Since the 1970’s
US foreign policy has been disproportionately driven by oil
and the overarching need to insure that foreign oil flows uninterruptedly
to the US. Connected to an oil driven foreign policy were the
aims to block Soviet (perhaps now Chinese) access to the Persian
Gulf, maintain the House of Saud in power in Saudi Arabia and
insure that OPEC uphold the dollar as the currency through which
oil is traded. This last assures the recycling of petrodollars
(dollars accumulated in oil producing nations’ central banks)
to purchase US treasury bonds and weapons systems.
Iraq and the
Hundred Years Oil Wars
Phillips argues
that the US has been in a thirty years oil war. The two Iraq
wars, 1991 and 2003, are its decisive events. Iraq is strategic
in completing three interrelated parts of US 21st century oil
policies. They are “rebuilding of Anglo-American oil reserves,
transformation of Iraq into an oil protectorate-cum-military
base, and reinforcement of the global hegemony of the US dollar.”
Iraq’s place was heightened by the 1990’s when it was suspected
that Iraq might have more oil reserves left than Saudi Arabia.
The Middle East and oil have fueled a hundred years war, pitting
British, German, American, French, Russian, Israeli and Arab
interests against one another and in fleeting coalitions against
one or another combination of the players. Iraq’s central place
in the hundred years struggle to control Middle East oil goes
back to the pre World War I proposal by the Germans to build
a Berlin to Baghdad railway as a way to connect Mesopotamian
oil fields to German industry and its war machine.
By the 1990’s
sharp and, it seems, enduring conflicts and contradictions over
oil had emerged. On the one side American imperialism’s drive
to achieve hegemony and on the other the French, Russian, German
and Chinese efforts to get access to Iraqi oil. In this mix
China has emerged as a critical
competitor to the US. For instance, in April 2006 following
his visit to Washington President Hu of China flew directly
to Saudi Arabia and China and Saudi Arabia signed mutual defense
and economic cooperation treaties. On the other hand, in 2001
Dick Cheney’s National Energy Policy Development Group linked
foreign oil needs and national security and the capture of new
and existing oil and gas fields. Phillips points out that these
policies of containing Iraq in order to control access to its
oil fields goes back to the Clinton Administration. Clinton
signed off on air strikes against Iraq in January and June 1996
and deployed troops on Iraq’s borders in 1997-98 after Baghdad
proposed oil concessions to Russia, China and France. The Bush-Cheney
Administration continued Clinton’s policies, upping them to
include full scale war and an energy forward strategy which
was based on hamstringing Iraq with respect to negotiations
with China, Russia and France. As this policy played out US
foreign policy became militarized. At the same time the Bush
Administration began negotiations with the Taliban in Afghanistan
to accept the construction of an American pipeline from Turkmenistan
(a former Soviet Republic) through Kabul to Karachi, Pakistan.
Phillips suggests that the US military has become a global oil
protection service and the war on terrorism is being conflated
with wars for oil.
Africa’s Oil
and Global Resource Wars
When all the
pieces are put together the wars on terrorism and the Iraq wars
are what Michael Klare claims are resource wars, where oil is
not a mere commodity, but a matter of national security. In
this scenario resource wars could extend beyond the Middle East
to Russia, China, Africa and Latin America, especially Venezuela.
There have, however, been counter moves by China and Russia,
a significant example being the Shanghai Cooperation Organization,
established to blunt the imperial overreach of the US in South
Asia. Beijing’s aggressive challenges to American trade hegemony
is expressed in what Joshua Cooper Ramo calls the Beijing
Consensus (China’s counter to the neoliberal globalist policies
of Washington), another global counter move to contain the US
militarily and economically.
Under the cloak
of fighting terrorism, talks have begun between Washington and
several African nations to build permanent naval and military
bases in West Africa, particularly Senegal, Ghana and Mali –
a rising oil region. The Wall Street Journal indicates
that the key mission for US forces in Africa is to guarantee
that Nigerian oilfields, that in the future could account for
25% of all US imports, remain secure. US military officials
have visited Gabon and Sao Tome where they are considering building
a deepwater port. The US European Command has recently stated
its carrier battle groups would spend half their time going
down the west coast of Africa. The US oil strategy in Africa
has ignited ethnic conflict, corruption, wealth and income disparities
and interstate tensions. Sudan and Chad and the political and
ethnic struggles in Nigeria are case studies of these developments.
Right Wing Christianity: Oil, Race and
the State
While the transition
is not neat, Phillips moves to rightwing religion as the second
stool in the crisis scenario. He perceives America’s deep religious,
ideological and cultural divisions as forms of warfare, specifically
ideological civil war. These divisions are motor forces of American
politics and history. This thesis originates with his book The
Cousins Wars. He traces the current religio-ideological
conflicts and divisions among whites (when Phillips talks about
America, he is talking about white America almost exclusively)
to the Civil War and Reconstruction. The late 20th century rise
of right wing fundamentalist Christianity based in the ideas
of biblical inerrancy, the end of time theological mythology,
the idea that white Americans are a chosen people, war, including
nuclear war, in the Middle East to signify the return of the
Messiah, and creationism and intelligent design as a substitute
for science, is part of the Southification of the nation and
American religion.
