Saturday 20th of April 2024

no longer exceptional but still exceptionally annoying…..

I do not accept second place for the United States of America.” That simple statement, delivered to rousing effect by Barack Obama in his first State of the Union, in January 2010, managed to summarize the current American strategic horizon in a single sentence.

For decades, the United States has been in relative decline, facing the prospect of someday being overtaken by a rival power. Its main problem, however, is not the relative decline itself – it’s a natural phenomenon occurring as companies, sectors, regions and countries grow at uneven rates. Instead, its main problem is a failure to recognise this condition, whether out of pride, electoral calculation or simple lack of awareness.

 

BY Manlio Graziano

 

In 1986, in his masterful The Rise and Fall of the Great Powers, Paul Kennedy explained that great powers rise and fall precisely because of their uneven growth: it is therefore the relationship between their varying growth rates that – “in the long run” – is decisive.

A slow and relative decline

Apart from a few brief periods of recession, the United States has never stopped growing. Since the 1950s, however, it has grown at a slower rate than most of the rest of the world: thus, it has been in relative decline. Between 1960 and 2020, its real GDP (i.e., in constant dollars) grew by a factor of five and a half times, but, in the same period, the GDP of the rest of the world was multiplied by eight and a half times: so while the US economy continued to grow in absolute terms, those of its rivals grew at a faster pace.

Moreover, if we compare the United States to its main rival, China, the growth gap is abysmal: while the US economy was growing by five and a half times, China was growing by 92 times. Put another way, in 1960, the US economy was equivalent to that of 22 Chinas; yet by 2020, it “weighed” only as much as 1.3 Chinas. In culinary terms, the cake has become much bigger for everyone, but the slice that goes to the United States has become relatively smaller.

This relative decline in economic and productive weight ultimately results in a narrowing of the margins for political action, due to the phenomenon of “overstretching,” the phenomenon at the origin of the fall of some great empires (from the Roman Empire to the Russian). Kennedy – in 1986 – explained it in this way:

“Decision-makers in Washington must face the awkward and enduring fact that the sum total of the United States’ global interests and obligations is nowadays far larger than the country’s power to defend them all simultaneously.”

That is, the global interests and obligations that the United States could afford to defend with a GDP of nearly $3.46 trillion in 1960, could not all be defended simultaneously in 1986 with a GDP of $8.6 trillion, and even less so today despite a GDP approaching $20 trillion. This paradox is only apparent: while the GDP of the United States in 1960 was almost half (46.7%) of the GDP of the rest of the world, by 2020 it had become less than a third (30.8%).

Kennedy’s prescient analysis unfortunately suffered from a case of bad timing. Three years after the release of his book, the pro-Russian regimes in Europe collapsed; four years later, the first of Japan’s “lost decades” began; five years later, the Gulf War (for which Washington assembled one of the largest military coalitions in history) broke out; and, at the end of that same year, 1991, the Russian Empire, in its Soviet version, imploded.

The myth of the American “hyperpower”

With the world’s second economic power (Japan) experiencing a sharp slowdown, and the Soviet Union disappearing, the relative decline of American GDP enjoyed a trend reversal, albeit a slight and short one. As a result, Kennedy’s book, when not mocked, was often forgotten.

Then began a period of US intoxication with being the “single superpower” in a “unipolar world,” the “hyperpower,” in which Americans thought they could reshape the world in their image despite no longer having the strength to do so and even as new competitors were beginning to flex their muscles. America’s relative decline did not depend solely on Japan’s rise, and certainly not on the USSR, but on the ineluctable tendency to uneven development; in Aristotelian terms, Japan and the USSR were the “accident”, and relative decline was the “substance”.

Nonetheless, some US leaders took advantage of the accident to deal with the substance: the Gulf War was one episode; another was the intervention in Bosnia; and the enlargement of NATO to the east was yet another, just to recall the main stages (not to mention the progressive reopening to China after the Tiananmen Square massacre, seen as an Eldorado of easy and abundant profits).

