|
Latin America’s Twenty First Century Capitalism And The US Empire
12 December 2010 By James Petras
The twin nemesis of Latin America’s quest for more
equitable and dynamic development, US imperial and
local oligarchic power have been subject to profound
changes over the past decade. New capitalist classes
both at home and abroad have redefined Latin America’s
relation to world markets, seized opportunities to
stimulate growth and forged cross class coalitions
linking overseas investors, agro-mineral exporters,
national industrialists with a broad array of trade
unions, and in some countries peasant and Indian
social movements. Parallel to these changes in Latin
America, a new militarist and financial political
configuration engaged in prolonged wars, colonial
occupations and widespread speculation has weakened
the structural economic links – dominance – between US
imperial economic interests and Latin America’s
dynamic socio-economic classes.
In the present conjuncture, these basic changes in
the respective class structures – in the US and Latin
America – define the contours, constraints and ‘reach’
of the imperial classes as well as the potential
autonomy of action of Latin America’s leading
socio-economic classes.
Notions which freeze Latin America in a time warp
such as “500 years of exploitation” or which conflate
earlier decades of US political-economic dominance
with the present, have failed to take account of
recent class dynamics, including popular
insurrections, mass electoral mobilizations and failed
imperial-centered economic models which have redefined
the power equation between the US and Latin America.
Equally important, fundamental changes in market
relations and market competition has lessened US
influence in the world market and opened major growth
opportunities for new and established sectors of Latin
America’s capitalist class, especially its dynamic
export sectors.
Understanding imperialism, especially the US
variant, requires focusing on class relations, within
and between countries and regions, the changing
balance of power as well as the impact of fundamental
changes in world market relations. Equally important
the private economic institutions of imperialism
(banks, multi-national corporations, investors) are
contingent on the composition and policies of the
imperial state. Insofar as the state defines its
priorities in military and ideological terms and acts
accordingly, by channeling resources in prolonged
wars, the imperial policymakers weakens their capacity
to sustain, finance and promote overseas private
economic interests. As we shall analyze and discuss in
the following sections, the US has suffered a relative
loss of political and economic power over key Latin
American regimes and markets as its military
commitments have widened and deepened over time. The
result is a Latin American political configuration
which has changed dramatically over the past two
decades.
Latin American
Political-Economic Configurations and US Imperialism
The upsurge of social movements, the subsequent
ascent of center-left political regimes,the dynamic
economic growth of Asian economies and the consequent
sharp increase in prices of commodities in the world
market has changed the configuration of political
power in Latin America and between the latter and the
US between 2000-2010.
While the US exercised almost absolute hegemony
during the period 1980-1999, the rise of a militarist
caste promoting prolonged imperial wars in the Middle
East and South Asia and the rise of relatively
independent national-popular and social-liberal
regimes in Latin America has produced a broad spectrum
of governments with greater autonomy of action.
Depending on the criteria we use, Latin American
countries have moved beyond the orbit of US hegemony.
For example, if we examine trade and investment, all
the major countries, independent of ideology, have to
a greater or lesser degree diversified their markets,
trading and investment partners. If we examine
political alignments, we find that all the major
countries have joined UNASUR, a regional political
organization that excludes the US. If we examine
policy divergences from the US on major regional
issues, such as the US embargo on Cuba, its efforts to
isolate Venezuela, its proposed military bases in
Colombia, Washington remains in splendid isolation, to
the point that the new Colombian President Santos,
chooses to “postpone” implementation in favor of
maximizing billion dollar trade and diplomatic ties
with Venezuela. If we focus on ideological divergence
between the US and Latin America, particularly on
global issues of free trade, military coups and
intervention, we find a variety of positions. For
example, Brazil opposes US sanctions against Iran and
supports the latter’s program of uranium enrichment
for peaceful uses. If we focus on joint US-Latin
American military exercises and support for the
Haitian occupation, most Latin countries – with the
exception of Venezuela – participate. If we examine
the issue of bilateral trade and regional trade
agreements, the US proposals on the latter were voted
down, while several countries pursue (so far with
little success) the former. On a rather fluid measure
of ‘affinity for neo-liberal’ ideology, in which a
mixture of elements of statism, deregulated markets
and social welfare co-exist in varying degrees, we can
draw up a tentative 4 fold division between “left”,
“center left”, “center right” and “right”.
