LCCC ENGLISH NEWS BULLETIN
October 30/06

 

 

Biblical Reading For today

Holy Gospel of Jesus Christ according to Saint Mark 10,46-52.
They came to Jericho. And as he was leaving Jericho with his disciples and a sizable crowd, Bartimaeus, a blind man, the son of Timaeus, sat by the roadside begging. On hearing that it was Jesus of Nazareth, he began to cry out and say, "Jesus, son of David, have pity on me." And many rebuked him, telling him to be silent. But he kept calling out all the more, "Son of David, have pity on me." Jesus stopped and said, "Call him." So they called the blind man, saying to him, "Take courage; get up, he is calling you." He threw aside his cloak, sprang up, and came to Jesus. Jesus said to him in reply, "What do you want me to do for you?" The blind man replied to him, "Master, I want to see." Jesus told him, "Go your way; your faith has saved you." Immediately he received his sight and followed him on the way.

 

 

Free Opinions & Studies

General Michel Aoun's Questionable Sincerity. By: Elias Bejjani !!World Forum - USA
Hezbollah Is Not a Charitable AssociationDar Al-Hayat

Latest New from the Daily Star for October 30/06
EU envoy pledges support for Siniora
Berri delays talks over key absences
Berlin confirms second incident with Israeli planes off coast of Lebanon
French make presence felt on border
Spanish UNIFIL troops begin rotation
Sunni leader denies plan to meet Khaddam during trip to France
UN vows answers on whether Israel used uranium munitions during summer war

Salameh touts health of commercial banks, downplays risk of defaults

Taamir youths seek amnesty ahead of army deployment
Bombed-out bridge claims 2 more lives

Don't antagonize a potentially nuclear Iran-By Reza Zia-Ebrahimi

Between Syria and Israel, a strategic breakthrough for peace is possible -By John K. Cooley

Cairo to host Hamas men for talks on swap

Syrian political prisoners launch hunger strike
Latest New from miscellaneous sources for October 30/
06

Mother, Baby Die in Destroyed Bekaa Bridge Plunge -Naharnet

US Official: Syria Plans Campaign to Topple Saniora Through Aoun ...Naharnet

Lebanon's Political Tensions Drag on as Dialogue Postponed-Naharnet

Lebanon speaker calls talks on feud-Gulf Times

Hezbollah demands more government power-Boston Globe

Talks among Lebanon's political groups on national unity ...International Herald Tribune

Iran, Syria discuss stabilizing Iraq-Washington Post

Solana in Beirut to Shore Up Support for Saniora's Government-Naharnet

US Jews approve of strike on Hezbollah-Deseret News-NEW YORK (AP)

Activist preaches to faithful in seeking Middle East peace-Contra Costa Times

Iran's FM brings message from Ahmadinejad to Syria-Jerusalem Post

Solana Pledges EU Support for Lebanon-Washington Post

Peacekeeping on Lebanon's 'Blue Line'-Kuwait Times

Lebanon hopes for stability so the once booming tourism industry ...International Herald Tribune

German defense minister to visit Israel and Lebanon-International Herald Tribune

Israel denies using uranium-enriched weapons in Lebanon-Israel Today

KRCS to dispatch the biggest aid convoy to Lebanon-Kuwait News Agency

EU tells Israel to stop its jets flying over Lebanon-Gulf Times

Syria calls for more active EU role in Mideast peace process-People's Daily Online

Between DC and Damascus-Ha'aretz

Syria president receives letter from Ahmadinejad on regional ...People's Daily Online

Kidnapped troops' families: Germans listened to us-Ynetnews

Germany confirms new Lebanon incident with Israel-Ynetnews

 

Lebanon's Political Tensions Drag on as Dialogue Postponed
Speaker Nabih Berri has postponed roundtable consultations on a national unity government for a week, ostensibly because three key members of the political elite are abroad. Berri told An Nahar that he preferred the presence of "first rank" leaders rather than representatives because talks among "second rank" politicians would slow the consultation process. The new date was set for Monday Nov. 6 after Druze leader Walid Jumblat, former President Amin Gemayel and Parliament's majority leader Saad Hariri have apologized from attending the session that was first scheduled for Monday Oct. 30 for travel obligations. Jumblat traveled to the United States on Saturday and will meet with top U.S. officials in Washington on Monday, the day the talks were first scheduled to begin.
An Nahar said Friday that Jumblat will meet during his visit to the U.S. with Vice President Dick Cheney, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and David Welch, Assistant Secretary of State for Near Eastern Affairs."Given previous engagements by some of the leaders and after consultations, it has been decided to postpone the talks to Monday Nov. 6 at 11 am in parliament to discuss the previously announced items on the agenda," said a statement released from Berri's office late Saturday. The speaker on Wednesday called for fresh talks across Lebanon's sectarian divide for consultations over a national unity government and reforming the country's electoral law. Those two issues are key demands of pro-Syrian Hizbullah, which fought a summer war with Israel, and Gen. Michel Aoun, the party's close political ally. Hizbullah chief Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah and Aoun have been recently calling for the resignation of Premier Fouad Saniora's government. They were among the top 14 leaders who took part in reconciliation talks, launched early March.
The thorny issue aimed at resolving Hizbullah's right to keep its weapons was last tackled by the pro and anti Syrian leaders before the discussions were adjourned late June. The outbreak of the Israel-Hizbullah war July 12 has prevented the resumption of the talks.
The speaker's postponement decision on Saturday came after the March 14 Forces announced they will join the roundtable consultations.
"We are going to take part in roundtable talks because we believe that the (current) tension overwhelming the country must be eliminated," said MP George Adwan, one of four members of the March 14 coalition entrusted by the anti-Syrian camp to meet Berri before coming out with a final decision on its participation. On Thursday, Hizbullah welcomed Berri's initiative and said it hoped that the meeting would lead to a solution to move Lebanon from its current political impasse. While Aoun did not give a final say in the resumption of the talks, he dubbed Berri's proposal as "positive" and said Saturday that he backed any form of dialogue that would solve the country's problems. Beirut, 29 Oct 06, 08:20


Hezbollah Is Not a Charitable Association
Abdullah Iskandar Al-Hayat - 29/10/06//
Perhaps nobody is ready in Lebanon to bet on the 'consultative body' that is supposed to start its meetings on Monday, after the exhortation made by Nabih Berry, Speaker of the Chamber of Deputies. Monday should be the day of the first session, that is, if it is not postponed at the last minute. This, in turn, would be due not only to the fact that the protagonists of the dispute will not attend these meetings, but also to the total loss of trust among the rivals, and the big gap between points of view and between the objects that these consultations are intended to achieve. And this would happen regardless of Berry's intentions and serious warnings, when he called for these talks.
It is clear that the issue regarding the government, its components and its program will draw most of the attention. Addressing the situation in Lebanon includes a discussion about Prime Minister Fouad Siniora, either positive or negative. According to Hezbollah, Aoun's party and their allies, PM Siniora represents absolute evil, and they even described him as a Hamid Karzai, and said that he is covering the project of striking Hezbollah and their weapons for the sake of Israel.
On the other hand, according to the March 14 forces, he does not neglect any components of the State, and he represents the defense of national sovereignty and the political resistance to the influence that previous forces, especially Syria, are trying to exercise on him.
Starting from these two evaluations, it is clear that Siniora's forte for his supporters, that is to say, his focus on State components inside, is his weak point for his opponents abroad. The conflict between these two functions that the government is called to implement is very much what complicates the relations between the two sides. Therefore, from this point of view, we can explain the demand for a change of government, on the one hand, and the fear for a political emptiness, on the other.
Hezbollah and its allies are demanding for this change, knowing that this government has a comfortably large majority in Parliament. Nevertheless, they believe that this majority, which originally resulted from an electoral alliance with Hezbollah and the Amal movement, lost its legitimacy when Hezbollah stopped trusting it, after the latter had disposed of the slogan which had governed this alliance, that is to say, the resistance. Moreover, they insist that the developments which followed the Israeli aggression last July, and international Resolution 1701, in which Siniora played an important role and which he achieved in a well-known way; aim to rob the resistance of its victory.
In other words, Hezbollah is saying that what is currently happening in Lebanon aims to prevent the translation of its success at the internal level. Therefore, this movement will do all it can, including popular mobilization, demonstrations, and sit-ins to impose the translation of its triumph at the internal level, and to correct the government's regional policy.
This dispute about harmony and the majority is being used as means in the battle, and not as a way to find solutions. Now, moving away from this, Hezbollah has at its disposal some cards to play at the Lebanese level, if a simple and obvious calculation is made. So far, it has not used these cards, because it has not been compelled to since its inception until the Syrian withdrawal. Additionally, the international and regional attention was reflected on Damascus and the Lebanese authorities, which weakens any of their influence on the local force.
In these calculations, Hezbollah represents the strongest military force in Lebanon, both for its weapons and for its organization. The army is one of its allies, and the Palestinian armed movements support it. This party also constitutes a big faction, if not the biggest in Lebanon, and it now has a certain financial relevance, something which only other groups used to have. The party, based on the Syrian support, is creating alliances, and is intruding into other confessions, especially the Maronites, through the 'card of the entente' with Aoun, its alliance with Soleiman Franjieh in the North, and with some Sunnite personalities who have been damaged by Siniora's centrality and, before this, by Rafik Hariri.
The internal card remains the most important and sensitive card for Hezbollah; and this is the fight against Israel. In fact, who resists the occupation and the enemy and wins is the one who uses its strength to impose the rules of the game in the internal political scene. This is the natural law of authority in every country that has witnessed liberation and resistance movements, regardless of their political regime.
This card becomes even more important because it is in line with Syria and Iran's regional calculations, knowing that these two countries, for various reasons and driving forces, are using all their influence to push for an internal political translation of the resistance against Israel. Unless Hezbollah is a charitable association for liberation that does not deal with politics, it finds itself in a position where it has the right to demand that the current government be dismantled, even if it has a parliamentary majority. Also, it has the right to replace this cabinet with one which allows it the right of decision-making

