Dividing
the spoils: A primer on the NATO and G8 summits
By
ERIC RUDER
IN MID-MAY,
Chicago will host an unprecedented gathering of the global 1%. The heads
of state from the Group of Eight (G8) club of powerful governments will
meet side by side with the world’s most powerful military alliance, in
the heart of a major American city.
Not since
1977 in London has the G8 and the North Atlantic Treaty Organization
(NATO) met in the same city. Not since its 2001 meeting in Genoa, Italy
drew some 200,000 protesters and Italian police killed demonstrator Carlo
Giuliani has the G8 dared to meet in an area accessible to protesters,
preferring instead remote locations that could be sealed off from the
rest of the world.
And not since
the eruption of international resistance—from revolutionary struggles
throughout the Arab world to the revolt against austerity in Europe and
the upsurge of the Occupy movement in the United States—have so many
people taken to the streets in a single year to protest precisely the
agenda that NATO and the G8 will be trying to advance when they meet in
Chicago from May 19 to 21.
Collectively,
the NATO and G8 countries command a massive proportion of the world’s
economic resources while wielding sufficient military force to
simultaneously pursue multiple wars and occupations. As a result, NATO
and the G8 together shape the terrain that every person interested in
social justice must contend with. That’s because every dollar that they
earmark for bank bailouts and bombing runs is a dollar siphoned away from
meeting human needs.
Already,
activists—from Chicago, across the United States, and around the
world—are planning events of all sorts to raise their voices in dissent.
There will be marches against NATO’s plans for militarization; there will
be actions to oppose the G8’s program of privatization and austerity; and
there will be a People’s Summit on May 12–13 to put forward an
alternative vision of a world characterized by peace and equality instead
of war and want.
But the
enforcers for the global 1% are also preparing—for repression. Democratic
mayor Rahm Emanuel is bending Chicago’s laws without regard to the rights
of protest and free speech,1 and law enforcement officials are
planning a militarized state of siege, complete with snipers,2 in an
effort to squash dissent. Ironically, despite all the violence and misery
imposed by these illegitimate and unrepresentative bodies, officials in
Chicago have again and again filled the media with the false claim that
those committed to exercising their First Amendment rights to assembly
and protest to get their voices heard are the “violent” ones.
NATO and the
Cold War
NATO has
transformed itself in the years since it was founded as the needs and
interests of the West’s industrialized countries have evolved. NATO was
founded in 1949 in the ruins of the Second World War, and until 1999, the
alliance never once engaged in an open military conflict. During the Cold
War years, NATO—under firm US leadership—served as the West’s umbrella of
“mutual self-defense,” which was mirrored by the Soviet Union’s bloc of
Warsaw Pact countries. NATO’s first secretary general, Lord Ismay, stated
NATO’s purpose was “to keep the Russians out, the Americans in, and the
Germans down.” At the height of its powers, the United States looked to
draw together its allies for the stand off with the Soviet Union, but
also to provide a counterbalance to a possible German resurgence.
Thus NATO
served as a means to justify the United States’ sprawling “empire of
bases”3 (or at least those that sprang up across Europe). Some of
NATO’s defenders talk wistfully of NATO’s “success” at deterring “Soviet
aggression” and credit it with “preserving the peace” during the Cold
War. But the Cold War era saw a massive arms race, the threat of nuclear
war, and various “hot wars” along the dividing line between the imperial
superpowers (Korea, Vietnam, and various places in Central America and
the Horn of Africa).
The doctrine
of “mutual assured destruction”—with the descriptively accurate acronym
MAD—lent the arms race the veneer of rationality. The idea was that each
superpower could deter the other from launching an offensive nuclear
strike because the threat of a retaliatory strike would guarantee the
annihilation of whichever side launched the first strike. Thus the United
States and the Soviet Union embarked upon a nuclear arms race that
produced enough weapons to destroy the world many times over, and on
several occasions the superpowers came to the brink of conflict (the best
known episode is the 1962 Cuban missile crisis) before pulling back from
the edge. Generations of people around the world thus grew up in a
constant state of anxiety about whether American and Soviet political
leaders were MAD enough to kill us all. Dr. Strangelove, anyone?
