Walden Bello spoke recently to the Beirut International Assembly
of Anti-war and Anti-Globalisation Movements, a gathering of activists
who came together in the Lebanese capital, itself so recently
torn by war, in mid- September, 2004. Below is the text of his
speech.
We are assembled here in Beirut at a critical moment. It is a
moment marked by crosscurrents: In Iraq, the US gets deeper and
deeper into a Vietnam-style quagmire, with the number of American
soldiers killed since the March 20, 2003 invasion passing the
1,000 mark in the first week of September. Yet in Palestine, the
Zionist Wall continues to be built at the rate of a kilometre
a day. A year ago, on September 14, 2003, some of us in this hall
were in Cancun, Mexico, dancing with joy at the Convention Center
as we celebrated the collapse of the Fifth Ministerial Meeting
of the World Trade Organization. Today, the WTO, the supreme institution
of corporate-driven globalization, is back on its feet with the
adoption last month of the Geneva Framework Document designed
to speed up the economic disarmament of developing countries.
In New York a few weeks back, we saw massive repudiation of George
W. Bush and his pro-war policies by over 500,000 people that marched
in the streets of New York. Yet, today, polls show that the same
George Bush has a 10 per cent lead over John Kerry in the lead-up
to elections the results of which will have a massive impact on
the fate of the world in the next few years.
The future, comrades, is in the balance, as we meet in this historic
city, with its glorious history of resistance to Israeli aggression
and American intervention. As you know, many more people wanted
to come to Beirut to be with us. The size, breadth, and diversity
of our assembly here today underline the strength, the power of
our movement.
It would be useful to briefly review our history over the last
decade to gain an appreciation of where we are today.
March from Marginalization
Less than 10 years ago, our movement was marginalized. The founding
of the WTO in 1995 seemed to signal that globalization was the
wave of the future, and that those who opposed it were destined
to suffer the same fate as the Luddites that fought against the
introduction of machines during the industrial revolution. Globalization
was going to bring prosperity in its wake, and how could one oppose
the promise of the greatest good for the greatest number that
the transnational corporations, guided by the invisible hand of
the market, were going to shower the world?
But the movement stood firm in the face of the scorn of the establishment
during the 1990's, when the boom in the world's mightiest capitalist
engine-the US economy-appeared to be destined to go on and on.
It was steadfast in its prediction that, driven by the logic of
corporate profitability, the liberalization and deregulation of
trade and finance would bring about crises, widen inequalities
within and across countries, and increase global poverty.
The Asian financial crisis in 1997 provided sudden, savage proof
of the destabilizing impact of eliminating controls from the flow
of global capital. Indeed, what could be more savage than the
fact that the crisis would bring 1 million people in Thailand
and 22 million people in Indonesia below the poverty line in the
space of a few weeks in the fateful summer of 1997?
The Asian financial crisis was one of those momentous events
that removed the scales from people's eyes and enabled them see
cold, brutal realities. And one of those realities was the fact
that the free market policies that the International Monetary
Fund and the World Bank imposed on some 100 developing and transitional
economies had induced, in all but a handful of them, not a virtuous
circle of growth, prosperity, and equality but a vicious cycle
of economic stagnation, poverty, and inequality. The year 2001
brought us not only Sept. 11. 2001 was also the year of reckoning
for free-market fundamentalism-the year that the Argentine economy,
the poster boy of neoliberal economics, crashed, while in the
United States, the contradictions of finance-driven, deregulated
global capitalism wiped out $4.6 trillion in investor wealth-half
of the US' gross domestic product-and inaugurated a period of
stagnation and rising unemployment from which the world's central
capitalist economy has not recovered till today.
As global capitalism moved from crisis to crisis, people organized
in the streets, in work places, in the political arena to counter
its destructive logic. In December 1999, massive street resistance
by over 50,000 demonstrators combined with a revolt of the developing
governments inside the Seattle convention centre to bring down
the third ministerial of the WTO. Global protests also eroded
the legitimacy of the IMF and the World Bank, the two other pillars
of global economic governance, albeit in less dramatic fashion.
