US Imperialist Road to Conquest:
Reaching and Revoking Peace and
Disarmament Agreements
By James Petras
Al-Jazeerah, CCUN,
May 2, 2018
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North Korean leader Kim Jong Un and South Korean president
Moon Jae-in, April 2018
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Introduction
In recent years US imperialist strategy has sought to lessen the cost
of defeating and
overthrowing independent countries.
The means and method are fairly straight forward. World-wide
propaganda
campaigns which demonize the adversary; the enlistment
and collaboration of European
and regional allies (England, France,
Saudi Arabia and Israel); the recruitment,
contracting, training and
arming of local and overseas mercenaries dubbed “rebels”, or
‘democrats’; economic sanctions to provoke domestic social tensions and
political
instability of the government; proposals to negotiate a
settlement; negotiations which
demand non-reciprocal concessions and
which include changes in strategic weapons in
exchange for promises
to end sanctions, diplomatic recognition and peaceful co
existence.
The strategic goal is disarmament in order to facilitate military and
political
intervention leading up to and beyond defeat, occupation,
regime change; the impositions
of a "client regime" to facilitate the
pillage of economic resources and the securing of
military bases,
international alignment with the US empire and a military springboard
for
further conquests against neighbors and independent adversaries.
We will apply this model to recent and current examples of US
tactical and
strategic empire building in diverse regions,
especially focusing on North Africa
(Libya), the Middle East (Iraq,
Palestine, Syria and Iran), Asia (North Korea), and Latin
America
(FARC in Colombia).
Case 1: Libya
After several decades of failed efforts to overthrow the popular
Libyan
government of Muammar Gaddafi via local tribal and monarchist
armed terrorists, and
international economic sanctions , the US
proposed a policy of negotiations and
accommodation.
The US opened negotiations to end sanctions, offered diplomatic
recognition and
acceptance in the ‘international community’,in
exchange for Gaddafi’s demobilization
and abandonment of Libya’s
strategic arms including its long-range ballistic missiles and
other
effective deterrents. The US did not reduce its military bases, ready
and alert ,
targeting Tripoli.
In 2003 Gaddafi signed off on the agreement with the George W. Bush
regime.
Major US Libyan oil agreements and diplomatic accords were
signed. US security
adviser Condoleezza Rice visited President
Gaddafi as a symbol of peace and friendship,
even as US military aid
was channeled to armed US clients.
In February 2011 the US led by President Obama and Secretary of State
Hillary
Clinton joined with their EU allies (France, UK . . .) and
bombed Libya – its
infrastructure, ports, transport centers, oil
facilities, hospitals and schools… US and EU
backed terrorists
seized control of the major cities, and captured, tortured and murdered
President Gaddafi. Over 2 million immigrant workers were forced to
flee to Europe and
the Middle East or return to central Africa.
Case 2: Iraq
Iraq under Saddam Hussein received arms and support from Washington
to attack
and invade Iran. This de facto agreement, encourage the
Iraqi leader to assume that
collaboration between nationalist Iraq
and imperial Washington reflected a shared
common agenda.
Subsequently Baghdad believed that they had tacit US support in a
territorial dispute with Kuwait. When Saddam invaded, the US bombed,
devastated,
invaded, occupied and partitioned Iraq.
The US backed the Kurds territorial seizure in the North and imposed
a no-fly
zone. Subsequently, President William Clinton engaged in
several bombing attacks
which failed to dislodge Saddam Hussein.
Under President G. W. Bush, the US launched a full-scale war,
invasion and
occupation ,killing several hundred thousand citizens
and displeasing millions of Iraqis.
The US dissolved the modern
secular state and fomented religious and ethnic wars
between Shia
and Sunni.
The attempt by Iraq to collaborate with Washington in the 1980’s
against its
nationalist neighbor Iran, led to the invasion, the
dismantling of the country, the killing of
the secular leaders
including Saddam Hussein, and the conversion of Iraq into a vassal
state of the empire.
Case Three: Syria
Syria’s President Bashar Assad, unlike Gaddafi and Hussein, retained
a degree of
independence from Washington’s overtures, even as he
sought to accommodate US
incursions in Lebanon and its support for
the largely minority christian and pro-western
opposition.
In 2011, the US broke its tacit accommodation and provided arms and
financing
to its local (so-called) Islamic clients for an uprising
which seized control of most of the countryside
and major cities,
including half of Damascus. Fortunately, Assad sought the support of
Russia, Iran and the Lebanese Hezbollah fighters. Over the next seven
years, the US-EU
backed terrorists were defeated and forced to
retreat, despite massive military, financial
and logistic support
from the US, EU, Israel, Saudi Arabia and Turkey.
