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      Postmodern Imperialism:  Geopolitics And The 
	  Great Games 
  By Eric 
	  Walberg, 
  
	  a Book Review By Richard WilcoxAl-Jazeerah, CCUN, August 9, 2011 
	    
	  Book Review ~ “Might Makes Wrong” Eric Walberg’s Postmodern 
	  Imperialism:  Geopolitics And The Great Games (1)
  If modern 
	  universities were honest institutions instead of overpriced degree mills, 
	  Imperialism 101 would be a required course for all undergraduate students 
	  and political science majors. Eric Walberg draws from a wide and relevant 
	  variety of sources to tell the story which stretches throughout what he 
	  calls the three periods of imperialism: Great Game I (classical 
	  imperialism); GGII (Capitalism vs Communism); and GGIII The US-Israel Post 
	  Modern Imperialism, our very frightening present day era. 
  
	  Walberg’s Postmodern Imperialism reads like a whodunit novel about the 
	  real world but would also serve as a fine-- and boldly politically 
	  incorrect-- political science textbook. Nothing is assumed by the writer 
	  beforehand and all terms are clearly defined. As an anti-imperialist 
	  Canadian, he has lived in Soviet era Russia, Uzbekistan and Egypt. What he 
	  offers the reader is therefore nothing less than a lifetime’s work, 
	  theoretically original in scope yet comprehensible  and assiduously 
	  documented. The book abounds with valuable gems scoured from the lost 
	  pages of history that are relevant for where we find ourselves amidst the 
	  dizzying New World Order, or, is it, Chaos Theory Realized? Walberg notes 
	  that “...’a postmodern imperialism’, devoid of messy competitive wars for 
	  colonies” was the post Cold War era goal for world peace-- but as we can 
	  see entropy seems to outweigh equilibrium these days. 
  This book 
	  includes 5 chapters and a number of appendixes. Chapter one deals with 
	  classical imperialism Great Game I (GGI); Chapter two with GGII, the anti 
	  communist period and the Cold War; Chapters three and four sharply define 
	  the role of Israel, Jewish and Zionist power in global and especially US 
	  politics/imperialism. The final chapter gives us a current scenario of 
	  struggles for power and political machinations to grab the last resources, 
	  winner take all and devil take the hindmost.   The setting for the 
	  classical “Great Game” is focused largely on Europe’s important role in 
	  Central Asia and the Middle East where European, North American and other 
	  powers such as Russia and China have struggled to expand their influence 
	  and territories. Walberg notes, “[t]he term ‘Great Game’ was coined in the 
	  nineteenth century to describe the rivalry between Russia and Britain.” 
	  The focus of this book is on the last two centuries, and takes us up to 
	  the present day analyzing many regions of the world where imperialism has 
	  had an affect. 
  Chapter 1 of the book, “GGI: Competing empires”, 
	  tells the story of how European powers “carved up” much of the world to 
	  their own advantage. I found this chapter very interesting since one often 
	  wonders how the countries we have today in the world came about. In many 
	  parts of the world it was directly due to GGI, where arbitrary borders 
	  were drawn in places like Africa that separated tribes according to new 
	  and arbitrary national borders. 
       “After 
	  seven centuries, the fates of both the Middle East and       
	  Central Asia have once again converged. But today, the vast region, with
	        its dozens of ethnic groups, tribes, and 
	  clans, is composed of largely       artificial 
	  states, the result of imperial divide-and-rule, inciting friction       
	  between peoples who had not experienced such brutal wars and invasions       
	  since the fourteenth century. The vast region is once again discovering
	        common roots in Islam, now the chief catalyst 
	  of dissent and resistance       to the imperial 
	  players, the US and Israel, bent as they are on further       
	  dismembering the region.” 
  GGI also included the United States, 
	  although less of a power at that time, 
       
