JUNE 17, 2016
Counterpunch.org
Despite the
lack of evidence linking Orlando mass murderer Omar Mateen to Daesh (ISIS) in
any operational (direct) sense, the first inclination of U.S. Presidential
hopeful Hillary Clinton was to renew American
bombing of Syria, Iraq
and Libya— the very nations that were destroyed by U.S. bombs directed by Mrs.
Clinton and from whence Daesh arose. In so doing Mrs. Clinton made it evident
that she is an unrepentant militarist whose bloodlust, combined with her
longstanding interest in promoting American business interests, ties her to the
U.S. imperial project of the last century and one-half. The precise moral
difference between mass murders for personal and state reasons depends on a
theory of the state at odds with this imperial project.
The company that employed Omar Mateen, G4S, is a
British-based ‘security’ company that operates in 120 countries and as a
‘private’ supplier of public services to the Department of Homeland Security,
the U.S. Army and to the very same State Department that Mrs. Clinton led as
Secretary of State. The company advertises itself capable of ‘mitigating liability’
for the U.S. government— the ruse used by the CIA and other clandestine and
quasi-clandestine government agencies to circumvent civil prohibitions on their
activities by employing ‘private’ companies to carry them out. The NSA’s domestic
surveillance programs tie to those of the FBI, DEA and CIA through this legalistic dodge. And
‘private contractors’ were behind some of the more grotesque slaughters in
recent American wars.
The classical liberal separation of economic from political
interests used to legitimate state violence is one that the Clintons have spent
their ‘public’ careers undermining. As leading proponents of neoliberalism, the Clintons have
spent three decades conflating‘private’
interests with the public interest. In history this tie of U.S. business interests to U.S. military
incursions runs from
residual European imperialism, including genocide against the indigenous
population and slavery, to direct wars, proxy wars, coups, assassinations,
murders and particularly odious ‘wars of attrition.’ What is corruption in the
liberal worldview is the nature of the capitalist-state acting in / on imperial
interests in a Marxian frame.
If this corruption is ‘solvable,’ such has yet to be demonstrated in the U.S.
Hillary Clinton’s use of the horrific crime in Orlando to
instigate further crimes against untold innocents abroad is hidden behind
manufactured fears of a lunatic and craven enemy (ISIS) that is in fact both a
product of earlier U.S. atrocities across the Middle East and but a pale ghost
of the savagery of combined U.S. actions in the region. The American
leadership’s practice of creating crises that it must then ‘respond’ to led the
way to the sequential slaughters, disruptions and dislocations that now finds
substantial portions of the Middle East in ruins and millions of refugees
flooding an increasingly xenophobic Europe. That this leadership never seems to
learn from its ‘mistakes’ suggests motivations at work other than those
presented at press conferences.
Where G4S, Omar Mateen’s employer, fits in is that Mr. Mateen
was in many respects the perfect mercenary— ‘our psychopath’ if we were paying
for his services. Murdering 49 people and wounding 50 more is, in addition to
being an atrocity, a crime and a moral calamity, a complicated logistical feat.
In 2004 U.S. Colonel James Steele was brought to Iraq, in a war that Bill
Clinton publicly supported and Hillary Clinton voted for, to engineer like
atrocities. Mr. Mateen’s crimes would have been business-as-usual in
U.S. led slaughters of innocent civilians in Nicaragua and El Salvador in the
1980s and in Iraq in the 2000s. And G4S is precisely the type of
‘public-private partnership’ favored by the Clintons to ‘mitigate liability’
behind a veil of ‘private’ actions.
This isn’t to suggest that Hillary Clinton had any part in the
murders carried out by Mr. Mateen. It is to suggest that in any human and / or
moral sense she is congenitally unfit for public office. The most generous
explanation of her support for George W. Bush’s criminal slaughter in Iraq is
that she was misled by the manufactured evidence proffered by the Bush
administration. That the war tied through history to the Clinton’s own
sanctions against Iraq that resulted in half a million innocents dying from
privation and to eight years of bombing that left much of the country in ruins
suggests that Mrs. Clinton probably well understood that Iraq posed no threat
to the U.S. in 2001. That the war was coincidentally a boon to Western business
interests was / is as grotesque as it was predictable.
If conceptual clarity around these issues seems wanting here—
that is the point. Neoliberalism as some unified theory of political economy
ties through history to the Washington Consensus that in turn ties to American imperial
history. Western imperialism— state-corporatism as division of the global
economic spoils through insertion / assertion of ‘national’ interests, has five
centuries of reasonably well defined history behind it. In this regard Donald
Trump’s relative rhetorical reticence to use military force as a first choice
is a threat to this imperial order whereas Hillary Clinton’s willingness to
destroy an entire region of the world on a whim to benefit Exxon Mobil and
Goldman Sachs makes her the ‘safe’ choice from the institutional perspective.