14 Year Old Assyrian Boy Decapitated By Muslim Group
GMT 10-29-2006 20:14:27
Assyrian International News Agency
To unsubscribe or set email news digest options, visit http://www.aina.org/mailinglist.html
(AINA) -- According to the Assyrian website ankawa.com, a 14 year old Christian Assyrian boy, Ayad Tariq, from Baqouba, Iraq was decapitated at his work place on October 21. Ayad Tariq was working his 12 hour shift, maintaining an electric generator, when a group of disguised Muslim insurgents walked in at the beginning of his shift shortly after 6 a.m. and asked him for his ID. According to another employee who witnessed the events, and who hid when he saw insurgents approach, the insurgents questioned Ayad after seeing that his ID stated "Christian", asking if he was truly a "Christian sinner." Ayad replied "yes, I am Christian but I am not a sinner." The insurgents quickly said this is a "dirty Christian sinner!" Then they proceeded to each hold one limb, shouting "Allahu akbar! Allahu akbar!" while beheading the boy.
Translated from Arabic by AINA
This item is available as: html
Copyright (C) 2006, Assyrian International News Agency. All Rights Reserved. Terms of Use.

Mother, Baby Die in Destroyed Bekaa Bridge Plunge
A young Lebanese mother and her one-year-old son were killed when their car plunged off a Bekaa Valley bridge that was badly damaged by Israeli bombardment during the summer war, police said Sunday. The father, who was at the wheel, and their five-year-old daughter were badly injured and taken to hospital at Taanayel, police added. An Israeli missile hit the bridge during the 34-day onslaught, creating a six-meter-deep crater in the middle of the span. The bridge is at Taanayel, a small village on the main Beirut-Damascus highway 10 kilometers from the Syrian border.
Since the war ended on August 14 at least five people have been killed in similar accidents. During the month-long conflict, 70 bridges in Lebanon were either destroyed or damaged in Israeli attacks. A massive program to rebuild the country's bridges is currently under way, funded mostly by private donations. Direct material damage to housing and infrastructure during the Israeli offensive has been put at 3.6 billion dollars.(AFP)
Beirut, 29 Oct 06, 11:57

Solana Voices Support for Saniora's Government
European Union Foreign Policy chief Javier Solana met on Saturday with Lebanese political leaders in an attempt to shore up support for Premier Fouad Saniora's beleaguered government. Solana, at a joint press conference with Saniora, voiced support for the Lebanese government and urged the implementation of the U.N. resolution that ended the Israel-Hizbullah war by all sides. He said, prior to his Lebanon visit, he informed the Israeli prime minister and defense minister that overflights of Israeli airspace must be stopped. The EU foreign policy chief is on a six-day swing through the Middle East to examine prospects for restarting stalled Israel-Palestinian peace talks and for stabilizing Lebanon in the wake of the recent Israel-Hizbullah war.
The one-day visit to Beirut was to send a strong message to Syria and its Lebanese allies that Europe, which is providing the bulk of a 7,000-strong U.N. peacekeeping force, wants to keep Saniora's moderate government in office. "We have real and important responsibilities in Lebanon" Solana said in Israel before heading to Lebanon. Behind closed doors EU officials were expected to voice concern over growing tensions between rival Lebanese factions, which threaten Saniora's fragile coalition. In the press conference, Saniora defended his government's performance during this summer's war with Israel, saying it had maintained national unity in the face of widespread devastation.
"This government is by itself a government that represents most of the political groups in the country" and it "has already demonstrated a high level of leadership in tackling most abuses," Saniora said. "This is the government that managed to preserve the unity of the Lebanese in the face of major attacks," he added.  On Saturday, Solana also met with Maj. Gen. Alain Pellegrini, leader of the U.N. peacekeeping force, to get an assessment on the U.N. mission in southern Lebanon and the U.N. force's relationship with the Israelis.
A U.N. official said Pellegrini urged Solana to pressure Israel to end its controversial overflights of Lebanon.
"(Pellegrini) complained about the overflights," UNIFIL spokesman Daljeet Bagga told reporters. "He asked Solana to pressure the Israelis."
Germany has alleged that Israeli jets this week fired in the air over a German naval vessel meant to protect other peacekeeping ships off the Lebanese coast.

The Israelis have denied shots were fired.
Solana also met with Nabih Berri and welcomed an initiative launched by the Lebanese speaker, calling for consultations between rival political factions in Lebanon - both pro- and anti-Syrian, Christian and Muslim. "We hope that the product of that dialogue will be a constructive one for the future of Lebanon," Solana said. Late Friday, the EU foreign policy chief held talks for the first time with the influential Maronite patriarch Cardinal Nasrallah Sfeir.
Notably absent from Solana's agenda was pro-Syrian Lebanese President Emile Lahoud. Solana's visit came as U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice stepped up the pressure on Hizbullah to disarm. Rice said in an interview aired Friday on the LBCI that Hizbullah should drop its armed struggle if it wants to continue playing a role in Lebanese politics. Tensions between rival political groups have risen in recent weeks, with Beirut witnessing a series of minor attacks, including a grenade fired from a rifle at a downtown building that houses a dance club.
The disarming of Hizbullah, a key international demand, has caused a tense internal struggle between the Saniora government and the Shiite party as Lebanese troops try to take control of Hizbullah's longtime stronghold in the south. Leaders failed to agree on the disarmament issue during talks in June.
The U.N.-brokered cease-fire that ended the Israel-Hizbullah confrontation called for Hizbullah to disarm.
But Hizbullah has refused to lay down its weapons. Neither the 15,000 Lebanese troops nor U.N. peacekeepers who are to patrol a buffer zone in the south have the mandate to take the weapons by force.


Solana left Beirut Saturday evening and arrived in Amman,

Jordan.(Naharnet-AP-AFP) Beirut, 28 Oct 06, 08:47
British Daily: High Radiation Level Samples Found After Israeli Bombing
Scientists studying samples of soil from Israeli bombardment craters in south Lebanon have shown high radiation levels, suggesting uranium-based munitions were used, a British newspaper reported Saturday. The samples were taken from two bomb craters in Khiam and At-Tiri and have been sent for further analysis to the Harwell laboratory in Oxfordshire, southern England, for mass spectrometry used by the Ministry of Defense, The Independent said. The samples thrown up by Israeli heavy or guided bombs showed "elevated radiation signatures," Chris Busby, the British scientific secretary of the European Committee on Radiation Risk, was quoted as saying. Britain's Ministry of Defense has confirmed the concentration of uranium isotopes in the samples, the newspaper said. In his initial report, Busby said there were two possible reasons for the contamination.
"The first is that the weapon was some novel small experimental nuclear fission device or experimental weapon (ex. a thermobaric weapon) based on the high temperature of a uranium oxidation flash," it said. "The second is that the weapon was a bunker-busting conventional uranium penetrator weapon employing enriched uranium rather than depleted uranium," Busby was quoted as saying. A photograph of the explosion of the first bomb shows large clouds of black smoke that might result from burning uranium, the newspaper said. The U.N., which has been studying the ecological damage in Lebanon caused by the war, said Saturday it would soon be able to say whether uranium-based munitions were used.
"If there is uranium we will find it," said Boutros al-Harb, director of the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) for Asia and the Middle East, based in Bahrain. Harb said he could not immediately confirm the claims of high radiation levels. "The analysis of samples taken by our munitions experts is being done in a laboratory at Spitz in Switzerland. I am not able today to confirm nor rule out the presence of uranium," Harb told Agence France Presse by telephone from Bahrain. The 34-day Israeli offensive on Lebanon left at least 1,287 people, nearly all civilians, dead and 4,054 wounded.(AFP-Naharnet) Beirut, 28 Oct 06, 08:06

 

