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“An
antiwar black President with an Arab-sounding name: See,
we’re not so bad after all, world!” - Barbara Ehrenreich, The
Nation, February 15, 2008
In the past
month African-Americans have realized the unthinkable - a
black man might actually
become President of the United States. After each Presidential
primary or caucus the candidacy of Barack Obama has gained
momentum, making that prospect seem, not only possible, but
also inevitable.
Why is this
happening in a society that still hasn’t honestly faced its
historical national-racist project, and certainly has not
eradicated
institutional racism?
Has the world actually turned-upside
down?
An analyst
of the role of African-Americans in United States foreign-policy
positions
in Government since the mid-1970’s provides some insight
as to why a President Barack Obama Administration might possibly
happen.
President
Jimmy Carter appointed the first African-American to a prominent
foreign policy
position. Andrew Young served as his Ambassador to the United
Nations. Young had been a close lieutenant of Dr. Martin
Luther King, Jr.during the Civil Rights Movement.
During the
Reagan Administration, Lieutenant General Colin Powell served
as National Security
Adviser from 1987 to 1989. (Reagan appointed several black
conservatives to domestic policy-making position in the 1980’s.
Lt. General
Powell also served in the first Bush Administration as the
chairman of
the Joint Chiefs of Staff from October 1989 to late-September,
1993. During that period he was involved in managing the
invasion of Panama and Gulf War I. Also, University of Denver’s
Graduate School of International Studies Ph.D., Condoleezza
Rice, served on Bush I’s National Security Council.
George Moose
and Susan Rice are African-Americans who served on the Clinton
Administration
foreign policy team. Moose, who had been a Foreign Service
official since 1967, served as Assistant Secretary of State
for African Affairs between 1993-1997. Rice’s initial assignment
was as Director for International Organizations and Peacekeeping
at the National Security Council (NSC) between 1993 and 1995. Over
the next two years she was Special Assistant to the President
and Senior Director for African Affairs at the NSC. Between
1997 and 2001, Rice served as Assistant Secretary of State
for African Affairs. (She is currently a foreign policy advisor
to Barack Obama.)
The second
Bush Administration appointed Colin Powell and Condoleezza
Rice to key policy-making
positions. Powell served as Secretary of State until 2005
while Rice served as National Security Advisor. During Bush’s
second term he appointed Rice Secretary of State after Powell
stepped-down. Further, Jendayi Frazier, who has a Ph.D. in
Political Science from Stanford University, is the current
Assistant Secretary of State for African Affairs. Prior to
that position she served as Senior Director for African Affairs
on the National Security Council.
What do the
appointments of these African-Americans to foreign policy-making
positions
have in common? First, the individuals mentioned had formal,
elite educational background and/or governmental and/or military
experience. Therefore, it could be argued that their selections
were partisan appointments based on “merit.”
However, it
could also be argued that segments of the United States ruling
class (dominant
capital and the political establishment, which includes the
foreign policy establishment) that controlled the Executive
Branch at the time of the appointments had other motives
as well. Those motives included using those individuals as
a “sympathetic face” to deal with Third World leaders and
issues as well as gain leverage throughout the world for
United States foreign policy. Significantly, most of those
appointments were made at conjunctural moments when the United
States was attempting to promote an assertive foreign policy
agenda.
For example,
the appointment of Andrew Young occurred at the height of
a “crisis of hegemony” the
United States faced, which challenged its post-World War
II dominance over the inter-state world capitalist system. This
crisis undermined the United States’ ability to act at will
geopolitically, particularly in the Third World.
The “crisis of hegemony” the
United States faced commenced with the TET-Offensive in January-February,
1968. Over the next eight years, additional developments
occurred which further impacted that crisis. Those developments
included:
the
emergence of West European and Japanese economic competition;
the
rise of Soviet “rough nuclear parity;”
OPEC
quadrupling the price of a barrel of oil;
eleven
Third World revolutions the United States could not prevent.
Moreover,
by mid-1970’s,
developments in Africa also played a central role in deepening
the United States “crisis of hegemony.” These developments
included successful revolutions in the former Portuguese
colonies (Guinea-Bissau, Angola, and Mozambique) in the mid-1970’s. In
fact, the United States' covert operation in Angola aimed
to defeat the Popular Movement for the Liberation of Angola
(MPLA) failed. This occurred because the Soviet Union and
Cuba aided the MPLA in defeating the United States-South
African-Zairian-supported National Front for the Liberation
of Angola and Union for the Total Union of Angola.
