August 18/19, 2023 -
Information Clearing House - "Black
Agenda Report" -
Every empire
falls and the fantasy of American
exceptionalism doesn't exempt the U.S. from
inevitable decline. Yet the failing hegemon
behaves as though it still controls
events, and in so doing creates dangers for
the whole world.
"We're an empire now, and when we act, we
create our own reality. And while you're
studying that reality — judiciously, as you
will — we'll act again, creating other new
realities, which you can study too, and
that's how things will sort out. We're
history's actors ... and you, all of you,
will be left to just study what we do."
Karl Rove, advisor to George W. Bush –
2004
By most accounts, Karl Rove was correct
about the United States empire. Nineteen
years ago, the U.S. had the strongest
military in the world, but the economy was
showing signs of weakness. Back in March of
2000, the stock market bubble burst,
resulting in the NASDAQ or “dot com bubble”
crash. Still at that time, most of the
country believed Reagan as he referred to
the country as, “…the shining city upon a
hill…” Due to its military might the U.S.
was able to project its power and impose its
will upon the world.
Rove’s arrogant assertion that “…when we
act, we create our own reality…” is a major
part of the problem that the U.S. empire is
facing today. What gets lost in this
assessment is the historic reality that all
empires run their course. An examination of
the European, Greek, Roman and British
empires tell the stories of tragic endings.
A common and significant factor in their
demise was arrogance. Instead of
recognizing the changing of global dynamics,
the geopolitical landscape and making the
requisite adjustments, they believed they
could manage the world by sheer force, power
projection and will.
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The United States is blinded by its
arrogance and cannot properly assess the
realities before it, still believing it is
the unitary hegemon and many of its recent
actions are exacerbating its demise. In
1991, President George H. W. Bush announced
a "new world order" that he believed would
replace the bipolar politics of the Cold War
era with a US driven unipolar order. While
still Governor of Texas but running for
president, George W. Bush outlined the
foreign policy principles that would guide
his presidency, promising a "distinctly
American internationalism", again, not so
subtle code language for a unipolar order.
Recently, Secretary of State Blinken and
other Biden administration officials
continue to discuss a “rules-based order.”
They seem to be the only ones who know what
the rules are.
This country continues to assert itself
as a unitary power in what is emerging as a
multipolar world. In The Sun Also Rises,
Hemingway’s Bill Gorton asks Mike Campbell,
“How did you go bankrupt?” Mike replies,
“Two ways…Gradually and then suddenly.” The
unipolar hegemonic dominance of the U.S. is
bankrupt and coming to an end.
In October of 2020 I published a piece
entitled “The
Non-Aligned Nations Realign
” wherein I wrote, “As the
US has emerged from the post-Cold War era as
the unitary global hegemon, it became
increasingly more difficult for countries to
maintain their sovereignty and battle the
inequities of the “new world” economic order
imposed upon them by the United States. The
U.S. “maximum pressure” campaign of
sanctions and regime change has been applied
as a weapon of economic warfare against US
“enemies” such as China, Cuba, Iran and
Venezuela. Except for China, these tactics
have crippled economies and wreaked havoc on
societies.”
We can see the demise of the U.S. Empire
happening in real time. According to
Alexander Mercouris, host of
The Duran
, “the great period of
danger in any international system is when
the overarching empire declines, when it
starts to lose control. Whether they (the
leaders of the empire) understand that their
empire is in decline and try to manage that
decline in a way that preserves the
international system or whether
alternatively they try to go for broke and
they try to preserve their position by
managing conflicts that they believe that
they can win.”
Even though the empire is in decline, it
is far from over. It is important to
understand that America is a nuclear power
and still maintains military dominance over
most of the world. According to
The Soldiers Project
, the U.S. has roughly 750
US foreign military bases spread across 80
nations. Russia (a nuclear power) has about
3 dozen bases, and China (a nuclear threat)
has just five. This implies that the U.S has
three times as many bases as all other
countries combined. One of the major
challenges facing the US is nuclear
deterrence and the concept of mutually
assured destruction. A nuclear attack by one
superpower would be met with an overwhelming
nuclear counterattack such that both the
attacker and the defender would be
annihilated.
