Friday, March 5, 2010

CAN MONEY BUY EDUCATION?

In order to have a successful middle–class life, most Americans agree
that a person must have at least a four year degree.

To be deemed educated, a person must be in attendance at an institution, where
they pay money, accept the teachings offered by their professors,
repeat back the opinions and lessons of the classroom, participate in
a collegiate culture, and in exchange, receive a diploma.

A person who becomes skilled at seeking lessons directly from the elders in their community, who learns to tap into the resources of a public library,
who embarks on their own life adventures,
who sets about creating their own experiments and challenging and teaching themselves, is considered uneducated, unless a piece of embossed paper is handed
to them while wearing a cardboard hat and oversize dress.


Source: http://www.yesmagazine.org/blogs/shannon-hayes/can-money-buy-education

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MITTELEUROPA:THE MAKING OF AMERICA’S NEW COLD WAR

MITTELEUROPA’S GAMBLE—Bearding the Russkies one more time



Mitteleuropa2h

EDITOR’S INTRO: Regrettably far too few people in America understand the criminally irresponsible policy followed now by several US administrations, that of encircling Russia with U.S. missile bases from Poland through central Europe and Kosovo to Georgia, Azerbaijan and central Asia., in an attempt to dominate the last standing independent superpower. As usual, many pretexts are used. U.S. envoy Richard Holbrooke declared on February 20 that al Qaida is moving into former central Asian constituent parts of the Soviet Union, such as Tajikistan, Kyrgyzstan, Uzbekistan, Turkmenistan, and Kazakhstan. Holbrooke is soliciting U.S. bases in these former Soviet republics under the guise of the ever-expanding “war on terror.” Such moves are extremely dangerous, as they could easily ignite another arms race, with unpredictable consequences for humanity. But the question is: why are the American people sleeping again as their leaders get them into yet another huge mess? In the essay below our European correspondent Gaither Stewart examines the geopolitical factors involved in this delicate game. Suitably, the discussion begins with an evaluation of what classical strategists used to call mitteleuropa. We ignore this topic at our own peril.—P. Greanville

La Repubblica in Rome quoted the Russian Chief of Staff General Nikolay Makarov that the US missile shield scheduled for installation in East Europe is blocking the signing by Presidents Obama and Medvedev of a new START agreement (strategic arms reduction treaty) between the USA and Russia.

(Rome) What is the significance today of Central Europe which still retains residues of the era when it was known by its former German designation, Mitteleuropa? Just who are the peoples and nations of the great swath of Central Europe that in the West was called “East Europe” during the Cold War, the cradle of much of our common culture, but also the part of Europe nearer Russia where the US war machine supports anti-Russian governments and where pressures continue to install what remains of Reagan’s Star Wars fantasies in the form of spatial antimissile shields?

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Since history does sometimes repeat itself, I propose taking a new look at this part of the Old World, in a sense a world in itself, where today one hears loud and clear multiple echoes of the past and one witnesses historical repetitions, as the USA puts the whole area in its sights. This is the part of Europe where less than a century ago the USA and its allies intervened to encircle revolutionary Russia, thwart the Revolution and circumscribe the very idea of Socialism that Russia dared propose to the world. Yesterday it was economic embargoes and military intervention. Today American missile shields, military bases and anti-Russian regimes again threaten Russia. It is the same old story: occupation of Central Europe, as if it were a vacuum, a nullity, an empty space deprived of its own historico-cultural time and place. The ignorance of history is indeed a dangerous lacuna in international politics.

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After Germany’s defeat in World War II and the forty years later collapse of Socialist East Europe, West Europeans were surprised to learn that the culture and significance of the Old World area between Germany and Russia had survived. Like a Phoenix the area once called Mitteleuropa because it was a largely German cultural-economic zone of influence—despite all its particularisms—was reborn, bringing with it the ghosts of former ethnicities but also the character of a people for whom culture is fundamental. The European cultural idea. After travel in that large part of Europe during the Cold War, I came to like the romantic sound of the German translation of Central Europe to describe that Soviet-dominated part of Europe which the West insisted on labeling “East Europe” to differentiate it from “democratic West Europe”. I have used here the terms Mitteleuropa and Central Europe interchangeably.

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PRIOR TO WORLD WAR I and the break-up of the Austro-Hungarian Monarchy, “Mitteleuropa” was the area’s most descriptive designation. Parts of Central Europe today are well on their way to becoming American Protectorates and again an anti-Russian buffer zone. For despite the wishes of many Central Europeans themselves and America’s apparent ignorance of history to the contrary, old Mitteleuropa is again present, in many respects still what it always was.

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Geographically there exists a big and a little Mitteleuropa. Its confines are imprecise and subjective. In its broadest sense, Mitteleuropa comprises the sweep of lands from the Baltic Sea to a little south of the Alps and from Germany, Austria and Italy in the West to Russia in the East and the Black Sea, Greece and Turkey in the southeast. Under Austro-Hungarian domination Mitteleuropa included also Germany and reached as far east as western Byelorussia, Ukraine (especially Galicia), Lithuania and in the South to northeast Italy, Slovenia and Croatia and in the Southeast to Romania and Serbia. Under Russian domination it included all the Communist Peoples’ Republics which for the West was “East Europe.” After the fall of the Berlin Wall and the economic collapse of USSR, the old name, Mitteleuropa, reappeared, especially in reference to a more restricted Mitteleuropa consisting of Poland, Czech Republic, Slovakia, Hungary, western Romania, Slovenia, Croatia and Austria.

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missiledefenseThe word, Mitteleuropa, as well as the term and concept, were German inventions. The word’s meaning may be interpreted politically, culturally, historically and geographically. Though Germany too was part of that geographical area corresponding to contemporary Central Europe, today Mitteleuropa and its ideological concepts are at the same time near to and distant from Germany and Berlin. After the geo-political watershed of 1989, old Mitteleuropa, also geographically at the doors of Trieste, Munich and Vienna, magically re-emerged—good, bad and ugly—from the Socialist experience, merging more and more with the West, entering not only trade agreements but also joining NATO and the European Union, and above all military accords with the USA with anti-Russian overtones. Some West Europeans now wonder just what kind of Mitteleuropa it is that is joining the European Union.

