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	<title>Ceasefire Magazine &#187; foreign policy</title>
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	<description>Ceasefire is a quarterly cultural and political publication, concerned with producing high-quality journalism, review and analysis. We cover a wide range of topics – from Arthouse to Žižek.</description>
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		<title>Africa, racism and the West</title>
		<link>http://ceasefiremagazine.co.uk/africa-racism-and-the-west/</link>
		<comments>http://ceasefiremagazine.co.uk/africa-racism-and-the-west/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 25 Nov 2009 23:03:40 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Adam Elliott-Cooper</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Features]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[The Anti Imperialist]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Africa]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[anti-imperialism]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[anti-imperialist]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[colonialism]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[congo]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[fanon]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[foreign policy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[neocolonialism]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[pan-africanism]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://ceasefiremagazine.co.uk/?p=141</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[<img class="alignright size-medium wp-image-144" title="siblings" src="http://ceasefiremagazine.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/siblings-200x300.jpg" alt="siblings" width="200" height="300" />US military intervention in Africa, writes Adam Elliott-Cooper, is premised on a Western understanding of a global racial hierarchy in which Africans are at the bottom. ]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong><img class="alignright size-medium wp-image-142" title="4076590210_b40fea3164" src="http://ceasefiremagazine.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/4076590210_b40fea3164-300x293.jpg" alt="4076590210_b40fea3164" width="300" height="293" />US military intervention in Africa, writes Adam Elliott-Cooper, is premised on a Western understanding of a global racial hierarchy in which Africans are at the bottom.</strong></p>
<p>Racism has been endemic in Western foreign policy for centuries. When the Spanish arrived in what they called the ‘West Indies’ in 1540, they saw the indigenous people as vermin &#8211; no life was worth sparing. A critic of Spanish colonialism in the ‘New World’, Bartolomé de las Casas (1484-1566), described the actions of the settlers: “All those captured &#8211; pregnant women, mothers of newborn babies, children and old men &#8211; were thrown into the pits and impaled alive”.</p>
<p>The relevance of race and racism has not been prominent in the study of international relations, despite glaring differences in economic and military power between the predominantly white ‘North’ and the overwhelmingly black ‘South’. Colonial legacies, which have left destruction and suffering in their wake, have been exacerbated by economic policies unimaginable in Europe or the USA.</p>
<p>The inhuman treatment of non-Europeans, the global majority, simply because they stand in the way of economic resources or military gains, has been standard practice for the makers of Western foreign policy. Hundreds of years after de las Casas wrote of the horrors of colonialism, those of European descent continued to enslave, plunder and exterminate indigenous peoples around the globe. As Kipling described it, this was their burden: “Send forth the best ye breed/ Go bind your sons to exile/ To serve your captives’ need”.</p>
<p>European racism was of course resisted, and its criticism was published in western literature as soon as non-Europeans gained access to the Western media. The most notable exposition of the effects of racism on the psyche of both colonisers and colonised is found in the works of Frantz Fanon (1925-1961) and Edward Said (1935-2003). These fathers of postcolonial studies developed a crucial framework for the understanding of Western intervention in Africa. Fanon highlights the contradictions of colonialism as follows: &#8220;Black Africa is looked on as a region that is inert, brutal, uncivilised&#8221; even though “[d]eportations, massacres, forced labour and slavery have been the main methods used by [western] capitalism to increase its wealth . . . and establish its power [in Africa]”. Even today, Europe and the USA profit greatly from goods that are sourced under slave-like conditions (such as sweatshops) – yet they rarely question their own morality in intervening in conflicts in which they have often helped to start or exacerbate.</p>
<p><strong><br />
</strong></p>
<p><strong>The Somalia case</strong></p>
<p><img class="alignright size-medium wp-image-143" title="somaia" src="http://ceasefiremagazine.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/somaia-300x199.jpg" alt="somaia" width="300" height="199" />In 1992, Somalia was dubbed a ‘failed state’ by Western academics, citing the breakdown of Western-style political institutions and infrastructure. This judgement led the US-led UN task force to claim that they could restore law and order (helpfully ignoring the fact that Said Barre, the ruthless dictator spreading violence and suffering across Somalia, had been backed, funded and militarised by the US ever since he had come to power.)</p>
<p>Somalia was the first external military intervention in Africa since the end of the Cold War. The country had been fought over by the US and USSR a number of times via proxy wars in the postwar period, and the US saw the 1992 intervention as a chance to assert dominance as the global superpower in a unipolar word. Noam Chomsky dubbed it “a PR operation for the Pentagon”. Such a PR operation could only be conceived in a framework of US superiority: Africans were perceived as different to people of European descent – the ‘other’.</p>
