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A New Cold
War? The Fight Against the "New World Order" and
Britain's Fate
Martin
Hutchinson
I am
not, by and large, a conspiracy theorist. Nevertheless,
it is equally naïve to suppose that, because a
particular regime at a particular time collapsed in
ruin, "the End of History" has arrived, and the world
can henceforth become united in support of the 1990s'
muddled, social democratic version of the free market.
The
Soviet Union, unlike Nazi Germany, was not the product
of one madman. It was a regime, established almost by
chance, that ruled a large portion of the world for over
70 years. Its economic nostrums were certainly not what
enabled it to do this; even at the time, they were
fatally flawed to any but the most rose-tinted
observer. What enabled it to rule, and to attract so
much support from outside its immediate domain, was its
political formulation, which proved immensely attractive
to millions of people, most of whom never had to live
under its sway.
The
Soviet Union became a government of infinite power, on
whom all its citizens depended for their existence,
whose whims could therefore totally affect their lives,
yet which could never be removed. Needless to say,
participation in the upper, middle and even lower
reaches of that government was an attractive opportunity
for millions of mildly intellectual bureaucrats, who
could use Marx's idealism to convince both themselves
and their people that they were motivated by pure
altruism.
That
dream, of participating with like-minded people in an
infinitely powerful, infinitely unresponsive government
that works ceaselessly to impose ideals on the populace,
was not confined to the Soviet Union, and it certainly
didn't die with the Soviet Union. George H.W. Bush, at
the end of the Gulf War, heralded a "New World Order"— a
term which has been appropriated by many of those
willing its arrival.
The
western incarnation of that dream probably originated
with the French philosopher Henri de Saint-Simon and was
given additional impetus by the British Fabian Society
in the early 20th century. However, the greatest impetus
to its incarnation as practical policy came from
economist John Maynard Keynes. Keynes propounded two
theories that had not been considered economically
respectable before his time: that the government could
effectively allocate resources between different
producers and traders, and that public spending could be
used to push an economy out of recession.
Keynes'
theories, propounded in his intellectually obscure
General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money
(1936) envisaged an economy in which, while ownership
technically remained predominantly in the private
sector, all significant economic decisions would be
taken by omniscient left-leaning public sector
intellectuals like himself. It was not necessary for
government to own the means of production; indeed Soviet
experience seemed to show that such ownership was so
economically counterproductive as to breed political
instability. It was simply necessary to set up a system
whereby all significant economic decisions required the
approval of the bureaucracy.
This
was the impetus behind the Indian Congress Party's
"permit raj" until 1991; it is also the impetus behind
much environmental regulation, practically all telecom
regulation and much trade policy. Free trade is not an
NWO objective, although establishing an international
bureaucracy to oversee trade may be a useful tool. It
is much better, instead, to have a system of massive
subsidization of agriculture, quantitative control over
textiles and the ability to impose randomly high tariffs
against "dumping" malefactors. All three increase
bureaucrat control – the object of the exercise.
It is
not enough, however, for government to be all-powerful,
it must also be unaccountable. As the British Labour
party found out in 1979, it is little joy to leftist
Keynesian bureaucrats to establish a “New Jerusalem”
where they control the economy if the electorate can
come along and throw them out, reducing their
finely-crafted construct to rubble. Accordingly, some
mechanism must be found whereby, even if personalities
and governments change from decade to decade, central
bureaucratic control remains in place.
Two
mechanisms exist for this: the voting system and the
supranational body. NWO partisans seek to impose
proportional representation systems, in which a
multiplicity of parties appears, and where governments
then tend to be formed by negotiation between insiders.
The
other favorite mechanism for reducing accountability is
the supranational body. Both the World Bank and the IMF
are classic New World Order entities, being exempt from
control either by a democratic electorate or by the
market and enjoying special privileges in terms of
access to capital and de facto right of first repayment
of their loans. Subsequent NWO entities include the
European Union, the International Court of Justice,
endless United Nations bodies and the World Trade
Organization (the latter not entirely an NWO creation,
since it remains pretty ineffectual without the full
agreement of its member governments.) All these bodies
share the characteristics of permanence, lack
accountability, possess immunity from economic pressure
and have the ability to overrule private or even
national interests that are the NWO ideal.
The
European Parliament is the ultimate NWO vehicle, being
both supranational and elected by proportional
representation; with 45 of the current 626 Euro-MPs, the
British Conservatives are the second largest grouping in
the chamber. Of course, all resolutions of this body
are settled by insider bargaining, with the EU's
electorate having neither input in nor indeed knowledge
of what is being decided.
The
last few weeks have seen a number of successes for both
sides in this Cold War:
(1)
The
collapse at Cancun of the Doha round of trade talks,
which removed the necessity for the U.S. and Europe to
reform their agricultural, textile and steel policies,
thus ensuring that U.S. and European farmers will remain
dependent on their governments, and that Third World
producers will remain both poor and dependent on the
international aid agencies for succor. Big NWO win.
