Imminent decline of the American empire?
By Ramzy Baroud
Online
Journal Contributing Writer
Apr 13, 2006, 13:51
The miscalculated policies of the US administration in the
Middle East are quickly depleting the country�s ability to sustain its once
unchallenged global position. Winds of change are blowing everywhere, and there
is little that Washington�s ideologues can do to stop it.
The above claim is increasingly finding its way into the
realm of mainstream thinking, despite all attempts to mute or relegate its
import. A recent speech by Chairman of the House International Relations
Committee Henry Hyde (R-Ill.) was the focal point of analysis by Martin Jacques
in The Guardian. "Our power has the grave liability of rendering our
theories about the world immune from failure. But by becoming deaf to easily
discerned warning signs, we may ignore long-term costs that result from our
actions and dismiss reverses that should lead to a re-examination of our goals
and means," Hyde said.
In his poignant analysis -- decoding Hyde�s deliberately
implicit thoughts -- Jacques argued, "The Bush administration stands
guilty of an extraordinary act of imperial overreach which has left the US more
internationally isolated than ever before, seriously stretched financially, and
guilty of neglect in east Asia and elsewhere."
Ironically, the invasion of Iraq with its "thousands of
tactical" mistakes -- as recently admitted by Secretary of State
Condoleezza Rice -- was meant to solidify and ensure the US� post Cold-War
global dominance. According to Jacques, as inferred from Hyde�s notable speech,
"It may well prove to be a harbinger of its decline." It can also be
argued that the US adventurism in Iraq has provided the coveted opportunity to
other countries to further their national and regional interests without the
constant fear of US reprisals.
In a recent interview, MIT professor Noam Chomsky, known for
his sharp criticism of US foreign policy particularity in Indochina, Central
and Latin America, delineated a new global political reality that is being
forged as the US stubbornly insists on fighting a lost battle in Iraq.
"What�s happening is something completely new in the history of the
hemisphere. Since the Spanish conquest, the countries of Latin America have
been pretty much separated from one another and oriented towards the imperial
power. For the first time, they are beginning to integrate and in quite a few
different ways."
That integration is evident, according to Chomsky, not only
by examining the rise of the Left in these countries and the almost immediate
alliances -- economic cooperation, for example -- that these popular
governments have achieved. There is a simultaneous rise of the political
relevance of the indigenous Indian population in Bolivia, and the opportunities
it represents to the Indian population of Ecuador and Peru. Moreover, there is
a noteworthy South-South integration that is already breaking regional
boundaries and significantly undermining the overpowering grip of the IMF,
which has played the infamous role of the unfair middleman between the rich and
hapless poor.
China and India, on the other hand, continue to achieve
astounding economic growth with China�s economic might and relevance to soon
surpass that of the US. In fact, there is an intense diplomatic clash underway
between the US and China, since the latter has dared to violate the
understanding of the Monroe Doctrine of 1823, which gave the US alone the right
to manage its Latin American domains. For the first time, says a BBC analysis,
a foreign country has challenged American influence in the region, and
successfully so. Indeed, China is upgrading its economic relations with Brazil
-- both increasingly formidable economic powers -- in ways that will eventually
help Brazil break away from a domineering US hold.
These are all part of the "warning signs" to which
Hyde was refereeing in his speech. While there are indications that Washington
is finally waking up to this grim reality, which it has helped create, there
are no signs whatsoever that a fundamental change of course in US foreign
policy in the Middle East is taking place: the destructive war in Iraq rages
on; the self-inflicting damage of unconditionally backing Israel in its endless
colonial ambitions perpetuates; and the same detrimental policy line used with
Iraq is employed, almost identically with Iran. US policy planners are as ever
insistent on following the same destructive course that has compromised their
nation�s global standing.
Instead of paying attention to these woes, the Bush
administration is trying to recover some of its Southeast Asia losses by
signing a nuclear treaty with India, an action that reeks of double standards
and miscalculations. The administration has also lifted the ban on sales of
lethal arms to Indonesia in recognition of its "unique strategic role in
Southeast Asia," despite protests from human rights groups.
Despite Bush�s recent �historic� trip to India and other top
officials� hasty attempts to reassert America�s global dominance, there should
be no illusions that the US� chief foreign policy debacle starts and ends with
the Middle East -- especially its �special� relationship with Israel. While the
latter has served the role of the client state since its establishment on
ethnically cleansed Palestinian territories, this relationship was
significantly altered in recent years, with the pro-Israeli lobby taking centre
stage, not simply by influencing US foreign policy toward Israel, but
eventually by directing it altogether in the region.
The rise of the neoconservatives helped create the false
impression that the US and Israeli policies are one and the same, including
their mutual interests in maintaining Israel�s military "edge" over
its neighbors, which eventually led to the invasion of Iraq. While the neocons
are washing their hands of any responsibility in the Middle East impasse, the
Bush administration�s arrogance is stopping it from immediately withdrawing its
troops from Iraq and reassessing its relationship with Israel.
The world is changing, yet the US government refuses to
abandon its old ways: militaristic, self-defeating and overbearing. Indeed, the
US must remold, not only its policies in the Middle East, but also its
hegemonic policies throughout the world. For once, the US administration needs
to tap into its sense of reason, and discern the "warning signs",
that should lead to "the re-examination of [its] goals and means." A
first step is to bring the troops home, and with them the entire doctrine that
unrestrained violence and perpetual wars can further the cause of an already
distrusted superpower.
Veteran
Arab American journalist Ramzy Baroud teaches mass communication at Australia�s
Curtin University of Technology, Malaysia Campus. His most recent book,
Writings on the Second Palestinian Intifada: A Chronicle of a People�s Struggle
has been published by Pluto Press, London.
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