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Over a decade ago I did a newspaper reportage on Mitteleuropa. I started my tour from Trieste at the southern gates of Central Europe. Trieste, the frontier city where novelist Italo Svevo and the poet Umberto Sava used to write in the famous Caffé San Marco, a tradition continued today by writer-journalist Claudio Magris. As in the 1800s, the atmosphere of that Mitteleuropa café is again marked by gypsy violins and Viennese waltzes, poetry readings and Sachertorte, fin de siècle lamps, chess players, and Italian, German and Slavic languages, underlining a cultural unity that has survived time and events in Central Europe.

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In his monumental book, Danube, the Germanist Magris depicts Napoleon’s victory over the Austrians at Ulm as the victory of modern Europe over former Hapsburg-Danubian Europe, the latter a world that died with World War I. According to Magris’ interpretation, Napoleon’s triumph was the victory of the unification process over the old Europe of separate nations, of the totalizer over the particular. The dialectical process continued with the rise of unifying Communism in East Europe, and then its fall and the concomitant reawakening of the particulars of Old Europe. Magris notes that we are witnessing the revenge of variegated Mitteleuropa: in his opinion, a positive phenomenon when it means freedom from tyrannies of various sorts; dangerous however when it means the return to the old hates and tensions of particularism. Antiquity can be inserted positively into the process of the construction of the modern, or, it can be merely an instrument of defense and rejection of any change at all. At Magris’ Stammtisch in the Old World café, nostalgia for the good old times is one thing, reality another. The central part of Europe that wants to return to the world scene and manifests traditions of liberalism, the defense of the individual and its great historical cultural traditions has nothing to do with nostalgia for Hapsburg times.

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But why the word, Mitteleuropa today? What does it mean? For Magris, Germany is the point. For centuries now Germany has always been the point in continental Europe. Although the German word itself is little used today, one continues to speculate about Mitteleuropa. Magris emphasizes the former concepts of German Kleindeutsch—a small Germany based on Prussia—and Grossdeutsch—a big Germany based on expansion toward Vienna and the East which in a limited way is again the case today. The German word, Mitteleuropa (Middle Europe), was born in the 19th century to indicate German economic and political supremacy—and also racial superiority in its most decadent formulation—recalling Edward Said’s similar theses regarding fundamental Western attitudes regarding the Orient in his book, Orientalism.

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When the concept of Mitteleuropa revived in the 1960s, people in the West began guessing at what the word implied for the non-German world of East Europe: though born as a German idea, the German word nonetheless today refers to a non-German world. Yet, many common aspects survive throughout Mitteleuropa: architecture, common cultural traditions in Vienna, Budapest, Prague and Krakow, ideas concerning analytical philosophy, ideological systems to explain the world, pessimism about history, irony, sensitivity for marginal things. The café tradition of hard-working people who like a drink on Sunday: from the Caffé San Marco to the Slavia in Prague, the Café Central in Vienna, the Hungaria-New York Café in Budapest, the old Picador in Warsaw. Vienna today is symbolic of the former Mitteleuropa: again a kind of melting pot of peoples of former Mitteleuropa: Poles and Ruthenians, Ukrainians and Romanians, Hungarians and Transylvanians, Roma gypsies and Eastern Jews, and where in the traditional New Year’s Concert always sounds the famous Radetsky March by Johann Strauss Sr. of 1840. An area of the honesty of “my word is my bond,” a love of literature and art. The idea of “to be rather than to seem.” Which made of those peoples also politically gullible peoples. Much of it Central Europe loves German culture and is still in Germany’s area of economic influence. But it is a world that in theory prefers to maintain a distance from Berlin. The reality is that the greater immediate problem for Europe of the East comes from the western shores of the Atlantic, from an America that prefers to see old Mitteleuropa, right up to the borders of Russia, as its sphere of influence simply because it won the Cold War.

“The generals were ready. Like Napoleon and Hitler, General Patton too dreamed of a triumphal march straight to Moscow. Because of general fatigue and nuclear fears Allied troops couldn’t march east at war’s end but for subsequent decades many Nazi policies vis-a-vis the USSR were to be followed to the letter by the United States. Former Nazis and their collaborators in Central Europe, including countless war criminals, became America’s allies. America’s embrace of such unsavory characters only made plain the nation’s leadership’s willingness to ally with the devil if necessary to protect its class interests.”

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missileMinuteman3launch

Minuteman3 missile launch. One of many "doomsday" weapons in America's strategic arsenal pointed at the old Russian antagonist.

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The Germanist Magris cautions that one should not forget the tensions and hates of the former Austro-Hungarian Empire with which many of its own peoples could not identify. Despite claims of right-wing intellectuals like Kundera, the past of Mitteleuropa was by no means progressive in comparison to Communist East Europe. Moreover the victory of the West over Communism in East Europe should be evaluated carefully. For perhaps the last word has not yet been spoken. Most definitely the question of Socialism is not dead in the East. Not everyone is convinced of the superiority of capitalism. Many Europeans in general are not. The Catholic Church and its popes are not. Bulgarian farmers are not. Hungarian workers are not. There can still be some surprises. One has long hoped that some kind of Mitteleuropean mentality could be the basis for regional cooperation. I believe the only variety would have to be socialistic. For it is in their DNA. Its more universal, humanistic politico-cultural heritage—despite the old particularisms—is in the long run simply too great for capitalistic individualism. The socialist ideals of liberty, equality and brotherhood once overcame individualism and can again. The problem for many Central Europeans was that Socialism in practice came to them though the Soviet filter, so that many came to believe that real Socialism developed more in Sweden than in Mitteleuropa. Yet, to know those peoples a bit where the spirit of brotherhood and equality survive is to recognize that real Socialism is at home here. And that it may return. American military bases or space shields notwithstanding.

