For not having much to write about regarding Syria, I guess
I am coming up with more reasons to write something about Syria. However, in this case, the issue of Syria is
the backdrop for what might offer a clue to the larger goings-on in the
world. Larger, as in the global standing
of the United States as the pre-eminent player on the world stage. Larger as in the resumed path toward global
government, or the further path toward decentralization – a path, it seems to
me, that has been visibly ascendant since the demise of the Soviet Union.
As a brief background, it seems to me that the proponents of
global government might have reached their pinnacle at or within a few decades
after the Second World War. At that
point, all the major institutions necessary were put in place: United Nations,
World Bank, IMF, NATO, etc. They even had
their global currency – the United States dollar. What was left was to drive the legitimacy of
these institutions into all countries of the world.
Since then, there has been much decentralization; the Soviet
Union, Czechoslovakia, and Yugoslavia have come apart. While the EU has come together, it seems
clear that, at minimum, that union is in trouble. New economic power centers have emerged –
China, India, and Brazil.
On top of all of this, progress demands decentralization –
central planning cannot deliver the goods, and too many people today enjoy the
goods. Rothbard
makes this point much better than I do (as he does all points):
The case for libertarian optimism
can be made in a series of what might be called concentric circles, beginning
with the broadest and longest-run considerations and moving to the sharpest
focus on short-run trends. In the
broadest and longest-run sense, libertarianism will win eventually because it
and only it is compatible with the nature of man and of the world. Only liberty can achieve man’s prosperity, fulfillment,
and happiness. In short, libertarianism will win because it is true, because it
is the correct policy for mankind, and truth will eventually out.
The clock cannot be turned back to
a preindustrial age….We are stuck with the industrial age, whether we like it
or not.
But if that is true, then the cause
of liberty is secured. For economic
science has shown, as we have partially demonstrated in this book, that only
freedom and a free market can run an industrial economy. In short…in an industrial world it is also a
vital necessity. For, as Ludwig von
Mises and other economists have shown, in an industrial economy statism simply
does not work.
In the twentieth century, Mises
demonstrated (a) that all statist intervention distorts and cripples the market
and leads, if not reversed, to socialism; and (b) that socialism is a disaster
because it cannot plan an industrial economy for lack of profit-and-loss
incentives, and for lack of a genuine price system or property rights in
capital, land, and other means of production.
We do not have to prophesy the
ruinous effects of statism; they are here at every hand.
With all of that said, the issue remains: are we getting
closer to the end of the long-run? Will we
see a return to further centralization or a new era of decentralization? And what does this have to do with Syria? Bear with me….
I take it as a given that the United States was and is the
best horse for the elite to ride on their path toward global government. The question is: are the other power centers
going along for the ride? Russia and
China are paramount, but additionally Brazil and India come to mind. And without the domination by the US military
over the geography, would Japan and Germany continue to ride on the US-global wagon?
I think about the overtly visible signs of division seen on the
world stage in recent years. Pre-eminent
and overriding the rest is the impact of the global financial meltdown –
centered on and driven by US government, quasi-government, and
government-backed pseudo-private financial institutions (i.e. banks and the
like).
Connected to this is the ever-decreasing importance of the
US economy within the larger global economy (and the near-certainty of
continued relative declines). As a
consequence of this, there have been reports of other countries developing
bi-lateral arrangements that avoid the US, the US dollar, and other global institutions.
Not to be dismissed are the ever-increasing and aggressive
military actions taken by the US since the fall of the Soviet Union. Instead of ushering in peace, it seems the
single-superpower model ushered in an uncontrolled bully. The entire Middle
East and North Africa regions have been turned into a war zone and US involvement
in these regions has been continuous and predominant.
Add to these the force used by the US in terms of bringing
non-US financial institutions into line – most famously the Swiss banks, but
virtually any institution that deals with US persons, US securities, and the US
dollar has been taught that they must follow US laws or face bankruptcy and
prison.
Further are the open revelations of global US spying on the
citizens and government actors in many countries throughout the world – not that
the government actors didn’t know this before, but there is a level of
embarrassment that comes with this becoming public, and at least some level of
local political demand to change it now that the citizens know it.
Finally the embarrassing episode of the Bolivian president’s
plane brought down in Europe – an overt example of the puppets that many world
leaders have become to the US puppet-master.
These global actors all have big egos – they don’t mind being puppets in
reality as long as they are not forced to make obvious to their constituents
that reality.
If there were ever reasons for other global actors to decide
it is time to rid themselves of connections to the American state, it would
seem now is as good a time as any.
So again, what does this have to do with Syria?
Syria offers an opportunity to get a peek at the answer to
the question: will these non-Anglo power centers fall in line, or will they
stand tall? Does the Anglo-American
elite have the strings of the Chinese and Russian leaders (and the rest) or are
the political leaders in these countries in a position to take a different
path? In other words, this affair in
Syria offers the possibility of a real inflection point in the big-game of
global elite control.
Helping to bring clarity to my scattered thoughts regarding
these Syrian events was a short
column by Paul Craig Roberts, posted today at LRC. After suggesting that the first line of
defense against Obama’s desire to murder innocent civilians would be the United
States Congress, he goes on to a second possibility:
In the event that Congress fails to
understand the real stakes and votes to support a criminal action, the second
thing that can be done to stop the attack is for most other countries in the
world–China, India, Japan, Brazil, Australia, Canada, Iran, South Africa, the
European and South American countries–to add their clear unequivocal statements
to those of the UN General Secretary and President Putin that an American
attack on Syria that is not authorized by the UN Security Council is a war
crime. Expression by the governments of the world of this truthful statement
would make it clear to Washington that it is isolated from the world community.
For Obama to proceed in an act of aggression in the face of united opposition
would destroy all influence of the US government and make it impossible for any
officials of the Obama regime to travel abroad or to conduct business with
other governments. What government would conduct business with a war criminal
government? It is up to the governments of the world to make it clear to
Washington that the US government is not above the law and will be held
accountable.
How the global community reacts to this action of the US
could be telling in the big picture of global elite control. I have previously
suggested that many things about this entire Syrian affair seem fishy. Perhaps this is one reason why.
Incidentally, I stumbled upon another recent PCR quote regarding Syria, adding an interesting question, in my view:
ReplyDelete"The lies being told by obama and kerry are so transparent that it makes one wonder if their strategy is to make such a poor case for war that the control Israel and the neocons have over US foreign policy will be broken. What else is one to make of such absurd statements as john kerry’s claim that “this is our Munich moment!” There is no comparison between Assad’s defensive effort to prevent the overthrow of the Syrian government by foreign jihadists supported by Washington and Hitler’s aggressive stance toward Czechoslovakia."
http://www.paulcraigroberts.org/2013/09/04/the-high-cost-of-saving-face-for-obama-paul-craig-roberts/
Given the administrations overall behavior with respect to Syria, PCR may have a point here, no? Anyway, time will tell ... and soon.
Greetings,
Abu
Abu, nice to hear from you.
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