Resisting the Global
Domination Project:
An interview with Prof. Richard Falk
April 18, 2003
For over three decades, Richard Falk has shared,
with fellow Americans Noam Chomsky and Edward Said, a reputation
of fearless intellectual and political commitment to the building
of a just and humane world. He recently retired as Professor of
International Law and Practice, at Princeton University and is
currently a Visiting Distinguished Professor at the University
of California, Santa Barbara. He has been a prolific writer, speaker
and activist of world affairs and the author or co-author of more
than 20 books.
The following are excerpts from a discussion that
Falk had with Zia Mian and Smitu Kothari about the US war on Iraq,
the role and future of the United Nations and the need to rethink
democratic institutions and practices.
Kothari/ Mian: Before the war, there were unprecedented
protests in the U.S and around the world. It was evident that
a significant proportion of world opinion was opposed to the US
plans to attack Iraq. Additionally, if the second Resolution had
come to the UN, the US would have faced a veto in the Security
Council, and yet they went ahead with the war. What are your thoughts
on the legality and illegality of the war, and what are its implications
for both the present period of engagement and the post-war situation?
Richard Falk: Before one gets to the issue of legality
or morality there is the issue of a war by the US Government that
violated fundamental rights of its own citizenry in a country
that proclaims itself the world’s leading democracy. This
war against Iraq is very questionable constitutionally, as well
as dubious under international law. There was no urgency from
the perspective of American national security that might have
justified a defensive recourse to a non-UN war, which is further
suspect because the war was initiated without a formal and proper
authorization from Congress. So this war against Iraq is constitutionally
unacceptable and anti-democratic even if account is taken only
of the domestic legal framework in the United States.
Aside from that, there was no basis for a UN mandate
for this war, either on some principle of humanitarian emergency
or urgency of the sort that arguably existed in Kosovo (1999)
or in some of the sub-Saharan African countries that were sites
for controversial claims of humanitarian intervention during the
1990’s. There was also no evidence of a defensive necessity
in relation to Iraq that had provided some justification for the
unilateral American recourse to war against Afghanistan in 2001.
In the Afghanistan War there was at least a meaningful linkage
to the September 11th attacks and the persistence of the al Qaeda
threat. A defensive necessity existed, although recourse to war
stretched the general understanding of the right of self-defense
under the UN Charter and international law. In contrast, recourse
to war against Iraq represents a flagrant departure from the fundamental
norms of the UN Charter that require war to be waged in self-defense
only in response to prior armed attack, or arguably in some exceptional
circumstance of imminent necessity -- that is, where there is
a clearly demonstrable threat of major war or major attack, making
it unreasonable to expect a country to wait to be attacked. International
law is not a prison. It allows a measure of discretion beyond
the literal language of its rules and standards that permit adaptation
to the changing circumstances of world politics. From such a standpoint,
as many people have argued in recent years, it is reasonable to
bend the Charter rules to the extent of allowing some limited
exceptions to the strict prohibition of the use of force that
is core undertaking of the UN and its Charter, and is enshrined
in contemporary international law. This analysis leads to the
inevitable conclusion that in the context of Iraq recourse to
force and war was impermissible: there was neither a justification
under international law, nor was there a mandate from the United
Nations Security Council (and if there had been such a mandate
it would have provided dubious authority for war, being more accurately
understood as an American appropriation of the Security Council
for the pursuit of its geopolitical goals). Furthermore, there
were no factual conditions pertaining to Iraq to support an argument
for stretching the normal rules of international law because there
were credible dangers of Iraqi aggression in the near future.
If such reasoning is persuasive, then it seems to me inescapable
that an objective observer would reach the conclusion that this
Iraq War is a war of aggression, and as such, that is amounts
to a Crime against Peace of the sort for which surviving German
leaders were indicted, prosecuted, and punished at the Nuremberg
trials conducted shortly after World War II.
