Politics 177 (Spring 2004):
America
and the
World
Week 10: States of Terror
6/1: Blowback
0. Imagine a "War on Plumbers" (by analogy)
1. There are millions of plumbers throughout the world.
2. They share an ideology called "plumberism."
3. A few plumbers believe that building codes are inimical to their
profession and set out to violate the codes.
4. These violations cause plumbing-related injuries to numerous people.
5. Building code authorities vow that rogue plumbers must be eliminated.
6. In doing so, they target all plumbers as suspicious characters, and
arrest many who are innocent of code violations.
7. This causes more plumbers to take up tools and violate the codes.
8. They organize into networks and associations, and begin to plot.
9. The building code authorities declare a "War on Plumberism."
10. As a result of this war, the global infrastructure of plumbinb
collapses.
I. Is the War on Terrorism a war of reason or a war of faith?
1. The Bush Administration says "you're either with us or
against us": This
is a statement of absolutes; there can be no middle ground, no choice,
no doubts or questions. Neither the reasons for terrorism nor the
methods of responding are open for interrogation.
2. The result is a closure of
politics: Politics is about choice and conflict, and it can, at
times, involve violence. By claiming the mantle of "good" and
naming the other as pure "evil," politics is eliminated. Any
contestation comes to be categorized as evil and illegitimate.
3. Such a move does not admit of
setbacks or failures: If one is good, and one's intentions are
good, regardless of the consequences, there can be neither setbacks nor
failure. Undesired consequences are, instead, temptations to
yield to evil.
4. The War on Terrorism is subject to
this kind of apolitical logic: There are two contingencies that
must be avoided: (i) loss of faith and (ii) admission of failure.
The first is maintained by the maintenance of fear through repeated
warnings and alerts--because no attacks have taken place, the state
must be protecting us against terrorism. The second is avoided by
increased discipline--if something happens, it will not be allowed to
happen again. You must have faith in both of these propositions.
II. What is "terrorism" and what are its sources?
1. Terrorism is conventionally understood as unjustified
violence against innocent civilians:
There are more than 100 definitions of terrorism in the literature and
none are terribly helpful. We might define "terrorism" as the
illegal and violent disruption of the "normal political and social
order." While war can have the same effect, there are certain
accepted laws and practices associated with it (cf. Geneva Conventions,
"Law of War," etc.). This is why the Bush Administration can talk
about "unlawful combatants," since they also seek to disrupt the laws
of war.
2. Terrorists are understood to be
attacking political authority: Intercommunal violence between
religious groups is not viewed as terrorism, although terrorist groups
may have links to such violence. Rather, the target is the state,
with the objective of influencing both public opinion and state
policy. Hence, the common argument that "publicity is to
terrorism as oxygen is to fire." So, it is a form of
communication as well as action.
3. The state, by definition, cannot
engage in terrorism: Because the state is the repository of
legal action, whatever it does is defined in terms of
self-defense. Of course, this does not mean that everything done
by the state's agents is legal, and many actions undertaken by the
state would be considered terrorism if undertaken by non-state actors.
4. Terrorist groups follow a "higher
law": Because, by definition, a terrorist sees the state and
its actions as "illegal" in terms of some universal law, the state is
the source of terrorism. This does not mean, however, that
terrorist groups cannot be absorbed into the state: there are any
number of state leaders, past and present, who were described, pursued
and incarcerated as "terrorists." There is a slippery slope
problem here.
II. What is the character of terrorism?
1. Terrorism is ideological; crime is material: Most
terrorist groups are not interested in material gain; their objectives
are idealist and ideological. As a result, interest-based
politics and strategies are not a part of terrorism's repertoire.
Criminals, by contrast, are interested in material gains and losses,
and subject to a rational economic logic. But there are
similarities in how both are organized.
2. Terrorism is decentralized; states are centralized: States
have material interests and infrastructures; their populations can be
held hostage by other states, and it is assumed that state leaders
value their populations or their possessions. Terrorist groups
are decentralized and are often organized along the lines of market
logic. Guerilla groups, by contrast, have headquarters and
hierarchies and seek state power. They can be targeted by states.
