Then just a few weeks later, the Middle East erupted in
pro-democracy protests against the region’s autocratic leaders, many of
whom were close U.S. allies whose foibles had been so conveniently
detailed in those same diplomatic cables.
Suddenly, it was possible to see the foundations of a U.S. world
order that rested significantly on national leaders who serve Washington
as loyal “subordinate elites” and who are, in reality, a motley
collection of autocrats, aristocrats, and uniformed thugs.
Visible as
well was the larger logic of otherwise inexplicable U.S. foreign policy
choices over the past half-century.
Tomgram: McCoy and Reilly, An Empire of Failed States
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Imperial powers hedge their bets. The most striking recent example
we have of this is in Egypt. While the Pentagon was pouring money into
the Egyptian military (approximately $40 billion
since 1979), it turns out -- thank you, WikiLeaks! -- that the U.S.
government was shuttling far smaller amounts (millions, not billions) to
various “American government-financed organizations” loosely connected
with Congress or with the Democratic and Republican parties. Some of
that money, in turn, was being invested
in “democracy-building campaigns” aimed at teaching young Egyptian
activists how to organize a movement against their autocratic ruler, how
to make the best use of social networking sites, and so on.
In other words, in Egypt (and elsewhere in the Middle East), Washington was funding both the autocrats and
the young activists who opposed them and who, in Egypt, would be
crucial players in the Tahrir Square movement that overthrew President
Hosni Mubarak. As one of those activists told the New York Times,
“While we appreciated the training we received through the NGOs
sponsored by the U.S. government, and it did help us in our struggles,
we are also aware that the same government also trained the state
security investigative service, which was responsible for the harassment
and jailing of many of us.”
Meanwhile, thanks to other State Department documents WikiLeaks
recently released, we know that, in at least one Middle Eastern country
where Washington did not enthusiastically support the local autocrat --
Syria -- the State Department was channeling significant sums of money
into “secretly financ[ing]... political opposition groups and related
projects, including a satellite TV channel that beams anti-government
programming into the country.“ It was, in other words, preparing a new
elite for a “regime change” future.
Think of it as a kind of grim irony that a significant part of the Egyptian military’s high command was in northern Virginia,
attending
an annual U.S.-Egypt Military Cooperation Committee meeting in late
January, when all hell broke loose in Tahrir Square, thanks to those
Egyptian activists, some trained with Washington’s money. The creation
or support of elites has, as Alfred McCoy and Brett Reilly write, always
been crucial to running global empires. And yet client elites are one
of those subjects seldom given much thought, even though Great
Britain, for instance, ruled its Indian Raj with striking, if
oppressive, efficiency for endless decades with
surprisingly few personnel
from England. How else, after all, could a global empire continue?
And yet, as a great power’s strength and influence wane, those bets --
like the one Washington placed in Egypt -- begin to go awry, from an
imperial point of view. If McCoy, a
TomDispatch regular and the author most recently of
Policing America’s Empire,
and Reilly are right, Washington’s touch, when it comes to keeping
local elites in line, may indeed be “on the rocks.” (To catch Timothy
MacBain’s latest TomCast audio interview in which McCoy discusses why
Washington is likely to cling disastrously to empire in the midst of
decline, click
here, or download it to your iPod
here.)
Tom
Washington on the Rocks: An Empire of Autocrats, Aristocrats,
and Uniformed Thugs Begins to Totter
by Alfred W. McCoy & Brett Reilly
Why would the CIA risk controversy in 1965, at the height of the Cold
War, by overthrowing an accepted leader like Sukarno in Indonesia or
encouraging the assassination of the Catholic autocrat Ngo Dinh Diem in
Saigon in 1963? The answer -- and thanks to WikiLeaks
and the “Arab spring,” this is now so much clearer -- is that both were
Washington’s chosen subordinates until each became insubordinate and
expendable.
Why, half a century later, would Washington betray its stated
democratic principles by backing Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak
against millions of demonstrators and then, when he faltered, use its
leverage to replace him, at least initially with his intelligence chief
Omar Suleiman, a man best known for running Cairo’s torture chambers
(and lending them out to Washington)? The answer again: because both
were reliable subordinates who had long served Washington’s interests
well in this key Arab state.
Across the Greater Middle East from Tunisia and Egypt to Bahrain and
Yemen, democratic protests are threatening to sweep away subordinate
elites crucial to the wielding of American power. Of course, all modern
empires have relied on dependable surrogates to translate their global
power into local control -- and for most of them, the moment when those
elites began to stir, talk back, and set their own agendas was also the
moment when it became clear that imperial collapse was in the cards.
