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The Sole Superpower in Decline

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In April 2007, the Kremlin issued a major foreign policy document. "The myth about the unipolar world fell apart once and for all in Iraq," it stated. "A strong, more self-confident Russia has become an integral part of positive changes in the world."

The Kremlin's increasingly tense relations with Washington were in tune with Russian popular opinion. A poll taken during the run-up to the 2006 G8 summit revealed that 58% of Russians regarded America as an "unfriendly country." It has proved to be a trend. This July, for instance, Major Gen Alexandr Vladimirov told the mass circulation newspaper Komsolskya Pravada that war with the United States was a "possibility" in the next ten to fifteen years.

Chavez Rides High

Such sentiments resonated with Hugo Chavez. While visiting Moscow in June 2007, he urged Russians to return to the ideas of Vladimir Lenin, especially his anti-imperialism. "The Americans don't want Russia to keep rising," he said. "But Russia has risen again as a center of power, and we, the people of the world, need Russia to become stronger."

Chavez finalized a $1 billion deal to purchase five diesel submarines to defend Venezuela's oil-rich undersea shelf and thwart any possible future economic embargo imposed by Washington. By then, Venezuela had become the second largest buyer of Russian weaponry. (Algeria topped the list, another indication of a growing multipolarity in world affairs.) Venezuela acquired the distinction of being the first country to receive a license from Russia to manufacture the famed AK-47 assault rifle.

By channeling some of his country's oil money to needy Venezuelans, Chavez broadened his base of support. Much to the chagrin of the Bush White House, he trounced his sole political rival, Manuel Rosales, in a December 2006 presidential contest with 61% of the vote. Equally humiliating to the Bush administration, Venezuela was, by then, giving more foreign aid to needy Latin American states than it was.

Following his reelection, Chavez vigorously pursued the concept of forming an anti-imperialist alliance in Latin America as well as globally. He strengthened Venezuela's ties not only with such Latin countries as Bolivia, Cuba, Ecuador, Nicaragua, and debt-ridden Argentina, but also with Iran and Belarus.

By the time he arrived in Tehran from Moscow (via Minsk) in June 2007, the 180 economic and political accords his government had signed with Tehran were already yielding tangible results. Iranian-designed cars and tractors were coming off assembly lines in Venezuela. "[The] cooperation of independent countries like Iran and Venezuela has an effective role in defeating the policies of imperialism and saving nations," Chavez declared in Tehran.

Stuck in the quagmire of Iraq and lashed by the gusty winds of rocketing oil prices, the Bush administration finds its area of maneuver woefully limited when dealing with a rising hydrocarbon power. To the insults that Chavez keeps hurling at Bush, the American response has been vapid. The reason is the crippling dependence of the United States on imported petroleum which accounts for 60% of its total consumed. Venezuela is the fourth largest source of U.S. imported oil after Canada, Mexico, and Saudi Arabia; and some refineries in the U.S. are designed specifically to refine heavy Venezuelan oil.

In Chavez's scheme to undermine the "sole superpower," China has an important role. During an August 2006 visit to Beijing, his fourth in seven years, he announced that Venezuela would triple its oil exports to China to 500,000 barrels per day in three years, a jump that suited both sides. Chavez wants to diversify Venezuela's buyer base to reduce its reliance on exports to the U.S., and China's leaders are keen to diversify their hydrocarbon imports away from the Middle East, where American influence remains strong.

"The support of China is very important [to us] from the political and moral point of view," Chavez declared. Along with a joint refinery project, China agreed to build thirteen oil drilling platforms, supply eighteen oil tankers, and collaborate with the state-owned company, Petroleos de Venezuela S.A. (PdVSA), in exploring a new oilfield in the Orinoco Basin.

China on a Stratospheric Trajectory

So dramatic has been the growth of the state-run company PetroChina that, in mid-2007, it was second only to Exxon Mobil in its market value among energy corporations. Indeed, that year three Chinese companies made it onto the list of the world's ten most highly valued corporations. Only the U.S. had more with five. China's foreign reserves of over $1 trillion have now surpassed Japan's. With its gross domestic product soaring past Germany's, China ranks number three in the world economy.

In the diplomatic arena, Chinese leaders broke new ground in 1996 by sponsoring the Shanghai Corporation Organization (SCO), consisting of four adjoining countries: Russia and the three former Soviet Socialist republics of Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, and Tajikistan. The SCO started as a cooperative organization with a focus on countering drug-smuggling and terrorism. Later, the SCO invited Uzbekistan to join, even though it does not abut China. In 2003, the SCO broadened its scope by including regional economic cooperation in its charter. That, in turn, led it to grant observer status to Pakistan, India, and Mongolia -- all adjoining China -- and Iran which does not. When the U.S. applied for observer status, it was rejected, an embarrassing setback for Washington, which enjoyed such status at the Association of South-East Asian Nations (ASEAN).