With that reality being understood the
issue shifts to one of economics. Until
recently, the US has been able to assert its
will via its economic leverage and a
sanctions regime combined with the threat of
military action. That’s not working any
more. The non-aligned nations have
realigned.
In response to the US sanctions regime,
China and Russia were forced to reassess
their interests and differences. They came
to understand that US hegemony and
imperialism was a common threat. The US
proxy war in Ukraine has proven to be a
major threat to Russia and the US
involvement in Taiwan threatens to start a
war with China. Russia and China now enjoy
the best relations they have had since the
late 1950s. There is a “new world order” on
the horizon but it's not the same order Bush
41 spoke about.
There are other examples of global
realignment. On March 10, 2023 Saudi Arabia
and Iran announced a normalization of ties
which was brokered by China. South African
President Cyril Ramaphosa has invited 67
country leaders and 20 representatives of
international organizations to the upcoming
BRICS summit
. Even though it’s not on
the immediate agenda, BRICS is moving
towards a new currency that will be based on
a basket of the currencies of the initial
five-nation bloc. Kenyan President, William
Ruto, has called on African nations to shift
away from using the US dollar for
intra-continental trade and opt for the use
of local currencies. In response to US
sanctions, the non-aligned nations are
realigning, making it increasingly more
difficult for the US to project its power as
nations seek to assert more control over
their country’s resources and governance.
It is important to realize that in spite
of US sanctions, well-stocked Iranian
supermarkets have opened in Venezuela and
Iran is exporting oil to Venezuela. China
and Iran have entered a 25-year strategic
partnership in trade, politics, culture, and
security. In spite of US pressure, a British
Court of Appeal set aside a decision by the
High Court giving President Maduro of
Venezuela access to $2 billion of gold
stored at the Bank of England.
Remember when President Biden told the
world that US sanctions against Russia would
cripple its economy? “As a result of these
unprecedented sanctions, the ruble almost is
immediately reduced to rubble…”, Biden
infamously said. According to
World Bank data
, Russia was among the
world’s five largest economies and the
largest in Europe in terms of purchasing
power parity (PPP) as of the end of 2022,
despite Western sanctions. China topped the
list as the world’s biggest economy ($31
trillion), followed by the US, India, and
Japan. So much for US sanctions.
Even as the US is trying to protect its
drone base and France’s access to uranium by
attempting to exert its power in Niger, the
current leaders of that government would not
take a meeting with America’s coup plotter
extraordinaire, Acting Deputy Secretary of
State Victoria Nuland. They would also not
allow her to meet with deposed President
Mohamed Bazoum. They are ignoring the
“rules-based order.” As Algeria, Mali and
Burkina Faso continue to back the junta in
Niger, the US’ ability to control the
dynamics is in question. It becomes
increasingly more difficult to project power
when the world sees that you are weak and
alternative alliances become available.
Americans see their country in the
romantic context of Reagan’s “Shining City
on a Hill” while the Global South sees the
US as a monster, in which the taints, the
sickness, colonialism/neo-colonialism and
the inhumanity of Europe have grown to
appalling dimensions. The “non-aligned”
nations are in realignment. The US should be
as Killens says, about “free people” not
“free enterprise.”
It is said that a dying mule can manage
to engage in some kicks. These kicks may be
dangerous, but they don't last long.
Progressively, they become weaker and weaker
until the mule finally gives up. We know the
US empire won’t go quietly into the night.
That’s when it is proving to be its most
dangerous. As Antonio Gramsci wrote, “The
crisis consists precisely in the fact that
the old is dying and the new cannot be born;
in this interregnum a great variety of
morbid symptoms appear.”
Dr.
Wilmer Leon is the author of Politics
Another Perspective and a nationally and
internationally broadcast radio talk show
host. Go to
www.wilmerleon.com
or email:
wjl3us@yahoo.com
.
www.twitter.com/drwleon
and Dr. Leon’s
Prescription at Facebook.com
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