Power and the new world order
By
Henry C K Liu
This article appeared in AToL
on February 25, 2003
Thomas L Friedman, three-time Pulitzer-winning columnist for the New
York Times, is the ordained voice of US neo-liberalism. In his February
17 column, Friedman reported that China was described privately by an
aide of US President George W Bush as "not having a dog in this fight"
at the UN Security Council debate over Iraq. Friedman offered a
tutorial to China on the new international order of World War III,
which he saw as having been set off by the events of September 11,
2001.
Friedman wrote: "The new world system is also bipolar, but instead of
being divided between East and West (as in the Cold War) it is divided
between the World of Order and the World of Disorder. The World of
Order is built on four pillars: the United States, European
Union-Russia, India and China, along with all the smaller powers around
them. The World of Disorder comprises failed states (such as Liberia),
rogue states (Iraq and North Korea), messy states - states that are too
big to fail but too messy to work (Pakistan, Colombia, Indonesia, many
Arab and African states) - and finally the terrorist and mafia networks
that feed off the World of Disorder."
Friedman asserts that the World of Disorder has been made more
dangerous today by globalization, a trend that he has enthusiastically
promoted for a decade since the end of the Cold War. "In a networked
universe, with widely diffused technologies, open borders and a highly
integrated global financial and Internet system, very small groups of
people can amass huge amounts of power to disrupt the World of Order.
Individuals can become super-empowered. In many ways, September 11
marked the first full-scale battle between a superpower and a small
band of super-empowered angry men from the World of Disorder." Yet
Friedman leaves his Aristotelian syllogism incomplete, failing to
explain how regime changes in Afghanistan and Iraq and war against
defenseless nation-states fit into "a battle between a superpower and
super-empowered individuals".
Friedman asserts that "the job of the four pillars of the World of
Order is to work together to help stabilize and lift up the World of
Disorder". He observes that some Chinese intellectuals, not to mention
French and Russian, "wrongly believe" that they "all have more to fear
from US power than from Osama, Kim or Saddam". He warns, "If America
has to manage the World of Disorder alone, the American people will
quickly tire." And he quotes Michael Mandelbaum, the Johns Hopkins
foreign-policy expert: "'The real threat to world stability is not too
much American power. It is too little American power.' Too little
American power will only lead to the World of Disorder expanding."
Friedman cannot be referring to military or financial power, of which
the United States has ample supply. He would be right if he were
referring to moral power. The US military is by far the most powerful
in the world, with more advanced technology and greater
force-projection capability than all other nations combined. And dollar
hegemony dominates the global economy. The last Gulf War was largely
paid for by Saudi Arabia and other oil-producing Arabic states, with
substantial benefit for the defense sector of the US economy.
The real threat to world stability is too much military and financial
power coupled with too little moral power on the part of any nation,
and such a combination is particularly dangerous on the part of a sole
superpower. Increasingly, US values, expressed in high-minded terms
such as "democracy" and "freedom", are sounding more like empty slogans
of tiresome propaganda. "Freedom" rings hollow to people around the
world who find themselves unable to pay for privatized water, the basic
necessity of life that used to flow clean and free, or to those forced
to buy imported packaged food they used to grow free on their own land
for themselves. "Democracy" cannot buy medicine for children exposed to
new contagious diseases brought in by visitors arriving on jetliners,
nor can it keep drug prices from wholesale gouging in the name of
intellectual property rights. These are the real freedoms that have
been taken away from much of the world by US-imposed globalization.
The so-called World of Disorder has been constructed in large measure
by half a century of US foreign and economic policies. Much of this
World of Disorder lay in the US sphere of influence all through the
Cold War. The memory of US support for Osama bin Laden against the
Soviets in Afghanistan and for Saddam Hussein's war against Iran is
still fresh in the minds of the people of the world. And US policies of
sanctions and embargoes have caused millions of deaths and starvation.
Now the world is asked to join a new US crusade against this year's
list of latest evils in the name of order and stability.
