The Recolonisation of the Arab world

http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=26651

by Dr. Ali Kadri


Global Research, September 19, 2011


Despite vast financial wealth, natural and human resources, the Arab
World remains underdeveloped and more than half the population is
condemned to a life of poverty.

Instead of underdevelopment, a more fitting concept that would capture
the recent historical phase would be that of reverse development or
de-development. De-development represents a combination of
retrogression in the build-up of physical capital and a denial of the
right of people to struggle to build a better life by repression and
absolute authoritarianism. Although capital accumulation entails a
blend of expansion of market driven forces (commodity realisation) and
development by encroachment and dispossession (control by violent
means including imperial plunder of third world resources), in the
Arab world, the latter pattern of accumulation held primacy, hence,
determining the pace of development altogether.

Oil in its raw form, in the way it is priced in the dollar, and in the
infinite scientific permutations to its derivatives creating value
added, represents a decisive constituent of global accumulation, the
control of which is central to maintaining the stature of US Empire,
the present global financial order and its associated imperial rents.
The articulation of the ‘Arab social formation’ with global capital is
reproduced by a cross-border class alliance of global capital elites
and Arab regimes, which maintains outright military superiority and
hegemony over Arab working masses, pari passu, Israel’s military
supremacy. The very persistence of conflicts and wars in the Arab
world however, mediate lingering and un-weathered inter-imperialist
rivalries relating to the contradiction between the US and other
powers in Europe and Asia over the disproportionate acquisition of
imperial rents derived from the stature of US empire.

The mismatch between America’s waning economic dynamism and imperial
rank, which in part manifests itself in growing US military
adventurism,  endangers the global financial structure and the dollar
as the universal medium of wealth holding and, ultimately, makes
uneasy the disposition of imperial partners towards future
inter-imperialist collaboration and wealth holdings denominated in
dollars.[i] Militarism, as a consequence, remains and shall remain
the principal province of accumulation, which reigns over much of the
third world and, principally, the Arab world.[ii]

On the underside of this  global process, Arab development, if it were
to occur, would conjointly buttress the security of Arab working
populations and Arab national security and, would indubitably distort
the current balance of forces propping up the US-headed imperial
structure.

For the Arab working population to exercise sovereignty over their
resources and put back into their economies more of the wealth that
would enhance their living conditions, is for America ’s position to
be de-leveraged globally.

Arab development diametrically undermines the present course of global
accumulation and the financial order associated therewith, in which
despite a financial crisis triggered by the US in 2008, the dollar
gained value on account of US institutional viability, which is
bolstered, in great part, by its imperial prowess and reach.[iii]
Situated in this context, the immiserisation of the Arab people
becomes both, an outcome of an inter-imperialist entente, and a
complex articulation of global powers necessitating the de-development
of the Arab world at the present stage of the crisis of capital.
Although power can be couched under various symbolic constructs, it is
becoming clearer with the ongoing escalation of counterrevolutionary
aggression against Arab working populations, continued direct
occupations in Iraq and Palestine, and the growing number of
potentially ‘failed’ and already ‘failed Arab states,’ that the
concept of power, which befits what is being unleashed against the
Arab working people, can be basically reduced to fire power.

US and Western aggression against the Arab working population, couched
under the rubric of international law and humanitarianism, is made to
appear more costly to imperialism than the gains that Western powers
are set to expropriate from the developing or Arab world.

The question is often put in a an apologetic way, in the sense that,
why should Western powers spend so much on war in countries whose
income and resources will not offset the costs of imperial wars? Or,
worse yet, Arab scholars who question why the US should side with
Israel when Arabs invest so much more in the US, while Israel gets a
yearly US subsidy in the form of aid. Imperial wars, seen from this
double-entry accounting framework, are explained as being part and
parcel of a Western civilising process of democratisation, which has
left behind it hundreds of millions of dead in the last century and an
ideology of hate and racism inherent in all ‘nationalisms,’ and, we
are yet to see the last fruit of this ‘civilising’ endeavour. When
stripped bare from falsehood and ‘de-fetishised’ however, prices and,
the sums of financial resources they amount to, are brokered by a
structure of power from which Arab working people have been wholly
discarded. After the usurpation of the bigger share of national wealth
by Arab elites and their foreign patrons, the resources remaining for
the Arab labouring classes, are insufficient to maintain a
historically-determined decent standard of living. A dispossessed and
disempowered working population cannot negotiate the condition of its
survival.

