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Today's Stories

January 13, 2009

Norman Finkelstein
The Facts About Hamas and the War on Gaza

January 12, 2009

Uri Avnery
The Blood-Stained Monster Enters Gaza

Paul Craig Roberts
Our Collapsing Economy

Mike Whitney
Israel's Moral and Political Insanity

Ewa Jasiewicz
Oh, Quiet Night: Only Six Homes Were Bombed

Bill Quigley
A Day in Gaza

Dave Lindorff
From Vietnam to Gaza

Bill and Kathleen Christison
Blowback From a Tragic Error: a Message to Barack Obama

Jonathan Cook
Israel Ponders the Third Stage

Andy Worthington
Seven Years of Guantánamo

Kara N. Tina
Oakland on Fire

Brenda Norrell
Palestinians and American Indians: Russell Means Breaks the Silence on Obama

Nour Kharma
A Plea From a Teen in Gaza: "Will I Die, Too?"

Website of the Day
The Villages Group: an Antiwar Alliance in Sderot

 

January 9/11, 2009

Alexander Cockburn
Israel's Onslaught on Gaza: Criminal, for Sure; But Also Stupid

Kathy Kelly
Tunnel Vision: Report from Arish, Egypt

Bill Quigley
Report From Rafah: Doctors Stopped at the Border

George Ciccariello-Maher
Oakland's Not for Burning?

Elaine C. Hagopian
Gaza: History Matters

Mike Roselle
Drowning in a Toxic River: What Can be Done to Save Appalachia?

Steve Hendricks
The Torturer-Elect?

Gary Leupp
Revisiting the Tale of Samson

Jonathan Cook
Outcry Over Israel's War Crimes

Karim Makdisi
The Ceasefire Plan: the UN Finally Acts, But Does It Mean Anything?

Rannie Amiri
Livni's Big Lie

Peter Morici
In the Jaws of a Depression

Peter Montague
Can Chemicals be Regulated?

Ralph Nader
Move Fast to Restore the Rule of Law

Andy Worthington
The Dying Days of the Guantánamo Trials

Nadia Hijab
A Music School Silenced in Gaza

Dan Bacher
Unholy Alliance: Nature Conservancy Backs Schwarzenegger's Big Ditch

Catherine Fenton
The American Peace Movement and Israel

David Macaray
Wal-Mart Caught Stealing

Valia Kaimaki
Why Greek Youths Took to the Streets

Richard Morse
Haiti's Gas Gang

David Yearsley
To Gotham City with Dexter Gordon

Charles R. Larson
The Horror, the Horror

Richard Rhames
Gaza and the Goon Squad Meet the Wizard

Stephen Martin
Meltdown Memo to Come?

Lorenzo Wolff
What They Sing About When They Sing About Love

Poets' Basement
Anderson, Beatty and Valentine

Website of the Weekend
Gaza Protest

January 8, 2009

Jean Bricmont /
Diana Johnstone

Gaza Seen From Paris

Franklin Lamb
How Dershowitz Misstates, Misrepresents and Misapplies the Law

Paul Craig Roberts
The Difficulty of Being an Informed American

Kevin Alexander Gray
Give Burris His Seat

Chris Floyd
The Enduring Priorities in Obama's Time of Change

Ewa Jasiewicz
Riding on Fire in Gaza

Steve Conn
Sanjay Gupta and Obama

Harvey Wasserman
Kill the Nuclear Stimulus!

Wayne S. Smith
An Opening to Cuba?

Linda Mamoun
Re-settling Gaza: the Real Goal of the Israeli Invasion?

Adam Turl
Unions and Young Workers

Chris Papaleonardos
Mourning Maria Dimitriadi

Website of the Day
On the Wing

January 7, 2009

Saree Makdisi
What Kind of Security Will This Barbarism Bring Israel?

Franklin Lamb
Bend Over Professor Dershowitz, It's Time for Your Check Up

William Blum
America's Other Glorious War

Belén Fernández
The Trauma Vortex: Israel's Monopoly on Psychological Suffering

Lawrence Davidson
What is New About Gaza?

Allan Nairn
Adm. Dennis Blair and the Church Killings in East Timor

Jonathan Cook
What is Israel's Objective?

Muhammad Idrees Ahmad
Watching the War on BBC

Deepak Tripathi
Bush, as He Leaves

Cal Winslow
Now is the Hour to Defend Democracy in the Labor Movement!

