|
by Noam Chomsky

5/97
Exporting American values through
the new World Trade Organization
For more than half a century, the
United Nations has been the main forum for the United States to try to
create a world in its image, maneuvering with its allies to forge global
accords about human rights, nuclear tests or the environment that
Washington insisted would mirror its own values."
So runs postwar history, we learn
from the opening paragraph of a front-page story by New York Times
political analyst David Sanger. But times are changing. Today, the
headline reads: "U.S. Is Exporting Its Free-Market Values Through Global
Commercial Agreements." Going beyond the traditional reliance on the UN,
the Clinton administration is turning to the new World Trade Organization
(WTO) to carry out the task of "exporting American values." Down the road,
Sanger continues (quoting the U.S. trade representative), it is the WTO
that may be the most effective instrument for bringing "America’s passion
for deregulation" and for the free market generally, and "the American
values of free competition, fair rules, and effective enforcement," to a
world still fumbling in darkness. These "American values" are illustrated
most dramatically by the wave of the future: telecommunications, the
Internet, advanced computer technology, and the other wonders created by
the exuberant American entrepreneurial spirit unleashed by the market, at
last freed from government interference by the Reagan revolution.
Today "governments are everywhere
embracing the free-market gospel preached in the 1980s by President Reagan
and Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher of Britain," Youssef Ibrahim reports
in another Times front-page story, reiterating a common theme. Like it or
hate it, enthusiasts and critics over a broad range of opinion agree—just
to keep to the liberal-to-left part of the spectrum—about "the implacable
sweep of what its exponents call ‘the market revolution’": "Reaganesque
rugged individualism" has changed the rules of the game worldwide, while
here at home "Republicans and Democrats alike are ready to give the market
full sway" in their dedication to "the new orthodoxy."
There are a number of problems
with the picture. One is the account of the last half-century. Even the
most dedicated believers in "America’s mission" must be aware that U.S./UN
relations have been virtually the opposite of what the opening passage
depicts ever since the UN fell out of control with the progress of
decolonization, leaving the U.S. regularly isolated in opposition to
global accords on a wide range of issues and committed to undermining
central components of the UN, particularly those with a third world
orientation. Many questions about the world are debatable, but surely not
this one.
As for "Reaganesque rugged
individualism" and its worship of the market, perhaps it is enough to
quote the review of the Reagan years in Foreign Affairs by a Senior Fellow
for International Finance at the Council on Foreign Relations, noting the
"irony" that Ronald Reagan, "the postwar chief executive with the most
passionate love of laissez faire, presided over the greatest swing toward
protectionism since the 1930s"—no "irony," but the normal workings of
"passionate love of laissez faire": for you, market discipline, but not
for me, unless the "playing field" happens to be tilted in my favor,
typically as a result of large-scale state intervention. It’s hard to find
another theme so dominant in the economic history of the past three
centuries. The current enthusiasms about the communications revolution
that Sanger is reporting are a textbook case.
Reaganites were following a
well-trodden course—recently turned into a comedy act by Gingrich
"conservatives"—when they extolled the glories of the market and issued
stern lectures about the debilitating culture of dependency of the poor at
home and abroad while boasting proudly to the business world that Reagan
had "granted more import relief to U.S. industry than any of his
predecessors in more than half a century"; in fact, more than all
predecessors combined, as they led "the sustained assault on [free trade]
principle" by the rich and powerful from the early 1970s, deplored in a
scholarly review by GATT secretariat economist Patrick Low, who estimates
the restrictive effects of Reaganite measures at about three times those
of other leading industrial countries.
The radical "swing toward
protectionism" was only a part of the "sustained assault" on free trade
principles that was accelerated under "Reaganite rugged individualism."
Another chapter of the story includes the huge transfer of public funds to
private power, often under the traditional guise of "security." Without
such extreme measures of market interference, it is doubtful that the U.S.
automotive, steel, machine tool, semiconductor industries, and others,
would have survived Japanese competition or been able to forge ahead in
emerging technologies, with broad effects through the economy.
"Thatcher’s Britain" is another
good choice to illustrate "free market gospel." Just to keep to a few
revelations of early 1997, "during the period of maximum pressure to make
arms sales to Turkey," the London Observer reported, Prime Minister
Thatcher "personally intervened to ensure a payment of 22 million pounds
was made out of Britain’s overseas aid budget, to help build a metro in
the Turkish capital of Ankara. The project was uneconomical, and in 1995
it was admitted" by Foreign Secretary Douglas Hurd that it was "unlawful."
