The
Paranoia of the Superrich and Superpowerful
Washington’s
Dilemma on a “Lost” Planet
By Noam
Chomsky
[This piece is adapted from “Uprisings,” a
chapter in Power
Systems: Conversations on Global Democratic Uprisings and the New
Challenges to U.S. Empire, Noam Chomsky’s new
interview book with David Barsamian (with thanks to the publisher,
Metropolitan Books). The questions are Barsamian’s, the
answers Chomsky’s.]
Does the United States still have the same level of
control over the energy resources of the Middle
East as it once had?
The major energy-producing countries are still firmly
under the control of the Western-backed dictatorships. So, actually,
the progress made by the Arab Spring is limited, but it’s not
insignificant. The Western-controlled dictatorial system is eroding.
In fact, it’s been eroding for some time. So, for example, if
you go back 50 years, the energy resources -- the main concern of
U.S. planners -- have been mostly nationalized. There are constantly
attempts to reverse that, but they have not succeeded.
Take the U.S. invasion of Iraq, for example. To everyone
except a dedicated ideologue, it was pretty obvious that we invaded
Iraq not because of our love of democracy but because it’s
maybe the second- or third-largest source of oil in the world, and is
right in the middle of the major energy-producing region. You’re
not supposed to say this. It’s considered a conspiracy theory.
The United States was seriously defeated in Iraq by Iraqi
nationalism -- mostly by nonviolent resistance. The United States
could kill the insurgents, but they couldn’t deal with half a
million people demonstrating in the streets. Step by step, Iraq was
able to dismantle the controls put in place by the occupying forces.
By November 2007, it was becoming pretty clear that it was going to
be very hard to reach U.S. goals. And at that point, interestingly,
those goals were explicitly stated. So in November 2007 the Bush II
administration came out with an official declaration about what any
future arrangement with Iraq would have to be. It had two major
requirements: one, that the United States must be free to carry out
combat operations from its military bases, which it will retain; and
two, “encouraging the flow of foreign investments to Iraq,
especially American investments.” In January 2008, Bush made
this clear in one of his signing statements. A couple of months
later, in the face of Iraqi resistance, the United States had to give
that up. Control of Iraq is now disappearing before their eyes.
Iraq was an attempt to reinstitute by force something
like the old system of control, but it was beaten back. In general, I
think, U.S. policies remain constant, going back to the Second World
War. But the capacity to implement them is declining.
Declining because of economic weakness?
Partly because the world is just becoming more diverse.
It has more diverse power centers. At the end of the Second World
War, the United States was absolutely at the peak of its power. It
had half the world’s wealth and every one of its competitors
was seriously damaged or destroyed. It had a position of unimaginable
security and developed plans to essentially run the world -- not
unrealistically at the time.
This was called “Grand Area” planning?
Yes. Right after the Second World War, George Kennan,
head of the U.S. State Department policy planning staff, and others
sketched out the details, and then they were implemented. What’s
happening now in the Middle East and North Africa, to an extent, and
in South America substantially goes all the way back to the late
1940s. The first major successful resistance to U.S. hegemony was in
1949. That’s when an event took place, which, interestingly, is
called “the loss of China.” It’s a very interesting
phrase, never challenged. There was a lot of discussion about who is
responsible for the loss of China. It became a huge domestic issue.
But it’s a very interesting phrase. You can only lose something
if you own it. It was just taken for granted: we possess China -- and
if they move toward independence, we’ve lost China. Later came
concerns about “the loss of Latin America,” “the
loss of the Middle East,” “the loss of” certain
countries, all based on the premise that we own the world and
anything that weakens our control is a loss to us and we wonder how
to recover it.
Today,
if you read, say, foreign policy journals or, in a farcical form,
listen to the Republican debates, they’re asking, “How do
we prevent further losses?”
On the other hand, the capacity to preserve control has
sharply declined. By 1970, the world was already what was called
tripolar economically, with a U.S.-based North American industrial
center, a German-based European center, roughly comparable in size,
and a Japan-based East Asian center, which was then the most dynamic
growth region in the world. Since then, the global economic order has
become much more diverse. So it’s harder to carry out our
policies, but the underlying principles have not changed much.
