My purpose here is to sketch the general outlines
of this culminating chapter of history as it is currently being
played out.
First, it is necessary to discuss geopolitics in
general, and from a historical perspective, in relation to resources,
geography, military technology, national currencies, and the
psychology of its practitioners.
The Ends and Means of Geopolitics
It
is never enough to say that geopolitics is about "power," "control," or "hegemony" in
the abstract. These words have usefulness only in relation
to specific objectives and means: Power over what or whom,
exerted by what
methods? The answers will differ somewhat in each situation;
however, most
strategic objectives and means tend to have some characteristics
in common.
Like other organisms, humans are subject to the
perpetual ecological constraints of population pressure and resource
depletion. While it may be simplistic to say that all conflicts
between societies are motivated by the desire to overcome ecological
constraints, most certainly are. Wars are typically fought over
resources - land, forests, waterways, minerals, and (during the
past century) oil. People do occasionally fight over ideologies
and religions. But even then resource rivalries are seldom far
from the surface. Thus attempts to explain geopolitics without
reference to resources (a recent example is Samuel Huntington's The
Clash of Civilizations) are either misguided or deliberately
misleading.
The industrial era differs from previous periods
of human history in the large-scale harnessing of energy resources
(coal, oil, natural gas, and uranium) for the purposes of production
and transportation - and for the deeper purpose of expanding
the human carrying capacity of our terrestrial environment. All
of the scientific achievements, the political consolidations,
and the immense population increases of the past two centuries
are predictable effects of the growing, coordinated use of energy
resources. In the early decades of the 20th century, petroleum
emerged as the most important energy resource because of its
cheapness and convenience of use. The industrial world is now
overwhelmingly dependent on oil for agriculture and transportation.
Modern global geopolitics, because it implies worldwide
transportation and communication systems rooted in fossil energy
resources, is therefore a phenomenon unique to the industrial
era.
The control of resources is largely a matter of
geography, and secondarily a matter of military technology and
control over currencies of exchange. The US and Russia were both
geographically blessed, being self-sufficient in energy resources
during the first half of the century. Germany and Japan failed
to attain regional hegemony largely because they lacked sufficient
indigenous energy resources and because they failed to gain and
keep access to resources elsewhere (via the USSR on one hand
and the Dutch East Indies on the other).
Yet while both the US and Russia were well endowed
by nature, both have passed their petroleum production peaks
(which occurred in 1970 and 1987, respectively). Russia remains
a net oil exporter because its consumption levels are low, but
the US is increasingly dependent on imports of both oil and natural
gas.
Both nations long ago began investing much of their
energy-based wealth in the production of fuel-fed arms systems
with which to expand and defend their resource interests globally.
In other words, both decided decades ago to be geopolitical players,
or contenders for global hegemony.
Roughly three-quarters of the world's crucial remaining
petroleum reserves lie within the borders of predominantly Muslim
nations of the Middle East and Central Asia - nations that, for
historical, geographic, and political reasons, were unable to
develop large-scale industrial-military economies of their own
and that have, throughout the past century, mainly served as
pawns of the Great Powers (Britain, the US, and the former USSR).
In recent decades, these predominantly Muslim oil-rich nations
have pooled their interests in a cartel, the Organization of
Oil Exporting Countries (OPEC).
While resources, geography, and military technology
are essential to geopolitics, they are not sufficient without
a financial means to dominate the terms of international trade.
Hegemony has had a financial as well as a military component
ever since the adoption of money by Bronze Age agricultural empires;
money, after all, is a claim upon resources, and the ability
to control the currency of exchange can effect a subtle ongoing
transfer of real wealth. Whoever issues a currency - especially
a fiat currency, i.e., one not backed by precious metals - has
power over it: every transaction becomes a subsidy to the money
coiner or printer.
During the colonial era, rivalries between the
Spanish real, the French franc, and the British pound were as
decisive as military battles in determining hegemonic power.
For the past half-century, the US dollar has been the international
currency of account for nearly all nations, and it is the currency
with which all oil-importing nations must pay for their fuel.
This is an arrangement that has worked to the advantage both
of OPEC, which maintains a stable customer in the US (the world's
largest petroleum consumer and a military power capable of defending
the Arab oil kingdoms), and of the US itself, which receives
a subtle financial tithe for every barrel of oil consumed by
every other importing nation. These are some of the essential
facts to bear in mind when examining the current geopolitical
landscape.