The NATO enlargement of the 1990s has recently been thrust back into the center of international debate, following the Russian invasion of Ukraine. For the Russians and their friends, this enlargement is the “original sin” from which everything sprang, placing responsibility, they say, for Vladimir Putin’s “special military operation” entirely on Washington’s shoulders.

The (eternal) US-Russian confrontation

As in all ideologies, there is a pinch of truth (which make them plausible), which is greatly simplified and de-contextualized before being served to the masses as a soup of propaganda. The pinch of truth comes precisely from Washington’s unilateral decision to position itself, through NATO, in Central and Eastern European nations newly freed from the Russian yoke.

For context, however, we must look to the expansion into those very same territories by the European Union. NATO’s expansion preceded that of the EU; by five years in the case of Poland, the Czech Republic and Hungary (in 1999); a few months (in 2004) for Slovenia, Slovakia and the three Baltic states; and three years (still in 2004) for Bulgaria and Romania. The buffer states between Russia and the heart of Europe, which lay at the center of American concerns after the two world wars, were again of burning topicality: those states could not be left to the exclusive control of Europe, because otherwise they would cease to be a buffer.

Now, if the United States has an incontrovertible strategic objective, it is precisely to prevent Europe (or, to be realistic, Germany and/or any group centered on Germany) from establishing a cooperation of any kind with Russia.

Controlling the world’s “heartland”

Since replacing the United Kingdom as the world hegemonic power, the Americans have inherited the “heartland” theory formulated by Sir Halford Mackinder. It essentially holds that if Eastern Europe (read Germany) takes control of the heartland (read Russia) its dominion over Eurasia, and therefore over the world, will ensue. The theory reflects the constant British concern over a possible Eurasian continental union capable of contesting, and ultimately overthrowing, London’s hegemony. This is why the British intervened three times on the continent to prevent its unification: once against France and twice against Germany.

 

(GusNote: Gus has highlighted this in bold because this is at the core of the US policies that WE have been harping about since the dawn of eternity — if you know what I mean.)

 

Mackinder’s thesis was revived during World War II by Nicolas Spykman, a Dutch-born Yale political scientist, who transformed it into the theory of “rimland”, that is, a “ring” of countries that could surround the heartland. In Spykman’s formulation, control of this ring becomes crucial for world control, a thesis later translated into the policy of containment, that is, of a cordon sanitaire around Russia.

Containment was nothing more than the expansion to the Asiatic front of the first postwar system of buffer states, though it was deliberately misrepresented throughout the Cold War: its purpose, in fact, was not to “contain” Russia, which posed no serious threat, given its extreme weakness (George Kennan himself, “father” of containment, wrote in 1947 that “Russia will remain economically a vulnerable, and in a certain sense, an impotent nation”), but to contain Germany and Japan – that is, to cut off the legs of the pro-Russian factions in these two countries, leaving the cast-iron border control of the rimland to Stalin’s tanks.

The concern over a possible Eurasian continental union capable of challenging, and ultimately overthrowing, their world hegemony had passed from the British to the Americans. As Henry Kissinger openly confirmed:

“In the first half of the 20th century, the United States fought two wars to prevent the domination of Europe by a potential adversary… In the second half of the 20th century (in fact, starting in 1941), the United States went on to fight three wars to vindicate the same principle in Asia – against Japan, in Korea, and in Vietnam.”

Farewell to the notions of “a civilizing mission,” “the defense of freedom,” “an arsenal of democracy,” or a war on militarism, fascism or communism… Once the ideologies evaporate, the reality of the great powers’ relations of force remain, in which the strongest dictates the rules, rewrites history and forges the ideologies that everyone is bound to believe.

