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	The Enduring Mystique of the Marshall Plan 
	
  By William Blum
  Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, March 8, 2011 
	 
	Amidst all the stirring political upheavals in North Africa and the 
	Middle East the name "Marshall Plan" keeps being repeated by political 
	figures and media around the world as the key to rebuilding the economies of 
	those societies to complement the political advances, which hopefully will 
	be somewhat progressive. But caveat emptor. Let the buyer beware. 
	During my years of writing and speaking about the harm and injustice 
	inflicted upon the world by unending United States interventions, I've often 
	been met with resentment from those who accuse me of chronicling only the 
	negative side of US foreign policy and ignoring the many positive sides. 
	When I ask the person to give me some examples of what s/he thinks show the 
	virtuous face of America's dealings with the world in modern times, one of 
	the things mentioned  almost without exception  is The Marshall Plan. This 
	is usually described along the lines of: "After World War II, the United 
	States unselfishly built up Europe economically, including our wartime 
	enemies, and allowed them to compete with us." Even those today who are very 
	cynical about US foreign policy, who are quick to question the White House's 
	motives in Afghanistan, Iraq and elsewhere, have little problem in accepting 
	this picture of an altruistic America of the period 1948-1952. But let's 
	have a look at the Marshall Plan outside the official and popular versions. 
	After World War II, the United States, triumphant abroad and undamaged at 
	home, saw a door wide open for world supremacy. Only the thing called 
	"communism" stood in the way, politically, militarily, and ideologically. 
	The entire US foreign policy establishment was mobilized to confront this 
	"enemy", and the Marshall Plan was an integral part of this campaign. How 
	could it be otherwise? Anti-communism had been the principal pillar of US 
	foreign policy from the Russian Revolution up to World War II, pausing for 
	the war until the closing months of the Pacific campaign, when Washington 
	put challenging communism ahead of fighting the Japanese. This return to 
	anti-communism included the dropping of the atom bomb on Japan as a warning 
	to the Soviets. 1 
	After the war, anti-communism continued as the leitmotif of American 
	foreign policy as naturally as if World War II and the alliance with the 
	Soviet Union had not happened. Along with the CIA, the Rockefeller and Ford 
	Foundations, the Council on Foreign Relations, certain corporations, and a 
	few other private institutions, the Marshall Plan was one more arrow in the 
	quiver of those striving to remake Europe to suit Washington's desires:  
	
		- Spreading the capitalist gospel  to counter strong postwar 
		tendencies towards socialism. 
 
		- Opening markets to provide new customers for US corporations  a 
		major reason for helping to rebuild the European economies; e.g., a 
		billion dollars of tobacco at today's prices, spurred by US tobacco 
		interests. 
 
		- Pushing for the creation of the Common Market and NATO as integral 
		parts of the West European bulwark against the alleged Soviet threat.
		
 
		- Suppressing the left all over Western Europe, most notably 
		sabotaging the Communist Parties in France and Italy in their bids for 
		legal, non-violent, electoral victory. Marshall Plan funds were secretly 
		siphoned off to finance this endeavor, and the promise of aid to a 
		country, or the threat of its cutoff, was used as a bullying club; 
		indeed, France and Italy would certainly have been exempted from 
		receiving aid if they had not gone along with the plots to exclude the 
		communists from any kind of influential role.
 