The Psychology
and Sociology of Geopolitics
Geopolitical
goals are pursued within specific environments, and they are
pursued by specific actors - by particular human beings with
identifiable social, cultural, and psychological characteristics.
These actors
are, to a certain extent, embodiments of their society as a whole,
seeking benefits for that society in competition or cooperation
with other societies. However, such powerful individuals are
inevitably drawn from a particular social class within their
society - typically the wealthy, owning class - and tend to act
in such a way as to benefit that class preferentially, even if
doing so means ignoring the interests of the rest of society.
Moreover, individual geopolitical actors are also unique human
beings with insights, prejudices, and religious obsessions that
may occasionally lead them to act at cross-purposes not only
to their society, but their class as well.
From society's
point of view, geopolitics is a Darwinian collective struggle
for increased carrying capacity; but from the individual geostrategist's
viewpoint, it is a game. Indeed, geopolitics could be considered
the ultimate human game - one with immense consequences, and
one that can only be played within a tiny club of elites.
As long as
there have been civilizations and empires, kings and emperors
have played some version of this game. The game attracts a patricular
kind of personality, and it fosters a certain way of thinking
and feeling about the world and about other human beings. The
act of playing the game confers feelings of immense superiority,
aloofness, power, and importance. One can begin to appreciate
the supremely addictive intoxication that flows from playing
the geopolitical game by reading documents composed by prominent
geostrategists - national security briefing papers by people
like George Kennan and Richard Perle, or books by Henry Kissinger
and Zbigniew Brzezinski. Take, for example, this passage from Kennan's
US State Department Policy Planning Study #23 from 1948:
We have 50
per cent of the world's wealth, but only 6.3 per cent of its
population. In this situation, our real job in the coming period
is to devise a pattern of relationships which permit us to
maintain this position of disparity. To do so, we have to dispense
with all sentimentality . . . we should cease thinking about
human rights, the raising of living standards and democratization.
Such dry, functional
prose is at home in a world of offices, telephones, and limousines,
but that is a world utterly disengaged from the millions - perhaps
hundreds of millions or billions - of people whose lives will
be overwhelmingly impacted by a phrase here, a word there. At
one level, the geostrategist is simply a man (after all, the
club is overwhelmingly a men's club) doing his job, and trying
to do it competently in the eyes of onlookers. But what a job
it is! - determining the course of history, shaping the fates
of nations. The geostrategist is a Superman, an Olympian disguised
as a mortal, a Titan in a business suit. Nice work if you can
get it.
Eurasia -
Grand Prize of the Great Game
Looking at their
maps and model globes, British geostrategists of 18th and 19th centuries
could not help but notice that Earth's landmasses are highly asymmetrical;
Eurasia is by far the largest of the continents. Clearly, if they
were themselves to build and maintain a truly globe-spanning empire,
it would be essential for the British first to establish and defend
strategic footholds throughout this mineral-rich, densely populated,
and history-soaked continent.
But British geostrategists knew perfectly well
that Britain itself is only an island off the northwest of Eurasia.
Within this largest of continents, the most extensive nation
was by far Russia, which geographically dominated Eurasia as
Eurasia dominated the globe. Thus the British knew that their
attempts to control Eurasia would inevitably confront the self-preservative
instincts of the Russian Empire. Throughout the 19th century
and into the early 20th, British/Russian conflicts repeatedly
flared on the Indian frontier, notably in Afghanistan. An imperial
functionary named Sir John Kaye called this the "Great Game," a
term immortalized by Kipling in Kim.
Two costly World Wars and a century of colonial
uprisings largely cured Britain of her imperial obsessions, but
Eurasia could not help but remain central to any serious plan
for world domination.