Take the Clinton doctrine. The Clinton doctrine was that
the United States is entitled to resort to unilateral force to ensure
“uninhibited access to key markets, energy supplies, and
strategic resources.” That goes beyond anything that George W.
Bush said. But it was quiet and it wasn’t arrogant and
abrasive, so it didn’t cause much of an uproar. The belief in
that entitlement continues right to the present. It’s also part
of the intellectual culture.
Right after the assassination of Osama bin Laden, amid
all the cheers and applause, there were a few critical comments
questioning the legality of the act. Centuries ago, there used to be
something called presumption of innocence. If you apprehend a
suspect, he’s a suspect until proven guilty. He should be
brought to trial. It’s a core part of American law. You can
trace it back to Magna Carta. So there were a couple of voices saying
maybe we shouldn’t throw out the whole basis of Anglo-American
law. That led to a lot of very angry and infuriated reactions, but
the most interesting ones were, as usual, on the left liberal end of
the spectrum. Matthew Yglesias, a well-known and highly respected
left liberal commentator, wrote an article in which he ridiculed
these views. He said they’re “amazingly naive,”
silly. Then he expressed the reason. He said that “one of the
main functions of the international institutional order is precisely
to legitimate the use of deadly military force by western powers.”
Of course, he didn’t mean Norway. He meant the United States.
So the principle on which the international system is based is that
the United States is entitled to use force at will. To talk about the
United States violating international law or something like that is
amazingly naive, completely silly. Incidentally, I was the target of
those remarks, and I’m happy to confess my guilt. I do think
that Magna Carta and international law are worth paying some
attention to.
I merely mention that to illustrate that in the
intellectual culture, even at what’s called the left liberal
end of the political spectrum, the core principles haven’t
changed very much. But the capacity to implement them has been
sharply reduced. That’s why you get all this talk about
American decline. Take a look at the year-end issue of Foreign
Affairs, the main establishment journal. Its big front-page
cover asks, in bold face, “Is America Over?” It’s a
standard complaint of those who believe they should have everything.
If you believe you should have everything and anything gets away from
you, it’s a tragedy, the world is collapsing. So is America
over? A long time ago we “lost” China, we’ve lost
Southeast Asia, we’ve lost South America. Maybe we’ll
lose the Middle East and North African countries. Is America over?
It’s a kind of paranoia, but it’s the paranoia of the
superrich and the superpowerful. If you don’t have everything,
it’s a disaster.
The New York Times describes the “defining
policy quandary of the Arab Spring: how to square contradictory
American impulses that include support for democratic change, a
desire for stability, and wariness of Islamists who have become a
potent political force.” The Times identifies three
U.S. goals. What do you make of them?
Two of them are accurate. The United States is in favor
of stability. But you have to remember what stability means.
Stability means conformity to U.S. orders. So, for example, one of
the charges against Iran, the big foreign policy threat, is that it
is destabilizing Iraq and Afghanistan. How? By trying to expand its
influence into neighboring countries. On the other hand, we
“stabilize” countries when we invade them and destroy
them.
I’ve occasionally quoted one of my favorite
illustrations of this, which is from a well-known, very good liberal
foreign policy analyst, James Chace, a former editor of Foreign
Affairs. Writing about the overthrow of the Salvador Allende
regime and the imposition of the dictatorship of Augusto Pinochet in
1973, he said that we had to “destabilize” Chile in the
interests of “stability.” That’s not perceived to
be a contradiction -- and it isn’t. We had to destroy the
parliamentary system in order to gain stability, meaning that they do
what we say. So yes, we are in favor of stability in this technical
sense.
Concern about political Islam is just like concern about
any independent development. Anything that’s independent you
have to have concern about because it might undermine you. In fact,
it’s a little ironic, because traditionally the United States
and Britain have by and large strongly supported radical Islamic
fundamentalism, not political Islam, as a force to block secular
nationalism, the real concern. So, for example, Saudi Arabia is the
most extreme fundamentalist state in the world, a radical Islamic
state. It has a missionary zeal, is spreading radical Islam to
Pakistan, funding terror. But it’s the bastion of U.S. and
British policy. They’ve consistently supported it against the
threat of secular nationalism from Gamal Abdel Nasser’s Egypt
and Abd al-Karim Qasim’s Iraq, among many others. But they
don’t like political Islam because it might become independent.