The incident was particularly noteworthy in the aftermath of the Pergau
Dam scandal, which revealed illegal Thatcherite subsidies "to ‘sweeten’
arms deals with the Malaysian regime," with a High Court judgment against
Hurd. That’s aside from government credit guarantees and financing
arrangements, and the rest of the panoply of devices to transfer public
funds to "defense industry," yielding a familiar range of benefits to
advanced industry generally.
A few days before, the same
journal reported that "up to 2 million British children are suffering
ill-health and stunted growth because of malnutrition" as a result of
"poverty on a scale not seen since the 1930s." The trend to increasing
child health has reversed and childhood diseases that had been controlled
are now on the upswing thanks to the (highly selective) "free market
gospel" that is much admired by the beneficiaries.
A few months earlier, a lead
headline reported "One in three British babies born in poverty," as "child
poverty has increased as much as three-fold since Margaret Thatcher was
elected." "Dickensian diseases return to haunt today’s Britain," another
headline reads, reporting studies concluding that "social conditions in
Britain are returning to those of a century ago." Particularly grim are
the effects of cutting off gas, electricity, water, and telephones to "a
high number of households" as privatization takes its natural course, with
a variety of devices that favor "more affluent customers" and amount to a
"surcharge on the poor," leading to a "growing gulf in energy between rich
and poor," also in water supply and other services. The "savage cuts" in
social programs are placing the nation "in the grip of panic about
imminent social collapse." But industry and finance are benefiting very
nicely from the same policy choices. To top it all off, public spending
after 17 years of Thatcherite gospel was the same 42 1/4 percent of GDP
that it was when she took over.
Not exactly unfamiliar here.
Exporting American Values
Let us put aside the intriguing
contrast between doctrine and reality, and see what can be learned by
examining the new era that is coming into view. Quite a lot, I think.
Sanger is celebrating the WTO
agreement on telecommunications. One of its welcome effects is to provide
Washington with a "new tool of foreign policy." The agreement "empowers
the WTO to go inside the borders of the 70 countries that have signed it,"
and it is no secret that international institutions can function insofar
as they keep to the demands of the powerful, in particular, the United
States. In the real world, then, the "new tool" allows the U.S. to
intervene profoundly in the internal affairs of others, compelling them to
change their laws and practices. Crucially, the WTO will make sure that
other countries are "following through on their commitments to allow
foreigners to invest" without restriction in central areas of their
economy. In the specific case at hand, the likely outcome is clear to all:
"The obvious corporate beneficiaries of this new era will be U.S.
carriers, who are best positioned to dominate a level playing field," the
Far Eastern Economic Review (FEER) points out, along with one UK-U.S.
megacorporation.
Not everyone is delighted by the
prospects. The winners recognize that fact, and offer their
interpretation: in Sanger’s words, others fear that "American
telecommunication giants...could overwhelm the flabby
government-sanctioned monopolies that have long dominated
telecommunications in Europe and Asia"—as in the United States, long past
the period when it had become by far the world’s leading economy and most
powerful state. It is also worth noting that major contributions to modern
technology came from the research laboratories of the "flabby
government-sanctioned monopoly" that dominated telecommunications here
until the 1970s, using its freedom from market discipline to provide for
the needs of advanced sectors of industry generally by transfer of public
funds (in indirect ways, unlike the more direct modalities of the Pentagon
system).
Those who cling irrationally to
the past see matters a bit differently. The FEER points out that "jobs
will be lost" in Asia and "many Asian consumers will have to pay more for
phone service before they will pay less." When will they pay less? For
that bright future to dawn, it is only necessary for foreign investors to
be "encouraged...to act in socially desired ways," not simply with an eye
to profit and service to the rich and the business world. How this miracle
will come to pass is unexplained, though doubtless the suggestion will
inspire serious reflection in corporate headquarters.
