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  1. Kieran you are right but you are wrong.
    Right to say that the US is still the dominant global power.
    Wrong that the US is not in decline.
    Its a question of relative decline.
    Brzezinski as you say saw long ago the need to co-opt Russia and China.
    After the “end of history” moment it looked like it would.
    Since then it has failed to quarantine both these new super-powers as subordinates, or mere ‘regional’ powers.
    The ‘victory’ over “communism” left it with none of the prizes it expected.
    The US never saw the rise of Russia and China as potential rivals emerging out of the collapse of the ‘state socialist’ regimes in the 1990s. It still regards China officially as ‘communist’ which it never was.
    Yet the decades of central planning outside the capitalist world economy created strong states in Russia and China that were able to resist all attempts by the US and its allies to turn these states into mere clients.
    So relatively speaking while the US appears to call the shots as in Ukraine or Syria or the South China Sea, it is not longer prevailing.
    The US has lost its superiority in nuclear weapons and cannot brandish these with impunity.
    In the Ukraine Russia invaded the Crimea and supports the breakaway Donbass enclaves.
    In Syria, the US is playing second fiddle to Russia in propping up the fascist Assad. Russia how includes Iran and on present indications, Turkey, in its power bloc with China and the other BRICS.
    The fact is that in the Great Game for control of Eurasia the US is losing. NATO is falling apart as is the EU itself as the Silk Roads begin to penetrate.
    Russia and China are moving into parts of the world that the US formerly regarded as part of its sphere of interest, namely the EU, Latin America and Africa.
    Such is the relative decline of the US that Trump is able to rise to power on a platform of return to the past ‘greatness’ of US isolationism.
    There is nothing so dangerous as an angry elephant at home and angry Eurasian bears on the loose.

    1. I agree with you general stance but not this:

      In the Ukraine Russia invaded the Crimea and supports the breakaway Donbass enclaves.’

      Having overthrown the legitimate government, the US puppet regime in Kiev declared that Russian, the language of the people of eastern Ukraine (which incidentally was only incorporated into Ukraine by Khrushchev in the early 1950s for economic reasons) was not to be used! Needless to say, they objected.

      Subsequently, the Russian-speaking region of Crimea (Russian since Catherine the Great’s time) managed to break free of Kiev control (the presence of a Russian base which had been paying ‘rent’ to Ukraine making the break easier) and voted to join the Russian Federation.

      ‘Russia invaded Crimea’ is just the propaganda story churned out by the corrupt western media, as a component of their anti-Putin, anti-Russia campaign.

      The fascist forces of west Ukraine US puppet government have been engaged in a war on the people of the Donbas region, to regain control of the mineral resources and factories that generated most of Ukraine’s wealth in the past (there’s not a lot of money to be made out of grain); volunteer units from Russia have supported the ‘east Ukrainians’ -who are really Russians.

      It has been reported that the US was all set to invade Crimea, but suddenly had a change of heart when the lead ships saw what the Russians had prepared to ‘welcome’ them: one of the most advanced missile systems in the world.

      1. Yeah I should have said Russia annexed Crimea.
        I agree that it had majority support from those living in Crimea.
        My point is that there is nothing progressive about Russia compared to the US.
        Both are imperialist, and it is no use hoping that Russia (or China and their fellow BRICS) can stop the US taking us with them as it bombs it way to oblivion under crazy General Trump.
        The only way to stop this total destruction is an international workers revolution.
        Anything less will become part of the disaster.

  2. The new Kieran article, like its precursors, contains important analytical conclusions that could be helpful for ‘the left’ in NZ toward further theoretical reasoning and practical derivation of future policies and actions.

    Not talking about militarist expansion, a historical strength of the USA – with global support echoing from all continents – comes from the powerful declaration of “all men / people are created equal”.

    This was, and still is, one of the most appealing and challenging political and social statements in human history and will be acknowledgment by an overwhelming majority of individuals, social and ethnic groups, religious aggregations and nation-states as an over-arching principle for life, action, interaction.

    “All people are created equal.” “Liberté, Egalité, Fraternité.”

    Perhaps not key phrases for facebooking or twittering; but the social and political quality of the statement and its compelling substance and attributes do actually continue to resonate with hundreds of millions in the Pacific, Asia, Europe, Africa, the Americas, and even in the US.

    For a start, direct sharing of experiences and interventions with analysts and citizens from Brazil, China, India, Russia, and South Africa would be helpful. The imperial notion of US-american exceptionalism – including its cannibalistic global and local economic materializations – can be brought to halt, and there might even be reasonably good chances for shifting the long-term perspective.

    ……….let’s have a searching look beyond Cape Reinga.