The first of the three points, our yearning for
democracy, that’s about on the level of Joseph Stalin talking
about the Russian commitment to freedom, democracy, and liberty for
the world. It’s the kind of statement you laugh about when you
hear it from commissars or Iranian clerics, but you nod politely and
maybe even with awe when you hear it from their Western counterparts.
If you look at the record, the yearning for democracy is
a bad joke. That’s even recognized by leading scholars, though
they don’t put it this way. One of the major scholars on
so-called democracy promotion is Thomas Carothers, who is pretty
conservative and highly regarded -- a neo-Reaganite, not a flaming
liberal. He worked in Reagan’s State Department and has several
books reviewing the course of democracy promotion, which he takes
very seriously. He says, yes, this is a deep-seated American ideal,
but it has a funny history. The history is that every U.S.
administration is “schizophrenic.” They support democracy
only if it conforms to certain strategic and economic interests. He
describes this as a strange pathology, as if the United States needed
psychiatric treatment or something. Of course, there’s another
interpretation, but one that can’t come to mind if you’re
a well-educated, properly behaved intellectual.
Within several months of the toppling of [President
Hosni] Mubarak in Egypt, he was in the dock facing criminal charges
and prosecution. It’s inconceivable that U.S. leaders will ever
be held to account for their crimes in Iraq or beyond. Is that going
to change anytime soon?
That’s basically the Yglesias principle: the very
foundation of the international order is that the United States has
the right to use violence at will. So how can you charge anybody?
And no one else has that right.
Of course not. Well, maybe our clients do. If Israel
invades Lebanon and kills a thousand people and destroys half the
country, okay, that’s all right. It’s interesting. Barack
Obama was a senator before he was president. He didn’t do much
as a senator, but he did a couple of things, including one he was
particularly proud of. In fact, if you looked at his website before
the primaries, he highlighted the fact that, during the Israeli
invasion of Lebanon in 2006, he cosponsored a Senate resolution
demanding that the United States do nothing to impede Israel’s
military actions until they had achieved their objectives and
censuring Iran and Syria because they were supporting resistance to
Israel’s destruction of southern Lebanon, incidentally, for the
fifth time in 25 years. So they inherit the right. Other clients do,
too.
But the rights really reside in Washington. That’s
what it means to own the world. It’s like the air you breathe.
You can’t question it. The main founder of contemporary IR
[international relations] theory, Hans Morgenthau, was really quite a
decent person, one of the very few political scientists and
international affairs specialists to criticize the Vietnam War on
moral, not tactical, grounds. Very rare. He wrote a book called The
Purpose of American Politics. You already know what’s
coming. Other countries don’t have purposes. The purpose of
America, on the other hand, is “transcendent”: to bring
freedom and justice to the rest of the world. But he’s a good
scholar, like Carothers. So he went through the record. He said, when
you study the record, it looks as if the United States hasn’t
lived up to its transcendent purpose. But then he says, to criticize
our transcendent purpose “is to fall into the error of atheism,
which denies the validity of religion on similar grounds” --
which is a good comparison. It’s a deeply entrenched religious
belief. It’s so deep that it’s going to be hard to
disentangle it. And if anyone questions that, it leads to near
hysteria and often to charges of anti-Americanism or “hating
America” -- interesting concepts that don’t exist in
democratic societies, only in totalitarian societies and here, where
they’re just taken for granted.
Noam Chomsky is Institute Professor Emeritus in the
MIT Department of Linguistics and Philosophy. A TomDispatch
regular, he is the author of numerous best-selling political
works, including recently Hopes
and Prospects and Making
the Future. This piece is adapted from the
chapter “Uprisings” in his newest book (with interviewer
David Barsamian), Power
Systems: Conversations on Global Democratic Uprisings and the New
Challenges to U.S. Empire (The
American Empire Project, Metropolitan Books).
Thanks to TomDispatch.com, where this interview originally appeared.
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