Doug
Casey on Syria and the Global RoboCop
Interviewed
by Louis James, Editor, International
Speculator
Recently
by Doug Casey:
Gun Control
L:
Doug, I just saw that Obama
is threatening the regime in Syria with military force if they
use chemical weapons in their fight to retain power. Unlike most
of the pundits filling the airwaves with comments, you've actually
been there. What do you make of what's going on?
Doug:
I've been there twice, actually. On one of those, I was basically
there over the Christmas holiday season. I rented a car in Damascus,
drove around, and saw a lot of the country. I, of course, did the
tourist things, like visiting the great mosque in Damascus and the
Krak
des Chevaliers which is one of the best-preserved medieval
castles anywhere and the Roman city of Palmyra. But I also got
down off my horse, as it were, and walked the souqs.
I even checked out local beachfront real estate. They don't have
much, but there's about 50 miles of beachfront, so I went to see
if there were any bargains. I'll buy almost anything, anywhere,
if the price is low enough, especially cheap beach land. I didn't
see anything appealing being the only foreigner on the whole strip
didn't seem likely to work out too well, and not much fun in a culture
that frowns on alcohol and bikinis.
Overall, I
have to say that the country seemed reasonably calm and busy in
the "business" sense without a great presence of police. I understood
there was a significant secret police presence it was definitely
not a place to voice political opinions but I didn't see signs
of widespread public fear. The people did not seem particularly
ground down with poverty or repression.
L:
So, do you doubt the uprising now is a genuine rebellion by the
oppressed masses perhaps it's just a power struggle between different
factions, some claiming to speak for the oppressed?
Doug:
Well, you really have to live somewhere to get to know the place,
and I didn't. I'm just saying that my impression of Syria, for all
its evil reputation in the West a veritable Mordor in the eyes
of TV watchers was not so bad. It was definitely less repressive
than the USSR or Eastern Europe before 1990. Of course, the government
was and is run by criminals but that's true almost everywhere.
I don't know who the good guys are in the current conflict or even
that there are any.
L:
So it looked fairly normal to you? But normal in that part of the
world has hardly been a shining beacon of liberty and prosperity
for all.
Doug:
No, it hasn't. Since the USSR collapsed, the Mid-East, Central Asia,
and Africa have competed for having the most repressive regimes
and backward economies. One interesting thing to me was that the
country seemed to be in a time warp it was like going to other
places as they were 40 years ago. There was almost no new building
going on I remember the big fuss at the time was that the Kuwaitis
were building a Four Seasons hotel. That was going to be by far
the classiest joint in Damascus, when done. At the time I was there,
the best place was a rather down-at-the-heels Sofitel.
Another thing
that you never hear on the news is that the country has exchange
controls. Reporters seem to consider that part of the natural landscape.
They're insulated from the effects of FX controls by their corporate
expense accounts, and they don't understand those effects. This
is one reason most reporting is so pedestrian and vapid but I
digress. Repressive governments always have exchange controls, because
they make it very inconvenient for the locals to pick up and leave;
as we've discussed in the past, the
US is moving in that direction. Locals have to exchange their
basically worthless currency for that of some neighboring country;
otherwise, they have no way to spend when they get there.
I can also
say that there wasn't an obvious military presence in Syria that
I could see, but it makes sense that a huge portion of the GDP went
to buying Soviet-era military hardware tanks and jet fighters.
In today's world, that
stuff amounts to junk. And that's entirely apart from the fact
that most Third-World armies are worthless for fighting real wars;
their main purpose is to build a power base for the regime and suppress
the people. Also, it's well known thanks to Julian Assange and
WikiLeaks,
among other sources that Syria is one of the places the CIA used
to ship
um
dissidents, for lack of a better word, to be tortured.
These things are not usually signs of a happy, peaceful population.