Manuel Garcia, Jr.
To Students Planning Careers: Be Mindful

Dr. Hannah Safran
No More Recycled Military Solutions

Website of the Day
CNN: Israel Broke the Ceasefire First

January 6, 2009

Pam Martens
It's All One Big Lie

Victoria Buch
Real Estate War in Gaza: the History and "Morals" of Ethnic Cleansing

Neve Gordon
Israel's New War Ethic

Tami Sarfatti /
Yonatan Mendel

What Silence Says: Gaza is Still Waiting on Obama

Mike Whitney
The Gaza Bloodbath

Alan Farago
After the Fall

Gary Leupp
A Hamas Coup d'Etat in 2007?

Larry Everest
Silent Partner: the US-Backed War on Gaza

Ron Jacobs
The New Iraqi Sovereignty

David Macaray
Union-Busting is Alive and Well

Stephanie Basile
Where's Anna's Money?

Stacey Warde
An Uncle's Unrest

Website of the Day
Israeli Refusenik on Gaza

January 5, 2009

Paul Craig Roberts
Will There be a Recovery?

Sousan Hammad
Phoning Home to Gaza

Wajahat Ali
Flying While Brown

Mats Svensson
Longing in Gaza

Jen Marlowe
Abeer's Baby

Muhammad Ali Khalidi
Gaza Phone Tag

Brian Cloughley
Israel is Immune From Criticism

Faheem Hussain
Gaza and India: a View From Pakistan

William Cook
Consider the Realities of Gaza

Dr. Trudy Bond
The Madness Among Us

Christopher Ketcham
The Revenge of the Blogger at the National Press Club: a Rotten Washington Interlude

Steve Early
Who Rules SEIU?

Dave Lindorff
When It Comes to Terrorism and POW Cases, Equal Justice Under Law is a Joke

Website of the Day
The Endangered Fish of the Colorado River Basin

January 2 - 4, 2009

Alexander Cockburn
Diary of 2008: an Incredible, Hope-Filled Year

Uri Avnery
Molten Lead in Gaza

Jonathan Cook
The Real Goal of the Gaza Assault

Paul Craig Roberts
Whatever Happened to Western Morality?

Brian Eno
Stealing Gaza: an Experiment in Provocation

Ralph Nader
America Must Stop Shirking Its Responsibility on Gaza

Omar Barghouti
UN Complicity in Israel's Massacre in Gaza

Graham Usher
Where Pakistan's Generals and the ISI Draw Their Lines

P. Sainath
The Economy is Worse Than It Appears

Belén Fernández
Pardon Our Dust: Israel's PR Campaign for Gaza

Deb Reich
Shiv'a in Gaza, December 2008

Gary Leupp
Defacing Mr. Jefferson's Wall: Preachers and the Inauguration

Michael Yates
Top Chef or Top Wage Thief? Tom Colicchio and the Economics of Restaurants

Joanne Mariner
How to Close Guantánamo

Seth Sandronsky
Funding the Israeli Military: the US Pipeline

Cynthia McKinney
We Lived to Tell the Story

Sonja Karkar
Israel's Dogs of War

Deepak Tripathi
Gaza in Perspective

Robert Fantina
Obama, Afghanistan and Israel

John Ross
The Year No One Can Remember

Norm Kent
The Heat on Duval Street: Why Head Shop Raids are Unfair and Unjust

Larry Portis
Syria and the Arab Barbie Doll--Before the Deluge

Richard Rhames
Is Conscience Dead?

Dee C. Lubell
We Come From the Sun: Zora Neale Hurston and Richard Wright

David Yearsley
A Gay German at the Courts of the Medici and Hanover, and of Course the BBC

Lorenzo Wolff
Joe Ely, the Fighting Rooster of Rock

Marc Catone
Looting Lennon's Legacy

Poets' Basement
Five Poems by Grzegorz Wróblewski

Website of the Weekend
Earth in High Rez

 

January 1, 2008

Jennifer Loewenstein
If Hamas Did Not Exist

Oren Ben-Dor
The Self-Defense of Suicide

Wajahat Ali
The U.S. Response to the Gaza Crisis: Unfair and Unbalanced

Saul Landau
In Cuba No One Man Could Steal $50 Billion From Other People

David Michael Green
What to Expect While We're Expecting

Website of the Day
Morbid Anatomy

December 31, 2008

Pam Martens
Wall Street's Collapse and the Ownership Society

Neve Gordon /
Jeff Halper

Where's the Academic Outrage Over the Bombing of a University in Gaza?

