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World
Oder, Failed States and Terrorism
PART 8: Militarism and failed states
By
Henry C K Liu
PART 1: The
failed-state cancer
PART 2: The
privatization wave
PART 3: The business of private security
PART 4: Militarism
and mercenaries
PART 5: Militarism
and the war on drugs
(Click here for previous parts)
This article appeared in AToL
on April 28, 2005
Militarism is the doctrine that military might is the basic source of
all security. In its mildest form it argues that military preparedness
delivers peace through strength. The doctrine leads inevitably to the
militarization of peace as a form of permanent preparation for war.
Militarism disparages peace movements as utopian and naive.
Yet militarism can be self-defeating. It can threaten national security
by energizing compensatory militarism in other countries as dictated by
the doctrine of balance of power. Militarism is the doctrinal fuel for
arms races, not only among hostile nations but also among allies who
can be expected to change sides in the future, since international
relations are affected by shifting national interests, and not based on
permanent friendship. National interests of different nations converge
and diverge over time, particularly in an international geopolitical
architecture built on the principle of balance of power. There is
strong logic in the premise that peaceful relations with neighboring
states will enhance rather than diminish a nation's overall power and
security, which extend beyond the confines of the military. Militarism
rejects this self-evident proposition. Militarism is not exclusive to
dictatorships or authoritarian states. Liberal democracies are
frequently proponents and willing victims of militarism.
In his book The New American Militarism, Boston University
Professor Andrew J Bacevich, West Point graduate, Vietnam veteran,
professional soldier for 23 years, and a conservative scholar,
identified Albert Wohlstetter and Andrew Marshall, both life-long
civilians, as having transformed a Cold War strategy of nuclear
deterrence that regarded war as a last resort to be avoided into a
proactive war strategy of superpower aggression. The resultant
"marriage of a militaristic cast of mind with utopian ends has
committed the United States to waging an open-ended war on a global
scale".
Herman Khan, while at Rand Corp - the US Air Force strategic think-tank
- was by far the most dominant figure in nuclear-deterrence scholastics
based on the concept of terror. Khan worked out the logic of MAD
(massive mutually assured destruction) as an effective deterrence to
nuclear war that would not allow any winners. Wohlstetter was a minor
voice at Rand who worked on the theory that tactical nuclear war would
be winnable even under the general rules of strategic deterrence. Both
Khan and Wohlstetter subscribed to the use of terror; the difference
between them was that Khan was strategic and Wohlstetter was tactically
inclined. Khan would prevent war unleashed by first strikes with the
terror of doomsday war machines that would also destroy the
first-strike party even after the target party had been obliterated.
Wohlstetter advocated the use of tactical wars that would gain
geopolitical advantage without setting off the doomsday machines. Both
had supporters in the Pentagon as long as both themes provided ample
circular rationalization for rising defense spending. Khan's
nuclear-deterrence strategy is part of an arms-control approach that
requires a concurrent buildup of conventional arms. Conceptually, arms
control is the deadly enemy of disarmament. Weapons are acquired to
create a condition of military stalemate under which their use will
produce no advantage to any one side. That condition is ultimately
anchored in the terror of global nuclear holocaust.
Deterrence moves the prevention of war from an "if, then" to an
"either, or" and finally to a "neither, nor" stability based on
paralyzing terror. Stability is enhanced when the dialogue of restraint
among enemies moves from "if you transgress, then you will be attacked"
to "either you desist, or we will outdo you" to "neither would you
start, nor would we start". It is a concept of peace through strategic
terrorism.
The turning point came after Khan's death and when strategic deterrence
based on the balance of terror ran out of steam in its justification
for further military spending when both sides had more than enough to
destroy the whole world several thousand times over, and more tanks and
planes than any army can use without the prospect of recurring shooting
wars. Strategic deterrence operates in a world of two superpowers.
After the dissolution of the Soviet Union, the balance of terror was
destabilized with the existence of only one superpower, albeit Russia
is still a formidable nuclear power.
Under US president Ronald Reagan, tactical-weapon development spending
took over as the main driving force, propelling Wohlstetter's tactical
theories on to a pedestal of doctrinal respectability. The argument of
"what's the point of having all these sophisticated and expensive
weapons systems without reaping some geopolitical benefit?" began to
attract support from the military-industrial complex. The technological
imperative in arms races is augmented by the stockpile imperative.
Stockpiles need to be depleted regularly in real battles and refilled
with new, improved generations of weapons based on real battle
feedbacks. This is illustrated by Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld's
statement that "you go to war with the weapons you have, not the
weapons you wish you had". The birth of new weapons systems requires
the midwife support of real shooting wars to accelerate the rate of
weapon obsolescence and highlight the awareness of the need for
updating.
For Wohlstetter and his followers, the function of weapons is not to
deter war, but to enable war with impunity to deter challenges to US
national interests. Peace through strength is supplanted by democracy
through war. The United States, with its superpower resources, is in a
position to use war to impose its world view on smaller nations to make
the world safe for the US values. This approach solicits two responses:
1) the revival of the doctrine of balance of power in international
relations among sovereign states to replace the doctrine of balance of
terror between two superpowers and 2) the emergence of asymmetrical
warfare from the powerless in failed states in the form of terrorism.