  3. Thank you for considering the points raised, Keiran.

    It can be argued that American power peaked at the end of WW2, when it was the only significant industrial nation that had not suffered substantial infrastructure damage, it possessed atomic weapons that other nations, particularly USSR (under Stalin) did not possess, and had supplanted the British pound with the US dollar as the global reserve currency.

    The USSR always had better tanks and better rockets than America (and used them very effectively against the Germans), and the coup of capturing the German rocket specialists in 1945 gave the USSR an even greater lead over the USA in rocketry: hence the first satellite, the first dog in orbit, the first man in orbit etc. The best the Americans could come up with was to fabricate some scenes of ‘men landing on the Moon’, put some men into orbit around the Earth for a while and claim they had been to the Moon. (The USSR never attempted such a mission because they knew it was impossible for humans to pass through the Van Allen belts and impossible to carry enough fuel to the Moon to support a manned landing). Whether the Russians could have developed nuclear weapons immediately after WW2 without secrets being leaked to them is conjectural. We do know that Khrushchev wrote about American planes flying over Czechoslovakia and even parts of the USSR unchallenged in the late 1940s. Stalin had a lot of very smart people shot or sent to gulags, of course, and it was only after his death that the USSR began to make rapid technological progress.

    The US was able to prop up the US puppet government in South Korea, was able to topple the Mossadegh government of Iran and install the US-friendly Shah Palavi, and was able to consolidate its occupation of numerous bases all the way from Germany to Japan. And through the 1970s and 1980s it was able to topple governments of small and medium-sized nations with impunity.

    That all came to and end with Syria, which Russia and China have apparently chosen as the battleground to bring the US down.

    An aspect that the vast majority of historians and commentators miss is that US was the biggest extractor of oil and the biggest supplier of oil derivatives throughout the 1940, 50s and 60s, so had ‘money coming out the ground’. That all changed over 1970-71, when US oil extraction peaked and went into decline. The opening up of Alaska provided a small hump on the US depletion profile but it has essentially been all downhill since 1971 (recent fracking activities providing another very costly very short-term blip on the depletion profile. Couple declining extraction with ever greater dependence on oil and the US soon became the biggest importer of oil.

    The enormous cost of the Vietnam War caused Nixon to close the gold window in 1971 when France demanded redemption of US notes in physical gold. “Sorry, no gold.” And the ever-greater need to import ever-greater quantities of oil led to the establishment of ‘petrodollars’, whereby fraudulently created money was recycled through the armaments and oil businesses.

    The ‘magic cheque book’ as Robert Newman called it

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sa3oqP3FGMc

    has allowed the US to live beyond its means for decades. But the days of ‘the magic cheque book’ are numbered, with increasing numbers of transactions bypassing US dollars. it is only manipulation of interest rates and massive money-printing that is preventing global collapse

    China now has a greater holding of gold that America, has highly sophisticated manufacturing capabilities, and has forged energy relationships with Russia and Iran. Note the parade of Chinese soldiers through Moscow at the 70th anniversary of the end of WW2, indicating the closest military cooperation ever. Not only that, but most nations (including the US) are now dependent on China for many of what might be described as the essentials of life -clothing and footwear.

    There are now numerous regions of the world where the US dare not send its military (remember the US drone that Iran brought down a couple of years ago and is now copying). We’ve been hearing about an ‘imminent attack’ on Iran since 2004, and nothing has happened. With very advanced Russian missile system now installed there and energy deals between Iran and China, the chances of the US attacking Iran are surely lower than ever. I’m sure the saber-rattling is purely for domestic consumption, to persuade American’s the US is still capable of military engagement.

    In addition to ineffectiveness of its military arsenal, its financial predicament and its corrupt and ineffective political system, the US is now having to cope with the effects of establishing an agricultural system predicated on emptying the Ogallala aquifer and overuse of chemicals (bees dying as never before), collapsing infrastructure -especially roads and bridges, and the severe effects on the populace of industrially produced food and a health system that is geared to maximizing the profits of corporations rather than actual health.

    For me, the transition for a superpower to a ‘has-been superpower’ occurred in 2008, when the US puppet Sashkavilli attempted to invade Ossetia, and a few days later Russian troops had stripped Georgia of everything they could move and had blown up everything they couldn’t move. And America looked on, powerless to act.

    That weakness was very apparent at the recent meeting in China, where Obama was literally a laughing stock, matching the status of John Kerry these days.

    In the past nations were fearful of America. Now many of them regard America as a joke. The ridiculous election goings-on magnify the worldwide perception that the US is now a beyond a joke.

    1. That is a very thoughtful and well-argued response. However, there is some conceptual slippage here that in some senses leaves us writing at cross purposes. I agree that in relative power terms the US was at its most powerful after WWII. And I agree that the US went into a decline from 1970-73. I have written about this stuff previously. The thing is, though, that I keep forgetting to remind people that I am not talking about the nation-state, I am talking about the empire. I use the term US empire, but as I have made clear the empire’s health is not the health of the USA itself.