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Recent history shows that one of the most urgent problems facing former Mitteleuropa-Central Europe is the threat of resurgent nationalisms. The end of Communism opened the gates to nationalistic totalitarianism. Modern Central European nations must defend themselves against reactionary nationalism, against which the European Union is supposed to be a shield … though in practice it is an increasingly modest one. Since 2006 Poland has been in the throes of that struggle. A couple years ago a Warsaw friend wrote me that Poland was already then a police state. Meanwhile the peoples in Central Europe want what the West has. And they want it fast. That desire however does not justify rabid nationalism and savage capitalism. Nor does it exclude Socialism; after all Marx too considered well-being the basis for Socialism. In my work in Mitteleuropa I found that though many people rejected the Soviet model, they did not—and still do not—reject Socialism. Nonetheless, considering the threats of US interventionism, Socialism in one country does not seem possible. In Mitteleuropa, it would necessarily have to be a simultaneous development, a bloc movement, in several countries at once.

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An old Communist-Socialist acquaintance, Jiri Pelikan, former Czech Communist leader and militant in the “Prague Spring” under Alexander Dubcek, believed a new kind of internationalism was required. A new social contract between governments and the governed. I would add especially today if only to avoid corporate-military regimes as in the contemporary USA. It was an irony of history for many Czechs that the Central European country with the most deeply rooted Western heritage became the prime ideological outpost of Moscow and was cut off from West Europe: the country of “Socialism with a democratic face” the most Soviet loyal. Czechoslovakia, like WWI Germany, was ripe for Socialism. Yet afflicted by contradictions and tensions, betrayed by the West by the 1938 Munich Pact and handed over to Nazi Germany, though still the center of Europe between East and West and torn between past and present, Czechs suffered from a national schizophrenia. Disappointed Czechs drinking record quantities of their famous beer, strangers in their own city, convinced of their inability to change either people or events, living in a Kafkaesque world escaping into alcohol. I remember the words of a Czech student leader: “West Europeans who no longer understand us are far away but Russians too are far far away from us. Russians are romantic people, while we Czechs are very practical.” That is Mitteleuropa speaking.

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missiles-reaganSellingSDI

Ronald Reagan selling his "Stars Wars" program.

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Once in the famous literary café of Prague, Slavia, I noted in block letters the following:

• MISTRUST OF THE WEST • FASCINATION WITH SOCIALISM • MISTRUST OF SOVIET ACHIEVEMENTS • LURE OF THE WEST

In the last century everything happened so fast in Central Europe—World War I, Nazism-Fascism, WWII, Communism and now capitalism—that people there today, though beginning to get acclimated to their new post-Cold War condition, are still drunk with “freedom,” as evident in Ukraine. One should hope they do not throw overboard their special cultural awareness in favor of the promised material well-being of savage capitalism. It is easy to criticize the dangers of comfort and ease of the “chewing gum society” of the West; yet East Europeans very much want the chewing gum. The Polish Pope, Karol Wojtyla, returned to that subject at the end of his life: “Nazism,” he said in his controversial affirmation, “was the absolute evil, and Communism the necessary evil,” with the emphasis on “necessary.” His words were interpreted to mean that Socialism is necessary to combat unlimited and uncontrolled Capitalism.

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What were the bloody wars in ex-Yugoslavia about but the ghost of the nationalism that for nearly half a century seemed overcome in Socialist East Europe? Magris reflects that struggle in his assessment of the conflict between the world of the Rhine (Germany and the West) and the world of the Danube (Mitteleuropa), between unitary German culture and heterogeneous, multinational Danubian culture. Former Mitteleuropa was above all the story of the meeting of German, Jewish and many small cultures, using German as the common language. Its culture is more than Pilsner beer and chamber music trios. The difference today is that the Kafkas write in Czech or Slovak or Hungarian or Polish, not in German. And one prefers to speak of Zusammenschluss instead of Anschluss.

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Despite his love for and dedication to the concept, Magris is largely pessimistic about Mitteleuropa. He was then concerned about the eventual role of Germany. Today I am certain he worries more about the USA. He worries about countries like Romania with weak economies and strong nationalism. The realities of Hungarians against Romanians, Slovaks against Czechs, Croats against Serbs are troubling phenomena that recall the worst of the past. Damned Bulgarians, charged its neighbors, damned Romanians, said the Hungarians as the two nations fought over Transylvania, damned Hungarians, said the Romanians and built fences between the two Eastern nations while Hungary was tearing down the fences between it and West Europe, damned Croats-damned Serbs, the two brothers swore as they went to war one against the other. Battles of words and not only. Ethnic minorities and religious minorities as Orthodox Serbs slaughtered Moslem Kosovars who long struggled in Yugoslavia for independence. And of more recent vintage, damned Americans, who bombed Belgrade and supported the independence movement in Kosovo in order to erect there one of America’s major military bases.

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Fortunately those many diverse peoples, though they cannot change overnight, have long and powerful cultural legacies to fall back on. Moreover, the rules of the European Union, as negative as they are economically, socially and politically, in the long run can help prevent them from attacking each other and reassure them about latent expansionistic aspirations of Germany that today seem to have vanished in history. The chief threat to Central Europe today comes from the West, across the Atlantic. The threat to make of them American colonies.

missileTopol_M_2005

Russia's Topol M defense missile.