<p>The ‘good intentions’ of the US mission in Somalia are usually stressed. The US mission statement was described by Chester Crocker, former Assistant Secretary of State for African Affairs, as a “sweepingly ambitious new ‘nation-building’ resolution”. But what made the US think they had the power to enter a country to stop a civil war and end a famine? More importantly, what made the US think they had a moral superiority over the Somali people that qualified them to determine the way in which their state was run? The US government dictated to the Somali people (and to the rest of the world) who they would install as the new leader of their country. Edward Said sums up this mentality as “the universal discourse of modern Europe and the US” who “assume the silence, willing or otherwise, of the non-European world”. Such sentiments are reflected in mainstream Western media: the Wall Street Journal despairingly states that “modern day colonialism may be the only policy that can prevent more tragedies in Somalia, and perhaps elsewhere in Africa”. This paternalistic attitude towards Africans is a further indication of the racism that has been burned into the minds of the American mainstream.</p>
<p>A further US attack on Somalia killed four people and wounded 20 in early 2008. The Pentagon claimed they were targeting a known al-Qaeda terrorist inside Somalia – yet despite the attack constituting a clear breach of international law, the US was not subject to any investigation. In fact according to the BBC, the US Defense Department spokesman Bryan Whitman “refused to give the identity of the target, whether the strike had achieved its goal or how the strike had been carried out”.</p>
<p>Such arrogance and contempt for international human rights serves as an expression of the racial superiority that international actors of European descent feel they have over Africans. Such apologias for neo-colonialism – including bombing raids in the name of national security – are entrenched in western media.</p>
<p><strong>9/11 and Sudan</strong></p>
<p><img class="alignright size-medium wp-image-144" title="siblings" src="http://ceasefiremagazine.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/siblings-200x300.jpg" alt="siblings" width="200" height="300" />It is often stated that national security concerns justify pre-emptive action as part of the so-called ‘war on terror’.</p>
<p>In 1998 the US bombed and destroyed a pharmaceutical factory in Sudan called al-Shifa, which was the main source of anti-malarial and veterinary medicines in the region, and essential for a predominantly agricultural country with many health problems (due, in part, to the ongoing conflict).</p>
<p>The US government insisted that the attack, dubbed ‘Operation Infinite Reach’ was a response to attacks on US embassies in Tanzania and Kenya a few days earlier. They also claimed that the factory was producing a VX nerve agent (classified as a WMD by the Chemical Weapons Convention) and that the owners of the medicine factory had ties with al-Qaeda.</p>
<p>The allegations of VX nerve agent production came from a CIA operation that found EMPTA (a compound used in VX) in a single soil sample taken from outside the factory. However, as EMPTA is also used in the production of industrial products such as plastic, it is therefore not banned under the Chemical Weapons Convention. As the New York Times notes: “Officials later said that there was no proof that the plant had been manufacturing or storing nerve gas, as initially suspected by the Americans, or had been linked to Osama bin Laden … no apology has been made and no restitution offered.”</p>
<p>It is impossible to say how many Africans died as a result of the ensuing shortages of human and veterinary medicine (the few serious estimates put the number at many thousands). But this is obviously beside the point. As Noam Chomsky points out, the ruling political elite in America uses such military forays to enable it to ignore popular calls for reforms such as for a state-based universal health service, improved schools or job creation.</p>
<p>Yet such diversion would not be possible if there did not already exist an underlying assumption of US moral and intellectual superiority in a global racial hierarchy. The implementation of foreign policy, from ‘humanitarian’ military intervention to the ‘war on terror’, can be – and is being – used as an effective tool in diverting the attention of western populations away from the problems in their own countries.</p>
<p>The destroyed lives of Africans are, at the most, little more than a slightly unpleasant afterthought.</p>
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		<title>Africa: the return of colonialism</title>
		<link>http://ceasefiremagazine.co.uk/africa-the-return-of-colonialism/</link>
		<comments>http://ceasefiremagazine.co.uk/africa-the-return-of-colonialism/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 09 Jan 2009 04:05:47 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Adam Elliott-Cooper</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Features]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[The Anti Imperialist]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Africa]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[colonialism]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[foreign policy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[neocolonialism]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[racism]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[somalia]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[sudan]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://ceasefiremagazine.co.uk/?p=68</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[We tend to think of problems on the African continent as purely internal. But, argues Adam Elliott-Cooper, that ignores our own role in fuelling the brutal conflicts that are taking place.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>Adam Elliott-Cooper</strong></p>