Muslim women are the key to change
The Sunday Times - Review - October 29, 2006
Ayaan Hirsi Ali lives under a death threat for daring to challenge the Islamic patriarchy and says the West must support women like her if it wants to spread freedom
Ideas can be dangerous. I have learnt that the hard way. But I know that when it comes to freedom and human rights these precious ideas, so valued in the West, are worth fighting for. As a young Muslim woman, born in Somalia, I abandoned my family to avoid an arranged marriage to a distant cousin and fled to Holland. I was just 23 and I had no idea back then that my refusal to submit to a traditional Muslim woman’s life would come to dominate my whole career.
So for me, the debate that is raging about the veil, particularly the niqab, which covers most of the woman’s face save for the eyes, goes to the very heart of the matter of liberty for Islamic women. Not just freedom for its own sake, but from a life of repression, subordination and violence.
Last week, for example, a senior Muslim cleric in Australia alluded in a sermon to unveiled women as “uncovered meat”. Sheikh Taj El Din al-Hilaly’s remarks prompted outrage, but he will have many faithful followers who agree with him.
Such insults to women are all the more reason to welcome the recent stand by Jack Straw and Tony Blair on the niqab. Not only is it a “visible mark of separation” as Straw described it, but also a visible sign of subjugation. At the same time it serves to condemn the male as well. If I were a man I would find it insulting because it supposes that all men are incapable of sexual self-restraint.
Like Straw I have also drawn on my experience of dealing with constituents. I served three years as an MP in the Dutch parliament, devoting myself to speaking out about female rights in Islamic societies. I often had to translate for poor women immigrants who were usually barely educated and nearly always in thrall to men.
In Islamic societies the veil functions as a constant reminder to the outside world of a stifling morality that makes a Muslim man’s honour entirely dependent on the respectable, obedient behaviour of the female members of his family.
I am living proof that Muslim women in the West can only benefit from turning away from the principles in their faith that justify subordination and embracing those of liberty in their host cultures. But there is a high price for urging Muslims to examine their beliefs. I have received death threats for becoming an infidel and two years ago the airing of a film about the oppression of women which I made with the director Theo van Gogh resulted in his murder by an Islamic terrorist.
The arguments for and against the veil will rage on, but what increasingly alarms me is the emergence of a post 9/11 generation of young women in the West who are out to make a statement by wearing the niqab. They enjoy all the western freedoms but choose to flaunt the veil. They are the female equivalent of the radical young men who travel to Pakistan and come back wanting to blow up trains.
Such men see themselves as companions of the prophet and they are “high” on religion. Both groups have completely succumbed to totalitarian seduction; they are the worst enemies of Islam, both to its image and to its chances of reformation.
The existence of this noisy female minority, many of them wealthy and educated, hides the fact that there are thousands of poorer women in Europe and millions across the Muslim world who have no voice and no choice. They are punished and threatened for daring to follow a different path.
In my book The Caged Virgin (Simon & Schuster) I tell the story of my friend Samira Ahmed, a 24-year-old girlishly pretty woman with a smile that seduces even the gloomiest of faces. Born to a family who left Morocco in the early 1980s and settled in the Netherlands, she is one of 10 children.
In the summer of 2005 I attended her graduation ceremony in Amsterdam where she received a diploma in education and a record 10 score (the highest possible) for her thesis. But behind the celebration lay tragedy. When I arrived for her graduation I noticed the happy class, a total of 35 students, gathered in clusters around coffee stands. Family and friends accompanied the students, chatting, carrying gifts and flowers. But not for Samira: no one from her family showed up.
Two years earlier Samira had had to sneak away from home because she wanted to live in a student house like her other friends. At home she had shared a bedroom with her siblings and every move she made was monitored by her mother and sisters; outside the house her brothers kept watch. They all wanted to ensure that she would not become westernised.
Samira had endured terrible physical and psychological violence at home. Her family always had a pretext to question her, go through her stuff and forbid her from setting foot outside the house. She was beaten frequently. She could bear it no longer and left.
Soon afterwards, in the summer of 2003, she got in touch with me. I went with her to the police to file a complaint against her brothers, who had threatened to murder her. According to them Samira’s death was the only way to avenge the shame she had brought upon the family for leaving their parents’ house. The police said they could do nothing. They said there were thousands of other women like her and it was not the police’s duty to intervene in family matters.
Ever since she left Samira has been in hiding, moving from house to house and depending on the kindness of strangers. Mostly she is brave and faces life with a powerful optimism. Sometimes, however, she has a sad, drawn look on her face that betrays her worries.
Today, on her graduation day, she is glowing, clutching her diploma. Her worries are far from over, though. She has no money; she has to find a job — and with her Moroccan name that will be far from easy. She also lives in fear of being discovered by her brothers and slaughtered. This is no joke, for in just two police regions in Holland 11 Muslim girls were killed by their families in a year.
It is women like Samira who politicians need to target because they hold the key to the future. They are going to become mothers and they are going to be the mothers of sons. We need to focus on them in order to prevent the next generation falling into the trap of the jihadist’s promise.
To my mind there are three categories of Muslim women living in the European Union who we need to reach. First, there are girls like Samira, intelligent and willing to take a chance on shaping their individual futures along a path they choose for themselves. They face many obstacles as they try to assimilate in western society and some may lose their lives trying to attain their dreams.
Second, there are girls and women who are very dependent and attached to their families but who cleverly forge a way to lead a double life. Instead of confronting their families and arguing about their adherence to custom and religion, these girls use a more tactful approach. When with family (in the broadest sense of the word, which also includes their community) they put on their headscarves and at home obey every whim of their parents and menfolk.
Outside the home, however, they lead the life of an average western woman: they have a job, dress fashionably, have a boyfriend, drink alcohol, attend cocktail parties and even manage to travel away from home.
The third group are the utterly vulnerable. Some of these girls are imported as brides or domestic workers from the country of origin of the immigrants with whom they come to live. These girls are removed from school once they attain puberty and locked up at home. Their families get away with this form of modern slavery because the authorities rarely take notice of these young women.
The girls have often been brought up to be absolutely obedient; they perform household chores in the house of their parents or husband without question. They can hardly read or write.
When they marry they generally bear as many children as their individual fertility allows. When they miscarry most of them view this as God’s will, not as a lack of proper healthcare which they are usually prevented from seeking for religious reasons.
When a woman in this subjugated state is violently abused by husband, brother or father, she considers it her own fault and promises to behave better in the future.
Some abused women may be tempted to rebel by running away or informing the authorities when their life becomes too painful. Those who act on such a temptation are likely to be killed by their own family or husband, or end up in prostitution or in women’s shelters. Some who have shown signs of rebellion are lured back to their country of origin by parents or husbands and simply dumped there.
For a while now I have been asserting that the most effective way for EU governments to deal with their Muslim minorities is to empower the Muslim women living within their borders.
The best tool for that is education. Yet the education systems of some EU countries are going through a crisis of neglect, particularly with regard to immigrant children. And in the matter of faith schools we are now paying the price of mixing education with ideology.
I think religion is taking up far too much time, attention and space in our society. Blair needs to look at the segregation of boys and girls and ask himself why young girls in primary schools are veiled. Are we saying that five and six-year-olds are sexual symbols, “uncovered meat”? As a society we must understand that saving young girls from all kinds of repression is important. Many are removed from school when they reach puberty, often when they start to behave like British teenagers. That is the precise moment when teachers, mentors and feminists need to identify those girls at risk, those who want to be emancipated and who face the risk of forced marriages and violence.
We want women like Samira to choose the career they want, the number of children they want and the husbands they want. We want them to be free. Girls like her need our help so badly.
***Ayaan Hirsi Ali is a research fellow at the Washington think tank American Enterprise Institute

 

The U.N. and Death of Internationalism
Posted by: lex on http://PEJ.org S

aturday, October 28, 2006 - 10:34 AM

The U.N. and Death of Internationalism

SP - One’s opinion of the United Nations reveals a lot about political consciousness; and because perception is usually based on experience, it’s only natural that people from  different countries have opposing views about the UN and its pillar institutions— the International Monetary Fund (IMF), World Bank, and the World Trade Organization (WTO). 

www.socialistperspectives.com

 In the United States, familiarity of the UN is limited to vague notions of ‘international democracy’ and ‘peacekeeping’, words that inspire the noblest of intentions; the World Bank and IMF on the other hand are institutions that invoke little reaction among the US public.  How and by whom the UN was formed, whose interests it serves, and the actual history of its ‘peacekeeping’ missions are all things rarely examined.  It is the purpose of this essay to look at the formation and development of the UN, and in so doing, attempt to show the evolution of the capitalistic system itself, which was ‘reborn’ upon the back of these hardly-neutral organizations.

It’s impossible to understand the United Nations without first studying the buried corpse it was built over—the League of Nations.  After World War I, the victorious allies sought to enrich themselves at the expense of the losers through the Treaty of Versailles.  Afterwards, the victors consolidated their power by the giant political pact of the League of Nations.  Although the League was first articulated by Woodrow Wilson’s propaganda spiel ‘Fourteen Points’, the United States refused to ratify it, opting for the later-proven strategy of isolationism.  Wilson’s Fourteen Points was an attempt to explain the fundamental problems that lead to World War I. It was understood that the economic interests of different nations lead eventually to trade-based alliances, trading blocs, eventually finding expression in military pacts and warfare.  This is why Wilson, in his third point, called for the “removal of economic barriers between nations”.   