	 
	The CIA also skimmed large amounts of Marshall Plan funds to covertly 
	maintain cultural institutions, journalists, and publishers, at home and 
	abroad, for the heated and omnipresent propaganda of the Cold War; the 
	selling of the Marshall Plan to the American public and elsewhere was 
	entwined with fighting "the red menace". Moreover, in its covert operations, 
	CIA personnel at times used the Marshall Plan as cover, and one of the 
	Plan's chief architects, Richard Bissell, then moved to the CIA, stopping 
	off briefly at the Ford Foundation, a long time conduit for CIA covert 
	funds. One big happy family. 
	The Marshall Plan imposed all kinds of restrictions on the recipient 
	countries, all manner of economic and fiscal criteria which had to be met, 
	designed for a wide open return to free enterprise. The US had the right to 
	control not only how Marshall Plan dollars were spent, but also to approve 
	the expenditure of an equivalent amount of the local currency, giving 
	Washington substantial power over the internal plans and programs of the 
	European states; welfare programs for the needy survivors of the war were 
	looked upon with disfavor by the United States; even rationing smelled too 
	much like socialism and had to go or be scaled down; nationalization of 
	industry was even more vehemently opposed by Washington. The great bulk of 
	Marshall Plan funds returned to the United States, or never left, to 
	purchase American goods, making American corporations among the chief 
	beneficiaries. 
	The program could be seen as more a joint business operation between 
	governments than an American "handout"; often it was a business arrangement 
	between American and European ruling classes, many of the latter fresh from 
	their service to the Third Reich, some of the former as well; or it was an 
	arrangement between Congressmen and their favorite corporations to export 
	certain commodities, including a lot of military goods. Thus did the 
	Marshall Plan help lay the foundation for the military industrial complex as 
	a permanent feature of American life. 
	It is very difficult to find, or put together, a clear, credible 
	description of how the Marshall Plan played a pivotal or indispensable role 
	in the recovery in each of the 16 recipient nations. The opposing view, at 
	least as clear, is that the Europeans  highly educated, skilled and 
	experienced  could have recovered from the war on their own without an 
	extensive master plan and aid program from abroad, and indeed had already 
	made significant strides in this direction before the Plan's funds began 
	flowing. Marshall Plan funds were not directed primarily toward the urgently 
	needed feeding of individuals or rebuilding their homes, schools, or 
	factories, but at strengthening the economic superstructure, particularly 
	the iron, steel and power industries. The period was in fact marked by 
	deflationary policies, unemployment and recession. The one unambiguous 
	outcome was the full restoration of the propertied class. 
	2 
	The rising up of the people ... and the conservative mind
	James Baker served as the Chief of Staff in President Ronald Reagan's 
	first administration and in the final year of the administration of 
	President George H.W. Bush. He was also Secretary of the Treasury under 
	Reagan and Secretary of State under Bush. Thus, by establishment standards 
	and values, inside marble-columned institutions, Baker is a man to be taken 
	seriously when it comes to affairs of state. Here he is on February 3, 
	during an interview by our favorite TV station, our very own shining beacon 
	of truth, Fox News: 
	
		"We want to see the people in the Middle East have a chance at 
		democracy and free markets ... I'm sorry, democracy and human rights."
		3 
	 
	Baker has a record of speaking his mind, whether Freudian-slip-like or 
	not. When he was Secretary of State, on an occasion when the Middle East was 
	being discussed at a government meeting, and Jewish-American influence was 
	mentioned, Baker was reported to have said "Fuck the Jews! They don't vote 
	for us anyway." 4 
	They couldn't resist, could they?
	News flash: "Judge Mustafa Abdel Jallil, the Libyan justice minister who 
	resigned last week in protest over the use of force against unarmed 
	civilians, said he has proof that Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi ordered the 
	bombing of Pan Am flight 103 over Lockerbie, Scotland on Dec. 21, 1988. He 
	would not disclose details of the alleged evidence." 
	5 
	Hmmm, let me guess now why he wouldn't disclose details of the alleged 
	evidence ... hmmm ... Ah, I know  because it doesn't exist! How could 
	Gadhafi's many enemies in Libya resist kicking him like this when he's down? 
	Or perhaps the honorable judge is simply protecting himself from a future 
	international criminal tribunal for his years of service to the Libyan 
	state? If you read any more of such nonsense  and you will  reach for some 
	of the antidote I've been providing for more than 20 years. 
	6 
	The empire's deep dark secret
	"In my opinion, any future defense secretary who advises the president to 
	again send a big American land army into Asia or into the Middle East or 
	Africa should have his head examined," declared US Secretary of Defense 
	Robert Gates on February 25. 
	Remarkable. Every one of the many wars the United States has engaged in 
	since the end of World War II has been presented to the American people, 
	explicitly or implicitly, as a war of necessity, not a war of choice; a war 
	urgently needed to protect American citizens, American allies, vital 
	American "interests", freedom, or democracy. Here is President Obama 
	speaking of Afghanistan: "But we must never forget this is not a war of 
	choice. This is a war of necessity." 7 
	This being the case, how can a future administration say it will not go 
	to war if any of these noble causes is seriously threatened? The answer is 
	that these noble causes are irrelevant. The United States goes to war where 
	and when it wants, and if a noble cause is not self-evident, the government, 
	with indispensable help from the American media, will manufacture it. 
	Secretary Gates is now admitting that there is choice involved. Well, Bob, 
	thanks for telling us. You were Bush's Secretary of Defense as well, and 
	before that 26 years in the CIA and the National Security Council. You sure 
	know how to keep a secret. 
	Items of interest from a journal I've kept for 40 years, part II
	