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The concept of Mitteleuropa is also an emotional response to a cultural history that is universal. Writers from east of Germany have long influenced world culture. The work and voices of some of them still play roles in European culture today: the Polish Nobel poet, Czeslaw Milosz; Joseph Roth, the Galician Jew assimilated in the Austro-Hungarian Empire who wrote in German, the great arbiter of East European Jewry for the West (the novel, Radetsky March and the The Legend of the Holy Drinker); Franz Kafka, who in his back and forth between Vienna and Prague depicted the heart of Mitteleuropa; Franz Werfel, Rainer Maria Rilke, and Georg Lukács. When Poland was still Communist I had the good fortune of interviewing in Warsaw the writers Andrzei Kusniewicz and Julian Stryjkowski, when they were both over eighty, survivors of a generation of Central European intellectuals who hardly knew nationality. For although technically Austro-Hungarian, Mitteleuropa was a Babel of separatism, its writers, the first cultural Europeanists, depicted a cosmopolitan all-European culture. Kusniewicz suggested that to appreciate that former unity you only had to look at “the architecture of nearly identical Sackbahnhöfe (End Train Stations) from Galicia to Trieste to grasp its unity.” Both writers, representative of many others, spent their artistic lives fighting Fascism and describing their multilingual culture of speaking and reading in Polish, Russian, Yiddish, German, English and French.

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YUGOSLAVIA AND MITTELEUROPA

Post-WWII East Europe, though in the throes of revolution and counter-revolution (the Hungarian Revolution in 1956 and the Prague uprising of 1967), social upheavals, ideological purges and the promises and hopes for Socialism, was an exciting historical moment. Already after WWI there had been much enthusiasm for the idea of southern Slav unity and the idea of a Yugoslav (southern Slav) state. Yugoslavia, bordering with Magris’ Trieste, was long a key to the East European conundrum because it broke away from Moscow control and sought another path to Socialism. Only a few hours from Trieste beckoned names like Ljubljana, Zagreb and Beograd, capitals of Yugoslav republics-states held together by the power of the nationalistic Yugoslav Communist League of Marshal Tito and Milovan Djilas. (Djilas later dissented from the party line over internal issues, wrote a damning book, The New Class, was arrested and later lived in internal exile in his apartment in Belgrade where I had the good fortune of interviewing him several times. His book, Conversations With Stalin, provide a rich background in Marxism-Leninism in practice and his views of why it ultimately failed.)

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In those early years of Socialism in practice great debates and polemics over Marxist-Leninist internationalism and nationalism shook the Communist world. Yet Tito’s Yugoslavia was very social: comradery, solidarity and expressions of the passions and pathos of the human condition. While various uprisings in Socialist East Europe were put down and the Cold War sharpened, Yugoslavia appeared to be one unified country. In the early days of Yugoslav Socialism, there were few signs of international conflicts and oppressions of minorities. Few signs of what was to happen a generation later when the diverse peoples of different religions but all speaking the same language slaughtered each other. Though in original Leninist theory, also the Yugoslav state was supposed to ultimately “wither away”, neither Tito nor Djilas intended the state’s demise. Therefore Yugoslavia split from Moscow. Yugoslavia’s problem was that neither did Serbia or Croatia or Slovenia or Bosnia or Montenegro or Macedonia intend withering away within the Yugoslav Federation. In the 1980s, at the time things fell apart in the land of the southern Slavs, Djilas told me it would be a bloody struggle: “Just wait till it breaks out in Bosnia,” he said, “blood will flow in rivers.” The unity the Southern Slavs dreamed of in the early 20th century had come full circle and collapsed in a paroxysm of madness in the 1990s.

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After the Yugoslav union split up and each republic set out alone and even a certain normality began to develop, American bombers flying from aircraft carrier Italy returned in the 1990s to destroy the old Serb-Yugoslav capital, Belgrade, just as had German bombers in WWII. Allegedly to put a stop to the bloody internecine in the land of the Southern Slavs, the USA in reality aimed at a foothold there –and eventually got it in Kosovo, part of Serbia.

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THE THREAT

In 2008, Warsaw and Washington struck a deal on deploying ten US long-range interceptor missiles in Poland as part of a global air-defence system which was heavily pushed by the US administration of George W. Bush. Now Obama has launched a review of the controversial system which Washington claims is intended to block potential Iranian attacks, a system fiercely opposed by Russia. The anti-missile system, meant to be ready by 2013, would also include a radar base in the Czech Republic, Poland’s southern neighbour.

Moscow is enraged by what it sees (with ample justification) as the latest US foray into its sphere of influence and has threatened to train nuclear warheads on Poland and the Czech Republic, both of which left the Communist bloc in 1989 and joined NATO 10 years later. Obama’s review of the antimissile system sparked concerns in Warsaw and Prague that after sticking out their necks for Washington, they would be left to take the flak from Moscow amid a thawing of ties between the two giants. Though President Obama has apparently eliminated Reagan’s technologically weak Star Wars systems, he has supported the Bush plan for the installation of antimissile shields in Poland and Czech Republic, perhaps also updated radar sites in addition to major US military bases already in Bulgaria in the southeast corner of old Mitteleuropa.

Such talk regularly raises alarm in Moscow which charges the US with accelerating rearmament. Logically Moscow asks, antimissile shields against whose missiles? The Iranian threat, America answers. A system to protect Europe. That is indeed bullshit. Though America considers as an alternative the installation of the shield in Turkey, the question of US threats to and fears of Russia, Communist or not, remains.

Many American military men agreed with some WWII Germans that the United States had fought the wrong World War II. German generals and even Admiral Karl Donitz, Hitler’s successor for a few days, hoped up that the Allies would allow them to surrender to the West and then fight the real war in the East together. The generals were ready. Like Napoleon and Hitler, General Patton too dreamed of a triumphal march straight to Moscow. Because of general fatigue and nuclear fears Allied troops couldn’t march east at war’s end but for subsequent decades many Nazi policies vis-a-vis the USSR were to be followed to the letter by the United States. Former Nazis and their collaborators in Central Europe, including countless war criminals, became America’s allies. America’s embrace of such unsavory characters only made plain the nation’s leadership’s willingness to ally with the devil if necessary to protect its class interests.

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After the collapse of the USSR and the end of Cold War, the whole world changed. But not US ruling class attitudes toward Russia. The fear of Russia remains, a fear communicated to the masses via the always compliant corporate media. Why, one wonders? Is the Russian bear on the warpath? Is Russia pressing against West Europe and establishing military bases all over the world? Is Russia a dangerous Fascist dictatorship? Or is today’s Russian capitalism only sham to cover up what is in reality masked Communism? Perhaps Socialism still lives in Russia?