The menace of Eurasia

In 2011, Vladimir Putin launched his proposal for a Eurasian Union (one of the many attempts to recompose the Russian empire), intended to become an “essential component of Greater Europe… from Lisbon to Vladivostok,” the American secretary of state, Hillary Clinton, reacted promptly and frankly:

“There is a move to re-Sovietize the region. It’s not going to be called that. It’s going to be called a customs union, it will be called Eurasian Union and all of that… But let’s make no mistake about it. We know what the goal is, and we are trying to figure out effective ways to slow down or prevent it.”

If the risk, feared by Mackinder, Spykman, Kennan, Kissinger, Brzezinski and Clinton, is that of a possible union of forces between a great industrial power and the Russian heartland, it is evident that the threat to the United States today comes more from China than from Europe or Japan.

Driving a wedge between China and Russia

The attempt to drive a wedge between China and Russia is undoubtedly one of the strategic priorities of the United States, if not the strategic priority. With the war that began on February 24, Russia has rendered two great services to the United States:

  • It has reunited, enlarged and rearmed NATO, removing the possibility of an agreement with Europe or even with just some European countries.
  • It has heightened Beijing’s distrust of Moscow.

Americans get the benefit; but a strategy cannot be built on the blunders of an adversary, and herein problems arise.

Meanwhile, the fact that there is an objective strategy (avoiding “second place for the United States,” in Obama’s words) does not necessarily mean that it becomes a subjective strategy, that is, consciously organized, planned, and implemented by a ruling class.

“There is no favorable wind for the sailor who does not know where to go,” Seneca wisely said; and the United States looks like that sailor: its relative decline has yet to be identified as such, and its political division means that any possible strategic hypothesis risks being modified – or even overturned – every four years.

Moreover, much of the country’s political class, drunk on ideologies, still feeds on the tale told by George W. Bush’s advisor Karl Rove nearly 20 years ago: “When we act, we create our own reality”; and while specialists are scrambling to study or decipher that reality, “we’ll act again, creating other new realities.” The several thousand “Roves” present in the American political class render their country the same service that Putin’s advisers, drunk on ideologies, render to theirs: with their good intentions and their stubborn and proud ignorance of geopolitical constraints, they pave the way to hell.

Manlio Graziano is an Assistant professor, geopolitics and geopolitics of religions, Sciences Po

This article was first published in The Conversation on July 21, 2022 and originally published in French.

 

 

READ MORE:

https://johnmenadue.com/manlio-graziano-united-states-the-end-of-an-illusion-of-omnipotence/

 

 

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sheep following the US dog…..


BY Salman Rafi Sheikh

 

When Russia began its special military operation in Ukraine and the West responded with sanctions and threats of completely cutting off energy supplies from Russia, little did European states realise that their threat will come back to haunt them within months. The constantly rising cost of living in Europe (and the US) and the spectre of gas shortage for the coming winter have taken the steam out of their bid to “isolate” and “defeat” Russia. The spectre of economic instability is now translating into political consequences, evident from the untimely exit of British and Italian leaders. As even a New York Times report said, “Italy’s crisis” has “exposed the fragility of a Europe contending with rising energy prices.” But what the western mainstream media has consistently failed to report – and even mention – is that this “fragility” is very largely self-inflicted, which is indeed a direct result of Europe’s failure to assert its strategic autonomy vis-à-vis the US, take its own decisions as well as its habit of every now and then caving in to the US demands to build a global coalition against Russia (and China in the Pacific).

As a result, Europe now faces an acute ‘gas crisis.’ Although European leaders did not initially decide to cut off their gas supplies from Europe (they were more eager to cut off oil and coal supplies), there were naïve enough to miss that Russia could take that decision very well. While Europeans believed that cutting off energy supplies from Russia will hurt Moscow, that decision to cut off pushed energy (oil and gas) prices high enough to allow Russia to earn more revenue than it did in the previous year while causing Europe itself to teeter under a crisis of ‘rising cost of living.’ Can Moscow be held responsible for a strictly European decision to “cut off” Russia? That would be a very lazy analysis if one were to attempt it.