In early August 2007, on the eve of an SCO summit in the Kyrgyz capital of Bishkek, the group conducted its first joint military exercises, codenamed Peace Mission 2007, in the Russian Ural region of Chelyabinsk. "The SCO is destined to play a vital role in ensuring international security," said Ednan Karabayev, foreign minister of Kyrgyzstan.

In late 2006, as the host of a China-Africa Forum in Beijing attended by leaders of 48 of 53 African nations, China left the U.S. woefully behind in the diplomatic race for that continent (and its hydrocarbon and other resources). In return for Africa's oil, iron ore, copper, and cotton, China sold low-priced goods to Africans, and assisted African counties in building or improving roads, railways, ports, hydro-electric dams, telecommunications systems, and schools. "The western approach of imposing its values and political system on other countries is not acceptable to China," said Africa specialist Wang Hongyi of the China Institute of International Studies. "We focus on mutual development."

To reduce the cost of transporting petroleum from Africa and the Middle East, China began constructing a trans-Burma oil pipeline from the Bay of Bengal to its southern province of Yunan, thereby shortening the delivery distance now traveled by tankers. This undermined Washington's campaign to isolate Myanmar. (Earlier, Sudan, boycotted by Washington, had emerged as a leading supplier of African oil to China.) In addition, Chinese oil companies were competing fiercely with their Western counterparts in getting access to hydrocarbon reserves in Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan.

"China's oil diplomacy is putting the country on a collision course with the U.S. and Western Europe, which have imposed sanctions on some of the countries where China is doing business," comments William Mellor of Bloomberg News. The sentiment is echoed by the other side. "I see China and the U.S. coming into conflict over energy in the years ahead," says Jin Riguang, an oil-and-gas advisor to the Chinese government and a member of the Standing Committee of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Council.

China's industrialization and modernization has spurred the modernization of its military as well. The test-firing of the country's first anti-satellite missile, which successfully destroyed a defunct Chinese weather satellite in January 2007, dramatically demonstrated its growing technological prowess. An alarmed Washington had already noted an 18% increase in China's 2007 defense budget. Attributing the rise to extra spending on missiles, electronic warfare, and other high-tech items, Liao Xilong, commander of the People's Liberation Army's general logistics department, said: "The present day world is no longer peaceful and to protect national security, stability and territorial integrity we must suitably increase spending on military modernization."

China's declared budget of $45 billion was a tiny fraction of the Pentagon's $459 billion one. Yet, in May 2007, a Pentagon report noted China's "rapid rise as a regional and economic power with global aspirations" and claimed that it was planning to project military farther afield from the Taiwan Straits into the Asia-Pacific region in preparation for possible conflicts over territory or resources.

The Sole Superpower in the Sweep of History

This disparate challenge to American global primacy stems as much from sharpening conflicts over natural resources, particularly oil and natural gas, as from ideological differences over democracy, American style, or human rights, as conceived and promoted by Western policy-makers. Perceptions about national (and imperial) identity and history are at stake as well.

It is noteworthy that Russian officials applauding the swift rise of post-Soviet Russia refer fondly to the pre-Bolshevik Revolution era when, according to them, Tsarist Russia was a Great Power. Equally, Chinese leaders remain proud of their country's long imperial past as unique among nations.

When viewed globally and in the great stretch of history, the notion of American exceptionalism that drove the neoconservatives to proclaim the Project for the New American Century in the late 20th century -- adopted so wholeheartedly by the Bush administration in this one -- is nothing new. Other superpowers have been there before and they, too, have witnessed the loss of their prime position to rising powers.

No superpower in modern times has maintained its supremacy for more than several generations. And, however exceptional its leaders may have thought themselves, the United States, already clearly past its zenith, has no chance of becoming an exception to this age-old pattern of history.

Dilip Hiro is the author of Secrets and Lies: Operation "Iraqi Freedom" and, most recently, Blood of the Earth: The Battle for the World's Vanishing Oil Resources, both published by Nation Books.