The United
States defeat in Angola was also abated by the United States
Congress passing
the Clark Amendment which terminated covert aid to Angola. This
act was a response to the domestic “Vietnam Syndrome” public
opinion, that was opposed to the United States getting directly
involved in Third World conflicts.
Also, in the
mid-1970’s
the anti-colonial forces in Southern Rhodesia intensified
their opposition to the white minority-ruled Ian Smith regime. These
forces included the Zimbabwe African National Union and the
Zimbabwe African People’s Union.
Furthermore,
in the early 1970’s, developments in South Africa began to shake the Nationalist
Party’s apartheid system. In 1973, black union members began
to carry out militant actions against mining and manufacturing
firms. Also, in June 1976, African youth initiated a rebellion
in the township of Soweto, that rocked the foundations of
apartheid. The militancy of the African National Congress
was also revived at this time.
In fact, when
Carter introduced Young at a press conference in March 1977,
he exposed the
purpose of Young’s appointment. At that press conference
Carter stated: “Third World nations now look on the United
States as having at least one representative… who understands
their problems, who speaks their language.” One can surmise
that the purpose of Young’s selection was to have him work
with Third World leaders, particularly in Africa, to regain
credibility for the United States, which might better facilitate
Carter’s political objectives. The Sunday Times of London added
that the day after Carter’s press conference: “Young’s job
was to restrain black African militancy, to buy time until
American arm-twisting of South Africa begins to produce results.”
One could
argue that the role of Powell and Rice in the Reagan, Bush
I, and Bush II
Administrations was an attempt to give “colored-legitimacy” to
the aggressive militarized neo-liberal policies (deregulation,
privatization, cutting taxes, rolling-back social spending,
etc.) carried out by those administrations. The same could
be said about Frazer in the second Bush Administration. Moreover,
the role of Moose and (Susan) Rice in the Clinton Administration
was also to project a “colored-face” while dealing with Africa
policy.
What does
this history have to do with Obama’s Presidential candidacy?
To understand
the point being argued about the Obama candidacy, a review
of geo-politics
over the past seventeen years is necessary. Since the collapse
of the Soviet Union, the United States has carried out policy
approaches aimed to gain absolute hegemony over the world
capitalist system. This means gaining access to areas where
the United States had either no/or limited access during
the Cold War. Those areas include Middle and Eastern Europe,
Central Asia, parts of the Middle East, and Sub-Saharan Africa.
Importantly, there has been
consensus support for this objective among dominant capital
(oil, Wall Street, the military-industrial complex, insurance
companies, pharmaceutical companies, big real estate developers,
telecommunications, etc.) and the political establishment
regardless of party-affiliation. Increasingly, that objective
began to be honed to:
gaining
control of the world’s energy supplies, with a focus
on the Persian Gulf states;
encircling
and weakening United States’ potential competitors/rivals (Western
Europe, Russia, and China);
complementing
Israel’s regional political agenda.
The first
Bush Administration took initial steps to pursue this objective
by:
managing
the unraveling of the Soviet Union;
challenging
the “Vietnam Syndrome” to enable the United States to
directly intervene militarily in the world by invading
Panama;
attempting
to break the regime of Saddam Hussein in Iraq in the
Gulf War I.
However, Bush
I was effectively challenged in the 1992 General Election,
aborting that administration’s
control over United States policy.
The Clinton
Administration at first deemphasized the military option
and pursued neo-liberal
economic policies and democratization aimed to create pro-United
States client regimes and opened up those economies to United
States transnational capital. However, even before the full
implementation of that approach, Clinton began utilizing
militarized approaches. This was manifested by increased
United States military presence and machinations in Middle
Europe, Central Asia, and Sub-Saharan Africa.
In 2000, George
W. Bush became President under duplicitous means and institutionalized
a neo-conservative orchestrated project. Once 9/11 (conveniently)
occurred, that project was kicked into gear under the guise
of the so-called “War on Terror.” That project, with which
we are all too familiar, has consisted of a pro-Israeli orientation
and an accelerated pre-emptive, unilateral military project,
underscored by the promotion of the neo-liberal/democratization
model.
