On the global hegemony of the
      American Empire
      Fickle, Bitter, and Dangerous
      An interview with Chalmers Johnson by David Ross
      
      Chalmers Johnson served in the Navy during the Korean War. He earned his
      Ph.D. in political science at UC Berkeley and taught there and at UC San
      Diego until 1992. He served as chairman of the Center for Chinese
      Studies and was elected a fellow of the American Academy of Arts and
      Sciences. Chalmers Johnson is president and co-founder of the Japan
      Policy Research Institute (www.jpri.org). He has written
      numerous
      articles and reviews and twelve books on Asian subjects, including,
      Peasant Nationalism and Communist Power, MITI and the Japanese Miracle,
      and Blowback: The Costs and Consequences of American Empire. His latest
      book is titled, The Sorrows of Empire: Militarism, Secrecy, and the End
      of the Republic.
      
      
      David Ross (D.R.): Throughout the Internet after the September 11th
      attacks, there was a lot of talk of blowback. When, in fact, a year
      before the attacks, you wrote the book Blowback: The Costs and
      Consequences of American Empire, where you predicted events such as
      9-11. What is blowback and what are its causes?
      
      Chalmers Johnson: "Blowback" is a CIA term. It was first invented after
      the CIA intervention against the government of Iran in 1953 when we
      overthrew an elected government there for the interests of the British
      and American petroleum industries. Blowback refers to the unintended
      consequences of clandestine policies that have been kept secret from the
      American public. I think it's important to stress that any policy may
      have unintended consequences, but here we're talking about unintended
      consequences of policies that the public knows nothing about, therefore,
      has no context within which to place them, and ends up with a daffy
      president going around asking, "Why do they hate us?" 
      
      My analysis was that the things we had done during the cold war, and the
      first decade after the cold war, were generating almost uncontrollable
      blowback. I did not, obviously, specifically anticipate anything like
      9-11, but I certainly did anticipate and predict terrorist acts against
      Americans-military and civilian, abroad and at home-and therefore, was
      not particularly surprised when the attacks came on the World Trade
      Center and the Pentagon in September of 2001. At the time, I did not
      think that they were necessarily Islamic terrorists; I thought they
      could have been from Argentina, Chile, Indonesia, Okinawa, Greece, or
      any number of places on earth where we have carried out clandestine
      activities that unquestionably generate hostility toward the United
      States. 
      
      My book was written as an explicit warning to my fellow Americans of the
      likely consequences of their policies over the previous decade and
      earlier. The warning was unheeded in the United States. The book was
      very well received abroad, particularly in Germany and Italy. But it was
      more or less ignored here until after 9-11, when, as you say, it became
      somewhat of an underground bestseller because of the surprise that the
      world finally came home to the Americans.
      
       
      
      DR: What are some instances of past blowback and possible future
      blowback against the U.S?
      
      Chalmers Johnson: First of all, I think the obvious thing right now is
      our mistaken reaction to 9-11. It became almost taboo in this country
      after 9-11 to even ask what the motives of the attackers were. The
      public has now been so confused by lies from our government that they
      believe Saddam Hussein was the one behind it. Of course, we know he
      wasn't, and since there is no evidence that he could have been, the
      people have gotten that idea only from listening to the disinformation
      that comes from the White House and the Pentagon. 
      
      September 11th was not an attack on America's values or America's
      democracy or America's wealth. It was an attack on American foreign
      policy and there were some fairly obvious things that should have been
      done at once which would have defused the situation. First, we should
      have withdrawn the troops at once that we had based in Saudi Arabia.
      Since the first war with Iraq in 1991, they were just exacerbating the
      situation rather than serving any real function. Second, we should have
      said that we do support the continuity of the state of Israel, but we do
      not support Israeli Zionist imperialism. And that until the settlements
      in the West Bank are closed-which are a cancer working on Israeli
      society in a destructive manner-we're going to cease our continued
      bankrolling of Israel, both financially and militarily. Last, we should
      have instituted at once a crash program of fuel conservation that could
      have easily eliminated our dependence on Persian Gulf petroleum imports.
      
      
      We didn't do any of those things. Instead, we set out to use our massive
      military power against two peculiarly puny and defenseless
      targets-Afghanistan and Iraq-producing untold misery. This will without
      question generate and recruit more people committed to the idea of
      attacking the United States. 
      