Andrew W Marshall, known as Yoda in defense circles, co-author (with
Zalmay Khalilzad and John P White) of Strategic Appraisal: The
Changing Role of Information in Warfare, had been named director of
the Pentagon's Office of Net Assessment by president Richard Nixon in
the 1970s and reappointed by every sitting president since. Today,
Marshall, along with his star proteges Vice President Dick Cheney,
Rumsfeld, and Deputy Defense Secretary Paul Wolfowitz (who has just
been appointed president of the World Bank), has been drafting
President George W Bush's plan to upgrade the military. Put in charge
of the Bush administration's proposed major military overhaul by
Rumsfeld, he has sharply polarized the defense community on the nature
of future wars and the military's role in fighting them.
Nicholas Lehman, political correspondent, in "Dreaming about war"
published in The New Yorker on July 16, 2001, writes: "People with
decoder rings knew that Bush's speech at the Citadel had been drafted
by Marshall's corps of allies and that it endorsed Marshall's main
ideas." Bush said "the best defense can be a strong and swift offense -
including ... long-range strike capabilities". The comment implied that
in future conflicts the US might be denied access to US bases on ally
soil near the conflict. Bush noted that "power is increasingly defined
not by mass or size but by mobility and swiftness ... The era of
procrastination, of half-measures, of soothing and baffling expedients,
of delays, is coming to a close." In other word, the approach of "shoot
first, ask questions later" would govern the Bush administration's
security policy. And this was a full year before the terrorist attacks
of September 11, 2001. In his campaign speech in September 1999, Bush
promised that, as president, he would order up "an immediate,
comprehensive review of our military" and give the secretary of defense
"a broad mandate to challenge the status quo". Within weeks into the
new Bush administration, it was reported that the secretary of defense,
Donald Rumsfeld, would conduct a broad review of the military.
Unreported was the fact that Andrew Marshall would be the main force
behind the review.
Since the 1980s, Marshall has been an advocate of an idea first posited
in 1982 by Marshal Nikolai Ogarkov, then chief of the Soviet general
staff, called Revolution in Military Affairs. RMA asserts that
technological advances have changed the very nature of conventional
war. Rather than conflict conducted by ground troops, the new
conventional war will be conducted with the same control and command of
a nuclear war, managed by computers at remote locations targeting
missiles at enemy military assets and infrastructure in accordance with
strategic defense doctrines. The battlefield would be transformed into
a vast virtual reality, utilizing military assets from great distances.
War, in RMA lexicon, would be conducted by spy satellites and
long-range guided missiles with precision targeting capability, by
computer viruses and laser beams that would disable enemy offensive and
defensive systems, and by a "layered" defense system that would make US
defense impenetrable. Military adventurism is enhanced by
impenetrability of one's own defense. It is a doctrine that focuses not
on deterrence by balance of terror, but on winning in war by remote
control from a safe haven. Yet the doctrine neglects the more important
problems of enforcing the peace after military victory. It reduces war
to no more purpose than a barroom brawl where the fighting itself was
the game.
The US Army War College's Strategic Studies Institute in its seventh
Annual Strategy Conference in April 1996 examined China's ability to
participate in RMA. Dr Bates Gill of the Stockholm International Peace
Research Institute (SIPRI), on a panel called "Seizing the RMA: China's
Prospects", argued that there is more to participating in RMA than
securing or producing high-tech weaponry. A revolution is an
all-encompassing phenomenon with socio-cultural as well as purely
technological aspects. China's prospects for seizing the RMA lie not so
much in the development of technology as in the restructuring of
concepts and organizations. History, culture, and philosophical values
will make it problematic for China to participate in the RMA. The same
of course applies to the military of all nations, including the US,
where RMA continues to have its skeptics. Gill believes that China may
be able to develop an "RMA with Chinese characteristics" much as it
took Marxism-Leninism, a Germanic-Russian innovation devised for
proletarian revolution, and modified its tenets to be relevant within a
peasant revolutionary context with a level of success unseen in Europe
or elsewhere in the Third World. Through sheer determination and by
optimizing technology and expertise available from outside sources,
China might approximate a less sophisticated RMA entirely suited to its
own needs. US Army Lieutenant-Colonel Lonnie Henley argued that over
the next decade, China will deploy a dozen or so divisions possessing
relatively advanced systems, but that overall, the People's Liberation
Army (PLA) will remain about a generation behind the US Army in terms
of its ability to participate in a fully developed RMA. Furthermore,
capabilities within the air and sea forces of the PLA will be even more
limited with relatively small infusions of advanced aircraft such as
the Su-27 and naval vessels such as Kilo-class submarines. These modern
weapons will make up only a fraction of what will be otherwise
seriously dated forces. According to Henley, by 2010 the PLA may be
able to achieve for its elite force the kind of capabilities
demonstrated by US forces in the first Gulf War. That does not mean
that the technological gap between the military capabilities of US and
China will be closed, as the US is not expected to stay still and will
have advanced technologically significantly by 2010.
