U.S. History
The U.S.A. and the World
Wednesday, 10 January 2007 15:41
The terrible events of
September 11, 2001 marked a turning point in the history of the United
States and the whole world. Overnight, it became impossible for ordinary
U.S. citizens to imagine that what was happening in the outside world
was no concern of theirs. A general sense of insecurity and apprehension
seized the national psychology. Suddenly, the world became a hostile
and dangerous place. Ever since September 11, Americans have been trying
to make sense of the kind of world that could produce such horrors.
Many people have been
asking themselves: what have we done that there should be such hatred
against us? Of course, ordinary Americans have done nothing to deserve
this kind of thing. And we regard it as a criminal act to kill innocent
civilians, of whatever nation, to make a political point. What is not
in doubt, however, is that the actions of the United States in the world
- its government, its big corporations and its armed forces - have aroused
feelings of deep antipathy and resentment, and it would be as well for
Americans to try to understand why this is so.
For much of its history,
isolationism has played a central role in the politics of the U.S.A.
But the fact is that in the modern world no country can cut adrift from
the rest of the world, no matter how big and powerful. Nowadays, the
most decisive phenomenon of our times is precisely this: the crushing
domination of the world market. It is often known by the latest buzzword,
globalization. But in fact it is not new. Already over 150 years ago
in that most contemporary of all works, The Communist Manifesto,
Marx and Engels predicted that the capitalist system, beginning as a
series of national states, would create a world market.
The participation of
the U.S.A. in world economy and world politics has grown almost continuously
for the last century. All attempts to pull America into a state of self-imposed
isolation have failed, and will inevitably fail, as George W. Bush has
found out very quickly. The United States has inherited the role that
was previously held by Great Britain –that of the world’s policeman.
But whereas Britain’s dominant role in the world took place at a time
when the capitalist system was still in its ascending phase, America
now finds itself ruling over a world that is mortally sick. The sickness
is the product of the fact that capitalism on a world scale is in a
state of irreversible decline. This expresses itself in a series of
convulsions that are increasingly of a violent character. The terrible
cataclysm of September 11 was only one manifestation of this.
Anti-Americanism is,
unfortunately, widespread. I say unfortunately because the present writer
holds no ill feelings towards the people of the U.S.A. or any other
country. As a Marxist, I am opposed to nationalism and chauvinist attitudes
that sow hatred and conflicts between different peoples. But that does
not mean that one can condone the actions of particular governments,
companies and armed forces that are pursuing actions that are harmful
to the rest of the world. It just means that it is wrong to confuse
the ruling class of any country with the workers and poor people of
that country.
The phenomenon of anti-Americanism
is strongest in poor countries in Asia, Africa, Latin America and the
Middle East. The reasons for this are related to the exploitation of
the resources of these countries by voracious U.S. multinational corporations,
backed by the U.S. military and the CIA, leading to the impoverishment
of their people, the destruction of the environment, the destabilization
of their currencies, their economies, and even their governments. Such
actions are not designed to promote love and respect for the U.S.A.
in the world at large.
A couple of years ago
The Economist concluded that the prices of raw materials were at
their lowest level for 150 years –that is, since records began. The
situation has varied somewhat since, but it has not changed the position
of millions of workers and peasants of the Third World who are being
forced to work for slave wages by big U.S. corporations. One American
golfer, Tiger Woods, for instance, earns more than the entire workforce
of Nike in Indonesia.
The ruthless conduct
of these big corporations is shown by the Bhopal tragedy in 1984, when
40,000 men, women and children were killed one night by the poisonous
fumes from a Union Carbide plant situated too close to their homes.
A recent report reveals that the area remains dangerously polluted to
this day. This case is unusual only inasmuch as it hit the headlines.
The super-exploitation of what is known as the Third World by rapacious corporations is what causes a backlash in Africa, Asia, the Middle East, and Latin America which may sometimes take the form of a rejection of all things American, but which is at bottom an expression of anti-imperialism. The best way to put an end to the poverty and starvation in the Third World is to fight for the expropriation of the big corporations that are the enemies of working people everywhere – beginning with the workers of the U.S.A., as we shall show.
Originally published in
the book Marxism
and the USA,
published by and available from Wellred.