Thus in 1997, in his book, The Grand Chessboard:
American Primacy and its Geostrategic Imperatives, Zbigniew Brzezinski,
former National Security Advisor to US President Jimmy Carter
and geostrategist par excellence, would insist that Eurasia
must be at the center of future efforts by the United States
to project its own power globally. "For America," he
wrote,
the chief
geopolitical prize is Eurasia. For half a millennium, world
affairs were dominated by Eurasian powers and peoples who fought
with one another for regional domination and reached out for
global power. Now a non-Eurasian power is preeminent in Eurasia
- and America's global primacy is directly dependent on how
long and how effectively its preponderance on the Eurasian
continent is sustained. 1
Eurasia is
pivotal, according to Brzezinski, because it "accounts for
about 60 percent of the world's GNP and about three-fourths of
the world's known energy resources." In addition, it contains
three-quarters of the world's population, "all but one of
the world's overt nuclear powers and all but one of the covert
ones." 2
In Brzezinski's
view, just as the US needs the rest of the world for markets
and resources, Eurasia needs American dominance for stability.
Unfortunately, however, the American people are not accustomed
to imperial responsibilities: "[T]he pursuit of power is
not a goal that commands popular passion, except in conditions
of a sudden threat or challenge to the public's sense of domestic
well-being." 3
Something fundamental
shifted in the world of geopolitics with the terrorist attacks
of September 11, 2001 - which clearly presented a "sudden
threat . . . to the public's sense of domestic well-being." This
shift was felt again with the new American administration's determination
- voiced with increasing insistence through 2002 and the first
weeks of 2003 - to invade Iraq. These geostrategic shifts seemed
centered in a new American attitude toward Eurasia.
At the end
of WWII, when the US and the USSR emerged as the word's dominant
powers, the US had established permanent bases in Germany, Japan,
and South Korea, all to hedge in the Soviet Union. America even
waged a failed and extremely costly war in Southeast Asia to
gain yet another vector of Eurasian containment.
When the USSR
collapsed at the end of the 1980s, the US appeared free to dominate
Eurasia, and thus the world, more completely than had any other
nation in world history. The decade that followed was one characterized
primarily by globalization - the consolidation of corporatized
economic power centered largely in the US. It appeared that US
hegemony would be maintained economically rather than militarily.
Brzezinski's book conveys the spirit of those times, advocating
the maintenance and consolidation of America's ties to long-time
allies (Western Europe, Japan, and South Korea) and the coddling
or co-opting of the new independent states of the former Soviet
Union.
In contrast
with this prescription, the new administration of George W. Bush
appeared to be taking a more strident tack - one that took old
allies for granted in its unabashed unilateralism. In his shredding
of international environmental, human rights, and weapons-control
agreements; in his pursuit of a doctrine of pre-emptive military
action; and especially in his seemingly inexplicable obsession
with the invasion of Iraq, Bush was expending enormous political
and diplomatic capital, needlessly creating enemies even among
trusted allies. His rationale for war - the elimination of 's
weapons of mass destruction - was patently silly, since the US
had supplied many of those weapons and Iraq posed no current
threat to anyone; moreover, a new Gulf war risked destabilizing
the entire Middle East. 4 What
could possibly justify such a risk? What was motivating this
bizarre new change in strategy?
Again, some
background discussion is necessary before we can answer this
question.
The US: Colossus
Astride the Globe
At the dawn
of the new millennium the US had the world's most advanced military
technology and the world's strongest currency. Throughout the
twentieth century, America had patiently built its empire, first
in Central and South America, Hawaii, Puerto Rico, and the Philippines,
and then (following World War II) through alliances and protectorates
in Europe, Japan, Korea, and the Middle East. Its army and intelligence
agency were active in virtually every country in the world, while
its immense powers seemed tempered by its ostensible advocacy
of democracy and human rights.
In the 1980s,
the US government came under the control of a group of neo-conservative
strategists surrounding Ronald Reagan and George Herbert Walker
Bush. For years, these strategists worked to destroy the USSR
(which they succeeded in doing by undermining the Soviet economy)
and to consolidate power in Central America and the Middle East.
The latter project culminated in the first US-Iraq war of 1990-1991.
Their publicly stated goal was nothing less than world domination.
While the Clinton-Gore
administration emphasized multilateral cooperation, its push
for corporate globalization - which ruthlessly transferred wealth
from poor nations to rich ones - was essentially an extension
of Reagan-Bush policies. However, the neo-conservatives fumed
at their exclusion from the direct reins of power. They regarded
themselves as the country's rightful leadership, and saw Clinton
and his followers as usurpers. When the Supreme Court appointed
George W. Bush as President in 2000, the neo-conservatives returned
with a vengeance. With the assistance of the fawning media, Bush
- the pampered son of a wealthy and deeply politically connected
East-coast family that had made its money from banking, weapons,
and oil - managed to portray himself as a down-home Texan "man
of the people." He immediately surrounded himself with the
group of geopolitical strategists - Donald Rumsfeld, Dick Cheney,
Paul Wolfowitz, and Richard Perle - who had developed international
policy for the first Bush administration.