In the time span relevant to
planning, the WTO agreement will raise phone service costs for most Asian
consumers, the Review predicts. "The fact is, comparatively few customers
in Asia stand to benefit from cheaper overseas rates" that are anticipated
with the takeover by huge foreign corporations, mostly American. In
Indonesia, for example, only about 300,000 of 190 million people make
overseas calls at all, specifically the business sector. "It’s very likely
the cost of local telecoms service, in general, will rise" in Asia,
according to David Barden, regional telecoms analyst at J.P. Morgan
Securities in Hong Kong. But that is all to the good, he continues: "if
there is no profitability in the business, there will be no business." And
now that still more public property is being handed over to foreign
corporations, they had better be guaranteed profitability —
telecommunications today, and a far wider range of related services
tomorrow. The business press predicts that "personal communications over
the Internet [including corporate networks and interactions] will overtake
telecommunications in five or six years, and telephone operators have the
biggest interest in getting into the online business." Contemplating the
future of his own company, Intel CEO Andrew Grove sees the Internet as
"the biggest change in our environment" at present. He expects large-scale
growth for "the connection providers, the people involved in generating
the World Wide Web, the people who make the computers" ("people" meaning
corporations), and the advertising industry, already running at almost
$350 billion annually and anticipating new opportunities with the
privatization of the Internet, which is expected to convert it to a global
oligopoly.
Meanwhile privatization precedes
apace elsewhere. To take one important case, over considerable popular
opposition the government of Brazil has decided to privatize the Vale
Company, which controls vast uranium, iron, and other mineral resources
and industrial and transport facilities, including sophisticated
technology. Vale is highly profitable, with a 1996 income of over $5
billion, and excellent prospects for the future; it is 1 of 6 Latin
American enterprises ranked among the 500 most profitable in the world. A
study by specialists of the Graduate School of Engineering at the Federal
University in Rio estimated that the government has seriously undervalued
the Company, noting also that it relied on an "independent" analysis by
Merrill Lynch, which happens to be associated with the Anglo American
conglomerate that is seeking to take over this central component of
Brazil’s economy. The government angrily denies the conclusions. If they
are accurate, as one may plausibly surmise, it will fall into a very
familiar pattern.
Side comment: Communications are
not quite the same as uranium. Where there is even a pretense of
democracy, communications are at its heart. Concentration of
communications in any hands (particularly foreign hands) raises some
rather serious questions about meaningful democracy. Similar questions
arise about concentration of finance, which undermines popular involvement
in social and economic planning. Control over food raises even more
serious questions, in this case about survival. A year ago the
secretary-general of the UN Food and Agricultural Organization, discussing
the "food crisis following huge rises in cereals prices this year," warned
that countries "must become more self reliant in food production," the
London Financial Times reported. The FAO is warning "developing countries"
to reverse the policies imposed on them by the "Washington Consensus,"
policies that have had a disastrous impact on much of the world, while
proving a great boon to subsidized agribusiness—incidentally, also to
narcotrafficking, perhaps the most dramatic success of neoliberal reforms
as judged by the "free market values" that the "U.S. is exporting."
Control over food supplies by
foreign corporate giants is well under way, and with the agreement on
telecommunications signed and delivered, financial services are next in
line.
Summarizing, the expected
consequences of the victory for "American values" at the WTO are: (1) a
"new tool" for far-reaching U.S. intervention into the internal affairs of
others; (2) the takeover of a crucial sector of foreign economies by
U.S.-based corporations; (3) benefits for business sectors and the
wealthy; (4) shifting of costs to the general population; (5) new and
potentially powerful weapons against the threat of democracy.
A rational person might ask
whether these expectations have something to do with the celebration, or
whether they are just incidental to a victory of principle that is
celebrated out of commitment to higher values. Skepticism is heightened by
comparison of the Times’ picture of the postwar era with uncontested fact.
It is further enhanced by a look at some of history’s striking
regularities, among them, that those in a position to impose their
projects not only hail them with enthusiasm but also typically benefit
from them, whether the values professed involve free trade or other grand
principles—which turn out in practice to be finely tuned to the needs of
those running the game and cheering the outcome. Logic alone would suggest
a touch of skepticism when the pattern is repeated. History should raise
it a notch higher.
In fact, we need not even search
that far.