The other
element of NATO’s Cold War strategy was to prepare for a possible ground
invasion of Europe by Soviet forces. To that end, American and British
spy agencies worked with NATO to train networks of paramilitary forces in
country after country throughout Europe. The full extent of these
networks wasn’t really known until the end of the Cold War when in 1990
Italian prime minister Giulio Andreotti was forced to acknowledge the
existence of such a network, code-named Operation Gladio (which means
sword), on Italian soil. But NATO’s “secret armies” didn’t confine
themselves to preparing to meet Soviet soldiers in Western Europe.
According to Daniele Ganser’s book NATO’s Secret Armies:
The notion of
the project in the intelligence services undoubtedly began as an effort
to create forces that would remain quiescent until war brought them into
play. Instead, in country after country we find the same groups of
individuals or cells originally activated for the wartime function
beginning to exercise their strength in peacetime political processes.
Sometimes these efforts involved violence, even terrorism, and sometimes
the terrorists made use of the very equipment furnished to them for their
Cold War function.4
Thus, NATO
also engaged in a covert war against domestic left-wing forces, carrying
out a war on democracy in the very countries that NATO was supposed to
protect from “anti-democratic” threats. In the words of historian Michael
Parenti:
[T]hese
secret units were involved in terrorist attacks against the left. They
helped prop up a fascist regime in Portugal, participated in the Turkish
military coups of 1971 and 1980, and the 1967 coup in Greece. They drew
up plans to assassinate social democratic leaders in Germany, and stage
“preemptive” attacks against social and communist organizations in Greece
and Italy. They formed secret communication networks and drew up
detention lists of political opponents to be rounded up in various
countries.5
NATO beyond
the Cold War
According to
its own “self-defense” mandate, NATO should have been disbanded with the
collapse of the Soviet Union and the end of the Cold War in 1991. A 1950
State Department paper, NSC 68, which outlined a strategy of military
containment of the USSR, also indicated that the permanent maintenance of
military superiority was “a policy which the United States would probably
pursue even if there were no Soviet Union.”6 Accordingly, the United States
sought to enlarge NATO in order to press its advantage in the wake of the
Soviet Union’s collapse by incorporating countries formerly part of the
Eastern bloc. NATO has also embarked upon a broad expansion and
reorientation of its operations and since 1999 has invaded three
countries—Yugoslavia, Afghanistan, and Libya.
As Rick
Rozoff details in his Stop NATO blog:
With the
expansion of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization into Eastern Europe
from 1999-2009, the US-led military alliance has grown by 75 percent,
from 16 to 28 members. By 2009 all former non-Soviet Warsaw Pact member
states had been incorporated into NATO, the former German Democratic
Republic (East Germany) being absorbed with its merger into the Federal
Republic in 1990. The Czech Republic, Hungary and Poland joined NATO in
1999 and Bulgaria, Romania and Slovakia in 2004.
This is just
the beginning, if NATO’s war planners have their way. NATO is also
pursuing a military partnership with the African Union, which represents
fifty-three member nations. According to a Kenyan news account of the
negotiations, “the stated aim is to counter global security threats and
specifically threats against Africa, [though] some observers read the
pact as aiming to counter Chinese expansion in Africa.”7 Thus,
NATO’s addition of more than fifty African nations to the military
alliance is yet another reprise of its Cold War objective of advancing
the interests of the United States against its global competitors.
Though NATO
insists that such expansions help to guarantee “security” and
“stability,” the drive to enlarge NATO’s reach has already led to new
military confrontations. The 2008 military conflict in Georgia, for
example, was portrayed in the mainstream media as a case of Russian
aggression against one of its former republics. But this only captures
one aspect of what took place. As Lee Sustar wrote in 2008:
Certainly,
Russia’s aim to dominate Georgia—which fell under Moscow’s control in the
late 18th century and was formally annexed in 1801—is imperial in nature.