1.
The Kay
report on
Iraq's
weapons of mass destruction, which has successfully been
spun outside the United States as "proof" that such
weapons did not exist, and hence that U.S. intervention
in Iraq was illegitimate. A successful rebuilding effort
in Iraq would be a major setback to the NWO's agenda
(but is probably unlikely, since even the U.S. aid
agencies are staffed largely by NWO proponents.)
2.
The
decline in popularity of the generally anti-NWO Bush
Administration and its increasing budgetary difficulties
are hopeful signs for the NOW, since it strongly
suggests the election of a less anti-NWO (or even
actively pro-NWO if it's Howard Dean) President in
2004. U.S. trade, budgetary and economic difficulties
are also hopeful signs for the NWO; they reduce Bush's
popularity, they allow a pro-NWO president (if one is
elected) to increase taxes, and, if they bring on a
truly severe recession, they de-legitimize the private
sector and allow all kinds of NWO-generated,
big-government economic experiments, just as happened in
the 1930s with the New Deal.
3.
The
Swedish referendum on the euro was a big setback for the
NWO, because it demonstrated that Swedish objections to
the euro and greater Brussels control, that it would
endanger their luscious welfare provisions, were from
the left not the right. To the extent that welfare
payments are legally mandated, non-discretionary and
transfer purchasing power directly from taxpayers to
recipients, they do not increase government control, and
hence are unattractive to the NWO nomenklatura.
4.
Japan's
apparent emergence from recession, and the political
strengthening of Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi are
both blows to the NWO, whose solution to Japan's
problems was an increase in public spending and a huge
bureaucrat-directed reorganization of the Japanese
banking system.
5.
The
IMF's bailout of the Kirchner government in Argentina,
without either significant reforms of the Argentine
economy or significant efforts to bail out private
sector lenders to
Argentina,
is an example of the NWO in action. The "Washington
Consensus" economic reforms of the 1990s were a façade;
what really matters to the NWO aid providers are that a
country support them in international forums and allow
them to maintain a veneer of success over the policies
they mandate, even when they produce economic
catastrophe.
For the
NWO, Britain is a particularly tricky problem. However
much publicity was poured into the "yes" side and
however stacked was the deck, it is certain that, in a
British referendum, the EU constitution would lose.
Hence a referendum must be avoided at all costs, a
necessity which is clearly understood by Prime Minister
Tony Blair. However, a huge problem arises if, by
forcing the constitution into effect without a
referendum (which must chronologically be done in
2004-5, before the next election is due) Blair delivers
the next election to the opposition. The Liberal
Democrats are not a threat; they are even more
enthusiastically pro-Europe than Blair and will happily
join him in a center-left, pro-NOW coalition if they are
needed. Indeed, such a coalition would help the NWO in
another way; to the extent a British government had any
power left after the EU constitution had been installed,
it could be delivered securely and in perpetuity to pro-NWO
forces by changing the electoral system to proportional
representation, a change which the Liberal Democrats
would conveniently insist on as a condition for
accepting a Blair-led coalition.
The
only British danger to NWO hegemony therefore is an
outright win by a Euro-skeptic Conservative party at the
next election, due in or before June 2006. To avoid
this, the NWO and its supporters in the British media
(about 90 percent of it) are attempting to destabilize
the leadership of Iain Duncan-Smith by playing up
attempts to remove him and by circulating (almost
certainly phony) stories of financial irregularities,
thus weakening him for the party conference at which he
traditionally reconnects with Conservative supporters.
This
benefits them in two ways; it opens the possibility of
the Conservative party getting a new leader, and, at a
minimum, it shows the Conservatives as a weak, divided
party, thus preventing them from capitalizing on Labor's
mistakes. Of the potential leadership candidates, the
only pro-NWO figure, Kenneth Clarke, now has little
support in the party because of his huge distance from
the party mainstream, but there are also "modernizing"
factions, led by Michael Portillo and David Davis, who
would blur the policy differences with Labor, as well as
perpetuating internal party strife – as the removal of
Margaret Thatcher in 1990 showed. Any forced change of
leadership that was not to a figure clearly in tune with
the party mainstream would be deeply debilitating for
several years. To stop the NWO's Europe project, the
Conservatives need to win the next election outright,
picking up over 170 seats from Labor and the Liberal
Democrats – only a total focus by the party on that
objective will render it attainable. Any other result
allows a Labor-Liberal Democrat coalition, which
perpetuates the NWO's control of
Britain,
and of Europe as a whole.
Martin
Hutchinson is UPI's Business and Economics Editor. This
adapted text from UPI's weekly "The Bear's Lair" column
is used with permission of UPI.
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