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See Special Essay below: Is the U.S. Clever Enough to Rule the World? 

 

Bio & Books of Ian Williams

Skeptic Ian Williams questions Bill Clinton during the New Hampshire Primary.

 

The Alms Trade... 

United Nations for Beginners... 

Deserter: George Bush's War on Military Families, Veterans, and His Past...

    

 

          Ian Williams’ first book The Alms Trade was published in 1989 and his second, The UN For Beginners, was published in 1995. The Deserter:Bush’s War on Military Families, Veterans and His Past is published by Nation Books and is scheduled for release in July 2004.

In 2004, he will have chapters in George Orwell into the 21st Century -  T Cushman ed, Paradigm Publishing,  Why Kosovo Matters: The Debate on the Left Revisited -  Danny Postel, ed. (Cybereditions, 2004) Irving Howe, Ed. John Rodden “Irving Howe’s hero-worship of Trotsky: Where the NeoCons came from,” and in 2005, The Iraq War  Rick Fawn and Raymond Hinnebusch (eds),  2005 “The UN and Iraq.” 

He has also contributed to several collections on international affairs.

He has written for on line media such as www.MaximsNews.com, Salon, Alternet, Fox and the Institute for War and Peace Reporting, has also been a columnist for the New York Observer and is correspondent for the Nation, Middle East International, and is regular columnist for George Orwell’s old newspaper, Tribune

From 1994-1999 he was US Editor of Balkan War Report. Since 1995 he has been US contributing editor and columnist for Investor Relations magazine for which he writes a monthly column, The Speculator which takes an offbeat look at the world of business and economics.

As editor and contributor for IWPR’s  WarReport and Transitions he covered the political, economic, and social problems of transition countries  and worked with many local contributors. 

Internationally, he has contributed to media across the world, from Punch to the Jordan Times to the South China Morning Post, Asia Times, and the Australian.

Before moving to New York in 1989, and since, he was a regular contributor in Britain to the Guardian, the Daily Telegraph, the Financial Times, the European, The Observer, and The Independent for which he was one of the founding contributors.  

He was twice President and twice Vice President of the United Nations Correspondents Association. He has produced several booklets for UN agencies, including one on Portugal and aid to Africa , another on ASEAN, and has edited reports for agencies such as UNCTAD.

He speaks on the UN and other aspects of international affairs and American foreign policy at venues such as the UN University in Tokyo , Yale, Columbia , NYU, Freedom Forum, and Rutgers , Al Maty Kazakh University, Fukuoka University Japan.

Born in Liverpool in 1949, he graduated from Liverpool University, despite several years suspension for protests against its investments in South Africa.

Consequently, he had a variegated career path, which included a drinking competition with Chinese Premier Chou En Lai and an argument on English Literature with Chiang Ching, a.k.a. Mme Mao. 

Chinese Premier Chou En Lai (l.) on his way to a drinking competition with Ian Williams (r., rear) on New Years Eve, 1970. 

He worked on the buses and trains, and eventually became a full time labor union official until the early eighties, when he moved into full time writing after winning a Nuffield Fellowship to study Indian unions in 1984.

In 1987 he was a speech-writer for UK Labour party leader Neil Kinnock during the elections. (Joe Biden’s presidential ambitions were derailed when it was revealed that he had plagiarized a Kinnock speech).

In addition to writing, he has worked in various capacities for many TV and radio outlets, ABC, CBC, CNN, BBC, ITN, CNBC, etc. 

On target: Williams in shooting competition with a governor in Yemen.

 

He has appeared on Good Morning America , the O’Reilly Factor, Hardball, Wolf Blitzer, etc.  

In 1995 a CBC programme investigating CIA influence on UN contracts, for which he was associate producer, won prizes at both the New York and Columbus festivals.  

email:       uswarreport@igc.org
website:    www.ianwilliams.info
 

Special Essay:

Is the U.S. Clever Enough to Rule the World? 

by Ian Williams

          UNITED NATIONS -- 9 June 2004 / www.MaximsNews.com /  Ian Williams spent last weekend in Loccum, in Hanover, Germany at a Lutheran monastery which contrived to stay part of the Cistercian order while becoming protestant. The Lutheran church can tell the difference between religion and religiosity and the Lutheran Evangelical Academy has a longstanding series of colloquia on world affairs. This was on the U.S. as a world power, and this is the paper he presented to it.