But it’s revealing that after selling the US invasion and occupation of
Afghanistan and Iraq as exercises in “promoting democracy,” the corporate
media is finally willing to characterize a great power’s expansionist
military moves as “imperialist.”
What’s
missing from the mainstream account of the Russia-Georgia war is the role
of US imperialism, which has sought to incorporate Georgia into NATO as
part of an arc of US military outposts and alliances stretching from the
Middle East to Central Asia. And while the Western press publishes
accounts of civilians terrorized by Russia’s military, far less attention
is given to the vicious attack of the Georgian military—trained by the
US—on the disputed South Ossetia region.8
Today, NATO
countries collectively account for more than 70 percent of world military
spending, the US alone for nearly half—raising the obvious question: From
what is NATO defending itself? After “testing” NATO’s military
capabilities in the 1999 war on Yugoslavia (which incidentally killed
more civilians than the Serbian ground offensive it was meant to stop),9 the
United States has thrust NATO into more offensive operations designed to
contain Russia and China.
A “good year”
for NATO
In late
December 2011, Admiral James Stavridis, commander of the US European
Command, declared, “As I look back on 2011, I think we had a reasonably
good year in the operational sense.”10
This
assessment is far too rosy. In late November 2011, NATO air strikes
killed twenty-four Pakistani soldiers, supposed allies of NATO in its war
on Afghanistan—triggering rage across Pakistan, further straining
US-Pakistani relations, and prompting Pakistan’s closure of NATO’s
critical supply routes to landlocked Afghanistan.11 More than two
months later, those supply lines remained closed, and according to the
Pentagon, the United States was forced to spend $104 million per month
(up from $17 million) to keep supplies flowing to NATO forces (the
overwhelming majority of whom are US troops).12
Stavridis
glides over these strained relations so he can focus on the alleged
successes of NATO’s operations in Afghanistan. He reports that roughly 50
percent of Afghanistan has been returned to the control of Afghan
security forces with NATO troops there playing merely “a support,
mentorship, and training role.” Given that this is the longest war in US
history, and that the United States set out to transform Afghanistan into
a stable client regime, this hardly seems the most positive result.
The US plan
to fully withdraw from Afghanistan by the end of 2013 and hand over
control to Afghan security forces (announced with much fanfare by US
defense secretary Leon Panetta in early 2012) seems unlikely to
succeed—as so many other “turning points” and “milestones” announced by
US war planners over the years have similarly failed to materialize. The
main problem, according to the military intelligence firm Stratfor, is
that while the United States and NATO have fought the Taliban to a
stalemate, they can’t militarily defeat the Taliban nor can they rely on
Afghan troops to do so:
The Afghan
military must recruit troops, and some of the most eager volunteers will
be Taliban operatives. These operatives will be indistinguishable from
anti-Taliban soldiers, and their presence will have two consequences.
First, the intelligence they will provide the Taliban will cause the
Afghan army offensive to fail. Second, shrewd use of these operatives
will undermine the cohesion and morale of the Afghan forces. Surprise is
crucial in locating, engaging and destroying a guerrilla force. Afghan
security forces will face the same problem the South Vietnamese army did;
namely, they will lack the element of surprise and at least some of their
units will be unreliable. Accordingly, the US strategy of using the
stalemate to construct a capable military force accordingly looks
unlikely to succeed even leaving aside the issue of the fragmentation of
the Afghan nation and the Karzai government’s internal problems.13
The Vietnam analogy—though
not perfect, since the United States still manages to hold on to
Afghanistan—is also useful in another sense. The same US
counterinsurgency strategy that failed to “win hearts and minds” in
Vietnam has also failed in Afghanistan. As the New York Times reports,
The
persistence of deadly convoy and checkpoint shootings has led to growing
resentment among Afghans fearful of Western troops and angry at what they
see as the impunity with which the troops operate—a friction that has
turned villages firmly against the occupation….