In his recent
article "The Push for War," international affairs analyst
Anatol Lieven traced the roots of the far-right strategic agenda
to a lingering Cold War mentality, Christian fundamentalism,
increasingly divisive domestic politics, and an unquestioning
support for Israel. The basic goal of total military domination
of the globe, Lieven wrote, was
shared by
Colin Powell and the rest of the security establishment. It
was, after all, Powell who, as Chairman of the Joint Chiefs
of Staff, declared in 1992 that the US requires sufficient
power "to deter any challenger from ever dreaming of challenging
us on the world stage." However, the idea of pre-emptive
defence, now official doctrine, takes this a leap further,
much further than Powell would wish to go. In principle, it
can be used to justify the destruction of any other state if
it even seems that that state might in future be able to challenge
the US. When these ideas were first aired by Paul Wolfowitz
and others after the end of the Cold War, they met with general
criticism, even from conservatives. Today, thanks to the ascendancy
of the radical nationalists in the Administration and the effect
of the 11 September attacks on the American psyche, they have
a major influence on US policy. 5
Whether or
not the administration in some way orchestrated the events of
9/11 - as has been suggested by several commentators including
Gore Vidal - it was clearly poised to take advantage of them. 6 Bush
immediately proclaimed to the world that "You are either
with us, or you are with the terrorists."
With a bloated
military budget, a cowed and obedient corporate media establishment,
and a public frightened into willingly giving up basic constitutional
protections, the neo-conservatives appeared to have won full
control of the nation and to have become masters of its global
empire. But even as their victory seemed complete, rumors of
dissent began swirling.
Insubordination
in the Ranks
Popular resistance
to corporate globalization started to materialize in the late
1990s, first coalescing in the anti-WTO mass demonstration in
Seattle in November 1999. Thenceforth, the anti-globalization
movement appeared to grow with each passing year, morphing into
a global anti-war movement in response to US plans to invade
first Afghanistan and then Iraq.
But discontent
with US domination of the globe was not confined to leftists
in street demonstrations brandishing giant puppets. As American
military bases sprang up in the Balkans in the 1990s, and in
Central Asia in the aftermath of the Afghanistan campaign, geostrategists
in Russia, China, Japan, and Western Europe began examining their
options. Only Britain seemed steadfast in its alliance with the
American colossus.
One seemingly
inoffensive response to US global hegemony was the effort of
eleven European nations to establish a common currency - the
euro. When the euro debuted at the turn of the millennium, many
predicted that it would be unable to compete with the dollar.
Indeed, for months the euro's comparative value languished. However,
it soon stabilized and began to rise.
A more worrying
development, from Washington's perspective, was the increasing
tendency of second- and third-tier nations to overtly abandon
the neoliberal economic policies at the heart of the project
of globalization, as new governments in Venezuela, Brazil, and
Ecuador publicly broke with the World Bank and declared their
desire for independence from American financial control.
Meanwhile,
in Russia political theorist Alexander Dugin was gaining increasing
influence with anti-American geostrategic writings. In 1997,
the same year Brzezinski's The Grand Chessboard appeared,
Dugin published his own manifesto, The Basics of Geopolitics,
advocating a reconstituted Russian Empire composed of a continental
bloc of states allied to cleanse the Eurasian land-mass of US
influence. At the center of this bloc Dugin posited a "Eurasian
axis" of Russia, Germany, Iran, and Japan.
While Dugin's
ideas were banned during Soviet times for their echoes of Nazi
pan-Eurasian fantasies, they gradually gained influence among
post-Soviet Russian officials. For example, the Russian Ministry
of Foreign Affairs recently decried the "strengthening tendency
towards the formation of a unipolar world under financial and
military domination by the United States" and called for
a "multipolar world order," while emphasizing Russia's "geopolitical
position as the largest Eurasian state." Russia's Communist
party has adopted Dugin's ideas in its platform; Gennady Zyuganov,
Communist Party chairman, even published his own primer on geopolitics,
titled Geography of Victory. Though Dugin remains a marginal
figure internationally, his ideas cannot help but resonate in
a country and continent increasingly hemmed in and manipulated
by a powerful and arrogant hegemonic nation on the other side
of the globe.