Development in the Arab world therefore, has to be continually denied
so that the security of working people and, by implication, national
security are exposed and laid open. Hence, the terms of power, which
determine the terms of trade or, the very making of the price system,
and underlay the reproduction of the global accumulation process, will
remain calibrated by belligerent means or otherwise to favouring a US
headed global capital. The continually deepening crisis of capital
implies a further escalation of the violent dispossession process
carried out against the working people in the Arab world and, a
cheapening of Arab human and material resources.

Notwithstanding the enforced public to private transfers that were
carried out under neo-liberalism prior to the Arab revolutions, wars
against working people in the Arab world act as the definitive
instrument by which social and non-monetised resources and labour are
coercively engaged in the formation of value under capitalist
accumulation. Wars on an already defeated Arab world have served to
maintain US control of oil supplies through direct military
subjugation, stabilised a financial order in which the dollar remains
the world reserve currency and wealth holding medium, reinforced
militaristic, religious and ultra nationalist ideologies globally,
assisted in the compression of the global wage and, ultimately, US
capital held at bay ascendant and competing imperialist powers.

There is a social story, antecedent to economics and its price facade,
which explains the maintenance of global capital rate of profit and
the dislocation and immiserisation of Arab people. In an integrated
and closely interlocked circuit of global capital, in which Arab oil
and development form principal moments of a totality, which is
capitalism as an historical epoch, the denial of Arab development in
itself  becomes an input to capital accumulation. In the inexorable
process of capital, the usurpation of resources and the ideological
underpinnings imparted through war, specifically, those of sect,
ethnicity, Islamophobia, etc., which pit working people against one
another, form self-reinforcing constituents of accumulation. Arab
social de-development thus far has represented a cornerstone in the
reproduction of global capital in social, physical and, and
ideological terms. Capital, lest one forgets, survives not only by oil
and the sweat of the working class, but also by its capability of
turning reality upside down through ideological means.

As for Eurocentric Marxists’ views counterpoising values to prices,
one is to recall that the profits extracted from the immiserisation of
the Arab people are not solely to be gauged on the basis of the value
created from longer working hours or poorer working and living
conditions (absolute surplus value). Profit rates derive from the
grabbing and engagement of non-moneyed or underpriced value forming
elements in the process of production as well. The process of
production starts with engaging labour and raw material, however, the
labour process in the Arab world is not about the expended muscle,
intellect and effort in creating surplus value. It is about cheapening
lives. The question then becomes: what passes more value to a
commodity the lives of the poor in the developing world or the stress
of workers in the developed world. Hence, wither the progressive
nature of capitalism that Eurocentrics drum up from a bourgeois class
position and, when it is precisely at this point, that ethics becomes
no longer obscure.

Relative to the global product, the value seized in the Arab world,
which is an outcome of this absolute measure of surplus value
extraction via impoverishment, will not be significant in distorted
power-brokered price terms. However, the social product derived from
imperialist control of Arab assets, which is the outcome of the
practice of depriving peoples of the right to own and deploy their
resources for their own benefit, will be hugely significant in value
terms or, more importantly, in terms of partly stabilising profit
rates by the wasted lives of the innocent in Iraq and elsewhere in the
Arab world. Would Marx’s method, which was in line with the principle
that ‘reducing existing differences to Identity is faulty because
quantitative differences are only the differences which are quite
external,’ have admitted that capitalism was progress in terms of
heaping commodities pure and simple, irrespective of the fact that it
consumes man and nature?[iv] Not so, by a long shot, especially when
Marx’s method espoused a principal  tenet of life being a
self-differentiating process.

>From a purely quantitative angle, little also would it matter for
capital had Arab development proceeded by market expansion,
productivity gains and higher wages. For this growth by market driven
forces would also dim in significance relative to the product of
Western formations assessed in money form. In point of fact, the share
of Arab GDP from OECD output is around one percent.[v] But from a more
concrete perspective, a non-war based and less dehumanising
developmental process in the Arab world, which entails a betterment of
living conditions and an empowerment of working people would still
result in enhanced individual and communal security, hence, it would
still distort the current international balance of forces forming the
substratum of global order. The game strategy is to safeguard the
power structure which underlies the reproduction of capital, both in
terms of a social relationship and, in terms of physical accumulation.
Wars on the Arab world, for the purpose of control, ensure the
imperial booty held as collateral against rising fictitious US
capital. More importantly, given the erratic nature of modern finance,
the degree of conflict in the Arab world makes for a  decisive moment
holding together a house of cards at this stage of capitalist
development.