If the "velvet revolutions” that swept Eastern Europe in 1989 tolled
the death knell for the Soviet empire, then the "jasmine revolutions"
now spreading across the Middle East may well mark the beginning of the
end for American global power.
Putting the Military in Charge
To understand the importance of local elites, look back to the Cold
War’s early days when a desperate White House was searching for
something, anything that could halt the seemingly unstoppable spread of
what Washington saw as anti-American and pro-communist sentiment. In
December 1954, the National Security Council (NSC) met in the White
House to stake out a strategy that could tame the powerful nationalist
forces of change then sweeping the globe.
Across Asia and Africa, a half-dozen European empires that had
guaranteed global order for more than a century were giving way to 100
new nations, many -- as Washington saw it -- susceptible to “communist
subversion.” In Latin America, there were stirrings of leftist
opposition to the region’s growing urban poverty and rural landlessness.
After a review of the “threats” facing the U.S. in Latin America,
influential Treasury Secretary George Humphrey informed his NSC
colleagues that they should “stop talking so much about democracy” and
instead “support dictatorships of the right if their policies are
pro-American.” At that moment with a flash of strategic insight, Dwight
Eisenhower interrupted to observe that Humphrey was, in effect, saying,
“They’re OK if they’re our s.o.b.’s.”
It was a moment to remember, for the President of the United States
had just articulated with crystalline clarity the system of global
dominion that Washington would implement for the next 50 years --
setting aside democratic principles for a tough realpolitik
policy of backing any reliable leader willing to support the U.S.,
thereby building a worldwide network of national (and often nationalist)
leaders who would, in a pinch, put Washington’s needs above local ones.
Throughout the Cold War, the U.S. would favor military autocrats in
Latin America, aristocrats across the Middle East, and a mixture of
democrats and dictators in Asia. In 1958, military coups in Thailand and
Iraq suddenly put the spotlight on Third World militaries as forces to
be reckoned with. It was then that the Eisenhower administration
decided to bring foreign military leaders to the U.S. for further
“training” to facilitate “the ‘management’ of the forces of change
released by the development” of these emerging nations. Henceforth,
Washington would pour military aid into the cultivation of the armed
forces of allies and potential allies worldwide, while “training
missions” would be used to create crucial ties between the U.S. military
and the officer corps in country after country -- or where subordinate
elites did not seem subordinate enough, help identify alternative
leaders.
When civilian presidents proved insubordinate, the Central
Intelligence Agency went to work, promoting coups that would install
reliable military successors --replacing Iranian Prime Minister Mohammad
Mossadeq, who tried to nationalize his country's oil, with General
Fazlollah Zahedi (and then the young Shah) in 1953; President Sukarno
with General Suharto in Indonesia during the next decade; and of course
President Salvador Allende with General Augusto Pinochet in Chile in
1973, to name just three such moments.
In the first years of the twenty-first century, Washington’s trust in
the militaries of its client states would only grow. The U.S. was, for
example, lavishing $1.3 billion in aid on Egypt’s military annually,
but investing only $250 million a year in the country’s economic
development. As a result, when demonstrations rocked the regime in Cairo
last January, as the New York Times reported,
“a 30-year investment paid off as American generals... and intelligence
officers quietly called... friends they had trained with,” successfully
urging the army’s support for a “peaceful transition” to, yes indeed,
military rule.
Elsewhere in the Middle East, Washington has, since the 1950s,
followed the British imperial preference for Arab aristocrats by
cultivating allies that included a shah (Iran), sultans (Abu Dhabi,
Oman), emirs (Bahrain, Kuwait, Qatar, Dubai), and kings (Saudi Arabia,
Jordan, Morocco). Across this vast, volatile region from Morocco to
Iran, Washington courted these royalist regimes with military alliances,U.S. weapons systems,
CIA support for local security, a safe American haven for their
capital, and special favors for their elites, including access to
educational institutions in the U.S. or Department of Defense overseas schools for their children.
In 2005, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice summed up this record
thusly: “For 60 years, the United States pursued stability at the
expense of democracy… in the Middle East, and we achieved neither.”
How It Used to Work
America is by no means the first hegemon to build its global power on
the gossamer threads of personal ties to local leaders. In the
eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, Britain may have ruled the waves
(as America would later rule the skies), but when it came to the ground,
like empires past it needed local allies who could serve as
intermediaries in controlling complex, volatile societies. Otherwise,
how in 1900 could a small island nation of just 40 million with an army
of only 99,000 men rule a global empire of some 400 million, nearly a
quarter of all humanity?