Kothari/ Mian: Is there a case or any effort to
legally challenge the U.S.? Given the international relations
of power and evolving geopolitics what kind of space exists for
any intervention of that kind?
Richard Falk: It is necessary to understand that
the available global political space available for such a legal
challenge was severely constrained by U.S. geopolitical influence
throughout the entire Iraq crisis, dating back to the first Gulf
War in 1991. It is instructive to consider the framing of the
recent debate in the United Nations Security Council around the
famous resolution 1441, incorporating a position that unconvincingly
accepted 80% of the U.S. allegations against Iraq. It is important
to realize that even France and Germany, credited with taking
an anti-American position, were arguing for an avoidance of war
within the essential framework insisted upon by the U.S., and
the U.K. The UN debate took it as established that the punitive
resolutions passed after the Gulf War more than a decade earlier
needed to be implemented by force to the extent that Iraq resisted.
The debate was thus limited to the narrow question of whether
these demands should be implemented by reliance on inspection
or by war, and even here the inspection option was conditioned
on Iraq's willingness to cooperate with unprecedented intrusions
on its sovereignty in the ultra-sensitive area of national security.
It is helpful to realize that France and Germany were only arguing
that inspection was doing the job of implementing the 1991 resolutions,
especially SC Res. 687.
Nowhere did the proponents of the inspection path
insist that Security Council resolutions calling for the immediate
end to Israeli occupation of the West Bank and Gaza be implemented.
Nowhere was the question raised as to whether the 1991 ceasefire
conditions imposed on Iraq continued to be justified, or whether
American threats against Iraq (open advocacy of "regime change")
warranted lifting UN sanctions and other restrictions on Iraqi
sovereignty, or did not create a duty by the UN to protect Iraq
against severe threats directed by the US at its political independence
and territorial integrity as promised by Article 2 of the Charter.
In fact, the U.S. made it rather clear that it hoped that it preferred
for the resolutions not to be enforced. Washington sought a pretext
for war against Iraq. The White House was reluctant for this reason
to seek authorization from the UN, and was persuaded to seek a
Security Council mandate so as to enhance the legitimacy of the
war and to get more countries to share the burden.
All along Washington viewed this inspection path
at the UN as an alternate route leading to war, at most an annoying
delay, but under no conditions providing grounds for abandoning
the resolve to embark on war. The US could not exert full control
over the Security Council, given Iraqi compliance with the inspection
process, and so recourse to war was undertaken by the US in defiance
of the UN. Even then the UN lacked the autonomy to condemn such
an unacceptable recourse to war. It needs to be remembered that
if Washington had been more patient the inspection path might
itself have produced a UN authorization of war, either if the
inspection uncovered weapons of mass destruction, or if the Iraqis
resisted some of the more extravagant demands of the inspectors.
Although opponents of the Iraq War can take satisfaction from
the refusal of UNSC to acquiesce in the US war policy, there are
still many reasons to take note of the weakness of the UN in upholding
the genuine security needs of the peoples of the world, or to
fulfill the Charter vision of saving "succeeding generations
from the scourge of war."
Kothari/ Mian: So what you are arguing is that
the entire framework of debate in the UN was itself severely constrained?
Richard Falk: Yes, the whole framework of debate
was distorted and deformed from the beginning. The real question
before the Security should have been, were there grounds for the
use of force against Iraq under any circumstances. The argument
that Iraq had not complied with these resolutions in 1991 expresses
a concern about the extent of UN authority in this sort of setting.
But it also raises the important question about whether the 1991
ceasefire arrangements did not involve the kind of punitive peace
that had been so disastrously imposed on Germany after WWI. The
Versailles treaty has to be seen as one of the colossal blunders
of the 20th century contributing to virulent German nationalism,
to the militarisation of Germany, to the rise of Nazism and political
extremism, generating a series of developments that led to WWII,
to upwards of 50 million deaths and to the use of atomic bombs
against the Japanese civilian population. In my judgment, this
punitive peace imposed on Iraq, was from Day One an illegitimate
way of normalising the relationship between Iraq and the international
community after the Gulf War. We also need to recall that the
Gulf War was itself a legally, politically, and morally dubious
war, which might have been averted by a greater reliance on diplomacy
and sanctions to achieve the internationally acceptable goal of
reversing Iraq’s aggression against Kuwait.