A stable world order cannot be constructed out of fear of precision
bombs or tactical nuclear weapons, or with economic sanctions. It can
only be constructed out of equality, equity and non-exploitative
development - elements in short supply in globalization. The world is
not just a marketplace; it is an organism in which disease and poverty
in any of its parts adversely affect the health of the whole organism.
It I hard to visualize how another war can put things right.
The Bush administration's policy toward China had been aggressively
antagonistic prior to September 11, fanning public paranoia against the
world's most populous nation in the early phases of legitimate
self-renewal as a potential competitor against US global hegemony.
Friedman now beseeches China to help keep alive "the open society in
America" and to help save globalization, "because we Americans will
tighten our borders, triple-check every ship that comes into port and
restrict civil liberties as never before, and this will slow the whole
global economy". He argues: "One more September 11 and your [China's]
growth strategy will be in real trouble [unless you plan on only
exporting duct tape], which means that the Chinese leadership will be
in real trouble." He maintains that China cannot be a "free rider on an
Iraq war" or "leave America to carry the burden of North Korea". Yet up
until September 11, the United States actively supported separatist
terrorism against China. The nuclearization of the Korean Peninsula is
mostly a result of US policy.
Friedman allows that it is quite legitimate for China to oppose the US
waging war on Iraq or North Korea. But he asks in exasperation: "Why
isn't China's foreign minister going to Baghdad and Pyongyang, slamming
his fist on tables and demanding that their leaders start complying
with the United Nations to avoid war?"
Notwithstanding that most households in the United States are now
looking to return the oversupply of duct tape they bought a few days
ago, it would really be a page out of a Wag the Dog screenplay
for the Chinese foreign minister to suggest, let alone demand, that
Iraq or North Korea, both longtime targets of US sanction and other
warlike hostile actions, is morally obligated to save the US from
unilaterally dismantling its domestic civil liberty or to save
US-imposed globalization that has impoverished much of the world. It
would be a more credible scenario if the US secretary of state would go
to Taipei to slam his fist on tables to demand that its leaders stop
flirting with Taiwan independence to avoid war.
Friedman warns: "One more September 11, one bad Iraq war that ties
America down alone in the Middle East and saps its strength, well, that
may go over well with the Cold Warriors in the People's Liberation
Army, but in the real world - in the world where the real threat you
face is not American troops crossing your borders but American dollars
fleeing from them - you will be out of business."
Friedman is right to be concerned about the adverse effects of
terrorism and the uncertainty of another Iraqi war on the slowing US
economy. And it is likely that one outcome of current US foreign policy
of preemptive military attacks on less than clearly imminent threats
will be further reversal of globalization trends. Globalization had
already stalled since the Asian financial crises of 1997, long before
the war on terrorism was launched, because the globalized game of
transferring wealth from the poor to the rich is not sustainable. But
Friedman must be astute enough to realize that China is at best a
reluctant participant in the globalization game and not a zealous
advocate. He is well enough informed not to be oblivious to the fact
that serious debate is openly being held among Chinese planners about
the proper policy response to stalled globalization. Many in China are
openly questioning the wisdom of relying on export, within the context
of dollar hegemony, as the sole engine of growth, or on market
fundamentalism as a development principle, with visible effects of
failed markets all over the world. The argument for a shift from export
for dollars toward national domestic development is fast gaining
acceptance among Chinese policymakers.
Earlier, on January 6, Friedman wrote: "I have no problem with a war
for oil - provided that it is to fuel the first progressive Arab
regime, and not just our SUVs [sport-utility vehicles], and provided we
behave in a way that makes clear to the world we are protecting
everyone's access to oil at reasonable prices - not simply our right to
binge on it." While the path to hell may be paved with good intentions,
the path to nirvana is never paved with devious justification.