These papers, written a decade ago, painted a picture of China with
limited potential to become a peer competitor of the United States in
the two decades following their writing. Nonetheless, there was little
doubt that China's relative power in Asia and globally would grow
sharply in that period, a prediction that has been borne out by fact.
Even partial success in pursuing advanced military technology and
organizing concepts could enhance the speed and impact of that rise in
Chinese power.
US Army Colonel Richard H Witherspoon, director of the Strategic
Studies Institute, sees the exploration of the issues surrounding the
RMA as having only just begun, and being worthy of consideration by
anyone interested in the role that China may play in the strategic
military balance early in the 21st century.
Michael Pillsbury, an alumnus of Rand, former special assistant for
Asian affairs in the Office of the Secretary of Defense, reporting to
Marshall, director of net assessment, edited for the Institute for
National Strategic Studies at the National Defense University a volume
titled Chinese View of Future Warfare. The report grew out of
a process that began in 1995 when the Chinese Academy of Military
Science hosted in Beijing a delegation of the Atlantic Council of the
US, with extensive reprint of papers by high Chinese military officers
and analysts. It shows that the views of Marshall are highly
influential within Chinese military planning circles. It is a vivid
example of militarism in one government stimulating counter militarism
in other governments.
Throughout the 1980s, the US Central Intelligence Agency purchased arms
from China for the mujahideen in their war against the Soviet Union.
The USSR-Afghan war was the beginning of US-China military cooperation,
a policy advocated by US right-wing Republican senators Orrin Hatch and
Gordon Humphrey and defense secretary Caspar Weinberger, and carried
out by State Department intelligence head Morton Abramovitz and the
Pentagon's Pillsbury. The Afghan mujahideen freedom fighters later
evolved into the Taliban, who harbored Osama bin Laden, the hunt for
whom was the pretext of the 2001 US-Afghan war after September 11.
Professor Bacevich argues that the greatest threat to US security is
not from terrorists but the neo-conservative belief, to which President
Bush is firmly committed, that US security and well-being depend on US
global hegemony and the imposition of US values on the rest of the
world. This belief resonates with a patriotic and paranoid public
manipulated with the help of the mainstream media. Persistence in these
misconceptions will lead the United States to "share the fate of all
those who in ages past have looked to war and military power to fulfill
their destiny. We will rob future generations of their rightful
inheritance. We will wreak havoc abroad. We will endanger our security
at home. We will risk the forfeiture of all that we prize," argues
Bacevich, who sees the problem as not how to deal with terrorism but
how to deal with the hubris, laden with catastrophe, that the US is
God's instrument for bringing history to its predetermined destination.
Being assigned such an exalted role creates the delusion that US virtue
is unquestionable and its use of preemptive coercion is infallible, a
delusion that led to the "cakewalk war" that would entrench democracy
in the Middle East and have US troops home in 90 days with "mission
accomplished". War is not much more than an adrenaline-filled college
spring-break orgy with fanatic purpose.
Paul Craig Roberts, former assistant secretary of the Treasury in the
Reagan administration, associate editor of the Wall Street Journal
editorial page and contributing editor of the conservative National
Review and co-author of The Tyranny of Good Intentions, and
reviewer Bacevich's The New American Militarism, observes that
US hubris, which flows so freely from Bush's rhetoric, explains why
half the US population seemed unconcerned over the US slaughter of
Iraqi civilians and torture of Iraqi prisoners. The "cakewalk war" is
now more than two years old and has claimed more than 10% of the US
occupation force as casualties. Yet the delusion persists that the US
is prevailing in Iraq and that democracy is firmly planted in the
Middle East.
In Chapter 7 of Marshall's The Changing Role of Information in
Warfare, Brian Nichiporuk wrote of Emerging Asymmetric Strategy:
"The lopsided American victory in Desert Storm featured a clear display
of the vast margin of superiority the US Air Force holds over any
conceivable adversary. Most analysts agree therefore that, in future
wars, hostile regional powers will use asymmetric options to counter
the US advantage in air power."
Yet asymmetric warfare decidedly puts a superpower at a disadvantage.
The logic of asymmetric response is based largely on its economy, which
suits the poorer adversary. It costs exponentially less to foil a
sophisticated system with virus and laser than to build the system and
its defense. This fact is demonstrated by the exponential growth of
anti-virus software companies such as Symantec. In fact, the higher the
level of sophistication, the greater the cost differential between
attack and defense and the penalty of failure by each. Thus the
financial advantage lies with the asymmetric attackers. This is the
basic economics of terrorism, with an astronomical cost:effect ratio
beyond the wildest dream on defense analysts. Asymmetric warfare
accelerates the effective neutralization of superpower prerogatives.
Nichiporuk observed that work on asymmetric strategies has revealed
three types of enemy options the US needs to be concerned about: 1)
increasing hostile capabilities in selected niche areas; 2) enemy
strategies that target key US vulnerabilities that are difficult or
costly to protect, and 3) creation of domestic and international
political constraints that hinder US force deployments flexibilities.