From a more progressive perspective, and with an
eye on global reform, it is crucial to realize the degree to which
the United Nations framework has itself been substantially co-opted
by geopolitical forces concentrated in Washington. Even this degree
of co-optation, which is less than 100%, frustrated the US Government
in this instance. The Iraq debate in the UNSC was about the remaining
20% of the global political space that has so far eluded becoming
geopolitically subordinated to the goals of U.S. foreign policy
and US grand strategy aiming at global domination. What made the
U.S. radical right leadership so furious was its inability to
twist enough arms to gain control over this last 20%, an inability
that resulted because the US was proposing a course of action
that so plainly defied the UN Charter, international law and the
elemental sense of international prudence. If you take note of
the debate in the United States, some of the most vocal and influential
opponents of the war were academic realists, individuals who have
over the years generally favored the use of force in American
foreign policy. But in this instance, from a prudential national
interest perspective, they opposed the war. Such realist opposition
is confirmation of the extremism that is generating American global
policy. The Bush administration has adopted a post- realist orientation
toward geopolitics that is partly religiously motivated and justified,
and seems intent on projecting American power globally no matter
what the norms, the breadth and depth of opposition, and the risks
involved. It is these elements that make American leadership so
dangerous for itself, and in the short run, even more menacing
for the rest of the world.
Kothari/ Mian: Is this proclivity to violence in
the Bush administration a response to its failure to secure control
of the remaining 20% of the UN as it seeks to globally dominate
the institutions and places where the U.S. writ did not run? In
fact, Immanuel Wallerstein has argued recently, that this is a
response to America’s relative decline and that this is
actually a restoration project rather than an expansionist project.
Richard Falk: These are important issues. With
regard to the remaining 20% of independent global space, the present
leadership in the White House seems likely to abandon the pursuit
of that objective, at least within the framework of the UN. The
Bush policymakers have been taught a lesson that more ideological
members of the Bush team had warned about anyway. It is useful
to remember that the U.S. was only persuaded some months back
to seek authorization from the UN after some Republican stalwarts
like Brent Scowcroft (former National Security Advisor), James
Baker, and more quietly, the senior George Bush, insisted that
the Bush administration needed this collective mandate from the
UN, that without it the war lacked sufficient political backing.
This challenged the White House. George W. Bush’s original
impulse was to act the way they did in Afghanistan without bothering
with the UN, claiming its own sovereign prerogatives to use force
as it thought necessary. For the White House/Pentagon hard line
their mistake was to heed the advice of the Republican old guard.
Instead, the new Bush reactionaries are convinced that if you
cannot control that last 20%, then it should be ignored, preferring
unilateralism to inaction. The new statecraft in Washington is
to go ahead with their global dominance project, acting outside
the UN and international law, claiming support on the basis of
so-called "coalitions of the willing," which include
weak and submissive participants, making the operation appear
to be the work of "a coalition of the coerced."
As far as the Wallerstein argument is concerned,
it offers instructive historical insights but I don’t find
it convincing overall. It is not attentive to a set of global
conditions that have never existed before. The United States is
a global state that is not deterred by any countervailing power
that exists within the state system, and is driven by a visionary
geopolitics aspiring to global domination. To the extent that
the United States is deterred, it is by non-state centers of resistance
that have shown the will and capability to inflict severe harm.
The scary credibility of this American global dominance project
rests on this idea that when one no longer has to worry about
deterrence, then the preeminent actor can achieve the total control
over the entire system. Such a grand strategy animates this leadership.
