The
Ultimate Blowback from U.S. Foreign Policy?
Donald Trump.
How the CIA, bad trade deals, and wanton
military intervention caused the social crises
that gave us the Donald. (Really.)
By Walden Bello
January 12, 2016 "Information
Clearing House"
-
"FPIF"
- When
the late Chalmers Johnson introduced the word
“blowback” to describe the adverse consequences
of Washington’s actions in the world, he wasn’t
referring simply to the victims of U.S. imperial
interventions striking back on American soil.
More importantly, he saw the resulting
destabilization of the American democratic
process as the most dangerous blowback of all.
Seen in
this light, Donald Trump’s “M&Ms campaign” —
which relies heavily on broadsides against
Mexicans and Muslims — is unquestionably a
disturbing blowback from Washington’s policies
abroad.
Trump
launched his campaign with a plan to build a
wall along the nearly 2,000-mile U.S.-Mexico
border while summarily deporting undocumented
migrants and their families. After the San
Bernardino shootings on December 2, in which a
Muslim couple killed 14 people, Trump has pushed
for the U.S. to stop accepting Muslim migrants
and visitors to the United States.
These
two proposals run directly against the U.S.
self-image as a country of migrants, threatening
to unleash a tide of hatred against
Mexican-Americans and Muslims, and putting them
on notice that their rights are fragile. Yet
Trump’s calls have resonated with large sectors
of the Republican base, with extremist rhetoric
now a staple not only of Trump’s campaign but of
his rivals’ as well.
The
Blowback from Iraq
The
U.S. foreign policy blunders that created ISIS —
popular fear of which now drives U.S. domestic
and foreign policy alike — are relatively well
documented.
The
U.S. invasion of Iraq blew the lid off Iraqi
society, which had been a pressure cooker of
sectarian rivalries contained by the regime of
Saddam Hussein. As a Shia-dominated regime took
over in Baghdad, an extremist Sunni movement —
al-Qaeda in Iraq, headed by Abu Musab al-Zarqawi
— rose to fight the government and its American
sponsors.
Zarqawi
found many receptive recruits among the hundreds
of thousands of Sunni soldiers in Saddam’s army,
which had been disbanded by the Americans
shortly after their takeover. Adherents were
also nurtured in U.S. prison camps, among them
future ISIS leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi. After
Zarqawi was killed by a U.S. airstrike, Baghdadi
emerged as the leader of the group, which broke
from al-Qaeda during the Syrian civil war and
began calling itself the Islamic State of Iraq
and Syria, or ISIS — later shortened to just the
Islamic State.
At
first, ISIS was seen by western intelligence as
focused mainly on establishing a caliphate in
the Middle East, for which it undertook a
sophisticated international recruitment campaign
online. Then concern developed that ISIS was not
simply recruiting young people from Europe and
the U.S. to fight in Iraq or Syria, but training
them to be sent back to perform terrorist acts
in their home countries.
The
Paris massacre in mid-November, which saw a
handful of shooters and bombers kill some 130
people in a sophisticated coordinated operation,
was seen as the ultimate blowback. That is,
until the San Bernardino shooting two weeks
later, which U.S. authorities saw as the
scariest blowback of all: shooters carrying out
uncoordinated individual actions
inspired by ISIS propaganda disseminated online.
The
Mexican Blowback 1: The CIA Connection
The
blowback process from Mexico is less well known
but equally well documented. One trigger, as in
Iraq, was political intervention.
The
Mexican drug syndicates were relatively
small-time affairs until the 1980s. It was the
Central Intelligence Agency that made them
big-time during
the
Reagan administration’s efforts to overthrow the
Sandinista government in Nicaragua, where it
engaged in unconventional fundraising operations
to evade congressional scrutiny.
One was
the so-called Iran-Contra deal, where top Reagan
administration officials facilitated the sale of
weapons to Iran — then the object of a U.S. arms
embargo — and then diverted part of the proceeds
to fund the anti-Sandinista guerrillas known as
the Contras.
Another
method was to use Mexican drug syndicates.