The emergence of enemy homeland sanctuary in wartime protected by
nuclear deterrence would have serious implications for US Air Force
planners and operators. Specifically, the enemy's leadership, command
and control structure, and internal security networks could all become
off-limit targets for fear of touching off a wider nuclear war. This is
why tacit cooperation from all nuclear powers to refuse nuclear
protection to targeted non-nuclear nations is needed by the US before
hostile action can be launched anywhere. Despite the dissolution of the
USSR, Russian nuclear protection remains the key reason the US does not
attack Cuba. Diplomatic concession by the United States to other
nuclear powers, both allies and non-allies, is the price the US pays
for such tacit cooperation. That is the strongest argument against US
unilateralism. This special treatment of nuclear powers gives
irresistible incentive for non-nuclear nations to go nuclear, not for
self-defense, but to gain diplomatic respect and attendant concessions
from the hegemonic superpower. Nuclear proliferation will continue
unless the US begins to stop treating non-nuclear nations as
second-class nations in a nuclear age and pledges a guarantee that
non-nuclear nations will be not be subject to attack by conventional
forces by nuclear nations. This is in fact what North Korea demands and
the US rejects as preconditions for abandoning the former's nuclear
capability. Until and unless the US adopts the doctrine of no first
use, non-proliferation will fail.
Supply and communications for enemy ground forces could not be
disrupted and the enemy's industrial war-making capacity (including
electric-power generation and telecommunications capacity) would in
essence be off limits to the orthodox offensive use of air power if the
enemy were under a nuclear umbrella. This limitation was clearly
demonstrated in the Korean War, where the US had the capacity to attack
Chinese air and ground bases inside the Chinese border but was
prevented from doing so by the Soviet nuclear umbrella.
The US is in a position to deny the enemy a homeland airspace sanctuary
if the US leadership itself is protected from risk of attack. Under
such circumstances, the US could deal with enemy possession of weapons
of mass destruction (WMD) in more direct ways of preemption other than
offensive information warfare. The United States could, as it did in
Iraq, threaten massive nuclear retaliation for any nuclear power
protecting any adversary use of WMD by a non-nuclear nation and then
proceed to carry out a massive conventional air campaign against the
non-nuclear enemy homeland under the assumption that the threat of
escalating dominance by the superior US nuclear arsenal cancels out the
enemy's sub-par nuclear capability or that of its nuclear protector.
Another option would be to mount a conventional counterforce campaign
aimed at destroying the enemy's WMD before they could be employed and
before nuclear deterrence could be put in play, as Israel did with the
Iraqi Osirak reactor in June 1981, albeit that the Orirak reactor was
considered by experts not to be a weapon-producing facility. A third
option is to protect the US homeland with a strategic defense
initiative (SDI).
A US president could well select any of these approaches in dealing
with nations without the protection of a nuclear umbrella. However, if
the US leadership is highly risk-averse from non-nuclear terrorism or
any other form of asymmetric non-nuclear warfare in a future major
theater war (MTW), it would force the US Air Force to plan to deal with
scenarios in which much of an enemy's homeland is off limits to
sustained aerial attack even without nuclear protection. Thus,
according of Marshall and his colleagues, homeland security is not a
just defensive strategy, but a platform from which to launch offensive
wars in an era of asymmetric warfare.
The new American militarism is nursed by militant evangelical
Christianity. Christian doctrine of love and peace has always been
accompanied by the theme of "Onward Christian Soldiers", as evidenced
by the Crusades and numerous expeditionary campaigns in the colonial
world to protect or avenge attacks on Christian missionaries. Professor
Bacevich, along with others analysts with similar views, explains that
evangelicals, aghast at Vietnam-era protests of the US war against
"godless communism", turned to the military as the repository of
traditional US Christian virtues. Of course, the images of Buddhist
monks setting themselves on fire to protest government-sponsored
persecution from Catholics in Vietnam generally failed to disturb US
Christian evangelicals, nor the centuries of anti-Semitic programs in
Christian nations. For Christian evangelicals, end-times doctrines join
US national security with eschatology, the belief in the end of the
world coinciding with the second coming of Christ. Biblical prophecies
clearly merge US fate with Israel. Unlike Islam, Judaism is not
evangelical. In fact, it is self-restricting in its exacting
exclusivity. Anti-Semitism is more secular than religious. Islam on the
other hand is a fanatic and expansionist infidel sect in the
Judeo-Christian world view. Islam inherited the role of godless
communism as the post-Cold War target of a Christian holy war against
satanic evil. The US emerges with the "same immensely elastic
permission to use force previously accorded to Israel". Traditional
isolationism was pushed aside by the events of September 11, which
served the role of a new surprise attack at Pearl Harbor in justifying
a holy war. What US evangelicals overlook is that the end of the world
may bring the second coming of Christ, but the price may be the end of
the United States as a nation. By that standard, US evangelism is
conceptually anti-patriotic. In World War I, the European monarchies
lost their thrones in a war to defend their empires, and in World War
II, the "democratic" imperialists lost their colonies in a war of
intra-imperialist rivalry to gain more colonies. The next world war,
launched by superpower neo-imperialism to spread bogus universal
democracy, will have similar self-destructive ironic outcomes.
Democracy with local characteristics, based on universal equality, will
rid the world of neo-imperialism and superpower hegemony.
