from TruthOut Website
WikiLeaks, Ideological
Legitimacy and the Crisis of Empire While empires try to maintain their hegemony through economic and military prowess, they must also rely on a form of ideological legitimacy to guarantee their rule.
Such legitimacy is often
embedded in the geopolitical reputation of the empire among its allies and
reluctant admirers. Once that reputation begins to unravel, the empire
appears illegitimate.
There were, of course, myriad contradictions that materialized throughout the earliest cold war period, but much of the West accepted the general framework and ideological legitimacy of the empire.
While a crisis of legitimacy emerged around the Vietnam War and the
undermining of the
Bretton Woods agreement by the Nixon administration, it
was not until the end of the cold war and the development of reckless unipolar geopolitics over the last decade that a real decline in US hegemony
became apparent.
However, it is instructive to note the response of those in the West to such "displays (of) imperial arrogance and hypocrisy" as reported by Steven Erlanger in The New York Times.
Erlanger cites an important editorial from the Berliner Zeitung that underscores the question of ideological legitimacy:
Commenting in The Guardian on the hypocrisy of the United States, British columnist John Naughton points to Secretary of State Hillary Clinton's January 21, 2010 address about Internet freedom and the remarkable subsequent about-face in denouncing such freedom as practiced by WikiLeaks.
Naughton does not spare other officials in the West who have been clamoring for curtailment of such freedom of information on the Internet.
The abuses heaped on Julian Assange and the threats against him, especially, but not exclusively, from politicians in the United States, reflects this hollowing out of democracy and a fear of the new virtual world of free speech.
Writing in the December 11, 2010 issue of the Melbourne Age, Assange's Australian attorney, Peter Gordon, opines:
Beyond the critical matter of freedom of information, however, is the erosion of alliances by stalwart supporters of US global hegemony in the aftermath of the WikiLeaks publication of some of the hundreds of thousands of diplomatic cables.
When The Guardian released some of the documents dealing with Poland, even its conservative prime minister, Donald Tusk, declared that,
The Australian government has been buffeted by a series of revelations that surfaced when the United States rejected an appeal by that government to see all of the cables relating to US-Australian relations before WikiLeaks released them.
Beyond the embarrassment to members of the Labor government,
there is a growing sentiment that the US is both arrogant and incompetent.
Hence, the hyperbolic criticism by US Attorney General Eric Holder that WikiLeaks has put,
As the WikiLeaks publications make clear, the diplomatic corps is
just another instrument of the US empire. Indeed, it is the empire itself
that is putting its own citizens at risk through the reckless, illegal and
immoral actions perpetrated around the globe.
Beyond WikiLeaks, the crisis of empire, according to Filipino scholar-activist Walden Bello,
Given the panic of the US masters, it might be time for the serfs at home to revolt under the banner of "Treason to Empire is Loyalty to Humanity." If that seems a little too provocative, we should remember the first American struggle for independence from the British Empire.
In defense of his anti-British Virginia Stamp Act Resolution, Patrick Henry is alleged to have declaimed:
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