The League of Nations was riddled with problems unsolved from World War I.  Instead of breaking down trade-barriers, the war created 17 new ones— the number of nations that emerged from the disbanded Ottoman and Austro-Hungarian empires.  Germany, instead of being crushed, still retained a mighty industrial-backbone, which, like all industrial nations, would eventually seek markets and raw-materials from outside its boarders, threatening the interests of France and England.  Nothing could be done about the fact that there were various powerful nations co-existing that, having similar levels of military and industrial might, would continue to collide with the ‘regional interests’ of other nations; WWI had in fact exasperated this problem by reducing England’s power while raising the US’.  

After ten years of the League’s existence the above weaknesses started to expose themselves. In response to the worldwide recession of the 1930’s, the great powers formed regional trading-blocs with the countries they had influence over; the U.S., Japan, England, France, and Germany were all masters of their respective zones. These trading blocs were the natural response of the powerful nations to the problems of global recession, since their domestic industries became protected from the competition of the other powers. Ultimately, the trading blocs worsened the conflagration, the crisis deepened, and trade partners turned into military allies.

Before the above problems fully manifested themselves, the League was able to be of some worth in promoting commerce and preventing warfare.  The collapse of the Austrian economy was prevented, territorial disputes between Finland and Sweden were resolved, and war between Greece and Bulgaria was averted; the economic and military might of the League proved a successful deterrent to the ‘excesses’ of smaller countries— it was the stronger nations that would prove impossible to control. 

The League’s utopian goal of ‘world peace’ was brightly displayed at the International Disarmament Conference of 1932.  As it turned out, the different countries of the world thought it to be in their ‘national interest’ to maintain a large military; the domestic steel and war manufacturers enjoyed the business in producing arms, while the commodity-producers appreciated the open markets that the weapons allowed them.  Much of the conference was aimed at pressuring Germany to dismantle its military; however, Germany cleverly demanded that the other nations disarm to its level— once this demand was rejected, and the hypocrisy was exposed, the nation now under Hitler was given the pretext for dropping out of the League in 1933, returning to the expansionist program demanded by its profit-seeking corporations.   

The initial decline of the League of Nations began with France’s military occupation of Germany in 1923.  The League was unable to convince France to drop the plan, who justified the adventure as a debt-collecting mission.  Although this event showcased the League’s powerlessness, larger problems loomed.  Japan used an alleged terrorist attack as a pretext for an invasion of Manchuria; China pleaded for the League’s intervention, but Japan rejected negotiations and the belligerency was accepted.  Japan, viewing the League purely as a nuisance, rescinded its membership in 1933, freeing itself to pursue its expansionist ambitions. 

The most blatant example of the League’s incompetence occurred when Italy invaded Ethiopia in 1935.  While Italy was ravaging the country— based on an obviously false pretext— Ethiopia’s head of state Haile Selassie gave the following plea to the League of Nations:

“…And in that unequal struggle between a Government commanding more than forty-two million inhabitants, having at its disposal financial, industrial and technical means which enabled it to create unlimited quantities of the most death-dealing weapons, and, on the other hand, a small people of twelve million inhabitants, without arms, without resources having on its side only the justice of its own cause and the promise of the League of Nations.”

Selassie accurately predicted that if no assistance was given to Ethiopia, the League of Nations would lose all credibility and eventually collapse.  The League’s collapse was hastened by Japan’s continued belligerence, military aggression and appeasement of Hitler, and the Spanish Civil War— in short, World War II. 

 The UN

The term ‘United Nations’ was first used to describe the military allies united against the ‘Axis Powers’ during WWII; and like the League of Nations before it, this would be how the present-day UN was formed—yet another ‘victor’s spoil’ approach.  Before WWII had even ended, the western powers— the U.S., France, and England— had already agreed on a post-war arrangement of the colonial world: each would retain control over their colonies and regions of influence.  It was only later that all the winners of the war, including Russia, China, and Eastern Europe, were allowed to take part in dividing the pie.  

After WWII, international commerce was essentially destroyed; capitalism, for good or bad, had grounded to a halt.  Resurrecting this failed system was the goal of the United Nations immediately after the war. The foundation for the new global-economic arrangement was erected at the now-infamous Breton Woods conference, where the institutions that would oversee capitalism’s development— the World Bank, International Monetary Fund (IMF), and the General Agreements on Tariffs and Trade (GATT) — came into existence.  These organizations determine how the global economic system works and who it works for.

The new arrangement was to begin where the old system had left off, meaning, that the U.S. had a tremendous economic, industrial, and military advantage over the rest of the western world— a power it intended to exploit.  During the Breton Woods ‘negotiations’, the famed British economist John Maynard Keynes tried to inject his more-democratic vision of capitalism into the new framework (something that would benefit Britain), but was brushed aside by the harsh realities of monopoly and power wielded by the US. The United States awarded itself power unknown in the history of civilization— it would have the final say over the institutions that ran the global economic system, and be responsible in providing the military means to maintain the new arrangement. 

If the newly-formed UN had learned one thing from WWII, it was merely a rehashing of last war’s lesson: trade restrictions ruin international peace. Therefore, ‘free trade’ was the catchphrase for the new system. Central to a smooth-running system of commerce are stable exchange rates— the lack of these is also considered one of the causes of WWII, since trade and investment becomes uncontrollable and risky without them.  Because of the US’ complete dominance in the financial sphere, the dollar was able to act as the stabilizing currency for the whole world. 

Free trade however, was not meant to be equal trade.   The winners of the war made sure that they had power over the other nations in the world.  To this day, the main allied victors of WWII retain their institutionalized advantages within the UN— the best example being Security Council membership. The Security Council is the one organ of the UN that has the power to make decisions that all other governments must abide by; this monopoly of international power is shared by China, France, Russia, England, and the U.S.  To make the Security Council as Democratic as possible, each member was given a veto for every decision— a policy that insures that the powerful nations are in consensus in pursuing a joint interest. In this way, the Security Council functions as an arbiter between the big powers. Problems arise however, when a veto is used, and a member decides to act alone; the UN becomes powerless.  

To insure that this powerful group’s domination was not limited to decrees, the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty was created, which declares that only Security Council members shall have access to nuclear weapons.  This treaty, which has been ignored by India, Pakistan, Israel, and North Korea, is being used as a pretext for an increase in hostilities with both Iran and North Korea.

 The World Bank

Each of the institutions created at Breton Woods have numerous loopholes that create favorable conditions for the industrial countries while maintaining de-facto colonial status for the poorer nations.  Understanding these contradictions to ‘world peace’ and ‘the elimination of poverty’ are essential in grasping the true mission of the United Nations. 

Nobody benefits from the UN institutions like the corporations and banks of the industrial nations, who, through debt, protectionism, subsidies, and the advantage of technology, wield an unbreakable advantage over the poorer nations.  Contrary to the mission statement of the UN organizations, the last thing anybody wanted was for the non-developed countries to develop— this would mean industrial competition, not to mention a complete lack of economic and political leverage.  

Although the World Bank was an official product of the UN, its actual workings are controlled by different nations, with the behind-the-scenes corporations having the final say on matters. Like the rest of the UN institutions, the World Bank is slated to benefit the wealthy nations at the cost of the poorer. This is done at the World Bank by methods of membership and voting rules, where the number of votes is given to the nations who have the most shares— much like how a corporation is run.  The U.S., having the largest economy in the world, has the loudest voice in decision making.  With nearly 17% of the international vote, and with an 85% majority needed in each decision, the U.S. has absolute veto power over every major decision.  In this clever accounting method, the World Bank is assured to be dominated by the largest, wealthiest nations. 

Originally, the World Bank played a progressive role, helping to rebuild a shattered Europe. Its first loan, 250 million dollars to France, was the beginning of a global plan to rebuild the industrial nations with the purpose of resuming international trade.  U.S. corporations needed markets for their goods, and thus encouraged the re-growth of Europe and Japan out of self-interest.  Loans were made to build infrastructure, power-plants, factories— all the necessities for a nation to become fully developed and independent.  Once Europe was stabilized, the World Bank turned its attention to the third-world, where it would drastically change its mission, becoming a usurer rather than a developer.    

One of the ways that the World Bank produces and maintains inequality is by the nature of the loans it makes.  Lender countries demand that their loans be repaid in the same currency it was lent; this means that borrower countries, whose currencies are always worth a fraction of the developed countries, must sell much more than they buy.  It is often the case that more loans are needed to repay previous ones, evolving into the all too familiar pattern of poverty inherit in the World Bank system.  Debt is a powerful tool, enabling the lender nation’s cheap access to the raw materials, markets, and privatization contracts of the debtor nations. This relationship has been a fundamental tactic in maintaining de-facto colonial status for the third world.   