Rejection of the Peace of Westphalia by NATO
The Peace of Westphalia ended the Thirty Years' War, a secular war with
religious dimensions. Subsequent wars were not about spiritual issues
of religion, but rather revolved around secular issues of state. The
"war on terrorism" today is the first religious war in almost four
centuries, also fought mainly by secular institutions with religious
affiliations. The peace that eventually follows today's "war on
terrorism" will also end the war between faith-based Christian
evangelicals and Islamic fundamentalists. Westphalia allowed Catholic
and Protestant powers to become allies, leading to a number of major
secular geopolitical realignments. The "war on terrorism" will also
produce major geopolitical realignments in world international
politics, although it is too early to discern its final shape.
Westphalia laid rest to the idea of the Holy Roman Empire having
secular dominion over the entire Christian world. The nation-state
henceforth would be the highest polity, subservient to no supranational
authority.
Both the League of Nations and the United Nations were international
institutions based on the concept of sovereign states. They enjoyed no
supranational authority. The only creeping supranational trend comes
from institutions such as the International Monetary Fund (IMF), the
Bank of International Settlement (BIS), the World Trade Organization
(WTO), the World Health Organization (WHO) etc, through neo-liberal
globalization after the Cold War. This trend is fueled by US
ideological assertion that capitalist free markets, inseparable from
Western capitalistic democracy, are the sole venue for prosperity. Out
of ignorance and cultural prejudice, such a biased assertion rejects
socialist or tribal democracy and cooperative community in societies
with historical roots different from those of the individualistic and
materialist West. This assertion forms the self-righteous rationale
behind US global aggression, ironically from a self-proclaimed modern
people who irrationally cling to the primitive myth that a man born of
a virgin was the son of God who had been killed by followers of a rival
sect only to rise from the dead before ascending to heaven and is
expected to return to Earth at its apocalyptic end. Just as the Holy
Roman Empire, even with the allegedly one true God on its side, brought
about its own demise by trying to impose religious universality on a
Christian world, the United States will bring about its own demise by
trying to impose its version of universal economic-political laws on
the modern world. Cultural relativity and diversity is not suppressible
even in a shrinking world of universal standards.
After the Peace of Westphalia, the concept of balance of power among
sovereign states governed the shape of world order for subsequent
centuries. The "war on terrorism" today will eventually lay to rest US
hegemony and end the age of superpower, possibly through a new balance
of power by sovereign states otherwise not particularly hostile to the
United States as a peaceful nation. It is ironically inconsistent for
the US, a culture that values individuality, to aim to impose universal
values. While everyone can have the same weapons, he or she will use
these weapons to defend their separate individuality.
This trend of moral imperialism is not limited to the United States.
The North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) after the Cold War,
looking for a rationale to continue, has transformed itself from a
defensive security alliance against Soviet expansion toward Western
Europe to an offensive alliance of force projection beyond Europe in
the name of spreading humanity and democracy.
In a 1998 Symposium on the Political Relevance of the 1648 Peace of
Westphalia, then NATO secretary general Javier Solana, a Spanish
socialist, said that "humanity and democracy [were] two principles
essentially irrelevant to the original Westphalian order" and
criticized that "the Westphalian system had its limits. For one, the
principle of sovereignty it relied on also produced the basis for
rivalry, not community of states; exclusion, not integration." Within
days of Solana taking up his NATO post on November 30, 1995, the
NATO-led, multinational Implementation Force (IFOR) was deployed in
Bosnia-Herzegovina to enforce military aspects of the Dayton peace
agreements. A year later, in December 1996, IFOR was replaced by the
Stabilization Force (SFOR) in Bosnia. Solana himself visited Sarajevo
and other localities in Bosnia many times, paying calls on NATO and
non-NATO forces there.
Solana's appointment as NATO secretary general in 1995, a post he held
until 1999, was a surprise to many, including 52 US congressmen who
telegraphed a protest because of his alleged Marxist views and open
sympathies for Fidel Castro. Solana had once been on the United States'
subversive list. He was one of Spain's most vocal and most prominent
opponents of NATO and had once written a pamphlet, "50 Reasons to say
NO to NATO". Scratch a Marxist, you will often find a Trotskyite under
the skin who despises cultural relativism and professes firm commitment
to universality. The neo-cons in US politics are Trotskyite rightists
while the social democrats in European politics are Trotskyite
leftists.
The NATO secretary general normally has a ministerial role, passing on
instructions from member-nation consensus to the organization's
military components. NATO was not conceived as a supranational
organization. Charles de Gaulle took France out of the NATO military
command in 1967 to pursue France's own nuclear defense program and
expelled all foreign-controlled troops from the country, which rejoined
in 1992. During his 1995-99 NATO tenure, Solana was given sole unusual
powers to make military decisions over Yugoslavia and the order to
commence bombing against Yugoslav targets was subsequently given solely
by Solana. He is part of the so-called Third Way Movement whose members
include Bill Clinton of the United States, Tony Blair of the United
Kingdom, Romano Prodi of Italy and Gerhard Schroeder of Germany.
