excerpt from the book
The Bush Agenda
Invading the World, One Economy
at a Time
by Antonia Juhasz
www.alternet.org, May 5, 2006
[Editor's Note: This is an edited
excerpt from Antonia Juhasz's new book, The Bush Agenda : Invading
the World, One Economy at a Time, published by Regan Books.]
An uncharacteristically somber George
Walker Bush approached the podium of the Great Hall of the United
Nations on Sept. 14, 2005. As the president stood in midtown Manhattan
to address the gathered members of the General Assembly, much
of the U.S. Gulf Coast lay buried beneath a sea of water, mud,
waste, sand and debris. Two days before, the bodies of 45 people
had been discovered in a flooded New Orleans hospital, adding
to a death toll that already exceeded a thousand. Over one million
people were without homes, including tens of thousands just recently
released from the New Orleans Convention Center and Superdome,
where they were forced to stay for almost a week without food,
water or electricity while outdoor temperatures exceeded a sweltering
100 degrees.
This would be President George W. Bush's
fifth address before the U.N. General Assembly. Two months after
Sept. 11, 2001, he established an annual tradition of addressing
the Assembly within days of the anniversary of the terrorist attacks
and just miles from ground zero. The president has used each speech
to put forward his international agenda squarely within the context
of 9/11. It was with these speeches that Bush made the case for
war beyond Afghanistan, into Iraq, and against all states that
harbor terrorists; he laid out the criteria for those who are
"with us" versus those who are "against us"
as he built a "coalition of the willing"; and he affirmed
his commitment to expanded international trade policies in the
name of fighting terrorism and spreading freedom.
The president, visibly tired, spent much
of the speech looking down at his notes. His familiar easy swagger,
comfortable grin and animated gestures were all but missing. True
to form, however, he made no alteration to his message. Bush spent
a mere 95 seconds of the 25-minute speech discussing the hurricane.
He noted the devastation, thanked the gathered nations for their
support and moved on. Then, as he had done every year for the
previous four years, the president devoted the bulk of his address
to just two topics. The first, not surprisingly, was the war on
terror, including the war in Iraq. The second was the expansion
of free trade. Once again, Bush offered these two policies, war
and free trade, as twin solutions to virtually all of the world's
problems -- from global poverty to international health crises,
including AIDS, malaria and the Avian flu -- and as the means
to achieving a better world.
The president described the benefits of
war and his administration's commitment to it by assuring his
listeners that "all of us will live in a safer world"
if we stay the course in Iraq and complete the war effort. The
United States and all "civilized nations" would "continue
to take the fight to the terrorists" and "defeat the
terrorists on the battlefield." As for free trade, Bush explained
that the United States would also defeat the terrorists by fighting
poverty and "the surest path to greater wealth is greater
trade. By expanding trade, we spread hope and opportunity to
the corners of the world, and we strike a blow against the terrorists.
Our agenda for freer trade is part of our agenda for a freer
world."
The agenda has been refined by President
Bush and leading members and allies of his administration over
decades, dating back most notably to the administration of his
father, George Herbert Walker Bush. Its leading framers include
men who served in the administrations of both father and son,
such as Dick Cheney, Donald Rumsfeld, Paul Wolfowitz, Zalmay Khalilzad,
Robert Zoellick and Scooter Libby. Decades of joint writing, refining
and advocating for a set of clear economic and military principles
reached its fullest articulation and most aggressive implementation
under the administration of George W. Bush -- what I call the
"Bush Agenda." This agenda predates the current president,
however, and its advocates certainly hope it will outlast him.
Within the Bush Agenda, "freer trade
for a freer world" refers to specific economic policies designed
especially to support key U.S. multinational corporations that
are used as veritable weapons of war, both in the war on terror
and in the administration's broader struggle to spread its vision
of a freer and safer world. Often, these economic policies are
applied in tandem with America's military forces, as was the case
in the March 2003 invasion and ongoing occupation of Iraq. To
date, the Iraq war represents the fullest and most relentless
application of the Bush Agenda. The "freer and safer world"
envisioned by Bush and his administration is ultimately one of
an ever-expanding American empire driven forward by the growing
powers of the nation's largest multinational corporations and
unrivaled military.
Free trade is shorthand for a number of
economic policies that expand the rights of multinational corporations
and investors to operate in more locations, under fewer regulations,
with less commitment to any specific location. Advocates contend
that these companies and individuals, freed of burdensome government
regulations, will amass great wealth and become engines of economic
growth. Their wealth, in turn, will filter down through the economy,
enriching even the very poorest members. One common image offered
to depict the benefits of free trade is of a rising tide of wealth
lifting all boats in its wake.