          Will the Iraq debacle cure, or at least ameliorate the megalomania that has infected the foreign policy of the U.S.?

During the Cold War, the U.S. often tended towards a position of primus inter pares, first among equals, with its allies. 

However, the last two years have seen both the culmination - and in Iraq, the catastrophic failure -of a trend towards being solus sine paribus, alone without equals.  

The rest of the world is aware that the U.S. is not equal to the task of ruling the world. In the light of Iraq, is Washington aware?

That the Bush administration even made the attempt is a demonstration that being a military and economic giant does not necessarily translate into diplomatic or intellectual acuity. 

We should also point out that this administration is not alone in its hubris, it took a unilateralist trend well established during the two Clinton administrations and pursued it to a reductio ad absurdum et tragediam, reduced it to absurdity and tragedy.

The overdose of Latin is a partial tribute to the imperial role model that set the standards – of decline and fall as well as triumphalism.

Former UN Secretary General Boutros Boutros-Ghali, who unsuccessfully tried to teach U.S. Secretary of State Madeleine Albright the art of statecraft, once noted that neither the Roman Empire nor the U.S. had any patience for diplomacy, which is "perceived by an imperial power as a waste of time and prestige and a sign of weakness.”

However, as the Goths, Huns and Vandals, among others, demonstrated soon enough, this was a dangerous misperception for the Romans and is currently proving equally dangerous for the Americans.

Even if Bush is defeated for the chaos and casualties that his unilateralism has wrought, a Kerry administration is at best likely to revert to the Clintonian norm of remaining unilateral in its formation of foreign policy, albeit with a more cosmopolitan and sophisticated attempt at multilateral execution.

There is no doubt that, short of some science fiction style cataclysm of the kind that Hollywood is so good at showing, the U.S. is, and will remain, a world power. 

Whether it will be the world power, capable of independent unilateral action regardless of the views of the rest of the world, is another story completely.

Regardless of the opinions of the rest of the world, we really have to question whether such an ambition is even consonant with the views of most Americans, especially in view of the sacrifices such ambitions may entail. 

We are used to a certain cynicism in world affairs, in which national interest often tempers morality. 

For example, while French Foreign Minister Dominique de Villepin’s U.N. speech against the proposed Anglo-American invasion of Iraq was in the best traditions of Cartesian logic, we would need to be very naïve indeed not to accept that the interests of Total-Elf-Aquitaine had much to do with French policy on the subject.

Indeed, it would be good if France had practiced in Bosnia, Rwanda, or Western Sahara and West Africa the lofty principles that it was recommending to the U.S. and Britain on this occasion.

However, no one would accuse either the Bush or even the Clinton administration of Cartesian logic in its recent policy formulations. 

Indeed, what makes recent American foreign policy so anomalous is how often it is in violation of any rational national interest, let alone of abstract moral and legal principles.

In this less than perfect world, real powers with real problems will occasionally bend and stretch the rules, but this administration has gone further. 

It has challenged the rules themselves, and denied their normative power.

The doctrine of pre-emptive strikes and unilateral action, the scorn for the United Nations and its Charter, represented a fundamental threat to the very global order that the U.S. did so much to bring about in 1945.

In 1990, George Bush Senior spoke of a New World Order, which he presented as a revival and continuation of the 1945 settlement that the Cold War suspended. 

By 2003, Bush Junior was presiding over a Hobbesian disorder, in which his ideologues were telling the world that rules did not apply to the U.S., and in fact only applied to others when Washington deemed it appropriate.

This scofflaw tendency applies not only to existing normative rules, but in a profoundly disruptive and self-defeating way, to new and developing international conventions and normative rules that the rest of the world considers essential to cope with the growing challenges, military, social, economic and environmental that threaten global prosperity and even survival.

For example, a small group of conservative ideologues has succeeding in delaying the American signature of the Law of the Sea. 

It is a hopeful sign that among the factions that want it ratified are Senator Lugar, the chair of the Foreign Relations Committee, and the U.S. Navy.

The distressing thing is that a small group of fundamentalists obsessed with sovereignty can stall participation in a treaty that is so-self-evidently in the interests of the U.S.