In 2001, German Foreign Minister Joschka Fischer, whose radical past
was well known with political trouble from allegations that he had once
harbored a key member of the extremist Red Army Faction terrorist
group, referred to the Peace of Westphalia as obsolete in his Humboldt
Speech: "The core of the concept of Europe after 1945 was and still is
a rejection of the European balance-of-power principle and the
hegemonic ambitions of individual states that had emerged following the
Peace of Westphalia in 1648, a rejection which took the form of closer
meshing of vital interests and the transfer of nation-state sovereign
rights to supranational European institutions." Fischer supported
German participation in the Kosovo war by NATO, which did not have the
backing of the United Nations, with the justification of "international
humanitarian emergency".
Rumsfeld's disparaging reference to the European Union as "Old Europe"
was not off the mark, albeit for the wrong reasons, based on his
displeasure with French and German opposition to the second Iraq war.
NATO wanted to revert back four centuries to pre-Westphalia world
disorder. In many ways, the Kosovo war was the opening shot of a new
Thirty Years' War.
NATO's bombing campaign lasted from March 24 to June 10, 1999,
involving up to 1,000 aircraft operating mainly from bases in Italy and
US aircraft carriers stationed in the Adriatic Sea. Tomahawk cruise
missiles were also extensively used, fired from aircraft, ships and
submarines located hundreds of miles from their targets. The US was,
inevitably, the dominant member of the NATO coalition against Serbia,
although all of the NATO members were involved to some degree. Over the
10 weeks of the conflict, NATO aircraft flew more than 38,000 combat
missions, setting a world record.
A less official reason for the war was given by then US secretary of
state Madeleine Albright when she said, "What's the use of having the
world's best military when you don't get to use them?" - a remark that
allegedly caused the US Army Chief of Staff to question her sanity. The
lady summed up the weapon-stockpile imperative argument for war. It was
been suggested that a small victorious war would help NATO find a new
role.
There was, however, criticism from all parts of the political spectrum
for the way NATO conducted its "clean war" of precision weapons. The US
Department of Defense claimed with pride that, up to June 2, 1999,
99.6% of the 20,000 bombs and missiles used had hit their targets. That
meant 160 bombs and missiles hit innocent victims, not counting
collateral damage of the direct hits. Moreover, the use of technologies
such as depleted uranium and cluster bombs was highly controversial for
a humanitarian operation, as was the bombing of oil refineries and
chemical plants, which led to accusations of "environmental warfare".
Many deformed babies were reported born after the war, and the British
Broadcasting Corp (BBC) reported that health experts estimated that
about 100,000 cancer deaths would result from this pollution. The
Chinese Embassy in Belgrade was "accidentally" bombed on purpose,
causing a temporary rupture in US-China relations, despite sham
apologies from the US and NATO.
The Kosovo war violated the NATO Charter that limited its role
exclusively to the defense of its members within their borders. In
Kosovo, NATO was used to attack a distant non-NATO country that was not
directly threatening any NATO member. NATO countered this argument by
claiming that instability in the Balkans was a direct threat to the
security interests of NATO members. This line of argument has now
extended to the "war on terrorism". The far left saw the NATO campaign
as an act of US aggression and imperialism, while the far right
criticized it as being not central to the country's national-security
interests. The liberal left and the neo-cons were strange bedfellows in
their quest to spread freedom around the world. The term "moral
imperialism" came into general use in policy debates over Kosovo.
Poland, Hungary and the Czech Republic, former Warsaw Pact members,
made history by becoming NATO members on March 2, 1999. Slovenia,
Slovakia, the former Warsaw Pact countries of Bulgaria and Romania, and
the former Soviet republics of Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania officially
acceded to NATO on March 29, 2004.
On September 12, 2001, NATO invoked, for the first time in its history,
the collective-security clause of its charter, Article 5, which states
that any attack on a member state is considered an attack against the
entire alliance, in response to the September 11 attacks on the US.
On February 10, 2003, NATO faced a crisis when France and Belgium
vetoed the procedure of silent approval concerning the timing of
protective measures for Turkey in case of a possible war in Iraq.
Germany did not use its right to break the procedure but said it
supported the veto.
On April 16, 2003, NATO agreed to take command that August of the
International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) in Afghanistan. The
decision came at the request of Germany and the Netherlands, the two
nations leading ISAF at the time of the agreement. All 19 NATO
ambassadors approved it unanimously. The handover of control to NATO
took place on August 11, and marked the first time in NATO's history
that it had taken charge of a mission outside the North Atlantic area.
On June 19, 2003, a major restructuring of the NATO military commands
began as the Headquarters of the Supreme Allied Commander, Atlantic,
was abolished and a new command, Allied Command Transformation, was
established in Norfolk, Virginia. On March 29, 2004, Bulgaria, Estonia,
Latvia, Lithuania, Romania, Slovakia and Slovenia join NATO. Many argue
that NATO is in conflict with the prospects of deeper European
integration in the fields of foreign policy and security within the
framework of EU institutions. Advocates for a strong EU Common Foreign
and Security Policy (CFSP) would like to see NATO dismantled and would
create common defense and foreign policy within the existing EU
institutions. After the re-election of President George W Bush in 2004,
Norway publicly questioned whether it would gain by strengthening her
defense relations with the EU, reflecting a spreading attitude that
NATO is a politically dead organization.