The specific free trade policies advanced
by the Bush administration are not new. Their modern roots trace
to the end of World War II and the founding of the now dominant
global financial institutions, the International Monetary Fund
and the World Bank. They have been the preferred international
economic tools of U.S. presidents for decades, especially over
the last 35 years and in response to the growth of the Organization
of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) and its attempts to control
the global oil economy. The key difference between Bush and his
recent predecessors is that Bush has directly aligned economic
might with military force and has applied both with a more radical,
unilateral and audacious approach. As a result, the Bush Agenda
has generated the greatest level of violent opposition to the
United States and its allies in recent history and made the world
a far more dangerous place. If the Bush Agenda is allowed to stay
its course, the poverty, inequality, hostility and violence it
generates will intensify and grow.
Of course, the Bush Agenda does have supporters,
especially corporate allies that have both shaped and benefited
from the administration's economic and military policies. Many
of those allies are found in the energy sector, while many from
the energy sector are found in the Bush administration. In the
2000 election cycle, the oil and gas industry donated over 13
times more money to the Bush-Cheney campaign than to its challenger
-- nearly $2 million versus just over $140,000. In 2004, the industry
gave more than nine times more to Bush-Cheney. The Bush administration
itself represents the first time in history that the president,
vice president and secretary of state are all former energy company
officials. In fact, the only other U.S. president to come from
the oil and gas industry was Bush's father.
The Bush years have been a record-breaking
bonanza for the oil industry. The twenty-nine major oil and gas
firms in the United States earned $43 billion in profits in 2003
and $68 billion in 2004. Oil profits were so high in 2005 that
the top three companies alone (ExxonMobil, Chevron and ConocoPhillips)
earned nearly $64 billion between them, more than half of which
went to Texas-based ExxonMobil, which recorded the single most
profitable year of any corporation in world history in both 2004
and 2005. Companies such as Halliburton and Chevron, which respectively
count the vice president and secretary of state as former officials,
are key allies to the Bush Agenda. The Bechtel Corp., the largest
engineering company in the world, with extensive work in the oil
and gas field, has exercised influence over the Bush Agenda through
its current and past executives, including current board member
and former company president, George Shultz, Ronald Reagan's secretary
of state. Lockheed Martin, the country's largest military contractor
and the world's largest arms exporter, has also played a lead
role, with no fewer than 16 current and past company officials
having held positions within the Bush administration.
The George W. Bush years have been remarkably
rewarding for each of these companies, particularly in the post-Iraq
invasion period. Indeed, each company has a long history in Iraq,
played a lead through company executives past and present in advocating
for war against Iraq in 2003, and has since profited greatly from
that war. Chevron had its most profitable year in its 125-year
history in 2004, earning $13.3 billion -- nearly double its profits
from the year before. The record did not last long, however, as
2005 brought more than $14 billion in profits. Bechtel's revenue
increased from $11.6 billion in 2002 to $16.3 billion in 2003
to $17.4 billion in 2004. Halliburton's stock price has nearly
quadrupled in value from March 2003 to January 2006, while Lockheed's
stocks more than tripled from early 2000 to January 2006. Vice
President Cheney is a stockholder in both Halliburton and Lockheed.
The past 25 years of U.S. economic engagement
with Iraq, culminating in the 2003 invasion and the ongoing occupation,
provide the most glaring example of the Bush Agenda and its imperial
ambitions. President Ronald Reagan, and to an even greater extent
President George H.W. Bush, focused U.S. economic policy toward
Iraq on an increasingly intimate and profitable economic engagement.
President George W. Bush has gone further, and in so doing, revealed
his imperial aims, by seeking and largely achieving economic control
over and within Iraq's economy. The Bush administration used the
military invasion of Iraq to oust its leader; replace its government;
implement new economic, political and oil laws; and write a new
constitution. Through the ongoing U.S. military occupation, the
Bush administration seeks to ensure that both the new government
and the new economic structure stay firmly in place.
The new economic laws have fundamentally
transformed Iraq's economy, applying some of the most radical,
sought-after corporate globalization policies in the world and
overturning existing laws on trade, public services, banking,
taxes, agriculture, investment, foreign ownership, media and oil,
among others. The new laws lock in sweeping advantages to U.S.
corporations, including greater U.S. access to, and corporate
control of, Iraq's oil. And the benefits have already begun to
flow. Between 2003 and 2004 alone, the value of U.S. imports of
Iraqi oil increased by 86 percent and then increased again in
the first three quarters of 2005.
Thus, advocates of the Bush Agenda have
succeeded in spreading corporate globalization policy to Iraq
-- securing both short- and long-term profits for U.S. corporations
-- and establishing an Iraqi government that is more favorable
than the last ten years of Saddam Hussein's regime to the continued
advancement of the agenda. But Iraq is only the beginning.
