Wednesday, May 18, 2011

The End of American Empire

There are multiple signs that the American Empire is crumbling.

In Latin America: Throughout the past decade, U.S.-friendly puppet dictators have been replaced with democratically-elected, leftist regimes that are standing up to U.S. They are consorting more with Cuba these days than the U.S.

The allies of U.S. hegemony - Western Europe and Japan: are also standing up to the U.S. and refusing to comply with its every wish. In fact, U.S. involvement in Libya occured more at the behest of Western European members of the UN security council than vice versa. Western Europe has been strengthening its ties with Russia, while the U.S. is trying to court the former Soviet states who still feel some vulnerability.

The Middle East: Resistance to U.S. domination has been visible for quite some time. However, the declining relations with Pakistan, and one can only assume with Egypt once the dust settles, and possibly at some point even Israel (who is also watching its regional hegemony fall to pieces), in addition to tension with supposedly U.S.-friendly leaders in Iraq and Afghanistan, point to the unraveling of U.S. power.

Asia: U.S. relations with Southeast Asia were forged primarily through mutually beneficial economic arrangements. However, with the "rise" of China, and the collapse of the global economy, there will surely be a realignment of allegiances in this region.

U.S. economic and military power have been weakening precipitously (particularly since the invasions of Iraq and Afghanistan). The U.S. is no longer able to strong-arm other countries like it used to. Instead, everyone seems to be acting in defiance of U.S. aims these days.

Obviously, the global economy has reached a turning point as well. Interestingly, there is some connection between economic patterns and geo-political developments. For example, historically, a decline in a hegemonic power has typically been accompanied, first, by a shift in focus from production/material expansion to financial speculation as a source of profit (started in 1979), and then, a full-scale collapse of the economy, partially driven by the financial speculation (that can be crossed off the list too). This does not bode well for the U.S. as an empire.

Why should this pattern hold? Because, as I have previously argued, the state is merely a tool for enforcing the regional constraints to competition that are necessary for the accumulation of wealth. Thus, the existence of a hegemonic power merely represents a system of restraints necessary to uphold a particular spatial organization of production (both in terms of the social division of labor and the logistics of the production process itself), which itself undergirds a certain form of accumulation of wealth.

Thus, as a particular organization of production reaches the limits of its capacity for profitability, the system is thrown into chaos, and the basis for the regional restrains and spatial organization upheld by the hegemon no longer serve the same purpose. Geopolitical organization is necessarily thrown into chaos as well and hegemonic power dissolves.

Or, in other words, inability to limit competition in the economic sphere (a result of declining profitability, as it both weakens the power of the monopolies and diminishes the ratio of potential profits to competitors) necessarily translates as an inability to limit competition in the political realm, since political institutions derive from economic relations.

So now we find ourselves in a multi-polar world. What will come next?

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