      The Department of Defense has said for years that nobody can meet us
      militarily except in one of two ways: one, with the use of nuclear
      weapons, which would deter us; and the other is what they call, in
      typical Pentagon jargon, "asymmetrical warfare," meaning the weak
      attacking the super powerful via terrorism. There is every reason to
      anticipate that we will have more terrorism as we increasingly sink into
      the two quagmires that we have created in Afghanistan and Iraq.
      
       
      
      DR: You've done a lot of research on U.S./Asian relations. Can you give
      us a historical thumbnail sketch of the U.S. involvement in South Korea?
      
      Chalmers Johnson: It goes back to the Korean War in 1950-1953 and we've
      been stationed there ever since. We have over one hundred military bases
      in South Korea. Peace began to break out in Korea in the year 2000 when
      the new South Korean president, Kim Dae-jung, on his own initiative,
      without asking permission from the United States, went north and tried
      to end the cold war on the Korean peninsula by opening direct
      negotiations with North Korea-with Kim Jong Il's regime. He came back
      after a triumph. It appeared as though, as he said in an op-ed in the
      Los Angeles Times, the chances of war on the Korean peninsula had just
      vanished. 
      
      This development was extremely threatening to the American military, the
      military-industrial complex, and those who believe in some form of
      American empire in that part of the world, they have done everything
      since then to cause this situation to backtrack-to not allow peace to
      break out on the Korean peninsula. 
      
      With the extremely belligerent remarks coming from the Bush
      Administration, including Bush's statement in the State of the Union
      address in 2002 that North Korea was part of something that he called an
      "axis of evil," the North Koreans concluded that, indeed, they were
      targeted by the United States for a regime change in the violent manner
      they've already seen happen in Afghanistan and Iraq. As the threat
      implicit in American policy became manifest with the massive attack on
      Iraq, the North Koreans concluded that the only way they could defend
      themselves was with the threat of nuclear weapons. The thing that was
      wrong with Saddam Hussein in Iraq is he didn't actually have any weapons
      of mass destruction and therefore, was vulnerable to the bullying of the
      Donald Rumsfelds and the Condoleezza Rices of this world. 
      
      Therefore, we have a genuine crisis today. The North Koreans have
      reopened their nuclear reactor, begun to reprocess old spent fuel rods
      from their reactor and convert them into plutonium, and are well on
      their way toward developing a nuclear arsenal. I believe the issue can
      still be controlled because the surrounding nations-South Korea, Japan,
      and China-all recognize that North Korea's activities are essentially
      defensive. It is an isolated country that was ruined by the end of the
      cold war, a failed communist country that has no real future and is
      desperately trying to come in from the cold the way China did 20 years
      ago. 
      
      But the chief issue is the volatility in Washington and whether or not
      we can cause the president and his advisors to back down and assume a
      more reasonable position in what is clearly a negotiable situation. The
      North Koreans have said they would dismantle their nuclear weapons
      capability in return for some guarantee that the Americans don't intend
      to simply squash them the way they did Iraq. They want a non-aggression
      treaty or at least some other very public statement by the United States
      that it will not carry out aggression against North Korea. This has
      struck our allies in South Korea as utterly reasonable, and it has
      helped to fuel a very considerable anti-American movement in South Korea
      at the present time.
      
       
      
      DR: I've read in several different sources that near four million
      Koreans were killed by U.S. military forces and U.S. client forces
      before and during the Korean War. Would you agree with this figure?
      
      Chalmers Johnson: I don't know if the number is accurate or not. But
      certainly the revelations of the killing of unarmed civilians at Nogunri
      during the Korean War, the almost relentless carpet bombing of North
      Korea, and the general atrocities carried out by American troops that
      seemed to have a basis in racism, have been suppressed for a long time
      in South Korea but are coming to the fore again as they begin to see
      American aggression in the field.
      
       
      
      DR: In your book, Blowback, you also talk about how Japan is still a
      client state of the U.S. government as is South Korea. Can you give us a
      thumbnail sketch of the U.S. involvement in Japan?
      