 IMF

In response to the exchange-rate problem that helped accelerate WWII, the IMF (International Monetary Fund) was created.  The basis for the new international exchange system was to revolve around the U.S. dollar, which, because of its tremendous superiority, could serve as the world’s reserve currency— pegged to gold at 35 dollars an ounce. The IMF is responsible for the general supervision of the capitalist system, providing insight into troubled areas, alerting nations to possible systemic problems, and offering remedies.

Managing the flow of currencies, and providing financing to counteract ‘balance of payments’ issues were also the primary functions of the IMF upon its inception.  As the system of global commerce grew and became more complex, the job of the IMF increased in difficulty, especially when its sound economic advice started being ignored by the powerful nations. 

 GATT 

The formation of GATT was also seen as a response to a harsh lesson learned by WWII. GATT was the organizational embodiment of the demand for free-trade.  Instead of trading blocs, where certain regions would be the sole beneficiary of low tariffs, multi-lateral (all nations) treaties were seen as instrumental to promoting world trade and preventing war. The trade talks would be consensus-based, with the premise that small sacrifices in certain areas would benefit the system as a whole.

GATT, like the World Bank and IMF, also benefits industrial nations at the expense of all the others.  Third-world nations do not have the machinery that lowers the costs of their domestic products (most importantly agriculture) while lacking the infrastructure and capital to produce ‘high-value’ goods that bring wealth to a nation. When a country lowers its import-tariffs— a typical demand of GATT — cheaper products from developed nations invade the country, destroying the domestic industry.  Although GATT was rightfully seen as essential to promoting the new economic system, the context it worked under— that of rich nations and poor nations— would automatically help sustain an international relationship of inequality and perpetual poverty. 

Every round of trade talks until recently has resulted in international agreements on different issues of trade, lowering the barriers in-between nations.  The evolution of GATT into its current, monstrous form (the WTO) is symbolic of the international expansion of capitalism and its need of institutions that encourage its basic tendency— growth. 

 The Cold War

Soon after its inception, the UN found itself in a precarious position. Because it was a system that concerned itself primarily with the upkeep of international capitalism, the very existence of the U.S.S.R— and soon China— was considered a threat.  To be sure, having the U.S.S.R on the Security Council would prove to be a major hindrance for the industrial nations (the U.S.S.R used most of its 122 UN vetoes during the early years of the UN).  The irreconcilableness of the conflicting economic systems soon manifested into the Korean War, where the once colonized nation of Korea— after shedding off the shackles of the Japanese— found itself caught between the interests of two superpowers. The Korean War was the United Nations’ first war mobilization effort, the primary goal of which was to prevent the birth of another so-called communist country. In Korea, this involved the immense repression of popular movements for independence and the slaughter of countless people dedicated against foreign intervention and occupation.

After the destruction and partition of Korea, the battle between the two systems – private and state-owned production— would express itself in the Western world as the ‘fight against communism’.  This was a euphemism referring to the process of military intervention needed to keep foreign markets open, and consequently, third-world nations subservient to the western powers.  The other industrial nations approved of the U.S. acting as capitalism’s policeman, since they benefited also from the commercial exploitation of the targeted countries; this policing duty required the US to spend the now-familiar billions on its military, resulting in a nearly-perpetual state of military intervention and warfare.    

Although the economic base of the U.S.S.R and the 1st world nations were in conflict, the intentions of the political leadership of both systems— maintaining their respective existence and privileges— allowed for compromise and cooperation.  Aside from all its inflammatory rhetoric, the western world depended on the U.S.S.R and China for their work in squashing potential revolutions— a phenomenon that would arouse the repressed people of both systems, therefore acting as an equal threat. For fifty years the social fury voiced in various European nations was funneled into the dead-end Communist parties that took orders from the U.S.S.R.  Every time a Communist party of a particular nation gained influence, it either led its constituency to dull reformism or physically crushed the rising movements, inevitably resulting in the generational mood of failure and disillusionment that still exists today.  This remarkable service performed by the U.S.S.R would soon be sorely missed by the West, who now had no substantial buffer to the social outrages that capitalism produces.      

The all-encompassing ‘fight against communism’ became the UN’s pretext for destroying national independence movements. Any national leader who sought to distance himself from the international finance oligarchy was labeled a communist and taken action against. The United Nations’ first peacekeeping mission is exemplary of the actual intentions of this nefarious organization, setting an unfortunate precedent for future military interventions. 

In 1960, the United Nations entered the Congo at the request of Patriace Lumumba, the Congo’s first democratically elected Prime Minister— often hailed as the founder of ‘pan-Africanism’, a philosophy of African unity that was born in response to centuries of colonial abuse. Lumumba’s rhetoric was based around opposition to the greater powers, and working towards satisfying the needs of Africans rather than the interest of international capital.  In response, Belgium, the local colonial power, after accusing Lumumba of being a communist, financed an opposition movement within the Congo that postured as a local independence movement.  Lumumba naively pleaded to the UN to help suppress the obviously illegal actions of Belgium and its puppet militia.  Seeing Lumumba as the bigger threat, UN ‘Peacekeepers’ stood by and watched as he was kidnapped and murdered by the Belgian-financed opposition group.  To this day, Lumumba is representative of many revered nationalistic leaders who were slain under the watchful eye of the international community (Belgium has since apologized for their role in the fiasco).  

The above events of the Congo have evolved into a finely tuned strategy of western domination, with the UN functioning nicely as a legal cover.  The pattern is simple: if any third-world nation strays from the path set by international finance, a variety of measures will be taken against it until a new government favorable to western interests is in place.  The methods used to achieve this are numerous:  The World Bank and IMF might withdraw financing; the UN may publicly denounce the new leadership; a ‘rebel’ group financed by an industrial nation may declare war on the existing government; a military coup might take place; a neighboring puppet-nation may invade— all these methods, and many more, have been used all over the world to destroy movements deemed threatening to the overall health of the world capitalist system. The UN has played an all-important role in these workings, either through the often-repressive missions of its ‘peacekeepers’, Security Council decisions, or, as often is the case, complete inaction in the face of repression and atrocity.

 Problems of the UN

Many of the UN’s high ambitions have proven to be unachievable, not to mention contradiction-ridden and short-sighted.  The best example of delusional thinking lies in the UN’s supposed primary goal of world peace.  Although the UN system has employed many intelligent people in order to prevent the big-powers from colliding in the economic sphere, such accidents are inevitable. Capitalism is a system in constant motion, where wealth is transferred from country to country, falling into the pockets of different corporations who wield differing levels of government control and military capability. 

The stability of the UN system was insured as long as the original arrangement, with the U.S. as international banker and policeman, remained stable; it also presupposed that the level of power shared by the industrial nations did not change, so that an agreed upon share of third-world exploitation could continue.  The above, rigid structure worked as long as it resulted in continued growth for the big countries while the smaller countries continued their submissiveness, with everybody else accepting their proper place.   This is obviously no longer the case.  As a result of the natural processes of capitalism, different nations have risen, some have fallen, with the latter desperately holding on to their systematized advantages.  A ‘breaking point’ has indeed been reached, with an epidemic of war and international tension unseen since the 30’s. 

Another difficulty of the UN is its claim that the growth of commerce in general is good for the world at large.  It is the duty of the International Labor Organization (ILO) to insure that the prosperity of the average worker is not overlooked during the mad dash for profits. The ILO is yet another relic from the defunct League of Nations, and has proven itself to be equally useless.  To the dismay of billions of people across the globe, the pillar institutions of the UN have found that really cheap labor is good for international business. In response, the ILO creates reports, holds a yearly conference, and has even won the Nobel Prize; its true effectiveness however, is known to most.  The WTO successively demanded that the ILO reduce the scope of its workings, making its mission statement vague enough so that any corporation could skirt its mandates.  In the countries where international investment is highest, so is wage-slavery— a term that is in no way an exaggeration to the majority of the earth’s population.    

The above two discrepancies of the UN charter became more acute when the new economic arrangement experienced its first recession; the perfectly planned institutions   of the UN started to show their faults, and a downward spiral of international relations began— a process that continues today in a more dangerous and critical state.    

 1971

The problems inherent in the post-war arrangement fully expressed themselves in 1971, the year Nixon ‘shocked’ the world by dismantling the foundation of the Breton Woods agreement. The global system of exchange-rates, based on the dollar’s convertibility to gold, was erased. 

To this day there are those who blame Nixon for screwing with the world’s economy and creating the financial chaos that continues today.  Contrary to popular belief, it was a move that could no longer be avoided. The global political arrangement, though successful for decades, had become completely unsustainable.  Decades of world military-policing had shrunken the U.S.’ economic dominance, to the point where there were more dollars floating around the world than gold in its banks. The debts couldn’t be paid: the dollar was overpriced.  