      Take the above-mentioned period and the transition from gold-backed US dollar to petrodollar. I am not sure if you have read Michael Hudson’s Superimperialism, but I imagine you would find it very persuasive. It makes some very interesting points about the nature of the transformation in that period, and it does not shy away from the sort of things you are talking about.

      Hudsons “superimperialism” effectively allowed the US to collect tribute from almost all countries, including the Soviet Bloc. It came at the same time as the transition from Keynesian to “military-Keynesian” dirigism. Moreover, though some claim that de-industrialisation was already underway, but it definitely kicked into high gear at this time. Though Nixon baulked at it, forces were already poised to roll out Chicago school supply-side economics (it soon came with the crisis du jour of “stagflation” which became pretext for the Volcker shocks). All of these things weaken and impoverish the state, the nation, and the civil society of the US. But it kept military predominance and dollar/finance hegemony. It was all bad for the country, but it all made the empire more powerful.

      To be frank, It think they deliberately hollowed out the US in order to ensure that their own people did not become empowered. Other empires create poverty at home by accident, but this seems to have been much more purposive. It was at exactly this same point that US wages stopped increasing and have remained static when adjusted for inflation for an astonishing 44 years.

      On the subject of debt, all US debts are denominated in US dollars, so if any country tries to offload a great deal of US debt they will collapse the dollar, as you probably know. One thing that this means is that you can only get rid of US bonds at a rate which other buyers or the US are willing to take them off your hands. If you dump them you get nothing and the subsequent dollar collapse will hurt all economies on the planet. The US itself would suffer less than the poor countries of the world, and perhaps many of the rich.

      Eventually the US dollar will be less significant and the US will be isolated, but in a way that worries me because they are giving every indication that they will take extreme action to forestall that outcome or usher in a different empire-dominated world order – perhaps a more multinational neofeudal empire.

      I do not deny that China and Russia are militarily formidable, and that Iran is a quagmire too far (or seems to be), but the US military now acts with impunity throughout huge tracts of the lands and oceans of this planet – more than it or any other power has before. We need to judge things with a thorough contextualisation. For example, you cite the USSR’s superior rocket technology, yet through having more industrial might it was the US that developed the first ICBM capability and it kept ahead in virtually every nuclear missile category (and it still is). On this subject I would recommend Gareth Porter’s The Perils of Dominance despite the caveats of my earlier article having a go at him.
      Saker rightly ridiculed the US “rods from the gods” space-launched weapons programme, but like an expert magician the US is always misdirecting with such flourishes. It quietly develops much more modest, pragmatic and deadly weapons, like its air-launched nuclear cruise missiles. When I say “pragmatic” of course I don’t mean that they are “pragmatic” in any normal sense, or in any sense that any US official would admit to. They aren’t a nuclear deterrent, they are a terror device and a threatening first-strike weapon.

      You end by saying that the US is a joke. That is the one thing that I really must object to. I mentioned Sun Tzu’s dictum: “When you are strong, appear weak”. US imperialist vastly exaggerate roadblocks or losses (e.g. the loss of China); they reverse disparities to make themselves seem threatened (e.g. the missile gap); they feign helplessness when they are controlling events (e.g. in negotiations during the wars in Korea and in Viet Nam); they back enemies into a corner and then pretend that the enemy if forcing their reluctant hand (e.g. Iraq 1990-2003); and if their enemies weaken they falsify intelligence to create fantastic threats (e.g the “Team B” reports that helped launch Cold War II, the hysterical lies about Grenada and Nicaragua, the exaggerations of whichever Middle-Eastern bogeyman is the most useful excuse for the moment, and the whole Hitler-of-the-month discourse that kicks in with sickening frequency).

      Throughout all of this they have been blessed with friends, enemies and rivals who, needing to shore up their own international or domestic support, will bluster and denigrate them – helping them in their lies. Remember Mao’s “paper tiger” remarks? Kruschev yelling “we will bury you!” Remember Saddam Hussein promising the “mother of all battles”? Remember how many times the BBC has told you that they have no “credibility” or that they are “seen as weak”?

      The US has done so much to destroy their credibility over the years and not only does it not effect their hard power or soft power, but losing credibility doesn’t even really effect their credibility. It is as if everyone sees two different worlds at the same time and they talk about one of them all the time, but deep down they know they have to live in the other one, where all of that bullshit means absolutely nothing.

      I don’t know if I have covered everything here, but hopefully you can see that the facts and arguments you present can and should be read in a different way when you shift from a nation-state focus to an empire focus.

      1. I think we have now got to the crux of the matter. What we live in is not actually a US empire as such but is an international money-lender empire which has used America as a means to an end, and will continue to use America as a means to an end until some other option arises.

