A Capitalist War?
by
Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.
Some
people dispute the claim that the US attack on Iraq is motivated
– at least in part – by the desire for Iraq’s oil. What can we say
about them? They may be hopelessly naïve about the public sector
in general. Some of the same people who are pleased to finger greed
and avarice as the root cause of all accounting problems on Wall
Street are loath to consider that similar impulses might inspire
politicians and bureaucrats as well.
It
could also be that those who deny an oil connection aren’t reading
the newspapers. After all, it was the New York Times that
carried no less than two large articles on Iraq’s oil resources
in its prominent "Week in Review" section (November 3),
one of which contained a map of reserves. The reporter noted: "112
billion barrels of proven reserves is also something nobody can
overlook.… Iraq’s ‘ability to generate oil’ is always somewhere
on the table, even if not in so many words."
Or
consider the MSNBC story that ran on November 11, "Iraqi Oil,
American Bonanza?," which says: "Iraq’s vast oil reserves
remain a powerful prize for global oil companies…. Such a massive
rebuilding effort represents a huge opportunity for the companies
chosen to tackle it…. It’s unlikely that American firms will be
left empty-handed if the U.S. follows through on threats of military
action."
What
does oil have to do with the Bush administration? The MSNBC reporter
gives the reader that information too: "American oil companies
are also hoping to benefit from the industry’s unusually strong
ties to the White House. President Bush, himself the former head
of a Texas oil company, has pursued a national energy policy that
relies on aggressively expanding new sources of oil. Vice President
Dick Cheney is the former CEO of oil services giant Halliburton.
National security adviser Condoleezza Rice is a former director
of Chevron."
Was
Lenin Right?
The
connection between the war on Iraq and the desire for oil raises
an important ideological consideration. Millions of college students
are taught the Leninist idea that capitalist economies are inherently
imperialistic. This is supposedly because exploitation exhausts
capital values in the domestic economy, and hence capital owners
must relentlessly seek to replenish their funds through grabbing
foreign resources. It takes war to avoid the final crisis of capitalism,
in this view.
College
students might be forgiven for thinking there is some basis for
this in the real world. In American history up to the present day,
the onset of war tends to track the onset of economic doldrums.
Might war be just the ticket to revive a moribund capitalist class?
Recall that it was then-secretary of state James Baker who said
the first Iraq war was all about "jobs, jobs, jobs." The line between
the owners of capital and the warfare state has never been that
clean in American history, and it has arguably never been as conspicuously
blurred as it is today.
The
view that sustaining capitalism requires aggressive war is usually
said to originate with V.I. Lenin as a way of rescuing Marxism from
a serious problem. The problem was that capitalism was not collapsing
in the 19th century. It was growing more robust and more
productive, and the workers were getting richer, not poorer – all
facts that weighed heavily against the Marxist historical trajectory.
The Leninist answer to the puzzle was that capitalism was surviving
only thanks to its military aggression. The prosperity of the West
originated in blood.
Capitalist
Imperialism
But
was Lenin really the originator of the theory? Not at all. The capitalists
beat him to it. As Murray N. Rothbard explains in his History
of Money and Banking in the United States (2002), the idea
began with a group of Republican Party theoreticians during the
late Gilded Age, who were concerned that the falling rate of profits
would end up crippling capitalism and that the only salvation was
a forced opening of foreign markets to US exports. These were the
brain trusters of Theodore Roosevelt, who ended up heralding US
aggression against Spain in 1898.
The
fear of falling profit stemmed from the mistaken embrace of the
theory of David Ricardo that the rate of profit is determined by
the stock of capital investment. In fact, the rate of profit, over
the long run, is determined by the rate of time preference in society.
All else being equal, as savings rise, profits fall, which doesn’t
at all spell disaster for capitalism. It could in fact be an indication
of a robust, competitive economy in which no business interest can
count on a sure thing in the marketplace.
But
the theorists of imperialism didn’t believe it. Economist Charles
Conant developed the theory in a series of essays beginning in 1896,
including "The
Economic Basis of Imperialism" which appeared in the North
American Review in 1898. In this piece, Conant argued that there
is too much savings in advanced countries, too much production,
and not enough consumption, and this was crowding out profitable
investment opportunities for the largest corporations.
The
best way to find new consumers and resources, he said, is to go
abroad, using force, if necessary, to open up markets. He further
said that the US industrial trusts then dominant on the landscape
could be useful in promoting and waging war. This would further
cartelize American industry and increase profits. Hence, said Conant,
"concentration of power, in order to permit prompt and efficient
action, will be an almost essential factor in the struggle for world
empire."
Yes,
that sounds exactly like the version of reality given to us by Lenin,
only the judgment is reversed. While Lenin found imperialism for
profit morally wrong, Conant found it praiseworthy, an inspiring
plan of action. Indeed, many of his contemporaries also did. Boston’s
US Investor argued that war is necessary to keep capital
at work. An "enlarged field for its product must be discovered,"
and the best source "is to be found among the semi-civilized
and barbarian races."