	  “America’s geography prevents any rival from challenging this state of      
	  affairs, unlike the much vaster Eurasia, stretching both east-west and 
	  north-      south, containing more than 80 per cent 
	  of the world’s population, with many         
	  rivals contending for hegemony.” 
  As one reads along startling 
	  claims jump off the page: did you know WWI was caused by the British 
	  Empire and the “International Bankers” in order to push  Germany out of 
	  competition? Previous to that time, “[t]raditional imperialism was based 
	  on the gold standard and mercantilism—the center amassing gold from the 
	  periphery either through direct theft or trade. London was the banking 
	  center that ensured the pound as international reserve currency based on 
	  gold.” Try that line out at the next party you attend and cause a Fox News 
	  fan to spill their drink on their Armani suit. If that doesn’t startle the 
	  uninitiated, Walberg states that “the events of [September] 2001 had far 
	  more to do with US imperialism—and Israel—than Islam.” This fact may cause 
	  the Islamophobes, which includes a great many Americans due to their 
	  having been brainwashed by the media, to sputter in a fit of anger, 
	  possibly spurting blood from a bitten lip or chipped tooth.
  Basic 
	  concepts of imperialism are explained: “[t]he term geopolitics refers to 
	  the use of politics in controlling territories.” This in itself is 
	  interesting given the term “geopolitics” is the academically acceptable 
	  form of “imperialism.” This is similar to when the US War Dept. changed 
	  its name to the Dept. of Defense (DOD, or, Dept. of Killing the 
	  Defenseless).
  We also learn about “Lebensraum” the German term 
	  which defines that:
       “that Eurasian land 
	  borders in the massive expanse of Eurasia are arbitrary   
	        and can be changed to meet the increasing 
	  needs of the population and       industry.... 
	  states are organic and growing, artificial constructs, that the land      
	  and people form a spiritual bond, and that a healthy nation’s borders are
	        bound to expand. This was the Monroe Doctrine 
	  and the concurrent Manifest       Destiny writ 
	  large for the Eurasian continent.“
  Not surprisingly, “[t]he goal of 
	  empire, and of all the games described here, is some variation on economic 
	  growth, the pursuit of profit, and (for public consumption) improving the 
	  well-being of the backward peoples—the latter infamously dubbed “the white 
	  man’s burden” by Rudyard Kipling...” Thus, as nation states solidified 
	  their own territories in Europe and America, technology allowed for ever 
	  greater expansion and expressions of violence of conquest. Although 
	  imperialism began as far back as the days of Columbus, by the 19th century 
	  the great game of “might makes right” was underway against the indigenous 
	  peoples of the world. 
       “Already by the 
	  nineteenth century there was no such thing as neutral       
	  territory. The entire world was now a gigantic playing field for the major
	        industrial powers, and Eurasia was the center 
	  of this playing field. The game      motif is 
	  useful to describe the broader rivalry between nations and economic      
	  systems with the rise of imperialism and the pursuit of world power.”  
	   But as all good people of common and natural sense know, violence 
	  begets violence, and to live by the sword is to die by the sword: World 
	  War I which was started by the International bankers, was a disaster for 
	  European society. Death on a large scale in the first world war led to 
	  WWII due to the unjust arrangements dictated to Germany, largely under the 
	  influence of Jewish financiers (2; 3). Walberg writes:
       