These goals were explicated long before the Bush administration
came to Washington. It is important to read what Richard Perle,
Paul Wolfowitz, and the other Bush ideologues were advocating
during the 1990s when they were watching from the sidelines throughout
the Clinton presidency. Theirs' was a view that America shouldn’t
misinterpret the end of the Cold War, that it was not the time
to disarm or a moment to declare "peace dividends."
On the contrary, it was the time to seize the great opportunity
provided by the Soviet collapse to establish a global security
system presided over by the United States. Such ambitions could
only be satisfied, however, if the US Government was willing to
invest sufficiently in military capabilities, including taking
full advantage of "the revolution in military affairs"
that required doctrinal innovations and drastic changes in weapons
procurements .
Kothari/ Mian: With the UN effectively demobilized
and the emerging spectre of the US exerting its political and
economic hegemony in wider and deeper arenas globally, what are
the possibilities and sources of potential resistance?
Richard Falk: At the present, I do not see the
sources of effective resistance to this American undertaking in
the short run. What I do see, and that’s why I refer to
global fascism, is sufficient resistance, including here in the
U.S., that it will lead the American leadership to pursue by all
means a consolidation of economic and military power and a willingness
to repress wherever necessary. The outcome seems increasingly
likely to be a global oppressive order with a significant domestic
spillover, which is already manifest. Given an attorney general
like John Ashcroft the domestic face of the American global design
is revealed as a kind of proto-fascist mentality that is prepared
to use extreme methods to reach its goals. Without being paranoid,
this is the sort of mentality that is capable of fabricating a
Reichstag fire as a pretext so as to achieve more and more control
by the state over supposed islands of resistance. At present,
the US Government manipulates terrorist alerts as a way of scaring
the American people into a submission that is at once abject and
incoherent. The combination of the September 11th shock effect
and the constant official warnings that there will be a repetition
of such attacks has so far disabled Americans from mounting an
effective opposition.
Kothari/ Mian: There is a lot of studied speculation
on the American regime’s motivations in going to war, ranging
from the need to expand its sphere of power, consolidating its
military-industrial, economic and geopolitical interests globally
to appropriating to itself the role of unilateral global policeman.
What in your assessment are the real motivations of the present
regime?
Richard Falk: Of course, the true motivations for
a controversial undertaking like the Iraq War are concealed by
American elites. Far more than elsewhere, American leaders operate
within a frame of reference that takes for granted American innocence
-- what some diplomatic historians have identified as America’s
moral exceptionalism, the claim that American foreign policy embodies
uplifting values, contrasting with other states that are driven
by crass interests. Such a contrast is sometimes expressed by
contending that the US is a Lockean nation in a Hobbesian world.
In the important speech that Bush gave at West Point in June 2002,
he went out of his way to say, despite all the evidence to the
contrary, that America is not seeking either imperial goals or
a new utopia. Bush tried to put American behavior within the framework
of a moral undertaking that was a response to the evil forces
responsible for the September 11th attacks. He argues that a wider,
necessary and justified, response to September 11th was based
on a recognition that the so-called rogue nations, re-christened
"axis of evil" states, now possess the leverage by way
of the global terrorist networks to be able to inflect severe
harm on the U.S., thereby validating American reliance on preemptive
war as a defensive measure. The Iraq War is the first test of
this new American doctrine, which has so alarmed the peoples,
and many of the governments, of the world.
It is helpful to realize that the roots of this
thinking antedate the present American leadership and the post-September
11 context. Well before the Bush administration came to Washington,
the American policy making community had developed a broad consensus
supportive of the idea of global domination, although avoiding
such language in public discourse. This national goal goes to
the Clinton years, and before that, to the end of the cold war.