By
the turn of the century, this view had largely caught on in the
economics profession, with even the eminent theorist John Bates
Clark of Columbia praising imperialism for providing American business
"with an even larger and more permanent profit."
Today's
Profits of War
Today
the same creed is captured in the pithy if chilling mantra of the
New York Times columnist Thomas Friedman: "The hidden hand
of the market will never work without a hidden fist" (The
Lexus and the Olive Tree, p. 464). Lenin himself couldn't
have said it better. Joseph Nye of Harvard fleshes out the point:
"To ignore the role of military security in an era of economic
and information growth is like forgetting the importance of oxygen
to our breathing."
Brink
Lindsey of the Cato Institute puts a different spin on the same
line. His goal in Against
the Dead Hand is to convince military imperialists that
international trade can be an important ally in the fight for global
dominance. Instead of seeing trade across borders as the extension
of voluntary exchange among individuals, he sees global trade as
a weapon to use against foreign states that do not conform to the
DC ideal. In Lindsey's view, foreign trade, managed by the US through
treaties and bureaucracies, is merely a way to wage the fight against
terrorism "with maximum effectiveness."
Historian
Robert Kagan is even more brutally clear: "Good ideas and technologies
also need a strong power that promotes those ideas by example and
protects those ideas by winning on the battlefield."
So
there you have it: if you want to use a cell phone, you have to
be willing to send your son to die for the US imperium in a war
against Iraq! And if you do lose your son in battle, know that this
was necessary in order to shore up US domination of the world economy.
This is the creed of the global social democrats who champion both
military and economic globalization.
How
far we've come from George Washington's "great rule of conduct for
us, in regard to foreign nations": extend commercial relations but
avoid political connections. He continues: "Harmony, liberal intercourse
with all nations, are recommended by policy, humanity, and interest.
But even our commercial policy should hold an equal and impartial
hand; neither seeking nor granting exclusive favors or preferences;
consulting the natural course of things; diffusing and diversifying
by gentle means the streams of commerce, but forcing nothing."
Peace
and Freedom
With
the communists and capitalists agreeing that war and profit are
mutually dependent, how is a believer in peace and freedom to respond?
While war can result in profit for a few, it is not the case that
the entire system of a free economy depends on such wartime profiteering.
Indeed, war comes at the expense of alternative uses of resources.
To the extent that people are taxed to pay for armaments, property
is diverted from its most valuable uses to purposes of destruction.
Indeed,
the idea that commerce and war are allies is a complete perversion
of the old liberal tradition. The first theorists of commerce from
the 16th century through the 18th century
saw that a most meritorious aspect of commerce is its link to freedom
and peace, that commerce made it possible for people to cooperate
rather than fight. It made armaments and war less necessary, not
more.
What
about the need to open foreign markets? The expansion of markets
and the division of labor is always a wonderful thing. The more
people involved in the overarching business of economic life, the
greater the prospects for wealth creation. But force is hardly the
best means to promote the cooperative and peaceful activity of trade,
any more than it is a good idea to steal your neighbor’s mower to
improve lawn care on your block. Bitterness and acrimony is never
good business, to say nothing of death and destruction.
In
any case, the problem in Iraq is not that Iraq is somehow withholding
its oil from the market. For ten years, and even before the first
war on Iraq, its oil supplies have been available to the world.
In one of the great ironies of modern war history, the first Bush
administration waged war, it said, to keep Iraq from withholding
its oil resources from world markets. The US then proceeded to enforce
a decade of sanctions that withheld most of Iraq’s oil reserves
from the market (thereby increasing prices and profits for US firms).
We
are somehow not permitted to say this, but the solution to Iraq
is at hand. Repeal sanctions immediately. Trade with Iraq. Oil prices
would fall dramatically. Hatred of the US would abate. The plight
of Iraq could no longer be used as exhibit A in terrorist recruitment
drives. The only downside, of course, is that US companies connected
to the Bush administration would not be the owners of the oil fields,
but instead would have to compete with other producers in supplying
consumers with oil.
Well,
so be it. The idea of free enterprise is that everyone gets a chance,
and no one industry or group of producers enjoys special privileges.
Through competition and cooperation, but never violence, the living
standards of everyone rise and we all enjoy more of the life we
want to live. It’s not hard to understand, except in the corridors
of the Bush administration, where theorists have linked arms with
Leninists in the belief that war is always good, and always necessary,
for business.
January
1, 2003
Llewellyn
H. Rockwell, Jr. [send him
mail] is president of the Ludwig
von Mises Institute in Auburn, Alabama, and editor of LewRockwell.com.
This
article is reprinted with permission from the December 16, 2002,
issue of The
American Conservative.
Copyright 2002 by The American Conservative. All rights reserved.
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