<p>Warfare has changed. Gone are the days of states following their noble, ideological paths into battle. New wars appear to be wars of ethnicity and ancient hatreds – a return to a primitive tribalism, infecting remote corners of southern regions.Hunger, genocide, rape, AIDS, forced resettlement, child soldiers.</p>
<p>These are all buzz-words linked with the conflict epidemic to which news channels occasionally devote the odd five minutes. Violence and suffering embedded in politics, often brushed aside in sweeping statements blaming corrupt governments, or weak economies. Distant tragedies, just managingto pluck at our heartstrings as we feel a fleeting concern for a few unfortunate souls.</p>
<p>It’s very easy for us, as enlightened and educated Westerners, to pity these people and countries. To wish they didn’t have the misfortune of being governed by corrupt leaders who rule with an iron fist, in countries that can barely produce enough to look after the well-being of their citizens. People often ask questions, like: is our government doing enough to help these countries? Are international bodies doing enough to help the situation? One may be led to believe that government funding to NGOs, the deployment of UN troops, and investments made by multinationals in poor countries, are all valiant efforts to bring economic development and sustainable peace to conflict zones on which we have had little influence. This assumption could not be further from the truth.</p>
<p>Vicious and bloody wars are ongoing in many parts of the world: in the Democratic Republic of Congo, Sudan, Sierra Leone and Angola &#8211; to name but a few. These conflicts have given rise to an enormous international arms market in which Northern actors sell huge amounts of lightweight and &#8211; more importantly &#8211; cheap weapons to groups in the South. According to Transparency International, G8 states controlled 85% of the arms trade in 2002,With regard to lightweight weaponry, mercenaries and child soldiers are used to wage battles against enemy forces or civilian populations. The most devastating and unsettling feature of a new war is the repeated targeting of civilians by soldiers. Whether these armies are public or private, ethnic cleansing through forced resettlement, rape and genocide, has plagued ‘new wars’ from the outset. The Carnegie Commission on Preventing Deadly Conflict states that “in some wars today, 90 per cent of those killed in conflict are non-combatants, compared with less than 15 per cent when the century began”. Torture and killing with basic weaponry such as Kalashnikovs and AK-47s haves also increased sharply. A study by the Small Arms Survey estimated that, on average, there is one death every minute as a result of lightweight weaponry.</p>
<p><strong>Discourses on development</strong></p>
<p>The general consensus of the international community, international aid agencies and discourse on development and conflict is that the causes of new civil wars are internal. Much emphasis has been placed upon the governments in the host states being corrupt and greedy, who are advocating and instigating conflict for their own selfish means. So as moral missionaries, Western governments deploy troops and aid workers to change poorer countries; to essentially make them more like us. The distinct aims of modern colonialists echo around hollow attempts at fulfilling empty promises</p>
<p>There is an alternative perspective and explanation for the causes of new wars. This perspective stems from the work of two political theorists: Raul Prebisch, the Director of the United Nations Economic Commission for Latin America during the 1960s, and Andre Gunder-Frank. According to this perspective, globalisation is not useful for the economic development of ‘dependent countries’ &#8211; which are countries in the South that rely on primary commodity exports, such as oil in Nigeria or diamonds in Sierra Leone, to sell to the richer, dominant countries in the North. The forces that perpetuate underdevelopment and, in turn, conflict are not internal problems as Western developmental discourse and modernisation theory may suggest. Dependency theory looks at multinational corporations, international banks and global markets as tools for the dominant states to further their own national economic interests in the South. For example, American farmers are heavily subsidised by the US government so they can sell products, such as rice, to people in many African countries more cheaply than African farmers can sell to their own people.</p>
<p>These economic tactics kick local farmers out of the market, forcing them to abandon agriculture, thus making the country dependent on imports from the dominant country. If the dominant country raises prices, the people of the dependent country starve.</p>
<p>One of the core insights of dependency theory is that, according to Gunder-Frank: “Poor countries exported primary commodities to the rich countries that then manufactured products out of those commodities and sold them back to the poorer countries.” One can highlight the fact that the greatest economic development in Latin American countries such as Brazil and Chile occurred when European countries, particularly Spain, were at war or suffering economic depression and therefore not constantly exploiting their raw materials and cheap labour. There are of course many more recent examples. Columbite-tantalite, a metal used in mobile phones and other electronic gadgets, is found across Africa in countries such as Zambia and The Democratic Republic of the Congo. This metal is sold to China, where it is processed and the value is added so it can be used in electronic equipment. The manufactured goods are then sold back to people in the African countries for an enormous profit. Despite the African nations being intrinsic to the production of the product, they will never make enough profit to aid the development of their country if the value of the product can only be increased by richer nations.</p>