The global reach is phrased euphemistically, but such thinking
was responsible for a series of provocative moves: the militarisation
of space, the preoccupation with “rogue” states, the
projection of American power everywhere in the world, the maintenance
of the alliances and foreign military bases in the aftermath of
the cold war with no plausible strategic threat. So in the background
of the present policymaking leadership was this bipartisan, strong
consensus that suggested that the end of the cold war provided
the U.S. with this novel opportunity to dominate the world and,
at the same time, to provide stable security for both the world
economy and to make the world safe for the market state committed
to a neo-liberal IMF worldview. This pre-Bush dominance project
became more explicit and more militarized in the aftermath of
September 11th. Earlier American leadership couldn’t acknowledge
its commitment to such a grand strategy, but so long as it was
proceeding under the banner of anti terrorism, everything was
validated, however imprudent, immoral, and illegal. Anti-terrorism.
provided a welcome blanket of geopolitical disguise.
Kothari/ Mian: But weren’t other interests
– oil, the control of markets, Israel, etc. -- also manifest
in America’s geopolitical designs?
Richard Falk:Yes. In the background of the global
domination project, was always the more specific preoccupation
with the geopolitics of energy for its own sake and to implement
the global domination project. To keep the oil flowing at an optimal
price, the U.S. needed to control Central Asian and Persian Gulf
oil and gas reserves, and supply routes and pipelines. The wars
against both Afghanistan and Iraq were partly motivated by these
energy objectives. Just as oil and gas are an integral, if undisclosed
component of American geopolitics, so is the strategic influence
of Israel. The Israelis offer the US a positive security model,
especially how to operate in a hostile setting of popular resentment.
Israel helps Washington fashion a response to such questions as
“how does a government that is opposed by various political
forces go about establishing its security without granting any
political concessions towards its opposition?” And “how
does a government impose its will in effect on resisting elements?
Israel has also exerted its back channels influence to convince
the U.S. that it is essential to eliminate Iraq as an independent
regional actor. Tel-Aviv was worried about Iraq as a potential
source of opposition to Israeli hegemonic ambitions in the Middle
East. Israel provided guidance as to how to fight the kind of
borderless war that has been waged against al Qaeda in recent
months. As Marwan Bishara has suggested, we are witnessing the
Israelization of American foreign policy. I would add that we
are also experiencing the Palestinisation of resistance tactics.
Political assassinations of Palestinian opponents in foreign countries
has long been a practice of Mossad – the Israeli Secret
Service -- and the justification for projecting force against
hostile regimes that are seen as giving aid and comfort to the
enemies of the United States is also part of this logic. In response,
the tactics of urban warfare, including suicide bombings, has
emerged as the most effective aspect of Iraqi resistance. Such
is the dynamics of learning with respect to the methodology of
political violence for both the strong and the weak.
Also, part of the motivational structure operative
in the White House and Pentagon is the widely shared perception
that the locus of conflict in the post cold war world has shifted
from Europe to the Middle East. This is a crucial shift that has
many policy implications. It helps to explain the significance
attached to the goal of making Iraq into a safe base area for
American and Israeli hegemonic aims. A pacified and subordinated
Iraq will give these actors much more leverage over Saudi Arabia
and the Gulf generally. It is a very important part of a policy
based on controlling the world by controlling the Middle East.
If the Middle East is the pivot of geopolitics at this point,
then the further idea behind the Iraq policy was to deepen the
alliance between the United States, as the dominant state, and
Israel and Turkey as regional partners, junior but still beneficiaries.
Now Turkey has temporarily, and partly, withdrawn from that arrangement,
under pressure from its public that overwhelming opposed waging
this war against a Muslim neighbor. Whether Turkey sustains this
level of independence is uncertain at this point. All these considerations
explain why the policymakers in Washington were willing to embark
on such a risky and unpopular course of action as initiating “a
war of choice” in defiance of the United Nations. For the
American leadership the risks were worth it because they regard
the stakes high, and the hoped for gains great.
Kothari/ Mian: It is clear, however, that the strategic
interests are different now. The US will also reconfigure its
relationship with the UN. What are your thoughts on this?
