must 
ensure that all its rivals, in every sector, must be crushed.

In 1993, Harvard scholar Samuel Huntington defended the primacy strategy 
because "it is central to the welfare and security of America and the future 
of freedom." It is therefore entirely rational that more than eighty percent 
of Indonesians and seventy percent of Pakistanis believe that the US might 
pose a military threat to them. Their freedom is not guaranteed by US 
primacy, even though "our" freedom in such an unequal world might rely upon 
it. Those within the advanced industrial states are beneficiaries of the 
policy of US primacy, because it is this that enables the extraction of 
wealth, resources and knowledge from the darker nations with impunity.

>From Asia come myriad proposals against US primacy. Before 9/11, Russia and 
China gathered four Central Asian states (Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzistan, 
Tajikistan and Uzbekistan) into the Shanghai Cooperation Organization. The 
US shunned this group as a means to constrain al-Qaeda. The Chinese talked 
about "multipolarity" at the initial meetings of the SCO, and the phrase has 
continued to resonate among its leadership. Before he took over leadership 
in China, Hu Jintao went on a trip to Europe just after 9/11, where he 
explained, "Multipolarity constitutes an important base for world peace and 
the democratization of international relations is an essential guarantee for 
that peace." In other words, the UN and inter-state collaboration should be 
the ground for conflict resolution rather than the guns of the US.

In January 2005, the Indian and Chinese governments agreed on the need to 
promote "multipolarity," "that the current international situation 
characterized by globalization presented an opportunity as well as posed a 
challenge. They emphasized the need for making international relations 
democratic in order to face the challenge."

In December 2004, the South American countries gathered in Cusco to craft 
the South American Community of Nations, whose principle of international 
relations were "based on the affirmation of the effective exercise of 
multilateralism that link up economic and social development firmly and 
effectively on the world agenda."

The demand for "democratization" of the UN Security Council might be simply 
be the "great power" ambitions of regional powerhouses (South Africa, India, 
Brazil), but the only reason this has traction is because of the general 
frustration around the planet with the US policy of primacy.

When Condoleezza Rice visited London in 2003, she said that multipolarity 
"is a theory of rivalry, of competing powers ­ and at its worst, competing 
values. We have tried this before. It led to the Great War" (this argument 
received intellectual "heft" from Robert Kagan in the Summer 1998 issue of 
Foreign Policy, although it was also repudiated by John Mersheimer in his 
book, The Tragedy of Great Power Politics).

Any talk of the messiness of democracy is met with impatience, and fear 
mongering. To allow other views onto the table is to invite "rivalry" and 
not democracy. Such is the anti-democratic ethos of US primacy ­ if you are 
not with us, you are against us, where the different fractions of the elite 
are united in the formula even if they disagree with its contents. The 
curtailment of the Bush regime is essential, but so too is the repudiation 
of the idea of US primacy.
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---
TCB'n,
Noah

"The foundation of all mental illness is the unwillingness to experience
legitimate suffering."
        - Carl Jung

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