 

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I live on the caribbean island of trinidad and tobago.As a child I longed to visit the u.s. Everyone wanted to go there. I spent three years there where I obtained as associates degree. It is a beautiful country, The Almighty God has made it like that. Today my impression of the us has changed. I realised now that they have been making friends in the world to control eventually the world.they have you in their pocket and you have to do as they say or as their president say 'either you are with us or against us' Thank you for showing me the other side of the coin. I thank God Almighty, not Goerge Bush for giving me understandng about this . Wonderful article. I'll read it to our two teenagers later today.God Willing.
Posted by:nizam aliAugust 21, 2007 2:08:18 AMRespond ^
When you consider how easily terrorized Americans have been by the Cheney/bush crime family, you’ve got to wonder how we’ll react when Russia or China start tossing around nuclear threats like Cheney/bush have been doing. Talk and threats are cheap, but not when you have nukes and appear crazy enough to use them. Most of the world, including me, are convinced that the dynamic-duo are crazy enough to drop the BIG ONE first, and on anyone. C/b have already committed so many crimes, they can’t stop now for fear of International Judgment later. If a World Court began an investigation of Cheney/bush crimes tomorrow, there would be millions of victims eager to testify against them. No doubt Karl Rove has already told nitwit and King Cheney to cover their ass. Based on what you’ve seen, how do you think they might decide to cover their ass? Go for broke, or face up to their crimes? The thing that really grates is creeping sense of guilt that chokes America right now. Our leaders in both parties share the blame for C/b crimes, and they know it. But rather than trying to climb out of the hole, they keep digging deeper. Wars of aggression spawn many other crimes to cover up the original crime. We the people also share the blame for C/b crimes, and we know it. The question is, will we continue committing crimes to cover up the original crime? Chances are, we the people might someday find ourselves hated and condemned by the world. Somebody’s got to take the fall, and I nominate Cheney/bush. When fascism fell apart for Mussolini, the Italians hung him upside down from a lamppost, which gained them points in International opinion. Nobody hated the Italians after the war, they made a mistake, but fixed it and everybody forgave them. We’ve got to show the world we’re trying to fix our mistakes, or they won’t be so forgiving. Cheney/bush have to be Impeached for many reasons, but stopping them from committing more war crimes is number one. The whole world is watching, and we better get it right to save our country. .
Posted by:rabblerowzerAugust 21, 2007 5:36:34 AMRespond ^
This entire administration needs to be impeached. Lobbyist have bought Hillary Clinton therefore if she wins the US will further decline. We need to get out of Iraq.
Posted by:Vicki LawsonAugust 21, 2007 11:09:11 AMRespond ^
As an American, I find the NeoConservatives running our political system today to be little more than a bunch of childish, emotionally-driven buffoons, desperate to fend off all challenges to their claim to being "king of the hill". I say kudos to China, Russia, and the other nations of the world to calling this nonsense out for what it is, and building their own hills. I cannot blame them for doing so, even as much as I love my own country. But I can't support such crass and shortsighted stupidity in diplomacy by our present leaders. Perhaps in due time, we will regain our footing as one nation among equals.
Posted by:Jack ReeseAugust 21, 2007 12:03:30 PMRespond ^
As an American, I find the NeoConservatives running our political system today to be little more than a bunch of childish, emotionally-driven buffoons, desperate to fend off all challenges to their claim to being "king of the hill". I say kudos to China, Russia, and the other nations of the world to calling this nonsense out for what it is, and building their own hills. I cannot blame them for doing so, even as much as I love my own country. But I can't support such crass and shortsighted stupidity in diplomacy by our present leaders. Perhaps in due time, we will regain our footing as one nation among equals.
Posted by:Jack ReeseAugust 22, 2007 12:40:03 AMRespond ^