Many in Europe claim that this decision was prompted by Russia’s decision to “invade” Ukraine. This was an “unprovoked invasion”, the claim often goes. But whose decision it was to expand NATO to include Ukraine and pose a direct territorial threat to Russia, not respect Russia’s legitimate security interests and refuse to address those interests in a reasonable fashion? Certainly not Moscow’s. The West – the US and the EU – claimed that Russia could not dictate the membership of NATO. It is their sole prerogative, they say. But Russia, like any other country in the world, can take steps to protect its interests. This is how Russia’s military operation in Ukraine began and this is why Russia responded to the European threat to cut off energy supplies from Russia with the demand to be paid in Roubles.

Facing the spectre of their own decision to cut Russia off haunting their own politics, European leaders decided to pay in Roubles. Western leaders claimed that Russia was weaponizing gas. If, in a war, the West can weaponise the economy and finance (SWIFT cut off) to impose sanctions, it would be naïve to expect Moscow not to take steps to shield itself. What Europeans did not like is the fact that Russian policies taught them a lesson in the gas trade. Paying in Roubles directly offset Western sanctions, allowing Roubles to gain vis-à-vis USD, and further allowing Russian currency to reach a 7-year high.

In other words, a chain of events triggered by the US policy to expand NATO to encircle Russia – and keep Europe under control – ended up contributing to the Russian economy. Nothing perhaps could be more ironical in global geopolitics than this.

Some of the Europeans are now coming to terms with this self-inflicted harm. Canada, after receiving a “request” from Germany and getting a sanctions waiver from Washington, has decided to send back the Nord Stream 1 turbine to Gazprom to help re-start the supply of gas from Russia. But fixing technical malfunctions is ultimately going to take time, which is why resumption of gas supply via NM1 is not going to happen quickly. More trouble is ahead for Europe.

With many European economies – especially, Germany – relying on energy supplies from Russia, the prospect of an economic meltdown across Europe is high, the IMF has predicted. According to other estimates, Germany’s economy would lose US$240 billion if gas supplies from Russia are cut off completely. The UK spy chief would be wise enough to re-calculate who is actually running out of steamdue to the war in Ukraine. While such rhetoric helps the Europeans reassure themselves of an ultimate victory, ground realities tell a completely different story.

As Germany’s finance minister, teetering under crisis, recently remarked, while Germany was moving as quickly as possible to slash its supplies from Russia, the real question was “at what point do we do more harm to Putin than to ourselves?” In other words, cutting energy supplies from Russia is much easier said than done.

According to BDEW, an association of German energy and utility suppliers, while cutting off energy – especially, gas supply – from Russia is theoretically possible, there is no gainsaying that this step means a complete, bottom-up transformation of the entire German economy. Is it doable? Extreme caution is, therefore, needed, the firm has advised. But the question is: will Europeans exercise caution? Will Europeans sit together and think that they could have – and still could – minimised the harm by transforming their geopolitics and foreign policy in ways to reduce dependence on Washington’s dictates and develop a more sustainable relationship with Russia?

Imagine a scenario in which European members of NATO refused to support the US bid to expand NATO. A war in Europe could have been avoided and an economic meltdown – and the increasing prospects of mass protests – could have been firmly averted.

 

Salman Rafi Sheikh, research-analyst of International Relations and Pakistan’s foreign and domestic affairs, exclusively for the online magazine “New Eastern Outlook”.

 

 

READ MORE:

https://journal-neo.org/2022/07/27/the-gas-crisis-in-europe-is-its-own-doing/

 

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ANY TOM, DICK OR JULIE WHO ISN'T AN "ECONOMIST" OR A "POLITICIAN" WOULD HAVE KNOWN: We don't want Russian gas, we take cold showers.... our cars will run on the air we breathe and our industries will shut down for the good side of stupidity....

 

 

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