      Chalmers Johnson: We created satellites in East Asia after World War II
      in the areas that we had conquered in exactly the same way and for more
      or less the same reasons that the Soviet Union created satellites in
      Eastern Europe-satellites that gained their independence from the Soviet
      Union after the Berlin Wall was breached in 1989. Then, of course, the
      Soviet Union fell apart in 1991. One of the reasons for my writing
      Blowback was the end of the cold war in 1991 and the disappearance of
      the menace of the Soviet Union. The United States, far from demobilizing
      and trying to generate a peace dividend, was instead doing everything in
      its power throughout the 1990s to shore up cold war structures in East
      Asia and expand our empire of military bases into the Middle East, the
      Persian Gulf, and Central Asia. 
      
      The problem is that this old structure is quite wobbly today, above all,
      on economic grounds. Economics was the one thing that was really
      different between our satellites and those of the Soviet Union. We said
      to Japan and South Korea: In return for allowing us to station American
      forces on your soil, indefinitely, without your having any control over
      them despite all the nuisances that come with that, we would, in return,
      give you free and open access to the American market, then and still
      today, the world's largest market. And more importantly, we would
      tolerate their protectionism, developing their own economies at our
      expense. We said this in the early 1950's when we couldn't imagine that
      they could ever become economic competitors
      
      This has now come to the point where East Asia is quite industrialized.
      It produces the largest trade surpluses in economic history that are
      destined for the United States-trade surpluses in places like Japan,
      South Korea, and Mainland China. This trade imbalance is something that
      simply can't go on forever. At some point, the economic consequences of
      our empire will bankrupt us, which is one of the sorrows of empire that
      I talk about in my new book. 
      
      Meanwhile, the presence of American military bases in places like
      Okinawa where we have 38 bases on an island smaller than Kauai in the
      Hawaiian Islands, has produced a place that is almost volcanic in its
      anti-Americanism. These military bases continue to generate
      incidents-sexual violence, accidents, pollution, airplane crashes,
      etc.-that build long-term distrust and dislike. What we're seeing is
      almost a classic situation of subordinated peoples slowly developing the
      attitudes and the alliances to resist American imperialism.
      
       
      
      DR: In your book, Blowback, you also describe how the Asian financial
      crisis, which infected Brazil and Russia also, was actually caused by
      U.S. interests in order to weaken the Asian economic tigers and keep
      them in their place.
      
      Chalmers Johnson: One of the things that worried the United States
      throughout the 1980s was that it became the world's largest net debtor
      nation-we owed more money to other people than anybody else-whereas
      Japan became the world's largest creditor nation. This should have been
      a signal right then and there to alter this old relationship. We didn't.
      Instead, the Japanese clung to us more tightly and we enjoyed having
      them as our satellite in permanent orbit around our foreign policy.
      Their foreign policy is essentially being dictated to them by Washington
      D.C. Over time this situation becomes more and more unstable. 
      
      We became deeply concerned, however, about the fact that Japan was
      becoming such a rich and powerful manufacturing country. All you have to
      do is look at any American parking lot to see what I'm talking about:
      The kind of enormous competition that Japan offered to the American
      automobile industry, and the fact that virtually all consumer
      electronics are made in Japan, South Korea, or Taiwan today. 
      
      Therefore, there's no question that we used organizations that are our
      surrogates, our proxies-the International Monetary Fund (IMF), the World
      Bank, and the World Trade Organization-to destabilize various nations in
      East Asia and to make them subordinate to us. 
      
      It was a shocking development for the Asian economic tigers. They've
      slowly begun to recover from it. South Korea has recovered very nicely.
      But the legacy it has left is that the United States is considered
      fickle, bitter, and dangerous, and that an alliance with the United
      States is probably more costly than it's worth. These attitudes now
      carry over into places like Argentina, which was formerly the fine pupil
      of American economic theories; the election of Lula da Silva in Brazil;
      and the anti-American attitudes caused by the great poverty imposed by
      the IMF in places like Ecuador and Venezuela. 
      