Many of the
detainees at the military prison at Bagram Air Base joined the insurgency
after the shootings of people they knew, said the senior NATO enlisted
man in Afghanistan, Command Sgt. Maj. Michael Hall. “There are stories
after stories about how these people are turned into insurgents,”
Sergeant Major Hall told troops during the videoconference.14
In early
February 2012, an 84-page report authored by Lt. Col. Daniel Davis was
making the rounds among Washington lawmakers when it was leaked toRolling
Stone magazine. Lt. Davis’ report explained in devastating detail
that the March 2011 congressional testimony of Gen. David Petraeus, then
the top commander in Afghanistan, heralding the success of Obama’s troop
surge to Afghanistan was either "misleading, significantly skewed or
completely inaccurate.” Contrary to the impression given by Petraeus, the
number of insurgent attacks, improvised explosive devices, and US
casualties in 2011 were respectively 82 percent, 113 percent and 164
percent higher than in 2009, the last year before Obama’s troop surge.
The number of US dead and wounded skyrocketed during those years from
1,764 to 4,662. “Even a cursory observation of key classified reports and
metrics,” Davis concludes, “leads overwhelmingly to the conclusion that
over the past two years, despite the surge of 30,000 American soldiers,
the insurgent force has gained strength.”15
As the
dominant force within NATO, the United States bears the chief
responsibility for the carnage caused by NATO’s war, and the scale of the
carnage is substantial—more than 10,000 Afghan civilians killed since
2007, nearly 3,000 NATO troops dead, and a price tag approaching half a
trillion dollars for US taxpayers alone. But despite the enormous human
and economic toll, the US foreign policy establishment remains
preoccupied with “victory” in Afghanistan because of the compulsion to
counter the growing influence of China as an economic and political force
in the region. In addition to Afghanistan’s location in the heart of
Asia, it’s also at a strategic crossroads for the construction of a
pipeline to transport valuable energy resources from the Caspian Sea to
the Indian Ocean (while, of course, avoiding Iran). This is one of the
reasons that the United States first hoped to negotiate with the Taliban
after it came to power in 1996 and then, after September 11, seized on
the ideal justification to use force to accomplish the same goal.16
Then there
was NATO’s seven-month strafing of Libya with 26,000 air sorties that
destroyed some 6,000 targets.17 NATO’s own rationale for its
military campaign was first to prevent a massacre in Misrata, which
quickly morphed into removing the brutal dictatorship of Muammar Qaddafi.
The real reason was to give Western powers a foothold in the region that
would allow them to make a grab for Libya’s prized oil resources, as well
as provide them leverage in the unfolding events of the Arab Spring.18 The
NATO invasion also exposed the hypocrisy of Western leaders, including
the Bush and Obama administrations, which had both enjoyed friendly
relations with Qaddafi as an ally in the “war on terror” until just weeks
before the NATO bombing began.19
To summarize,
since the end of the Cold War, the United States has looked to expand
NATO’s role as global policeman, considering it to be more strategically
valuable as a means to expand its dominance in the world. “NATO has left
Western Europe a long time ago,” writes Asia Times analyst Pepe
Escobar.
[T]oo small,
too provincial. It’s already in Central and South Asia as well as
Northeast Africa, interlinked with the Pentagon’s AFRICOM…. Way beyond
the Afghan killing fields, NATO is fast becoming a huge “forward
operating base” for policing the Middle East, Africa, Asia and even the
South Atlantic, where the Pentagon reactivated the Fourth Fleet.20
G8: The
global 1%
The group of
powerful countries that became the G8 got its start in 1975 in the
context of a world oil crisis and global recession. Since then, the G8
heads of state have met annually to spread the gospel of neoliberalism,
prying open markets, privatizing lucrative state-owned industries, and
designating what they consider “intrusive” environmental safeguards and
workers’ rights as “trade barriers.” The G8 countries, which contain 15
percent of the world’s population but account for more than half of
global nominal GDP, find themselves at the top of the global capitalist
food chain, and their agenda is to make sure they stay there.