Another unintended consequence of the post-war arrangement was the emergence of the European and Japanese economies as competitors of the United States, both in commodities and currencies.  The U.S.’ total economic dominance had clearly ended, and with it, the ability to serve as the world’s stabilizing currency and central banker; the unwavering hand that controlled the ‘free market’ started to tremble.   

Nixon’s maneuver marked the end of not only stable exchange-rates, but also the largest economic expansion of capitalism’s history.  The western nations, after successfully integrating the productive powers of the assembly line, would never again see such tremendous growth rates. The countries dominating UN policy found themselves having to adjust to the new circumstances, and did so by a variety of methods. Floating exchange-rates were adopted, making the economic system more flexible, but also more volatile and reactionary.  To compensate for this, the UN institutions started changing their policies, trying to adjust to the lack of stability by tightening the screws in the developing nations.  The UN, both economically and militarily, became more predatory.  

 Modern UN Policy

In any critique of recent World Bank or IMF policy, the term ‘neoliberalism’ invariably comes up; the word is often negative, portrayed as a thoughtless strategy that has failed in its mission and in need of replacement.  Neo-liberalism however, is merely an extension of the founding principles of the UN, albeit under more desperate circumstances.  The term can be summed up briefly: no restrictions on the movement and growth of capital. This is nothing new, and is in fact the basis of the ‘free trade’ ideal that the Breton Woods conference was founded on.  Because the world economy was never able to fully recuperate after the recession of the early 70’s, and the growth rates of nearly every country had steadily fallen, the protectors of the capitalist system have intensified their pursuit of profits by demanding that free-trade and other commerce-aiding policies be injected into every crevice of the globe; the frantic drive of this process took on a new character, requiring a new name: neoliberalism. 

Included in neoliberal policy is the maddened drive in attacking the wages, benefits, and general conditions of workers. Much of capitalism’s meager growth in the last twenty years is based on the siphoning of wealth from workers; this is why we see stocks rise when giant transnationals have announced a giant lay-off or wage reduction plan; this is also why ‘outsourcing’ exists in the first place— growth rates have stunted and investors are demanding returns, finding them only where labor can be purchased for peanuts.  During the previous era’s gigantic expansion, concessions could be made to workers, however, the boundaries of the nation-state proved too small for the stockpiles of cash that needed investment— corporations demanded the freedom to roam internationally to pursue returns.  Lowering national boundaries, as well as restrictive laws on corporations, are necessary policies if capitalism is to be continued. Therefore, the UN institutions have likewise encouraged the free-reign of capital, helping whenever they can in lowering the boundaries of foreign nations to accept injections of wealth from the wealthy countries.   

The IMF, whose mission it was to oversee exchange rates, suddenly found itself irrelevant in the face of the abandoned U.S. gold-standard. In order to avoid being an anachronism, it gathered its economists together, brainstormed, and amended its constitution.  The new IMF would have broader, farther-reaching powers, working with a newly-revamped World Bank to ‘stabilize’ third-world countries amid a more unpredictable economic climate.  Since exchange rates everywhere were floating, the third world would be a beacon of security and safe investment. Thus, regulating third-world economies now required more drastic measures, and the UN’s pillar institutions have risen to the challenge. The dual functions of securing foreign investment in developing nations, while completely ‘integrating’ these economies into the international system (a euphemism for allowing corporations free reign to exploit and pillage), necessitated new, drastic policy changes. 

One of the key ways that the IMF has emboldened itself is by employing ‘structural adjustment programs’.  Upon receiving a loan or grant from the IMF, developing countries are required to make adjustments to how their economies are run.  Typically, these changes are a hodgepodge of neoliberal reforms, usually including deregulation (privatizations of state-controlled industries), restrictions on social spending (including basic infrastructure), currency devaluations, eliminating capital controls, lowering of tariffs and the erasing of state subsidies.   All of these policies do in fact aide international commerce, and likewise have debilitating effects on the native population.  Aside from the fact that IMF policy has destroyed third-world living conditions, there are additional outrages.  The above IMF policies are now widely-considered responsible for creating or inflaming famine in Malawi, Ethiopia, and Niger, not to mention the worsening conditions of the average Iraqi. The lack of worldwide economic stability, as well as the general ineffectiveness of the IMF, is highlighted by the fact that, since 1980, over 100 countries have experienced banking collapses, drastically weakening their citizens’ already poor standard of living.  The immense wealth of international finance now works under a rape and pillage mentality: wealth floods into a country, investors take advantage of favorable conditions, inflate the local economy, and leave before the stack of cards collapses. 

The evolution of the World Bank is another flagrant indication of the state of global economy.  The Bank is now headed by well-known neocon Paul Wolfowitz, a fact of no small importance.  Europe, like the rest of the world, did not object to this appointment because the neocons, rather than being a subversive, underground sect, are instead the representatives of the modern international finance community, having like-minded associates in governments across the globe.   

The workings of the World Bank, like its IMF counterpart, attest to the inherent conflict between the needs of corporate profit and the interests of people.  Although the World Bank claims that ‘development’ is part of its mission, a closer inspection proves this to be lip-service.  The so-called development programs of the World Bank are typically construction projects to aide in the extraction of raw materials that are shipped out of the country to the developed nations. Bridges and roads are built that connect a World Bank funded shipping-port to copper or silver mines; ‘free trade zones’ are constructed next to the ports, where slave-labor is brought in to create goods that only citizens from developed countries can afford. Money is seldom given to countries for the development of roads and bridges for community usage, nor is money loaned to these countries to develop industries that build the machines capable of creating infrastructure and wealth; this work is outsourced to developed countries, much like the ‘reconstruction’ contracts given to corporations after a heavy-dosage of American militarism.

The World Bank also has a long and nefarious history when it comes to corruption. One way this is done is by the tacit support the Bank gives dictators and undemocratic governments, granting them enormous loans.  These loans are used to enrich both the lenders and the ruling-class of the developed nation at the expense of tax-payers in both countries.  After a dictatorship establishes ‘order’— yet another euphemism referring to the complete suppression of democratic demands of wealth distribution— foreign investment comes pouring into the country.  The amount of foreign cash quickly floods the native economy, and the limited room for a sound investment is soon realized in the form of a crash. A case in point example of this process occurred under Clinton’s watchful eye, when the Mexican economy was crushed by neoliberal policies, and U.S. taxpayers were forced to inject 50 billion into a supposed ‘bail out’.  The only people who saw that money were wealthy U.S. speculators, who entered the Mexican pyramid scheme a bit late in the game.  To regain ‘stability’ after the crash, Mexico was again forced to adopt a variety of neo-liberal reforms, the result has been nothing less than devastating, with the continued flood of immigrants attesting to this fact.  The reputation of the World Bank as an international money laundering apparatus has been so widely discussed that Paul Wolfowitz, who oversaw the squandering of World Bank money in Indonesia, has made it his personal mission to oversee a ‘war on corruption’. 

That other, more elusive offspring of Breton Woods, GATT, has evolved as well in consequence of the changing world economic situation.  The progress of trade talks – typically resulting in the lowering of trade-barriers and the expansion of trade in general— are a good indicator of the general health of the capitalist system, which demands ever-growing expansion for the insatiable demand of profit accumulation.  If multi-lateral trade talks begin to stagnate, you can bet that the overall growth of international commerce has already begun to slow, and a general trend of protectionism has begun.

After Breton Woods, GATT made considerable progress in promoting world trade. Each time a consensus was reached, the often-monotonous talks were referred to as a ‘round’.  Since  the initial round in Geneva in 1948, participation in GATT has gone from 23 countries to the 102 countries that took part in the ‘Uruguay Round’ that ended in 1992 (after 6 years), which marked the organization’s evolution into the World Trade Organization (WTO).  Every meeting of these international trade summits, until now, has resulted in agreements on lowering different types of trade barriers. 

The WTO is simply a more official version of GATT, complete with a large bureaucratic structure, code of law, and enforcement measures. The creation of the WTO itself is a telling indicator of world economy, reflecting businesses’ need to compensate for the steady drop in international growth.  

Radicals have focused enormous energy on protesting this particular offspring of capitalism, pointing to its secretive meetings, the enormous social effects of its decisions, and the fact that the WTO can declare a country’s laws— including environmental, social programs, etc— to be illegal trade barriers.  In this assessment radicals are half right: yes the WTO is responsible for a policy that has often horrendous effects on large swaths of people throughout the world, but in this respect it is no different from the IMF, World Bank, and for that matter, capitalism itself.  The WTO cannot be considered as an entity separate from the system of global commerce, no matter how crucial an ingredient it may be. 

 ‘Peacekeeping’

All the major Breton Woods children require an element of force to maintain; this is where the military side of the UN enters the scene, and the notorious ‘peacekeepers’ are put to work. In the last 20 years, there have been 16 African countries subjected to UN peacekeeping missions.  Traditionally, the UN has intervened during or after civil war takes place. The timing of a UN intervention, and which side the UN allies itself with, are not unimportant details. 