With the encouragement of Bechtel, Chevron,
Halliburton, Lockheed Martin and others, the Bush administration
has begun to expand its agenda to countries across the Middle
East with the U.S.-Middle East Free Trade Area. Insulated by oil
revenues, the countries of the Middle East have been largely immune
from the need to sign free trade agreements. With the invasion
and occupation of Iraq, however, the Bush administration has demonstrated
the lengths to which it will go to fulfill its interests. Worried
about "regime change" spreading to their countries,
an unprecedented number of Middle Eastern governments are participating
in these free trade negotiations, which are progressing rapidly.
President Bush reaffirmed his commitment
to expanding free trade policy in his 2005 U.N. address. Much
of the speech was in fact devoted to the World Trade Organization
(WTO) ministerial meeting in Hong Kong three months later. The
president argued "the lives and futures of millions of the
world's poorest citizens hang in the balance -- and so we must
bring the [WTO] trade talks to a successful conclusion."
Founded in 1995, the WTO has 148 member governments and is the
most powerful global institution writing and enforcing the rules
of corporate globalization. Headquartered in Geneva, Switzerland,
the WTO administers agreements on issues as broad and far-reaching
as agriculture, telecommunications, government procurement and
services on behalf of its members. It provides a forum for expanding
these agreements and negotiating new ones. The WTO monitors the
internal laws of its members, arbitrates disputes between governments
over its rules and enforces its rulings through the imposition
of sanctions. Every two years, the WTO holds ministerial level
meetings at which high-ranking government officials finalize negotiations
on existing and newly proposed WTO rules.
Before the WTO, multinational trade rules
dealt largely with the movement of goods between countries, primarily
tariffs, which are taxes applied to goods as they enter or exit
a country, and quotas, which dictate the amount of a specific
product that can enter or leave a country. While the WTO continued
to regulate these aspects of trade, it went further, moving inside
of countries and regulating their internal laws. Every law or
government policy that has the potential, whether intended or
not, to impact foreign companies or investors is open to WTO regulation.
Fighting terror with trade
On Sept. 20, 2001, U.S. Trade Representative
Robert Zoellick announced that the Bush administration would be
"countering terror with trade." In a Washington Post
Op-Ed, Zoellick argued that "free trade" and "freedom"
are inextricably interlinked and that trade "promotes the
values at the heart of this protected struggle." In the name
of fighting terror, he called for the passage of a series of corporate
globalization agreements -- including negotiations to expand the
WTO and Fast Track authority -- which had already been the topic
of serious Congressional debate and conflict.
"Fast Track" refers to legislation
that allows the president to move trade bills through Congress
quickly by overriding core aspects of the democratic process such
as committee deliberations, full congressional debate and the
ability to offer amendments. The administration had tried unsuccessfully
to pass such legislation for over a year. Now, however, a new
opportunity presented itself -- 9/11. Literally wrapping the administration
in the flag, Zoellick declared that "Congress, working with
the Bush administration, has an opportunity to shape history by
raising the flag of American economic leadership. The terrorists
deliberately chose the World Trade towers as their target. While
their blow toppled the towers, it cannot and will not shake the
foundation of world trade and freedom."
Congress and the public decried Zoellick's
opportunism. One memorable condemnation came from New York Rep.
Charlie Rangel. A senior member of the Democratic Party, a leader
of the 1960s civil rights movement and the ranking member on the
Committee on Ways and Means, Rangel has an imposing physique and
a raspy voice that gives the impression that he spent the last
24 hours yelling at someone. He also has a quiet charm that is
at least as disarming as his physical presence. He raised a powerful
voice against Zoellick when he said that "to appeal to patriotism
in an effort to force Congress to move on Fast Track by claiming
it is needed to fight terrorism would be laughable if it weren't
so serious." Unfortunately, Zoellick was not alone in his
position: It was administration policy.
Four months later, President Bush delivered
what was arguably one of the most important State of the Union
Addresses in 50 years -- the first after 9/11. In the speech,
the president repeated Zoellick's characterization of 9/11 as
an opportunity to spread free trade and free markets. He, too,
called on Congress to pass his corporate globalization agenda
in the spirit of recovery from 9/11. In the closing moments of
his speech, the president explained that "in this moment
of opportunity, a common danger is erasing old rivalries. In
every region, free markets and free trade and free societies are
proving their power to lift lives. Together with friends and allies
from Europe to Asia and Africa to Latin America, we will demonstrate
that the forces of terror cannot stop the momentum of freedom."
The mantra, soon to be repeated in speech
after speech by President Bush and his subordinates in the buildup
to war was that his administration would be "trading in freedom."
"Free trade" and "free markets" were synonymous
with "freedom," and the United States was willing to
implement this theory with military force. It was pure imperialism,
which the advocates of the Bush Agenda had been waiting for decades
to implement.
Antonia Juhasz is a Foreign Policy In
Focus scholar who is based in San Francisco and working on a book
about the economic invasion of Iraq. She is currently on tour
with The Bush Agenda and you can view her schedule on her web
site, TheBushAgenda.org.
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