Peace of Westphalia rejected by Islamic regionalism
Islamic regionalism and pan-Arabism hold the view that the
international system that has splintered Islam and the Arab nation into
a large number of separate states will collapse. This system had been
constructed by Western imperialism under the sovereign-state principle
of the Peace of Westphalia. A new world order will rise with all Islam
under the leadership of a mighty Islamic confederation and a unified
Arabic nation. Neo-liberal globalization is bringing about an evolution
of the international system that threatens the principle of sovereign
states that has been enshrined by the Peace of Westphalia and coopted
by US neo-imperialism. This globalization also provides the opening for
global Islamic unity and Arab nation-building.
Within the balance-of-power framework, failed and failing states
created by collapsing imperialism are too destabilizing for the
hegemonic superpower to tolerate. Since self-determination had been
denied to nationalities separated into colonies of Western imperialist
powers as a result of balance of power, the post-colonial era's newly
independent sovereign states inherited territorial arrangements that
were convenient to the need to maintain a stable postwar balance of
power system for the benefit of the victorious great powers. At the
Congress of Vienna in 1815, France was punished for the Napoleonic
Wars, but was maintained as a major player in the ensuing concert of
Europe. Indeed, the practical settlements in Vienna all attempted to
create as stable a balance of power as possible among the European
states. The German Confederation was established and Sweden took charge
or Norway. After World War I, Imperial Germany fell not from defeat in
war, but from internal revolution. After World War II, both West
Germany and Japan were made into key allies in the Cold War against the
spread of communism.
Klepto-imperialism is another cause of failed states. Germany and Japan
are examples of klepto-imperialist victimization in that their new
constitutions were imposed on them by the foreign victors in war to
mimic the victor's own neo-imperialist character. These new
constitutions fundamentally limit the sovereign authority of the two
defeated nations by limiting the state structure to that envisaged by
the victors as desirable, denying the popular will until it could be
molded into desirable shape under the label of "de-Nazification" in
Germany and "demilitarization" in Japan or "nation-building" in weaker
states in the Third World.
Germany was artificially divided into two failed states of opposing
ideologies, both imposed from the outside. Both Germany and Japan still
are unable to forge fully independent foreign policies, rid their soil
of foreign troops, or free their politics from alien ideologies imposed
by the victors even six decades after their separate unconditional
surrenders. This is the geopolitical aim of the US "war on terrorism" -
the spread of political institutions deemed desirable by the hegemonic
superpower into sovereign states around the world. It is the ultimate
Clausewitzian view of war: to deprive of the enemy not only the
ability, but the will to resist, in the complete sense of the term
"hegemony". Support from these two subservient states for US policy was
Pavlovian until the second Iraq war.
Militarism and the doctrine of balance of power
The doctrine of balance of power among sovereign states is rooted in
militarism, for it is through military force or the threat of force
that the balance is maintained. It has several aspects, all of which
are based on a common objective of anti-hegemony. One is political
equilibrium in which power is distributed among many independent
sovereign states so that none can be a hegemon. A second aspect is the
natural tendency of weaker states to unite against a rising dominant
power to prevent it from becoming a hegemon, or to demolish an existing
hegemony. A third aspect denotes the status of a state whose membership
in a coalition is necessary, such status being recognized as holding
the balance of power between competing coalitions.
The aim of statesmen in the 17th and 18th centuries was generally to
preserve their own maximum independence and utmost flexibility of
action in a fluid world. Hence the basic rule was to ally against the
dominant state, regardless of common language, culture, values or
economic interests. A world order created by balance of power was one
where states threw their weights toward where it was most needed, so
that its own importance was enhanced. The purpose of balance of power
was not to enhance peace or prosperity, but to preserve sovereignty and
independence of states, as the term "liberties of Europe" was generally
understood. War was often necessary to maintain or achieve a balance of
power. The doctrine was in essence anti-hegemonic and imperialist
rivalry.
As the ambition of Louis XIV grew bolder, and as the capacity of Spain
to resist withered away, the balance of power to oppose the Sun King
was engineered by the Dutch. William II, prince of Orange, who in his
late years would be king of England and Scotland as well, became
France's tireless enemy. In 1609, the Dutch founded the Bank of
Amsterdam, the first modern national bank. European money was in a
state of chaos - coins were being minted not only by great sovereigns,
but also by minor states and principalities in Germany and city-states
in Italy and by private banks and persons. Under continuous
inflationary pressures, money issuers habitually debased their money
with cheap alloys. Money in all forms represented uncertain and
fluctuating value. The Bank of Amsterdam provided a needed service by
accepting all forms of money from all holders, accessed their true
content value and allowed depositors to withdraw equivalent value in
gold florins minted by it at exchange rates fixed by it. By providing
such monetary order, Amsterdam became the center of world finance.
Under their republican government, the Dutch enjoyed unprecedented
freedom, but the Dutch nation was not a modern state. The Prince of
Orange was simply first among equals of many noblemen in the country.
As finance became a national industry, the aristocracy was being
outdistanced by the rising bourgeoisie and public affairs were
generally managed by the burghers fixated on making money and lowering
taxes, rather than preserving feudal traditions. Private, civilian and
decentralizing tendencies prevailed to keep a strong state from
emerging except in times of imminent foreign threat. It was the
original prototype of modern neo-liberalism.