From
1850 to 1950, Britain controlled its formal colonies through an
extraordinary array of local allies -- from Fiji island chiefs and Malay
sultans to Indian maharajas and African emirs. Simultaneously, through
subordinate elites Britain reigned over an even larger “informal empire”
that encompassed emperors (from Beijing to Istanbul), kings (from
Bangkok to Cairo), and presidents (from Buenos Aires to Caracas). At its
peak in 1880, Britain's informal empire in Latin America, the Middle
East, and China was larger, in population, than its formal colonial
holdings in India and Africa. Its entire global empire, encompassing
nearly half of humanity, rested on these slender ties of cooperation to
loyal local elites.
Following four centuries of relentless imperial expansion, however,
Europe’s five major overseas empires were suddenly erased from the globe
in a quarter-century of decolonization. Between 1947 and 1974, the
Belgian, British, Dutch, French, and Portuguese empires faded fast from
Asia and Africa, giving way to a hundred new nations, more than half of
today’s sovereign states. In searching for an explanation for this
sudden, sweeping change, most scholars agree with British imperial
historian Ronald Robinson who famously argued that “when colonial rulers
had run out of indigenous collaborators,” their power began to fade.
During the Cold War that coincided with this era of rapid
decolonization, the world’s two superpowers turned to the same methods
regularly using their espionage agencies to manipulate the leaders of
newly independent states. The Soviet Union’s KGB and its surrogates
like the Stasi in East Germany and the Securitate in Romania enforced
political conformity among the 14 Soviet satellite states in Eastern
Europe and challenged the U.S. for loyal allies across the Third World.
Simultaneously, the CIA monitored the loyalties of presidents,
autocrats, and dictators on four continents, employing coups, bribery, and covert penetration to control and, when necessary, remove nettlesome leaders.
In an era of nationalist feeling, however, the loyalty of local
elites proved a complex matter indeed. Many of them were driven by
conflicting loyalties and often deep feelings of nationalism, which
meant that they had to be monitored closely. So critical were these
subordinate elites, and so troublesome were their insubordinate
iterations, that the CIA repeatedly launched risky covert operations to
bring them to heel, sparking some of the great crises of the Cold War.
Given the rise of its system of global control in a post-World War II
age of independence, Washington had little choice but to work not
simply with surrogates or puppets, but with allies who -- admittedly
from weaker positions -- still sought to maximize what they saw as their
nations’ interests (as well as their own). Even at the height of
American global power in the 1950s, when its dominance was relatively
unquestioned, Washington was forced into hard bargaining with the likes
of the Philippines’ Raymond Magsaysay, South Korean autocrat Syngman
Rhee, and South Vietnam’s Ngo Dinh Diem.
In South Korea during the 1960s, for instance, General Park Chung
Hee, then president, bartered troop deployments to Vietnam for billions
of U.S. development dollars, which helped spark the country's economic
"miracle." In the process, Washington paid up, but got what it most
wanted: 50,000 of those tough Korean troops as guns-for-hire helpers in
its unpopular war in Vietnam.
Post-Cold War World
After the Berlin Wall came down in 1989, ending the Cold War, Moscow
quickly lost its satellite states from Estonia to Azerbaijan, as
once-loyal Soviet surrogates were ousted or leapt off the sinking ship
of empire. For Washington, the “victor” and soon to be the “sole
superpower” on planet Earth, the same process would begin to happen, but
at a far slower pace.
Over the next two decades, globalization fostered a multipolar system
of rising powers in Beijing, New Delhi, Moscow, Ankara, and Brasilia,
even as a denationalized system of corporate power reduced the
dependency of developing economies on any single state, however
imperial. With its capacity for controlling elites receding, Washington
has faced ideological competition from Islamic fundamentalism, European
regulatory regimes, Chinese state capitalism, and a rising tide of
economic nationalism in Latin America.
As U.S. power and influence declined, Washington’s attempts to
control its subordinate elites began to fail, often spectacularly --
including its efforts to topple bête noire Hugo Chavez of
Venezuela in a badly bungled 2002 coup, to detach ally Mikheil
Saakashvili of Georgia from Russia’s orbit in 2008, and to oust nemesis
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad in the 2009 Iranian elections. Where a CIA coup or
covert cash once sufficed to defeat an antagonist, the Bush
administration needed a massive invasion to topple just one troublesome
dictator, Saddam Hussein. Even then, it found its plans for subsequent
regime change in Syria and Iran blocked when these states instead aided a
devastating insurgency against U.S. forces inside Iraq.