On the “left” we can include Venezuela and Bolivia
which have expanded the public sector, economic
regulations and social spending. On the “center-left”
we can include Argentina, Brazil and Ecuador which
have increased social spending, public investment and
increased employment, wages and reduced poverty, while
vastly increasing private national and foreign
investment in agro-mineral export sectors. On the
center-right we can include Uruguay, Chile and
Paraguay, which embrace free market doctrines, with
mild poverty programs and an open door to foreign
investment. On the right we find Colombia, Panama,
Costa Rica, Mexico, Peru, Honduras, Haiti, the
Dominican Republic, all of whom line up with
Washington on most ideological issues, even as they
may be diversifying trade ties with Asia and
Venezuela.
Internal shifts in class power within Latin America
and the US have spurred divergences. Latin America has
witnessed greater policy influence by a more
‘globalist elite’ less tied to the US, and an emerging
‘nationalist bourgeoisie’, and greater pressure from
reformist working class and public employees trade
union. In contrast within the US industrial capital
has lost influence to the financial sector and exerts
little influence in shaping economic policy toward
Latin America, beyond rearguard ‘protectionist’
measures and state subsidies. The US ruling political
elite, highly militarized and Zionized, shows little
capacity to engage in launching any major new
initiatives toward recapturing markets in Latin
America, preferring massive military expenditures on
wars and paying tribute to their Israeli mentors.
As a result of major socio-political shifts within
the US and Latin America and the singular importance
of dynamic changes in the world market, there are four
axis of power operating in the Western Hemisphere.
- The emerging economic power of Brazil and the
growth of intra-regional trade within and between
Latin American economies.
- The dynamic expansion of Asian trade, investment
and markets leading to a long term, large scale
shift toward greater economic diversification.
- The substantial financial flows from the US to
Latin America in the form of “hot money” with
destabilizing effects, as well as continued
substantial investment, trade and military ties.
- The European Union, Russia and the Middle East
as real and potential influentials in particular
settings, depending on the countries and time frame.
Of these 4 ‘vectors of power’, the most significant
in recent times in reshaping Latin America’s relation
to the US and more importantly in opening up prospects
for 21st century capitalist growth, is the boom in
commodity prices and demand – the dynamic of the world
market. On the ‘negative side’, the prolonged US-EU
economic crises has limited trade and investment
growth and encouraged greater Latin American
integration and expansion of regional markets. A
serious threat to Latin America’s growth, autonomy and
stability is found in the US currency devaluation and
subsequent overvaluating of Latin currencies
(especially Brazil) imposing constraints on industrial
exports and prejudicing the manufacturing sector.
Equally important US and EU manipulation of interest
rates – downward – has driven speculative capital
toward higher interest rates in Latin America,
creating destabilizing “bubbles” which can derail the
economies.
US Empire Strikes Back:
Protectionism, Devaluation and Unilateralism
By the middle of 2010 it was clear that the US
economy was losing the competitive battle for markets
around the world and was unable to reduce its trade
and fiscal deficit within the existing global free
trade regime. The Obama regime, led by Federal Reserve
head Bernacke and Treasury Secretary Geithner
unilaterally launched a thinly disguised trade war,
effectively devaluating the dollar and lowering
interest rates on bonds in order to increase exports
and in effect ‘overvalue’ the currency of their
competitors. In other words the Obama regime resorted
to a virile “bugger your neighbor policies”, which
outraged world economic leaders, provoking Brazilian
economic leaders to speak of a “currency war”.
Contrary to Washington’s rhetoric of “greater
co-operation”, the Obama regime was resorting to
protectionist policies designed to alienate the
leading economic powers in the region.
No longer in a position to impose non-reciprocal trade
agreements to US advantage, Washington is engaged in
currency manipulation in order to increase market
shares at the expense of the highly competitive
emerging economies of Latin America and Asia, as well
as Germany.
Equally prejudicial to Latin America, the Federal
Reserve’s lowering of interest rates leads to heavy
borrowing in the US in order to speculate in high
interest countries like Brazil. The consequences are
disastrous, as a flood of “hot money”, speculative
funds flow into Latin America, especially Brazil,
overvaluating the currency and provoking a speculative
bubble in bonds and real estate, while encouraging
excess liquidity and public and private consumer debt.
