Imperialism, globalization in crisis and the Arab revolutions - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Imperialism, globalization in crisis and the Arab revolutions

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Title: The Middle East, nationalism, Le Moyen-Orient, nationalisme, Islam and religion islam, religion 23 - 08 - 2005 Author: Peter Drucker Last modified by – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Imperialism, globalization in crisis and the Arab revolutions


1
Imperialism, globalization in crisis and the
Arab revolutions
2
Introduction
  • Place of report in the session
  • Reporter
  • a US
  • Jewish
  • gay
  • anti-imperialist
  • in Holland
  • Reporters limits
  • not an economist
  • not an expert on any of these countries

3
Overview of report
  • I. Imperialism Lenins theory
  • II. Neoliberal globalization
  • III. Armed globalization and the war on
    terror
  • Permanent revolution
  • V. The Arab revolutions today

4
I. Imperialism Lenins theory
  • The Marxist understanding of imperialism before
    Lenin
  • Marx and Engels Ireland, Poland, Algeria and
    India
  • German social democracy not a man, not a penny
  • An outdated vision of capitalism revisionism
  • The shock of 1914

5
Basics of Lenins theory
  • (from a non-economist!)?
  • Laissez-faire capitalism and monopoly capitalism
  • Uneven development and export of capital
  • Competition for raw materials
  • The division of the planet colonial empires
  • Spheres of influence and semi-colonies

6
Colonial empires 1914
7
(Official) division of the world
  • PERCENTAGE OF TERRITORY BELONGING TO THE EUROPEAN
    COLONIAL POWERS (including the US)?
  • 1876 1900 Increase or decrease
  • Africa.......... 10.8 90.4 79.6
  • Polynesia.... 56.8 98.9 42.1
  • Asia............ 51.5 56.6 5.1
  • Australia..... 100.0 100.0
  • America...... 27.5 27.2 -0.3

8
(Unofficial) control of the world
  • DISTRIBUTION (APPROXIMATE) OF FOREIGN
  • CAPITAL IN DIFFERENT PARTS OF THE GLOBE
  • (circa 1910)?
  • Britain France Germany Total
  • (in billions of German marks)
  • Europe.......... 4 23 18 45
  • America.......... 37 4 10 51
  • Asia, Africa, and Australia...... 29 8
    7 44
  • Total........ 70 35 35 140

9
Imperialism, 1916-1982
  • 1914-20 Re-division German and Ottoman
    possessions become British, French, Italian,
    Japanese and US
  • 1936-45 Failed German challenge to re-division
    Italy and Japan lose their colonial possessions
  • 1947/1956 Truman Doctrine and Suez crisis mark
    replacement of British by US hegemony
  • 1949 Chinese revolution
  • 1955 Bandung India, Indonesia, Egypt etc. gain
    autonomy
  • 1975 US defeat in Vietnam
  • 1979/1980/1982 Thatcher elected Reagan elected
    debt crisis

10
II. Neoliberal globalization
  • Is imperialism still a relevant framework to
    analyze the world economy today?
  • Claudio Katzs arguments
  • Growth of inequality dominant and dependent
    countries
  • Terms of trade
  • Extraction of financial resources
  • Transfer of industrial profits
  • Loss of political autonomy

11
Distribution of wealth (2005)?
  • world pop. world GDP GDP per cap.
  • Dominant 14 78 31,000
  • countries
  • Dependent 80 19 1,410
  • countries
  • (Figures from CADTM)?

12
Terms of trade and repatriation of profits
  • Ratio of prices between dependent country exports
    and dependent country imports
  • 1980 100
  • 2002 48
  • Net repatriation of profits from dependent
    countries by multinational corporations,
    1998-2002
  • 334 billion

13
Multinationals monopoly finance capital
Selected GDP of countries and revenues of
multinational corporations
  • Countries (IMF, 2012, billion)?
  • 1. US 15,685
  • 2. China 8,227
  • 5. France 2,609
  • 7. Brazil 2,396
  • 10. India 1,825
  • 13. Spain 1,352
  • 18. Netherlands 773
  • 39. Egypt 257
  • 43. Israel 241
  • 46. Iraq 213
  • 104. Afghanistan 20
  • Multinationals (2012/13, billion)?
  • 1. Shell 482
  • 2. Walmart 469
  • 3. ExxonMobil 450
  • 4. Sinopec 428
  • 5. PetroChina 409
  • 6. BP 388
  • 7. China State Grid 298
  • 8. Toyota 266
  • 9. Volkswagen 248
  • 10. Total 234

14
Autonomy lost - and found?
  • IMF/World Bank/WTO one dollar, one vote
  • Structural adjustment and conditionality
  • Consequences for social spending and debt
    repayment
  • Consequences for negotiating positions
  • Beyond dependence China, Brazil, India(?)
  • Signs of change Doha, Bancosur(?)