It reinforces the messages sent by the refusal of honor the Kyoto conventions, to sign the landmines treaty, and the dilute controls of small arms trade.

Similarly, the U.S. has expended huge diplomatic capital across the world to sabotage the International Criminal Court.

All across the world, American envoys bullied small countries into signing bilateral treaties protecting Americans from a non-existent threat – in the process getting a very bad lesson in international ethics.

One of the major problems with American foreign policy formulation is that the democratic process of checks and balances does not function effectively, not least because far too many Americans have neither the information about, nor the interest in what happens elsewhere, which leaves the field open to obsessive interest groups.

Indeed, there is a satirical dictionary definition of “war,” as “God’s way of teaching Americans geography.” 

Sadly, it has much truth in it, except that it seems that with the current teaching aids of Fox TV, MSNBC and talk radio, the curriculum does not get beyond Geography 101.

It does not bode well for democratic debate of foreign policy, and leaves the field open even more to the lobbyists and fundamentalists.

That is why, for example, while it may seem to much of the Arab world that the invasion of Iraq was an imperial enterprise, but we should bear in mind that to most Americans, and certainly to a majority of those reservists drafted to staff the prisons of Abu Ghraib, this was an exercise in self defense, payback for September 11. 

They would not have supported an overtly imperial agenda.

Sadly, not only ordinary Americans are geographically challenged. 

In many ways, the ideologues of unlimited American hegemony who contrived the Iraqi invasion had as little awareness of the realities of the world as those many Americans misled by a potent combination of White House spin and Cable TV collusion.

In the end, the USA is indeed powerful, but in reality, it could not exercise the sole hegemony that the more visionary planners in the Pentagon imagined.

  Imperial Over-Reach

Despite spending as much on defense as the next ten largest military powers, the U.S. armed forces are hard-pressed to maintain the occupation of Iraq, let alone to attack other countries like Syria and Iran that seemed to be very seriously in the sights of the Pentagon planners a year ago.

One of the more obvious lessons was that military power could not be effective without “soft” moral factors, such as diplomacy, which in turn are helped by moral legitimacy.

In overreaching, U.S. has shown its weaknesses. 

American abilities to wage conventional war across the globe depend on willing allies abroad and a public at home prepared to make sacrifices. 

All those military bases are on sufferance from other countries, which have often imposed restrictions on their use for purposes that they disagree with. 

The Turks and Saudis, for example, severely disrupted U.S. plans to attack Iraq when they refused to host the invasion forces.

Money, and credit, said Daniel Defoe, are “the sinews of war.” 

Paradoxically, in relation to the rest of the world, the U.S. is economically weaker than at any time since the end of World War II.

The combination of ideologically motivated tax-cutting and increasing military spending has made the U.S. more vulnerable than ever before. 

Domestically, it is politically impossible for an American administration to increase taxes.

In a little noticed report published on the U.S. budget at the beginning of January, the IMF hints at a rapidly undeveloping country, whose fiscal irresponsibility is compounded by a political immaturity that tends to ignore geopolitical and economic reality.

Ironically, the globalization that some have denounced as an instrument of American global domination has actually made the U.S. more vulnerable than ever before. 

Once a relatively autarkic, self-contained trade system, the U.S. economy is now integrated into world trade systems.

One simple basis of the “Bush boom” is that China is recycling its $100 billion plus trade surplus with the U.S. back into dollars, and especially into Treasury bonds. 

Almost half of U.S. Treasury bonds are now owned by Asian countries.

Among Asian countries, the Pentagon dreamers have identified China as the major future threat. 

Yet if Taiwan, for example, became a major crisis, those Chinese T-Bonds could do more damage than H-bombs. 

All Chinese Prime Minister Hu has to do is to shout, “Sell” down the phone, in order to devastate the U.S. economy more than any Chinese nuclear strike.

The U.S. refusal to take the measures necessary to reduce its oil consumption has also made it extremely vulnerable to creeping measures of readjustment, such as a decision by oil states to price their product in Euros rather than dollars.

There are very good economic and political arguments for them to do just that: why take payment in a depreciating currency from a country such as the USA where your holdings are vulnerable to strange tort actions and arbitrary political decisions? 

In that light, the mystery is really why the oil states still accept dollars!