<p>The implications of attempting to put this theory into practice would mean that Northern donor governments, the organisations affecting humanitarian policy, would have to curb the huge profits they make from Southern regions in the global market. These ideas, however, have gained little credence in Western developmental discourse. What we have seen instead is a shift of responsibilities.</p>
<p>Northern governments have decided that instead of ending the clear economic dependency that the South has on the North, humanitarian organisations must change their policies in order to stimulate development. According to convenient theories such as the ‘cosmopolitan approach’, societies in conflict regions need to change, and they will be helped to do this through the change in aid policy of NGOs such as Oxfam and CARE. Apparently poorer countries will only develop by providing cheap goods and labour for rich Northern states. Again, the colonial undercurrents are impossible to ignore.</p>
<p>Moreover, attention to the impact of foreign markets on underdevelopment and conflict will raise the uncomfortable issue of the mass sale of weapons from Northern donor governments to governments, groups and individuals in the South where the new wars are taking place. Advocates of the Western-centric modernisation theory to conflict resolution have taken into account the huge flow of weapons in international markets. Michael Klare insists, for instance, that there has been a “transformation of the global arms trade from its earlier focus on sales of major weapons systems to its current focus on sales of light and medium weapons.” But Klare fails to cite the fact that, according to recent studies, the United States arms transfer agreements with developing nations rose from $6.5 billion in 2005 to $10.3 billion in 2006. The same study also recognises an increase in light weapons being sold to the South, and that they have in fact come from smaller sellers of arms, such as Israel. However, the ‘cosmopolitan approach’ does not involve any proposal to curb this monstrous and savage market</p>
<p>According to a 1998 report by Oxfam, between 1995 and 1997 the UK sold small arms to over 100 countries. So by passing the buck, as it were, Northern governments are changing the policies of humanitarian organisations so that the pressure is on them to prevent future conflicts. The notion that Northern governments should bear this responsibility is almost completely ignored. To quote John Bolton, the U.S. Undersecretary of State for arms control, as he was speaking at a UN conference addressing the issue of small arms: “[the USA] would not support moves to outlaw any arming of rebel groups, nor would it help fund a campaign by human rights groups to raise awareness of the [small arms] trade”.</p>
<p>So in essence, national governments and international trade organisations have made no effort to change the things that induce war and poverty in the South. “We can’t have it both ways. We can’t be both the world’s leading champion of peace and the world’s leading supplier of arms,” said former US President Jimmy Carter, during his presidential campaign of 1976. It appears, from the evidence presented, that President Carter was wrong. It appears that Western governments pay no attention to the effect their hugely profitable foreign investments have on the nations they are exploiting.</p>
<p>Following the generally-accepted view that the problems of conflict and development in Southern regions are internal, one may be led to believe that national governments and international bodies are doing every conceivable thing to tackle the causes of new wars. The approach they have adopted creates the impression that they are acting selflessly to tackle problems that have little to do with their past or present actions.</p>
<p>In truth, this is a shameful façade, attempting to draw a veil over the way Northern bodies have benefited from profitable trade which serves to further entrench Southern nations in underdevelopment and poverty. In addition, attempts to curb the mass sale of arms have been ignored, or met with contempt. The notions that Northern governments have perpetuated underdevelopment through their trade practices and perpetuated conflict through the sale of arms have barely been admitted by the perpetrators. Governments insist on treating the symptoms rather than the causes of conflict and underdevelopment. Acting in this way ensures that the poor countries they are claiming to help will only develop to the point where their citizens can provide cheap labour and raw materials for the West.</p>
<p>Colonialism’s a thing of the past? I think not.</p>
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		<title>What is imperialism?</title>
		<link>http://ceasefiremagazine.co.uk/what-is-imperialism/</link>
		<comments>http://ceasefiremagazine.co.uk/what-is-imperialism/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 21 Jul 2008 16:13:45 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Ideas]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Africa]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[foreign policy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[imperialism]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://ceasefiremagazine.co.uk/?p=37</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[We&#8217;ve all heard the word, but what does it mean? Here, Dr. Andrew Robinson looks at the economic and social history of imperialism, examining the work of key thinkers, and asks whether imperialism is still around us. &#8220;Imperialism&#8221;&#8230; We&#8217;ve all heard it. But what is it? Something very old, yet also something very new. At [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>We&#8217;ve all heard the word, but what does it mean? Here, Dr. Andrew Robinson looks at the economic and social history of imperialism, examining the work of key thinkers, and asks whether imperialism is still around us.</strong></p>