An Improper Forum
The same day that the front page
was reporting the victory for American values at the World Trade
Organization, New York Times editors warned the European Union not to turn
to the WTO to rule on its charge that the U.S. is violating free trade
agreements. Narrowly at issue is the Helms-Burton Act, which "compels the
United States to impose sanctions against foreign companies that do
business in Cuba." The sanctions "would effectively exclude these firms
from exporting to, or doing business in, the United States, even if their
products and activities have nothing to do with Cuba" (Peter Morici,
former director of economics at the U.S. International Trade Commission).
That is no slight penalty, even apart from more direct threats against
individuals and companies who cross a line that Washington will draw
unilaterally. The editors regard the Act as a "misguided attempt by
Congress to impose its foreign policy on others"; Morici opposes it
because it "is creating more costs than benefits" for the U.S. More
broadly at issue is the embargo itself, "the American economic
strangulation of Cuba" that the editors term "a cold war anachronism,"
best abandoned because it is becoming harmful to U.S. business interests.
But broader questions of right
and wrong do not arise, and the whole affair is "essentially a political
dispute," the Times editors stress, not touching on Washington’s
"free-trade obligations." Like most others, the editors apparently assume
that if Europe persists, the WTO is likely to rule against the United
States. Accordingly, the WTO is not a proper forum.
The logic is simple, and
standard. Ten years ago, on the same grounds, the International Court of
Justice was found to be an inappropriate forum for judging Nicaragua’s
charges against Washington. The U.S. rejected ICJ jurisdiction, and when
the Court condemned the U.S. for the "unlawful use of force," ordering
Washington to cease its international terrorism, violation of treaties,
and illegal economic warfare, and to pay substantial reparations, the
Democrat-controlled Congress reacted by instantly escalating the crimes
while the Court was roundly denounced on all sides as a "hostile forum"
that had discredited itself by rendering a decision against the United
States. The Court judgment itself was scarcely reported, including the
words just quoted and the explicit ruling that U.S. aid to the contras is
"military" and not "humanitarian." Along with U.S. direction of the
terrorist forces, the aid continued until the U.S. imposed its will,
always called "humanitarian aid." Public history keeps to the same
conventions.
The U.S. then vetoed a Security
Council resolution calling on all states to observe international law
(scarcely reported), and voted alone (with El Salvador and Israel) against
a General Assembly Resolution calling for "full and immediate compliance"
with the Court’s ruling—unreported in the mainstream, as was the
repetition the following year, this time with only Israel on board. The
whole affair happens to be a typical illustration of how the U.S. used the
UN as a "forum" for imposing "its own values."
Returning to the current WTO
case, in November 1996, Washington voted alone (with Israel and
Uzbekistan) against a General Assembly Resolution, backed by the entire
European Union, urging the U.S. to drop the embargo against Cuba. The
Organization of American States had already voted unanimously to reject
the Helms-Burton Act, and had asked its judicial body (the Inter-American
Juridical Committee) to rule on its legality. In August 1996, the IAJC
ruled unanimously that the Act violated international law. A year earlier,
the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights of the OAS had condemned the
U.S. restrictions on shipments of food and medicine to Cuba as a violation
of international law. The Clinton administration’s response was that
shipments of medicine are not literally barred, only prevented by
conditions so onerous and threatening that even the largest corporations
here and abroad are unwilling to face the prospects (huge financial
penalties and imprisonment for what Washington determines to be violations
of "proper distribution," banning of ships and aircraft, mobilization of
media campaigns, etc.). And while food shipments are indeed barred, the
Administration argues that there are "ample suppliers" elsewhere (at far
higher cost), so that the direct violation of international law is not a
violation.
As the issue was brought by the
EU to the World Trade Organization, the U.S. withdrew from the proceedings
on the ICJ model, effectively bringing the matter to a close.
In short, the world that the U.S.
has sought "to create in its image" through international institutions is
one based on the principle of the rule of force. The "American passion for
free trade" entails that the U.S. government may violate trade agreements
at will. No problem arises when communications, finance, and food supplies
are taken over by foreign (mainly U.S.) corporations. Matters are
different, however, when trade agreements and international law interfere
with the projects of the powerful.
We learn more by investigating
the reasons for U.S. rejection of international law and trade agreements.