Ted Honderich
The First Casualty of Israel's War

Brian Cloughley
Five Little Girls on a Sofa: Gaza's One-Sided Images

Ron Jacobs
What is Hamas, Really?

Vijay Prashad
Hot Rod and His Sikh Warrior: Blago's Indian Connections

Franklin Lamb
Mr. Mubarak, Tear Down That Wall!

Mike Whitney
My Brilliant Career

David Macaray
What Really Killed the Auto Bailout

Richard Thieme
The Betrayal of the Commons

Mary Lynn Cramer
Who Wins What in Gaza?

Stephen Lendman
The Troubling Case of the Fort Dix Five

Worthy Group of the Day
Western Shoshone Defense Project

December 30, 2008

Paul Craig Roberts
May We No Longer Be Silent

Tariq Ali
The Gaza Ghetto and Western Cant

Robert Bryce
The $775,000-a-Year GI

Jonathan Cook
Electioneering with Bombs

Gary Leupp
The Fishbarrel War

Dave Lindorff
Tough Guys Don't Walk: Will Cheney Seek a Pardon?

Brian McKenna
Ted Downing and Troublemaker Anthropology

John Walsh
The End of the Green Party

Ramzy Baroud
Gaza and the World

Bob Sommer
The Education of David Frost

Worthy Activist of the Day
Support Marie Mason

 

December 29, 2008

Jennifer Loewenstein
Israel's Attempted Endgame in Gaza

Neve Gordon
What, Exactly, is Israel's Mission?

Joshua Frank
Obama and the "Special Relationship"

George Salzman /
Manuel Garcia, Jr.

The War Against Palestine: Exception From Humanity

Norman Solomon
A Hundred Eyes for an Eye

Ewa Jasiewicz
Gaza Today: "This is Just the Beginning"

Rob Larson
The Banks Laugh All the Way to the Bank

Kenneth Libby
Arne Duncan's Dark Years in Chicago

Robert Weissman
The 10 Worst Corporations of 2008

Elsa Johnson
High Noon at Black Mesa: Bush's Farewell Gift to Peabody Coal

Nicola Nasser
Resolution 1850: Bush's Parting Gift

Belén Fernández
Hanukkah Games

Worthy Group of the Day
Nuclear Information and Resource Service

December 26-28, 2008

Alexander Cockburn
The Medusa's Head

Dr Eyad Al Serraj
The Boming of Gaza: "An Earthquake on Top of Your Head"

Jeffrey St. Clair
Cancerous Air

Bradley Simpson
Obama's New Intel Chief, Dennis Blair, Ran Interference for Indonesia's Butchers

Ralph Nader
Government Without Laws

Gary Leupp
Obama and the Graveyard of Empires

Ellen Cantarow
Richard Falk, Israel and the NYT

Matt Landon
The Great Coal Ash Flood
: a Report From Swan Pond Road

David Macaray
SAG's Terrible Dilemma

Patrick Bond
End of Neoliberalism? Sorry, Not Yet

Norm Kent
Invoking Bigotry: Obama and Rick Warren

Brian T. Ketcham
Fuel Efficiency is Easy--Just Don't Let Detroit Tell You How to Do It

Rannie Amiri
War Clouds Over Gaza

Larry Portis
Changing the Ethnic Vocabulary

Richard Rhames
Welcome to Soup Kitchen America

Stephen Lendman
29 Red Flags: Early Suspicions About Bernard Madoff

James L. Secor
Unheralded Coup

Ramzy Baroud
Iraq, the Plot Thickens

Harold Pinter
Art, Truth and Politics: the Nobel Lecture

Cpt. Paul Watson
Tracking the Cetacean Death Star

Howard Lisnoff
Nixon's Cambodian Shock Treatment

Michael Dee
The Bill of Rights, Killed in Action by the War on Drugs

Steve Conn
Eight Predictions for 2009

Poets' Basement
Valentine, Kaung, Moser and Graham

Worthy Group of the Weekend
United Mountain Defense

December 25, 2008

Judy Gumbo Albert
What Were Those 1960s Terrorists Thinking, Anyway?