Richard Falk: The prospects in Iraq are increasingly
likely to resemble a modified Afghanistan approach taken -- modified
because Washington is keenly aware that there exist major economic
rewards for the administrators of post-war Iraq. The reconstruction
of the country will be worth billions. Contracts are likely to
be given to very influential American companies, such as Bechtel,
Parsons, Halliburton, for example, that have close ties to Pentagon
officials, as well as to leaders spread around the American governmental
structure, and its infra-structure of closely linked think tanks.
Richard Perle’s economic machinations have been recently
disclosed, showing that despite his lack of an official post,
his access to the policy elite is a valuable economic asset.
The strategic objectives are very different in
Iraq than they were in Afghanistan and the emphasis placed on
retaining and asserting regional control will lead to a much stronger
American presence even though it may yet be given a cosmetic UN
façade. The American strategy is likely to be to use the
UN to achieve a modicum of legitimacy. but to maintain the actualities
of control. This control will shape the reconstruction of Iraq
and the realization of regional strategic goals. The full extent
of these goals is not yet clear. It seems that the more extreme
elements of the Bush administration, certainly including Wolfowitz,
Feith, and John Bolton, but also probably Cheney and Rumsfeld,
have a post-Iraq plan to alter the political landscape of the
region in a series of other countries including Syria, Iran, Saudi
Arabia and Yemen. Its rather difficult to predict or anticipate
how this plan will be actualized. It depends on a series of uncertainties,
including the degree to which opposition to the American presence
becomes formidable, and threatening. Despite these American imperial
expectations, there are structural factors that may induce even
the Bush-led government to make a major effort to reconcile its
strategic objectives with the appearance of quasi-legitimacy.
Such a reconciliation, if possible, would seem likely to mitigate
the intensity of anti-imperial resistance around the world and
in the United States. Others also have an interest in reconciliation.
France and Germany will undoubtedly for historical
and economic reasons be eager to reach a new accommodation with
the U.S. It is quite likely that the UN will be selectively used
to the extent its helpful for improving the atmospherics of the
global setting without undermining the achievement of American
strategic objectives. But in future occasions where the U.S. seeks
the use of force, it is unlikely to repeat the mistake of accepting
advice that it needs first to obtain the collective authorization
of the international community. As long as this present leadership
is in control of the US Government, the UN will be bypassed when
it comes to war-peace issues.
Kothari/ Mian: We are now rapidly approaching the
50th anniversary of the overthrow of the Prime Minister Mossadegh
in June, 1953. What are your reflections about what the U.S. political
process has learned about its legitimacy given what has happened
in previous attempts to intervene and exercise what it considers
its legitimate authority?
Richard Falk: The learning curve about legitimacy
is very modest, if not outright regressive. The American elite
has always had a rather barren historical memory. American leaders
abstract one or two very simplistic and self-serving lessons from
the past, thinly disguised rationalizations for the use of force
as necessary if America is to reach its goals. It is remarkable
how much weight has been give to the fatuous reasoning of Bernard
Lewis to the effect that the September 11th events occurred because
the United States had projected an image of weakness and ineffectuality
in the Arab world.
Such ideas were dominant in any event with the
current elite, but the scholarly mantle of Lewis supposedly gives
such shopworn thinking additional weight. The Bush entourage are
much less overtly economistic than the Clinton era elite, although
they are equally enthusiastic free marketeers. But more than Clinton,
they believe that you need military force to police the markets
and to attain an advantageous world economic system. They further
believe that this use of force by the US needs to be discretionary,
without paying heed to international law or worrying about public
opinion. It is in this sense that the new American configuration
of power and objectives contains the danger of establishing global
fascism, a loathsome political reality that has never before credibly
aspired to global dominance.