	  “Whichever side ‘won’ WWI, the international bankers were guaranteed to
	        emerge the true victors, with both warring 
	  parties deeply in debt to the       international 
	  banking elite....in 1919, the CFR [Council on Foreign Relations]      
	  was established in New York, financed by Morgan money, which would be       
	  the mouthpiece of the American branch of the now Anglo-American        
	  empire....The international bankers, who enjoyed the protection of the       
	  British crown around the world, were well aware that the British 
	  government       was virtually bankrupt by the 
	  outbreak of WWI. They were already focusing       
	  on the US and were able to pressure President Woodrow Wilson to sign the
	        US Federal Reserve Act in 1913, putting money 
	  creation in the US in the       hands of private 
	  bankers rather than of government, as it was already in       
	  Britain, France and Germany. These GGI central banks were already moving      
	  towards the financial endgame of imperialism—the creation of a world       
	  system of financial control in private hands....The creation of the Bank 
	  for       International Settlements in Basel, 
	  Switzerland, in 1930, ostensibly to        
	  manage German reparations payments, marked a new stage in the       
	  globalization of financial capital, with the BIS a ‘coordinator of the       
	  operations of central banks around the world’.” 
  Indeed, as the 
	  book The Empire of the City: The Secret History of British Financial Power 
	  claims, the international banking cartel played a decisive role in 
	  intentionally setting off some 20 wars, by funding multiple parties, 
	  during the 19th and 20th centuries. When countries are at war they go into 
	  debt, and the debt must be paid to the bankers (4).
  Walberg places 
	  attention on the Rothschild banking family, especially during GGI, yet 
	  noting that even today “[t]here are only 5 nations without a Rothschild 
	  model central bank: North Korea, Iran, Sudan, Cuba and Libya. Until 
	  recently, there were two others: Afghanistan and Iraq.” As Michael Collins 
	  Piper who recently tackled the issue of Rothschild banking and political 
	  power has written:
       “The Rothschild family 
	  are the “King of Kings” --if only by virtue of their      
	  immense wealth. And they are, beyond doubt, the royal family of Jewry. It 
	  is      thus no coincidence that on Jan. 2, 2009, 
	  Moses L. Pava, a Jewish professor      of business 
	  ethics admitted candidly in the Jewish newspaper, Forward, that:      
	  ‘Our Jewish communities which once honored rabbis and scholars, now      
	  almost exclusively honor those with the biggest bank accounts.’ And those      
	  with the biggest bank accounts are the Rothschilds. (5)”
  Walberg’s 
	  interpretation of the Russian revolution will be controversial to some on 
	  the political Right, who see that part of history as an overthrow of an 
	  imperfect monarchy by something far worse, Soviet communism. Walberg is 
	  mindful of the Stalinist holocaust against Russian peasants and mass 
	  starvation in the Ukraine, as well as ecological destruction caused by the 
	  Soviet system. But he writes,  “the Russian revolution in 1917 was a 
	  declaration of war against the imperialist system itself. This marked the 
	  beginning of what is called here Great Game II (GGII)—the Cold War between 
	  imperialism and communism.”  Thus, during the Cold War years the US 
	  branded any form of independent development around the world as 
	  “communist” whether it was or not, and had to  destroy it through a 
	  variety of hard and soft power methods. Which brings us up to “the 
	  collapse of the Soviet Union and the socialist bloc in 1989–91 and the 
	  beginning of what is called here Great Game III (GGIII)” which mainly 
	  concerns  “the two regions—the Middle East and Central Asia.” As anyone 
	  who follows the news today knows, many savage wars of geopolitics in the 
	  search for abundant natural resources are taking place in those regions of 
	  the world. 
  Speaking of how Walberg himself came to a critical view 
	  of politics, he recalls his days as a student when his view about 
	  communism became sympathetic: “[i]mperialism was not an abstraction, but a 
	  devastating force that destroyed good, idealistic people, whole peoples. 
	  Enemies of imperialism  must be reconsidered, in the first place, the 
	  Soviet Union, which until then I had accepted as a dangerous and evil 
	  force in the world.” From the end of WWII the US became the global 
	  policeman (or thug): “[t]he US itself is the source of much of the world’s 
	  terrorism, its 1.6 million troops in over a thousand bases around the 
	  world the most egregious terrorists.” Walberg does not draw a simplistic 
	  analysis of Soviet crimes, yet still sides with the ideals of the former 
	  SU against the evil West:
       “The Soviet 
	  Union produced environmental disasters, notably the       
	  death of the Aral Sea. Collective farming enforced at gunpoint destroyed
	        a vibrant peasant tradition. The gulags and 
	  Stalinist repression were a       terrible tragedy. 
	  But colonialism and fascism killed far more innocent       
	  people, and both were aggressive, starting wars with other countries.       
	  The Soviet Union was a one-party system, a dictatorship, but not an       
	  aggressively expanding empire, contrary to what we were and are       
	  indoctrinated into believing.” 
  I found Chapter 2 to be the least 
	  exciting given that it reads like a standard Left critique of post WWII US 
	  foreign policy, as encountered in such important works as William Blum’s 
	  Killing Hope and the works of Noam Chomsky and Michael Parenti. While all 
	  of these authors including Walberg are correct that the US used the 
	  pretext of “fighting communism” in order to crush independent democratic 
	  and free market development in the Third World, many believe this argument 
	  makes the former Soviet Union come off smelling too sweet whereas 
	  communism’s crimes have been too much ignored by the Left. 
  
