
| Msg # 350 of 620 on ZZUK4446, Thursday 10-29-25, 2:31 |
| From: NY.TRANSFER.NEWS@BLYTHE.O |
| To: ALL |
| Subj: Blair's Washington Summit: What Next for |
[continued from previous message] something. And that is all that most of Blair's bourgeois critics want. They do not offer a different policy, merely a call for a harder bargaining stance in Britain's dealings with Washington. The question that haunts them all is just how far they can take such horse-trading with the US, given Britain's subordinate position in relation to its transatlantic partner. There are many within the British bourgeoisie who nurse their petty resentments towards the US and pride themselves on Britain's diplomacy and statesmanship when compared with the "Ugly American." But ever since the 1957 Suez debacle, they have understood that it is the US that ultimately calls the shots. Just prior to Blair's trip to Washington, Kendall Myers, a senior analyst with the US State Department's Bureau of Analysis and Research, gave a lecture to the School of Advanced International Studies at Johns Hopkins University. In it he stated that Blair got "nothing, no payback" for supporting Bush in Iraq. Blair should have been ditched by Labour, he added, but the party had lacked the "courage or audacity" to remove him. The Bush administration, he continued, took little account of what Britain said: "We typically ignore them and take no notice. We say, `There are the Brits coming to tell us how to run our empire. Let's park them.' It is a sad business and I don't think it does them justice." But Myers did more than embarrass Blair. He declared that the "special relationship" between Washington and London was always a "myth": "It has been, from the very beginning, very one-sided. There never really has been a special relationship, or at least not one we've noticed." Such candid remarks will strike a resentful chord within the British establishment, but resentment and dissatisfaction alone cannot produce a major shift in foreign policy. For this, significant layers within ruling circles would have to conclude that their strategic task is to build a series of alliances within Europe as a counter-force to the US. And to date, the European bourgeoisie has proved itself militarily incapable of offering such an alternative power base and lacking the necessary political will to mount such a challenge. Despite their obvious desire to profit politically from the reversals suffered by the US, they are constrained by a belief that a defeat for the "world's policeman" in Iraq would be politically disastrous--bringing in its wake a mass radicalisation of the working class not only throughout the Middle East, but also in the US and Europe. The British bourgeoisie fears such an outcome more than any other. Nile Gardiner, director of the Margaret Thatcher Centre for Freedom, wrote on December 7 in the Telegraph of the greatest challenges ever faced by the Anglo-American special relationship, noting, in particular, that "anti-American views are now as widespread, or perhaps even more prevalent, in the UK than in some continental European countries with a far deeper tradition of public scepticism toward the US." A "weakening of the Anglo-American alliance," he warned, would mean "the further loss of national sovereignty, the diminution of British global power and influence, the loosening of defence and intelligence ties, and a weakening of the close-knit financial, trade and investment relationship... In times of international crisis, the US and the UK stand together, and the world is a safer and better place for it." In reality, US imperialism faces a major loss of its economic power for which its aggressive military policy could never compensate. Far from being a factor ensuring stability and peace, America has become the major destabilising factor in the world situation. As a result, British imperialism's alliance with, and continued reliance on, Washington is at the very heart of its own mounting difficulties. Whether under Blair or whoever succeeds him as Labour leader, Britain will continue as America's chief partner-in-crime in Iraq. Like the debate in the US between the Democrats and Republicans, and within the Republican Party itself, the debate over Britain's foreign policy takes place between factions whose concern is how best to advance their predatory imperialist interests in the Middle East and internationally. Such an agenda not only demands continued bloodshed in Iraq, but must also pave the way for worse atrocities in future. This must provoke mounting domestic opposition that can find no outlet within the official political spectrum. Equally, any sharp shift in the political situation in America, whether due to events in the Middle East, the worsening situation facing the US economy, or a movement in opposition to the gutting of living conditions and the erosion of democratic rights, will have grave consequences for Britain. Copyright 2006 World Socialist Web Site. All rights reserved. * ================================================================ NY Transfer News Collective * A Service of Blythe Systems Since 1985 - Information for the Rest of Us Search Archives: http://olm.blythe-systems.com/htdig/search.html List Archives: http://olm.blythe-systems.com/pipermail/nytr/ Subscribe: http://olm.blythe-systems.com/mailman/listinfo/nytr ================================================================ -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v1.4.5 (FreeBSD) iD8DBQFFfYWaiz2i76ou9wQRAr2OAJ90hVNbhuqVZjpKfeT7YKGxMzr4uwCgu+GI Ud8HcOvCVfVnR8+JFQPVDIk= =lyiO -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05 * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2) |
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