Don't talk about
the danger of war
-unless you are prepared to speak about
capitalism!
As the US makes its final preparations for an attack on Iraq, the
horror of this impending war, and the massive casualties that will
almost certainly result, is blamed on everything except the real
cause: the laws of motion of capitalist civilization. For some, war
is imminent because of the "cowboy" in the White House, and the
unilateralism of his administration, in contrast to Clinton who only
unleashed missiles and bombers with the blessing of the UN or NATO.
For others, this war is simply about oil. For others, it is about the
need to distract the American electorate and play the card of
patriotism in order to assure the re-election of the President. While
each of these factors may play a role as proximate causes for the
unleashing of war at this time and place, they do not explain the
basic necessity for war that is integral to our civilization and that
inevitably finds an outlet in an immediate cause of one kind or
another.
Meanwhile, for others, the danger of war is due to the arrogance
of America, unwilling to listen to the French, the Russians, and the
Chinese, all of whom argue that it is possible to avoid war, if Bush
is only willing to give UN inspection a chance. Yet, while the French
prattle on about peace in Iraq, French troops are joining an orgy of
ethnic cleansing in the Ivory Coast, just as they assisted in the
genocide in Rwanda a decade ago. The Russian army engages in mass
murder in Chechnya, while the Chinese continue their vicious ethnic
cleansing of Tibet. Their objections to an American attack on Iraq
are real enough, but they have nothing to do with opposition to war.
What they object to is a war that will enhance American power, and
thereby weaken theirs - as indeed it will; a war that will
consolidate America's grip on the world, and thereby weaken their own
projects for, at least, regional hegemony.
Even if the danger of an American attack were removed, that would
not mean peace for Iraq. It would just replace the danger of dying at
the hands of American missiles and bombs by the danger of being
murdered in the ethnic cleansing campaigns of the Ba'athist regime.
This war will bring death, disease and hunger for millions. They
don't show up in the cost-benefit analyses of the Pentagon, they are
not discussed on CNN. They are made faceless, nameless. The
war-effort demands that their pain is hidden and the media
intuitively understand that. They know that they must transform a
brutal, impersonal industrial slaughter into a video game. The
victims must be reduced to mere numbers. They must be subhumanized.
The war propaganda is racist at its core because racism -the denial
of the humanity of the "other"- is necessary to make the mass killing
acceptable. The US government spends a lot of money to sell a
tolerant image to the Muslim world but in the US itself, foreign-born
Muslims are terrorized with mass arrests and deportations. Many are
held in solitary confinement for no other reason than that they are
Muslim. Basic rights of prisoners are denied. This is not done for
security reasons but to send the message that "these people" can be
treated in a way that would not be accepted for "normal," Christian,
Americans. It is done to devalue them, to make the slaughter of
"their kind" acceptable.
What is driving the US is the need to prop-up a system of
capitalist exploitation and to consolidate its geo-political
hegemony. The real risk that the American ruling class is seeking to
avoid, is the collapse of its capital assets. Capitalism was born out
of scarcity and it cannot function properly without it. Its opposite,
abundance, means - within the framework of capitalism -
overproduction and crisis. While capitalist competition impels the
system to ever greater productivity, that very development expels
ever greater numbers of workers - now more than 1.5 billion - from
the global productive process, and thereby drastically reduces global
purchasing power. The capitalist reaction to the very over-capacity
it engenders is to attack wages, thereby further reducing effective
demand, and further increasing productivity, and therefore the
plethora of commodities seeking buyers. Since global over-capacity
resurfaced in the late 1960's, capitalism has responded with
inflationary demand-stimulation in the '70's, and an explosive growth
of the public debt in the '80's. In the 1990's, the end of the cold
war, globalization, and the explosion of information technology,
seemed to provide capitalism with new hope. The combination of access
to pools of cheap labor and higher productivity did boost profits,
but at the same time it also raised the problem of over-capacity to
an even greater scale. At the same time, the flight of capital
seeking a safe haven, its search for places to store its value
safely, protected from deflation, pushed up the "value" of the assets
of the strongest capitals, especially the US - the controller of the
global currency and guarantor of global order. But that wealth was
just so much paper, a mere illusion, unless constantly fed by real
profits. And that profit creation is jeopardized by the very efforts
to perpetuate it. That is why capitalism in crisis is so dangerous.
Its whole financial system collapses when there is a collapse of
assets. Capitalism must go to any lengths to prevent that - including
war!
That is why Bush wants to invade Iraq. Not to avenge his daddy,
not to get cheap gas for American SUVs, but because the US economy is
sitting on a mountain of 31 trillions dollars of debt, because the
stock market bubble is bursting, because the dollar is plunging,
because foreign capital owners are seeing investing in US assets
increasingly as a risk. That's what makes this project so urgent.
Iraq's oil could be a huge cash crop for US capital. The American
occupation would give the US control over the oil price (paid in
dollars, thank you) and where would the new Iraq invest its profits
but in the US stock market? From military bases in Iraq, the US would
increase its leverage over the Middle East and the projection of its
power would inspire the confidence of capital owners all over the
world. That is the grand scheme that motivates this bloody
undertaking, for which 9/11 and the military weakening of Iraq (not
it's growing threat) provided the right conditions. It follows a
logic inseparable from the very existence of capitalism. And that is
why it is ultimately futile to oppose this war if you are not
prepared to oppose capitalism!
Capitalist crisis pushes "normal" competition to become a violent
struggle. This is the real source of terrorism, of the increasing
number of conflicts in the world. There's no escape from this. The
future of capitalism is more war, more misery, more racism and
despair. We must end it before it ends us. It doesn't have to be this
way. Most people are fundamentally decent and want nothing else but
to be free from want, free from fear, free from oppression and they
want the same for their fellow human beings. We can organize global
production and global society for that goal. We can put an end to
this whole profit system, to the system based on wage-labor, which
has become outdated, absurd, and lethal. It's a huge task and it
starts with confidence in ourselves as human beings, as workers.
Let's trust ourselves. When we follow unions or parties we are led
time and again to defeat. Let's not allow ourselves to be divided by
nation, race, gender, religion or ethnicity. Let's develop our
self-organization and solidarity, let's collectively defend our
standard of living, and stand up for the interests of the global
working class, for humankind. Let's come together in a resistance
without compromise that blossoms into global revolution.
February 15, 2003
INTERNATIONALIST PERSPECTIVE
For a sample copy of our publication write to: AM,
P.O. Box 40231, Staten Island, NY 10304
Back to Against Capitalist War Against
Capitalist Peace
Back toHome Page