      These attitudes are now hardening. If we look forward and ask when will
      the American empire start to unravel, I would predict that our military
      is so strong, I don't really expect it to occur on military grounds, but
      I think we can expect an economic crisis in the not too distant future.
      The attempt to dominate the entire globe militarily is an extremely
      expensive proposition, and we are not in a very good position to do that
      compared to other empires. The British Empire, on the eve of the First
      World War, had trade surpluses in the neighborhood of 7 percent of Gross
      Domestic Product (GDP). They were a rich country and could afford to do
      what they wanted to do, even make mistakes, like the Boer War in South
      Africa. 
      
      The United States for the last 15 years has had trade deficits that are
      the largest ever recorded in economic history and today are running at
      around 5 percent of GDP. The buoyancy of our financial markets-since we
      save almost nothing in this country-depends almost entirely on capital
      imports from savings-oriented countries, particularly those in East
      Asia. Anytime these countries start concluding that the United States is
      not a safe place to invest or that there are alternatives, such as the
      emerging European Union, then the United States will find itself in
      extremely serious trouble with a howling deflation. 
      
       
      
      DR: In June 2003, Paul Wolfowitz was in Japan advocating that Japanese
      troops be sent to Iraq. Could you comment on that?
      
      Chalmers Johnson: The odd thing in East Asia, which is, except for
      places like North Korea, one of the richest parts of the world today is
      that peace is breaking out. China has turned decisively in a commercial
      direction and is today one of the major manufacturing centers on earth.
      Except for the United States and Britain, it absorbs more direct foreign
      investment than any other country on earth. It is quite integrated into
      the world's manufacturing system at the present time and has a huge
      trade surplus with the United States. 
      
      There is no enemy that requires our military presence in East Asia,
      except in so far as we are worried that China, 50 years from now, with
      the world's largest population and an economy that's growing faster than
      any other economy on earth, may well rival us in terms of our power to
      push people around. I don't believe there is any real sense of a
      military threat. 
      
      Nonetheless, we have now become so committed to military
      means-militarism is so far advanced in our country and we have such
      massive forces deployed in East Asia-that Wolfowitz and the like are
      doing their best to insure that peace does not break out. They do
      everything in their power to push Japan into further rearmament, to
      exacerbate the situation on the Korean peninsula, and to continue to
      talk to the Taiwanese about the possibility of war with China. In fact,
      the Taiwanese situation is largely being resolved by economic
      integration between the mainland and Taiwan. 
      
      Wolfowitz was touring the area from Singapore up through Korea and
      Japan, making belligerent statements everywhere he went. What does it
      sound like? It sounds like the Roman Empire. They are concerned about
      the potential growth-not any genuine, serious threat-of China over the
      long term.
      
       
      
      D.R.: What solid evidence is there that the Bush Administration is lying
      to the general public about the recent invasion of Iraq; and secondly,
      do you think they're going to attack other nations in the Middle East?
      
      Chalmers Johnson: The evidence is now overwhelming that the so-called
      main reason for the attack on Iraq-the threat that Saddam Hussein had
      weapons of mass destruction, meaning nuclear, biological and chemical
      weapons-has evaporated. And there's ample evidence that the
      administration lied to the public, and knew they were lying in the sense
      that the documents alleging, for example, that Iraq was importing
      uranium from Niger were forged. They relied on intelligence from the
      British government that was plagiarized from other open and public
      sources. The credibility of Colin Powell simply is gone after his
      performance at the United Nations on February 5th, 2003. No one in their
      right mind would ever believe a thing he said again. 
      
      As for further war in the Middle East, the people who have been making
      policy, concentrated above all in the Pentagon around people like Paul
      Wolfowitz and under the influence of Rumsfeld and Condoleezza Rice, have
      certainly proclaimed their desire to carry the war further. They are
      also deeply influenced by the right wing in Israel, by the Likud Party,
      the party of Ariel Sharon. 
      
      Therefore, the only thing that apparently might stop them from further
      wars in, for example, Syria or Iran-which there's already evidence
      they're trying to destabilize-is the growing quagmire in Iraq itself.
      The American public, whether they're informed about the war or not, will
      not tolerate many further casualties of the sort that have been
      occurring after the president so flamboyantly declared the war was over.
      
       
      
      David Ross hosts a talk show on KMUD radio in Redway, CA. He is a
      grassroots activist who has worked on the Nader campaign, corporate
      malfeasance, U.S. foreign policy, and environmental issues. He can be
      reached at daveross27@hotmail.com.