In the Nicaragua case, State Department Legal Adviser Abraham Sofaer
explained that when the U.S. accepted World Court jurisdiction in the
1940s, most members of the UN "were aligned with the United States and
shared its views regarding world order." But now "A great many of these
cannot be counted on to share our view of the original constitutional
conception of the UN Charter," and "This same majority often opposes the
United States on important international questions." It is therefore
understandable that the U.S. should be far in the lead since the 1960s in
vetoing UN resolutions on a wide range of issues including international
law, human rights, environmental protection, and so on (UK second, France
a distant third), precisely contrary to the standard version repeated in
the opening paragraph above. The U.S. advanced its lead another notch
shortly after this account appeared, casting its 71st veto since 1967.
When the question (Israeli settlements in Jerusalem) moved to the General
Assembly, the U.S. and Israel stood alone in opposition, again a standard
pattern.
Drawing the natural conclusions
from the unreliability of the world, Sofaer went on to explain that we
must now "reserve to ourselves the power to determine whether the Court
has jurisdiction over us in a particular case." The long-standing
principle, now to be enforced in a world that is no longer obedient, is
that "the United States does not accept compulsory jurisdiction over any
dispute involving matters essentially within the domestic jurisdiction of
the United States, as determined by the United States." The "domestic
matters" in question were the U.S. attack against Nicaragua.
The basic operative principle was
stated elegantly by the new Secretary of State, Madeleine Albright, when
she lectured the UN Security Council about its unwillingness to go along
with U.S. demands concerning Iraq: The U.S. will "behave, with others,
multilaterally when we can and unilaterally as we must," recognizing no
external constraints in an area deemed "vital to U.S. national
interests"—as determined by the United States. The UN is an appropriate
forum when its members "can be counted on" to share Washington’s views,
but not when the majority "opposes the United States on important
international questions." International law and democracy are fine
things—but as judged by outcome, not process; like free trade.
The current U.S. stand in the WTO
case thus breaks no new ground. Washington declared that the WTO "has no
competence to proceed" on an issue of American national security; we are
to understand that our existence is at stake in the strangulation of the
Cuban economy. A WTO ruling against the U.S. in absentia would be of no
significance or concern, a Clinton administration spokesperson added,
because "we do not believe anything the WTO says or does can force the
U.S. to change its laws." Recall that the great merit of the WTO
telecommunications agreement was that this "new tool of foreign policy"
forces other countries to change their laws and practices, in accord with
our demands.
The principle is that the U.S. is
exempt from WTO interference with its laws, just as it is free to violate
international law at will; uniquely, though the privilege may be extended
to client states as circumstances require. The fundamental principles of
world order again resound, loud and clear.
The earlier GATT agreements had
allowed for national security exceptions, and under them, Washingon had
justified its embargo against Cuba as "measures taken in pursuit of
essential US security interests." The WTO agreement also permits a member
to take "any action it considers necessary for the protection of its
essential security interests," but only in relation to three designated
issues: fissionable materials, traffic in armaments, and actions "taken in
time of war or other emergency in international relations." Perhaps not
wishing to be officially on record with an utter absurdity, the Clinton
administration did not formally invoke its "national security exemption,"
though it did make clear that the issue was "national security."
At the time of writing, the EU
and the U.S. are trying to arrange a deal before April 14, when the WTO
hearings are scheduled to begin. Meanwhile, the Wall Street Journal
reports, Washington "says it won’t cooperate with the WTO panels, arguing
that the trade organization doesn’t have jurisdiction over national
security issues."
Indecent Thoughts
Polite people are not supposed to
remember the reaction when Kennedy tried to organize collective action
against Cuba in 1961: Mexico could not go along, a diplomat explained,
because "If we publicly declare that Cuba is a threat to our security,
forty million Mexicans will die laughing." Here we take a more sober view
of threats to the national security.
There were also no reported
deaths from laughter when Administration spokesperson Stuart Eizenstat,
justifying Washington’s rejection of the WTO agreements, "argued that
Europe is challenging ‘three decades of American Cuba policy that goes
back to the Kennedy Administration,’ and is aimed entirely at forcing a
change of government in Havana" (NYT). A sober reaction is entirely in
order on the assumption that the U.S. has every right to overthrow another
government; in this case, by aggression, large-scale terror, and economic
strangulation.