Today, with
the eurozone teetering on the edge of solvency and a global economic
downturn that has created stubbornly high unemployment rates throughout
the industrialized world, the G8 countries are frantically seeking ways
out of the economic crisis that began in 2008. Their solutions are based
on trying to offload the costs of the crisis—in particular, the budget
deficits caused by trillions of dollars in bailouts to the world’s
largest financial institutions—onto the 99 percent. This means cutting
social services like health care and anti-poverty programs, attacking the
living standards of public-sector workers, raising the retirement age,
and privatizing state industries.
The annual G8
summit is therefore a forum for discussions about how the G8 countries
plan to use their international financial institutions—such as the
International Monetary Fund, World Bank, and World Trade Organization—to
allow for the greatest possible freedoms for multinational corporations
while imposing discipline on any nations that don’t accept free markets
and neoliberal orthodoxy. Greece is merely the latest country to receive
a “lifeline” of loans and incentives that “saves” the national economy
from financial ruin—by plunging the 99 percent into poverty, devaluing
the life savings of millions of people, and cutting wages.
The heads of
state of the world’s eight most powerful countries—the United States,
United Kingdom, Germany, France, Japan, Italy, Russia, and Canada
(included in 1976 at the insistence of the United States)—make sweeping
decisions that affect the entire world. The G8’s summits have become
annually rehearsed charades in which the world’s wealthiest nations
pledge a tiny fraction of the resources they have plundered from the rest
of the world to address poverty, famine, and disease in poorer countries.
At 2011’s G8 summit in the French resort town of Deauville, British prime
minister David Cameron explained what he describes as the G8’s image
problem by saying, “I think what people think back home about these summits
is a bunch of people in suits get together make some promises,
particularly to the world’s poorest, and then they go in and have a big
lunch and forget about the promises.”21 But the image problem exists
not because it’s an image problem, but a well-deserved reputation.
The issue of
agriculture subsidies, for example, is a case in point. While G8
countries give generous subsidies to their own agricultural sectors,
which are dominated by a handful of megacorporations, they maintain
tariffs and other barriers to the importation of agricultural products
from the less developed world. This maintains a lopsided economic
arrangement in which artificially cheap agricultural products from the
rich countries drive local producers in the less developed countries out
of business and undermines food self-sufficiency in the rest of the
world. According to journalist Julio Godoy:
Perhaps the
most important issue for African development, one that few have
mentioned, is the need to reduce the subsidies that most G8 countries
shell out to their farmers and the trade barriers that protect their own
markets, which numerous studies show contributed heavily in the past two
decades to undermining development in Africa and other poor regions of
the world.
This is not
something unknown to politicians and analysts in the G8 capitals. Already
in 2005, the United Nations Human Development Report (UNHDR), which had
the premonitory title “International cooperation at a crossroads: Aid,
trade and security in an unequal world,” said it quite clearly: “The
basic problem to be addressed in the World Trade Organization
negotiations on agriculture can be summarized in three words: rich
country subsidies.”
The document
went on: “In the last round of world trade negotiations (launched in Doha,
Qatar in 2001) rich countries promised to cut agricultural subsidies.”
But, as the UNHDR remarked, since then, subsidies for agriculture in
the G8 countries have steadily grown. The world’s richest countries spent
just over one billion dollars for the year 2005 on aid for
agriculture in poor countries, and just under one billion dollars each
day of that year for various subsidies of agricultural
overproduction at home. “A less appropriate ordering of priorities
is difficult to imagine,” concluded the U.N. report (emphasis mine).22
To state this
using hard numbers, the average European cow received $2.50 in government
subsidies per day in 2002 and the average Japanese cow clocked $7.50 per
day, while 75 percent of people in Africa were living on less than $2 per
day. American subsidies to its cotton growers amounted to $3.9 billion in
2002 alone, which was three times US foreign aid to Africa that year.23
The 2005 G8
summit at Gleneagles, Scotland, was celebrated by international celebrities
such as U2’s Bono as a breakthrough because of the pledge to provide
Africa with $50 billion in additional aid by 2010.24 But the
legitimacy that Bono’s support lent the G8 wasn’t deserved—then or now.