		- In its more than 50 years of revolution Cuba has never reciprocated 
		the US aggression against it; no military or terrorist assaults have 
		emanated from Havana in spite of the many hundreds of CIA aerial 
		bombings, ground attacks, acts of sabotage, and assassination attempts. 
		Oh, did I mention all the chemical and biological warfare? Oddly, the 
		State Department's list of "State sponsors of terrorism" includes Cuba, 
		but not the United States. The little nation of Cuba has defied all 
		rational odds against its socialist survival.
 
		- The wit and wisdom of Mr. Barack Obama: "To ensure prosperity here 
		at home and peace abroad, we all share the belief we have to maintain 
		the strongest military on the planet." (December 1, 2008, Agence 
		France Presse) How true. All Americans share that belief, as they 
		rejoice in the strongest military on the planet and a veritable 
		overflowing of prosperity at home and peace abroad.
 
		- Steven Bradbury, Department of Justice lawyer under George W. Bush, 
		testifying before the Senate Judiciary Committee, which was discussing 
		the legal status of prisoners at Guantanamo Bay: "The president is 
		always right." (Washington Post, July 12, 2006)
 
		- "There are 3 billion people in the world and we have only 200 
		million of them. We are outnumbered 15 to 1. If might did make right 
		they would sweep over the United States and take what we have. We have 
		what they want."  President Lyndon Johnson, 1966
 
		- As the George W. Bush administration was entering office in 2000, 
		Donald Rumsfeld exuberantly expressed grandiose ambitions for Middle 
		East domination, telling the National Security Council: "Imagine what 
		the region would look like without Saddam and with a regime that's 
		aligned with US interests. It would change everything in the region and 
		beyond." A few weeks later, Bush speechwriter David Frum declared to the
		New York Times Magazine: "An American-led overthrow of Saddam 
		Hussein, and the replacement of the radical Baathist dictatorship with a 
		new government more closely aligned with the United States, would put 
		America more wholly in charge of the region than any power since the 
		Ottomans, or maybe even the Romans." 
 
		- Shortly after Salvador Allende became president of Chile in 1970, 
		Nixon's National Security Advisor, Henry Kissinger, recorded a 
		conversation in which Secretary of State William Rogers agreed that "we 
		ought, as you say, to cold-bloodedly decide what to do and then do it," 
		but warned it should be done "discreetly so that it doesn't backfire." 
		Rogers predicted that "after all we have said about elections, if the 
		first time a Communist wins the U.S. tries to prevent the constitutional 
		process from coming into play we will look very bad."
 
		- "The revulsion against war ... will be an almost insuperable 
		obstacle for us to overcome. For that reason, I am convinced that we 
		must begin now to set the machinery in motion for a permanent wartime 
		economy." Charles E. Wilson, 1944. During World War II he held leading 
		positions overseeing the huge US military production effort; after the 
		war he resumed his position as CEO of General Electric, one of the 
		leading defense corporations.
 