Rev. William E. Alberts
The Sole of Christmas

Hannah Mermelstein
Caution: Settlers Ahead

Worthy Group of the Day
Citizens' Coal Council

December 24, 2008

Bill Quigley
Five Bailout Lessons From Katrina

Saul Landau
Then and Now: Venezuela and Cuba, 1960-2008

Sam Smith
Evangelism and Politics

Brian Cloughley
Torture, Slaughter and Lies

John Ross
Where's al-Zaidi's Pulitzer?

Eric Walberg
Cold War Shivers

Norm Kent
What Will Obama Do About Marijuana?

Stephen Martin
Reasons for Cheerfulness

Worthy Group of the Day
Collateral Repair Project

December 23, 2008

Michael Hudson
The Ponzi Paradigm

Michael Yates
The Tombstone Economy

Chuck Spinney
The New York Times Flames Out in Defense Dogfight

Vijay Prashad
India's Reckless Road to Washington, Through Tel Aviv

Brian Horejsi
Interior Decorating: Obama, Salazar and the Future of America's Public Lands

David Macaray
Obama's Best Pick?

Neil Watkins /
Sarah Anderson
Ecuador's Conscientious Default

David Michael Green
Hey, Reagan Democrats! Now Do You Get It?

Worthy Group of the Day
Focus on the Corporation

 

 

 

January 13, 2009

Subversion Through Trade?

Cuba and the Obama Administration

By ROBERT SANDELS

The incoming Obama administration is being bombarded with suggestions on how to deal with Cuba.  In the main, they favor relaxing or ending the blockade (embargo) and travel ban.  The principal argument is that trade and diplomatic relations will nudge Cuba toward democratic capitalism, a policy adjustment that differs from the current regime-change strategy mainly in its tactical considerations.

The recommendations are being advanced while both the incoming and outgoing administrations in Washington are abandoning all but the pretense of a competitive free market.  Through policy inertia, it seems, memos keep going out to other countries urging them to stick resolutely to the free-market model.

A recent report from the Partnership for the Americas Commission of the Washington-based think tank the Brookings Institution proposes a broad range of generally positive reform initiatives for Latin America and Caribbean policies in such areas as environment, energy, migration, and international cooperation.[1]

The advice on Cuba, nevertheless, follows the pattern set earlier this year by the Council on Foreign Relations, which repackaged President George W. Bush's Cuba overthrow policy and placed it back on the shelf as "A New Direction for a New Reality."[2]

The Brookings recommendations, among others, propose a soft version of traditional US hegemony tactics in the guise of democracy promotion. Democracy promotion as a policy tool has been strengthened during the Bush years most notably at the 2001 Quebec Summit of the Americas where Bush insisted on a declaration making democracy inseparable from a market economy.[3]

Linking the two in this way allows overthrow advocates to skip lightly over the part about destroying economies and undermining governments and to justify economic warfare by insisting that sanctions help populations in target countries achieve democracy.

Democracy promotion in Latin America and elsewhere is what replaced the more indelicate policy of maintaining US hegemony through direct support of military regimes.  The soft version includes such practices as funding "party-building" and "electoral education" by channeling funds through the National Republican Institute (NRI), the National Democratic Institute (NDI), the National Endowment for Democracy (NED) and other US-government front organizations to co-opt civil society in target counties.

Failing to confront the real policy underneath the official blather about democracy and freedom leaves these reports the sole option of criticizing "errors" of phantom policies.

In his groundbreaking study, Promoting Polyarchy: Globalization, U.S. Intervention, and Hegemony, William I. Robinson warns, "US policy is not explained by specific policy views of individuals, much less by policy pronouncements by political leaders taken at face value.  Besides, US policy is not be analyzed on the basis of what policy makers say they do, but what they actually do".[4]

Softening the Bush plan

For a compendium of what Brookings aims to reform, we have reports from Bush's Commission for Assistance to a Free Cuba (2004, 2006).[5]  By now, the remaking of Cuba as envisioned in them should have been well underway. They are essentially a vast comic-book blueprint for remaking Cuba through privatization along lines applied with disastrous effect in the former Soviet Union in the 1990s, a free-trade agreement with the United States, and membership in the World Bank and International Monetary Fund (IMF). These institutions are notorious for the destructiveness of their structural adjustment programs.

Just as democracy promotion replaced the traditional policy of creating and supporting military dictatorships, many of the current recommendations for a new Latin America policy call for an end to brutal sanctions, the constant moralizing and bluster from Washington and the State Department's lists of states that supposedly sponsor terrorism, drug trafficking and child molestation.