The assumption remains in place
and apparently unchallenged, but Eizenstat’s statement was criticized on
narrower grounds by historian Arthur Schlesinger. Writing "as one involved
in the Kennedy Administration’s Cuban policy," Schlesinger pointed out
that Under Secretary of Commerce Eizenstat had misunderstood the policies
of the Kennedy administration. Its concern was Cuba’s "troublemaking in
the hemisphere" and "the Soviet connection." But these are now behind us,
so the Clinton policies are an anachronism, though otherwise, it seems,
unobjectionable.
Schlesinger did not explain the
meaning of the phrases "troublemaking in the hemisphere" and "the Soviet
connection," but he has elsewhere, in secret. Reporting to the incoming
President on the conclusions of a Latin American Mission in early 1961,
Schlesinger spelled out the problem of Castro’s "troublemaking": it is
"the spread of the Castro idea of taking matters into one’s own hands," a
serious problem, he added shortly after, when "The distribution of land
and other forms of national wealth greatly favors the propertied
classes...[and] The poor and underprivileged, stimulated by the example of
the Cuban revolution, are now demanding opportunities for a decent
living." Schlesinger also explained the threat of the "Soviet connection":
"Meanwhile, the Soviet Union hovers in the wings, flourishing large
development loans and presenting itself as the model for achieving
modernization in a single generation." The "Soviet connection" was
perceived in a similar light far more broadly in Washington and London,
from the origins of the Cold War in 1917 into the 1960s, when the
documentary record currently ends.
Schlesinger also recommended to
the incoming president "a certain amount of high-flown corn" about "the
higher aims of culture and spirit," which "will thrill the audience south
of the border, where metahistorical disquisitions are inordinately
admired." Meanwhile we’ll take care of serious matters. Just to show how
much things change, Schlesinger also realistically criticized "the baleful
influence of the International Monetary Fund," then pursuing the 1950’s
version of today’s "Washington Consensus" ("structural adjustment," "neoliberalism").
With these (secret) explanations
of Castro’s "troublemaking in the hemisphere" and the "Soviet connection,"
we come a step closer to an understanding of the reality of the Cold War.
But that is another topic.
Similar troublemaking beyond the
hemisphere has also been no slight problem, and continues to spread
dangerous ideas among people who "are now demanding opportunities for a
decent living." In late February 1996, while the U.S. was in an uproar
over Cuba’s downing of two planes of a Florida-based anti-Castro group
that had regularly penetrated Cuban airspace, dropping leaflets in Havana
calling on Cubans to revolt (also participating in the continuing
terrorist attacks against Cuba, according to Cuban sources), the wire
services were running different stories. AP reported that in South Africa,
"a cheering, singing crowd welcomed Cuban doctors" who had just arrived at
the invitation of the Mandela government "to boost medical care in poor
rural areas." "Cuba has 57,000 doctors for its 11 million people, compared
to 25,000 in South Africa for 40 million people." The 101 Cuban doctors
included top medical specialists who, if they were South African, would
"very likely be working in Cape Town or Johannesburg" at twice the
salaries they will receive in the poor rural areas where they go. "Since
the program of sending public health specialists overseas began in Algeria
in 1963, Cuba has sent 51,820 doctors, dentists, nurses and other medical
doctors" to "the poorest Third World nations," providing "medical aid
totally free of charge" in most cases. A month later Cuban medical experts
were invited by Haiti to study a meningitis outbreak.
This kind of troublemaking goes
back a long way. A leading West German journal (Die Zeit) reported that
Third World countries regard Cuba as "an international superpower" because
of the teachers, construction workers, physicians, and others involved in
"international service." In 1985, it reported, 16,000 Cubans worked in
Third World countries, more than twice the total of Peace Corps and AID
specialists from the United States. By 1988, Cuba had "more physicians
working abroad than any industrialized nation, and more than the UN’s
World Health Organization." Most of this aid is uncompensated, and Cuba’s
"international emissaries" are "men and women who live under conditions
that most development aid workers would not accept," which is "the basis
for their success." For Cubans, the report continues, "international
service" is regarded as "a sign of political maturity" and taught in the
schools as "the highest virtue." The warm reception by an ANC delegation
in South Africa in 1996, and the crowds singing "long live Cuba," attest
to the same phenomenon.