Syria has survived and reconquered most of the country, where Libya
and Iraq
failed, because it was able to secure an armed-alliance
with strategic allies who
succeeded in neutralizing domestic
insurgents.
Case 4: FARC ( The Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia)
The FARC was formed in the early 1960’s as a largely peasant army
which
grew, by 2001,to nearly 30,000 fighters and millions of
supporters ,mostly in the
countryside. In effect a dual system of
power predominated outside the major cities.
The FARC made
several attempts to negotiate a peace settlement with the
Colombian
oligarchical regime. In the late 1970’s a temporary agreement led
sections of
the FARC to shed arms, form an electoral party, the
Patriotic Union, and participate in
elections. After several
electoral gains, the oligarchy abruptly broke the agreement,
unleashed a campaign of terror, and assassinated 5,000 party activists
and several
presidential and congressional candidates and elected
officials. The FARC returned to
armed struggle.
During subsequent negotiations, between1980-81, the oligarchical
regime broke
off talks and raided the meeting site in an attempt to
assasinate the FARC representatives,
who successfully evaded capture.
Despite the repeated failures ,in 2016 the FARC
agreed to enter into
‘peace negotiations’ with the Colombian regime of President Juan
Manuel Santos, a former Defense minister who was a leading force during
the
extermination campaign in the countryside and urban slums during
between 2001-2010 .
However major political changes took place
within the FARC. During the previous
decade the historic leaders of
the FARC were killed or died and were replaced by a new
cohort who
lacked the experience and commitment to secure agreements which
advanced peace with justice, while retaining their arms in the
eventuality that the
untrustworthy oligarchical regime, which had
repeatedly sabotaged negotiations, reneged
on the so-called ‘peace
agreement’.
In blind pursuit of peace, the FARC agreed to demobilize and disarm
its
revolutionary army; it failed to secure control over
socio-economic reforms, including
land reform; it turned
security over to the regime’s military forces linked to landlords, the
seven US military bases and narco-death squads.
The ‘peace agreement’ destroyed the FARC. Once disarmed the regime
reneged
on the agreement: dozens of FARC combatants were
assassinated or forced to flee; the
oligarchs retained total control
over land from dispossessed peasants,natural resources,
public
funding and elite controlled elections; FARC leaders and activists were
jailed and
subject to death threats and a constant barrage of
hostile public and private media
propaganda.
The FARC’s disastrous peace agreement led to internal splits,
divisions and
isolation. By the end of 2017, the FARC disintegrated:
each fraction went its own way.
Some rejoined reduced guerrilla
groupings; others abandoned the struggle and sought
employment;
others opportunities to collaboration with the regime or became coca
farmers.
The oligarchy and the US secured through negotiations the surrender
and defeat
of the FARC which it failed to accomplish during four
decades of military warfare.
Case 5: Iran: The Nuclear Accord
In 2016 Iran signed a peace accord with seven signatories: the US,
the UK,
France, Germany, China, Russia, European Union. The
agreement stipulated that Iran
would limit its manufacture of
enriched uranium which had dual use – civilian and
military – and
ship it out of the country . Iran permitted western inspection of
nuclear
facilities ---which found Teheran in full compliance.
In exchange the US and its collaborators agreed to end economic
sanctions,
unfreeze Iranian assets and end restrictions on trade,
banking and investment.
The Iranians fully complied. Enriched uranium
laboratories ceased producing and
shipped-out remaining stock.
Inspections were granted full access of Iranian facilities.
In
contrast the Obama regime did not fully comply. Partial sanctions were
lifted
but others were reinforced, deeply restricting Iran’s access
to financial markets – in clear
violation of the agreement.
Nevertheless, Iran continued to maintain its part of the
agreement.
With the elections of Donald Trump, the US rejected the agreement
(‘it’s the
worst deal ever’) and in compliance with the Israeli
Prime Minister B. Netanyahu’s
military agenda, demanded the total
restoration of sanctions, the dismantling of Iran’s
entire military
defenses and its submission to the US, Israeli and Saudi Arabian
dictates
in the Middle East.
In other words, President Trump discarded the agreement in opposition
to all the
major countries in Europe and Asia, in favor of Israel’s
demands to isolate, disarm and
attack Iran and impose a puppet
regime in Teheran.
French Prime Minister Emmanuel Macron sought to ‘modify’ (sic) the
agreement
to include some of Trump’s demands to secure new military
concessions from Iran,
including that it (1) abandon its allies in
the region (Syria, Iraq, Yemen, Palestine,
Lebanon-Hezbollah, and
islamic mass movements), (2) dismantle and end its advanced
inter-continental ballistic missile defense system, (3) accept US
(Israeli) supervision and
inspection of all its military bases and
scientific centers.