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I found some telling statistics of the year 2009 compiled by Russia’s Gallup Poll, the Levada Center. Only 29% of Russians consider the country better off now than in the Soviet era, while 60% regret the end of the Soviet Union and think it could have been saved. A whopping 51% want more state intervention than today and 63% think the state should provide public services and guarantee a decent standard of living. And as for a dictatorship in Russia, President Medvedv enjoys a popularity rating of 74%, Putin 79%, both elected democratically. Those are terrifying statistics to died-in-the-wool capitalists. Hardly surprising then that in this context American conservatives worry that the passage of a law establishing an absurdly limited National Health Service smacks of—horror of all horrors!—“SOCIALISM.” The “containment” of Russia, and its possible bad example, is therefore once again, necessary. Mitteleuropa is where these paranoias will inevitably play themselves out.

By Gaither Stewart

Based in Rome, novelist and veteran journalist GAITHER STEWART is Cyrano’s Journal Online Special European Correspondent. His latest book is the master spy thriller THE TROJAN SPY, soon to be released by DA Diamonds (UK).


Article printed from CYRANO'S JOURNAL ONLINE: http://www.bestcyrano.org

URL to article: http://www.bestcyrano.org/?p=4815

Posted By hijabella On 26 February, 2010 @ 10:06 pm In American Imperialism, American politicians, CAPITALISM & SOCIALISM, CIA + Government crimes, Obama, US military | No Comments

Copyright © 2009 Cyranos Journal Online. All rights reserved.


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The history that “binds” the US and Haiti [1]

Amid the smug media celebration of our “goodness”, uncomfortable history


You won’t hear this from Katie Couric’s lips (or Diane Sawyer’s!)
APTOPIX Haiti Earthquake [1]In his statement on the Haitian earthquake Wednesday, President Barack Obama referred to the “long history that binds us together.” Neither he nor the US media, however, have shown any inclination to probe the history of US-Haiti relations and its bearing on present catastrophe confronting the Haitian people. [continue reading [2]]


BY BILL VAN AUKEN, WORLD SOCIALIST WEB SITE [3]

In a cynical and dishonest editorial, the New York Times Thursday began, “Once again the world weeps with Haiti,” a country which it goes on to describe as characterized by “poverty, despair and dysfunction that would be a disaster anywhere else but in Haiti are the norm.” The editorial continues: “Look at Haiti and you will see what generations of misrule, poverty and political strife will do to a country.” In a background article on the Haitian disaster, the Times adds that the country “is known for its many man-made woes—its dire poverty, political infighting and proclivity for insurrection.”