3. The Algerian FLN was considered a
terrorist group: It organized along the lines of the cell
structure depicted in The Battle of
Algiers; this is a classical Leninist approach. But this
structure also lends itself to penetration by the authorities.
Algeria was won not by the cells but when the FLN's ideological
sensibility became the common wisdom of the Arab majority.
4. Terrorists tend to be rooted in the
bourgeoisie: Ironically, perhaps, terrorism is a middle-class
phenomenon. Petty criminals tend to be lower-class because they
have immediate material concerns; terrorists tend to have the initial
luxury of pursuing ideological goals because their material needs are
taken care of. This poses serious problems for the state, if it
is seen to be going after the children of the bourgeoisie.
III. What is Jihadist Islamism?
1. The War on Terror has come to be defined in terms of Islam against
the West: In fact,
it might be better understood in terms of fragmentation within global
liberalism. There is a history of movements of purification
within Islam--just as the Great Awakenings have been about purification
of the American body politic--and contemporary Islamic jihadism can be
traced back at least 200 years. It seems to have been, in part, a
reaction against the corruption and decadence introduced into Muslim
societies as a result of European colonialism and capitalism.
2. "Jihad" has multiple meanings: We
associate the word with "holy war" against non-Muslims, but it also
refers to the struggle within the self to be pure and righteous.
Jihadist Islam is, thus, a movement to purify the religion, the
individual states comprising the Muslim world, and the umma, the global community of
Muslims. It comprises only a small fraction of the one billion
Muslims in the world, but the effort to eliminate the Jihadists is
having the effect of alienating many more (as in the case of Algeria).
3. Islam offers a form of globalism
parallel to Western liberalism: It is not only a set of
religious practices, it is also a system of beliefs, practices and
politics, energized by transnational networks, communications, and
movements. It utilizes the modern channels of globalization and
provides the infrastructure through which Jihadism can propogate and
expand.
4. Jihadism cannot be wiped out:
The upshot is that, if Jihadist Islamism is the basis for the ideology
and practices of decentralized global networks such as Al Qaeda, there
is no way to eliminate it. Movements of purification are inherent
in religion and, as we have seen in the United States, may use violence
as a means of pursuing their objectives.
IV. What can/should the United States do?
1. The War on Terrorism cannot be won
by force:
Indeed, if anything, violence will only serve to increase the number of
adherents to terrorist groups. Ironically, perhaps, this was not
the effect of American intervention in Afghanistan, if only because
that country was so poor and isolated from the world, that there was
little in the way of media exposure. Iraq is quite different in
this regard.
2. The Arab regimes allied to the
United States are problematic: As seen in Saudi Arabia, these
regimes tend to lack full legitimacy. Even if most Saudis are
opposed to Jihadist Islam, the regime is still in trouble. The
case of the Shah of Iran is instructive in this regard: he managed to
generate a mass oppositional movement, many of whose members had no
desire for an Islamic Republic. Keeping these regimes going may
require a degree of intervention that even the United States cannot
afford.
3. The strategy of empire is
problematic: It works only so long as governments are believed
to be relatively autonomous, but insofar as empire requires a
commitment of loyalty to the core, autonomy is difficult to
demonstrate. And, if the policies of a state create large numbers
of disaffected, educated people, the government's long-term prospects
are not good. Finally, intervention, as we have seen, is as
likely to generate resistance as cooperation.
4. Terrorism is not going to go away
or be defeated:
Terrorism cannot destroy entire societies, but it can certainly
generate the kinds of responses that exacerbate instability. As
Michael Watts suggested, the intersecting policies of the Bush
Administration and tactics of Osama Bin Laden fit together like hand
and glove in terms of mutual antagonism. The
conditions enabling terrorism are structural and cannot be eliminated
without doing mortal damage to neo-liberal globalization. The
factors triggering individual and group actions might require the kinds
of hands-off policies that could be damaging to U.S. interests.
6/3: America in the 21st Century
I. Review and summation of the course
1. Understanding and explaining foreign policy: Foreign
policies are generally framed in terms of "national interests."