There seems to be very little awareness among the
American leadership as to what went wrong in Iran after the CIA’s
overthrow of Muhammed Mossadegh in 1953 or the Guatemala intervention
the next year that led directly to a savage period of unrestrained
ethnocide in Guatemala that lasted more than four decades. The
only relevant lesson that arose from American interventionary
behavior that this American elite acknowledges is the failure
of Vietnam, which is generally blamed on the American peace movement
or the liberal media or a lack of will. Vietnam is an active experience
within the memories of the current leadership. But they see the
present stakes and risks as far different and they believe that
they have the support of the citizenry, being mobilized around
the anti-terrorist campaign, manipulating, as needed, the fear
of the public and stirring from time to time the toxic mixture
of fear and anger. Such a public mood is being treated as a kind
of wall that insulates this leadership from any obligation to
respond to criticism and to show respect to grassroots opposition.
Helpful to the government is an exceedingly compliant media—especially
TV–that has been vigorously orchestrating society to support
this dominance project. Influential arenas of public conjecture
like the Wall Street Journal have also been enthusiastically cheerleading
the ideas behind the global dominance project. The passivity of
the Democratic Party is also part of this picture of fallen democracy.
So far the centers of formal authority in the United States have
faced very little meaningful opposition. They feel no need to
acknowledge “the American street.”
Kothari/ Mian: Don’t you think that there
are still vast spaces that are not amenable to this kind of domination?
What are the impulses or sources of hope, how does it really look
in the short run or does it really look hopeless? How significant
is the public resentment in Europe?
Richard Falk: The most hopeful development of this
character has been the emergence of a global movement of opposition
and resistance initially to the Iraq war, but more basically to
the reality and prospect of global domination by the U.S. This
movement has an enormous potential to deepen and sustain itself
as the first peace movement of truly global scope. Just as there
is this first global fascist danger, there is also this exciting
global democratic possibility that is focused on anti-war issues.
If this movement could creatively fuse with the anti-globalization
movement it could become a powerful and inspiring source of an
alternate future. I would expect this movement to have its own
political project of counter-domination. The very credibility
and visionary hopes of the resistance -- it will deepen and grow
here in this country as well -- will undoubtedly scare those on
top, giving rise to more vicious methods of response. Such an
interaction is almost inevitable. Also, depending on whether the
US leadership is successful in reviving the global economy, there
are large parts of the world that are increasingly likely to reject
the clarion calls of imperial geopolitics, even if they are not
yet inclined to engage the United States openly by forming defensive
alliances and the like. These states inhabit, more or less, a
geopolitical purgatory that is situated between acquiescence and
co-option. At present, such governmental ambivalence is not a
source of significant resistance. Even China at this stage is
more or less playing this role, mainly acquiescing rather than
trying to mount a meaningful resistance.
Public resentment directed at American militarism
and geopolitical hubris in western Europe is widespread and pervasive.
But its not accompanied by a progressive political project that
offers the prospect of an alternative elite structure. It is ironic
that an arch conservative such as Chirac should be now playing
the role of being the leader of mainstream diplomatic opposition
to the U.S. The weakness of socialism and democratic socialist
tendencies in Europe is a dismal part of this picture, limiting
the opportunities for collaboration between the popular movement
and sympathetic governments. The organized political parties in
most of the parts of the world do not seem politically relevant
for the purposes of resisting the onset of global fascism. It
is the popular movement that gives by far the most hope, and the
question posed by this reality is whether this popular movement
can generate vehicles for political action that are more than
symbolic. Can the peace and global democracy movement transform
its symbolic role of mass opposition and resistance into substantive
political results? I do not at the moment see how to achieve such
global agency, but all progressive forces need to identify with
this struggle and hope that enough creative capacity is present
to generate those new institutions and vehicles for restructuring
geopolitics-from-above. In some dramatic sense what is needed
is a new surge of democratic empowerment, an emergent geopolitics-from-below.
Kothari/ Mian: Does it not seem important then
to significantly rethink and democratize the relationship between
society, political parties, and the state? Additionally, the vast
if dispersed unrest, assertion and mobilization – some of
it manifest in the significant cultural and political gatherings
at the World Social Forum – would also be the ground for
the construction not just of dissenting imaginations but also
of alternative political institutions and processes. Communities,
even local governments in many places in the world have already
begun to conceptualise and implement radically different people-centred
economic, cultural and political systems. What are your thoughts
on this?