Equally damaging the overvalued currencies price
industrial and manufacturing out of world market
competition, threatening to “de-industrialize” the
economies and further their dependency on agro-mineral
exports. US resort to unilateral protectionism tells
us that the decline in US economic power has reached a
point where it struggles to compete with Latin America
rather than to reassert its former dominant position.
Protectionism is a defense mechanism of an empire in
decline. While Washington can pretend otherwise, the
weapons it chooses to arrest its loss of
competitiveness in the short run, sets in motion a
process of growing Latin America integration and
increased trade with Asian economies, which will
deepen Latin America’s economic independence from US
control.
Latin America’s Center-Left
and the US: Economic Ties Trump Geopolitical
Strategies
The consolidation of Latin America’s center-left
regimes has had major consequences for US policy,
namely a reconciliation between arch-adversary
Venezuela and Washington’s foremost ally, Colombia.
The power of the market, in this case over $4 billion
in Colombian exports to Venezuela, has trumped the
dubious advantage (if any) of being Washington’s
military launching pad in Latin America.
The election of Lula’s chosen candidate Dilma
Rousseff as President of Brazil, the likely
re-election of Chavez in Venezuela and Cristina
Fernandez in Argentina, means that Washington has
little leverage to reverse the dynamic diversification
and greater autonomy of Latin America’s leading
economies. Moreover, as the political rapprochement
between Venezuela and Colombia, including the mutual
extradition of Colombian guerrillas and drug
traffickers demonstrates, closer economic relations
are accompanied by warmer political relations,
including a tacit pact in which Colombia abjures from
supporting the rightwing opposition in Venezuela,
while the latter does likewise toward the Left
opposition to Santos. The larger meaning of this
obscuring of ideological boundaries is that Latin
America’s economic integration advances at the expense
of US prompted ideological divisions. The net result
will be the further exclusion and diminution of the US
as the dominant actor in the Southern Hemisphere. At
the same time it should be remembered that we are
writing about greater capitalist integration, which
means the continued marginalization of class based
trade unions and social movements from strategic
economic policy making positions.
In other words, the decline of US hegemony is not
matched by an increase in working class or popular
power. As both decline, the big winner is the rising
business class, mostly, but not exclusively the
agro-mineral, financial and manufacturing elites
linked to the Latin American and Asian markets.
The prime destabilization danger now includes US
currency wars, the growing potentially volatile
extractive exports and the high levels of dependence
on China’s (and Asian) appetite for raw materials.
Imperial Wars, Free Trade
and the Lumpen Legacy of 1990’s
One of the paradoxes leading to the current eclipse
of US hegemony in Latin America is found in the very
military and economic successes in the 1990’s. A broad
swathe of North and Central American and the Andean
countries has witnessed the rise of what we call
“lumpen political-economic power” which has devastated
the formal economy and legitimate political authority.
The concept of “lumpen” is derived from ‘lupus’ or
Latin for ‘wolf’ a metaphor for a ‘predatory’ actor,
or in our context, the rise of a political and
economic class which preys upon the public and private
resources and institutions of an economy and society.
The lumpen power elites are based on the creation of a
dual system of legitimate and illegitimate political
authority backed by the instruments of coercion and
violence. The emergence and formation of a powerful
lumpen class of predatory capitalists and their
accompanying military entourage is what we refer to in
writing of the “process of lumpenization”. Today
“lumpenization” no longer merely entails the overt
violent organizers of illicit production, processing
and distribution of drugs but an entire array of
‘offspring’ economic activity (kidnapping, immigrant
smugglers, etc.) as well as large scale long term
interaction with ‘legitimate’ economic institutions
and sectors, including banking, real estate,
agriculture, retail shopping centers, tourist
complexes, to name a few. Money laundering of illicit
funds is an important growth sector, especially
providing important flows of capital to and from major
US and Latin American financial institutions. Today
over three-quarters of Mexico’s territory and
governance is contested by over 30,000 organized armed
lumpen led by centralized political-economic
formations. Central America is a major transit point,
production center and terrain for bloody lumpen
struggles for power and revenue collection. Colombia
is the major center for ‘raw material production’of
drugs, marketing,and import and export center under
the leadership of powerful lumpen capitalists with
long standing ties to the governing political,
military and economic elite. The lumpen economy has
supply chains further south in Peru, Bolivia and
Paraguay and distribution networks through Venezuela
and Brazil as well as multi-billion dollar money
laundering and financial links in the Caribbean, the
US, Uruguay and Argentina.