On the side, we might ask how the
U.S. would react to Libyan planes flying over New York and Washington
dropping leaflets calling on Americans to revolt, after years of terrorist
attacks against U.S. targets at home and abroad. By garlanding them with
flowers, perhaps? A hint was given by Barrie Dunsmore of ABC a few weeks
before the downing of the two planes, citing Walter Porges, former "ABC
News" vice president for News Practices. Porges reports that when an ABC
news crew on a civilian plane attempted to take photographs of the U.S.
Sixth Fleet in the Mediterranean, "it was told to move immediately or it
would be shot down," which "would have been legal under provisions of
International Law defining military air space." A small country under
attack by a superpower is a different matter, however.
A further look at history may be
useful. The policy of overthrowing the government of Cuba does not go back
to the Kennedy administration, as Eizenstat asserted, but to its
predecessor: the formal decision to overthrow Castro in favor of a regime
"more devoted to the true interests of the Cuban people and more
acceptable to the U.S." was taken in secret in March 1960, with the
addendum that the operation must be carried out "in such a manner as to
avoid any appearance of U.S. intervention," because of the expected
reaction in Latin America and the need to ease the burden on doctrinal
managers at home. At the time, the "Soviet connection" and "troublemaking
in the hemisphere" were nil, apart from the Schlesingerian version.
Since Washington is the arbiter
of the "true interests of the Cuban people," it was unnecessary for the
Eisenhower administration to attend to the public opinion studies it
received, reporting popular support for Castro and optimism about the
future. For similar reasons, current information about these matters is of
no account. The Clinton Administration is serving the true interests of
the Cuban people by imposing misery and starvation, whatever studies of
Cuban opinion may indicate: for example, the polls reported in December
1994 by an affiliate of the Gallup organization that found that half the
population consider the embargo to be the "principal cause of Cuba’s
problems" while 3 percent found the "political situation" to be the "most
serious problem facing Cuba today"; that 77 percent regard the USA as
Cuba’s "worst friend" (no one else reached 3 percent); that by 2 to 1, the
population feel that the revolution has registered more achievements than
failures, the "principal failure" being "having depended on socialist
countries like Russia which betrayed us"; and that half describe
themselves as "revolutionary," another 20 percent "communist" or
"socialist."
Right or wrong, the conclusions
about public attitudes are irrelevant, again a regular pattern, at home as
well.
History buffs might recall that
the policy actually dates back to the 1820s, when Washington’s intention
to take control of Cuba was blocked by the British deterrent. Cuba was
regarded by Secretary of State John Quincy Adams as "an object of
transcendent importance to the commercial and political interests of our
Union," but he advised patience: over time, he predicted, Cuba would fall
into U.S. hands by "the laws of political...gravitation," a "ripe fruit"
for harvest. So it did, as power relations shifted enough for the U.S. to
liberate the island (from its people) at the end of the century, turning
it into a U.S. plantation and haven for crime syndicates and tourists.
The historical depth of the
commitment to rule Cuba may help account for the element of hysteria so
apparent in the execution of the enterprise; for example, the "almost
savage" atmosphere of the first cabinet meeting after the failed Bay of
Pigs invasion described by Chester Bowles, the "almost frantic reaction
for an action program," a mood reflected in President Kennedy’s public
statements about how failure to act would leave us "about to be swept away
with the debris of history." Clinton’s initiatives, public and indirect,
reveal a similar streak of vindictive fanaticism, as in the threats and
prosecutions that ensured that "the number of companies granted U.S.
licences to sell [medicines] to Cuba has fallen to less than 4 percent" of
the levels prior to the Cuban Democracy Act (CDA) of October 1992, while
"only a few of the world’s medical companies have attempted to brave U.S.
regulations" and penalties, a review in Britain’s leading medical journal
reports.
Considerations such as these
carry us from the abstract plane of international law and solemn
agreements to the realities of human life. Lawyers may debate whether the
ban on food and (effectively) medicine violates international agreements
stating that "food must not be used as an instrument for political and
economic pressure" (Rome Declaration, 1996) and other declared principles
and commitments. But the victims have to live with the fact that the CDA
has "resulted in a serious reduction in the trade of legitimate medical
supplies and food donations, to the detriment of the Cuban people" (Joanna
Cameron, Fletcher Forum). A recently released study of the American
Association for World Health concludes that the embargo has caused serious
nutritional deficits, deterioration in the supply of safe drinking water,
and sharp decline in availability of medicines and medical information,
leading to low birth-rate, epidemics of neurological and other diseases
with tens of thousands of victims, and other severe health consequences.