Friedman's idea of a postwar "progressive" Iraq is definitely not a
Venezuela of the Middle East, with a democratically elected president
that the Bush White House tried to topple with a coup. Or is Kuwait or
Saudi Arabia Friedman's idea of a "progressive" regime? He must realize
that his "open door" policy on access to Mideast oil is incompatible
with a truly progressive Iraqi regime, and that "reasonable" oil prices
are incompatible with conservation.
In his book The Lexus and the Olive Tree, Friedman wrote that
"the globalization system, unlike the Cold War system, is not static,
but a dynamic ongoing process: globalization involves the inexorable
integration of markets, nation-states, and technologies to a degree
never witnessed before - in a way that is enabling individuals,
corporations, and nation-states to reach around the world farther,
faster, deeper, and cheaper than ever before, and in a way that is also
producing a powerful backlash from those brutalized or left behind by
this new system.
"The driving idea behind globalization is free-market capitalism - the
more you let market forces rule and the more you open your economy to
free trade and competition, the more efficient and flourishing your
economy will be. Globalization means the spread of free-market
capitalism to virtually every country in the world. Globalization also
has its own set of economic rules - rules that revolve around opening,
deregulating and privatizing your economy.
"Unlike the Cold War system, globalization has its own dominant
culture, which is why it tends to be homogenizing. Culturally speaking,
globalization is largely, though not entirely, the spread of
Americanization - from Big Macs to iMacs to Mickey Mouse - on a global
scale.
"If the defining anxiety of the Cold War was fear of annihilation from
an enemy you knew all too well in a world struggle that was fixed and
stable, the defining anxiety in globalization is fear of rapid change
from an enemy you can't see, touch or feel - a sense that your job,
community or workplace can be changed at any moment by anonymous
economic and technological forces that are anything but stable.
"Last, and most important, globalization has its own defining structure
of power, which is much more complex than the Cold War structure. The
Cold War system was built exclusively around nation-states, and it was
balanced at the center by two superpowers: the United States and the
Soviet Union. The globalization system, by contrast, is built around
three balances, which overlap and affect one another. The first is the
traditional balance between nation-states. In the globalization system,
the United States is now the sole and dominant superpower and all other
nations are subordinate to it to one degree or another. The balance of
power between the United States and the other states still matters for
the stability of this system. And it can still explain a lot of the
news you read on the front page of the papers, whether it is the
containment of Iraq in the Middle East or the expansion of NATO against
Russia in Central Europe.
"The second balance in the globalization system is between
nation-states and global markets. These global markets are made up of
millions of investors moving money around the world with the click of a
mouse. The United States can destroy you by dropping bombs and the
Supermarkets can destroy you by downgrading your bonds. The United
States is the dominant player in maintaining the globalization
gameboard, but it is not alone in influencing the moves on that
gameboard. This globalization gameboard today is a lot like a Ouija
board - sometimes pieces are moved around by the obvious hand of the
superpower, and sometimes they are moved around by hidden hands of the
Supermarkets.
"The third balance that you have to pay attention to in the
globalization system - the one that is really the newest of all - is
the balance between individuals and nation-states. Because
globalization has brought down many of the walls that limited the
movement and reach of people, and because it has simultaneously wired
the world into networks, it gives more power to individuals to
influence both markets and nation-states than at any time in history.
So you have today not only a superpower, not only Supermarkets, but, as
I will also demonstrate later in the book, you have Super-empowered
individuals. Some of these Super-empowered individuals are quite angry,
some of them quite wonderful - but all of them are now able to act
directly on the world stage without the traditional mediation of
governments, corporations or any other public or private institutions."
Friedman went on: "Osama bin Laden, a Saudi millionaire with his own
global network, declared war on the United States in the late 1990s,
and the US Air Force had to launch a cruise-missile attack on him as
though he were another nation-state. We fired cruise missiles at an
individual!"
So, assuming the September 11 attacks were indeed masterminded by Osama
bin Laden, the attacks were, by Friedman's account, merely retaliatory
strikes.
