Imperialism and
Liberation Strategies in the Middle East
At
the moment, the United States has great difficulty
in retaining its hegemony in the Middle East. Its
troops have been declared unwanted in Iraq; and in
Syria, the US and their foreign legion of terrorists
lose terrain and positions every month. The US has
responded to this with a significant escalation, by
deploying more troops and by constant threats
against Iran. At the same time, we have seen strong
protest movements in Lebanon, Iraq and Iran.
By Pål Steigan
February 01, 2020 "Information
Clearing House" -When
millions of Iraqi took to the streets recently,
their main slogan was «THE UNITED STATES OUT OF
THE MIDDLE EAST!»
How should one analyze this?
Obviously, there are a lot of social tensions in
the Middle East – class based, ethnic, religious and
cultural. The region is a patchwork of conflicts and
tensions that not only goes back hundreds of years,
but even a few thousand. There are always many
reasons to rebel against a corrupt upper class,
anywhere in the world. But no rebellion can succeed
if it is not based on a realistic and thorough
analysis of the specific conditions in the
individual country and region.
Just as in Africa, the borders in the Middle East
are arbitrarily drawn. They are the product of the
manipulations of imperialist powers, and only to a
lesser extent products of what the peoples
themselves have wanted.
During the era of decolonization, there was a
strong, secular
pan-Arab movement that wanted to create a
unified Arab world. This movement was influenced by
the nationalist and socialist ideas that had strong
popular support at the time. King
Abdallah 1 of Jordan envisaged a kingdom that
would consist of Jordan, Palestine and Syria. Egypt
and Syria briefly established a union called the
United Arab Republic. Gaddafi wanted to unite
Libya, Syria and Egypt in a
federation of Arab republics. In 1958, a quickly
dissolved confederation was established between
Jordan and Iraq, called
the Arab Federation. All these efforts were
transient. What remains is the Arab League, which
is, after all, not a state federation and not an
alliance. And then of course we have the demand for
a Kurdish state, or something similar consisting of
one or more Kurdish mini-states. Still, the most
divisive product of the First World War was the
establishment of the state of Israel on Palestinian
soil. During the First World War, Britain’s Foreign
Minister Arthur Balfour issued what became known as
the
Balfour Declaration, which «… view with
favour the establishment in Palestine of a national
home for the Jewish people.»
But what is the basis for all these attempts at
creating states? What are the prerequisites for
success or failure?
The imperialist powers divide the
world according to the power relations between them
Lenin gave the best and most durable explanation
for this, in his essay «Imperialism
– the highest stage of capitalism«. There, he
explained five basic features of the era of
imperialism:
The concentration of production and capital
has developed to such a high stage that it has
created monopolies which play a decisive role in
economic life;
The merging of bank capital with industrial
capital, and the creation, on the basis of this
“finance capital”, of a financial oligarchy;
The export of capital as distinguished from
the export of commodities acquires exceptional
importance;
The formation of international monopolist
capitalist associations which share the world
among themselves; and
The territorial division of the whole world
among the biggest capitalist powers is
completed.
But Lenin also pointed out that capitalist
countries are developing unevenly, not least because
of the uneven development of productive forces in
the various capitalist countries. After a while,
there arises a discrepancy between how the world is
divided and the relative strength of the imperialist
powers. This disparity will eventually force through
a redistribution, a new division of the world based
on the new relationship of strength. And, as Lenin
states:
“The question is: what means other than
war could there be under capitalism to overcome
the disparity between the development of
productive forces and the accumulation of
capital on the one side, and the division of
colonies and spheres of influence for finance
capital on the other?“
The two world wars were wars that arose because
of unevenness in the power relationships between the
imperialist powers. The British Empire was past its
heyday and British capitalism lagged behind in the
competition. The United States and Germany were the
great powers that had the largest industrial and
technological growth, and eventually this
misalignment exploded. Not once, but twice.
Versailles and Yalta
The victors of the First World War divided the
world between themselves at the expense of the
losers. The main losers were Germany,
Austria-Hungary, Russia (the Soviet Union) and the
Ottoman Empire. This division was drawn up in the
Versailles treaty and the following minor
treaties.
This map shows how the Ottoman Empire was
partitioned:
At the end of World War II, the victorious
superpowers met in the city of Yalta on the Crimean
peninsula in the Soviet Union. Roosevelt, Churchill
and Stalin made an agreement on how Europe should be
divided following Germany’s imminent defeat. This
map shows how it was envisaged and the two blocs
that emerged and became the foundation for the Cold
War. Note that Yugoslavia, created after Versailles
in 1919, was maintained and consolidated as «a
country between the blocs». So it is a country that
carries in itself the heritage of both the
Versailles- and Yalta agreements.
