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At a symposium held on the Atlantic
coast in Abidjan and attended by prominent members of the international
political and cultural communities, participants engaged in a lively
debate on how US foreign policy is impacting on the rest of the world. The
debate centered on trying to find a rational explanation for the support
the United States has been extending since the end of World War II up to
the present day to a large number of corrupt regimes in the Third World,
with often disastrous consequences. Indeed, it was thanks to American
backing that many otherwise defunct regimes survived as long as they did,
including those of several banana republics in South America, the Shah of
Iran and other unpopular rulers. In addition to consistently placing its
bets on the losing side, the United States pursued a policy throughout the
Cold War of supporting fundamentalist –theocratic- political movements
in the belief that they could serve as a bulwark against the spread of
communism.
What Washington failed to take into
account is that once a genie has been let out of the bottle, there is no
way it can be induced into going back in and that, moreover, the impact of
its emergence in the light cannot be predicted with any degree of
accuracy. Everyone knows that the Iranian revolution, which was to cause
the United States a great deal of aggravation, was assiduously courted by
Washington in the early days, before Khomeini fled first to Iraq and from
there to France, which took him under its wing and away from the American
embrace. But far from learning its lesson, the United States continued
playing the theocratic card in a number of other cases to counterbalance
the communist threat, which it regarded as a greater evil.
Perhaps the most famous illustration
of how this irresponsible game can get out of hand is what happened in
Egypt in the early ‘seventies, when the theocratic genie was used to
offset the influence of the socialist genie which had been let loose in
the ‘sixties. By the end of the decade, the theocratic genie had become
strong enough to turn on the man who had been instrumental in giving it a
new lease of life, Anwar Sadat, who was assassinated by a member of
Egypt’s fundamentalist movement. Moreover, there is no doubt in my mind
that the Palestinian theocratic genie was let out of the bottle in order
to clip the wings of the secular Palestinian resistance movement, Fattah
– an act of folly its perpetrators will rue for many years to come.
Participants at the Abidjan
symposium spent many hours trying to come up with a logical explanation
for this bizarre aspect of US foreign policy which, despite an abysmal
record of failures, continues to be applied to this day. The theme of the
debate was dictated by the venue of the symposium, Africa, where corrupt,
despotic rulers kept in power by the United States have wreaked havoc on
the peoples of the continent. Examples abound, but perhaps the most
notorious was Zaire’s Mobuto. My interpretation of the phenomenon
differed from that of the other participants, some of whom attributed it
to America’s inexperience in the field of foreign affairs, others to
Jewish domination over the American decision-making process.
My view was, rather, that American
foreign policy is influenced by two sets of considerations. One set is
related to its long-term interests, which dictate that the political
system of the United States support forces capable of moving their
societies forward both in terms of democratic development and economic
growth; the other, running parallel with the first, is related to the
short-term interests of powerful economic institutions, interests which
are not necessarily compatible with those of the United States in the long
term. The history of the United States since the end of World War II has
been shaped by a constant tug of war between the two sets of
considerations. Sometimes the decision-making process is more responsive
to the short-term interests of economic institutions, leading to the
disastrous alliances we spoke of earlier, much less frequently, it
operates to serve America’s own long-term interests.
When that happens, the United States astounds the world by taking
principled stands in defense of legitimate rights, as when President
Eisenhower condemned the tripartite aggression against Egypt in 1956.
If scientific socialism died because
it carried within it the seeds of its own destruction as represented in
its inability to achieve economic success, so too does the so-called
“Free World”, which is currently led by the United States, carry the
seeds of its own destruction, in the form of the sharp discrepancy between
the short-term interests that often determine its political decisions on
the one hand and the long-term interests of its own society and those of
the world at large on the other.
And yet this bleak picture is not
without a glimmer of light. There are grounds for optimism thanks to the
technological and information revolution which could help engender a
general climate favourable to the positive development of human rights and
environmental protection systems, which are still primitive, uncoordinated
and extremely inequitable. In such a climate, long-term considerations
that have for long been subsumed to the short-term considerations of
special-interest groups with an inordinately powerful influence on the
political decision-making process will come into their own.
Here a number of key states in the
Third World can play an important role in fostering a climate conducive to
just such a development. A necessary if not sufficient condition here is
to defuse whatever tensions now poison their relations with the United
States. Maintaining these tensions will only reinforce the status quo and
leave the field open to short-sighted, short-term interests, with all this
implies for the prospects of global peace and stability. If these
interests are given a free rein, they will be like a cankerous sore on the
global body politic, eating away at the foundations of world order and
paving the way to clashes, bottlenecks and explosions that could destroy
the present world order and bring the stage crashing down on the heads of
its principal players.
Summing up the conclusions reached
by the symposium, a noted French professor of political science at Paris I
University had this to say: “In other words, it is only if the United
States discards the theory that these strange regimes are the only barrier
in the face of global chaos that this worst-case scenario can be averted.
By clinging to that theory, the United States is trying to avoid the
breakdown of world order through methods that will only hasten its
coming!”
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