In his statement on the Haitian earthquake Wednesday, President Barack Obama referred to the “long history that binds us together.” Neither he nor the US media, however, have shown any inclination to probe the history of US-Haiti relations and its bearing on present catastrophe confronting the Haitian people.
Rather, the backwardness and poverty that have played a substantial role in driving the death toll into the tens, if not hundreds, of thousands are presented as a natural state of affairs, if not the fault of the Haitians themselves. The United States is portrayed as a selfless benefactor, ready to come to the aid of Haiti with donations, rescue teams, warships and Marines.
In a cynical and dishonest editorial, the New York Times Thursday began, “Once again the world weeps with Haiti,” a country which it goes on to describe as characterized by “poverty, despair and dysfunction that would be a disaster anywhere else but in Haiti are the norm.”
The editorial continues: “Look at Haiti and you will see what generations of misrule, poverty and political strife will do to a country.”
In a background article on the Haitian disaster, the Times adds that the country “is known for its many man-made woes—its dire poverty, political infighting and proclivity for insurrection.”
In a shorter and even more dismissive editorial, the Wall Street Journal celebrates the fact that the US military will play the leading role in Washington’s response to the earthquake as “a fresh reminder that the reach of America’s power coincides with the reach of its goodness.”
It goes on to draw an obscene comparison between the Haitian earthquake and the one that struck southern California in 1994, in which 72 people died. “The difference,” the Journal declares, “is a function of a wealth-generating and law-abiding society that can afford, among other things, the expense of proper building codes.”
The message is clear. The Haitians have only themselves to blame for the hundreds of thousands of dead and injured, because they failed to create sufficient wealth and lacked respect for law and order.
What is deliberately obscured by this comparison is the real relationship, which has evolved over more than a century, between “wealth generation” in the United States and poverty in Haiti. It is a relationship built on the use of force to pursue US imperialism’s predatory interests in a historically oppressed country.
If the Obama administration and the Pentagon carry through with reported plans to deploy a Marine expeditionary force in Haiti, it will mark the fourth time in the past 95 years that the US armed forces have occupied the impoverished Caribbean nation. This time, as in the past, rather than aiding the Haitian people, the essential purpose of such a military action will be to defend US interests and guard against what the Times refers to as the “proclivity for insurrection.”
The roots of this relationship go back to the birth of Haiti as the first independent black republic in 1804, the product of a successful slave revolution led by Toussaint Louverture, and the subsequent defeat of a French army sent by Napoleon.
The ruling classes of the world never forgave Haiti for its revolutionary victory. It was subjected to a worldwide embargo that was led by the United States, which feared the Haitian example could inspire a similar revolt in the southern slave states. It was only with southern secession and the outbreak of the Civil War that the North recognized Haiti—nearly 60 years after its independence.
From the dawn of the 20th century, Haiti fell under the domination of Washington and the US banks, whose interests were defended by sending Marines to carry out an occupation that continued for nearly 20 years, maintained through the bloody suppression of Haitian resistance.
The Marines left only after carrying out the “Haitianization”—as the New York Times referred to it at the time—of the war against the Haitian people by building an army dedicated to internal repression.
Subsequently, Washington backed the 30-year dictatorship of the Duvaliers, which began with the coming to power of Papa Doc in 1957. While tens of thousands of Haitians died at the hands of the military and the dreaded Tontons Macoute, US imperialism saw the murderous dictatorship as a bulwark against communism and revolution in the Caribbean.
Since the mass upheavals that brought down the Duvaliers in 1986, successive US governments, Democratic and Republican alike, have sought to reconstruct a reliable client state capable of defending the markets and investments of US firms attracted by starvation wages, as well as the property and wealth of the Haitian ruling elite. This entails preventing any challenge to a socio-economic order that keeps 80 percent of the population in dire poverty.
This effort continues today under the tutelage of Bill and Hillary Clinton—respectively the UN’s special representative to Haiti and the US Secretary of State—who together have Haitian blood on their hands.
Washington has backed two coups and sent US troops back into Haiti twice in the past 20 years. Both coups were organized to overthrow Jean-Bertrand Aristide, the first Haitian president to be elected by popular vote and without Washington’s approval. Together, the coups of 1991 and 2004 claimed the lives of at least 13,000 more Haitians. In the 2004 overthrow, Aristide was forcibly transported out of the country by US operatives.
Needing them in Iraq, the US withdrew its troops in 2004, contracting the job of repression out to a United Nations peacekeeping force of 9,000 under the leadership of the Brazilian army.
Despite Aristide’s capitulation to the demands of the International Monetary Fund and his willingness to compromise with Washington, the mass support he attracted with his anti-imperialist rhetoric made him anathema to the ruling elites in both Washington and Port-au-Prince. On the orders of the Obama administration, he is barred from returning to Haiti and his political party, Fanmi Lavalas, remains effectively outlawed.
This is the real and continuing history that, as Obama put it, binds Haiti to US imperialism, which bears overwhelming responsibility for the desperate conditions that have compounded the carnage inflicted by the earthquake.
There are, however, other ties that bind and are deeply felt, as the immensity of the tragedy in Haiti unfolds. There are over half a million Haitian Americans officially counted in the US and undoubtedly hundreds of thousands more who are undocumented. Their presence concretizes the class interests and solidarity that unite Haitian and American workers. Together, it is their task to sweep away the conditions of poverty and devastation in both countries, along with the capitalist profit system that has created them.
Bill Van Auken
•••••
The Guardian 13 January 2010
Our role in Haiti’s plight
Haiti is routinely described as the “poorest country in the western hemisphere”. This poverty is the direct legacy of perhaps the most brutal system of colonial exploitation in world history, compounded by decades of systematic postcolonial oppression.
Peter Hallward
Any large city in the world would have suffered extensive damage from an earthquake on the scale of the one that ravaged Haiti’s capital city on Tuesday afternoon, but it’s no accident that so much of Port-au-Prince now looks like a war zone. Much of the devastation wreaked by this latest and most calamitous disaster to befall Haiti is best understood as another thoroughly manmade outcome of a long and ugly historical sequence.
The country has faced more than its fair share of catastrophes. Hundreds died in Port-au-Prince in an earthquake back in June 1770, and the huge earthquake of 7 May 1842 may have killed 10,000 in the northern city of Cap ­Haitien alone. Hurricanes batter the island on a regular basis, mostly recently in 2004 and again in 2008; the storms of September 2008 flooded the town of Gonaïves and swept away much of its flimsy infrastructure, killing more than a thousand people and destroying many thousands of homes. The full scale of the destruction resulting from this earthquake may not become clear for several weeks. Even minimal repairs will take years to complete, and the long-term impact is incalculable.
What is already all too clear, ­however, is the fact that this impact will be the result of an even longer-term history of deliberate impoverishment and disempowerment. Haiti is routinely described as the “poorest country in the western hemisphere”. This poverty is the direct legacy of perhaps the most brutal system of colonial exploitation in world history, compounded by decades of systematic postcolonial oppression.
The noble “international community” which is currently scrambling to send its “humanitarian aid” to Haiti is largely responsible for the extent of the suffering it now aims to reduce. Ever since the US invaded and occupied the country in 1915, every serious political attempt to allow Haiti’s people to move (in former president Jean-Bertrand Aristide’s phrase) “from absolute misery to a dignified poverty” has been violently and deliberately blocked by the US government and some of its allies.
Aristide’s own government (elected by some 75% of the electorate) was the latest victim of such interference, when it was overthrown by an internationally sponsored coup in 2004 that killed several thousand people and left much of the population smouldering in resentment. The UN has subsequently maintained a large and enormously expensive stabilisation and pacification force in the country.
Haiti is now a country where, according to the best available study, around 75% of the population “lives on less than $2 per day, and 56% – four and a half million people – live on less than $1 per day”. Decades of neoliberal “adjustment” and neo-imperial intervention have robbed its government of any significant capacity to invest in its people or to regulate its economy. Punitive international trade and financial arrangements ensure that such destitution and impotence will remain a structural fact of Haitian life for the foreseeable future.
It is this poverty and powerlessness that account for the full scale of the horror in Port-au-Prince today. Since the late 1970s, relentless neoliberal assault on Haiti’s agrarian economy has forced tens of thousands of small farmers into overcrowded urban slums. Although there are no reliable statistics, hundreds of thousands of Port-au-Prince residents now live in desperately sub-standard informal housing, often perched precariously on the side of deforested ravines. The selection of the people living in such places and conditions is itself no more “natural” or accidental than the extent of the injuries they have suffered.
As Brian Concannon, the director of the Institute for Justice and Democracy in Haiti, points out: “Those people got there because they or their parents were intentionally pushed out of the countryside by aid and trade policies specifically designed to create a large captive and therefore exploitable labour force in the cities; by definition they are people who would not be able to afford to build earthquake resistant houses.” Meanwhile the city’s basic infrastructure – running water, electricity, roads, etc – remains woefully inadequate, often non-existent. The government’s ability to mobilise any sort of disaster relief is next to nil.
The international community has been effectively ruling Haiti since the 2004 coup. The same countries scrambling to send emergency help to Haiti now, however, have during the last five years consistently voted against any extension of the UN mission’s mandate beyond its immediate military purpose. Proposals to divert some of this “investment” towards poverty reduction or agrarian development have been blocked, in keeping with the long-term patterns that continue to shape the ­distribution of international “aid”.
The same storms that killed so many in 2008 hit Cuba just as hard but killed only four people. Cuba has escaped the worst effects of neoliberal “reform”, and its government retains a capacity to defend its people from disaster. If we are serious about helping Haiti through this latest crisis then we should take this comparative point on board. Along with sending emergency relief, we should ask what we can do to facilitate the self-empowerment of Haiti’s people and public institutions. If we are serious about helping we need to stop ­trying to control Haiti’s government, to pacify its citizens, and to exploit its economy. And then we need to start paying for at least some of the damage we’ve already done.