In the words of Canadian politician Stephen Lewis, who served a term as a
UN special envoy for HIV/AIDS in Africa, “Bono and company do their best
to flatter the contributions of the G8, but even they are forced to say
that the increases from 2005 to 2010 ‘have fallen far short of what was
promised.’”25 By 2011, according to the G8’s own accountability
report, G8 countries were already behind by $19 billion on their 2005
pledges. But that didn’t stop them from promising even more at their 2011
summit. “It seems unrealistic for the G8 countries to commit to such huge
amounts when there is still a deficit of about $19 billion from previous
summits,” Egyptian activist Ragia Omran told reporters.26 In 2007,
Oxfam predicted that a $30 billion funding shortfall would lead to the
deaths of 5 million people, disproportionately children.27 It should
be remembered that this figure of $30 billion does not represent even .01
percent of the combined GDP of the G8 countries.
In the
conclusion to the 2004 book Fatal Indifference: The G8, Africa and Global
Health, the authors explain that not only have the G8 countries broken
their promises to the less-developed world, but it can’t be assumed that
their promises were in the best interests of the less-developed world in
the first place. There’s a simple reason for this.
The current
development policy model appears to be one that promotes growth only in
ways that are (a) consistent with the financial interests of the
industrialized world, and (b) require minimal or no redistribution of
income and wealth from the rich world to the poor. Certainly, that is the
message conveyed by the long-term decline in ODA [official development
assistance] flows from the G8 countries, even as their wealth has greatly
increased.28
Why oppose
NATO and the G8?
According to Forbes magazine,
2011 was a year to celebrate for the world’s ultra-rich because both the
total number of billionaires and their combined wealth shattered the
previous record.29 The combined wealth of the world’s 1,210
billionaires amounted to $4.5 trillion in 2011. To get some idea of the
scale of this number and how it relates to the vast expanse of unmet
human needs, $5.5 trillion could eliminate extreme poverty around the
world, end world hunger, provide access to potable water for everyone,
and end the HIV/AIDS crisis—for the next 20 years. In other words,
redistributing the wealth of the world’s richest 1,210 people could
eradicate the world’s most pressing inequalities.
Some 1.4
billion people live on less than $1.25 a day. For them, there’s no such
thing as stability, only a daily and terrifying instability. For the
AIDS-ravaged continent of Africa, orphaned children wonder where their
next meal will come from. For the campesinos throughout Central
America trying to feed their families, each day raises the question of
whether to stay on the land or join the urban poor in one or another
megalopolis where begging may provide more nutrition than tilling the
land. And for the people of Afghanistan, the daily thrum of unmanned
drones flying overhead poses the question, “Will today be the day that a
bomb falls on me?”
NATO and the
G8 stand as the ultimate guardians of a broken economic and political
order that sustains such gargantuan inequalities—and marching against
them is an opportunity to point out how they do this, but also to draw
attention to the larger problems of the system of global capitalism.
Nearly a
decade ago, global justice campaigner George Monbiot challenged the
“democracy hypocrisy” of the G8 heads of state for their double
standards. “[The G8 countries] leave the rest of the world out of their
deliberations,” wrote Monbiot in his book The Age of Consent. “We
are left to shout abuse…. They reduce us, in other words, to the mob, and
then revile the thing they have created…. They, the tiniest and most
unrepresentative of the world’s minorities, assert a popular mandate they
do not possess, then accuse us of illegitimacy.”30
Nothing could
be more legitimate than standing with the rest of humanity against the
global 1%. So whether you are concerned about better public education or
the crisis of housing foreclosures and evictions, whether you are driven
by the growing climate crisis or the scourge of war, you have a reason to
come to Chicago in May and be a part of a mass mobilization to oppose the
G8 and NATO.
1 Brit Schulte and Caitlin Sheehan,
“Emanuel gets his clampdown,” Socialist Worker, January 23, 2012.
2 Shia Kapos, “Trained marksmen will
be watching NATO/G8 dignitaries, protesters,” Crain’s Chicago
Business blog, January 9, 2012.
3 Chalmers Johnson, “America’s Empire
of Bases,” TomDispatch.com, January 15, 2004.