Richard Falk: Even before this current crisis became
so manifest there was a sense that representative democracy through
traditional political parties were not serving the well-being
of the peoples in nominally democratic societies. There existed
a widely felt need to reinvent democracy and to activate the creative
roles of civil society to generate innovative ideas, to raise
hopes, and to unlock the moral and political imagination of humanity.
How does one goes about moving toward a new relationship
between the state and society? Is it possible to restructure the
state, to recapture it for a more populist agenda, remove it from
control by the private sector and the military control? Can political
action make the state into an instrument for more progressive
social change? The global civil society movement was coming toward
such an understanding in the late 1990’s. Despite its grassroots
base of support, activists were not overall abandoning the state,
but participating in a politics that aimed prudently to create
a new equilibrium between capital and society. This equilibrium,
never altogether satisfactory, had been lost in this early phase
of globalization when the private sector successfully appropriated
the mechanisms of the state for pursuing its goals of neo-liberal
economics on the global stage. Now the populist and democratic
agenda has been enlarged and altered to accord priority to anti-militarism,
an adjustment to American geopolitical intoxication that is now
being treated as the number one menace.
This is a challenge to the extraordinary annual
gatherings at Porto Allegre – which is itself a very encouraging
invention of new policymaking arenas The challenge for these new
political arenas is to incorporate anti-militarism with anti neo-liberalism
and create the ideological climate for the emergence of a progressive
politics that neither foregoes the sovereign state, nor limits
its sense of institutional problem-solving to statist action.
This new progressivism could emerge in forms that we cannot fully
anticipate at the moment, but many of the elements are there already.
This development is the main source of hope that we can have for
a positive human future. We cannot count on just drifting within
this present political landscape and think it possible to avoid
catastrophe. How are we to arrest this drifting toward catastrophe
without summoning the energies that have been evolving out of
civil society and transnational social movements. I believe firmly
that grassroots politics has the creative potential to produce
an alternate vision that can mobilize people sufficiently.
Kothari/ Mian: What happens to the entire process
of deepening the international normative framework, the human
rights system where some significant progress has been made? What
are the threats and the possibilities of the survival and strengthening
of the entire UN system and the progress in international law?
Richard Falk: It is urgent that democratic forces
do their best to safeguard the UN system. It is possible to believe
that as the U.S. grows disillusioned with its capacity to control
the UN, an institutional vacuum will emerge, and that it could
be filled by civic forces leading the UN to flourish as never
before. If the geopolitical managers treat the UN as unimportant,
it may become more available for moderate states and their allies
in global civil society. To the extent that the U.S abandons the
UN, it will be a challenge for the rest of the world to strengthen
its commitment both by adding resources and enlarging capacities,
and psychologically endowing the organization and such kindred
initiatives as the International Criminal Court with renewed vigor.
The UN can revive our hopes for the future even if it is largely
immobilized in relation to peace and security as it was throughout
most of the cold war. It was really irrelevant to the way in which
cold war violent conflicts were negotiated in Asia and elsewhere.
This experience of the fifty years following World War II is probably
an image of what is likely to happen at least during the next
decade when the UN will almost certainly be marginalized with
respect to the resolution of major geopolitical issues. At the
same time the UN may enhance its contributions by providing an
enlarged space for normative deepening in relation to human rights,
environmental protection, and global justice issues. It is also
possible that in reaction to this growing fear of global domination
there will be developed a series of regional spaces for normative
development of the sort that in the most optimistic sense seem
to be occurring in Europe through the development of the European
human rights framework, especially the European Court of Human
Rights. I can envision other regional developments – Asian
and African leaders have been talking more and more about constructing
new institutions. Perhaps, a robust framework of resistance and
creativity, the evolution of regional institutions, regional norms,
regional political consciousness, will surprise us positively,
both as resistance to the global project and as a positive sort
of normative development.
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