		- Remember Ben Tre? That was the Vietnamese village the Americans 
		destroyed in 1968, saying "It became necessary to destroy the town in 
		order to save it." Since then the Americans have been saving towns all 
		over the globe, in Cambodia, Laos, Panama, Nicaragua, Sudan, Iraq, 
		Yugoslavia and more. Then on Sept 11, 2001, someone, no doubt overcome 
		with gratitude, decided to save some Americans.  Bev Currie, Canada
 
		- United Nations Resolution 1244, adopted in 1999, reaffirmed the 
		sovereignty and territorial integrity of the former Federal Republic of 
		Yugoslavia to which Serbia was the recognized successor state, and 
		established that Kosovo was to remain part of Serbia. Today, Kosovo is 
		independent, because the United States wants it that way, because Serbia 
		is still being punished for its refusal in the 1990s to act like a 
		proper European state displaying subservience to the United States, the 
		European Union, NATO, and capitalism. Independent Kosovo is perhaps the 
		most genuinely gangster-state in the world. It's led by Prime Minister 
		Hashim Thaci, whom a Council of Europe investigation recently accused of 
		being the boss of a criminal operation to kidnap people and steal their 
		kidneys.(sic) (Associated Press, December 14 and 15, 2010) He 
		and Washington, naturally, are on the best of terms.
 
		- "Look," said Russian president Vladimir Putin about NATO in 2001, 
		"this is a military organization. It's moving towards our border. Why?" 
		He subsequently described NATO as "the stinking corpse of the cold war." 
		(Associated Press, June 16, 2001; Press Trust of India, 
		December 21, 2007)
 
		- Senator John McCain, re: fighting in Georgia, 2008: "I'm interested 
		in good relations between the United States and Russia. But in the 21st 
		century, nations don't invade other nations." (Washington Post, 
		August 14, 2008) One really has to wonder at times about the sanity of 
		neo-conservatives, or at least their IQ.
 
		- Re: "collateral damage" produced by US bombing in many countries: 
		Killing innocent bystanders when targeting someone else has long been 
		considered murder in Western law.
 
		- "It is forbidden to kill; therefore all murderers are punished 
		unless they kill in large numbers and to the sound of trumpets."  
		Voltaire
 
		- "The central aim of the war in Afghanistan  planned well before the 
		attacks of September 11, 2001  was to take advantage of the power 
		vacuum in Central Asia created by the Soviet Union's dissolution to 
		assert US domination over a region containing the second largest proven 
		reserves of petroleum and natural gas in the world."  Bill Van 
		Auken, World Socialist Web Site
 
		- "To me, I confess, [countries] are pieces on a chessboard upon which 
		is being played out a game for dominion of the world." Lord Curzon, 
		British viceroy of India, speaking about Afghanistan, 1898
 
		- Ricardo Alarcon, President of the Cuban National Assembly, stated in 
		2008: Cuba allows CNN, AP and Chicago Tribune to maintain offices in 
		Cuba, but the US refuses to allow Cuban journalists to work in the 
		United States.
 
		- Washington's "Plan Colombia", launched in 2000, was the 
		militarization of the war on drugs.
 
		- Michael Moore, March 24, 2008: "I see that Frontline on PBS this 
		week has a documentary called 'Bush's War'. That's what I've been 
		calling it for a long time. It's not the 'Iraq War'. Iraq did nothing. 
		Iraq didn't plan 9/11. It didn't have weapons of mass destruction. It 
		DID have movie theaters and bars and women wearing what they wanted and 
		a significant Christian population and one of the few Arab capitals with 
		an open synagogue. But that's all gone now. Show a movie and you'll be 
		shot in the head. Over a hundred women have been randomly executed for 
		not wearing a scarf."
 
		- Michael Collon: "Let's replace the word 'democratic' by 'with us' 
		and the word 'terrorist' by 'against us'."
 
		- The American Century went the way of the Thousand Year Reich.
 
		- Reagan invaded Grenada in October 1983 because he cut and ran from 
		Beirut after the United States lost 241 Marines in the infamous truck 
		bombing. The United States invaded Grenada two days later. 
 
		- Noam Chomsky: "The whole debate about the Iranian 'interference' in 
		Iraq makes sense only on one assumption; namely, that 'we own the 
		world'. If we own the world, then the only question that can arise is 
		that someone else is interfering in a country we have invaded and 
		occupied. So if you look over the debate that took place and is still 
		taking place about Iranian interference, no one points out this is 
		insane. How can Iran be interfering in a country that we invaded and 
		occupied? It's only appropriate on the presupposition that we own the 
		world. Once you have that established in your head, the discussion is 
		perfectly sensible."
 