The fateful change of era when
the Soviet Union fell
In the era of imperialism, there has always been
a struggle between various great powers. The battle
has been about markets, access to cheap labor, raw
materials, energy, transport routes and military
control. And the imperialist countries divide the
world between themselves according to their
strength. But the imperialist powers are developing
unevenly.
If a power collapses or loses control over some
areas, rivals will compete to fill the void.
Imperialism follows the principle that Aristotle in
his Physics called
horror vacui – the fear of empty space.
Are You Tired Of
The Lies And
Non-Stop Propaganda?
And that was what happened when the Soviet Union
lost the Cold War. In 1991, the Soviet Union ceased
to exist, and soon the Eastern bloc was also
history. And thus the balance was broken, the one
that had maintained the old order. And now a huge
area was available for redivision. The weakened
Russia barely managed to preserve its own territory,
and not at all the area that just before was
controlled by the Soviet Union.
"Never has a so large
area been open for redivision. It was the
result of two horrible world wars that anew
was up for grabs. It could not but lead to
war." (Pål Steigan 1999)
When the Soviet Union disintegrated, both the
Yalta and Versailles agreements in reality
collapsed, and opened up the way for a fierce race
to control this geopolitical empty space.
This laid the foundation for the
American Geostrategy for Eurasia, which
concentrated on securing control over the vast
Eurasian continent. It is this struggle for
redistribution in favor of the United States that
has been the basis for most wars since 1990:
Somalia, the Iraq wars, the Balkan wars, Libya,
Ukraine, and Syria.
The United States has been aggressively
spearheading this, and the process to expand NATO
eastward and create regime changes in the form of
so-called «color revolutions» has been part of this
struggle. The coup in Kiev, the transformation of
Ukraine into an American colony with Nazi elements,
and the war in Donbass are also part of this picture.
This war will not stop until Russia is conquered and
dismembered, or it has put an end to the US
offensive.
So, to recapitulate: Because the world is already
divided between imperialist powers and there are no
new colonies to conquer, the great powers can only
fight for redistribution. What creates the basis and
possibilities for a new division is the uneven
development of capitalism. The forces that are
developing faster economically and technologically
will demand bigger markets, more raw materials, more
strategic control.
The results of two terrible wars
are again up for grabs
World War I caused perhaps
20 million deaths, as well as at least as many
wounded. World War II caused around
72 million deaths. These are approximate
numbers, and there is still controversy around the
exact figures, but we are talking about this order
of magnitude. The two world wars that ended with the
Versailles and Yalta treaties thus caused just below
100 million dead, as well as an incredible number of
other suffering and losses. Since 1991, a
low-intensity «world war» has been fought,
especially by the US, to conquer “the void».
Donald Trump recently stated that the United
States have waged wars based on lies, which have
cost $ 8 trillion ($ 8,000 billion) and millions of
people’s lives. So the United States’ new
distribution of the spoils has not happened
peacefully.
«The Rebellion against
Sykes-Picot»
In the debate around the situation in the Middle
East, certain people that would like to appear
leftist, radical and anti-imperialist say that it is
time to rebel against the artificial boundaries
drawn by the Sykes-Picot and Versailles treaties.
And certainly these borders are artificial and
imperialist. But how leftist and anti-imperialist is
it to fight for these boundaries to be revised now?
In reality, it is the United States and Israel
that are fighting for a redistribution of the Middle
East. This is the basis underlying Donald Trump’s
«Deal of the Century», which aims to bury Palestine
forever, and it is stated outright in the new US
strategy for partitioning Iraq
Again, this is just an updated version of the
Zionist Yinon plan that aimed to cantonize the
entire Middle East, with the aim that Israel should
have no real opponents and would be able to dominate
the entire region and possibly create a Greater
Israel.
It is not the anti-imperialists that are leading
the way to overhaul the imperialist borders from
1919. It is the imperialists. To achieve this, they
can often exploit movements that are initially
popular or national, but which then only become
tools and proxies in a greater game. This has
happened so many times in history that it can hardly
be counted. Hitler’s Germany exploited Croatian
nationalism by using the
Ustaša gangs as proxies. From 1929 to 1945, they
killed hundreds of thousands of Serbs, Jews and Roma
people. And their ideological and political
descendants carried out an extremely brutal ethnic
cleansing of the Krajina area and forced out more
than 200,000 Serbs in their so-called
Operation Storm in 1995. Hitler also used the
extreme Ukrainian nationalists of Stepan Bandera’s
OUN, and after Bandera’s death, the CIA continued to
use them as a fifth column against the Soviet Union.