Outwardly,
Russia - like Germany, France, Japan, and China - still usually
defers to the US. Even dissent from the Bush buildup to war on
Iraq has remained fairly muted.
But in private,
leaders in all of these countries are no doubt making new plans.
Few would yet go so far as to agree with Alexander Dugin's view
that Eurasia will come to dominate the US, not the other way
around. Yet in just three years, many Eurasian leaders' attitudes
toward American hegemony have shifted from quiet acceptance to
biting criticism to a serious examination of the alternatives.
The American
Dilemma
Dugin and other
Eurasian critics of US power begin from a premise that would
seem ludicrous to most Americans. To Dugin, the US is acting
not out of strength, but of weakness.
America has
for many years sustained an overwhelmingly negative balance of
trade - which it can afford only because of the strong dollar,
in turn enabled by the cooperation of OPEC in denominating oil
exports in dollars. America's trade balance is negative partly
because its indigenous production of oil and natural gas has
peaked and the nation now relies increasingly on imports. Also,
most US corporations have shifted their manufacturing operations
overseas. A further systemic weakness comes from widespread corporate
corruption - revealed most glaringly in the collapse of Enron
- and the close ties between corporations and the US political
establishment. Bubble after bubble - high-tech, telecom, derivatives,
real estate - has either already burst or is about to.
Next to the
strong dollar, the other pillar of American geopolitical strength
is its military. But even in this case there are cracks in the
facade. No one doubts that the US possesses weapons of mass destruction
sufficient to wipe out the world many times over. But America
actually uses its weaponry increasingly for the purpose of what
French historian Emmanuel Todd has called "theatrical militarism." In
an essay titled "The US and Eurasia: Theatrical Militarism," journalist
Pepe Escobar notes that this strategy implies that Washington
. . . should
never come up with a definitive solution for any geopolitical
problem, because instability is the only thing that would justify
military action ad infinitum by the only superpower, anytime,
anywhere. . . . Washington knows it is unable to confront the
real players in the world - Europe, Russia, Japan, China. Thus
it seeks to remain politically on top by bullying minor players
like the Axis of Evil, or even more minor players like Cuba. 7
Thus American
attacks on Afghanistan and Iraq simultaneously reveal both the
sophistication of US military technology and the inherent frailties
of the US geopolitical position.
Theatrical
militarism has the dual purpose of projecting the image of American
invincibility and might while maintaining or extending US military
domination over resource-rich third-tier nations. This largely
explains the recent Afghanistan invasion and the impending attack
on Baghdad. The strategy suggests that terrorist acts against
the US should be covertly encouraged as a justification for more
domestic repression and foreign military adventures.
Yet we have
not fully answered the question posed earlier - why is the current
administration willing to expend so much domestic and international
political capital in order to pursue the impending Iraq war?
Critics of the administration insist that this is a war for oil
profits, but the situation is actually more complicated and can
be understood only in the light of two crucial factors not widely
acknowledged.
The first is
that the continued strength of the dollar is in question. In
November 2000, Iraq announced that it would cease to accept dollars
for its oil, and would accept instead only euros. At the time,
financial analysts suggested that Iraq would lose tens of millions
of dollars in value because of this currency switch; in fact,
over the following two years, Iraq made millions. Other oil-exporting
nations, including Iran and Venezuela, have stated that they
are contemplating a similar move. If OPEC as a whole were to
switch from dollars to euros, the consequences to the US economy
would be catastrophic. Investment money would flee the country,
real estate values would plummet, and Americans would shortly
find themselves living in Third-World conditions. 8
Currently,
if any country wishes to obtain dollars with which to buy oil,
it can do so only by selling its goods or resources to the US,
taking out a loan from a US bank (or the World Bank - functionally
the same thing), or trading its currency on the open market and
thus devaluing it. The US is in effect importing goods and services
virtually for free, its massive trade deficit representing a
huge interest-free loan from the rest of the world. If the dollar
were to cease being the world's reserve currency, all of that
would change overnight
A New York
Times article dated 31 January, 2003, titled "For
Flashier Russians, Euro Outshines the Dollar," noted that "Russians
are believed to have hoarded as much as $50 billion in American
dollars in coffee cans and under mattresses, the largest such
stash of any nation on earth." But Russians are quietly
exchanging their dollars for euros, and high-ticket items like
cars now carry price tags in euros. Further, "Russia's
central bank said today that it had increased its euro holdings
in the last year to 10 percent of its foreign reserves, up
from 5 percent, while the dollar's share had dropped from 90
percent to 75 percent, reflecting the low return on dollar
investments." 9
Ironically,
even the European Union is concerned about this trend, because
if the dollar sinks too low then European firms will see their
US investments lose value. Nevertheless, as the EU grows (it
is slated to add ten new members in 2004), its economic clout
is increasingly perceived as inevitably surpassing that of the
US.