Several important issues to keep in mind in
discussing the lumpen political economy.These include:
(1)the growth in size, scope and significance over the
past 20 years (2) the increasing economic importance
as the ‘legitimate’ economy goes into crises (both
cause and consequence) (3) the increasing public
cynicism as previously thought of “legitimate”
economic and political actors (capitalists) engage in
multi-billion dollar financial swindles and are
“bailed” out by political leaders.
The ‘boom’ in lumpen political-economic growth can
be dated to the end of the 1980’s and early 1990’s,
coinciding with several major historical events in the
region. These include: the North Atlantic Free Trade
Agreement; the US-oligarchy defeat of the
revolutionary movements in Central America and the
demobilization but not disarmament of the paramilitary
and armed militia; the total militarization and
paramilitarization of Colombia especially with the
advent of Plan Colombia (2001) and the end of peace
negotiations; the deregulation of the US financial
system in the mid 1990’s and the growth of a financial
bubble economy.
What is striking about all the countries and
regions experiencing ‘deep lumpenization’, is the
profound disarticulation of their economies and
smashing of their social fabric due to free trade
agreements with the US (Mexico and Central America)
and the large scale US military intervention during
their civil wars (El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras,
Colombia). The US politico-military intervention left
millions without work and worse, destroyed the
possibility of reformist or revolutionary political
alliances coming to power and carrying out meaningful
structural changes. The restoration of US backed
neo-liberal-militarist collaborator regimes left the
young unemployed peasants and workers with three
choices: (1)submit to degradation and poverty (2)
emigrate to North America or Europe (3) join one or
another of the narco-trafficking organizations, as a
risky but lucrative route out of poverty. The timing
of the rise and dynamic growth of lumpen power
coincides with the imposition of US free trade and
political victories in the aforementioned regions.From
the early 1990’s forward lumpen power spreads across
the region fueled by NAFTA decimating the Mexican
small producers and the US imposed Central American
“peace accords” which effectively destroyed the
chances of socio-economic change and dismantled but
did not disarm the militias and paramilitary gunmen.
Case Studies of Lumpen Dual Power: Mexico
Mexico, unlike the other major economies of Latin
America did not experience any popular upheavals or
center-left electoral outcomes during the late 1990’s
or early 2000. Unlike Venezuela, Argentina, Brazil,
Bolivia and Ecuador, in which new center-left regimes
came to power imposing regulatory controls on
financial speculation, Mexico witnessed electoral
fraud and signed off on NAFTA, deepening its ties to
Wall Street .As a result it experienced a series of
financial shocks, undermining its capacity to launch a
more diversified trading and investment model. Unlike
Argentina which launched state directed employment
generating investment policies, Mexico, under US
tutelage, relied on emigration and overseas
remittances to compensate for the loss of millions of
jobs in agriculture , small and medium manufacturing
activity and retail sales. While popular uprisings and
mobilization in Latin America led to the rise of
center-left regimes capable of securing greater
independence in economic policy from the US and the
IMF, the Mexican elite literally stole elections in
1988 and 2006, blocking the possibility of an
alternative model. It successfully repressed
alternative peasant movements in Chiapas, Oaxaca and
Guerrero unlike the successes in Bolivia and Ecuador.
While the center-left regimes captured the economic
surplus from the agro-mineral sectors and increased
public and private investment in production and social
spending, Mexico witnessed massive illegal and legal
outflows of investments into speculative ventures in
the US: an outflow of over $55 billion between
2006-2010.
Regional migration within Latin America fueled by
high growth, led to rising income; overseas
immigration depleted Mexico of skilled and unskilled
labor ; in some cases ‘return migration’from the US of
deported gang members, with arms and drug networks
fueled the growth of lumpen power . With the severe
recession, US immigration policy led to the closing of
the border, the massive deportation of Mexican
immigrants and the decline of the major source of
foreign earnings: remittances. Pervasive and deep
corruption throughout the cupula of the Mexican
political and economic system, combined with the
decline of the legitimate economy, the absence of
channels for popular redress and Washington’s
insistence that militarization and not social
investments was the solution to rising crime, led to
the huge influx of young recruits to the growing
network of lumpen-capitalist directed narco
enterprises. With almost all US and Mexican financial
institutions and arms vendors as willing partners and
an unlimited pool of young recruits with a ‘lean and
hungry look’, Mexico evolved into a fiercely contested
terrain between a half dozen rival lumpen
organizations,and the Mexican military, with nearly
30,000 deaths between 2006-2010.