Conventionally, such "interests" are regarded as self-evident:
security, prosperity, investments, etc. These, however, cannot be
defined in simple terms, because as they are dissected and
deconstructed, it becomes obvious that they reflect struggles between
various social forces within societies as well as outside of
them. But, insofar as the practice of politics strives to avoid
complex explanations and solutions, there are strong temptations to
simplify threats and interests. The
policymaker, entangled in a highly-masculinized governmental
bureaucracy, cannot afford to seek out complex solutions, for to do so
is to appear reluctant, cautious and even fearful, and to lose
influence.
Moreover, the constraints on U.S. executive authority motivate or
compel leaders to act where limits are minimal. Thus, the problem of
oil is reframed as "security of supply" which can only be assured
through the deployment of military force. Contrast this approach
with that of many European countries and Japan, which have implemented
a range of domestic policies to make oil expensive and to shift to
alternatives. Point: Foreign policy can only be understood and
explained by examining both the internal and external arenas of a
society.
2. The historical roots of American foreign policy: The
relationship of the "inside" to the "outside" is a combination of
material considerations and idealist visions. If the former case,
the early American colonies were established in what was seen as a dark
and uncivilized place, which required conquest in order to eliminate
evil. Europe always presented a threat, for those empires might
seek to conquer and discipline the colonies. At the same time,
the settlers had visions of what it was they were trying to create in
North America: a utopian Protestant society that would provide not only
the conditions for individual salvation but also a model for world
salvation: the City on the Hill, the New Jerusalem. Westward
expansion, and the gradual expulsion of the French, Spanish, Russians
and British from what became the United States, seemed to fulfill both
the material needs and idealist conditions necessary to this
image. And, once the United States acquired military power, it
became able to expand its sphere of action beyond the country's borders
and outside of the Western hemisphere.
3. Antecedents to the Cold War: Between
1865 and 1940, the growth of the economy motivated economic expansion
into Latin America and Asia. The recurrent economic crises of the
late 19th century, in particular, motivated an outward-looking strategy
in the search for resources and markets. But many Americans were
reluctant to engage in straighforward imperialism, as they accused
other countries of doing. Hence, the notion that America's
motives were pure and directed toward spreading the enlightened
philosophies of democracy and capitalism became the engines of
expansion. Those who resisted, as happened in the Philippines
after the Spanish American War, were denigrated as uncivilized and
ignorant non-white savages or anarchist aliens bent on destroying
civilization. American entry into World War One, under Woodrow
Wilson's banner of "Making the World Safe for Democracy," was directed
against the "barbarians" of Germany who, beginning during the 1930s,
struck back with similar arguments. By 1945, Halford Mackinder's
notion that no Great Power should be allowed to dominate Central and
Eastern Europe became doctrine and dogma for the United States.
4. Constructing the Cold War Empire: The
Cold War should be seen as the product of two dominant "interests":
creating an international economy open to American capital and ensuring
that no alternative systems be allowed to establish themselves.
In this sense, the Cold War was a struggle between systems rather than
purely a security dilemma. Through the Bretton Woods
institutions, the United States sought to create an open, market-based
economic system in which American goods could be exported as necessary
and foreign resources obtained as required (free flows of capital were
not an integral part of the BW system). By contrast, the Soviet
system was based on relatively-closed economic units which traded
largely through barter. Any expansion of the Communist block
represented a diminution of the areas open to capitalist expansion--and
the "loss" of China was especially serious in this regard--and America
was especially worried that Europe and Japan might opt for less open
economies. But while governments play a central role in
structuring political economies, in a market-based system there are
limits to how much they can dictate or control production and
consumption. By contrast, security matters are not subject to
market logic and offer the spearpoint, as it were, for the social
struggle.
5. Economic change and globalization: There
is a surprise inside of capitalist prosperity: "all that is solid melts
into air" (Marx and Engels, The
Communist Manifesto). As capitalism expands and production
grows. Under Fordism, wages rise and profits decline.
Producers seek to reduce their costs and improve productivity: they
innovate both technologically and socially. New machines and new
ways of making things drive new forms of social organization and create
social disruption. The success of the Bretton Woods system led to
its eventual collapse during the economic crisis of the 1970s.