"Health and nutrition standards have been devastated by the recent
tightening of the 37-year-old US embargo, which includes food imports,"
Victoria Brittain writes in the British press, reporting the year-long
study by U.S. specialists, which found "hospitalised children lying in
agony as essential drugs are denied them" and doctors compelled "to work
with medical equipment at less than half efficiency because they have no
spare parts." Similar conclusions are drawn in other current studies in
professional journals.
These are the real crimes, far
more than the casual and reflexive violation of legal instruments that are
used as weapons against official enemies, with the cynicism that only the
truly powerful can display.
In fairness, it should be added
that the suffering caused by the embargo is sometimes reported here as
well. A lead story in the New York Times business section is headlined:
"Exploding Cuban Cigar Prices: Now Embargo Really Hurts as Big Smokes Grow
Scarcer." The story reports the tribulations of business executives at "a
plush smoking room" in Manhattan, who lament "that it’s really tough to
get a Cuban cigar in the States these days" except at "prices that catch
in the throats of the most devoted smokers."
While the Clinton administration,
exploiting the privilege of the powerful, attributes the grim consequences
of economic warfare without parallel in current history to the policies of
the regime from which it promises to "liberate" the suffering Cuban
people, a more plausible conclusion is more nearly the reverse: the
"American economic strangulation of Cuba" has been designed, maintained,
and in the post-Cold War era intensified, for the reasons implicit in
Arthur Schlesinger’s report to incoming President Kennedy. Much as
Kennedy’s Latin American Mission feared, the successes of programs to
improve health and living standards had been helping to spread "the Castro
idea of taking matters into one’s own hands," stimulating "the poor and
underprivileged" in the region with the worst inequality in the world to
"demand opportunities for a decent living," and with dangerous effects
beyond as well. There is a substantial and compelling documentary record,
accompanied by consistent action based on quite rational motives, which
lends no slight credibility to this assessment. To evaluate the claim that
the policies flow from concern for human rights and democracy, the
briefest look at the record is more than sufficient, at least for those
who even pretend to be serious.
It is improper, however, to have
any thoughts or recollections about such matters as we celebrate the
triumph of "American values." Nor are we supposed to remember that a few
months ago, inspired by the same passion for free trade, Clinton
"pressured Mexico into an agreement that will end the shipment of
low-price tomatoes to the United States," a gift to Florida growers that
costs Mexico about $800 million annually, and that violates NAFTA as well
as the WTO agreements (though only "in spirit," because it was a sheer
power play and did not require an official tariff). The Administration
explained the decision forthrightly: Mexican tomatoes are cheaper and
consumers here prefer them. The free market is working, but with the wrong
outcome. Or perhaps tomatoes too are a threat to national security.
To be sure, tomatoes and
telecommunications are in very different leagues. Any favors Clinton might
owe to Florida growers are dwarfed by the requirements of the
telecommunications industry, even apart from what Thomas Ferguson
describes as "the best-kept secret of the 1996 election": that "more than
any other single bloc, it was the telecommunications sector that rescued
Bill Clinton," who received major campaign contributions from "this
staggeringly profitable sector." The Telecommunications Act of 1996 and
the WTO agreement are, in a sense, "thank you" notes, though it is
unlikely that the outcome would have been very different if a different
mix of largesse had been chosen by the business world, suffering at the
time from what Business Week had just called "spectacular" profits in yet
another "Surprise Party for Corporate America."
Prominent among the truths that
are not to be recalled are the ones briefly mentioned earlier: the actual
record of "Reaganesque rugged individualism" and the "free market gospel"
that was preached (to the poor and defenseless) while protectionism
reached unprecedented heights and the Administration poured public funds
into high tech industry with unusual abandon. Here we begin to reach the
heart of the matter. The reasons for skepticism about the "passion" that
have just been reviewed are valid enough, but they are a footnote to the
real story: how U.S. corporations came to be so well-placed to take over
international markets, inspiring the current celebration of "American
values."
But that, again, is a larger
tale, one that tells us a lot about the contemporary world: its social and
economic realities, and the grip of ideology and doctrine, including those
doctrines crafted to induce hopelessness, resignation, and despair.
Return to Table of Contents |