America’s moronic hegemonic policy spells disaster
By Paul Craig Roberts
Online Journal Contributing Writer
Nov 19, 2008, 00:24
According to all accounts, the US faces its worse economic
crisis since the Great Depression with $2 trillion in near-term financing needs
for bailouts and economic stimulus. This is an enormous sum for any country,
especially for one that is so heavily indebted that it is close to bankruptcy. If
the money can’t be borrowed abroad, it will have to be printed -- a policy that
carries the implication
of hyper-inflation.
In normal life, a borrower who must appeal to creditors
makes every effort to bring order to his financial affairs. But not the Bush
regime.
The out-of-pocket costs of Bush’s Iraq war
are about $600 billion at the present moment, a figure that increases by
millions of dollars every hour.
In addition, there are the much larger future costs that
have already been incurred, such as long-term care for the wounded and disabled
US soldiers, the replacement costs of the used up equipment, interest payments
on the war debt, and the lost economic use of the resources and manpower
squandered in war. Experts estimate that the already incurred out-of-pocket and
future costs of Bush’s Iraq war to be
$3 trillion and rising.
Even these costs might be small if an article by Richard
LaMountain in the November 2008 Middle
American News is accurate. According to LaMountain, US refugee programs for
Iraqis displaced by the US invasion and occupation could
result in a large and
growing Muslim US population. These would be people whose lives were
adversely impacted by the US invasion of Iraq.
If the US maintains its pro-Israeli stance against Arabs and
Muslims generally, the implications of a growing Muslim population and a
government obsessed with its “war on
terror” are frightening for American civil liberty. In order to contain
the potential terror that it will have imported, Washington would impose a
total police state. We will have our own Saddam Hussein.
To avoid the immigration that would be problematic for US
civil liberties, the war must end. The war must also end in order that bankrupt
Washington can borrow abroad the money it needs to bail out the US economy.
The budget authority for the annual out-of-pocket costs of
the war have been rising by $150 billion per year, an addition to the budget
deficit that must be financed by borrowing abroad. A sane person might think
that a government, such as the US, in need of foreign loans to save its
economy, would jump at the chance to get its troops out of Iraq, where they are
not wanted.
Instead, the Bush regime has been struggling all year with
the Iraq government in order to secure an agreement that lets the US government
continue to hemorrhage hundreds of billions of dollars by keeping American
troops in Iraq.
The Korean War ended 55 years ago, and the US still has
troops in Korea.
Germany was defeated in 1945, and the US still has troops in
Germany.
A country that must go hat-in-hand to its creditors must
first look to where costs can be cut. Annual military spending of $700 billion
is certainly a good place to start.
But the US government has far more hubris than intelligence
and is on its way to being a failed state that has to print money to pay its
bills.
It is not too late for the US to save itself and the dollar
standard, but it would require a rapid transition from arrogance to humility. The
rest of the world can bring America down by not lending to us, in which case
neither the trade nor budget deficits could be financed.
The world does not want to bring us down in this way. Our
creditors would like to preserve as much as possible the values of their
trillions in US dollar assets. This is easier done if the dollar remains the
reserve currency. Therefore, the US government has an opportunity to go to its
creditors with a plan.
This is what the plan must be: A declaration that repudiates
the neoconservative
goal to achieve US hegemony over the world; a budget that reduces annual US
borrowing needs by several hundreds of billions by ending the Afghan and Iraq
wars, by closing overseas military bases, and by cutting military spending; a
new corporate tax system that brings back American jobs, manufacturing
capability, and export potential by taxing US corporations’ worldwide profits
according to the value-added in the US.
Such a plan would demonstrate that the US respects the
sovereignty and aspirations of other countries and is willing to cooperate
peacefully with others as an occupant of what the Russian president has termed “our common house.” Such a plan would
demonstrate that the US government has come to the realization that there is a
limit to its borrowing capacity and the loans that it can service and is
prepared to put first things first. Such a plan would show that the US can
curtail its unsustainable dependency on imports without erecting a wall of
tariffs.
If the US had the leadership to approach its creditors with
such a plan, a sigh of relief would emit from the rest of the world. Many of
the economic hardships that Americans currently face could be avoided, and the
prospect of a hyper-inflationary depression would recede.
Such a favorable outcome requires that the government in
Washington give up the delusion that Americans are an “indispensable people” who have a monopoly on virtue that gives
them claim to hegemony over the world.
Paul
Craig Roberts [email
him] was Assistant Secretary of the Treasury during President
Reagan’s first term. He was Associate Editor of the Wall Street Journal. He has
held numerous academic appointments, including the William E. Simon Chair,
Center for Strategic and International Studies, Georgetown University,
and Senior Research Fellow, Hoover Institution, Stanford University. He was
awarded the Legion of Honor by French President Francois Mitterrand. He is the
author of Supply-Side
Revolution : An Insider’s Account of Policymaking in Washington; Alienation
and the Soviet Economy and Meltdown:
Inside the Soviet Economy, and is the co-author with Lawrence M.
Stratton of The
Tyranny of Good Intentions : How Prosecutors and Bureaucrats Are Trampling the
Constitution in the Name of Justice. Click here for
Peter Brimelow’s Forbes Magazine interview with Roberts about the recent
epidemic of prosecutorial misconduct.
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