<p><img class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-38" title="2180581652_a8d7cee87e_o" src="http://ceasefiremagazine.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2180581652_a8d7cee87e_o.jpg" alt="" width="500" height="159" /><span id="more-37"></span></p>
<p>&#8220;Imperialism&#8221;&#8230;  We&#8217;ve all heard it.  But what is it?</p>
<p>Something very old, yet also something very new.  At its most basic, domination of one society by another goes back as far as states &#8211; although not as far as humanity, being pretty much unknown in indigenous societies.  But the depth of today&#8217;s imperialism is relatively new.  The historic pre-capitalist empires, such as the Roman Empire, the Aztec Empire and the Chinese Empire, had a logic of &#8220;tribute extraction&#8221;, where subject-peoples were required to pay a tribute of money, soldiers or resources to the imperial capital.  They were usually allowed to keep their local rulers, economies and ways of life.  For this reason, &#8220;imperialism&#8221; as a term is usually reserved for the type of empire which arose with capitalism and modern society.</p>
<p>There were actually two waves of modern empire-building, the first in the sixteenth century when Spain conquered much of the Americas and white settler-colonies were formed in other places like what&#8217;s now the USA, Canada and Australia, and the second in the nineteenth century when European countries colonised most of Asia and Africa.  In the first stage, indigenous peoples in the target colonies were mostly wiped out, with around 90% of the population killed throughout the Americas.  Although some of the losses were from disease, a lot were caused by genocidal policies of attacking indigenous peoples and destroying their resources and environments.  In the USA for example, indigenous people were driven from their lands to make way for cattle ranches and frontier farms.  A policy was put in place to exterminate buffalo, the main source of food for the Native Americans of the Great Plains, and a series of brutal wars were waged against recalcitrant peoples.  Black Africans were captured as slaves and shipped to America to work on plantations.  Today the old settler-colonies in North America and elsewhere are established as part of the northern or First World.   South and Central America, and the Caribbean, occupy a more ambiguous position in today&#8217;s world.  The first wave of colonialism, which corresponds with the initial emergence of modernity in Europe, is often ignored in accounts of colonialism, partly because its motives were rather different from later phases.</p>
<p>What is more often thought of as classical imperialism was the colonisation of Asia and Africa in the nineteenth century.  By this time, Europe &#8211; having accumulated wealth through plunder and foreign trade &#8211; had begun to industrialise massively, and on doing so, has gained an advantage over the rest of the world in terms of weapons.  Taking advantage of this temporary situation, European states, with Britain and France in the lead, started invading and subjugating the previously independent societies of the rest of the world.  The colonisers behaved with incredible brutality in establishing and maintaining colonial rule.  The Germans killed hundreds of thousands of people in Namibia, the Belgians were known for cutting off hands in the Congo, and Britain is remembered for a litany of atrocities including the Amritsar massacre, where hundreds of anti-colonial protesters were trapped in a square and gunned down, and the forced resettlement of tens of thousands of people in Kenya and Malaya.  This time, however, the goal was not to exterminate local populations entirely.  Only a small layer of administrators and soldiers ever migrated from Europe to the new colonies (hence they always relied heavily on colonial subjects, from the same colony or a different one, to maintain control).  Rather, this new empire was all about economics.  India was initially colonised by the British East India Company, a private company whose existence was all about the &#8220;bottom line&#8221;.  Britain banned clothesmaking and salt production in India, hence creating a massive market for its own exports.  Later, Britain attacked China to force the Chinese rulers to accept opium imports from British colonies.</p>
<p>The colonial world came about by means of military force &#8211; not at all a matter of cultural superiority, indeed, a great historical low-point for humanity.  But this success went to the heads of many Europeans.  Colonialism was associated with the emergence of racist ideas, the idea of European &#8220;civilisation&#8221; as inherently &#8220;superior&#8221; to all others, the idea different &#8220;races&#8221; of humans, a European &#8220;destiny&#8221; to rule the world and so on.  The colonies were deemed inferior places, to be reshaped in the image of the coloniser.  They became sites for experimentation with technologies of control, violence and subordination.</p>
<p>Most of the colonised countries became independent following protests in the 1940s, 50s and 60s.  India led the way in 1947, granted independence by a war-weary Britain in a great victory for the massive non-violent Satyagraha protest movement.  Algeria and Vietnam soon followed, expelling the French in guerrilla wars.  Decolonisation dragged on until 1975, when the Portuguese were finally forced out of Africa, and even later in a few cases (such as Zimbabwe).  Even today there are a scattering of &#8220;dependencies&#8221; and &#8220;overseas provinces&#8221; of Britain, France, America and other countries, such as Diego Garcia, French Guiana, Puerto Rico, and New Caledonia/Kanaky.  In these places, anti-colonial struggles continue.</p>
