17th February 2024

Taiwan under President Tsai Ing-wen is being heavily armed by the US
The concept of the ‘new world order’, as coined by US President, George Bush, in January 1991 was an attempt to shape the post Cold War era in the image of the United States, following the defeat of the Soviet Union. The phrase emerged in a speech Bush made announcing the launch of Operation Desert Storm, following the Iraqi intervention in Kuwait which precipitated the first Gulf War. It was quickly seized upon by US neo-cons, in particular, as short hand for US imperialism’s desire to play the role of global policeman, justifying military intervention wherever and whenever deemed necessary.
With the strategic counter balance to US expansionism, which the Soviet Union represented having been taken away, the only acceptable interpretation of the world for the US was one it dominated. The so called Monroe doctrine, where the US since the 19th century saw Latin and South America as its ‘backyard’ in which to intervene as it wished, had now gone global.
While the US has undoubtedly flexed its economic and military muscle in a series of scenarios since 1991, things have not always gone according to plan. Overt and covert activity in the Middle East, previously aimed at curtailing Soviet influence, translated into attempting to stem the tide of Islamic fundamentalism resulting in the calamity of the Taliban and al-Qaeda. The origins of both can be traced back to CIA funded covert operations. In addition, the adventurist foreign policy pursued by the Iranian dictatorship, to fund a network of resistance across the region, including Hamas, Hezbollah and the Houthis, is a direct response to the failures of US Middle East policy.
The disastrous invasion of Iraq in 2003, under the fictional pretext of identifying weapons of mass destruction, undoubtedly made the US and its NATO allies more enemies than friends in the Middle East. The intervention in Libya has resulted in an ongoing civil war between rival factions; the retreat from Afghanistan has left the population at the mercy of the medieval Taliban; while the covert intervention to try and unseat Bashir al-Assad in Syria has more than backfired, with unsuccessful military action leading to the reality of a major refugee crisis for Western Europe.
The US still has too much military and economic might for these scenarios to be described as US imperialism’s death throes but there are increasing indications that the world order is changing and those changes are not to the liking of the US and its NATO allies. The most obvious of these is in relation to China.
While China has no military designs other than to defend its own territory, anti-Chinese rhetoric has been growing amongst Western politicians and media in recent years. Much of this is in response to the exponential growth in China’s economic power and its increasing influence with developing nations. Investments made on the basis of joint co-operation, collaboration and mutual trust are a far cry from the asset stripping and plundering which characterises the economic relationship of the West with the developing world.
Nations of the Global South increasingly see trade and investment with China as a more productive and sustainable option than dealing with Western backed corporations. Such successes are as a result of China’s Belt and Road Initiative (BRI), launched 10 years ago, with the aim of creating a network of mutually supportive economic relationships, not based upon exploitation and not based upon the expropriation of one state’s assets by another.
BRI is inspired by the concept of the Silk Road, established during the Han Dynasty 2,000 years ago, an ancient network of trade routes that connected China to the Mediterranean via Eurasia for centuries. The aim of BRI is to connect Asia with Africa and Europe via land and maritime networks along six corridors.
That such a strategy is a threat to the dominance of US economic imperialism, there can be no doubt, hence the increasingly vitriolic rhetoric aimed at painting China, as an economic danger, but also a military threat. Much of this rhetoric focuses upon the relationship of China to Taiwan, recognised in international law as Chinese territory, but increasingly used by the West as leverage with which to ‘justify’ its designs on restraining China’s economic growth. The US has been increasing its supply of weapons to Taiwan underlining the potential of the island being a bridgehead into direct conflict with China.
The concept of a Chinese ‘threat’ also lies behind the justification of the US and its NATO allies to increase military expenditure and add to the level of Western military presence in South East Asia generally.
There is also concern in Western capitals that China plays a key role in the BRICS (Brazil, Russia, India, China, South Africa) group, which is increasingly attracting the attention of nations of the Global South, looking to find ways to break with the US led global order.
While the BRICS countries are by no means a homogeneous group in terms of their political outlook the initiative remains an important one. The stranglehold of imperialist designed institutions such as the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and World Bank, both of which are US dominated and controlled, has tied developing nations to Western economies in ways which have thwarted, rather than encouraged, their economic independence.
The tools of the imperialist banking sector are there precisely to generate dependence and keep former colonial nations within a neo-colonial orbit. The deployment of Western corporations, infrastructure and technology only serves to reinforce those dependencies over the long term. Inevitably there is often a military pay off too, with arms contracts being tied into economic support and the stationing of military bases and US hardware as part of the deal.
The fact that the concept of “de-dollarisation” is even on the agenda of developing nations, and that there is an emerging investment network which it does not control, is of concern to the US. Also, there can be no doubt that much of the current US provocation towards China stems from the fear that the unipolarity it has enjoyed, since the defeat of the Soviet Union, is not only being questioned but is being actively challenged.
