What is left roaming our
wilderness of mirrors depends on the mood swings of the Goddess of the
Market. No wonder an effect of Eurasia integration will be a death blow to
Bretton Woods and “democratic” neoliberalism, says Pepe Escobar.
By Pepe Escobar
Special to Consortium News
Special to Consortium News
Get ready for a major
geopolitical chessboard rumble: from now on, every butterfly fluttering its
wings and setting off a tornado directly connects to the battle between Eurasia
integration and Western sanctions as foreign policy.
It is the paradigm shift of
China’s New Silk Roads versus America’s Our Way or the Highway. We used to be
under the illusion that history had ended. How did it come to this?
Hop in for some essential time
travel. For centuries the Ancient Silk Road, run by mobile nomads, established
the competitiveness standard for land-based trade connectivity; a web of trade
routes linking Eurasia to the – dominant – Chinese market.
In the early 15th century,
based on the tributary system, China had already established a Maritime Silk
Road along the Indian Ocean all the way to the east coast of Africa, led by the
legendary Admiral Zheng He. Yet it didn’t take much for imperial Beijing to
conclude that China was self-sufficient enough – and that emphasis should be
placed on land-based operations.
Deprived of a trade connection
via a land corridor between Europe and China, Europeans went all-out for their
own maritime silk roads. We are all familiar with the spectacular result: half
a millennium of Western dominance.
Until quite recently the latest chapters
of this Brave New World were conceptualized by the Mahan, Mackinder and Spykman
trio.
The Heartland of the World
Halford Mackinder’s 1904
Heartland Theory – a product of the imperial Russia-Britain New Great Game
– codified the supreme Anglo, and then Anglo-American, fear of a new emerging
land power able to reconnect Eurasia to the detriment of maritime powers.
Nicholas Spykman’s 1942
Rimland Theory advocated that mobile maritime powers, such as the UK and the
U.S., should aim for strategic offshore balancing. The key was to control the
maritime edges of Eurasia—that is, Western Europe, the Middle East and East
Asia—against any possible Eurasia unifier. When you don’t need to maintain a
large Eurasia land-based army, you exercise control by dominating trade routes
along the Eurasian periphery.
Even before Mackinder and Spykman,
U.S. Navy Admiral Alfred Thayer Mahan had come up in the 1890s with his Influence
of Sea Power Upon History – whereby the “island” U.S. should establish
itself as a seaworthy giant, modeled on the British empire, to maintain a
balance of power in Europe and Asia.
It was all about containing the
maritime edges of Eurasia.
In fact, we lived in a mix of
Heartland and Rimland. In 1952, then Secretary of State John Foster Dulles
adopted the concept of an “island chain” (then expanded to three chains) alongside
Japan, Australia and the Philippines to encircle and contain both China and the
USSR in the Pacific. (Note the Trump administration’s attempt at revival via
the Quad–U.S.,
Japan, Australia and India).
George Kennan, the architect of
containing the USSR, was drunk on Spykman, while, in a parallel track, as late
as 1988, President Ronald Reagan’s speechwriters were still drunk on Mackinder.
Referring to U.S. competitors as having a shot at dominating the Eurasian
landmass, Reagan gave away the plot: “We fought two world wars to prevent this
from occurring,” he said.
Eurasia integration and
connectivity is taking on many forms. The China-driven New Silk Roads, also
known as Belt and Road Initiative (BRI); the Russia-driven Eurasia Economic
Union (EAEU); the Asia Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB); the International
North-South Transportation Corridor (INSTC), and myriad other mechanisms, are
now leading us to a whole new game.
How delightful that the very
concept of Eurasian “connectivity” actually comes from a 2007 World Bank report
about competitiveness in global supply chains.
Also delightful is how the late
Zbigniew “Grand Chessboard” Brzezinski was “inspired” by Mackinder after the
fall of the USSR – advocating the partition of a then weak Russia into three
separate regions; European, Siberian and Far Eastern.
All Nodes Covered
At the height of the unipolar
moment, history did seem to have “ended.” Both the western and eastern
peripheries of Eurasia were under tight Western control – in Germany and Japan,
the two critical nodes in Europe and East Asia. There was also that extra node
in the southern periphery of Eurasia, namely the energy-wealthy Middle East.
Washington had encouraged the
development of a multilateral European Union that might eventually rival the
U.S. in some tech domains, but most of all would enable the U.S. to contain
Russia by proxy.
China was only a delocalized,
low-cost manufacture base for the expansion of Western capitalism. Japan was
not only for all practical purposes still occupied, but also instrumentalized
via the Asian Development Bank (ADB), whose message was: We fund your projects
only if you are politically correct.
The primary aim, once again, was
to prevent any possible convergence of European and East Asian powers as rivals
to the US.
The confluence between communism
and the Cold War had been essential to prevent Eurasia integration. Washington
configured a sort of benign tributary system – borrowing from imperial China –
designed to ensure perpetual unipolarity. It was duly maintained by a
formidable military, diplomatic, economic, and covert apparatus, with a star
role for theChalmers Johnson-defined Empire of
Bases encircling, containing and dominating Eurasia.
Compare this recent idyllic past
with Brzezinski’s – and Henry Kissinger’s – worst nightmare: what could be
defined today as the “revenge of history”.
That features the Russia-China
strategic partnership, from energy to trade: interpolating Russia-China
geo-economics; the concerted drive to bypass the U.S. dollar; the AIIB and the
BRICS’s New Development Bank involved in infrastructure financing; the tech
upgrade inbuilt in Made in China 2025; the
push towards an alternative banking clearance mechanism (a new SWIFT); massive
stockpiling of gold reserves; and the expanded politico-economic role of the
Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO).