The national
divisions over Christianity are really division about race first,
and then gender relations, war and peace, science and ultimately
the shape of 21st century capitalism. Phillips easily acknowledges
how religion plays into all of the issues of division; his problem
is to account for how race is factored in. The Southern Baptist
Convention, the nation’s largest Protestant denomination, opposed
the Civil Rights Movement, was and is a center of white resentment
against Blacks and more recently gays, lesbians and transgendered
people. While accurately understanding the religio-ideological
form of the divisions among whites, Phillips fails to acknowledge
the substance of these divisions in race and racial inequality.
He conceptualizes
the South as more than a region; it is, he tells us, a culture
and an ideology. In this respect he speaks of a greater South,
which reaches beyond the old Confederacy and its border states.
The main institutional mechanism for the Southification of the
nation is the Southern Baptist Convention and more recently,
the Republican Party. The
Southern Baptist Convention (SBC) became the “nurseries of American
fundamentalism.” Southern Baptists, during the long period of
the Cold War, the Civil Rights and Black Power Movements, the
anti-Vietnam War Movement, the Women’s Movement and the Gay
and Lesbian Movement, defined themselves as representatives
of the white majority and of cultural and ideological normativity.
Their goal was not to reject society, but to absorb it. Under
the leadership of the SBC, Baptists linked Christianity to American
patriotism and support for all wars and for huge military spending.
Normalcy was associated most strikingly with some form of Southern
white culture. Ultimately, they viewed themselves as the nation.
New White
Ethnic, Religious and Ideological Identities
Out of the Southification
of a large part of the nation new ethno-religio-ideological
identities have formed. White fundamentalist Evangelical Christianity
(Black hangers-on not withstanding) is an identity within the
white population. It makes up about 40% of the white population
and 60% of the Republican coalition. They view themselves as
authentically American and authentically white. They are the
political and ideological underpinnings of right wing authoritarianism,
and I would insist, crypto-fascism. This coalition, Phillips
observes, is driven by “the South’s haunted history, regional
religion and combative temperament.” Moreover, “the twenty-first
century Greater South commands a much bigger share of the nation’s
population and resources then did the ill-fated Confederate
States.” In politics this produces religious excess, attacks
upon science and plans for global war and crusaderism. To stay
in power the Republican Party after Ronald Reagan was transformed
into a reservoir of fealty to whiteness, manifested as white
Southern folk culture and white resentment to blackness. George
Wallace, segregationist Governor of Alabama, in the 1968 and
1972 Presidential elections, first demonstrated this combination
as a potent national political force.
Phillips believes
that one third to one half of the exodus to the Republican Party
is explained by race. The fact of the matter is that new ethno-religio-ideological
identities among whites in the post civil rights era are necessary
in the refashioning of whiteness and white supremacy to meet
the new domestic and global situation especially as they relate
to the color line. Phillips severely understates the role of
race in the Southification of the nation. Yet, if not for race
then why organize political and religious life around ‘Southern
values' in the first place? What is the attraction of white
Southern culture and religion if not their formation in the
cauldrons of slavery and Jim Crow? Moreover, creationism and
intelligent design theories (based in so-called Biblical authority)
uphold notions of fixed and permanent race relations based on
white supremacy. The young earth thesis, (i.e. the earth is
between 6 and 10 thousands years old) ultimately suggests that
the appearance of ‘white people’ in Europe is coterminous with
the creation of the planet and of human life. Stated another
way, the beginnings of life are the beginning of ‘white people’
as a distinct group in the genetic history of humanity. All
of this, of course, denies the 2 million year history of anatomically
modern humans on the African continent, as well as humanity’s
civilizational origins in Africa and Asia, at least five thousand
years ago. The end times narrative where the ‘chosen’ and the
‘righteous’ will be saved from Armageddon is coded in ways that
suggest that white Southerners will rise again. In the end,
the defeated South, in God’s plan will rise in the end days.
Tim La Haye’s Left Behind series of novels is the fictionalized
version of this fiction. Religio-racism sees Americans, especially
Southerners (in the expanded sense) as God’s chosen people,
with a manifest destiny to rule the world and use for their
benefit its peoples and resources.