Obama frothing on Haiti. Don't suspend disbelief.

Obama frothing on Haiti. Don't suspend disbelief.

IN HIS STATEMENT ON THE HAITIAN EARTHQUAKE Wednesday, President Barack Obama referred to the “long history that binds us together.” Neither he nor the US media, however, have shown any inclination to probe the history of US-Haiti relations and its bearing on present catastrophe confronting the Haitian people.

Rather, the backwardness and poverty that have played a substantial role in driving the death toll into the tens, if not hundreds, of thousands are presented as a natural state of affairs, if not the fault of the Haitians themselves. The United States is portrayed as a selfless benefactor, ready to come to the aid of Haiti with donations, rescue teams, warships and Marines.

In a cynical and dishonest editorial, the New York Times Thursday began, “Once again the world weeps with Haiti,” a country which it goes on to describe as characterized by “poverty, despair and dysfunction that would be a disaster anywhere else but in Haiti are the norm.”

The editorial continues: “Look at Haiti and you will see what generations of misrule, poverty and political strife will do to a country.”

In a background article on the Haitian disaster, the Times adds that the country “is known for its many man-made woes—its dire poverty, political infighting and proclivity for insurrection.”

In a shorter and even more dismissive editorial, the Wall Street Journal celebrates the fact that the US military will play the leading role in Washington’s response to the earthquake as “a fresh reminder that the reach of America’s power coincides with the reach of its goodness.”

It goes on to draw an obscene comparison between the Haitian earthquake and the one that struck southern California in 1994, in which 72 people died. “The difference,” the Journal declares, “is a function of a wealth-generating and law-abiding society that can afford, among other things, the expense of proper building codes.”

The message is clear. The Haitians have only themselves to blame for the hundreds of thousands of dead and injured, because they failed to create sufficient wealth and lacked respect for law and order.

What is deliberately obscured by this comparison is the real relationship, which has evolved over more than a century, between “wealth generation” in the United States and poverty in Haiti. It is a relationship built on the use of force to pursue US imperialism’s predatory interests in a historically oppressed country.

If the Obama administration and the Pentagon carry through with reported plans to deploy a Marine expeditionary force in Haiti, it will mark the fourth time in the past 95 years that the US armed forces have occupied the impoverished Caribbean nation. This time, as in the past, rather than aiding the Haitian people, the essential purpose of such a military action will be to defend US interests and guard against what the Times refers to as the “proclivity for insurrection.”

US Marines in Haiti, 1919. As usual preserving "democracy" at gunpoint.

US Marines in Haiti, 1919. As usual, the imperial troops were preserving "democracy".

The roots of this relationship go back to the birth of Haiti as the first independent black republic in 1804, the product of a successful slave revolution led by Toussaint Louverture, and the subsequent defeat of a French army sent by Napoleon.

The ruling classes of the world never forgave Haiti for its revolutionary victory. It was subjected to a worldwide embargo that was led by the United States, which feared the Haitian example could inspire a similar revolt in the southern slave states. It was only with southern secession and the outbreak of the Civil War that the North recognized Haiti—nearly 60 years after its independence.

From the dawn of the 20th century, Haiti fell under the domination of Washington and the US banks, whose interests were defended by sending Marines to carry out an occupation that continued for nearly 20 years, maintained through the bloody suppression of Haitian resistance.

The Marines left only after carrying out the “Haitianization”—as the New York Times referred to it at the time—of the war against the Haitian people by building an army dedicated to internal repression.

Subsequently, Washington backed the 30-year dictatorship of the Duvaliers, which began with the coming to power of Papa Doc in 1957. While tens of thousands of Haitians died at the hands of the military and the dreaded Tontons Macoute, US imperialism saw the murderous dictatorship as a bulwark against communism and revolution in the Caribbean.

Since the mass upheavals that brought down the Duvaliers in 1986, successive US governments, Democratic and Republican alike, have sought to reconstruct a reliable client state capable of defending the markets and investments of US firms attracted by starvation wages, as well as the property and wealth of the Haitian ruling elite. This entails preventing any challenge to a socio-economic order that keeps 80 percent of the population in dire poverty.

This effort continues today under the tutelage of Bill and Hillary Clinton—respectively the UN’s special representative to Haiti and the US Secretary of State—who together have Haitian blood on their hands.

Washington has backed two coups and sent US troops back into Haiti twice in the past 20 years. Both coups were organized to overthrow Jean-Bertrand Aristide, the first Haitian president to be elected by popular vote and without Washington’s approval. Together, the coups of 1991 and 2004 claimed the lives of at least 13,000 more Haitians. In the 2004 overthrow, Aristide was forcibly transported out of the country by US operatives.

Needing them in Iraq, the US withdrew its troops in 2004, contracting the job of repression out to a United Nations peacekeeping force of 9,000 under the leadership of the Brazilian army.

Despite Aristide’s capitulation to the demands of the International Monetary Fund and his willingness to compromise with Washington, the mass support he attracted with his anti-imperialist rhetoric made him anathema to the ruling elites in both Washington and Port-au-Prince. On the orders of the Obama administration, he is barred from returning to Haiti and his political party, Fanmi Lavalas, remains effectively outlawed.