In 1661, the revolutionary government of England re-enacted the
Navigation Act, first passed in 1651 but lapsed into invalidity during
the Restoration, upon which a series of follow-up measures were
introduced that formed the foundation of the British colonial empire.
The act, the first anti-trade-liberalization measure in modern history,
was aimed at destroying Dutch carrying trade. It stipulated that all
goods imported into England and its dependencies must be brought in
English ships or in ships belonging to the goods' country of origin. In
the Act of 1663, the importation principle required that all foreign
goods be ship to the American colonies through English ports. In return
for restrictions on manufacturing and regulation of trade, colonial
commodities were often given a monopoly of the English market and
preferential tariff treatment. The American colonies benefited when
tobacco cultivation was made illegal within England; and British West
Indian planters were aided by high duties on French sugar. These trade
restrictions were a focus of popular agitation that preceded the
American Revolution and laid the foundation for the north-south
conflict that led to the American Civil War.
Since the Dutch were too small a nation to be producers or origin
exporters, they had to trade by carrying the goods of others. Three
indecisive wars over free trade erupted between the two nations from
1652 to 1674 in which the British annexed New York. On land, the Dutch
were threatened by France, which in 1667 claimed the Spanish
Netherlands and Franche-Comte. To save their own lot, the Dutch
aristocrats granted the 22-year-old William III centralized sovereign
power, restricted feudal liberties and constitutional checks, to move
in the direction of absolute monarchy by abandoning liberalism.
The Westphalia world order of sovereign nation states that survives to
the present is based on the concept of inviolable sovereignty. One of
its key functions had been to resist free international trade that
threatened national economies. Britain was against free international
trade until the Industrial Revolution propelled it to the status of
world power and empire builder. The US went through a similar
transformation, from a policy of Hamiltonian economic nationalism to a
policy of neo-liberalism as the two world wars propelled the US to the
status of superpower. The theory of comparative advantage in free trade
does not contain an equalization element. In his National System of
Political Economy (1841), Friedrich List asserts that political
economy as espoused in England, far from being a valid science
universally, was merely British national opinion, suited only to
English historical conditions. List's institutional school of economics
asserted that the doctrine of free trade was devised to keep England
rich and powerful at the expense of its trading partners and it must be
fought with protective tariffs and other protective devices of economic
nationalism by the weaker countries. Henry Clay's "American system" was
a national system of political economy.
As List pointed out, once a nation falls behind in economic
competitiveness, free trade only exacerbates the resultant wealth gap.
The causes of wealth are something totally different from wealth
itself. A person may possess wealth, ie exchangeable value; if,
however, he does not possess the power of producing objects of more
value than he consumes, he will become poorer. A person may be poor; if
he, however, possesses the power of producing a larger amount of
valuable articles than he consumes, he becomes rich. The power of
producing wealth is therefore infinitely more important than wealth
itself; it ensures not only the possession and the increase of what has
been gained, but also the replacement of what has been lost. Under
"dollar hegemony", a term describing the status of the dollar, a fiat
currency, as the major reserve currency for international trade, free
trade produces absolute advantage for the dollar economy, not
comparative advantage for all trading economies. One should not be
misled by the dollar-denominated trade deficit the US runs with the
rest of the world, particularly Asia, for dollar hegemony has become
the most effective power of producing wealth for the United States,
despite dislocations in selected sectors of the US economy. These
dislocations, in the form of unemployment in sunset industries,
actually strengthen the US economy structurally in the long run in a
globalized economy. When US Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan
warns about the adverse effect of the deficit on the US economy, he is
talking exclusively of the government budget deficit, not the trade
deficit.
Within a world order of sovereign states, for one state to attack
another with legitimacy, the target state needs to be deemed as having
failed as a political institution. Failed states are defined as those
that can no longer perform basic governance functions such as providing
security, livelihood, public health and education, usually due to
fractious violence or extreme poverty. Within this power vacuum, common
citizens fall victim to warring factions and runaway crime. Sometimes,
an international institution such as the United Nations, or a coalition
of neighboring states, intervenes to prevent a humanitarian disaster
that would spill across borders. However, states fail not only because
of internal factors. Foreign powers frequently purposely undermine a
minor state by fueling ethnic warfare or supporting rebel forces, or
destabilizing its economy, or assassinating its leaders, causing it to
collapse. Humanitarian intervention often rings hollow when starvation
is frequently caused by superpower sanctions or embargoes brought on by
geopolitical motivation. Economic sanctions, generally recognized as
acts of war, caused the death of an estimated 2 million Iraqi
civilians, mostly women and children, between the two Iraq wars, which
Madeleine Albright, as US secretary of state, declared publicly on
television as being "worth it".
The general attributes of failed states are that they are small,
underdeveloped and poor and helpless to stop foreign interference in
their internal affairs. Yet a case can be made that large states with
advanced social infrastructure and developed economy can also qualify
as failed states, by virtue of ideologically driven trends to disable
basic state functions.
Next: Sovereignty, democracy and militarism
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