And there are
deep-rooted reasons for tension. Syria like almost all of the
countries in Africa, the Middle East, and Asia is an artificial
construct put together, completely arbitrarily, by politicians in
the boardrooms of Europe. In the case of Syria, it was assembled
from some of the remnants of the Ottoman Empire by the Europeans
after World War I. As in neighboring Lebanon and Iraq, it's got
at least a dozen major religious/tribal/ethnic groups that are loyal
mainly to themselves. The idea of a Syrian nation is a fantasy.
It was inevitable that eventually Syria would fall apart just
as it was and is inevitable for most of the other artificially constructed
countries to fall apart. This applies to the EU now as well, for
similar reasons.
L:
I didn't know that about the dozen different religions. I would
have expected the lines on the map to be artificial, since the people
in the area were historically nomadic, but I would have thought
they shared more in common, culturally. I suppose it only seems
that way because I'm on the outside and have not looked closely.
Doug:
Yes. Just to begin with, there's the Shia and Sunni Muslims, but
there are many
subdivisions within these and other schools of thought. There
are also a number of different sects of Christians still there,
and Jews as well. Some people worship Jesus, some worship Yahweh,
some worship Allah. Nobody seems to agree on what these various
gods really say or what they tell you to do or not do, but most
everybody seems to take it pretty seriously and in the Middle
East, much more than almost anywhere else. Religious wars seem to
be a specialty of the various children of Abraham; the Hindus, Jains,
Buddhists, Zoroastrians, pagans, atheists, and what-have-you, are
historically much, much more live and let live.
L:
So, presuming that the majority of those who control the government
in Syria are of one religious/ethnic/cultural group, as is often
the case, do you think they'd have any qualms against using chemical
weapons against the rebels? It could seem like "us vs. them" to
them.
Doug:
I wouldn't doubt that at all although chemical weapons are messy,
and hugely overrated. But all this fuss and bother about Syria's
chemical weapons is distorted and misguided just as was the case
with the nonexistent weapons the Iraqis were said to have.
In the first
place, if one believes that governments should exist at all and
that the need for a military is one of the justifications for the
state, then one can't argue that such states should not have weapons.
The details of the weapons are irrelevant once you grant the basic
premise. And it certainly makes no sense to argue that some governments
should have certain weapons, and some should not. The US has huge
arsenals of chemical weapons, and no one is calling for military
force to take them away. Why does the US have them? Who might they
use them against?
L:
Well, some governments are thought to be more responsible, or less
evil, than others
Doug:
Doesn't matter. The people running any given government, and their
intentions, can change very quickly. You can't accept the idea of
sovereign nations and argue that some should be able to have weapons
that others cannot. And if you did try to impose different weapons
rights on good-guy countries and bad-guy countries, you'd have to
have some sort of super-country to make it stick, and that would
be very dangerous indeed. Who decides who is a good guy? The fact
is that the Germans during World War II actually thought they were
the good guys.
L:
Many people think the UN should be in charge and make that determination.
Doug:
Those people are deluding themselves and are woefully ignorant of
history if they think bigger government is better government...
and dangerously and pathetically naοve if they think one super-state
with the power to rule them all would be impervious to corruption.
If the UN became the mightiest force on earth, then no one could
stop them, and very bad things would happen. The UN having real
power would be about the worst possible outcome. Thankfully, right
now it's nothing more than an incredibly corrupt and dysfunctional
homeowners' association for governments. If it got real power, it
would become a much more serious magnet
for sociopaths than it currently is.
L:
One ring to rule them all and in the darkness bind them.
Doug:
Exactly. It's the fact that the nations of the world are not united
that has saved us from global mismanagement and despotism. It's
too bad that there are only about 200 sovereign states; ideally
we would have seven billion.
L:
Power corrupts; absolute power corrupts absolutely. The antidote
is decentralizing power as much as possible.
Doug:
Yes. Just look at what the US is already doing, because it sees
itself as top dog. The US has increasingly been taking on the role
of global "RoboCop," using its military power to impose its notions
of what should be on other countries and peoples around the world.
The results are almost invariably destructive and counterproductive
on the ground where US force is projected. Just look at the happy
outcomes in Iraq, Afghanistan, and Libya, for just three current,
quick examples. Furthermore, it's unethical to force US taxpayers
to bankroll foreign interventions many of them perhaps even most
of them do not approve of.