glad this is just commentary and not a real article. So Russia is becoming an energy superpower? What about all the peak oil literature saying Russia is depleting faster than nearly all of the major oil producing countries? Nothing is said about Russia's dying/leaving population. Has the author walked around downtown Sydney or Seattle lately? Tons of Russians moving in. Obviously, someone forgot to tell them the country they've left behind is just about to become the next big thing. The fact that Russia is exporting 3/5ths of it's gas suggests they won't be going anywhere anytime soon. Russia is not some small vassal state like Kuwait or Iraq - they have/had a sizable population and are somewhat industrialized. If they really were on the path toward international stardome, they would be using a lot more of that gas themselves, producing "value added" exports rather than having the Europeans come in and basically take it away. No country gets rich exporting resources - that's what colonies are for, and that's why colonies remain provincial, backward and poor. Which segways perfectly into the bit about Chavez. While Chavez is hated by the numbskulls up at the Bush Whitehouse (or down on the Ranch, depending on the time of year), Chavez remains Big Oil's ultimate wetdream. In order to retain power, Chavez irreversably destroyed a good % of his country's oil capacity, while at the same time, took a sizable portion off international markets. He's basically playing right into OPECS hands, which kind of nulifies his former "swing producer" status. And those last few paragraphs about China are so wrong - - - suffice to say, I'll be surprised if China as we know it is still around in ten years time. China is a Western Ghosttown just waiting to happen. The glitz is there now, but when the gold runs out, it's all just desert and buzzards everywhere you look (oh, and 1.4 billion people).
Posted by:stu mannAugust 22, 2007 6:01:10 AMRespond ^
Your foreign policy has been subverted by a foreign nation. Your high offices and banking system have also been subverted by a foreign nation and that foreign nation and its diaspora control what you think through your media. It is time for US citizenry to return to the ideals of the Founding Fathers and to rid yourselves of a foreign parasite and its bought and paid for lawmakers in the US.
Posted by:DeanoAugust 22, 2007 1:27:18 PMRespond ^
The War in Iraq and the Dollar's Slide Throughout most of the Vietnam War, the U.S. dollar was fixed to the value of gold under the Bretton Woods Agreement (one ounce of gold for $35). But by 1971, as the costs of the Vietnam War skyrocketed and the U.S. financed the war by debt and an increase in the money supply (dollars), the administration under President Richard Nixon had to give up the money-for-gold guarantee. In the wake of the Vietnam War, the 1970s brought a slide in the dollar's value, not only against gold but also against the French franc and the deutsche mark, among other currencies. In 1981, one ounce of gold cost more than $800. Today, history repeats itself: the Cost of War Web site shows that the war in Iraq has so far cost the U.S. $422 billion -- and the cost of the U.S.'s increased military budget is not completely included in that number. The Federal Reserve System under Alan Greenspan and Ben Bernanke responded to this with a dramatic increase in the money supply, which led to so-called asset price inflation: most foreign currencies, not only the euro, but also the British pound, the Indian rupee and many others, rose against the dollar. So did the value of gold, which, in terms of dollars, has almost tripled since the beginning of the war on terror. Germans have their own, profound memories of inflations triggered by wars: The great inflation in Germany in 1923 was caused by the World War I and made possible the rise of the Nazis. World War II brought inflation and rendered the deutschemark worthless until the currency reform of 1948. What does a crumbling U.S. dollar mean for the U.S. and the rest of the world? First, inside the U.S., the poor become poorer and the rich become richer, since the rich can hedge their fortunes against a falling dollar. The U.S. will more and more resemble countries like Brazil and many of those in Africa where a tiny, filthy rich elite runs the country and gets all the important jobs in government and industry. An impoverished majority will be kept in ignorance and without access to healthcare and education. Falling voter turnout will render the U.S. a democracy in name only. Second, the power of the U.S. as a center of world capitalism is weakened as gains of wealth outside the U.S. shift the gravity centers of the world economy. The countries that benefit from a weak dollar are those that have their own strong currencies like the euro and those who have commodities like oil. Thus, Russia, Iran and Venezuela -- all foes of the U.S. -- will gain in strength and influence. It is true that the U.S. has one asset that is stronger than all its competitors: the military. Yet the use of the United States Army in the wars in Afghanistan, Iraq and Somalia combined with the arrogance of the Bush administration and its disrespect for human rights, as Guantanamo shows, leads to hate, anger, resentment and widespread anti-Americanism everywhere outside the U.S. This may affect American trade and business. As history shows us, empires not only rise but also fall. Following the long decline of the Roman Empire, the Arabs ruled from A.D. 500 until 1500 from Spain to India, and Malta to Tanzania. From 1500 on, Portugal and Spain commanded huge empires. Later, the Dutch and the British ruled over the majority of mankind. The end of the British Empire coincided with the rise of the U.S. as a superpower. Now, the United States' superpower status is fading away, as the war in Iraq war marks the end of an era.
Posted by:Hartmut KaiserAugust 22, 2007 2:22:06 PMRespond ^
http://www.hornofafrica.de/english/ 2007_eng/03_mar_2007/22augusr_usa2.htm