Anti-neoliberal mass movements brought new governments to power
in Venezuela, Argentina, Brazil, Ecuador, and Bolivia. The fifth
ministerial meeting in Cancun, an event associated in many people's
minds with the altruistic suicide of the Korean farmer Lee Kyung-Hae
at the barricades, became Seattle II. And, in November last year,
in Miami, the same alliance of civil society and developing country
governments forced Washington to retreat from the neoliberal program
of radical liberalization of trade, finance, and investment that
it had threatened to impose in the western hemisphere via the
Free Trade Area of the Americas (FTAA).
Fighting against Empire
The fight for global justice and equity has been one thrust of
our movement. The other has been the struggle against militarism
and war. For the movement against imperial intervention, the 1980's
and 1990's were not good decades. National liberation struggles
retreated, lost momentum, or were compromised in many parts of
the world. Of course, there were exceptions, as in South Africa,
where the ANC came to power; Palestine, where the first Intifadah
handed Israel a political and military defeat; Lebanon, from where
the US fled in 1983 after 241 American Marines perished in the
bombing of their base located just a few kilometres away from
here, and from where the Israelis were gradually squeezed out
over the next decade; and, not to forget, Somalia, where the destruction
of a US Ranger unit in Mogadishu forced the Clinton administration
to terminate its military intervention in October 1993.
The ideologues of globalization promoted the illusion that accelerated
globalization would bring about the reign of "perpetual peace."
In contrast, our movement warned that as globalization proceeded,
its economically and socially destabilizing effects would multiply
conflicts and insecurities. Driven by corporate logic, globalization,
we warned, would herald an era of aggressive imperialism that
would seek to batter down opposition, seize control of natural
resources, and secure markets.
We were proved right, but it took us some time to gain our bearings.
We were still too disoriented by the events of September 11,
2001, and by the internal politics of Afghanistan to enable us
to respond effectively to the US invasion of that country. But
it was soon clear that the so-called War against Terror was simply
an excuse for implementing a quest for Absolute Military Supremacy
or, in Pentagon jargon, "Full Spectrum Dominance."
In late 2002 and early 2003, the movement finally swung into
action, becoming a global force for justice and peace that mobilized
tens of millions of people throughout the world on Feb. 15, 2003,
against the planned invasion of Iraq. We did not succeed in stopping
the American and British invasion, but we have surely contributed
to delegitimizing the Occupation and made it increasingly difficult
for invaders that have brazenly violated international law and
many rules of the Geneva Convention to remain in Iraq. The New
York Times, on the occasion of the Feb. 15, 2003, march, said
that there are only two superpowers left in the world today, the
United States and global civil society. Let me add that I have
no doubt that the forces of justice and peace will prevail over
the contemporary incarnation of empire, blood, terror, and greed
that is the USA.
Iraq, the Resistance, and the Movement
Our movement is on the ascendant. But our agenda is massive,
our tasks formidable. To name just a few: We have to drive the
US out of Iraq and Afghanistan. We must stop Israel's increasingly
genocidal policies against the Palestinian people. We must impose
the rule of law on outlaw, rogue states like the US, Britain,
and Israel. Moreover, we have some way to go before becoming a
critical mass that will decisively affect the struggle for national
liberation in Iraq.
Let me explain. Over the last few months, there have been two
defining events in Iraq. One was the expose of systematic sexual
abuse at the Abu Ghraib prison facility outside Baghdad. The second
was the uprising in Fallujah in April.
The Abu Ghraib scandal, which has angered most of the world and
shamed most Americans, stripped the last shred of legitimacy from
the US presence in Iraq. The uprising in Fallujah, which saw Iraqi
men, women, and children fighters defeat the elite of Washington's
colonial legions, the US Marines, was the turning point of the
Iraqi war of national liberation. Fallujah was followed by uprisings
in other cities like Najaf and Ramadi. It showed that the Iraqi
resistance is not one carried out by remnants of the Saddam Hussein
regime but one that is widespread, popular, and on the ascendant.
Let me read you a recent account from the New York Times on the
conditions in Ramadi and Falluja, which are pretty much a microcosm
of Iraq at this point. It says that "American efforts to build
a government structure around former Baath party stalwarts
have
collapsed." Instead, both cities and much of Anbar Province, "are
now controlled by
militias, with US troops confined mainly
to heavily protected forts on the desert's edge. What little influence
the Americans have is asserted through wary forays in armoured
vehicles, and by laser-guided bombs
[But] even bombing raids
appear to strengthen the [militias], who blame the Americans for
scores of civilian deaths."