L:
And it forces US troops who just want to defend their loved ones
to go off and die in foreign lands for purposes that have nothing
to do with why they signed up.
Doug:
True enough although the military has always attracted a
certain type of young male who wants to visit exotic foreign
lands, meet interesting people, and kill them. Even if it were true
that Syria has chemical weapons, and even if it were true that the
government forces in Syria plan to use them against their opposition
and in today's world chemical weapons are mainly useful against
civilian populations in cities that does not create a moral obligation
on the US to go off and try to stop it. It would be quite blackly
comedic if the US decided to use its own huge stock of chemical
weapons to prevent the Syrians from using theirs
Whenever I
think of the US military, I'm forced to think of Dr. Strangelove,
actually.
L:
So just leave those poor, innocent people in Syria to die?
Doug:
Well, those poor people tolerated their local despotism for years
and many of them surely participated in it or collaborated with
it in various ways over the years, so it's arguable how innocent
they all are. But no, that's not the only option. Those who find
the actions of the Syrian state reprehensible and want to do something
about it should be free to do so. The US government used to allow
this with letters of marque and reprisal. Now of course, it's quite
illegal for an American to even contemplate.
In my ideal
world, people everywhere would be perfectly free to arm themselves
and hop on a plane to wherever tyranny flared up, and help put an
end to it.
Anyone who
really believes that bad guys around the world should be stopped
ought to stop trying to coerce others to take action via the state,
and should volunteer themselves. If they are not willing to do that,
it's just hypocrisy and cowardice to force others taxpayers and
soldiers to do their bidding for them. If you want to talk the
talk, then you should be willing to walk the walk.
L:
But we don't live in your ideal world
Doug:
More's the pity. In any event, what the US is trying to do is completely
insane. The Russians are very friendly with the Syrians, and even
have a naval base in Syria. Direct US action against the government
of Syria could provoke the Iranians as well. Becoming declared enemies
of the Assad regime could have many negative consequences beyond
what may happen in Syria and will certainly hasten the insolvency
of the US government.
Besides, taking
out the Assad regime may only make matters worse who's to say
that whoever seizes power after Assad is gone will be any better?
Perhaps the result will be a full-blown civil war that lasts for
years, laying most of the country to waste in the process. Just
look at what's going on in Egypt and Libya did the people there
become suddenly better off? Libya, by the way, is another country
that's on the ragged edge of splitting up into several smaller countries
or tribes, fighting over Libya's resources.
Things like
this are terrible, but they've been going on since the dawn of history
it's arrogant and foolish in the extreme to imagine that outsiders
can create lasting peace in places full of people who hate each
other. There are dozens of places around the world that have imminent
potential for genocide: Mali, Sudan, Congo, Nigeria, Uzbekistan,
Tajikistan, and many others, not just Syria. At the end of the day,
there's no way outsiders can make any of these places better. Outside
volunteers might participate in the process, but the people in these
places need to sort things out themselves, find solutions that work
for them. One can only hope they're not typical political solutions.
L:
So you're not advocating turning a blind eye to the woes of the
world, just keeping the state out of it and leaving it to individual
conscience?
Doug:
Yes. But the question now is: which will be the next of these Arab
despotisms to fall apart? Maybe Algeria? It could just as easily
be Morocco or Mauritania.
L:
What about the big one: Saudi Arabia? The guys on top there don't
seem like the sort to inspire great love among the people.
Doug:
Agreed. I don't know when, but I'd say Saudi is a slam-dunk candidate
for blowing up. Something like half the population is under 25,
and unemployment is huge. All the money is sucked off by the royal
family; it's rather ridiculous that the country is named after the
family that took it over after World War I. The place is a gigantic
accident waiting to happen.
So of course,
the US will stick its nose into that mess as well, at great cost.
Saudi being the sacred homeland of The Prophet "peace be upon
him," as they like to say putting US troops there to keep the
oil flowing would lead to all sorts of trouble. The long war between
believers in Jesus and believers in Allah has been going on since
the 7th century and shows signs of seriously heating
up.