The US low-intensity war against Iraq, from the
Gulf War in 1991 to the Iraq War in 2003, helped
divide the country into enclaves. Iraqi Kurdistan
achieved autonomy in the oil-rich north with the
help of a US «no-fly zone». The United States thus
created a quasi-state that was their tool in Iraq.
Undoubtedly, the Kurds in Iraq had been oppressed
under Saddam Hussein. But also undoubtedly, their
Iraqi «Kurdistan» became a client state under the
thumb of United States. And there is also no doubt
that the no-fly zones were illegal, as UN Secretary
General Boutros Boutros-Ghali
admitted in a conversation with John Pilger.
And now the United States is still using the
Kurds in Northern Iraq in its plan to divide Iraq
into three parts. To that end, they are building the
world’s largest consulate in Erbil. What they are
planning to do, is simply «creating a country».
As is well known, the United States also uses the
Kurds in Syria as a pretext to keep 27 percent of
the country occupied. It does not help how much the
Kurdish militias SDF and PYD invoke democracy,
feminism and communalism; they have ended up
pleading for the United States to maintain the
occupation of Northeast Syria.
Preparations for a New World War
Israel and the US are preparing for war against
Iran. In this fight, they will develop as much
«progressive» rhetoric as is required to fool
people. Real dissatisfaction in the area, which
there is every reason to have, will be magnified and
blown out of all proportion. «Social movements» will
be equipped with the latest news in the Israeli and
US «riot kits» and receive training and logistics
support, in addition to plenty of cold hard cash.
There may be good reasons to revise the 1919
borders, but in today’s situation, such a move will
quickly trigger a major war. Some say that the Kurds
are entitled to their own state, and maybe so. The
question is ultimately decided by everyone else,
except the Kurds themselves. The problem is that in
today’s geopolitical situation, creating a unified
Kurdistan will require that «one» defeats Turkey,
Syria, Iraq and Iran. It’s hard to see how that can
happen without their allies, not least Russia and
China, being drawn into the conflict. And
then we have a new world war on our hands. And in
that case, we are not talking about 100 million
killed, but maybe ten times as much, or the collapse
of civilization as we know it. The Kurdish question
is not worth that much.
This does not mean that one should not fight
against oppression and injustice, be it social and
national. One certainly should. But you have to
realize that revising the map of the Middle East is
a very dangerous plan and that you run the risk of
ending up in very dangerous company. The alternative
to this is to support a political struggle that
undermines the hegemony of the United States and
Israel and thereby creates better conditions for
future struggles.
It is nothing new that small nations rely on
geopolitical situations to achieve some form of
national independence. This was the case, for
example, for my home country Norway. It was France’s
defeat in the Napoleonic War that caused Denmark to
lose the province of Norway to Sweden in 1814, but
at the same time it created space for a separate
Norwegian constitution and internal self rule. All
honor to the Norwegian founding fathers of 1814, but
this was decided on the battlefields in Europe. And
again, it was Russia’s defeat in the Russo-Japanese
War that laid the geopolitical foundation for the
dissolution of the forced union with Sweden almost a
hundred years later, in 1905. (This is very
schematically presented and there are many more
details, but there is no doubt that Russia’s loss of
most of its fleet in the Far East had created a
power vacuum in the west, which was exploitable.)
Therefore, the best thing to do now is not to
support the fragmentation of states, but to support
a united front to drive the United States out of the
Middle East. The Million Man March in Baghdad got
the ball rolling. There is every reason to build up
even more strength behind it. Only when the United
States is out, will the peoples and countries in the
region be able to arrive at peaceful agreements
between themselves, which will enable a better
future to be developed. And in this context, it is
an advantage that China develops the «Silk Road»
(aka Belt and Road Initiative), not because China is
any nobler than other major powers, but because this
project, at least in the current situation, is
non-sectarian, non-exclusive and genuinely
multilateral. The alternative to a monopolistic rule
by the United States, with a world police under
Washington’s control, is a multipolar world. It
grows as we speak. The days of the Empire are
numbered. What this will look like in 20 or 50
years, remains to be seen.
Pål Steigan is a Norwegian
veteran journalist and activist, presently editor of
the independent news site
Steigan.no. Translated by Terje Maloy.
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