15
III. Armed globalization and the war on terror
  • Militarism response to and cause of
    disintegration of peripheral states (Katz)?
  • Role of US
  • Enforcer of neoliberal world order
  • Sole superpower 39 of global military
    spending
  • Military-industrial complex
  • Military supremacy inter-imperialist
    rivalries
  • Oil Latin America, the Middle East and shale
  • Tools Coalitions of the willing, NATO and UN

16
The post-1991 world order
  • The first US invasion of Iraq (1991) a decisive
    moment (Achcar)?
  • US military return to Gulf region (after 1962
    withdrawal)?
  • Demonstration of superior US military technology
  • Network of bases and alliances

17
The empire and Obama
  • A time of deepening crisis
  • Challenges to US/European/Japanese power
  • Iraq, Afghanistan and Libya
  • Factors in imperial politics in Mideast
  • Oil
  • Geopolitics
  • Alliance with Zionism
  • Clash of civilizations

18
The clash of barbarisms
  • 9/11 Spotlight on Islamic world
  • Petty bourgeoisie and fundamentalism
  • The diversity of fundamentalism pro-imperial,
    anti- crusader and undecided
  • Women and LGBTs
  • Fundamentalism a deadly enemy
  • March separately, strike together
  • The Arab revolutions fundamentalism sidelined?

19
IV. Permanent revolution
  • Permanent revolution and our identity
  • A distinctive feature of Trotskyism
  • The heritage of the Bolshevik revolution
  • World War II, Yugoslavia and China
  • The 1968 generation, Vietnam and Che
  • Since 1989 the collapse of national liberation
    movements and new strategic debates

20
Origins of the theory
  • 1905 Mensheviks (intransigent opposition),
    Bolsheviks (democratic dictatorship) and
    Trotsky
  • 1917 April Theses Lenin and Trotsky converge
  • 1923-4 Socialism in one country vs. permanent
    revolution
  • 1927 Tragedy of the Chinese revolution
  • 1929 The theory generalized

21
Key points of Trotskys theory
  • Against economic determinism (maturity and
    immaturity) democratic and socialist tasks
  • Against stagism
  • The working class and its allies
  • The revolution begins nationally, progresses
    internationally, is completed globally
  • No triumphalism possibilities and impossibilities

22
1945- the theory developed
  • Michael Löwy and Latin American Marxism
  • Yugoslavia, China, Vietnam bureaucratized
    permanent revolution
  • Cuba and Nicaragua
  • Mexico, Bolivia, Algeria interrupted popular
    revolutions
  • Turkey, India, Indonesia semi-revolutions from
    above

23
1995 the theory re-examined
  • Theoretical tasks comparable to early 20th
    century
  • Major defeats structures are no longer
    functional (reformist, populist, revolutionary
    nationalist)
  • Crisis of leadership is now a crisis of movement
  • National/international/global where is the
    power?
  • Since 1995 Venezuela, Bolivia
  • and the Arab revolutions

24
V. The Arab revolutions
  • The Arab world history and its lessons
  • The stakes oil, Zionism and geopolitics
  • The story so far Tunisia, Egypt, Syria
  • Results and prospects an ongoing permanent
    revolution?
  • Revolution and solidarity

25
Glory of the Arab world
26
British and French imperialism
27
US imperialism in the Middle East
  • 1933 US contract with Saudi king
  • 1947-9 Nakba creation of Israeli state
  • 1956 Suez crisis
  • 1967 1973 US backs Israel
  • 1979 Iran revolution USSR invades
    Afghanistan
  • 1989 USSR leaves Afghanistan
  • 1991 First US invasion of Iraq
  • 2001 9/11 US invasion of Afghanistan
  • 2003 US invasion and occupation of Iraq
  • 2008 Assault on Gaza
  • 2010/1 Arab revolutions intervention in Libya
  • 2011 US troop withdrawal from Iraq

28
Lessons of Middle Eastern history
  • Depth of anti-imperialism
  • Oil, imperialism and populism
  • Israel imperial asset and liability
  • Vital interests converging and contradictory
  • The Arab despotic exception

29
Oil reserves by region

30
Palestine continuing Nakba


31
The Arab revolutions begin Tunisia and Egypt
  • An end to the Arab despotic exception?
  • Tyranny, corruption, crisis youth without a
    future
  • Tunisia the spark
  • Egypt the central country (since 1952)
  • In the workplaces / on Tahrir Square
  • Imperialism responds Morocco Jordan Saudis in
    Bahrain
  • Elections victory of (diverse and divided)
    Islamic forces
  • The crises of an-Nahda and the Brotherhood in
    power
  • A four-cornered fight?

32
Revolution in the trenches Libya and Syria
  • Libya oil (a bit), shifting relation to
    imperialism
  • NATO intervention imperialism back in the game
  • Syria even less oil relation to Zionism
  • Achcar on differences between Libya and Syria
  • Syria mounting bloodshed and impossible
    intervention
  • The right to assistance - and the danger of
    subordination
  • Another four-cornered fight?

33
Results and prospects an ongoing permanent
revolution?
  • The dynamic of growing over (2011 IC text)
  • Regional dimension - and international (Madrid,
    Madison, New York)
  • Popular participation, Constituent Assembly and
    state institutions
  • A very unfinished process is class independence
    possible?
  • Debates in the Tunisian Popular Front
  • Is bourgeois democracy impossible?
  • Reform versus revolution?
  • Towards a working-class insurrection?

34
Revolution and solidarity
  • The legitimacy of revolution
  • The balance of military forces
  • Our globalization linking civil societies
  • Fundamentalism and democracy, capital and labour
  • Solidarity a political battle
  • Solidarity concrete tasks
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