The real reason for colonisation has not changed, it is undertaken to
strip the people of the third world of sovereignty over their
resources. It is to allow the balance of forces behind the scenes to
set the price of their primary commodities far below the social value
necessary to reproduce the population and maintain living standards.
In addition to this, wars, by dispensing of human beings, cheapen
labour globally. The acquisition of third world labour by means of
forced migration, which gets engaged in the capitalist production of a
centre that has not initially borne the social costs of reproduction
of the immigrant labour force, generates immense value and, hence,
profit, insofar as it transfers grabbed value and depresses wages. In
this ongoing endeavour, imperialism gets something for nothing-
keeping buoyant its rate of profit.

Although in the financialisation phase of imperialism, capital has
filed some of the spikes of nationalism, inter-imperialist rivalry
lingers as a result of the growing disproportionate share of the US
rentier mode and rising global imbalances, which destabilise the
universal wealth holding medium or dollar.[vi] However, whether the
bourgeois canaille re-colonises together or separately, Western
capital must expand by destroying and reengaging peripheral assets and
by patenting the reconstruction to its benefit, including, no less,
the design of neoliberal economic policies facilitating the usurpation
of value in money form. What the pricing in the dollar façade conceals
is that short-changed values from the third world create massive
profits for the first world. Capital in the Arab world as noted all
along however,  has literally made a killing before it made a profit.

In the current revolutionary phase of Arab history, the
counter-revolutionary imperialist assault amounts to an offensive on
working people, which is meant to destroy the remaining semblance of
an Arab state or any form of social organisation that could, at a
future date, pull together the political objectives of working people.
For years, brutal dictators worked hand in glove with their
imperialist bosses who turned a blind eye to the abjection and misery
that has been wrought upon the working masses. Arab dictators were
graded brightly by the number of souls they have slain in the course
of their tenure in power. So long as they mow down the opposition in
cold blood, as they are doing now, they were imperial favourites.[vii]

Now, the very imperialists who had groomed these dictators look to
further cheapen and control Arab and, by implication other third world
resources, so they opportunistically  step in to steer a revolutionary
course in line with their ambitions. If contingently a state stands in
the way of resource grab, then wither that state. A stateless, sect
torn, or tribal conglomeration has no say over its resources. The
revolutionary forces however,  wish dictators to be defeated, but are
not indifferent to who defeats them.[viii] That is why the litmus test
of the success or failure of the present Arab revolutionary process is
measured by the distance revolutionary forces keep from the US and its
NATO allies. The imperialist aim was for long to breed the brutal Arab
dictatorships in preparation for the destruction of any form of
political control of Arab people over their resources, including,
their already enfeebled states. The crisis  of capital is steeper now
than before and, the case may be, that only through re-colonisation
and extended warfare against working people in the Arab world, will
this baleful phase of imperialism hold together.

Ali Kadri is presently visiting fellow at the London School of
Economics (LSE). He is conducting research on the political economy of
the Arab world. Formerly, he served as Head of the Economic Analysis
Section of the United Nations regional office in Beirut.
[email protected].

Notes


[i] http://petras.lahaine.org/?p=1857
[ii] 
http://www.marxists.org/archive/luxemburg/1913/accumulation-capital/index.htm
[iii] http://www.nytimes.com/2008/10/06/business/06dollar.html
[iv]  http://www.marxists.org/reference/archive/hegel/works/sl/slsubjec.htm
[v] http://data.worldbank.org/indicator/NY.GDP.MKTP.CD
[vi] 
http://21stcenturymanifesto.wordpress.com/2011/01/11/prabhat-patnaik-notes-on-contemporary-imperialism
[vii] 
http://www.amnesty.org/en/news-and-updates/report/saudi-arabia-human-rights-abuses-name-fighting-terrorism-20090722
[viii] http://newpol.org/node/447




Ali Kadri is a frequent contributor to Global Research.  Global
Research Articles by Ali Kadri
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