Mandarin for the Warlords: The Harvard School of Empire Building
Harvard professor Joseph Nye, a former senior
Pentagon functionary, is one of the longest serving and most influential
advisers to US empire building officials. Nye has recently re-affirmed
the primacy of the US as a world power in his latest book, Is the
American Century Over? And his article, ‘The American Century will
survive the Rise of China’ (Financial Times, 3/26/15, p. 7). These
publications are in line with his earlier book, Bound to Lead, and his
longstanding view that the US is not a declining world power, that it
retains ‘supremacy’ even in the face of China’s rise to global power.
Nye’s views of US world
supremacy have served to encourage Washington to wage multiple wars ;
his view of US economic power has allowed policy-makers to ignore
fundamental weaknesses in the US economy and to overestimate US power,
based on what he dubs, ‘soft’ and ‘military’ power.
In tackling Professor Nye’s work, we are not dealing with a ‘detached
academic in the ivory tower’ – we are taking on a high level political
influential, a hardline military hawk, whose views are reflected in the
forging of strategic decisions and whose arguments serve to justify
major government policies.
First, we will proceed through a
critical analysis of his theoretical assumptions, historical arguments
and conceptual framework. In the second part of this essay, we will
consider the political consequences, which have flowed from his analysis
and prescriptions. In the conclusion, we shall propose an alternative,
more realistic, analysis of US global power, one more attuned to the
real international position of the US in the world today.
Nye’s Analysis is Ossified in His Distorted Time Warp
Nye’s segmentation of power
into three spheres – economic, military (hard), and diplomatic/cultural
(soft), overlooks the inter-relation between them. What he dubs as
‘soft power’ usually relies on ‘hard power’,
either before, during or
after the application of ‘soft power’. Moreover, the capacity to
influence by ‘soft power’ depends on economic promise or military
coercion to enforce ‘persuasion’. Where economic resources or military
threats are not present, soft power is ineffective.
Nye’s argument that military power is co-equal with economic power is
a very dubious proposition. Over the medium run, economic power buys,
expands and increases military power. In other words, economic
resources are convertible into military as well as ‘soft power’. It can
influence politicians, parties and regimes via trade, investments and
credit in many ways which military power cannot. Over time, economic
power translates into military power. Nye’s claims of persistent US
military superiority in the face of its admitted economic decline is
ephemeral or time bound.
Nye’s argument about the continued ascendancy of US global power ‘for the next few decades’
is a dubious, static view – ignoring a long-term, large-scale,
historical trajectory. Lifelong shibboleths never die! By all
empirical indicators – economic, political and even militarily, the US
is a declining power. Moreover, what is important is not where the US is
at any given moment but the where it is moving. Its declining shares
of Latin American, African and Asian markets clearly points to a
downward trajectory.
Power is a relationship. By definition it means a country’s capacity
to make other countries or political entities do what they otherwise
would not do. To consider the US as the dominant world power, we
cannot, as Nye proposes, look at its ‘reputation’ as a world power or
cite its ‘military capacity’ or willingness to project military force.
We need to look at military and political outcomes in multiple key issue
areas in which US policymakers have sought to establish regional or
local dominance.
Nye’s discussion fails to look at the negative cumulative effects of
US policy failures in multiple regions over time to determine whether
the US retains its global supremacy or is a declining power.
To simply preach that ‘the American century is not over’,
because some critics in the past mistakenly thought that the USSR in the
1970s or Japan in the 1980’s would displace the US as the global power,
is to overlook the foundational weakness and repeated failures of US
policymakers to impose or persuade other nations to accept US supremacy
over the past decade and a half.
If, as Nye grudgingly concedes, China has replaced the US as the
leading economic power in Asia, he does not understand the dynamic
components of Chinese economic power, especially its long term,
large-scale accumulation of foreign reserves and rapidly growing
technical knowhow. Even worse, Nye ignores how the military dimension of
world power has actively undermined US economic supremacy.
It is precisely Nye’s belief, along with other Pentagon advisers,
that US military supremacy make it a ‘world power’, which has led to
catastrophic, prolonged and costly wars. These wars have degraded and
undermined US pretensions of ‘world leadership’ or more accurately – imperial supremacy.
While the US has spent trillions of dollars of public money on
prolonged and losing wars in Afghanistan, Iraq and Somalia, as well as
ongoing military interventions in Libya, Syria, Ukraine and Yemen, China
and other emerging powers have engaged in large long-term economic
expansion, increasing market shares, acquiring productive enterprises
and expanding their sources of capital accumulation in dynamic regions.