Instead of issuing a new gloss on the plans of the Commission for Assistance to a Free Cuba, which were predicated on the destruction of the Cuban government, the report would have the next president rely on the subversive effects of tourism, investment and democracy promotion to do the job.

A great many of these recommendations on Cuba are laudable if taken in parts.  The context for them, however, is a strategic rebalancing of the factors of control in Latin America as the region and its resources drift away toward China and inward toward national and regional interests.

One key element offered to correct these trends is free trade.  After alluding briefly to some of the damage already done through bilateral free-trade pacts, the Brookings report goes on to recommend passage of the Colombia and Panama free-trade agreements on the curious ground that doing so will uphold Washington's "credibility."

The report does not explain why economies of the weaker partners - particularly their agricultural sectors - should be damaged for the sake of some undefined US credibility.

After the pointless credibility exercise, the report advises the new administration to stop pursuing bilateral pacts.  The US version of free trade has been exposed as having more to do with the free flow of capital and free access to national markets and resources in asymmetric arrangements.  Still, the Brookings report seeks to revive the carcass of the Free Trade Area of the Americas (FTAA) under the guise of broad multilateral agreements through the World Trade Organization (WTO) Doha Round of trade negotiations.

However, to accomplish that, the US and Europe would have to radically alter their protectionist policies and addiction to agricultural subsidies. How, for example, is the United States going to justify in Doha talks its selective subsides (bailouts) for US car manufacturers but not for foreign companies manufacturing cars in the United States?

If everything else fails, Brookings recommends measures that sound progressive on the surface but hint at a continued underlying asymmetry. The United States should, the report says, "continue to deepen economic integration with the LAC [Latin American and Caribbean] countries, with which it already has free trade agreements, by building on and improving existing forums.  Reducing the cost of shipping goods and services across North American borders should remain a priority."

Subversion through trade

Another Washington think tank, the Cato Institute, has been issuing its views on Cuba for several years in its Handbook on Policy, an exhaustive set of recommendations to Congress on domestic and foreign policies.  It has, since 1999, consistently called for a reversal of the Cuba sanctions policy.[6] Its most recent edition (2005) is blunt on trade matters, unafraid to use the word "subversion" in connection with opening up trade with Cuba.

"An open U.S. trade policy," says the current handbook, "is likely to be more subversive of [Cuba's]...system than is an embargo.  Proponents of the Cuban embargo vastly underestimate the extent to which increased foreign trade and investment can undermine Cuban communism even if that business is conducted with state entities."

The handbook argues against sanctions, not because of their inherent injustice, but because, "they have, in fact, failed to bring about democratic regimes anywhere in the hemisphere, and Cuba has been no exception."

There is scant evidence to support the fantasy that the United States has a history of applying economic sanctions anywhere in the Hemisphere to bring about democracy.

Discussing the history of US military interventions, Chalmers Johnson writes, "It should be noted that since 1947, while we have used our military power for political and military gain in a long list of counties, in no instance has democratic government come about as a direct result."[7]

Most of the advice concerning Cuba policy repeats the common refrain that maintaining the blockade gives the Cuban government an excuse for its dictatorship and that ending it could deliver a fatal blow to the regime.

Oblivious to the long history of US aggression against Cuba, an editorial in the New York Times, repeating the main points in the Brookings report, says that the economic embargo, "has given Mr. Castro and his cronies a never-ending excuse for their failures and misdeeds."[8]

The Cato report likewise cites well-known Cuban dissidents as authorities on this theory and argues, "The more supporters of the embargo stress the importance of sanctions in bringing Castro down the more credible becomes Castro's claim that the United States is responsible for Cuba's misery."

Sort of reforming Cuba policy

The Brookings report's sensible recommendations for Cuba rest on the bedrock of traditional overthrow policy.  The next president, says the report, should work with members of the European Union and other countries to create a multilateral fund for civil society that will train future entrepreneurs in "management and innovation."  This is language straight out of the Helms-Burton Act of 1996, a major part of what Brookings seeks to reform and what the Cato report wants repealed outright.[9]

One would think that after 50 years of surviving blockade and physical assaults by the United States Cuba had surely demonstrated management skill and innovation.  In the US economy, these traits seem to have been most highly developed in the financial sector's addiction to asset bubbles and Ponzi schemes.