	  Chapters 4 and 5 integrate the classic critique of imperialism with an 
	  understanding of the Jewish power structure, as readers of the works of 
	  Israel Shamir, James Petras and a fairly large and growing number of 
	  Internet journalists and bloggers have now championed. This aspect of the 
	  book breaks new ground. The synthesis of Zionist ideology and American 
	  military might emerged as the new political ideology of neoconservatism, 
	  which led to the Iraq war blood bath of 2003 and the death of millions of 
	  Iraqis. This is the doorstep we find ourselves sitting on today, a world 
	  of wars on the behest of Israel, Big Oil, Military Industry and ultimately 
	  the international banking cartel. A postmodern and most deadly game.  
	   While it is now possible to criticize Israel, Walberg notes that 
	  “[n]one of the mainstream critics of the [Israel] lobby dares to point to 
	  the continuity between the Israel lobby and the fatal embrace by Jewish 
	  elites of past empires.” Indeed, Benjamin Ginsberg’s Fatal Embrace: Jews 
	  and the State, details with pride Jewish involvement in the economic 
	  history of the United States. He shows how Jewish families in the 19th 
	  century such as the American Seligman’s financed the US Navy and the 
	  building of the Panama Canal and the German Schiff’s helped finance the 
	  post Civil War railroad building that tamed the American continent. “Like 
	  their British counterparts, late nineteenth century American-Jewish 
	  financiers were proponents of imperialist programs and policies and 
	  participants in the American imperialist coalition of the period. (6)” 
	   The departure from a standard Left critique of US imperialism is 
	  boldly evident by reading Walberg’s chapter and subheading titles which 
	  include: Chapter 3 GGIII: US-Israel Postmodern Imperialism; Chapter 4 
	  GGII: Israel -- Empire -and-a-half; Judaism and Zionism -- goals; Jews and 
	  the state through history; and The Israel Lobby and ‘Dog wags tail’ 
	  debate. Walberg cites plenty of evidence that Jewish interests control the 
	  US political system, which as Walt and Mearsheimer are famous for arguing 
	  is onerous not only to the United States but to Israel itself, both of 
	  which countries are set on a path of self and mutual destruction, from 
	  within and from enemies whom they have created through their bellicose 
	  behavior. As minds as sharp as professor emeritus of politics, James 
	  Petras, to Obama’s failed nominee (he was too anti Zionistic) for chair of 
	  the National Intelligence Council (NIC), Charles Freeman, have shown 
	  beyond doubt, The Tail Wags The Dog. Anyone who cares to research the 
	  topic can see that Jewish interests are involved in political, financial 
	  and media far out of proportion to the numbers of Jewish voters or 
	  consumers they purport to represent. The pseudo Bibilcal and cranky 
	  ideology of the 70 million Christian Zionist supporters of the Jewish 
	  power system is heading us into moral degradation, economic collapse and 
	  brutal Soviet style police state conditions.
  The final chapter of 
	  the book deals with the complex machinations of nation states and 
	  multinational corporate interests, that overlap and conflict. In a world 
	  of scarce resources and grotesque inequality, the Great Game is 
	  increasingly turning into a Terrible Nightmare for an majority of the 
	  world’s population that must battle the latter stages of an ecocidal and 
	  unsustainable imperialist system.
  Richard Wilcox 
	  has a Ph.D. in environmental studies and lives in one of America’s far 
	  flung postmodern semi-colonies. 
	   References 
  1. Eric Walberg (2011). 
	  Postmodern Imperialism: Geopolitics and the Great  Games.
	  
	  http://www.amazon.com/Postmodern-Imperialism-Geopolitics-Great-Games/dp/098335393X 
	   2. A.J.P. Taylor (1961). The Origins of The Second World War  
	  
	  http://www.amazon.com/Origins-Second-World-War/dp/0684829479
  3. 
	  Ingrid Rimland Zundel (July, 2011). Japan in WWII: A Casualty of Usury? 
	  Was WWII Fought to make the World Safe for the Bankers? 
	  
	  http://www.veteranstoday.com/2011/06/26/was-world-war-ii-fought-to-make-the-world-safe-for-usury/ 
	   4. E. C. Knuth (1944). The Empire of "The City"  
	  
	  http://www.amazon.com/Empire-City-C-Knuth/dp/0944379125 
  5. 
	  Michael Collins Piper (2009).The New Babylon: Those Who Reign Supreme, a 
	  Panoramic Overview of the Historical, Religious and Economic Origins of 
	  the New  World Order.
	  
	  http://www.amazon.com/New-Babylon-Panoramic-Historical-Religious/dp/B00328Q3DK 
	   6. Benjamin Ginsberg (1993). The Fatal Embrace: Jews and the State  
	  
	  http://www.amazon.com/Fatal-Embrace-Jews-State/dp/0226296660 
	  
       
       
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