Lumpenization: Central
America
Drug gangs dominate the streets of the major cities
and countryside of all the countries which were
militarized during the US backed counter-revolutionary
wars between the 1960’s to early 1990’s. US proxy
military dictators and their civilian clients, in El
Salvador, Guatemala, Nicaragua and Honduras decimated
civil society and particularly the mass popular
organizations. In El Salvador over 75,000 people were
killed and hundreds of thousands were uprooted, driven
across borders or into urban shanty towns. In
Guatemala over 200,000 mostly Mayan Indians were
murdered by the US trained “special forces” and over
450 villages were obliterated in the course of a
scorched earth policy. In Nicaragua, the Somoza
dictatorship and the subsequent US financed and
trained counter-revolutionary (“contra”) mercenary
army killed and maimed close to 100,000 people and
devastated the economy. In Honduras, the US embassy
promoted and financed in-country and cross-border
counter-insurgency operations which killed, uprooted
and forced thousands of Honduran peasants into exile.
Highly militarized Central American societies, in
which US funded and armed death squads murdered with
impunity, in which the economy of small producers was
shattered and ‘normal’ market activity was subject to
military assaults, led to the growth of illegal crops,
drug and people smuggling. With the so-called “peace
agreements”, the leaders of the insurgents became
“institutionalized”in elite electoral politics,while
large numbers of unemployed ex-guerillas and
demobilized death squad militia members found no place
in the status quo. The neo-liberal order imposed by
the US client rulers with its free market ideology
built “fortress neighborhoods”, hired an army of
private “security” guards, while the productive bases
of small scale agriculture was destroyed. Millions of
Central Americans faced the familiar “routes out of
poverty”: outmigration, forming or joining criminal
gangs, or attempting to find an economic niche in an
unpromising environment. Outmigration for
semi-educated former members of armed bands led to
their early entrée into armed groups, deportation back
to Central America, swelling the ranks of narco
traffickers in their “home country”. Highly repressive
immigration policies implemented in the new millennium
closed the escape valve for most Central Americans
fleeing violence and poverty. Former guerrilla
fighters and their families, abandoned by their former
leaders embedded in electoral parties, turned their
military experience toward carving a new living, as
security guards for the rich, or as armed traffickers
competing for ‘market shares’ with and against the
discharged deathsquad militia members.
Between 2000-2010 the annual number of homicides
exceeded the number of deaths suffered during the
worst period of the civil wars of the 1980s. US
imposed peace agreements and the neo-liberal order
which resulted, led to the total lumpenization of the
economy and polity throughout the region, the practice
of electoral politics and even the election of
“center-left” politicos in El Salvador and Nicaragua
notwithstanding. Lumpenization was a direct
consequence of the ‘scorched earth’ and ‘mass
uprooting’ counter-insurgency policies which were
central to US re-establishing dominance in the region.
Economic and personal insecurity and social misery
were the price paid by imperial Washington to prevent
a popular revolution.
Case Study: Colombia
The ties between the world centers of finance and
the most degenerate and blood curdling ruler in the
Western Hemisphere were most evident in the slavishly
laudatory puff-pieces published in the Financial Times
and the Wall Street Journal in praise of President
Alvaro Uribe, while over 3 million Colombians were
driven off their lands, several thousands were
murdered, over a thousand trade unionists, journalists
and human rights activists were killed. Two thirds of
his Congressional backers were financed by narco-traffickers
.Incarcerated deathsquad leaders identified top
military officials as their primary supporters. All of
Colombia’s Presidents collaborated closely with US
military missions and all were financed and associated
with the multi-billion dollar drug cartels, even as
the Pentagon claimed to be engaged in a “war against
drug trafficking”.
Landlords and their financial and real estate
backers organized private militias, which terrorized,
uprooted and killed hundreds of thousands of peasants,
others fled to the urban slums, or across the border
to neighboring countries. Others joined the
guerrillas, and still others were recruited by the
deathsquads and military. With the advance of the
guerrilla armies and then President, Pastrana’s
opening to peace negotiations, President Clinton
launched a $5 billion dollar military scheme, “Plan
Colombia” to quadruple Colombia’s air and ground
forces and deathsquads. With Washington’s backing,
Alvaro Uribe, a notorious narco-deathsquad politico,
so identified by US officials, took power and launched
a massive scorched earth policy, murdering and
displacing millions of peasants and urban slum
dwellers in an effort to undermine the vast network of
community organizations sympathetic to the agrarian
reform, public investment and anti-military program of
the guerrilla movements.
