Buried in a
great article by Juan Cole on Obama's Asia trip is this comment on the Bush-Cheney "foreign wars" project. It's the clearest statement yet of what those two were really up to, and what they, and we, got for their trouble:
George W. Bush and Dick Cheney thought in terms of expanding American conventional military weapons stockpiles and bases, occupying countries when necessary, and so ensuring that the U.S. would dominate key planetary resources for decades to come. Their worldview, however, was mired in mid-twentieth-century power politics.
If they thought they were placing a marker down on another American century, they were actually gambling away the very houses we live in and reducing us to a debtor nation struggling to retain its once commanding superiority in the world economy. In the meantime, the multi-millionaires and billionaires created by neoliberal policies and tax cuts in the West will be as happy to invest in (and perhaps live in) Asia as in the United States.
I'm sure in Cheney's mind, his foreign wars project was patriotic, an attempt to use American military power to secure control of vital resources ahead of our international competitors, like China and India. Occupying Iraq, for example, would prevent the Chinese and Russians from accessing Iraqi oil. Occupying Afghanistan, and placing an
ex-oil industry shill in the nominal seat of power, would guarantee control of the planned natural gas pipeline from Turkmenistan.
Again, the goal would
not be to secure those resources for us (they would be secured for the oil and gas companies); the goal would be to block "unfriendly" access to them, thus boxing in our competitors and giving us a deciding international hand in resource allocation.
This is the
Great Game, 21st century style. It failed, and we live among the shards of the result — Cole's point in the passage quoted, I think.
Read
the rest of the article for more on the present — Obama's Asia trip and American prospects, as seen from Cole's perspective. It's very good. But I thought the above was an interesting post-scriptorial comment on the era just ended, the failed Bush-Cheney project.
GP
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