		- In late 1997, according to Dana Priest's book, The Mission, 
		the Bill Clinton White House wanted CENTCOM commander Gen. Anthony Zinni 
		to order his pilots to provoke a military confrontation with Iraq in the 
		no-fly zone by deliberately drawing fire from Iraqi planes.
 
		- Reagan accepted a fateful trade-off when he agreed not to complain 
		about Pakistan's efforts to acquire a nuclear weapons capability in 
		exchange for Pakistani cooperation in helping the Afghan rebels.
 
		- "The presumption of 'government incompetence' is seldom a useful 
		assumption in evaluating the behavior of governments. We only reach such 
		a conclusion if we take their official rhetoric at face value. In terms 
		of 'achieving democracy', the official rhetoric, Bush has been 
		'incompetent' in Iraq. But in terms of the real agenda  building 
		permanent bases and controlling the oil  he has in fact been 
		successful. I have found that this is always the pattern: some real 
		agenda is always being achieved by the policies in force, despite the 
		apparent bungling in terms of the official agenda."  Richard K. 
		Moore
 
		- The 9/11 attacks reflected the anger and rage that US foreign policy 
		had produced in the past and then provided the excuse for US officials 
		to continue such policy in the future.
 
	 
	Upcoming talks by William Blum
	Saturday, April 2, 7:00 pm University of Pittsburgh at 
	Titusville, PA 504 East Main Street Henne Auditorium  
	Titusville is about 2 hours by car from Pittsburgh and 2 1/2 hours from 
	Cleveland. For further information call 888-878-0462 Or email Mary Ann 
	Caton: caton@pitt.edu 
	Thursday, May 19 Paris, France Conference: "Ethics 
	and US Foreign Policy in the 21st Century" Universitι de Paris Ouest-Nanterre-La 
	Dιfense, Amphi B-2 All day, beginning at 9 am Email me for full 
	schedule 
	Notes
	
		- See William Blum's
		essay on the use 
		of the atomic bomb ↩
 
		- For discussion of various aspects of the Marshall Plan 
		see, for example, Joyce & Gabriel Kolko, The Limits of Power: The 
		World and US Foreign Policy 1945-1954 (1972), chapters 13, 16, 17; 
		Sallie Pisani, The CIA and the Marshall Plan (1991) passim; 
		Frances Stoner Saunders, The Cultural Cold War: The CIA and the 
		world of arts and letters (2000) passim ↩
		
 
		- 
		Crisis in 
		Egypt - James A. Baker III on Middle East Political Change 
		↩
 
		- The Guardian (London), December 12, 2000; 
		Haaretz (Israel), November 14, 2008 ↩
 
		- McClatchy Newspapers, February 26, 2011 
		↩
 
		- The 
		Bombing of PanAm Flight 103: Case Not Closed 
		↩
 
		- Veterans of Foreign Wars convention, August 17, 2009
		↩
 
	 
	 
	William Blum is the author of:  
	
		- Killing Hope: US Military and CIA Interventions Since World War 
		2
 
		- Rogue State: A Guide to the World's Only Superpower 
 
		- West-Bloc Dissident: A Cold War Memoir 
 
		- Freeing the World to Death: Essays on the American Empire 
		
 
	 
	Portions of the books can be read, and signed copies purchased, at
	www.killinghope.org  
	Previous Anti-Empire Reports can be read at this website.  
	To add yourself to this mailing list simply send an email to 
	bblum6 [at] aol.com 
	with "add" in the subject line. I'd like your name and city in the message, 
	but that's optional. I ask for your city only in case I'll be speaking in 
	your area.  
	(Or put "remove" in the subject line to do the opposite.) 
	Any part of this report may be disseminated without permission. I'd 
	appreciate it if the website were mentioned. 
	 William Blum 
	www.killinghope.org  
	
	http://killinghope.org/bblum6/aer91.html  
	  
       
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