petras back on form

The US and China: One Side is Losing, the Other is Winning
James Petras, Global Research, Jan 3 2010

Even a cursory read of a single issue of the Financial Times (Dec 28 2009) illustrates the divergent strategies toward empire building. On page one, the lead article on the US is on its expanding military conflicts and its ‘war on terror’, entitled “Obama Demands Review of Terror List”. In contrast, there are two page-one articles on China, which describe China’s launching of the world’s fastest long-distance passenger train service and China’s decision to maintain its currency pegged to the US dollar as a mechanism to promote its robust export sector. While Obama turns the US focus on a fourth battle front (Yemen) in the ‘war on terror’ (after Iraq, Afghanistan and Pakistan), the Financial Times reports on the same page that a South Korean consortium has won a $20.4b contract to develop civilian nuclear power plants for the UAE, beating its US and European competitors. On page two of the FT there is a longer article elaborating on the new Chinese rail system, highlighting its superiority over the US rail service: the Chinese ultra-modern train takes passengers between two major cities, 1,100km, in less than 3 hours whereas the US Amtrack ‘Express’ takes 3½ hours to cover 300km between Boston and New York. While the US passenger rail system deteriorates from lack of investment and maintenance, China has spent $17b constructing its express line. China plans to construct 18,000km of new track for its ultra-modern system by 2012, while the US will spend an equivalent amount in financing its ‘military surge’ in Afghanistan and Pakistan, as well as opening a new war front in Yemen.

China builds a transport system linking producers and labor markets from the interior provinces with the manufacturing centers and ports on the coast, while on p.4 the Financial Times describes how the US is welded to its policy of confronting the ‘Islamist threat’ with an endless ‘war on terror’. The decades-long wars and occupations of Moslem countries have diverted hundreds of billions of dollars of public funds to a militarist policy with no benefit to the US, while China modernizes its civilian economy. While the White House and Congress subsidize and pander to the militarist-colonial state of Israel with its insignificant resource base and market, alienating 1.5 billion Moslems (FT, p.7), China’s GDP grew 10-fold over the past 26 years (FT,p.9). While the US allocated over $1,400b to Wall Street and the military, increasing the fiscal and current account deficits, doubling unemployment and perpetuating the recession (FT, p.12), the Chinese government releases a stimulus package directed at its domestic manufacturing and construction sectors, leading to an 8% growth in GDP, a significant reduction of unemployment and ‘re-igniting linked economies’ in Asia, Latin America and Africa (also on p.12). While the US was spending time, resources and personnel in running ‘elections’ for its corrupt clients in Afghanistan and Iraq, and participating in pointless mediations between its intransigent Israeli partner and its impotent Palestinian client, the South Korean government backed a consortium headed by the Korea Electric Power Corporation in its successful bid on the $20.4b nuclear power deal, opening the way for other billion-dollar contracts in the region (FT, p.13). While the US was spending over $60b on internal policing and multiplying the number and size of its ‘homeland’ security agencies in pursuit of potential ‘terrorists’, China was investing $25b in ‘cementing its energy trading relations’ with Russia (FT, p.3). The story told by the articles and headlines in a single day’s issue of the Financial Times reflects a deeper reality, one that illustrates the great divide in the world today. The Asian countries, led by China, are reaching world power status on the basis of their massive domestic and foreign investments in manufacturing, transportation, technology and mining and mineral processing. In contrast, the US is a declining world power with a deteriorating society resulting from its military-driven empire building and its financial-speculative centered economy:

Washington pursues minor military clients in Asia, while China expands its trading and investment agreements with major economic partners: Russia, Japan, South Korea and elsewhere. Washington drains the domestic economy to finance overseas wars. China extracts minerals and energy resources to create its domestic job market in manufacturing. The US invests in military technology to target local insurgents challenging US client regimes; China invests in civilian technology to create competitive exports. China begins to restructure its economy toward developing the country’s interior and allocates greater social spending to redress its gross imbalances and inequalities while the US rescues and reinforces the parasitical financial sector, which plundered industries (strips assets via mergers and acquisitions) and speculates on financial objectives with no impact on employment, productivity or competitiveness. The US multiplies wars and troop build-ups in the Middle East, South Asia, the Horn of Africa and Caribbean; China provides investments and loans of over $25b in building infrastructure, mineral extraction, energy production and assembly plants in Africa. China signs multi-billion dollar trade and investment agreements with Iran, Venezuela, Brazil, Argentina, Chile, Peru and Bolivia, securing access to strategic energy, mineral and agricultural resources; Washington provides $6b in military aid to Colombia, secures seven military bases from President Uribe (to threaten Venezuela), backs a military coup in tiny Honduras and denounces Brazil and Bolivia for diversifying its economic ties with Iran. China increases economic relations with dynamic Latin American economies, incorporating over 80% of the continent’s population; the US partners with the failed state of Mexico, which has the worst economic performance in the hemisphere and where powerful drug cartels control wide regions and penetrate deep into the state apparatus.