US repeated projections of military power have not created new
sources of wealth. The US capacity and willingness to engage in
multiple disastrous wars has led to a greater loss of military
influence.
Consequences of High Military Capacity and Declining Economic Performance
The consequence of utilizing its great storehouse of military
capacity so disastrously has degraded and weakened the US military as
well as its imperial economic reach. Repeated US military defeats, its
inability to secure its goals or impose its dominance in Lebanon, Syria,
Iraq and Afghanistan has severely weakened the domestic political
foundations of global military power, to the point where the US public
is adverse to sending large scale US ground troops into combat.
Nye’s inventory of military resources, stockpile of up-to-date
bombers, nuclear weapons, fighter planes, military bases, special forces
operations, and its vast spy (“intelligence”) apparatus, in other words
the US’s supreme military ‘capacity’, has not resulted in the
establishment of a prosperous, stable and submissive empire (the goal
that Nye euphemistically dubs ‘world supremacy’). US military
engagements, both high and low intensity wars, have resulted in costly
defeats and retreats as adversaries advance into the vacuum. Superior
material capacity has not translated into US dominance because
nationalist, anti-imperialist consciousness and movements based on mass
armed resistance, have demonstrated superiority in countering foreign
(US) invasions, occupations and satellite building.
Nye ignores a decisive ‘military resource’, which the US does not
have and its adversaries have in abundance – nationalist consciousness.
Here, Nye’s notion of US supremacy in ‘soft power’ has been terribly
wrong-headed. According to Nye, the US superiority in the use and
control of mass media, films, news and cultural organizations and
educational institutions continues and has allowed the US to retain its
global supremacy.
No doubt the US global propaganda apparatus and networks are
formidable but they have not been successful, not least, as a bulwark of
US global supremacy. Once again Nye’s inventory of soft power assets
relies exclusively on quantitative, contemporary, material structures
and ignores the enormous counter-influence of historical legacies,
nationalist, cultural, religious, ethnic, class, race and gender
consciousness, which rejects US dominance in all of its forms. US ‘soft
power’ has not conquered or gained the allegiance of the people in
Afghanistan, Iraq, Syria or Yemen. Nor has it convinced the billions of
Chinese, Latin American or Islamic peoples to embrace American
‘leadership’.
No doubt ‘soft power’ has worked to a limited extent, especially
among sectors of the educated classes and the local political elite,
converting them into imperial collaborators. No doubt elements of the
educated elite have been co-opted by US funded ‘non-governmental
organizations’ that engage in grass roots counter-insurgency as the
counterpart to the drone attacks from above. But, once again, Nye
relies on quantitative, rather than qualitative, measures of influence.
Despite an army of NGOs and the budgeting of billions of dollars, US
imperial conquests, coups, occupations, rigged elections, and puppet
regimes are highly unpopular. As a result, US troops need to diminish
their presence, and its overseas and visiting diplomats require a
squadron of security officials and operate out of armed fortresses.
Professor Nye’s treatment of what he calls ‘soft power’ is reduced to
an inventory of propaganda resources, developed and/or cultivated by
the imperial state (the US) to induce submission to and acceptance of
the global supremacy of the US. However vast the spending and however
broad the scope of ‘soft power, Nye fails to recognize the
ineffectiveness of the US ‘soft power apparatus’ in the face of systemic
crimes against humanity, which have profoundly alienated and decisively
turned world opinion and specific national publics against the US.
Specifically, Washington’s practice of torture (Abu Ghraib), kidnapping
(rendition), and prolonged jailing without trial (Guantanamo); its
global spy network monitoring hundreds of millions of citizens in the US
and among allies and its use of drones killing more non-combatant
(innocent) citizens than armed adversaries, have severely weakened, if
not undermined, the appeal of US ‘soft powers’. Nye is oblivious to the
ways in which US projections of military power have led to the
precipitous long-term decline of ‘soft power’, and the way in which that
decline has resulted in the greater reliance on military power … in a
vicious circle.