However, nearly
six-and-a-half years later, owing to the illegality, brutality,
and ignorance
of the Bush Administration in the application of that project,
the United States faces the most serious set of crises in
its history. Moreover, it is clear that segments of the dominant
capital and political establishment have recognized the failure
of Bush II to achieve its promised objectives. The United
States is embroiled in two un-winnable wars in Afghanistan
and Iraq; is considered a “rogue-state” throughout the world;
and is being circumvented by numerous forces attempting to
formulate/implement counter-hegemonic geo-political arrangements/development
approaches (The Bolivarian Revolution, the Shanghai Cooperation
Organization, the World Social Forum, etc.).
Furthermore,
the Bush II polices have exacerbated a global structural
economic crisis
that, in the near future, may make the Great Depression look
like a weekend at the beach. This is evidenced by the spiraling,
out of control sub-prime credit crisis; the enormous trade
imbalances and national debt; the decline of the dollar; $100
a barrel oil; and the growing massive disparities in global
wealth and income.
The global
crises the United States faces has caused divisions within
the dominant capital
and political establishment as to how to address them. The
transparent stresses among the Republican Party Presidential
candidates and the tensions between the Clinton and Obama
candidacies reflect those divisions. The several candidates
represent competing blocs of the capital and foreign policy
establishment.
This
is where Barack Obama comes into the story. “Enlightened” imperial
segments of the United States ruling class recognize it needs
a “new face” to present to the world (See among many: Zbigniew
Brzezinski, Second
Chance: Three Presidents and the Crisis of American Superpower,
2007; Palestine:
Peace Not Apartheid,
2006.). (It also needs a new voice in an attempt to maintain
the domestic population’s belief in the system to blunt a
wide-spread social explosion.)
Thus,
Obama has been selected to be that “new face.” This is indicated
primarily by:
the
favorable press coverage he has received from most of
the corporate-owned media;
the
number of establishment political endorsements he has
received;
the
total amount of money he has received from establishment/corporate
donors in the past year.
That
total has amounted to well over $100 million.
The
role the Obama Presidency could serve is also reflected in
statements made by his establishment supporters. For example,
when Senator John Kerry endorsed Obama in early January he
declared, “Who better than Barack Obama to bring new credibility to America’s
role in the world and help restore our moral authority? Who
better than Barack Obama to turn a new page in American politics,
so that Democrats, Independents and Republicans alike can
look to the leadership that unites to find common ground.”
Senator
Patrick J. Leahy also made the same point when he endorsed
Obama. He stated "We need a president who can reintroduce
America to the world, and reintroduce America to ourselves."
Interestingly, those statements
reflect exactly what Communist Party of Italy leader, Antonio
Gramsci, observed about the relationship between the
United States ruling class and African-American intellectuals
in the 1920’s. In his essay “The Different Position of Urban
and Rural Type Intellectuals,” Gramsci wrote:
“…one
further phenomenon in the United States is worth studying,
and that is the formation of a surprising number of negro
intellectuals who absorb American culture and technology. It
is worth bearing in mind the indirect influence that these
Negro intellectuals could exercise on the backward masses
in Africa, and indeed direct influence if… American expansionism
should use American negroes as its agents in the conquest
of the African market and the extension of American civilization.” [See:
Antonio Gramsci, Selections
from the Prison Notebooks, Quintin
Hoare and Geoffrey Nowell Smith, eds. (London: Laurence
and Wishart, 1971) p.21.]
Despite his
perceptive insight, Gramsci probably never imagined that
the United States ruling
class would put up an African-American for President. That
decision indicates that the crises the United States ruling
class now faces must be really bad! Whether a President Obama
can actually re-establish global “legitimacy” for the United
States is questionable. One thing for certain is that the
political, economic, and ecological crises humanity faces
today cannot be solved within an imperialist-capitalist framework.
George Wright , PhD is the author of The
Destruction of a Nation: United States' Policy Toward Angola
Since 1945(Pluto
Press, 1997) and Stan
Wright - Track Coach(Pacifica
Sports Research Institute, 2005). He in Professor Emeritus
from the Political Science Department, California State University,
Chico. His research interests include: International Political
Economy, African International Relations, and the Politics
of International Sport. Click
here to contact Dr. Wright.
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