<p>It is often argued, however, that while colonialism ended with decolonisation, imperialism did not.  Imperialism carried on in myriad new forms, sometimes termed &#8220;neo-colonialism&#8221;, &#8220;economic imperialism&#8221;, &#8220;cultural imperialism&#8221; and so on.  In addition, military interventions in militarily weak Southern countries have been a constant feature of western foreign policies from decolonisation to the present day.  The Iraq and Afghanistan wars are only the latest in a long series of invasions &#8211; in Guatemala, Panama, Vietnam, Sierra Leone, Somalia, Lebanon, Grenada and so on.</p>
<p><strong><span style="font-size: medium;">Theories of imperialism</span></strong></p>
<p>The most influential theory of imperialism is the economic model first formulated by the liberal author Hobson, but made famous by the socialists Lenin, Luxemburg, Kautsky and Hilferding.  According to this theory, imperialism arises from contradictions within capitalism.  In particular, because it produces more than it can sell, capitalism produces a surplus which it needs to sell, or put to work in production (a situation known as overproduction or underconsumption).  Having exhausted the options available within its existing hotbeds, it seeks new markets and productive resources abroad.  This often involves what David Harvey has termed &#8220;accumulation by dispossession&#8221;.  Local people have to be driven off their land and robbed of their tools and possessions so that both the people (as workers) and the land and objects (as productive resources) can be put to work by the capitalists.  Hence for instance, in India, Britain found markets for surplus textiles, and products such as tea which could be marketed &#8220;at home&#8221;.   Capitalism is thus viewed as paradoxically needing war and devastation.  According to this theory, as long as there&#8217;s capitalism, there will be war and imperialism.  (War also contributes to ending underconsumption by putting resources to work making weapons, and destroying some of the stock of surplus resources during the war itself).</p>
<p>Imperialism does not, however, mean that colonies are remade in exactly the image of the coloniser.  Rather, they are demonised as inferior or &#8220;underdeveloped&#8221;, as fundamentally lacking whatever it is which makes the dominant society superior.  According to anti-colonial psychologists Franz Fanon and Albert Memmi, the colonised subject is burdened with an impossible double demand &#8211; on the one hand the imperative to &#8220;develop&#8221;, to become like the coloniser, and on the other hand an assertion of her or his inability to do so, a refusal ever to recognise that such &#8220;development&#8221; has happened.  The colonial subject who identifies with the coloniser and learns &#8220;white&#8221; or &#8220;European&#8221; habits ends up as a reject in both worlds.</p>
<p>In economic terms, a parallel phenomenon is what is known as &#8220;dependency&#8221;, or &#8220;combined and uneven development&#8221;.  According to a series of scholars such as Prebisch, Baran and Sweezy, Cardoso, Frank, Wallerstein and Arrighi, western economic actions in colonies and post-colonies have taken the form of gearing the colonial economy to production for the colonising society.  This happens on unequal terms of trade &#8211; western societies sell items they produce above their value because of a monopoly on the technology or knowledge needed for their production, and pay less than the value of the primary commodities assigned to the dependent societies of the South.  According to this approach, different societies are not independent entities connected by external relations; rather, the internal dynamics of Southern societies have been altered at a deep level by the North, creating a single, interconnected world with unjust internal relations.  This is supplemented by &#8220;cultural imperialism&#8221;, in which western society is upheld as a global ideal and western consumer images (McDonalds, Mickey Mouse) exported as bearers of capitalist culture.</p>
<p>The North makes it very difficult for dependent societies to break out of their dependency.  In Andre Gunder Frank&#8217;s classic analysis of United Fruit in Guatemala, it is shown that Guatemalan &#8220;development&#8221; is driven by the needs of the company &#8211; roads, ports and so on are put in place to serve the fruit trade, with United Fruit&#8217;s agents in America acting as sellers.  Hence, when Guatemala kicked out United Fruit, they were left with a highly skewed economy lacking the means to do anything else.  Dependency theorists have suggested various approaches for breaking out of dependency.  These include &#8220;delinking&#8221;, or withdrawing from the world economy; &#8220;import substitution&#8221;, meaning diversifying local production to meet local needs, producing things which are currently imported from the west; &#8220;appropriate technology&#8221;, or the deployment of lighter, more labour-intensive technologies to ensure wider distribution of resources and less dependent relations in the South; and a &#8220;new international economic order&#8221;, involving a redressing of global inequalities.  Ideas of fair trade (paying the costs of production rather than the market price), sustainable development (concentrating on ecological and economic persistence over time instead of rapid economic growth) and human development (stressing issues like healthcare, infant mortality and life expectancy instead of economic growth) have also come partly from this approach.</p>