The rise of neo-liberal ideology and practice, beginning around 1975,
and based on the new commodity frontier of knowledge, has been a source
of revived economic growth (especially during the 1990s) and a driver
of social re-organization and disruption. The United States, as
the primary engineer of the rules governing the global economy, and the
source of the global reserve currency, has been in a strong position to
foster economic growth, which is packaged in terms of the diffusion of
democracy and capitalism (the "Washington Consensus") as a means of
making the world friendlier to the United States and as an ideological
vision of human improvement and progress.
6. Petropolitics: Oil
has long been important to the United States and its economy. For
many decades, the management of global oil fell to the international
oil majors--the Seven Sisters--who operated as a cartel to control
production and marketing. Development of Saudi Arabian oil was
especially important to the U.S. for both strategic reasons--in the
event of another World War--and economic reasons--it provide Washington
with considerable leverage in relation to its European allies and
Japan. The oil cartel collapsed during the 1970s, to be replaced by the
Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC), which attempted
to control output in order to maintain a high price for oil. This
worked so long as world demand for oil is high and OPEC provides the
marginal (or "swing") production; when demand is down, the OPEC
countries compete with each other for market share, and the price of
oil drops. The invasion of Iraq might have been driven, in part,
by the projected need to manage Middle East oil so as to ensure a
reliable and growing supply over the next few decades. Private
investment is necessary for development of these sources, and it will
not be forthcoming under conditions of high political uncertainty.
7. Imperium: The
end of the Cold War, and the conjunction of global economic and
military dominance, provided an opportunity for the United States to
institutionalize a form of empire, based more on established rules of
behavior and economic influence than on outright territorial
control. The Clinton Administration tried to accomplish this
through a largely multilateral strategy and the Washington
Consensus. There were no systemic threats and no coherent
military strategy for dealing with security problems. The Bush
Administration, under the influence of the Project on the New American
Century, tried to move toward unilateral pursuit of the imperial
option, but was not fully committed until after 9/11. The
invasion of Iraq and the Greater Middle East Initiative are elements of
the effort to back Imperium up with threats of force.
8. States of terror: Inherent
in neo-liberal globalization is the notion of self-discipline and its
potential failure. Terrorism can be seen, in part, as the failure
of self-discipline, but it is also a facet of globalization. In
this regard, then, punishment must be very severe in order to inhibit
free individuals from attacking the system, but sufficiently severe
punishment would impose limits on neo-liberal globalization that it
could not survive.
II. What kinds of foreign policy
issues confront the United States?
1. For the time being, the Bush Administration is distracted by Iraq:
The rest of the world has not gone away, and most of the rest of the
world is concerned about things other than Iraq. Yet, the United
States has managed to "securitize" many, if not all, of these other
issues. This arises, in part, from what Chalmers Johnson
describes as the "militarization of diplomacy."
2. The issues fall into three
categories:
i. Strategic matters: For example, relations with China, Russia,
Europe, Japan--after the imperial project, how will these be handled?
ii. Economic matters: Much of
the world remains quite interested in access to American markets and
concerned about the twin budget deficits and their long-term effect on
the U.S. economy. What should/can be done?
iii. General well-being:
Hunger, poverty, disease, development, migration, environment, etc. are
all issues that could occupy the United States government full
time.
3. Congress will not be strongly
inclined to raise taxes or to pay for such matters: To a
growing degree, and as a result of 20 years of anti-government
rhetoric, the public is disinclined either to pay for services it does
not use or to believe that the United States has some ethical
responsibility to the less fortunate. Congress is quite sensitive
to these feelings, and is loathe to go against them.
4. Yet there are global public goods
that ought to be provided in some way: If the United States
insists on deciding by itself how funds are to be allocated, other
countries will be reluctant to contribute to the costs of such public
goods. We tend not to be aware of the extent to which we are
dependent on these public goods for our prosperity and well-being, and
will not do well if they disappear entirely.
5. The fundamental question, then,
is: what kind of global order will provide such goods? Here is
where the United States must make a much stronger commitment to the UN:
financial, military, organizational.