        Bill Still’s ‘Money Masters’, though now slightly dated, is one of the best resources I know of on the topic.

        ‘The development of fractional reserve banking practices in the 17th century brought to a cunning sophistication the secret techniques initially used by goldsmiths fraudulently to accumulate wealth. With the formation of the privately-owned Bank of England in 1694, the yoke of economic slavery to a privately-owned “central” bank was first forced upon the backs of an entire nation, not removed but only made heavier with the passing of the three centuries to our day. Nation after nation, including America, has fallen prey to this cabal of international central bankers.’

        https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UrJGlXEs8nI

        (Needless to say, most people cannot be bothered to ‘wade through’ 3 hours of highly informative documentation, so ‘the secret’ remains ‘a secret’. )

        We live on a planet ruled by bankers, who pull all the strings of government, including the military, to further the short-term interests of bankers: that short-term interest is, of course, to maintain and expand their global Ponzi scheme and bring an ever-greater number of people under their control via debt-slavery and dependence on bank-owned corporations.

        Additionally, bankers desire for ownership or control of resources -everything from land to water to oil has driven political-economic policies for around two centuries.

        The surveillance state, the corrupt and ineffective education systems, the mass media brainwashing etc. are mechanisms for maintaining and expanding control of populations by the bankers. And wars are mechanisms for acquiring control over populaces of resources.

        When this perspective is understood, many aspects of history and present-day existence become explicable.

        For instance, socialist governments throughout the world have been toppled and replaced by fascist dictatorships, or more recently replaced by chaos.

        Gaddafi was using Libya’s oil wealth to raise the living standards of Libyans but with as little involvement of [Rothschild] bankers as possible; he was even in the process of establishing an independent African development bank: he therefore had to be assassinated a.s.a.p. That is just relatively recent example of a history of manipulation and intervention that goes back to the eighteenth century. (Prior then, it was primarily the greed of monarchs, the desire to acquire natural resources and religious differences that generated wars.)

        By the way, it was the use of ‘depleted uranium’ munitions -really nasty stuff that contaminates regions more-or-less permanently, and in contravention of several international conventions- by US/NATO forces that resulted in several quick victories, especially in Iraq.

        The control of societies by bankers permeates everything, including environmental policy. Thus, nothing whatsoever is done to prevent rapid planetary meltdown, and the failed scheme that was supposedly going to address emissions was simply another banker-initiated scam to generate or redistribute fiat currency. The incessant mantras populations are fed, that ‘population growth is good’, that ‘GDP growth is good’, that environmental destruction will be remedied by ‘sustainable development’ are all banker-instigated lies. And since infinite growth on a finite planet is mathematically impossible

        https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sI1C9DyIi_8

        we are rapidly reaching the end of the game in which resource depletion, the accumulation of pollution and overpopulation determine everything.

        Note that energy depletion, accumulation of pollution and overpopulation do not feature at all in any NZ government policy development and all policies are geared to making all three predicaments far worse, as required to maintain the global banking Ponzi scheme just a little longer.

        Thus. we enter the period of collapse firmly under the thumbs of international banking (and other) corporations, and with the bulk of the populace either ignorant or in denial.

  4. All roads lead to Rome which was the technology that allowed Rome to expand there technology across there Empire and coincidently it was the technology that allowed early Christianity to expand across the Roman empire. As the empire grew the share weight of the empire crushed its roads because every section of road needed constant maintenance and solders to protect the labourers and traders from marauding barbarians. Eventually Rome didn’t have the solders to protect all its vassal states and maintain its roads and the empire reached its end game.

    Today we have the technology of financial engineering that has reached its end game in a lot of ways. The same roads that the barbarians used to march into Rome and take it over are now being used today by the big four banks in New Zealand who corrupt the system and take it over and unsettle the political forums and democratic process and cause financial anarchy.

    Every country is going down a similar path rejecting the empire of debt, an empire of debt that incidentally doesn’t care about boarders or land acquisition like traditional empires. Now unemployment and protest are a plague everywhere. The rise of mass shootings and police corruption can not continue. Mainstream must take a good honest look at private sector debt and include private sector debt in all mainstream theory so we can create a society that makes sense to all involved.

  5. It all looks like a chess board. At the Black end is The City of London, District of Colombia and the seated between them as lead player is the Vatican. The opponents with hands on the white pieces are Russia, China and those countries aligned with the BRICS.
    But technology moves on and we are facing Zero Point Energy ably demonstrated by Putin when dealing with the warship Donald Cook. When the White Pieces are moved into position for zero energy to be deployed, Black pieces will freeze on the board.
    As @SAM has said, all roads lead to Rome. Interestingly, the Whore of Babylon as mentioned in the bible, is none other than the Holy See of Rome.

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