This is the real and continuing history that, as Obama put it, binds Haiti to US imperialism, which bears overwhelming responsibility for the desperate conditions that have compounded the carnage inflicted by the earthquake.

There are, however, other ties that bind and are deeply felt, as the immensity of the tragedy in Haiti unfolds. There are over half a million Haitian Americans officially counted in the US and undoubtedly hundreds of thousands more who are undocumented. Their presence concretizes the class interests and solidarity that unite Haitian and American workers. Together, it is their task to sweep away the conditions of poverty and devastation in both countries, along with the capitalist profit system that has created them.

Bill Van Auken is a senior writer and political analyst with WSWS.

•••••

The Guardian (U.K.) 13 January 2010
Our role in Haiti’s plight

By Peter Hallward

Bodies outside the capital city morgue.

Bodies outside the capital city morgue.

Any large city in the world would have suffered extensive damage from an earthquake on the scale of the one that ravaged Haiti’s capital city on Tuesday afternoon, but it’s no accident that so much of Port-au-Prince now looks like a war zone. Much of the devastation wreaked by this latest and most calamitous disaster to befall Haiti is best understood as another thoroughly manmade outcome of a long and ugly historical sequence.

Haiti is routinely described as the “poorest country in the western hemisphere”. This poverty is the direct legacy of perhaps the most brutal system of colonial exploitation in world history, compounded by decades of systematic postcolonial oppression.

The country has faced more than its fair share of catastrophes. Hundreds died in Port-au-Prince in an earthquake back in June 1770, and the huge earthquake of 7 May 1842 may have killed 10,000 in the northern city of Cap ­Haitien alone. Hurricanes batter the island on a regular basis, mostly recently in 2004 and again in 2008; the storms of September 2008 flooded the town of Gonaïves and swept away much of its flimsy infrastructure, killing more than a thousand people and destroying many thousands of homes. The full scale of the destruction resulting from this earthquake may not become clear for several weeks. Even minimal repairs will take years to complete, and the long-term impact is incalculable.

What is already all too clear, ­however, is the fact that this impact will be the result of an even longer-term history of deliberate impoverishment and disempowerment. Haiti is routinely described as the “poorest country in the western hemisphere”. This poverty is the direct legacy of perhaps the most brutal system of colonial exploitation in world history, compounded by decades of systematic postcolonial oppression.

The noble “international community” which is currently scrambling to send its “humanitarian aid” to Haiti is largely responsible for the extent of the suffering it now aims to reduce. Ever since the US invaded and occupied the country in 1915, every serious political attempt to allow Haiti’s people to move (in former president Jean-Bertrand Aristide’s phrase) “from absolute misery to a dignified poverty” has been violently and deliberately blocked by the US government and some of its allies.

Aristide’s own government (elected by some 75% of the electorate) was the latest victim of such interference, when it was overthrown by an internationally sponsored coup in 2004 that killed several thousand people and left much of the population smouldering in resentment. The UN has subsequently maintained a large and enormously expensive stabilisation and pacification force in the country.

Haiti is now a country where, according to the best available study, around 75% of the population “lives on less than $2 per day, and 56% – four and a half million people – live on less than $1 per day”. Decades of neoliberal “adjustment” and neo-imperial intervention have robbed its government of any significant capacity to invest in its people or to regulate its economy. Punitive international trade and financial arrangements ensure that such destitution and impotence will remain a structural fact of Haitian life for the foreseeable future.

It is this poverty and powerlessness that account for the full scale of the horror in Port-au-Prince today. Since the late 1970s, relentless neoliberal assault on Haiti’s agrarian economy has forced tens of thousands of small farmers into overcrowded urban slums. Although there are no reliable statistics, hundreds of thousands of Port-au-Prince residents now live in desperately sub-standard informal housing, often perched precariously on the side of deforested ravines. The selection of the people living in such places and conditions is itself no more “natural” or accidental than the extent of the injuries they have suffered.

As Brian Concannon, the director of the Institute for Justice and Democracy in Haiti, points out: “Those people got there because they or their parents were intentionally pushed out of the countryside by aid and trade policies specifically designed to create a large captive and therefore exploitable labour force in the cities; by definition they are people who would not be able to afford to build earthquake resistant houses.” Meanwhile the city’s basic infrastructure – running water, electricity, roads, etc – remains woefully inadequate, often non-existent. The government’s ability to mobilise any sort of disaster relief is next to nil.

The international community has been effectively ruling Haiti since the 2004 coup. The same countries scrambling to send emergency help to Haiti now, however, have during the last five years consistently voted against any extension of the UN mission’s mandate beyond its immediate military purpose. Proposals to divert some of this “investment” towards poverty reduction or agrarian development have been blocked, in keeping with the long-term patterns that continue to shape the ­distribution of international “aid”.

The same storms that killed so many in 2008 hit Cuba just as hard but killed only four people. Cuba has escaped the worst effects of neoliberal “reform”, and its government retains a capacity to defend its people from disaster. If we are serious about helping Haiti through this latest crisis then we should take this comparative point on board. Along with sending emergency relief, we should ask what we can do to facilitate the self-empowerment of Haiti’s people and public institutions. If we are serious about helping we need to stop ­trying to control Haiti’s government, to pacify its citizens, and to exploit its economy. And then we need to start paying for at least some of the damage we’ve already done.

Article printed from CYRANO'S JOURNAL ONLINE: http://www.bestcyrano.org

URL to article: http://www.bestcyrano.org/?p=4528

URLs in this post:

[1] The history that “binds” the US and Haiti: http://www.bestcyrano.org/?p=4528

[2] continue reading: http://www.bestcyrano.org/?p=4528&page=2

[3] WORLD SOCIALIST WEB SITE: http://www.wsws.org/articles/2010/jan2010/pers-j15.shtml

Posted By hijabella On 11 January, 2010 @ 2:38 pm In ASIDES, American Imperialism, Obama | 3 Comments

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