<p>Today it is often debated whether classical imperial relations still hold.  For some theorists, ideas like humanitarian intervention, failed states, development, globalisation and neoliberalism are continuations of older patterns of imperialist control.  Marxist authors such as David Harvey and Alex Callinicos argue for a basic continuity with classical imperialism.  There is still rivalry between imperialist powers.  Others such as Wood, Panitch and Gindin argue that imperialism is now largely an economic phenomenon, not relying so much on state power.  There is now a single imperialism based on the American economic system.  Other theorists argue that a new stage of capitalist control has been reached.  William Robinson has argued that a transnational capitalist class now controls the entire world directly, while Hardt and Negri argue that imperialism has been superseded by capitalist &#8220;Empire&#8221; in which capitalist control is directly exercised everywhere, with the old unevenness smoothed out.  Still others argue for a discontinuity between neoliberalism and the latest forms of American empire.  Jan Nederveen Pieterse has argued that there is a disjunction between neoliberalism and American empire, viewing the latter as an aggressive attempt to compensate for the problems of the former.  Arrighi has recently argued that American economic influence has unravelled, and America is using its one remaining asset &#8211; military force &#8211; to try to turn back the tide of history, which is pushing economic power towards East Asia.</p>
<p>The economic approach is not the only one.  An alternative put forward by some historians blames aristocratic pursuit of prestige for colonialism, arguing that racist ideas are outgrowths of classist ideas of &#8220;breeding&#8221;, and that colonialism served as a safety-valve for junior members of the aristocracy, and upwardly-mobile &#8220;commoners&#8221;, to lord it over subject-populations abroad.  Schumpeter analyses imperialism as an &#8220;objectless expansion&#8221; by a &#8220;warrior&#8221; class within society, which manufactures reasons to perpetuate its existence.  Virilio argues further that the logic of colonialism, the dominance by the occupying army over the subject population, is now internalised back into the coloniser societies, as dominance by a military way of seeing and a kind of deep state apparatus.  In international relations, it is often assumed that imperialism is a way to strengthen a state&#8217;s geopolitical position.  This might for instance consist in grabbing and monopolising scarce resources such as oil, uranium and clean water.  Military interventions are often highly selective, and sites of resource extraction, such as the Niger Delta, the Gulf oilfields, the uranium-rich areas of the Sahara, and Papua&#8217;s Freeport, are crucial sites of contestation.</p>
<p>More recently, increasing emphasis has been placed on the epistemological (knowledge) aspects of colonialism.  According to postcolonial theorists such as Spivak, Bhabha, Shiva and Escobar, imperialism did not simply take over societies, but also dismissed and devalued entire systems of knowledge, identity, science, belief and narrative.  It assumed that the &#8220;modern&#8221;, western way of seeing was universally valid, and imposed this way of seeing across the entire world.  In doing this, it denied voice to other peoples and agents.  Obviously this kind of imperialism is still very much alive today.  Hence for instance, Vandana Shiva writes of the preponderance of capitalist monoculture as a threat to other ways of life, and Edward Saïd exposes the prevalence of anti-Arab and anti-Muslim stereotypes, with related ideas of cultural inferiority.  Postcolonial theorists argue that the contact with other peoples and the self-definition through exclusion of colonised &#8220;others&#8221; is central to the way the West or North has constructed its identity.  The modern world is also necessarily the colonial world, or the &#8220;modern/colonial world system&#8221; as Walter Mignolo terms today&#8217;s world.  Hence, today&#8217;s world is very much a product of colonialism and has not escaped it.  In a famous quote from Salman Rushdie, &#8220;the British don&#8217;t know their own history because it was made somewhere else&#8221;.</p>
<p>Against capitalist monoculture, postcolonial theorists often counterpose global dialogue, listening to other voices and revaluing other epistemologies (systems of knowledge), including indigenous epistemologies and &#8220;border thinking&#8221; arising from points of contact between different discourses.  Some postcolonial theorists such as Shiva and Escobar argue against &#8220;development&#8221;, instead calling for an emphasis on local alternatives.  Followers of the Brazilian educator Paolo Freire emphasise the importance of resisting &#8220;submersion&#8221; in the dominant categories, instead learning to &#8220;speak one&#8217;s own word&#8221;.  Authors such as Badie, Chatterjee, Mbembe and Hecht and Simone question the universality of the western state-form, arguing instead for everyday practices.  Reflexivity &#8211; thinking critically about one&#8217;s own assumptions, and not taking them for granted &#8211; is emphasised by authors such as Spivak.  Postcolonial theory effectively calls for a decolonisation of culture and the mind, as well as of spaces and economies.</p>
<p><strong><span style="font-size: medium;">The legacy of imperialism</span></strong></p>
<p>In addition to the persistence of imperial wars, economic imperialism and epistemological dominance, imperialism has effects running through the whole of the social life of the contemporary world.  The modern-colonial world has created a world which is globalised, and yet highly uneven and uncertain of itself.  Identities have been torn apart by violence, and reappear in mutilated forms, either as creative hybridities and reflexive subjectivities or as aggressive &#8220;predatory&#8221; identities.  Colonial domination left a legacy of questionable boundaries along lines of historical convenience, cutting some populations in half and fusing others into illogical meta-states.  It also left a social structure in which the military was extremely strong, laying the foundation for coups, corruption and human rights abuses across the world.</p>