L:
So, in this world full of nation-states, what should be done?
Doug:
I hate to put myself in the place of Thomas Friedman, busybody
to the world, but if you ask me, I'd say the US should withdraw
its troops from all foreign bases, cut military spending on the
order of 90%, abolish the CIA, and stop intervening in foreign countries.
That would be a good start, anyway.
L:
Some people would say that's acknowledging defeat admitting to
the world that the US doesn't have the power to boss everyone around
and that could invite attack.
Doug:
I would argue to the contrary: cutting our losses now will slow
the US descent into insolvency, which is the absolute worst thing
for "national security" although that's a dangerous and grossly
overrated concept. It might even give the US time to rebuild its
economic and social strength, which is the real power that defeated
the US's opponents in WW II. Most important of all, instead of meddling
and making enemies, the US could again become the shining example
it should be, the beacon of hope to people all around the world
that the Statue of Liberty is supposed to represent.
L:
I note that it's a statue of liberty, not a statue of some thug
with a sword or club, like those that adorn gates and castles all
around Europe. Right, not might, was the symbol of the America that
Was.
But okay
investment implications? The trend towards more disintegration in
North Africa and the Middle East can't be good for oil production
Doug:
No, chaos isn't good for oil production but it's bullish for energy
prices. Fighting over control of oil fields is never good for output.
But not only can we avoid being hurt by higher prices, we can profit
mightily from them. I'll leave it to your bro, Marin, to lay out
the best ways to play investing in energy trends in the Casey
Energy Report.
However, rising
energy costs are not good for industry as a whole. That has implications
for the whole global economy, which will have to absorb the higher
costs.
On the most
fundamental level, this trend in Syria and the rest of that part
of the world is not good for either the global economy or world
stock markets. That's because stock markets gain or should gain
over the long term, based on growth in capital, and war destroys
capital.
L:
I was taught in school that WW II ended the Great Depression.
Doug:
Any economist who looks at the data knows that's not true. But most
of those who masquerade as economists today are really just political
apologists, like Paul
Krugman. War is an ill wind that blows no good. It is a purely
destructive force that can only create a net loss for the world
as a whole. I don't see any good at all that could come from US
meddling in Syria or other such countries. It's not just asking
for trouble it's begging for a catastrophe.
L:
But it's going to happen so bet on higher energy prices
What
else?
Doug:
I may sound like a broken record, but I'd be remiss if I didn't
remind people to diversify against political instability in the
world by internationalizing their assets and lives, and to buy gold.
I suspect very, very few have done so, however.
L:
That brings up a question we've had from readers: could gold have
peaked already? If you look at a long-term chart, say, a ten-year
chart for gold, you'll see that the steady upward march has been
broken. The top of the curve has definitely turned downwards, since
last year. But you're as bullish as ever?
Doug:
Yes. For starters, unlike what happened back in 1980, when gold
last peaked, interest rates are extremely low, kept there artificially
by the Fed. Back in 1980, interest rates had risen to extremely
high levels, which encouraged people to switch to saving in dollars.
In the 1970s the period that led to the last peak governments
were afraid of inflation and were working to reduce inflation of
the currencies. Now, governments are racing to debase their currencies
at truly phenomenal rates. Even as we speak gold is heading up again.
I'd say the chances of gold having peaked for this cycle are slim
to none.
L:
And Slim's out of town?
Doug:
[Chuckles] Yes, exactly. But we'll be discussing how to survive
and profit in a politicized economy at our upcoming
Carlsbad seminar. I invite our current readers to join us there,
although the number of attendees is quite limited, as always. It's
going to be a worthwhile and enjoyable event.
L:
All right then thanks for another interesting conversation.
Doug:
My pleasure, as always.
August
24, 2012
Doug
Casey (send him mail)
is
a best-selling author and chairman of Casey
Research, LLC., publishers of Caseys
International Speculator.
Copyright
© 2012 Casey
Research
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