Globalization, even as it makes the U.S. more vulnerable, also gives it some measure of protection, since anyone who pulls the plug on the dollar would get very wet themselves in the resulting splash.  

Nevertheless, even with that qualification, the fact is you cannot be a solo Superpower on borrowed money.

Apart from military and economic power, there is a power of leadership.

Opinion polls worldwide show that almost no other country in the world would elect George W. Bush.

At one time, the U.S. had high moral stature, certainly in much of the world, although we should remember the trend represented even by FDR, an undoubted hero, who is on record as calling Nicaraguan dictator Somoza a “son of a bitch,” but excusing him as “our son of a bitch.”

Going further, there has been a strong and increasing tendency in American thought towards Manichaean binary thinking, to see the world in terms of absolute good and evil, indeed, one might say, Cowboys and Indians. 

Allegedly in the Levant, they say that “my enemies’ enemy is my friend,” but in the U.S. they take it a stage farther and consider that my enemy’s enemy must necessarily be morally superior, a saint.

There is also an adage about knowing people, by the company they keep.

Support for the Saudi and Uzbek regimes, let alone Israeli practices, does not cover the U.S. with glory.

Above all, to attack Iraq, allegedly for its violation of U.N. resolutions, in defiance of the wishes of most U.N. members and the U.N. Charter is a sin for which the U.S. is now paying penance as it implores the international community to relieve it of its burden there. 

It will take a long time for Washington to regain international credibility.

 Can Anything be Done?

At the time of the tragic and murderous attacks on the World Trade Centre, the one consolation was that it would focus the American public on what its government was doing abroad in their name.

After all, perhaps for the first time since the British burnt the White House in 1813, Americans had foreign policy happening to themselves, rather than it being something that their rulers inflicted on others.

Sadly, that was clearly not the case. 

There was little or no public debate on the origins of Al Qaeda, no realization that expedient and ad-hoc American policies had brought about and indeed financed the organization, that it was a U.S. ally, Pakistan which with general American support, had put the Taliban in power.

The rest of the world was much more aware of that, and despite that, it was the soon-to-be-hated French who quickly moved the resolution in the Security Council expressing solidarity for September 11, shortly followed by another, which effectively provided legal cover for the U.S. to attack Afghanistan, in “self defense.”

The rest of the world watched with puzzlement as the U.S. gave up on Afghanistan and finding Osama Bin Laden while the American public were, almost subliminally, persuaded that the battleground for the War on Terror should be Iraq.

It took not much more than a year for the Bush administration to boil away nearly all the unprecedented international support it had immediately after the attack.

Of course, there are different trends in American foreign policy, with the State Department, which has the unenviable task of explaining it to the rest of the world, much more able to see the benefits for the U.S. from a general support of a normative global structure of law and order, and a predisposition to go along with it principle.

Indeed, they are more likely to recall that the U.S. was the main sponsor of the United Nations, and in its drafting of the charter, and throughout the decades, from Korea, to Suez, has invoked its authority whenever it can – and sometimes, as in Iraq, when it really could not.

It is not surprising that for last few years, the leaders of the United Nations and most of the major powers have had as the first item in their bedtime prayers a plea that Colin Powell would stay on at the State Department, and much of their diplomacy has been directed at boosting his position inside the administration.

It is not always successful, since the Pentagon –Powell dualism sometimes looked like a planned good-cop bad-cop routine. 

On the other hand, the State Department’s attempts to keep some vestiges of multilateralist faith have occasionally pathetically touching, like the attempt to pull together a list of states that supported the “Coalition,” most of whom were so vulnerable and weak that initially the department was too embarrassed to name them. 

However, we should take the attempt as a signal that even in the darkest days of triumphal unilateralism from the Pentagon civilians, there was a flicker, or at least a smolder, of multilateralism in the State Department.

The conundrum is that the U.S. needs counterbalancing, as traditional political theory would suggest, but the question is whether that can be achieved without reverting to some form of antagonistic great power system. 

However, it is possible if we take into account one of the Anglo-Saxon inventions in domestic politics: the concept of a “loyal opposition.” 

We often forget that for most of history, and across much of the globe even now, this is an oxymoron. 