In her
brave expose on the rise of Mexican drug
cartels, Narcoland: The Mexican Drug Lords
and Their Godfathers, the celebrated
Mexican investigative journalist Anabel
Hernandez writes that when the U.S. Congress
prohibited the use of government money to fund
the overthrow of the Sandinistas, the CIA made a
deal with the cartels to allow large-scale
cocaine sales into the United States, but on
condition that part of the proceeds would be
diverted to support the Contras.
Indeed,
the CIA’s complicity in fostering the rise of
the Mexican cartels, which eventually displaced
the Colombian cartels as the main transporters
of cocaine to the United States, has also been
documented by a number of U.S. journalists.
Among the key beneficiaries of the CIA
connection was the Sinaloa Cartel, which
eventually produced the lord of drug lords: “El
Chapo” Guzman.
The
Mexican Blowback II: NAFTA
The
other source of the Mexican blowback was
economic.
Following the Third World debt crisis in the
early 1980s, the United States — via the
International Monetary Fund and World Bank —
began an ambitious effort to restructure the
Mexican economy along free-market lines. The
cutting back of government support for many
agricultural services, along with a program of
privatization designed to reverse communal
ownership of land institutionalized by the
Mexican Revolution, resulted in widespread
suffering in the countryside, with many peasants
thrown off their lands.
But
even more devastating was Mexico’s integration
into the North American Free Trade Agreement, or
NAFTA, which quickly became a program for
dumping subsidized U.S. corn and other
agricultural products into Mexico. According to
a 2003 report of the Carnegie Endowment, imports
of U.S. agricultural products under NAFTA threw
1.3 million farmers out of work.
For
these peasants, the choice became either the
shantytowns of Mexico City or “El Norte,” with
vast numbers opting for the latter. By 2006,
roughly 10 percent of Mexico’s population was
living in the United States, 15 percent of its
workforce was working there, and one in every
seven Mexicans was migrating to the U.S. There
was a strong element of truth in the sardonic
comment that, owing to NAFTA’s savage impact on
peasant agriculture, Mexico’s peasantry simply
moved to the United States.
U.S.
policies in Mexico and Central America thus had
a dramatic dual blowback effect. On one side,
the CIA godfathered a powerful cartel whose
massive exports of cocaine devastated inner
cities from Los Angeles to Washington, DC — and
whose violence has now killed or displaced tens
of thousands of Mexicans. On the other side,
U.S.-sponsored structural adjustment and NAFTA
ruined Mexican peasant agriculture, leading to
the migration of millions to the north, where
they’ve become scapegoats for U.S. economic
troubles.
Study
after study has refuted claims that migrants
take jobs away from non-migrant workers, or that
they don’t pay their taxes. Yet Mexican migrants
are continually blamed by opportunistic
politicians on the make, like Trump and his
Republican colleagues.
The
Ultimate Blowback
It’s
unfortunate that this opportunistic, demagogic
game of playing on physical fear (“Muslim
terrorists out to take your life”) and economic
fear (“Mexican workers out to steal your jobs”)
has resonated among so much of the country’s
white population. Trump, whose anti-Muslim and
anti-Mexican rhetoric is most brazen, leads his
opponents in the Republican presidential race by
a wide margin in the surveys.
Instead
of aggressively challenging the Republican
candidates’ inflamed rhetoric and pointing to
U.S. political and economic programs as the
cause of the blowback, most liberal leaders are
on the defensive. Only Bernie Sanders, the
Vermont independent, is pointing to the real
roots of America’s foreign policy and domestic
crises. In the race for the Democratic
presidential nomination, his opponent, Hillary
Clinton, continues to push for more military
intervention in the Middle East and is reluctant
to finger Wall Street as the source of the
country’s economic troubles.
The
country seems headed towards an even less
liberal democratic order than now exists — one
marked by more religious intolerance, more
restrictions on civil liberties, and more
immigration rules designed to keep out migrants.
And that, as Chalmers Johnson so presciently
warned, was really the ultimate blowback.
FPIF columnist Walden Bello is Adjunct Professor
of Sociology at the State University of New York
at Binghamton. An earlier version of this
commentary was published by Telesur.