The rationale for all this is to "improve the livelihoods of large segments of the population," and "increase the demand from within Cuba for expanded economic freedoms and opportunities for advancement, to enable legitimate Cuban voices to shape a representative, accountable, and sustainable transition to democracy."

Such recommendations do not differ substantially from current attempts to undermine the Cuban economy by putting dollars into private hands to sustain a dissident movement, interrupt socialist capital accumulation and promote the dual currency system, which is always held up as an example of Cuba's economic failures.

The absurdity of the suggestion to pump up a national entrepreneurial class in Cuba is exposed simply by asking how the funds would be introduced into Cuba.  Would the Cuban government be asked to take part in the dismantling of its own system by acting as fiduciary for the foreign funds or would they be injected somehow into a stream of direct foreign investment essentially outside of government control?  If the latter, Cuba could have two economies, one of its own and another run by foreign countries.

Obviously, the report has skipped ahead a few steps to suggest measures that could only be imposed in a post-socialist Cuba.  And that would be brought about by -.what?

As in most blueprints for remaking another society, this one imagines there are "legitimate voices" among all the illegitimate voices in Cuba and that the Brookings Institution can tell them apart.

The Draino effect: flushing away communism

There is broad consensus on lifting the travel ban, but the Brookings commission's reasons for allowing Americans to travel to Cuba ("promote small businesses and provide information to the people") are fundamentally interventionist.  As one newspaper editorial put it, "The influx of American money, vitality and friendship probably would flush away remnants of communism.[10]

If Cuba wants more small businesses, it can start them.  As for information, what information would an American traveler steeped in ignorance about Cuba bring to Cuba?  The Brookings report does not say anything about free entry of Cubans into the United States.  They might bring their ideas about business and their information on free universal public education and healthcare or how to manage an economy under siege.

Had the authors of these reports really wanted to offer advice on what is wrong with US policy in Latin America and especially in Cuba and Venezuela they would have first dwelt at length on the last 50 years or so of US subversion, invasions, CIA-engineered black operations and assassinations, and other methods of control exercised all over the region.

Shifting ground under U.S. policy

Little if any high-powered advice to the incoming administration takes into account the shifting ground upon which US economic ideology rests. Usually omitted is the current trend in the United States toward industrial policy and elements of a command economy blurring the line between free-market capitalism and Cuban socialism.

It makes little sense to rail against socialism from the vantage point of a debt-based economy brought to ruin by the logic of the unfettered marketplace.  A country that has nationalized in all but name whole sectors of its economy to save itself from the very system it wishes to foist onto others should be asking others for advice on how to do it properly.

Both outgoing and incoming administrations have chosen to save the system with massive bailouts forcing taxpayers to suffer for corporate sins instead of allowing the sacred forces of the market to sort out the financial crisis.  The global movement toward state intervention in the failing financial and industrial sectors has made the traditional criticism of socialism by democratic market countries no longer plausible.

Outlining a scenario in which the current recession bottoms out at a world wage- and asset-price equilibrium, Martin Hutchinson writes, "Throughout the world, but particularly in the United States and Western Europe, governments have resorted to bailouts and 'stimulus packages' that have exploded public sector deficits and increased the power of government in the economy."[11]

Following the takeover in September 2008 of the US insurance giant AIG, the prescient economist Nouriel Roubini wrote in his blog that the Federal Reserve and US Treasury had attempted "the biggest government intervention and nationalizations in the recent history of humanity."  He called it, "the biggest and most socialist government intervention in economic affairs since the formation of the Soviet Union and Communist China."[12]

Such interventions cost money that has to be borrowed.  That in turn impinges on the ability of entrepreneurs and consumers to finance their aspirations.  Hogging available capital, says Hutchinson, "crowds out other more productive uses of capital," and that means a further weakening of the private sector."

At their November meeting in Washington, the feckless G-20 leaders likewise were unable to advance any better solutions for the spreading global recession than more bailouts, while simultaneously touting the anodyne properties of the free market.