Nye ignores the changing composition of the strategic decision makers
who decide where and when military power will be exercised. He blandly
assumes that policy is directed by and for enhancing US ‘global
supremacy’. But as Professors Mearsheimer and Walt, (The Israel Lobby) and Petras, (The Power of Israel in the United States),
have demonstrated, powerful, organized lobbies, like AIPAC, and Israel
First officials in the Executive branch have taken military decisions to
focus on the Middle East at the behest of Israel in order to enhance
its power. These decisions have had an enormous cost in terms of loss of
human and financial resources and have contributed to the decline of US
global supremacy. Nye fails to recognize how the ascendancy of his
militarist colleagues in the Pentagon and the Zionists in the Congress
and Executive have drastically changed the way in which hard power
(military) is exercised
And how it has weakened the composition and use of soft power and
provoked greater imbalances between economic and military power.
Nye’s argument is further weakened by his incapacity to ‘problematize’
the changing content of military power, its shift from a tool of
economic expansion, directed by US empire-builders, to an end in itself
exploiting economic resources to enhance Israeli hegemony in the Middle
East. This weakness is exacerbated by his failure to recognize the
changing nature of economic power – the shift from manufacturing to
finance capital and the negative consequences, which result for the
projection of US economic power and dominance.
Finally, Nye totally ignores the moral dimension of the US drive for
world dominance. At worst, he blithely assumes that destructive US wars
are, by their nature, virtuous. Nye’s political commitment to the ‘American Century’
and total belief in its benignancy blind him to the killing and
displacement of millions of Iraqis, Syrians, Afghans, Somalis, Libyans
and now Ukrainians – among others. Nye’s assumption of the beneficial
effects of the US-NATO-EU expansion into the former Warsaw Pact
countries, and especially Russia, ignores the vast impoverishment of 70%
of the Ukrainian population, the outward flight of 20 million skilled
professionals and workers, and the subsequent militarization of Eastern
Europe and East Germany via its incorporation in NATO. According to
Nye’s moral calculus, any policy that enhances US global power is
virtuous, no matter how it impacts the recipient population. These are
not only Nye’s views, they provide the ideological underpinning of the
official ‘soft power’ propaganda accompanying past, present and near
future wars of mass destruction.
Nye is not your typical garden variety Ivy League-ideologue-for-US-and-Israeli-dominance
(and there are many in US academia). Nye has been an important
theoretical architect and strategic planner responsible for US global
wars and the accompanying crimes against humanity. His global fantasies
of US ascendancy have led to the parlous state of the US domestic
economy, multiple unwinnable wars overseas and the eclipse of any
strategic thinking about reversing the economic decline of the US in the
world economy. Applying a cost-benefit analysis to Prof. Nye’s
policies, if he were employed as a CEO in the private sector, he would
have long ago been fired and dispatched to a prestigious business school
to teach ‘ethics’. Since he is already tenured at Harvard and employed
by the Pentagon he can continue to churn out his irresponsible
‘manifestos’ of US global leadership and not be held to account for the
disasters.
In Joseph Nye, we have our own American version of Colonel Blimp
surveying his colonial projects: He has exchanged his pith helmet,
short britches and walking stick, for a combat helmet and boots, and has
limited his ‘reviews’ of the Empire to secure zones,
surrounded by an entourage of combat ready Leathernecks or mercenaries,
circling helicopter warships and super-vetted local military toadies.
Historical Fallacies
Even at its zenith of ‘global power’ during the 1940’s, 50’s and
60’s, US military performance was the least effective component of world
power. Two major wars, Korea and Indo-China, speak against Nye’s
formula. The US military failed to defeat the North Korean and Chinese
armies; Washington had to settle for a ‘compromise’. And the US was
militarily defeated and forced to withdraw from Indo-China. Success in
securing influence came afterwards, via economic investments and trade,
accompanied by political and cultural influences.
Today, Nye’s reliance on the superior military resources of the US to
project the continuance of the ‘American Century’ rests on very shakey
historical foundations.
Nye’s Military Metaphysics as Crackpot Realism
The US has declined as a world power because of its ‘military pivot’ –
following Nye’s military metaphysics and ‘soft power’ psychobabble. In
every practical situation, where the US attempted to secure its
dominance by relying on its superior ‘military capacity’ against its
competitors’ reliance on economic and political resources, Washington
has lost.
China has set in motion the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank
(AIIB) – with an initial offering of $50 billion dollars. The US is
staunchly opposed to the AIIB because it clearly represents an
alternative to the US-dominated International Monetary Fund (IMF).
Despite Washington’s pressure to reject membership, its ‘allies’, led by
the UK and followed by all major powers (except Japan for now), have
applied for membership. Even Israel has joined!