<p>Migration is widely demonised in the west as a supposed symptom of social breakdown and invasion from the &#8220;outside&#8221;.  In fact migration is built into the modern-colonial world.  The problems of the South, the attractions of the former colonial power and the uneven distribution of economic resources are all products of colonial history.  Colonialism left British and other western citizens scattered across the planet.  Caribbean people were encouraged to view Britain as the &#8220;motherland&#8221;, and actively solicited by the government to migrate to fill labour shortages in the 1950s.  But the racist attitudes encouraged by colonialism have also not abated.  In many places, policing practices such as stop-and-search reproduce colonial forms of dominance within societies, creating a kind of internal colonialism.  In other parts of the world, colonial powers played on existing ethnic divisions (such as Hutu and Tutsi, Sinhala and Tamil) or created new ones (such as African and Asian in Uganda or Guyana) as a way to control discontented locals through a middleman.  This exacerbated what might formerly have been benign differences into the hatreds sometimes expressed in ethnic cleansing today.</p>
<p>People who call themselves anti-imperialist are typically opponents primarily of western states and their allies.  But today, imperialism has become increasingly complex.  Firstly there is the phenomenon of proxy war, where local groups seek the aid of, or are used by, external powers to serve their local interests.  Often the proxy is not particularly imperialistic in itself, but simply ends up in a bad alliance.  Secondly, there&#8217;s the ambiguity of whether societies like the Soviet Union and China can be &#8220;imperialist&#8221;.  Some Marxists deny this, but it is undeniable that these states have subordinated other societies (Chechnya, Georgia, Xinjiang, Tibet) in recognisably imperialistic ways.</p>
<p>Thirdly, there&#8217;s the problem of Southern, post-colonial states which themselves invade neighbours or refuse to let parts of their territory secede &#8211; Iraq with the Kurds; Indonesia in East Timor, Papua, Aceh; Morocco in Western Sahara; Sudan in the South; India in the northeast and in Kashmir, and so on.  Is this to be considered imperialism or not?  It seems undeniable that postcolonial states inherited from the coloniser a lot of the colonial mindset, including western ideas of territorial integrity and nationality.  So basically, the postcolonial state acts as a continuation of the colonial state in suppressing &#8220;insurgency&#8221;.  But sometimes the issue is complicated because a second power, western or non-western, is backing the rebels.  Morocco for instance often accuses the Sahrawi resistance group Polisario of being an agent of foreign powers (it has been documented as operating out of Algeria).  At the limit, one comes up against cases such as Darfur &#8211; a local conflict between two groups (nomadic herders and farmers), complicated once over by the Sudanese regime&#8217;s war against rebels and the alleged involvement of Chad, and once more by the west&#8217;s hostility to Sudan and geopolitical ambitions in the region.  It becomes almost impossible to tell, without crudifying, who is the coloniser and who is the colonised.</p>
<p>Another legacy of imperialism is the ongoing subordination of indigenous peoples.  This takes diverse forms, from continued denial of political recognition to the devaluing of knowledge-systems and the theft of land.  In America and Canada, there are large areas of unceded territory which was never taken over by the respective states, but which they now claim as their territory.  In West Papua, the Niger Delta and Chiapas, indigenous peoples are in open rebellion against dominant states complicit in neoliberalism.  The indigenous challenge is not just about local autonomy, however.  It makes demands on people elsewhere to think otherwise.  The revaluing of indigenous knowledges is also about learning other ways of seeing, relating in more inclusive and networked ways to the whole of existence (animals, plants, rivers, spirits), questioning industrialism and the western ideas which have been established as global standards.</p>
<p>Finally, there is also the question of whether colonialism has been ended, or rather, generalised to the entire world.  On Virilio&#8217;s account, the security state is a kind of internal colonialism in which the colonial apparatus is applied backwards, onto the imperial society itself.  An article titled &#8220;The Parting of the Ways&#8221; has shown one example of this in practice &#8211; the policing of anti-capitalist protests in London stemming from Metropolitan Police absorption of Peter Kitson&#8217;s counterinsurgency guide, written about the Malayan anti-colonial insurgency.  Virilio has also claimed that our way of seeing is deeply marked by the military, colonial gaze &#8211; seeing as if through a camera or gunsight, instrumentalising problems like a military planner, mapping and counting like a colonial administrator.  The fantasy of war against barbarian &#8220;others&#8221;, a product of colonial reason, is still a staple both of fiction and of politics.  The &#8220;war on terror&#8221; is the most visible of its contemporary manifestations.</p>
<p>To conclude, imperialism is everywhere around us today &#8211; not only in the obvious places, in the Iraqi quagmire and the Foreign Office, but in less obvious ones too &#8211; in repressive policing and the security state, in stereotypes about black people and Muslims, in immigration &#8220;controls&#8221; and deportations, in the dominance of instrumental reason and the devaluing of nature, in a western &#8220;standard of living&#8221; built on unfair trade and global dependency.  But if imperialism is everywhere, then so is the struggle against it.  The struggle is therefore not just about decolonising Iraq, but also about decolonising our society, our minds, and our ways of seeing.</p>
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