For US geostrategists,
the prevention of an OPEC switch from dollars to euros must therefore
seem paramount. An invasion and occupation of Iraq would effectively
give the US a voting seat in OPEC while placing new American
bases within hours' striking distance of Saudi Arabia, Iran,
and several other key OPEC countries.
The second
factor likely weighing on Bush's decision to invade Iraq is the
depletion of US energy resources and the consequently increasing
American dependency on oil imports. The oil production of all
non-OPEC countries, taken together, probably peaked in 2002.
From now on, OPEC will have ever more economic power in the world.
Moreover, global oil production will probably peak within a few
years. As I have discussed elsewhere, alternatives to fossil
fuels have not been developed sufficiently to permit a coordinated
process of substitution once oil and natural gas grow scarce.
The implications - especially for major consumer nations such
as the US - will eventually be ruinous. 10
Both problems
are of overwhelming urgency. Bush's Iraq strategy is apparently
an offensive one designed to enlarge the US empire, but in reality
it is primarily defensive in character since its deeper purpose
is to forestall an economic cataclysm.
It is the two
factors of dollar hegemony and oil depletion - even more than
the hubris of the neo-conservative strategists in Washington
- that are prompting an overall de-emphasis of long-standing
alliances with Europe, Japan, and South Korea; and the increasing
deployment of US troops in the Middle East and Central Asia.
While no one
is talking about it openly, top echelons in the governments of
Russia, China, Britain, Germany, France, Saudi Arabia and other
countries are keenly aware of these factors - hence the shifting
alliances, the veto threats, and the back-room negotiations leading
up to the US invasion of Iraq.
But the war,
though by now inevitable, remains a highly risky gamble. Even
if it ends in days or weeks with a decisive American victory,
we will not know for some time whether that gamble has paid off.
Who Will
Control Eurasia?
As I write
this, the US is drawing up plans to bomb Baghdad, a city of five
million people, and to pour in twice as many cruise missiles
during the first two days of the assault as were used in the
entirety of the first Gulf War. Depleted uranium shells and bullets
will again be employed, leaving much of Iraq a radioactive wasteland
and condemning future generations of Iraqis (and American soldiers
and their families) to birth defects, sickness, and early deaths.
It is difficult to imagine that the spectacle of so much unprovoked
death and destruction could help but inspire thoughts of revenge
in the hearts of millions of Arabs and Muslims.
American geopolitical
strategists will call the effort a success if the war ends quickly,
if production from Iraqi oil fields is soon ramped up, and if
other OPEC nations are bullied into maintaining the dollar as
their currency of account. But this operation (one cannot really
call it a war), undertaken as an act of economic desperation,
can only temporarily stem a rising tide.
What are the
long-term consequences for the US and Eurasia? Many are unpredictable.
Forces are being unleashed now that may be difficult to contain.
The more reliably
foreseeable long-term trends are not favorable. Resource depletion
and population pressure have always been predictors of war. China,
with a population of 1.2 billion, will soon be the world's largest
consumer of resources. In times of plenty, this nation can be
viewed as immense opening market: there are already more refrigerators,
mobile phones, and televisions in China than in the US. China
does not wish to challenge the US militarily and recently gained
trade privileges by quietly backing American military operations
in Central Asia. But as oil - the basis for the entire industrial
system - grows scarcer and its reserves more hotly disputed,
China cannot be expected to remain docile.