Washington sought to convince leading ‘emerging economies’ to accept
US-centered economic integration; but instead, Brazil, Russia, India,
China and South Africa (the BRICS) founded the BRICS’ bank.
The US engineered the overthrow of the elected government in the
Ukraine, and set up a puppet regime to incorporate it as a NATO client
and military platform on Russia’s border. Instead, the Ukraine turned
into an economic basket case, run by kleptocratic oligarchs, defended by
openly neo-Nazi brigades and incapable of defeating federal autonomist
rebels in the industrialized east.
The US and the EU imposed economic sanctions on Russia and federal
autonomist rebels of the Donbass in Eastern Ukraine. This has become
another example of projecting political power to enlarge the scope of
military operations at the cost of devastating losses in trade and
investment, between Moscow and the European Union, not to speak of the
Ukraine – whose economy was dependent on trade with Russia.
The decline of US world power is, in part, a result of the dynamism
and economic growth of emerging powers such as China and the relative
decline of US market shares and inferior rates of growth.
Nye, in one of his more egregiously foolish efforts to puff up US
economic superiority and to downgrade China’s economic rise, argues that
China’s growth rate is ‘likely to slow in the future’. Dear
Joe… don’t you know that a Chinese ‘slow down’ from double digit growth
to 7 percent is still triple the rate of growth of the US today and for
the foreseeable future?
Moreover China’s balanced economy, between production and finance, is
less crisis-prone than the lopsided growth of the corrupt US financial
sector. Nye’s economic calculus ignores the qualitative, as well as
quantitative, dimensions of economic power.
Conclusion
The intellectual value of Joseph Nye’s writings would not merit
serious consideration except for the fact that they have a deep and
abiding influence on US foreign policy. Nye is an ardent advocate of
empire building and his arguments and prescriptions carry weight in the
White House and Pentagon. His normative bias and his love of empire
building blinds him to objective realties. The fact that he is a failed
policy advisor, who refuses to acknowledge defeats, decline and
destruction resulting from his world view, has not lessened the
dangerous nature of his current views.
Nye’s attempt to justify his vision of continuing US world supremacy
has led him to blame his critics. In his latest book, he rants that
predictions of US decline are ‘dangerous’ because they could encourage
countries such as China to pursue more aggressive policies. In other
words, Nye having failed, through logic and facts, to sustain his
assertions against his better-informed critics, questions their loyalty –
evoking a McCarthyite specter of intellectuals critical of US global
power…stabbing the country in the back.
Nye tries to deflect attention from the fragile material foundations
of US power to disembodied ‘perceptions’. According to Nye, it’s all
perceptions’ (or illusions!): if the world leaders and public believe
that ‘the American century is set to continue for many decades’,
that faith will, in itself, help to sustain America’s superiority!
Nye’s fit of irrationality, his reliance on Harry Houdini style of
political analysis (‘Now you see US global power, now you don’t!) is unlikely to convince any serious analyst beyond the halls of the Pentagon and Harvard University’s John F Kennedy School.
What matters is that the US, while it is a declining world power, is
still militarily powerful, dangerous and destructive, even as its empire
building is weakening and its forces are in retreat. As Mahatma Gandhi
once stated about the declining British Empire, ‘It’s the aging tiger that becomes the man eater’.
As an alternative, we can
follow two lines of inquiry: One is to question the entire imperial
enterprise and to focus on our return to republican values and domestic
social and democratic reconstruction. That is a necessary, but
prolonged struggle, under present circumstances. In the meantime, we
can pursue policies that emphasize the importance of shifting from
destructive military expansionism toward constructive economic
engagements, flexible cooperation with emerging competitors, and
diplomatic agreements with adversaries. Contrary to Nye’s assertions,
militarism and economic expansion are not compatible. Wars destroy
markets and occupations provoke resistance, which frighten investors.
‘Soft power’ and NGO’s that rely on manipulation, lies and demonization
of critics gain few adherents and multiple adversaries.
The US should increase its ties and co-operation with BRICS and
China’s AIIB. It should reach out to sign trade deals with Iran, Syria
and Lebanon. It should cut off aid to Israel, because of it bellicose
posture toward the Arab East and its brutal colonization of Palestine.
Washington should end its support of violent coups and engage with
Venezuela. It should lift sanctions against Russia and East Ukraine and
propose joint economic ventures. By ending colonial wars, we can
increase economic growth and open markets. We should pursue economic
accommodation not military occupation. The former leads to prosperity,
the latter to destruction.
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