China is not an exceptional capitalist country. Under Chinese capitalism, labor is exploited; inequalities in wealth and access to services are rampant; peasant-farmers are displaced by mega-dam projects and Chinese companies recklessly extract minerals and other natural resources in the Third World. However, China has created scores of millions of manufacturing jobs, reduced poverty faster and for more people in the shortest time span in history. Its banks mostly finance production. China doesn’t bomb, invade or ravage other countries. In contrast, US capitalism has been harnessed to a monstrous global military machine that drains the domestic economy and lowers the domestic standard of living in order to fund its never-ending foreign wars. Finance, real estate and commercial capital undermine the manufacturing sector, drawing profits from speculation and cheap imports. China invests in petroleum-rich countries; the US attacks them. China sells plates and bowls for Afghan wedding feasts; US drone aircraft bomb the celebrations. China invests in extractive industries, but, unlike European colonialists, it builds railroads, ports, airfields and provides easy credit. China does not finance and arm ethnic wars and ‘color rebellions’ like the US CIA. China self-finances its own growth, trade and transportation system; the US sinks under a multi trillion dollar debt to finance its endless wars, bail out its Wall Street banks and prop up other non-productive sectors while many millions remain without jobs.

China will grow and exercise power through the market; the US will engage in endless wars on its road to bankruptcy and internal decay. China’s diversified growth is linked to dynamic economic partners; US militarism has tied itself to narco-states, warlord regimes, the overseers of banana republics and the last and worst bona fide racist colonial regime, Israel. China entices the world’s consumers. US global wars provoke terrorists here and abroad. China may encounter crises and even workers rebellions, but it has the economic resources to accommodate them. The US is in crisis and may face domestic rebellion, but it has depleted its credit and its factories are all abroad and its overseas bases and military installations are liabilities, not assets. There are fewer factories in the US to re-employ its desperate workers: A social upheaval could see US workers occupying the empty shells of its former factories. To become a ‘normal state’ we have to start all over: Close all investment banks and military bases abroad and return to America. We have to begin the long march toward rebuilding industry to serve our domestic needs, to living within our own natural environment and forsake empire building in favor of constructing a democratic socialist republic. When will we pick up the Financial Times or any other daily and read about our own high-speed rail line carrying US passengers from New York to Boston in less than one hour? When will our own factories supply our hardware stores? When will we build wind, solar and ocean-based energy generators? When will we abandon our military bases and let the world’s warlords, drug traffickers and terrorists face the justice of their own people? Will we ever read about these in the Financial Times? In China, it all started with a revolution.

3 Responses to petras back on form

  1. chicago dyke says:

    the big difference between revolutionary movements of the last century and today is television/visual media saturation (including the web). it deadens and creates a permanent sense of apathy and helplessness. i don’t think today’s Chinese people would be as revolutionary as their ancestors; they enjoy visual digital culture in as many ways as we do, almost. it’s a drug, and it makes people passive and afraid better than any kind of propaganda ever invented. it’s clearly sapped all the revolutionary strength from the american people, who are the most ‘sophisticated’ targets of such on the globe right now. but what works here works elsewhere, and i’m not at all confident that the american people will have revolutionary tendencies for at least another generation, if ever.

  2. keiandyuri says:

    “television/visual media saturation … deadens and creates a permanent sense of apathy and helplessness.” — chidy

    We have observed that we feel positively depressed (we have “minor” depression to begin with) after tv, even tv we enjoy, if it does not lead to other activities, whereas days that threaten to depress because of the loss of tv from electrical problems or such become memorable. Terry Gilliam talked about the importance of not having visual stimuli (in listening to radio shows) in developing one’s own visual sense. Certainly the best aggregate critique of American media is the utter absurdity and helplessness — indeed the inappropriateness — of humanity. With that said, we never feel bad about those internet activities that allow social interaction.

  3. niqnaq says:

    Absolutely, and in fact I think the full scale cinema film is even worse. I regard it as full scale voluntary brainwashing, I have a theory vaguely derived from Lacan about this, more or less to the effect that visual pseudo-data bypasses the critical functions in the mind that are associated with verbal reasoning. Certainly real intelligence operatives, especially in the USA, not only name their operations after fiction movies, but not infrequently describe them as reminiscent of movies, and to allow one’s mind to work in this way — using fiction as a precedent or authentication for supposed facts — indicates a sort of brainwashing effect.

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