After WWII, Africa was left largely in the hands of its colonial masters, the French and English. Soon thereafter, a wave of independence movements rose across the continent, and the Europeans were forced to rule by proxy— another well-worked tactic of neo-colonialism.  Behind the multitude of civil-wars fought in Africa over the last 20 years are often the workings of western nations, who supply and finance groups they believe will act in their interest.  In any military conflict in Africa, the UN is sure to intervene on the side that will comply with World Bank and IMF policies.  In the past the UN has tacitly granted permission (by saying nothing) to western nations to militarily intervene in the affairs of African nations, with ‘peacekeepers’ consecrating the adventures. Because the western world has been increasingly desperate for markets and raw materials, this tactic of domination has become increasingly brutal—the most fitting example being Rwanda. 

The catastrophe that was Rwanda cannot be explained by ‘ethnic tensions’ like the world press would have us believe, but rather was the product of inter-imperialist conflict, the two sides being the British, who supported the Hutus, and the U.S., who were backing the Tutsis.  The UN was well aware of the slaughter that was about to take place, but found itself powerless when faced with the interests of two countries on the Security Council. So the U.N. played deaf and dumb while the two sides fought it out (a not uncommon tactic of the UN).  When the Tutsis came out victorious, after committing their fair share of atrocities, the UN came back on the scene, eager to help stabilize the country (the UN, along with Belgium— the old colonial master— has since apologized for enabling the massacres to take place). 

A more recent example of this diabolical process occurred in Haiti, where the Democratically-elected President Jean-Bertrand Aristide was for the second time removed from power, this time by the always-mysterious ‘rebels’.  Aristide’s crimes against the international community were two fold: he reversed the previous puppet regime’s plan to privatize all state-owned companies, and he funded a variety of social programs— two things that global commerce frowns upon. An economic aid embargo was put into place, with international financing— including the IMF and World Bank— suddenly refusing loans.  

What then followed was the usual pattern of imperialist intervention. Millions of dollars were given to ‘opposition groups’ inside Haiti, who helped prepare the ensuing military action with floods of propaganda; the US puppet regime next door, the Dominican Republic, was used as the base to train former Haitian army officials, many of whom were war criminals— yet later to be portrayed by the US media as Democracy-seeking heroes willing to succumb to the international community after their victory. 

When the action began, the rebels were aided by an occupying force of US, French, Canadian, and Chilean troops, all who helped stabilize the new regime by suppressing the 92% of the country who had voted for their displaced President.  This particular coup was planned far in advance, with a UN Peacekeeping force introduced with lightning speed that gave legitimacy to the new government of butchers.  Haiti is one of many examples of the UN Peacekeepers acting more as a brutal occupying army than an independent mediator; but Haitians were used to such strong-arm tactics, and militantly protested the new dictatorship. The UN’s response, as always, was shameless, and involved ‘observing’ massacres staged by the police, or engaging in full-out warfare against neighborhoods that energetically supported Aristide.  Some of these raids have involved hundreds of troops, tanks, and helicopters.  Meanwhile, the western media complicity ignored the events, reporting just enough to create confusion.  Only recently has the Haitian majority won back a level of independence, thanks to the militant protests against an obvious attempt of the dictatorship to quell social unrest through fraudulent elections. 

The two horrific examples of Haiti and Rwanda are but a fraction of the atrocities committed by the powerful nations under the guise of the UN; in many of the cases, the reason for the intervention was the same: a country tried to free itself from the clutches of international finance, striving for some degree of independence.  The leaders of such nations are always labeled tyrants, dictators, destabilizes, demagogues, and now, terrorists.  However, the UN and its institutions have a long history of supporting real Dictators and tyrants, as long as they offer their countries to the appetites of international corporations and banks.  Dictators in fact, are preferred by the international community, since they are able to provide ‘investment security’ in the way of dismantling trade unions, social services, and dissent in general. The UN’s real reason to intervene and ‘stabilize’ governments around the world is candidly stated by the World Bank’s website, where we read:

“Our presence in a potential investment can literally transform a "no-go" into a "go." We act as a potent deterrent against government actions that may adversely affect investments. And even if disputes do arise, our leverage with host governments frequently enables us to resolve differences to the mutual satisfaction of all parties”.

Such security can only be guaranteed by the barrel of a gun, something that is needed to suppress the masses of people adversely affected by the economic policies of UN institutions.  The unity of purpose behind the UN, World Bank, IMF, and GATT combine for a daunting power, which has been used to steadily crush the third world to a point where billions of people on earth are either starving, or near the threshold.  On the other hand, the transnational corporations have grown steadily stronger, and the share-holders of these firms have enriched themselves well beyond the capacity of any ruling-class in history. However, there are cracks in the system. The reverberations of decades of inhumanity and greed have expanded alongside the progress of global integration; the economic system that once destroyed only the lives of non-whites is now devastating people in every country, with the situation promising to only worsen.       

 The mounting crisis

In the past decade there have been innumerable signs that the post-war arrangement among nations is in its death-throes.  Many of the facades that the imperial countries have been working behind have been exposed— the set-up that was to prevent war and promote prosperity has been revealed as a hoax.  It must first be mentioned that much of the world had long ago caught on to the real intentions of the UN.  In most of Africa, Central America, the Middle East, and Eastern Europe, the work of UN Peacekeepers has always corresponded with repression and dictatorship.  Now however, the ruptures in the scheme have widened, to the point where a flood of reaction and discontent are filling the globe. 

The Asian financial crisis was an event that led to a mass exodus from UN institutions.  The neoliberal programs adopted by many Asian countries helped hasten and deepen a depression that lingers on to this day.  Since the crash, most of the countries, including China, India, Thailand, and the Philippines, have forgone the IMF and sought financing elsewhere.   The same is true in Latin America, where the large economies of Mexico, Brazil and Argentina are likewise separating themselves from the IMF. Argentina and Mexico both experienced disastrous economic collapses that have helped fuel hatred of the UN institutions throughout the region. As a result, both the IMF and World Bank are facing a budget crisis due to lack of funding. The fact that these highly effective tools of imperialism are facing a complete lack of credibility, not to mention extinction, is a telling sign of the current global-systemic deterioration.  

An equally major indictment of capitalist fragility is on display at the current ‘Doha round’ WTO talks, which tout an impressive membership of 149 countries. Many of the round’s participants have declared the talks dead, while issuing dire warnings about the global implications.  This happening is especially daunting to the overall health of the capitalist system, which was reconstructed upon the basis of free, multi-lateral trade.  If the Doha round does in fact end in complete failure, it will be the first time in GATT/WTO history.  Especially troublesome is the growing tendency to form bi-lateral trade agreements, bringing with it several consequences.  First, bi-lateral trade agreements are typically between a powerful nation and a weak one; after securing a number of such agreements, a powerful nation may have what can be considered a ‘trade bloc’, where the country is master of his region of commerce— as was the case before WWII.  Secondly, the tendency of bi-lateral trade means that the general process of trade is restricted by a web of different agreements, where various laws and tariffs slow global trade circulation. The end result is that the current economic downturn is worsened.   

As it turns out, the powerful countries are only concerned with multi-lateral trade agreements when they stand to benefit from them. During economic downturns, governments seek to protect their native corporations from international competition, with agriculture acting as the most relevant example.  Europe and the US both have expressed little intent in reducing agricultural subsidies to the other’s liking— and for good reason.  Both continents are dominated by conservative governments, where rural votes play a crucial role.  Reducing agricultural subsidies to farmers, both large and small, would be tantamount to committing political suicide.  Eliminating subsidies in any country has become increasingly difficult in general, since the large corporations who benefit from such programs control the politicians making the laws. 

The Doha round has also produced a newfound rebelliousness in the emerging and developing nations, known as the G23— led by China, India, and Brazil.  This new group, aligning itself against the dominant members of the G-8, represents over half of the world’s population.  Although the G23 has prided itself on standing up to the traditionally dominant nations, the end result is more head butting and less agreements, creating more difficulties for the global economy as a whole.  In the end, the less developed countries will most likely be forced into bi-lateral agreements, where they will still be bound to the powerful nations’ dictates. The G23, if it is at all successful, will simply give its dominant members more global power at the expense of the countries of the G-8. The really poor countries will remain so.     

As multi-lateral trade stagnates and the world economy veers sharply towards recession, the formation of pre-WWII trading blocs is accelerating.  Virtually every region of the world has either entered into a bloc, or is considering the possibility. Presently, NAFTA and the European Union constitute the two most economically powerful blocs, although the Southeast Asian trading bloc (ASEAN) may become of equal weight if China and/or Japan enter the pact.  The different trading blocs have varying levels of economic and political integration; thus far, only the EU trading bloc combines ‘defense’ with economic activity, though other regions are considering similar paths. The historic end result has been war. 
Indeed, because in is impossible to separate the modern nation from its economic base, the narrow-interests of commerce are being broadly politicized by different governments; global economic tensions have risen to the point where military rhetoric is being used in reference to currency and trade discussions— US politicians have referred to China’s undervaluation of its currency as ‘an act of war’.  To be sure, China’s monstrous growth continues to be seen as a threat from the US.  In response, the US has pursued the pre-WWII policy of England in response to Germany’s industrial rise— containment.  The US has surrounded much of China’s boarders with client states, allies, or military intervention.  China continues to pursue raw materials from around the world to meet its energy needs, while also building up its military in response to the aggressive actions of the US— a clashing of ‘regional interests’ between the two powers that results in warfare can be considered a safe bet.

