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Thursday 31 January 2013

Tory Plans to teach His-TORY

"History" is what historians do to the past but unlike professional historians, the Conservative government does not do nuance, conflict, or the idea that there may be much wrong or to be critically  reflected upon. They don't much like the notion of historical evidence. This Conservative government, which boasts several historians with creditable achievements with the pen, thinks that the essence of British history is the unfolding of its "illustrious past" - Churchill, empire and Margaret Thatcher. There's lots wrong with this aim but what the current plans for "citizenship" testing for would-be Britons belies is the openly partisan character of the British state.

New Labour's big guns - Blair, Brown and the rest - were proud of the empire and refused to apologise for it. So nothing new about Tory imperialism. What this latest episode shows is the degree of emasculation of the British civil service in the face of the power of party.

One of the greatest of virtues of Britain - its openness to a variety of ideas about what Britain is, and its tolerance of a thousands flowers and strands of opinion - does not appear on the agenda.

What appears is Winston Churchill without his electoral defeat in 1945; Margaret Thatcher but no striking mineworkers who challenged the authority of power itself.

Britain, it appears, was "involved" in Ireland: no mention of the colonial plantation system and ethnic cleansing of Catholics.

Britain left in an orderly way from the empire - but no mention of a million-plus people killed in communal violence in India in 1947. Nothing about the torture and brutalisation of Mau Mau suspects, currently suing HMG in the courts. Silence on alliances with headhunters in Borneo and Malaya to thwart nationalist resistance to British rule.

And a bipartisan silence on the Iraq war's origins and course, currently subject of an official enquiry into unlawful killings and torture..

Providing a narrative with its critical counterpart: that's what wanna be Brits should learn to pass a citizenship exam. Many of them are fleeing precisely the sorts of regimes that provide a bland and celebratory version of history.

The politics of our time, however, militate against critique of an imperial past: that is because, as British troops engage in Mali, having already civilised Iraq and Afghanistan and Libya, the present remains imperial.

Sunday 20 January 2013

Obama's Establishment Straddles Democrats and Republicans

As we approach US President Barack Obama's second inauguration, attention must turn to the (now very) old question: why has Obama maintained the principal planks of the foreign and national security policies of the George W Bush administrations, despite promised radical change?

In their haste to explain, most commentators cling to what are now 'old favourites': Obama's legacy of wars and financial crises; his lack of experience in foreign affairs; his personal insecurities as commander-in-chief but having served in no wars. None of those arguments are without some merit but they remain wedded to arguments suggesting had this or that been different, Obama would have transformed US policy and power. This is patently false.

An article in a recent (pre-election) issue of Foreign Affairs, house organ of the US foreign policy establishment, unwittingly (almost) hit the nail on the head: "Obama is the Republican candidate", it declared. Actually, Obama was the Establishment candidate - and the real Establishment is bipartisan, welcoming millionaires from both its wings in the Democratic and Republican parties.

Obama's most recent nomination of former Republican senator, Chuck Hagel, illustrates this perfectly: variously described as a liberal realist or internationalist, or  a Republican realist, Hagel is endorsed by the big guns of the Establishment: Colin Powell, Robert Gates, Brent Scowcroft, Zbigniew Brzezinski, and others, who have rushed to defend him against neo-con charges of anti-semitism  and weakness on Iran, Syria, etc... Hagel supported the Iraq war. He supports full-blooded aid to Israel. He just thinks military power isn't always the answer to every problem (this makes him, to neocons, weak on national security).

Obama's pick for secretary of state is Senator John Kerry - another pro-Iraq war advocate,as was Hillary Clinton, the hardline and hawkish state department head,and current vice president, Biden.

Withdrawn from nomination for head of CIA in 2008 - John Brennan is Obama's choice for that role in 2013. Brennan's complicity in use of torture, in supporting the Guantanamo facility and the secret prisons programme, escalated drone strikes ie illegal assassinations with plenty of civilian casualties is well known or widely suspected, but hardly thoroughly investigated. He is likely to sail through the Senate hearings to which all nominees to top posts are subject.

Obama promotes those who backed the most absurd American war since Vietnam not because he is insecure, inexperienced, lacking knowledge of foreign affairs, or because he inherited a mess. He is a paid up member of the Establishment, fully bought into the American global power programme, and who sees all problems through the prism of US Establishment interests. It is not public opinion that drives US foreign policy: it is the Establishment and its myriad of think tanks, foundations, and other experts and financial backers from Wall Street and other prestigious addresses, and who are responsible for the global financial crisis and the rapacious character of US power (dressed up as exporting US core values).

What is the "Establishment"? Long ago, Godfrey Hodgson, the keenest British observer of American political life, provided an excellent definition: these he, argued, are the power behind the throne, the people who know the right people who get things done, those operating outside the US congress and mainly as appointees in the executive branch, whose power is often exercised outside of the constitutional forms. The power to block the people who don't belong and promote those who do. Wall Street, not Main Street, runs America. When it is said that "millions stand behind me" by White House incumbents they are referring to big bucks from Wall Street banks and American multinationals like Lockheed Martin, arms firms at the heart of the military-industrial complex that continues to wield massive power in the United States.

In this, his second term, Obama should have have been able to break free from anxiety and inexperience and speak with his own voice, if the usual critics had it right. That he is not doing so is not because he is obtuse: it is because he buys the programme. And that programme is a bipartisan Establishment programme that Obama bought into bit by bit over the many decades from his private school education in Hawaii, in California, at Columbia and Harvard universities.

Obama's record in dealing with issues that were NOT inherited legacies gave the game away long ago: the president who would not do coercive regime change supported it in Libya; who professed friendship to the people of the Middle East provided record levels of aid to Israel; who won the Nobel Peace Prize dramatically increased drone strikes across the world and escalated the war in Afghanistan; who believed in democracy backed Hosni Mubarak's oppressive regime in Egypt until it was clear that he was yesterday's man; who backed Saudi military intervention in Bahrain against citizens fighting for their democratic rights; and so on.

Despite the great achievement that President Obama represents as the first African-American chief executive, it is important to bear in mind the myth that he represents: he is half-white; not a man of the people, let alone of black people; has dropped any pretence of dealing with the structural and historically-rooted problems of racial and social inequality; and has paid his dues to the Establishment that placed him the White House in 2008 to pick up the pieces of crisis-ridden American power after 8 years of George W. Bush.

So militaristic is Obama's foreign policy programme that he outflanked the neo-conservative-backed Mitt Romney and gave him no place to go but increased rhetorical stridency. This has proved embarrassing to liberals who tend to remain quiet on Obama's military escalations; and outflanked neoconservatives who harp on without credibility about America's weaknesses.

Neither liberals nor neoconservatives have a vested interest in recognising the truth of Obama's record: it is one of which George W. Bush would have been proud.