4 Daniele Ganser, NATO’s Secret
Armies: Operation Gladio and Terrorism in Western Europe (New York:
Routledge, 2005).
5 Michael Parenti, Against Empire (San
Francisco: City Lights Books, 1995), 143.
6 Quoted in Lance Selfa, “From Cold
War to Kosovo,” International Socialist Review 8, Summer 1999.
7 Cited by Rick Rozoff, “Africa:
Global NATO seeks to recruit 50 new military partners,” Stop NATO blog,
February 20, 2011, http://rickrozoff.wordpress.com/africa-global-nato-seeks-to-recruit-50-new-military-partners/.
8 Lee Sustar, “How imperial rivalries
stoked war in Georgia,” Socialist Worker, August 12, 2008.
9 See “New Masters of the Balkans,” International
Socialist Review 8, Summer 1999; and Noam Chomsky, The New Military
Humanism: Lessons from Kosovo (Monroe, Maine: Common Courage Press,
1999).
10 James Stavridis, “NATO in 2011: Five
key events,” December 19, 2011, http://www.aco.nato.int/saceur/NATO-in-2011-Five-Key-Events.aspx.
11 Salman Masood and Eric Schmitt,
“Tensions flare between US and Pakistan after strike,” New York
Times, November 26, 2011.
12 Luis Martinez, “NATO supplies to
Afghanistan keep flowing, but at a price,” ABC News National Security
blog, January 20, 2012,
http://abcnews.go.com/blogs/politics/2012/01/nato-supplies-to-afghanistan-keep-flowing-but-at-a-price/.
13 George Friedman, “Afghanistan: Moving
toward a distant endgame,” Stratfor.com, February 7, 2012.
14 Richard Oppel Jr., “Tighter rules
fail to stem deaths of innocent Afghans at checkpoints,” New York
Times, March 26, 2010.
15 Gareth Porter, “Army officer's leaked
report rips Afghan war success story,” Inter Press Service news agency,
February 11, 2011.
16 Eric Ruder, “Why Washington wanted
this war,” Socialist Worker, September 6, 2002. For a more in-depth
discussion of US war aims in Afghanistan in the Obama era, see David
Whitehouse, “Afghanistan: Sinking Deeper,” International Socialist
Review 69, January-February 2010.
17 Stavridis.
18 Alan Maass and Lance Selfa,
“Washington celebrates Qaddafi’s death,” Socialist Worker, October
24, 2011.
19 This episode also exposed the
hypocrisy of Qaddafi’s defenders who downplayed his regime’s
collaboration with the United States. See Maass and Selfa.
20 Pepe Escobar, “Welcome to NATOstan,” Asia
Times, November 20, 2010.
21 Geert De Clercq, “NGOs blast G8 for
broken promises, hollow words,” Reuters, May 27, 2011.
22 Julio Godoy, “G8-AFRICA: Farm
subsidies a taboo subject?” Inter Press Service news agency, May 30,
2007.
23 Kwesi Kwaa Prah, “Catch as Catch Can:
Obstacles to Sustainable Development in Africa,” in Sustainable
Development in Africa: A Multifaceted Challenge, ed. Okechukwu Ukaga
and Osita G. Afoaku, (Trenton, New Jersey: Africa World Press, 2005), 17.
24 Geert De Clercq, “NGOs blast G8.”
25 Stephen Lewis, “The G8 and G20, roken
promises on global AIDS,” Reproductive Health Reality Check, June 23,
2010.
26 Geert De Clercq, “NGOs blast G8.”
27 “G8 broken promises could cost five
million lives warns Oxfam,” Oxfam statement, May 11, 2007.
28 Ronald Labonte, Ted Schrecker, David
Sanders, and Wilma Meeus, Fatal Indifference: The G8, Africa and
Global Health (Cape Town, South Africa: University of Cape Town
Press, 2004), 211.
29 “The World’s Billionaires,” Forbes,
September 3, 2011.
30 George Monbiot, Age of Consent (London:
Flamingo, 2003)
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