President Macron’s posture was to ‘save’ the form of the ‘agreement’
by …
destroying the substances. He shared Trump’s objective but
sought a step by step
approach based on ‘modifying’ the existing
agreement. Trump chose the Israeli
approach; a frontal repudiation
of the entire agreement, accompanied by overt threats of a
military
attack, if Iran rejected concessions and refused to capitulate to
Washington.
Case 6: Palestine
The US pretended to broker a peace agreement between Israel and
Palestine in
which Israel would recognize Palestine, end
colonization and pursue a peace settlement
based on mutually agreed
to a two state solution based on pre 1967 territorial and
historical
rights. The United States under President Clinton hailed the settlement
and
then….. proceeded to back each and every one of Israel’s present
and future violations.
Over 600,000 Israel’s colonists seized land and expelled tens of
thousands of
Palestinians. Israel regularly invades the West Bank
and has assassinated and jailed tens
of thousands of Palestinians.
Israel seized total control of Jerusalem.
The US endorsed,
armed, and financed,
Israeli step by step ethnic cleansing and Judafication of Palestine.
Case 7: North Korea
The US has recently stated that it favors a negotiated agreement
initiated by North
Korean President Kim Jong- un .Pyongyang has
offered to end its nuclear programs and
testing, and to
negotiate a permanent peace treaty including the denuclearization of the
peninsula and the retention of US military forces in South Korea.
President Trump has pursued a strategy of ‘support’ of the
negotiation….. while
tightening economic sanctions, and ongoing
military exercises in South Korea. In the
run up to negotiations the
US has made no reciprocal concessions. Trump overtly
threatens to
scuttle the negotiations if North Korea does not submit to Washinton’s
insistence that North Korea disarm and demobilize their defenses.
In other words, President Trump wants North Korea to follow the
policies that led
to the US successful invasion and military conquest
and destruction of Iraq , Libya and
the FARC.
Washington’s negotiations for a Korean peace agreement will follow
the same
path as its recent broken nuclear agreement’ with Iran--
one-sided disarmament of
Teheran and the subsequent reneging of the
agreement.
For empire builders like the US, negotiations are tactical diversions
to disarm
independent countries in order to weaken and attack them,
as all of our case studies
demonstrate.
Conclusion
In our studies we have highlighted how Washington uses ‘negotiations’
and
‘peace processes’ as tactical weapons to enhance
empire-building. By disarming and
demobilizing adversaries it
facilitates strategic goals like regime change.
Knowing that
empire builders are perfidious enemies does not mean countries
should reject peace processes and negotiations – because that would give
Washington a
propaganda weapon. Instead imperial adversaries could
follow the following guidelines.
Negotiations should lead to
reciprocal concessions – not one sided, especially
non-reciprocal
reductions of arms programs.
Negotiations should never demilitarize and demobilize its defense
forces which
increases vulnerability and permits sudden attacks.
Negotiators should retain their
ability to impose a high cost for
imperial violations and especially sudden reversals of
military and
economic agreements. Imperial violator hesitate to invade when the human
and national costs are high and politically unpopular.
Imperial opponents should not remain isolated. They must secure
military allies.
The case of Syria is clear. Assad built a coalition
of Russia, Iran and Hezbollah which
effectively countered the
US-EU-Israeli- Turkish and Saudi backed terrorist ‘rebels’.
Iran did
agree to dismantle its nuclear capacity but it retained its ICBM program
which can retaliate to surprise military attacks by Israel or the
US. Almost surely Israel
will insist that the US suffer the cost of
Middle East wars, to Tel Aviv’s advantage.
North Korea has already
made unilateral, non-reciprocal concessions to the US
and to a
lesser degree to South Korea. If it is unable to secure allies (like
China and
Russia ) and if it ends its nuclear deterrent it invites
pressure for more concessions.
Lifting economic sanctions can be
reciprocated but not by compromising
strategic military defenses.
The basic principles are reciprocity, strategic defense and tactical
economic
flexibility. The guiding idea is that there are no
permanent allies only permanent
interests. Misguided trust in lofty
western imperial ‘values’ and not realistic recognition
of imperial
interests can be fatal to independent leaders and destructive to a
people,as
was clearly the case of Iraq, Libya and Palestine and near
fatal to Syria. The most recent
example is the case of Iran: the US
signed a peace agreement in 2016 and repudiated it in
2017.
It behooves North Korea to learn from the Iranian experience.
The imperial time frame for repudiating agreement may vary; Libya
signed a
disarmament agreement with the US in 2003 and Washington
bombed them in 2011.
In all cases the principle remains the same.
There is no historical example of an
imperial power renouncing its
interests in compliance with a paper agreement. It only
abides with
agreements when it has no other options.
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