Posted by:Burhan AliAugust 22, 2007 11:25:39 PMRespond ^
Well, well, well. So the chickens have finally come home to roost in the USA.Of course, nobody over here saw it coming. They never do. They just wave their flags,say the Pledge of Allegiance, and send their jobs to other countries. See, here is how Americans think: 'If my neighbor loses his job, it's a recession. If I lose MY job, it's a depression.' This is the accumulated bad karma of 50 years of arrogance and paranoia. It's really kind of fitting that the rise of China as an economic Superpower began with Wal-Mart, who sought cheap labor. Now where do most Americans go when they can still earn a dollar? Wal-Mart. And who passes the laws that make all of this possible? Why, the American Congress! Now, isn't that the uniquely American Way? Elect the Lawmakers who sell your jobs to other countries which turn them into economic Superpowers that threaten your nation! Brilliant! So, go ahead on, all you Patriots. Keep voting your values instead of your intelligence. Keep voting in the 'We won't negotiate crowd' and in a few years, you may actually get the wish the Fundamentalist Christians pray so hard for everyday...Armageddon.
Posted by:steppenRazorAugust 23, 2007 4:26:38 PMRespond ^
"I'll be surprised if China as we know it is still around in ten years time." Ha! Ha! Ha! I'll be surprised if US as we know it is still around in ten years time.
Posted by:The OneAugust 25, 2007 11:42:49 PMRespond ^
There is always ALFA as well as OMEGA. Even the mighty ROMAN EMPIRE is just a history. God bless us all.
Posted by:EritrawiAugust 30, 2007 3:07:24 AMRespond ^
First of all Russia is a superpower, they have the world's largest nuclear weapon arsenal, 10 times greater than the US, Russia's economy is stronger than the US, BBC news reported this recently. Third they are an energy super giant and their military has been continuing to update in all forces of the 21 century weapons compared to the US and they have every domain of power in ideological, diplomatic and technological fronts. Russia is a superpower because they have the economics, the wealth, the diplomatic power, ideological, technological advances than any other country besides the US, they have the cultural sector and lets not forget their military levels (surpreme). The US is on the mist of a recession and several the US government agenices such as NASA are going bankrupt. Russia is on the raise and I main raise, the country is becoming super rich and now are being placed at the 5th fastest growing country in the world. This is many reasons, the US has annouced this several times and new agencies such as CNN news, Russia is a Superpower but the USA is still the leader but no longer the sole superpower, it is now 2 Superpowers; Russia and the USA Washington Acknowledges Russia as Superpower http://www.kommersant.com/page.asp?id=768929 Also Russia is an energy super giant of the world as well. Russia Super energy power http://www.thefirstpost.co.uk/index.php?storyID=4883 http://edition.cnn.com/2006/WORLD/europe/12/12/russia.oil/index.html http://www.russiaprofile.org/page.p hp?pageid=CDI+Russia+Profile+List&articleid=2015 http://www.strategypage.com/on_point/20041130.aspx http://www.warpeace.org/article.php?story=20070414073647506 http://72.14.253.104/search?q= cache:W9TVovUnRK8J:se2.isn.ch/ serviceengine/FileContent%3FserviceID%3DESDP%26fileid%3D7BC1 A58B-6D27-B7C1-9CAA-9E2793253D B2%26lng%3Den+Washington+Acknowledg es+Russia+as+Superpower&hl=en&ct=clnk&cd=25&gl=us http://www.russophile.com/russ ia_blog/5205-russias_superpowe r_membership_card_returned.html Washington Acknowledges Russia as Superpower http://www.kommersant.com/page.asp?id=768929 http://bhtimes.blogspot.com/2007_05_28_archive.html http://www.spacewar.com/Superpowers.html http://www.spacewar.com/reports/Analysis_SCO_energy_ties_999.html Russia Dangerous Superpower (??) http://www.cambridge.org/catalogue/ catalogue.asp?isbn=9780521545297&ss=fro A Former Superpower Rises Again http://www.spiegel.de/international/spiegel/0,1518,426393,00.html http://www.spiegel.de/international /spiegel/0,1518,druck-426393,00.html Russia: A superpower rises again POSTED: 1203 GMT (2003 HKT), December 13, 2006 Says Russia was always a Superpower http://edition.cnn.com/2006/WORLD/europe/12/12/russia.oil/index.html http://www.beliefnet.com/boards/message_list.asp?discussionID=580084 Russia on the march - again By Con Coughlin Last Updated: 12:01am BST 13/04/2007 http://www.telegraph.co.uk/opinion/ main.jhtml?xml=/opinion/2007/04/13/do1303.xml Russia - Economic Superpower http://lightworker.com/store/product_info.php?products_id=58 In the playground of the superpowers http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Central_Asia/II21Ag01.html
Posted by:ScottNovember 9, 2007 2:24:58 AMRespond ^
Russia is already a superpower again, the US gov't has said it in 2007 and even in 2006 at the G8 meeting in St. Petersburg Russia, the Bush Adminstration was there and no one opposed the comments.

Washington acknowledges Russia as a Superpower:
http://www.kommersant.com/page.asp?id=768929

http://www.cambridge.org/us/catalogue/catalogue.asp?isbn=0521836786
Posted by:ScottJune 23, 2008 1:50:04 PMRespond ^

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