A Warning to Africa: The New U.S. Imperial Grand Strategy
by John Bellamy Foster, GlobalResearch.ca,
June 09, 2006
Last Updated:
Monday, June 12, 2006 06:56:36 PM |
John Bellamy Foster |
mperialism is constant for capitalism. But it
passes through various phases as the system evolves. At present the
world is experiencing a new age of imperialism marked by a U.S.
grand strategy of global domination. One indication of how things
have changed is that the U.S. military is now truly global in its
operations with permanent bases on every continent, including
Africa, where a new scramble for control is taking place focused on
oil.
Elite opinion in the United States in the decade immediately
following the collapse of the Soviet Union often decried the absence
of a U.S. grand strategy comparable to what George Kennan labeled
"containment," under the mantle of which the United States
intervened throughout the Cold War years. The key question, as posed
in November 2000 by national-security analyst Richard Haass, was
that of determining how the United States should utilize its current
"surplus of power" to reshape the world. Haass's answer, which
doubtless contributed to his being hired immediately after as
director of policy planning for Colin Powell's State Department in
the new Bush administration, was to promote an "Imperial America"
strategy aimed at securing U.S. global dominance for decades to
come. Only months before, a similar, if even more nakedly
militaristic, grand strategy had been presented by the Project for
the New American Century, in a report authored by future top
Bush-administration figures Donald Rumsfeld, Paul Wolfowitz, and
Lewis Libby, among others.[1]
This new imperial grand strategy became a reality, following the
attacks of September 11, 2001, in the U.S. invasions of Afghanistan
and Iraq---and was soon officially enshrined in the White House's
National Security Strategy statement of 2002. Summing up the new
imperial thrust in Harvard Magazine, Stephen Peter Rosen, director
of the Olin Institute for Strategic Studies at Harvard and a
founding member of the Project for the New American Century, wrote:
A political unit that has overwhelming superiority in military
power, and uses that power to influence the internal behavior of
other states, is called an empire. Because the United States does
not seek to control territory or govern the overseas citizens of the
empire, we are an indirect empire, to be sure, but an empire
nonetheless. If this is correct, our goal is not combating a rival,
but maintaining our imperial position, and maintaining imperial
order. Planning for imperial wars is different from planning for
conventional international wars....Imperial wars to restore order
are not so constrained [by deterrence considerations]. The maximum
amount of force can and should be used as quickly as possible for
psychological impact---to demonstrate that the empire cannot be
challenged with impunity....[I]mperial strategy focuses on
preventing the emergence of powerful, hostile challengers to the
empire: by war if necessary, but by imperial assimilation if
possible.[2]
Prof. John Lewis Gaddis |
Commenting in late 2002 in Foreign Policy,
John Lewis Gaddis,
professor of military and naval history at Yale, stated that the
goal of the impending war on Iraq was one of inflicting an
"Agincourt on the banks of the Euphrates." This would be a
demonstration of power so great that, as in Henry V's famous
fifteenth-century victory in France, the geopolitical landscape
would be changed for decades to come. What was ultimately at issue,
according to Gaddis, was "the management of the international system
by a single hegemon"---the United States. This securing of hegemony
over the entire world by the United States by means of preemptive
actions was, he contended, nothing less than "a new grand strategy
of transformation."[3]
The Nature of Grand Strategy Since the time of Clausewitz, tactics
has been designated in military circles as "the art of using troops
in battle"; strategy as "the art of using battles to win the war."[4]
In contrast, the idea of "grand strategy" as classically promoted by
military strategists and historians, such as Edward Meade Earle and
B. H. Liddell Hart, refers to the integration of the war-making
potential of a state with its larger political-economic ends. As
historian Paul Kennedy observed in Grand Strategies in War and Peace
(1991): "a true grand strategy" is "concerned with peace as much as
(perhaps even more than) with war....about the evolution or
integration of policies that should operate for decades, or even for
centuries."[5]
Grand strategies are geopolitical in orientation, geared to
domination of whole geographical regions---including strategic
resources such as minerals and waterways, economic assets,
populations, and vital military positions. The most successful grand
strategies of the past are seen as those of long-standing empires,
which have been able to maintain their power over large geographical
expanses for extended periods of time. Hence, historians of grand
strategy commonly focus on the nineteenth-century British Empire (Pax
Britannica) and even the ancient Roman Empire (Pax Romana).
For the United States today what is at stake is no longer control of
a mere portion of the globe,
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