North Korea,
a Chinese quasi-ally, was being quietly defanged through negotiations
during the Clinton era, but is now chafing at being labeled by
Bush as part of an "axis of evil" and at having crucial
energy-resource imports embargoed by the US. Out of desperation,
it is trying to get Washington's attention by reviving its nuclear
weapons programs. Meanwhile, the new South Korean government
is utterly opposed to US unilateralism and wants to negotiate
with the North. The US is threatening to destroy North Korea's
nuclear facilities with air strikes, but to do so would raise
a deadly nuclear cloud over all of northeast Asia.
Meanwhile,
India and Pakistan also have interests that will likely eventually
diverge from those of the US. These neighbor nations are, of
course, nuclear powers and sworn enemies with longstanding border
disputes. Pakistan, currently a US ally, is also a significant
supplier of nuclear materials to North Korea, and has offered
aid to the Taliban and al Qaida - facts that underscore just
how convoluted and counterproductive Washington's strategy has
lately become.
The Americans'
worst nightmare would be a strategic and economic alliance among
Europe, Russia, China, and OPEC. Such an alliance possesses an
inherent logic from the viewpoint of each of the potential participants.
If the US were to try to prevent such an alliance by playing
the only strong card still in its hand - its weaponry of mass
destruction - then the Great Game could end in ultimate tragedy.
Even in the
best case, petroleum resources are limited and, as they gradually
run out over the next few decades, will be unable to support
the further industrialization of China or the maintenance of
industrial infrastructure in Europe, Russia, Japan, Korea, or
the US.
Who will rule
Eurasia? In the end, no single power will be capable of doing
so, because the energy-resource base will be insufficient to
support a continent-wide system of transportation, communication,
and control. Thus Russian geopolitical fantasies are as vain
as those of the US. For the next half-century there will be just
enough energy resources left to enable either a horrific and
futile contest for the remaining spoils, or a heroic cooperative
effort toward radical conservation and transition to a post-fossil-fuel
energy regime.
The next century
will see the end of global geopolitics, one way or another. If
our descendants are fortunate, the ultimate outcome will be a
world of modest, bioregionally organized communities living on
received solar energy. Local rivalries will continue, as they
have throughout human history, but never again will the hubris
of geopolitical strategists threaten billions with extinction.
That's if all
goes well and everyone acts rationally.
NOTES
1. Zbigniew
Brzezinski, The Grand Chessboard: American Primacy and its
Geopolitical Imperatives (Basic Books, 1997), p. 30.
2. Ibid.,
p. 31.
3. Ibid.,
p. 36.
4.
See Richard Heinberg, "Behold Caesar," MuseLetter
#128, October 2002
5. Anatol
Lieven, "The Push for War," London Review of
Books, December 30, 2002
6.
See Gore Vidal, "The
Enemy Within," and the Center
for Cooperative Research.
7.
Pepe Escobar, "The
US and Eurasia: Theatrical Militarism," Asia Times Online,
December 4, 2002.
8.
See:
9.
See Michael Wines, "For
Flashier Russians, Euro Outshines the Dollar," New York
Times, January 31, 2003.
10.
Richard Heinberg, The
Party's Over: Oil, War and the Fate of Industrial Societies (New
Society, 2003).
Richard Heinberg is one of the world's foremost Peak Oil (oil depletion) educators and is a Research Fellow of Post Carbon Institute. He is the author of eight books including The Party’s Over: Oil, War and the Fate of Industrial Societies (New Society, 2003, 2005), Powerdown: Options and Actions for a Post-Carbon World (New Society, 2004), and The Oil Depletion Protocol (New Society, 2006).
He is a journalist, educator, editor, lecturer, a Core Faculty member of New College of California where he teaches a program on “Culture, Ecology and Sustainable Community,” and a Research Fellow of the Post Carbon Institute. He is widely regarded as one of the world’s foremost Peak Oil educators. His monthly MuseLetter has been included in Utne Magazine’s annual list of Best Alternative Newsletters. Since 2002, he has given over three hundred lectures on oil depletion (“Peak Oil”) to a wide variety of audiences—from insurance executives to peace activists, from local and national elected officials to Jesuit volunteers. Richard is married to horticulturist/herbalist/massage therapist Janet Barocco; they live in a suburban house retrofitted for energy efficiency and food production. Richard’s primary hobby is playing the violin. He performs frequently with chamber groups and jazz ensembles.