In their final declaration, Bush and his G-20 colleagues promised, "Our work will be guided by a shared belief that market principles, open trade and investment regimes, and effectively regulated financial markets foster the dynamism, innovation, and entrepreneurship that are essential for economic growth, employment, and poverty reduction."[13]

Three days later, India led off the stampede out of the marketplace with a 20% protective tariff on soybean oil, and on December 10, Russia slapped a 35% maximum duty on imported cars.[14]

In a recent interview with CNN, Bush said he had "abandoned free market principles to save the free market system."  As a statement confessing the ultimate in policy exhaustion, it surely ranks alongside the immortal line from the Vietnam War era, "it was necessary to bomb the village in order to save it."[15]

Yet, these state capitalists who claim to be free trade marketeers use huge deficit financing in order to further enrich financial institutions in the world, while denying access to basic human services to the world at large. The Brookings Institution, and similar entities seem oblivious to bankruptcy of their economic system and ideological recipes.

Cuba, in the meantime, would be wise to take what it needs from whatever initiatives may originate in the United States if it serves the country's needs, while rejecting those elements that do not serve its purpose. Foreign interventionism, whatever the guise, has no future in the island.

Robert Sandels is a writer for Cuba-L Direct.

Notes

[1] "Rethinking U.S.-Latin American Relations: A Hemispheric Partnership for a Turbulent World," Report of the Partnership for the Americas Commission,

The Brookings Institution (Washington, DC), November 25, 2008. http://www.brookings.edu/reports/2008/1124_latin_america_partnership.aspx.

[2] "U.S.-Latin America Relations: A New Direction for a New Reality," Council on Foreign Relations 05/15/08. http://www.cfr.org/content/publications/attachments/LatinAmerica. See also "The Council on Foreign Relations Has Some Dubious Advice for the Next President," Cuba-L Analysis (Albuquerque), 05/29/08. http://cuba-l.unm.edu/.

[3] The summit declared democracy "fundamental to the advancement of all our objectives," It implicitly set democracy as a requisite for a state's "participation. in the Summit of the Americas process." Declaration of Quebec City, 04/20/01. http://www.iin.oea.org/tercera_cumbre_ingles.htm.

[4] William I. Robinson, Promoting Polyarchy: Globalization, U.S. Intervention, and Hegemony, New York: Cambridge University Press, 1996, p.5.

[5] Commission for Assistance to a Free Cuba: Report to the President, July 2006. http://www.cafc.gov/2006/.

[6] "Cato Handbook on Policy," The Cato Institute (Washington, DC), 2005, 6th ed., ch. 63. http://www.cato.org/pubs/handbook/hb109/.

[7] Chalmers Johnson, Nemesis, the Last Days of the American Republic, New York: Holt, 2006, p.19.

[8] New York Times, 11/28/08.

[9] "To encourage other countries and multilateral organizations to provide similar assistance, and to work cooperatively with such countries and organizations to coordinate such assistance." Cuban Liberty and Democratic Solidarity [Helms-Burton] Act of 1996, Section 201 (8). http://thomas.loc.gov/cgi-bin/query/F?c104:1:./temp/.

[10]  "Enough; Stop hurting Cubans," The Charleston (W.Va.) Gazette, 12/11/08.

[11] Martin Hutchinson, "Worse than the Great Depression," Asia Times, 12/10/08. http://www.atimes.com/atimes/archive/12_10_2008.html.

[12] Nouriel Roubini, http://www.rgemonitor.com/blog/roubini. Reprinted in Guardian, 9/18/09. http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2008/sep/18/.

[13] Declaration on the Summit of Financial Markets and the World Economy, 11/15/08.  http://www.g20.utoronto.ca/2008-leaders-docs.html.

[14] The Washington Post, 12/22/08.

[15] Attributed to NBC correspondent Peter Arnett in 1968 quoting an unnamed officer. Its authenticity has been questioned by some conservative supporters of the war.

 

 

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The Inside Story of the Shannon Five's Smashing Victory Over the
Bush War Machine

By Harry Browne

Born Under a Bad Sky:
Notes from the Dark Side

of the Earth
By Jeffrey St. Clair

RED STATE REBELS:
Tales of Grassroots Resistance from the Heartland

Edited by
Jeffrey St. Clair
and Joshua Frank


How the Press Led
the US into War


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The Secret Language
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HOW THE IRISH
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By Daniel Cassidy

WINNER OF THE
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Saul Landau's Bush and Botox World with a Foreword by Gore Vidal


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Grand Theft Pentagon
How They Made a Killing on the War on Terrorism

 

 

 

 

 


The Occupation
by Patrick Cockburn

 

 

 


Humanitarian Imperialism
By Jean Bricmont

 


 

 


CITY BEAUTIFUL
By Tennessee Reed