As Glenn Diesen formulates in his
brilliant book, Russia’s Geo-economic Strategy for a
Greater Eurasia, “the foundations of an Eurasian core can
create a gravitational pull to draw the rimland towards the centre.”
If the complex, long-term,
multi-vector process of Eurasia integration could be resumed by just one
formula, it would be something like this: the heartland progressively
integrating; the rimlands mired in myriad battlefields and the power of the
hegemon irretrievably dissolving. Mahan, Mackinder and Spykman to the rescue?
It’s not enough.
Divide and Rule, Revisited
The same applies for the
preeminent post-mod Delphic Oracle, also known as Henry Kissinger,
simultaneously adorned by hagiography gold and despised as a war criminal.
Before the Trump inauguration,
there was much debate in Washington about how Kissinger might engineer – for
Trump – a “pivot to Russia” that he had envisioned 45 years ago. This is how I
framed the shadow playat the
time.
In the end, it’s always about
variations of Divide and Rule – as in splitting Russia from China and
vice-versa. In theory, Kissinger advised Trump to “rebalance” towards Russia to
oppose the irresistible Chinese ascension. It won’t happen, not only because of
the strength of the Russia-China strategic partnership, but because across the
Beltway, neocons and humanitarian imperialists ganged up to veto it.
Brzezinski’s perpetual Cold War
mindset still lords over a fuzzy mix of the Wolfowitz Doctrine and the Clash of
Civilizations. The Russophobic Wolfowitz Doctrine – still fully classified – is
code for Russia as the perennial top existential threat to the U.S. The Clash,
for its part, codifies another variant of Cold War 2.0: East (as in China) vs.
West.
Kissinger is
trying some rebalancing/hedging himself,
noting that the mistake the West (and NATO) is making “is to think that
there is a sort of historic evolution that will march across Eurasia – and not
to understand that somewhere on that march it will encounter something very
different to a Westphalian entity.”
Both Eurasianist Russia and
civilization-state China are already on post-Westphalian mode. The redesign
goes deep. It includes a key treaty signed in 2001, only a
few weeks before 9/11, stressing that both nations renounce
any territorial designs on one another’s territory. This happens to concern,
crucially, the Primorsky Territory in the Russian Far East along the Amur
River, which was ruled by the Ming and Qing empires.
Moreover, Russia and China commit
never to do deals with any third party, or allow a third country to use its
territory to harm the other’s sovereignty, security and territorial integrity.
So much for turning Russia
against China. Instead, what will develop 24/7 are variations of U.S. military
and economic containment against Russia, China and Iran – the key nodes of
Eurasia integration – in a geo-strategic spectrum. It will include
intersections of heartland and rimland across Syria, Ukraine, Afghanistan and
the South China Sea. That will proceed in parallel to the Fed weaponizing
the U.S. dollar at will.
Heraclitus Defies Voltaire
Alastair Crooke took a great
shot at deconstructing why Western global elites are terrified of
the Russian conceptualization of Eurasia. It’s because “they ‘scent’…a stealth
reversion to the old, pre-Socratic values: for the Ancients … the
very notion of ‘man’, in that way, did not exist. There were only men: Greeks,
Romans, barbarians, Syrians, and so on. This stands in obvious opposition to
universal, cosmopolitan ‘man’.”
So it’s Heraclitus versus
Voltaire – even as “humanism” as we inherited it from the Enlightenment, is de
facto over. Whatever is left roaming our wilderness of mirrors depends on the
irascible mood swings of the Goddess of the Market. No
wonder one of the side effects of progressive Eurasia integration will be not
only a death blow to Bretton Woods but also to “democratic” neoliberalism.
What we have now is also a
remastered version of sea power versus land powers. Relentless Russophobia is
paired with supreme fear of a Russia-Germany rapprochement – as Bismarck
wanted, and as Putin and Merkel recently
hinted at. The supreme nightmare for the U.S. is in fact a truly Eurasian
Beijing-Berlin-Moscow partnership.
The Belt and Road Initiative
(BRI) has not even begun; according to the official Beijing timetable, we’re
still in the planning phase. Implementation starts next year. The horizon is
2039.
This is China playing a
long-distance game of go on steroids, incrementally making the
best strategic decisions (allowing for margins of error, of course) to render
the opponent powerless as he does not even realize he is under attack.
The New Silk Roads were launched
by Xi Jinping five years ago, in Astana (the Silk Road Economic Belt) and
Jakarta (the Maritime Silk Road). It took Washington almost half a decade to
come up with a response. And that amounts to an avalanche of sanctions and
tariffs. Not good enough.
Russia for its part was forced to
publicly announce a show of mesmerizing weaponryto
dissuade the proverbial War Party adventurers probably for good – while
heralding Moscow’s role as co-driver of a brand new game.
On sprawling, superimposed
levels, the Russia-China partnership is on a roll; recent examples include
summits in Singapore, Astana and St. Petersburg;
the SCO summit in
Qingdao; and the BRICS Plus summit.
Were the European
peninsula of Asia to fully integrate before mid-century – via high-speed rail,
fiber optics, pipelines – into the heart of massive, sprawling Eurasia, it’s
game over. No wonder Exceptionalistan elites are starting to get the feeling
of a silk rope drawn ever so softly, squeezing their gentle throats.
Pepe Escobar is the
correspondent-at-large for Hong Kong-based Asia Times. His
latest book is 2030. Follow him on Facebook.
https://consortiumnews.com/2018/08/29/back-in-the-great-game-the-revenge-of-eurasian-land-powers/