Fundamentalist
Christianity and State Power
Blind faith and
religious excess have signaled and often initiated the decline
of former capitalist hegemons. Phillips’ concern, and one of
the places where his analysis of religious ideology is most
poignant, is how religious fundamentalism becomes an organizing
ideology of the state and Republican Party. This moves the state
and a large part of political debate from the secular realm
to religion. While Phillips does not extend his analysis of
the state, it can be argued that the configuration of the state
on the basis of Evangelical Christian ideology reflects both
a crisis of the state as well as a crisis of American capitalism
itself. (See Monteiro, “Race and
the Racialized State: A Du Boisian Interrogation,” Socialism
and Democracy, Volume 20, No. 1.) As the crises of the system
accumulate religious state ideology asserts itself as all knowing,
the defender of absolute truths rooted in biblical authority
and the defender of those who believe in its truths.
Phillips points
to several southern and Southwest Republican Party conventions
that endorse so called ‘Christian nation’ party platforms. These
platforms are based on Christian Reconstructionist theology,
“the tenets of which range from using the Bible as a basis for
domestic law, to emphasizing religious schools and women’s subordination
to men.” The 2004 Texas Republican platform “affirms the US
as a ‘Christian nation’, regrets the myth of the separation
of Church and state, calls for abstinence instead of sex education
and broadly mirrors the Reconstructionist demand for the abolition
of a large group of federal agencies.” Theological Reconstructionists
have called for the death penalty for homosexuals and adulterers,
prostitutes and drug users; moderate Reconstructionist called
merely for jail time.
Debt and Capitalist
End Times
The last leg
in the three cornered stool is debt. Phillips asks, how long
can an economic system grow in which in 2004 credit market debt
reached 304% of Gross Domestic Product, net foreign debt was
$3.3 trillion, assets of the financial services sector of the
economy were $45.3 trillion dollars, and financial sector profits
significantly exceeded those in manufacturing and services?
His answer is not long. Phillips calls this the financialization
of the American economy. Where debt and debt services is more
important than producing useful commodities. The financial services,
broadly construed, have taken over the dominant economic, cultural
and political role in the national economy. Since that sector
of the dominant economic class, which V.I. Lenin, John Hobson
and Rudolph Hilferding called finance capitalist, are non productive
and parasitic, they, as Phillips suggests, undermine the economic
system. “No presidential clan has been so involved in banking,
investment and money market management over so much time,” as
the Bush clan. Lifetime patrons of George W. Bush are Morgan
Stanley, Merrill Lynch, Pricewaterhouse Cooper and MBNA, the
credit card giant.
Phillips asserts
that over the last part of the 20th century the federal government
chose finance to be ascendant over manufacturing. America’s
productive sector, manufacturing, lost its markets, profits
and prime political access. Furthermore, between 1995 and 2000
11,000 bank mergers occurred and new mega financial holding
companies were created; all predicated upon bank deregulation.
Three US banks, Citigroup (the world’s largest), Bank of America
and JP Morgan, became super banks.
It is not coincidental
that at the time the leading sector of the economy was assumed
by finance and oil (a declining global resource) that right
wing Christianity emerges as a state ideology under Republican
rule. Phillips’ point is that an economy that unduly relies
upon an outdated, limited and expensive source of energy, substitutes
finance and money markets over manufacturing and production,
whose foreign policy is defined by imperial overreach and where
religious dogma that denies science in the name of biblical
inerrancy has the upper hand among a sizable part of the population,
these are markers of national crisis leading to national decline
Judas Capitalism
and End Times
Business Week’s
William Wolman calls the American economy a ‘Judas economy’;
dominated by debt and financiers. He identifies this with late
stage capitalism. In an ironic sense Evangelical Christianity’s
concern with the end times might really reflect its followers
sense that American capitalism could be in its end times. The
tragedy is that without struggle and programmatic unity among
the victims of the Judas economy the ‘chosen’ might only be
the super rich. If the meek are to inherent the earth deep and
radical social reforms must be fought for. In the course of
which Christianity must redefine its essence, much in the way
Martin Luther King Jr. proposed in the 1960’s, i.e. spiritual
vitality and questioning, anchored in the Christian duty to
act on behalf of peace and social justice. The state and the
economy must be democratized in ways similar to Franklin Roosevelt’s
New Deal and Lyndon Johnson’s partially successful Great
Society. Education and jobs must be the center of a national
youth program. Anti-racism and gender equality along with immigrant
rights must be intertwined in all movements for change. Uppermost
has to be the struggle against wars and the military industrial
complex.
Phillips looks
at oil, debt and religion. In the end he is looking at American
capitalism.
Some reviewers
commented that this is a pessimistic book, even conspiracy theory
driven. For ordinary people late stage capitalism, like late
stage cancer, is not an optimistic picture. Phillips’ book glimpses
the now times of American capitalism.
Human beings
will decide the end times.
Anthony
Monteiro is a lifelong political and social activist who is
a lecturer in the Department of African American Studies at
Temple University in Philadelphia. He considers himself a scholar/activist/revolutionary.
Monteiro’s scholarly work focuses upon W.E.B Du Bois, the Black
radical intellectual tradition and the political economy of
Black liberation. He can be contacted at [email protected].