The question, friends and comrades, is no longer whether Washington
will eventually be defeated by the Iraqi resistance. It will be
defeated. The question is how long it will hang on to an impossible
situation. On the resolution of this issue, our role in the global
peace movement has a very important bearing.
Washington hangs on despite the daily attacks on its troops by
the resistance. The victory of the Iraqi people's resistance will
definitely be hastened by one thing: the emergence of a strong
global anti-war movement such as that which took to the streets
daily and in the thousands before and after the Tet Offensive
in 1968. So far that has not materialized, though opposition to
the US presence in Iraq is the dominant global sentiment and disillusionment
with their government's policies in Iraq has now spread to a majority
of the US public.
Indeed, at the very time that it is most needed by the people
of Iraq, the international peace movement has had trouble getting
into gear. The demonstrations on March 20, 2004, were significantly
smaller than the Feb.15, 2003, when tens of millions marched throughout
the world against the projected invasion of Iraq. The kind of
international mass pressure that makes an impact on policymakers-the
daily staging of demonstration after demonstration in the hundreds
of thousands in city after city-is simply not in evidence, at
least not yet.
Perhaps a major part of the reason is that a significant part
of the international peace movement, particularly in Europe and
the United States, hesitates to legitimize the Iraqi resistance.
Who are they? Can we really support them? These questions have
increasingly been flung at the advocates of an unconditional military
and political withdrawal from Iraq. Let us face it: the use of
suicide as a political weapon continues to bother many US and
European activists who were repelled by statements such as that
of the Palestinian leaders who proudly asserted that suicide bombers
were the oppressed people's equivalent of the F-16. Let us face
it: the fact that a large part of the resistance in both Iraq
and Israel is Islamic rather than secular in inspiration continues
to bother many western peace activists. Yet there has never been
any pretty movement for national liberation or independence. Many
Western progressives were also repelled by some of the methods
of the "Mau Mau" movement in Kenya, the FLN in Algeria, the NLF
in Vietnam. What western progressives forget is that national
liberation movements are not asking them mainly for ideological
or political support. What they really want from the outside,
from progressive like us, is international pressure for the withdrawal
of an illegitimate occupying power so that internal forces can
have the space to forge a truly national government based on their
unique processes. Until they give up their implicit conditioning
of their actions on the guarantee that a national liberation movement
tailored to their values and discourse will be the one to come
to power, many US and western peace activists will continue to
be trapped within a paradigm of imposing their terms on other
people.
Let me be clear. We cannot promote conditional solutions--even
one that says US and Coalition troop withdrawal only if there
is a UN security presence that takes the place of the Americans.
The only principled stand is: Unconditional withdrawal of US and
Coalition military and political forces now. Period.
But if the future in Iraq itself continues to hang in the balance,
the Iraqi resistance has already helped to transform the global
equation.
The US is weaker today than it was before May 1, 2003, when Bush
declared victory in Iraq. The Atlantic Alliance that won the Cold
War no longer functions, largely because of the division over
Iraq. Spain and the Philippines have been forced to withdraw their
troops from Iraq, and Thailand has now quietly followed suit,
contributing further to US isolation. The situation in Afghanistan
is more unstable now than last year, with the US writ extending
only to the outskirts of Kabul. Militant Islam, which the US now
considers its enemy no. 1, is now more vigorously spreading throughout
Southeast Asia, South Asia, and the Middle East. In Latin America,
we now have massive popular anti-neoliberal and anti-US movements
in Brazil, Argentina, Venezuela, and Bolivia that are either in
government or are making it difficult for governments to maintain
their neoliberal, free market policies. Hugo Chavez has frontally
challenged imperialism in its own backyard, and he remains in
power owing to the organized support of the Venezuelan people.
More power to him!
Owing to its hubris, the US is suffering from that fatal disease
of all empires-imperial overstretch. Our role, to echo that great
Cuban revolutionary Che Guevara, is to worsen this crisis of overextension,
not only by creating or expanding movements of international solidarity
against the US in Iraq, the US-Israel axis in Palestine, and the
creeping US intervention in Colombia. It is also to give birth
or reinvigorate struggles against the US imperial presence in
our own countries and regions. For instance, the struggle against
the US bases in Northeast Asia and the renewed US military presence
via the so-called War on Terror in Southeast Asia is one that
we from Southeast Asia must rededicate ourselves to.