But Friedman's mentality transcends his personal insights. It is a
mentality of arrogance of power for which the United States has been
criticized by many. US moral imperialism demands not only quiet
submissiveness from its victims, but vocal loyal support. Not only is
globalization a game of heads I win for the US, and tails you lose for
other participants, Friedman has the audacity to dangle globalized
trade as a political favor from the United States to be granted only to
sycophant partners. If China wants to continue to export goods
manufactured by low-paid labor in exchange for dollars that the US can
print at will, and in the process keeping US inflation unnaturally low
even in the face of fiscal irresponsibility, to earn a trade surplus
unspendable in the Chinese domestic economy as it must be held as
foreign-exchange reserves in dollar-denominated instruments to finance
the US trade deficit, then China had better fall in line to
unquestioningly support US political hegemony.
It is easy to act humbly when you are rich; the trick offered by
Friedman is for the United States is to be arrogant when it is in debt
up to its ears. The fact is that the US can no more dispense with
low-cost Chinese imports than it can do without Mideast oil, both of
which it pays for with paper money it can print without restriction. US
Trade Representative Robert Zoellick said on the same day as Friedman's
article: "China's ballooning trade surplus with the US is a boon to
global growth and therefore desirable at a time when the economies of
Japan and Europe are pretty stagnant." So who's kidding whom?
US-China trade faces stagnant growth anyway unless the United States
abandons its sanction on high-technology export to China. With the US
relocating all manufacturing offshore under globalization, high tech
and military systems are the main US exports outside of agriculture and
financial services. Thus high-tech sanctions put a damper on US-China
trade growth and contribute to the growth of the US trade deficit. Last
year, China overtook the United States as the leading exporter to Japan
(US$61.7 billion, up 6.1 percent from 2001), accounting for 18.3
percent of Japanese imports, while US export to Japan dropped 9.5
percent to $57.5 billion. The US exported $22 billion to China,
imported $125 billion (against import of $121 billion from Japan),
chalking up a deficit to China of $103 billion in 2002. In 1985, the US
incurred a trade deficit of $6 million with China.
Friedman is not just another columnist. He is the celebrated spokesman
for US neo-liberalism and, as such, his views are highly influential
on, if not in concert with, US policy. In fact, US officials have been
making similar noises in recent days about US dissatisfaction on
China's posture on Iraq and North Korea. Yet the war on Iraq is not
simply about oil. The United States already controls the global oil
market and it does not need a war to consolidate its hold further.
Despite recent surges, oil prices are still low by historical standards
and as long as oil is denominated in dollars, the rise and fall of oil
prices do not present insurmountable problems for the US economy.
Petro-dollars are in essence captured US assets.
If Friedman is really concerned about open access to oil at reasonable
prices for everybody, he should support a progressive pricing regime
for oil with higher prices for high per-capita consumption markets. The
more you waste, the more you pay - the conservation formula of market
fundamentalism. The average consumption in the inclusive period of
1983-2001 was 4.47 barrels per person per year for the world. A barrel
of oil contains 5.8 million British thermal units (BTU). In 1995, US
per capita usage was 327 million BTU per year, which is equivalent to
56.38 barrels of oil, 12.6 times of world average. On a deeper level,
the real threat on long-term economic growth for the global economy is
not the price of commodities but the tyranny of mostly Western
intellectual property rights.
The war on Iraq is part of a US grand strategy to reposition the entire
post-Cold War global geopolitical landscape to reflect a new world
order with a single superpower. The split in the European Union into
Old and New Europe over the Iraq war is part of a US objective of
establishing a new US satellite system in Eastern European client
states to fill the vacuum left by the collapse of the Soviet satellite
system. The North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) is being
transformed from a defensive alliance for Europe against the Soviet
bloc to an offensive proxy war machine for US policy of moral
imperialism. France, Germany, Russia and China are working not as
allies, but as nations with common interest in preventing the US in
again turning the UN Security Council into a lap dog of US foreign
policy, as the International Monetary Fund has been for US financial
hegemony in the past two decades.
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