Sadly, that is also true of some sections of the American body politic who have shown difficulty in accepting opposition at home or abroad as anything but starkest treachery.  

Last year’s rabid Francophobia was very embarrassing to any sophisticated American.

However, a loyal opposition is still a useful concept. 

If it stood together, the European Union is big enough to insist on a hearing in Washington, and even more so if it teams with Russia and China, although it has to beware of expediency in joining with, let us say, incompletely democratic societies. 

In conjunction with countries like India, and many states in Latin America, it could indeed assemble a loyal opposition.

In this connection, perhaps the British were almost as important as Blair thinks they are. 

Harold Macmillan had fond paternalistic hopes of London playing the role of Athens to Washington’s Rome, perhaps forgetting that the Athenians who taught the Romans were often literally slaves.

However, for some years now the British have indeed played a special role with the U.S. 

It has been surprising how little contumely the British have attracted over the years for their role as amanuensis for successive American administrations, like Colin Powell, they have functioned at once as a bridge and a fudge between the more outrageous American wants and the realities of the world and norms of international law.

Other countries I suspect saw it as on a par with cleaning sewers: it’s a dirty job, but someone has to do it, and much better someone else than us. 

It also has to be said, the British have done a reasonable job of it most of the time. 

Their constructive engagement as a reliably loyal ally did indeed give them an occasional hand on the steering wheel, as Tony Blair said.

It seems fairly certain that President Bush would not have gone to the UN at all if were not for the British Prime Minister’s blandishments. 

Nevertheless, in the end it became clear, that what Blair thought was the steering wheel in a car was just the whistle on a runaway locomotive. 

All he could do was to warn that the train was rattling down the tracks and would not stop until it hit Iraq. 

Confronted with the realities of the American style of occupying Iraq, and the reaction of the occupied, the British have reverted to their former role. 

In the various drafts of the resolution to end the Iraqi occupation, they have been assiduously supporting a much more sovereign sovereignty for Iraq, even as they draft the successive resolutions.

The British invented the special relationship for their own reasons, once they realized that the empire thing was a dead duck. 

As they put it at the time, the British foreign minister in the 1945 Labour government wanted NATO to keep “the Americans in, the Germans down, and the Russians out.” 

I would question whether that historical basis still exists, and would urge the Europeans, particularly the French and Germans to work hard on the British, to suborn and turn the British Trojan Horse so that instead of being a source of unilateralist American infiltration into the EU, it takes multilateralism into Washington. 

That is always assuming that Blair survives his election and that Kerry overlooks the British Prime Ministers somewhat promiscuously rapid switch from Clinton to Bush.

Will Things Change if Bush loses?

Returning to the point at the beginning, the present U.S. policy has much continuity with the previous administration’s. 

Remember the conversation between Madeleine Albright, and her British counterpart, Robin Cook over Kosovo, in which Cook cited problems "with our lawyers" over using force in the absence of UN endorsement.  Albright's response was "Get new lawyers."

Certainly, a Kerry policy has to be an improvement over Bush’s -- but it may be a more marginal improvement than most of us would wish. 

There is the dreadful possibility that his fudging on foreign policy, his support for Ariel Sharon is not just a cynical electoral maneuver, it may be the real thing!

However, no amount of internal argument or external exhortation can do as much to change American policy as has now been done by the over-reachers’ in the Pentagon, whose hubris has reduced the U.S. to begging for international help to get out of the hole they dug in Iraq. 

Ironically, our best hope for a change of policy is the effect of the cold shower of reality on their fevered apocalyptic visions.

Whoever is elected has to pay the bills for this war, for the tax cuts, for the energy policy and all the other enormities of this administration. 

Since bullying has failed so egregiously  to overcome the problems he has inherited, the next President is going to need a lot of forbearance and indulgence in World Councils from other countries.

The real battle is to get that message across to U.S. legislators, opinion formers and indeed the electorate to maintain a continuing interest in foreign policy, what it does to others, and most tellingly, what the cost will be to them. 

Since the U.S. is a world power, this is a global task, an essential task for everyone in the world. 

Stop pandering. Be firm but friendly. 

Real allies do not applaud your every move. 

They shout stop, when you want to run over a cliff edge. 

Next time Gerhard Schroeder offers an American president advice, the latter should listen.

 

-- 30 --

 

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