Mass terror and population flight emptied whole
swathes of the countryside; livelihoods were destroyed
and landlords in alliance with drug cartel bosses and
Generals seized millions of acres of land. For the
financial and respectable mass media, the
massification of terror mattered not: the insurgents
were ‘contained’, driven back, put on the defensive.
They trumpeted the killing of key guerrilla leaders:
foreign corporate property was secure. Rule by Uribe ,
the military and the narco-deathsquads secured US
power and influence and created an ideal “jumping off”
location for destabilizing the democratically elected
Venezuelan President Chavez. The latter was especially
important by the mid 2000’s when Washington’s internal
assets attempted coup and lockout were resoundingly
defeated in 2002-03. Having gained strategic
territorial advantage over the guerrillas, Washington
in collaboration with Uribe moved to shift the balance
of power between the narco-deathsquads and the state:
a disarmament and demobilization and amnesty was
proclaimed. The result was detailed revelations of the
deep structural links between narco-deathsquads and
the Uribe police state regime, up to and including
family members and cabinet ministers. While
‘nominally’ the cartels are in retreat, in fact, they
have become decentralized .Equally important top
politicos and military officials continue to
collaborate in the production, processing and shipping
of billion dollar cocaine exports … with major US
banks laundering illicit funds.
Rule of Lumpen-Capitalism in
the Imperial System
Drug trafficking has deep roots in the economies of
North and South America and has profound ramifications
throughout their societies. One cannot understand the
tremendous growth of US banking and financial centers
if not for the $25 to $50 billion dollar yearly income
and transfers from laundering drug funds and double
that amount from illegal money transfers by business
and political leaders directly and indirectly
benefiting from the drug trade. Lumpen capitalists,
their collaborators, facilitators paramilitary
mercenaries and military partners play a major
political role in sustaining the imperial system.
Washington’s major influence and principle area of
dominance resides in those countries where lumpen
power and deathsquad operations are most prevalent,
namely Central America, Colombia and Mexico.Both
phenomena are derived from US designed ‘scorched
earth’ counter-insurgency strategies that prevented
alterations, modifications or reforms of the
neo-liberal order and blocked the successful emergence
of social movements and center-left regimes as took
place in most of Latin America.
The contemporary imperial system relies on lumpen
capitalists, their economic networks and military
formations in practically every major area of conflict
even as these collaborators are constant areas of
friction.
As in Afghanistan and Iraq today and in Central
America in the recent past and in Latin America under
the military dictatorships, the US relies on drug
traffickers, military gangsters engaged in extortion,
kidnapping, property seizures and the pillage of
public property and treasury to destroy popular
movements, to divide and conquer communities and above
all to terrorize the general public and civil society.
The singular growth of the financial sector
especially in the US is in part the result of its
being the massive recipient of large scale sustained
flows of ‘plunder capital’ by lumpen rulers and their
economic partners via ‘political crony’
privatizations, foreign loans which never entered the
local economy and other such forms of pillage
characteristic of ‘predator’ classes.
The deep structural affinities between Wall Street
speculators and Latin lumpen-capitalists provided the
backdrop for the ascendancy of a new class of lumpen
financiers in the imperial financial centers: bogus
bonds, mortgage swindles, falsified assessments by
stock ratings agencies, trillion dollar raids on state
treasuries define the heart and soul of contemporary
imperialism.
If it is true that the promotion and financing of
lumpen warlord capitalists was an essential defense
mechanism at the periphery of the empire to contain
popular insurgencies, it is also true that the growth
of lumpen capitalism severely weakened the very core
of the imperial economy, namely its productive and
export sectors leading to uncontrollable deficits, out
of control speculative bubbles and massive and
sustained reductions of living standards and incomes.