Like its predecessor the League of Nations, the UN is currently experiencing a crisis of legitimacy.  The current trouble is being caused by the organization’s inability to achieve its supposed goal of world peace.  A worldwide trend of militarization has been steadily mounting, with the UN either aiding in the bloodshed, or powerless to stop it.  The Gulf War was the first agreed upon UN mobilization, an act many in the area rightly saw as imperialistic and oil-based. The collaboration set a dangerous precedent of warfare that is becoming a danger to world peace.  The next big international operation followed shortly after, in Yugoslavia, which was touted— like always— as a peace mission.  Germany used the event as a pretext to expand its military for the first time since WWII. It hasn’t looked back since. 

Next was the Iraq War, showcasing just how irrelevant the UN had become.  Before it began its military campaign, the US addressed the Security Council in a most condescending matter, demanding that the UN sanction the war effort, or sit by and watch. Official permission was not granted, and the US acted alone. After the bombs had fallen, the UN sought to hide the obvious friction by offering its belated seal of approval through various provisions to the new government; but this act of appeasement would not prevent more war. 

Part of the US’ international belligerence is expressed through Israel, whose contempt for the UN has spanned decades.  The Security Council has issued numerous resolutions that Israel refuses to acknowledge, and because it has the tacit support of the US, it doesn’t have to.  This relationship reached a new low however, with the recent bombing and invasion of Lebanon, consolidating the UN’s lack of global credibility.

For three weeks, Israel partook in full-scale destruction of Lebanon, while the world looked on in horror.  The US had prior knowledge of the attack and worked tirelessly to prevent a ceasefire, while the people of Lebanon were made refugees or slaughtered.  In a striking case of historic déjà vu, Lebanon’s Prime Minister Fouad Siniora pleaded his countries case to anyone who would listen, in an unmistakably similar tone to the above-quoted address of Ethiopia’s then President Haile Selassie:

“As the world watches, Israel has besieged and ravaged our country, created a humanitarian and environmental disaster, and shattered our infrastructure and economy, putting an intolerable strain on our social and economic systems. Fuel, food and medical equipment are in short supply; homes, factories and warehouses have been destroyed; roads severed, bridges smashed and airports disabled…”

The US-Israeli partnership proved an unstoppable force for the UN, who was inept to prevent the bloodshed.  Although much of Europe voiced rage and disgust over the Lebanon invasion, it has since played the role of scavenger; different European countries have used Lebanon’s need for ‘peacekeepers’— in this case a euphemism for Hezbollah suppression— as a pretext for furthering their military ambitions.  Italy and Germany both clamored at the opportunity to pursue their ‘regional and political interests’.  Germany has been especially ambitious lately, with troops scattered about in the Balkans, Afghanistan, Sudan, and the Congo.

The above outrages have fully exposed the UN for what it is, and dissident governments are starting to talk openly about it.  The latest meeting of the UN General Assembly contained candid speeches about the entire UN arrangement, pointing in particular towards the unequal power in of the Security Council, its abuses, and motive of imperialism.  Hugo Chavez’s infamous speech contained the following gem:

“…I don't think anybody in this room could defend the system… Let's accept -- let's be honest. The U.N. system, born after the Second World War, collapsed. It's worthless…”

And, from Iranians ‘crazy’ President, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad:

“Today, it is undeniable that the Security Council, most critically and urgently, needs legitimacy and effectiveness. It must be acknowledged that as long as the Council is unable to act on behalf of the entire international community in a transparent, just and democratic manner, it will neither be legitimate nor effective…”

The aggressiveness of US foreign policy is solely responsible for the above distain for the UN, as well as the international arms race that deepens every year (the US House recently approved the largest military spending bill ever, at $448 billion!).  The recent military adventures of the United States have created concern and reaction among countries internationally. To make matters worse, the US has encouraged its allies, especially Japan, Australia and India, to drastically increase military spending, most likely to ‘contain’ China.  In response, China, since 1999, has invested double-digit percent increases in military spending, to be continued for some time; this has already been pointed out as a subject of concern by Donald Rumsfeld and other military higher-ups, who have used China’s spending as a pretext for their continued provocations.  

Sadly, in lieu of the immense instability and global tensions created by the above affairs, more war looms.  U.S. politicians have exhausted themselves performing acrobatic rhetoric as they try to paint the countries of Iran, Syria, North Korea and Sudan as ruled by insane dictators planning to take over the world.  One thing that all these countries have in common is that, because of economic embargoes, US investment is nowhere to be found.  Although US politicians claim the embargoes are due to poor human-rights records, plenty of their current allies reveal this to be a lie. 

Because the giant wealth of the US has been unavailable to the ‘axis of evil’ nations, they have sought investment elsewhere.  China, Russia, and Europe have thus made economic gains at the US’ expense, resulting in UN Security Council consensuses that are harder and harder to come by— the US wants to implement ‘regime change’ in the countries that the other superpowers consider friends, if not cordial business partners. 

Any attack on the above-mentioned US targets would very well spurn the downfall of the UN. This eventuality would be seen by many higher-ups in the US as a good thing, since its pet organization is evolving— much like the WTO— into more of a pest.  To make his perspective on the matter clear, Bush nominated the notorious UN critic John Bolton to represent the US internationally; he has since used the position to create confrontation and political fallout.  The US’ spite for the UN has reached such a degree that Bush sneeringly called the Iran issue a ‘test’ for the international body, meaning, that if the UN doesn’t sanction military action, it will become irrelevant.  If the US withdraws its UN membership (something that’s been talked openly about) the subsequent chain of events will most likely accelerate an already hostile global situation. 

 Conclusion

The inherent problems of post WWII capitalism are now on display for all to see, so much so that an all-out global depression is being discussed openly by the ‘experts’. The IMF, in trying desperately to regulate the world economy, is finding its repeated warnings fall on deaf ears. Most of its dire predictions are based on the immense ‘imbalances’ that the US economy now works under as it tries to please its resident corporations by grabbing markets and raw materials via warfare. The US knows that its military capabilities prevent it from any real international oversight, and has distanced itself from global treaties and economic agreements out of necessity, less it deliver its native corporations to the guillotine that is international competition. This fact exemplifies the key flaw in the idea that suggests that ‘free trade prevents war’. Nations will cooperate with each other as long as it’s in their best interest; during times of economic expansion, the impulse to cooperate is great, the future seems bright.  In times of recession, this pattern turns into its opposite: free trade becomes a hindrance and a threat. The UN’s job becomes that much harder as the superpowers of the world find themselves encroaching on each other’s interests; agreements in the Security Council become exceptions.

The approaching economic crisis has been a long time in the making, yet skillfully avoided for years with the help of global free-trade agreements and the enormous use of credit; both of these avenues have reached the exhaustion point. The debts born from the credit strategy will soon have to be paid with interest, and international free trade has evolved into protectionist measures and defensive trading-blocs. This sad state of global capitalism has led to desperate tactics, most notably the international attacks of worker’s wages and benefits, complimented by global militarism. The UN, more than any other institution, embodies the decline of the global economy, since its recent actions represent the degeneration of the economic base it was built to protect. Although it is imaginable that a new rearranging of the world could lead to another ‘golden era’ of capitalism, it would first require the painful process of war— no regime has surrendered its position of global dominance without putting up a fight. The US’ recent actions are a modern testament to this historically-proven fact. 

The above events have radicalized broad layers of the world population, many of whom focus their rage on the UN organizations and their neoliberal policies, seeing them as unnatural growths rather than necessary creations. As a remedy, doses of nationalism are mistakenly prescribed to cure these international ailments.  The middle-class radicals, especially shocked by their declining living standards (which they blame solely on ‘outsourcing’) are finding solace in the backward politics of nationalism as well, to the point where Pat Buchanan, a notorious racist, is now seen as an inspirational force. History has shown these policies to only deepen crises and produce more war.  The latest machinations of globalization are simply the demands of capital seeking growth outside national boundaries— restricting this growth, either by outlawing outsourcing or capital flight in general, will only accelerate the current global predicament, inevitably leading to political confrontation and reaction. An international economic system based on the expansion of profit cannot be ‘reigned in’ by individual nations.     

Thus, the socialization of society’s wealth stands out as the only common-sense solution to the disease of capitalism— a system that creates poverty and war for the benefit of a few at the expense of the many.  Demanding that the tremendous wealth and productive power of society be used for the needs of people rather than the demands of profit is the practical answer for those asking important questions about social progress.