Towards a New Global Economic Order
Struggle against imperialism and war is one front of our struggle.
The other front is the struggle to change the rules of the global
economy, for it is the logic of global capitalism whose fountainheads
are the US, the European Union, and Japan that is the source of
the disruption of society and of the environment. The challenge
here goes beyond simply disempowering institutions like the World
Bank, the International Monetary Fund, and the World Trade Organization,
though this task must not be underestimated-witness, for instance,
the recent resurrection in Geneva of the WTO, which many of us
thought had suffered a major blow to its foundations in Cancun.
The challenge is that even as we deconstruct the old, we dare
to imagine and win over people to our visions and programs for
the new. Contrary to the claims of the ideologues of the establishment,
the principles that would serve as the pillars of a new global
order are present. The primordial principle is that instead of
the economy, the market, driving society, the market must be--to
use the image of the great Hungarian scholar Karl Polanyi-"reembedded"
in society and governed by the overarching values of community,
solidarity, justice, and equity. At the international level, the
global economy must be deglobalized or rid of the distorting,
disfiguring logic of corporate profitability and truly internationalized,
meaning that participation in the international economy must serve
to strengthen and develop rather than disintegrate and destroy
local and national economies.
The perspective and principles are there; the challenge is how
each society can articulate these principles and programs in unique
ways that respond to their values, their rhythms, their personality
as societies. Call us post-modern, but central to our movement
is the conviction that, in contrast to the belief common to both
neoliberalism and bureaucratic socialism, there is no one shoe
that will fit all. It is no longer a question of an alternative
but of alternatives. And unless there is a new global order built
on the principles of justice, sovereignty, and respect for diversity,
there will be no real peace.
Two Challenges
But let me end by returning to our urgent task, which is to defeat
the US in Iraq and Israel in Palestine. We are all here not to
celebrate our strength but, most important, to address our weaknesses
over the next few days.
Let me just say that one of the challenges that we will be addressing
is how we get beyond spontaneous actions, beyond coordination
that remains at the level of coordinating international days of
protest. The enemy is extremely well coordinated at a global level
and we have no choice but to match that level of coordination
and cooperation. But we must match it in with a professionalism
that respects our democratic practices-indeed, we must confront
it in ways that turns our democratic practice into an advantage.
The other challenge that I would like to highlight is that of
closing the political and cultural gap between the global movements
for justice and peace and their counterparts in the Arab and Islamic
worlds. This is a gap that imperialism has exploited to the hilt,
with its effort to paint most of our Arab and Muslim comrades
as terrorists or supporters of terrorism. We cannot allow this
situation to continue, which is the reason we are holding this
meeting in Beirut. Indeed, let me say that unless the global movements
and the Arab movements forge tight, organic ties of solidarity,
we will not win the struggle against corporate-driven globalization
and imperialism.
So, friends, the future of the struggle is in the balance-a balance
that will be affected by what happens here in Beirut in the next
few days. Will we advance, stay in place, or retreat? The answer
is one that depends on each one of the over 300 registered delegates
that have come here from all over the world. I am cautiously confident.
Why? Because I know the goodwill is there, the tolerance for differences
is there, and the political will is there to achieve unified action
to overcome the forces of injustice, oppression, and death.
For more on Beirut International Assembly of Anti-war and Anti-Globalisation
Movements, including media coverage, see: here
Walden Bello is Director of Focus on the Global South in Bangkok,
a project of Chulalongkorn University's Social Research Institute,
and Professor of Public Administration and Sociology at the University
of the Philippines. He serves on the Programme Board of the International
Centre for Trade and Sustainable Development in Geneva, which
provides NGOs with information on the WTO. Bello has regular columns
in Philippine and Thai newspapers, Focus on Trade, and the Far
Eastern Economic Review. His most recent books are Deglobalisation:
Ideas for a New World Economy (Zed 2002) Dark Victory: The United
States and Global Poverty (updated 2nd edition; TNI/Food First/Pluto
1999) and A Siamese Tragedy: Development and Disintegration in
Modern Thailand (Food First/Zed 1998).