Washington Consensus precepts are:
*Fiscal discipline
*A redirection of public expenditure priorities toward fields
offering both high economic returns and the potential to improve income
distribution, such as primary health care, primary education, and
infrastructure
*Tax reform (to lower marginal rates and broaden the tax base)
*Interest rate liberalization
*A competitive exchange rate
*Trade liberalization
*Liberalization of inflows of foreign direct investment
*Privatization
*Deregulation (to abolish barriers to entry and exit)
*Secure property rights
Against this imperial history the U.S. view that national
elections are an internal matter places U.S. voters as the nominal ‘choosers’
of political economy for much of the world. In political terms, the 800+ military bases that the U.S. keeps around the globe
serve as quasi-private security forces to assure repatriation of ‘profits’ for
multi-national corporations in the form of resources, plentiful, cheap labor
and the broader economy of imperial conquest. In fact, as opposed to theory,
these profits are the reciprocal of the death, misery,
subjugation and immiseration inevitably
put forward by Western economists and politicians as the result of
‘free-choice’ by those on the losing end of American imperial fortune. That
increasing numbers of Americans are on this losing end helps explain current
(and heretofore slight) political unrest and its reciprocal in establishment
support for Mrs. Clinton.
Hillary Clinton’s toxic jargon that “America never stopped
being great” poses a seeming conundrum for her supporters who aren’t
dedicated sociopaths. If U.S. wars in Southeast Asia, Central America, the
Middle East and Northern Africa are evidence of this greatness, then what are
the moral and political bases of such a judgment? Mrs. Clinton’s nostalgia for
the days of alleged national unity following the attacks of September 11, 2001
is apparently for the erasure of the history that led to the attacks and not
for unity per se. Conversely, given the absence of any operational link to
Daesh, Omar Mateen could just as well have claimed that his crimes were
motivated by Napoleon Bonaparte or Jesus Christ were ISIS not such a
well-implanted foe.
Externally, and in contradiction of to the exceptionalists, the
democratists and Western neoliberals, the U.S. is broadly
considered the greatest threat to world peace on the planet. Brought to the fore in
the current Presidential election cycle is that Western elites— inherited
wealth, bailout-dependent bankers, the corporate lootocracy dependent on wildly
goosed (by the Federal Reserve) asset prices and various and sundry agents,
functionaries and court pleaders, are now well-understood to have interests
diametrically opposed to those of the vast majority of Americans. The
conceptual leap not yet taken by the American electorate is the international
nature of this class divide.
This
international ‘footprint’ is fact regardless of whether or not Americans
consider it when voting. Internal economic dislocations, such as jobs lost and
stagnant wages from trade agreements, find their reciprocals in indigenous
economies destroyed, in ‘developing market’ industries shut out through
subsidized ‘competition,’ in IMF ‘workouts’ that place ownership of developing
industries in Western hands and through commodification and expropriation of
millennia of accumulated knowledge to be put back as alien product against the
peoples and cultures that developed it. In this respect, the ‘Clinton model’
of sweatshop labor as economic development joins the ‘Obama model’
of subverting civil law in the interests of corporate-state plutocrats.
Calls to unify behind Hillary Clinton in her bid to become
President pose the heavily engineered outcome of the Democratic primaries as
the popular will. In this sense they are roughly analogous to the calls to
unite behind George W. Bush following the Bush v. Gore Supreme Court decision
in 2000. The Clintons paved the way for Mr. Bush’s brutal militarism much as
Barack Obama maintained the institutional infrastructure of the ‘unitary
Presidency’ and the capacity for launching criminal wars of opportunity.
Between Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump, it is Mrs. Clinton who has the proven
record as guardian of empire and imperial prerogative. Her unbridled militarism
is an expression of this prerogative.
The question for Democrats is how evil can someone be to still
be worthy of voting for? Alleged stark differences between Hillary Clinton and
George W. Bush find very high degrees of synchronicity between their actual
policies (and those of Barack Obama). And lest this be unclear, it is the
Democratic establishment that chose Mrs. Clinton as its candidate (chart
above), and not the politically and economically dispossessed electorate. The
grift that American elections reflect the popular will, and therefore confer
political legitimacy, contrasts with the facts that the dominant Parties are
largely and increasingly unpopular and that the popular will bears no relation to
the policiesdecided upon and enacted by the American political
establishment.
Rob Urie is an artist and political economist. His book Zen
Economics is published by CounterPunch Books.
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