Lumpen classes were both the agencies for
consolidating the empire and its undoing: tactical
gains at the periphery led to strategic losses in the
imperial centers. Imperial policymakers resort to
terrorist formations resulted from their incapacity to
resolve internal contradictions within a legal,
electoral framework. The high domestic political cost
of long term warfare led inevitably to the recruitment
of mercenary lumpen armies who extracted an economic
tribute for questionable loyalty. Lacking any popular
constituency, mercenary armies rely on terror to
secure circumstantial submission. Having secured
control, local warlords preside over the rapid and
massive growth of drugs and other lumpen economic
practices.
The alliance of empire and lumpen capitalists
against modern secular and traditional insurgencies,
brings together high technology weaponry and primitive
clan based religious-ethnic racists in Iraq and
Afghanistan and deracinated psychopaths in the case of
Colombia.,Mexico and Central America.
For Washington military and political supremacy and
territorial conquests take priority over economic
gain. In the case of Colombia the scorched earth
policy undermined production and lucrative trade with
Venezuela. Imperial ascendancy had similar
consequences in Asia, the Middle East and Central
America.
When Lumpen Power becomes a
Problem for the Imperial State
Lumpen capitalism develops a dynamic of its own,
independent of its role as an imperial instrument for
destroying popular insurgency. It challenges imperial
collaborator regimes. It displaces, threatens, or
cajoles foreign and domestic capitalists. In the
extreme, it establishes a private army, seizes
territorial control, recruits and trains networks of
intelligence agents within the armed forces and
police, undermining imperial influence. In a word
lumpen organized military capitalism threatens the
security of imperial hegemony: newly emerging
predators threaten the established collaborators. The
imperial attempts to use and dispose of lumpen
counterinsurgency forces has failed; the demobilized
paras become the professional gunmen of a “third
force” – neither imperial nor insurgent. The
decimation of the reformist center-left option, which
took hold in Latin America, precludes a socio-economic
alternative capable of integrating the young combative
unemployed, stimulating the productive economy,
diversifying markets and escaping the pitfalls of a US
centered neo-liberal order.
The divergence of priorities and strategies between
Latin America’s center-left and Washington has as much
to do with economic and class interests as it has with
ideological agendas. For the US security means
defeating the rising power of lumpen military economic
formations in their remaining ‘power bases’. For Latin
America, security concerns are secondary to
diversifying and boosting market shares within Latin
America and overseas. Lumpen power is currently under
the political control of domestic rulers in Latin
America; it is out of control in US clients. The US
solution is military; the Latin approach is greater
growth; social expenditures and police repression
especially in Brazil. The Latin solution has greater
attraction, evident in Colombia’s break with the US
military base and encirclement strategy toward
Venezuela. Colombia’s new President opted for $8
billion dollar trade deals with Venezuela’s Chavez
over and against costly million dollar military base
agreements with the US.
Clearly the US economic decline in Latin America as
a direct result of its reliance on military and lumpen
power, is in full force. The driving force of
accelerated decline is not popular insurgency but the
attraction and lucrative opportunities of the economic
marketplace within Latin America and beyond for the
local ruling classes. Insofar as militarism defines
the policies and strategies of the US Empire there is
no remedy for the challenges of lumpen power in its
‘backyard’. And Washington has nothing on offer to
recapture a dominant presence in Latin America. The
world market is defeating the empire. Latin America’s
twenty-first century capitalists are leading the way
to further decline in imperial power.
James Petras is the author of over 62 books
published in 29 languages, and over 600 articles in
professional journals, including the American
Sociological Review, British Journal of Sociology,
Social Research, and Journal of Peasant Studies. He
has published over 2000 articles in nonprofessional
journals such as the New York Times, The Guardian, The
Nation, Christian Science Monitor, Foreign Policy, New
Left Review, Partisan Review, TempsModerne, Le Monde
Diplomatique, and his commentary is widely carried out
in the Internet. James Petras is a former professor of
Sociology at Binghamton University, New York, has a
50-year membership in the class struggle, the author
is an advisor to the landless and jobless in Brazil
and Argentina and is co - of Globalization Unmasked
(Zed Books) and Zionism, Militarism and the Decline of
U.S. Power (Clarity Press, 2008). James Petras latest
book is War Crimes in Gaza and the Zionist Fifth
Column in America (Atlanta:Clarity Pres 2010) He can
be reached at: jpetras@binghamton.edu. | Read other
articles by James Petras, or visit his website:
http://petras.lahaine.org/index.php
©
EsinIslam.Com
Add
Comments |