Similarly, despite the infusions of billions of dollars in foreign
aid, Washington has found it nearly impossible to control the Afghan
president it installed in power, Hamid Karzai, who memorably summed up
his fractious relationship with Washington to American envoys this way:
“If you're looking for a stooge and calling a stooge a partner, no. If
you're looking for a partner, yes.”
Then, late in 2010, WikiLeaks began distributing those thousands of
U.S. diplomatic cables that offer uncensored insights into Washington’s
weakening control over the system of surrogate power that it had built
up for 50 years. In reading these documents, Israeli journalist Aluf
Benn of Haaretz could see
“the fall of the American empire, the decline of a superpower that
ruled the world by the dint of its military and economic supremacy.” No
longer, he added, are “American ambassadors… received in world capitals
as ‘high commissioners'... [instead they are] tired bureaucrats [who]
spend their days listening wearily to their hosts' talking points, never
reminding them who is the superpower and who the client state.”
Indeed, what the WikiLeaks documents show is a State Department
struggling to manage an unruly global system of increasingly
insubordinate elites by any means possible -- via intrigue to collect
needed information and intelligence, friendly acts meant to coax
compliance, threats to coerce cooperation, and billions of dollars in
misspent aid to court influence. In early 2009, for instance, the State
Department instructed
its embassies worldwide to play imperial police by collecting
comprehensive data on local leaders, including “email addresses,
telephone and fax numbers, fingerprints, facial images, DNA, and iris
scans.” Showing its need, like some colonial governor, for incriminating
information on the locals, the State Department also pressed
its Bahrain embassy for sordid details, damaging in an Islamic society,
about the kingdom’s crown princes, asking: “Is there any derogatory
information on either prince? Does either prince drink alcohol? Does
either one use drugs?"
With the hauteur of latter-day imperial envoys, U.S. diplomats seemed to empower themselves for dominance by dismissing
“the Turks neo-Ottoman posturing around the Middle East and Balkans,”
or by knowing the weaknesses of their subordinate elites, notably
Colonel Muammar Gaddafi’s “voluptuous blonde” nurse, Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari’s morbid fear of military coups, or Afghan Vice President Ahmad Zia Massoud’s $52 million in stolen funds.
As its influence declines, however, Washington is finding many of its
chosen local allies either increasingly insubordinate or irrelevant,
particularly in the strategic Middle East. In mid-2009, for instance,
the U.S. ambassador to Tunisia reported
that “President Ben Ali… and his regime have lost touch with the
Tunisian people,” relying “on the police for control,” while “corruption
in the inner circle is growing” and “the risks to the regime's
long-term stability are increasing.” Even so, the U.S. envoy could only
recommend that Washington “dial back the public criticism” and instead
rely only on “frequent high-level private candor” -- a policy that
failed to produce any reforms before demonstrations toppled the regime
just 18 months later.
Similarly, in late 2008 the American Embassy in Cairo feared
that “Egyptian democracy and human rights efforts... are being
suffocated.” However, as the embassy admitted, “we would not like to
contemplate complications for U.S. regional interests should the
U.S.-Egyptian bond be seriously weakened.” When Mubarak visited
Washington a few months later, the Embassy urged
the White House “to restore the sense of warmth that has traditionally
characterized the U.S.-Egyptian partnership.” And so in June 2009, just
18 months before the Egyptian president’s downfall, President Obama hailed this useful dictator as “a stalwart ally... a force for stability and good in the region."
As the crisis in Cairo’s Tahrir Square unfolded, respected opposition leader Mohamed ElBaradei complained bitterly
that Washington was pushing “the whole Arab world into radicalization
with this inept policy of supporting repression.” After 40 years of U.S.
dominion, the Middle East was, he said,
“a collection of failed states that add nothing to humanity or science”
because “people were taught not to think or to act, and were
consistently given an inferior education.”
Absent a global war capable of simply sweeping away an empire, the
decline of a great power is often a fitful, painful, drawn-out affair.
In addition to the two American wars in Iraq and Afghanistan winding
down to something not so far short of defeat, the nation’s capital is
now writhing in fiscal crisis, the coin of the realm is losing its
creditworthiness, and longtime allies are forging economic and even
military ties to rival China. To all of this, we must now add the
possible loss of loyal surrogates across the Middle East.
For more than 50 years, Washington has been served well by a system
of global power based on subordinate elites. That system once
facilitated the extension of American influence worldwide with a
surprising efficiency and (relatively speaking) an economy of force.
Now, however, those loyal allies increasingly look like an empire of
failed or insubordinate states. Make no mistake: the degradation of, or
ending of, half a century of such ties is likely to leave Washington on
the rocks.
Copyright 2011 Alfred W. McCoy and Brett Reilly