by Tarik Cyril Amar November 17, 2023 from RT Website
FILE PHOTO: President Joe Biden is greeted by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu after arriving at Ben Gurion International Airport, Oct. 18, 2023, in Tel Aviv.
© AP Photo/Evan Vucci
shows that Washington is the single most disruptive force in the world.
of global instability, but it pretends to be the solution...
A halfway even-handed international community would have to step in and protect the victims of the disproportionate Israeli retaliation, which multiple international voices have called a genocide and an ethnic cleansing.
Failure to do so reveals profound bias and dysfunction. That much is obvious.
Yet there is another aspect of this catastrophic crisis, which receives less attention than it should. The global failure to hold back Israel's aggression is due to only one part of the world, the West.
And the West follows the lead of the US...!
Yet, in terms of power, US behavior is decisive.
Just imagine a world in which Washington had reacted differently and restrained Israel. Its allies and clients would, of course, have fallen into line.
Instead, the Biden administration deterred anyone who could have been tempted to interfere with Israel. Washington has also supplied arms and ammunition, intelligence, and special forces assistance, and provided diplomatic cover.
This brings us to the other fact that we need to wake up to:
This is not a polemical point but the conclusion of a dispassionate analysis of Washington's persistent capacities and empirical record since, roughly, the end of the Soviet Union, which marked the beginning of America's "unipolar moment."
The precondition for America's unusual ability to disturb the peace is its historically extraordinary concentration of economic and military capacities.
Currently, the US still accounts for at least 13.5% of global GDP - adjusted for purchasing power.
Yet the US is still among the upper ten in terms of (nominal) GDP per capita, reflecting its great wealth.
The injudicious over-use of this leverage has begun to backfire...!
For now, it is a fact still to be reckoned with.
All this economic oomph translates into enormous military budgets.
The sheer size of American power alone tells us little about how it is used.
But what is too often overlooked is that without it, America - whatever its policies - simply could not be so influential. There is clear, again quantitative, evidence that Washington's influence is highly disruptive.
According to the conservative journal The National Interest, between 1992 and 2017,
This list is incomplete:
Moreover, as you would expect, given the source, these are conservative figures.
By 2022, Ben Norton, a well-informed critic of US politics on the left found,
The US has not only shown a high propensity to pursue its perceived interests abroad by military force - instead of diplomacy or even "merely" economic warfare, i.e. sanctions.
What is at least equally concerning is that this preference for direct violence as a tool of policy is accelerating.
The National Interest finds that - again between 1992 and 2017 - America was engaged in four times as many military interventions as between 1948 and 1991 ("only" 46 times).
Likewise, the Military Intervention Project at Tufts University's Center for Strategic Studies has found that the US,
US bellicosity has grown over time (though not evenly) and, recently, after the end of the Cold War and the former Soviet Union, that growth has sped up.
These wars, moreover, have been extremely destructive.
According to exhaustive research conducted by the Costs of War project at Brown University, the so-called "Global War on Terror" after 2001 alone produced between 905,000 and 940,000 "direct war deaths."
The same research project notes that the,
The fact that most of these deaths were "indirect" shows that, even without engaging in violence directly, Washington has an extraordinary knack of spreading lethal disruption.
If the use and promotion of military violence by the US is so globally destabilizing,
Here as well, we see a clear escalation.
A recent op-ed by the New York Times editorial board noted that,
Between 2000 and 2021, for instance, the Treasury Department's Office of Foreign Assets Control sanctions list grew by more than tenfold, from 912 to 9,421 entries,
Over the long term, since 1950, the US has been,
The American share of 42% outdistances the runners-up, the EU (and its predecessor organizations) on 12%, and the United Nations on 7%.
The official ideology of sanctions foregrounds their putative positive sides.
Short of war, they are supposed to coerce states, organizations, and individuals into complying with things such as human rights or the vague rules of the so-called rules-based order.
Wide open to manipulation and bad faith as these justifications are, what is worse is that, in reality, US sanctions serve narrowly defined US interests and are subject to the demagogic appeals that constitute much of US domestic politics.
There are probably no more telling cases of this systemic flaw than America's reneging on, ...including the recent - futile - attempt to block and even roll back China's development of AI technologies...
Sanctions also disproportionately harm poor - and politically powerless - populations.
As a comprehensive study by the Center for Economic and Policy Research on the "Human Consequences of Economic Sanctions" has established,
Blanket sanctions on Venezuela's oil industry in 2018, for instance,
These US policies are not only unethical, they also destabilize whole societies and states, often in especially sensitive regions.
Washington's recent track record is clear enough.
But it does not predict the future:
The Quincy Institute for Responsible Statecraft, for instance, is explicit about ,
The chances for a truly fundamental course correction seem slim.
That is the mindset reflected in New York Times articles asking whether,
If history teaches anything then it is that trend extrapolation is a hard, thankless business, because the limits of our imagination - even if well-equipped with method and data - are always narrower than those of reality.
Maybe we are on the cusp of major generational shifts - in values and ethnic self-identification - in American society. Perhaps, all US trends will be upset by the Civil War 2.0 that some conventional observers already call a "mainstream" notion.
In any case, prudence requires to assume that the problem of global US disruptiveness will not solve itself or go away soon or, for that matter, easily.
The most important challenge of international security, therefore, is to manage a US that is especially dangerous now, by historical standards, and, even in decline, remains extremely powerful.
It is sad to say, but in terms of achieving global stability, America is precisely not what it imagines itself to be:
In reality, it is the single worst problem.
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