EU, China, Immigration: Washington’s Dangerous
Illusions
By Paul Craig Roberts
It is not obvious that the U.S.
is headed for a fall. How could it be? Our country is
the only superpower. We are the number one military
power and the number one economic power. We are the
leader in science and technology. Our language is the
world language, and our currency is the world
currency.
These successes give us real
strengths, but they also make it easier for us to fall
prey to illusions. The U.S. has three dangerous
illusions. One is that we can maintain our special
relationship with Great Britain even as we push the
British into the European Community. Once England is
part of Europe, we will have lost our most trusted
ally of the past 60 years.
The British, with one foot in
Europe and the other in the Atlantic Alliance, have
given us the diplomatic leverage to carry our foreign
policy. Without this leverage, the U.S. will find
itself isolated in Europe by France and EC bureaucrats
in Brussels.
The NATO alliance itself will not
survive the absorption of the British into the EC. The
European army organized by France, the European Rapid
Reaction Force, will crowd out NATO. With NATO’s
demise goes our British and European bases and our
ability to project military power far beyond our
shores.
The U.S. will be the same country
with the same technology, but our reach will have
shrunk. The shrinkage will affect economics, diplomacy
and our foreign policy.
The shrinkage will embolden those
inclined to aggressively pursue their spheres of
influence. Here China comes to mind. Our policy toward
China is based on the
illusion
that we can win China over with favors. We have
provided China with our secret missile and satellite
technology, investment capital, consumer goods
technology, and access to our consumer markets.
This policy of
"openness" is supposed to moderate China and
make the Chinese into partners. This is one possible
outcome, but less
desirable
ones are as likely. The Chinese could see our policy
as stupid or arrogant and be encouraged in their
belief that China can reduce or eliminate our
influence in Asia.
If we continue to pursue policies
that portend our isolation in Europe and Asia, Middle
Eastern oil is up for grabs. It is farfetched that our
fleet, shorn of its forward bases, can protect our
interests in the Middle East. Terrorists have no doubt
learned from the mayhem caused by foot and mouth
disease in Britain how easy it would be to dissuade
any of our former allies who might be inclined to
rally around in a time of crisis.
Our third and greatest illusion
is our immigration policy. The immigration
policy put in place by
Democrats in 1965 is changing the racial and cultural
composition of the U.S. As experts have noted,
assimilation is breaking down due to sustained high
rates of immigration from third world countries.
Two other reasons are causing a
halt to assimilation. One is an unexpected
consequence of U.S.
civil rights policy. In order to jumpstart integration
of blacks into society, "preferred
minorities" were (unconstitutionally) given
privileged legal standing.
These legal privileges were
supposed to be temporary and, therefore, no lasting
threat to equality in law. However, these privileges
are now a 35-year-old inherited right. Getting rid of
these temporary privileges is proving to be a massive
struggle that may be lost. Many American elites
support differential group rights as a way of
achieving equality of result. Moreover, as Tony
Smith, a scholar at
Tufts University, points out in a new
book
published by Harvard, the retention of these racial
privileges is supported "by an ever more powerful
Mexican-American
lobby."
The
combination of civil rights and immigration policies
has created a situation in which millions of
immigrants, none of whom are victims of alleged past
discrimination in the U.S., find themselves privileged
over native-born white Americans. A caste society is
gradually emerging in which white Americans are second-class
citizens.
The second reason assimilation
has halted is the rise of "multiculturalism"
in education. Education has two primary
functions—literacy and enculturation. With the
emphasis on diversity and deconstruction of
"hegemonic European culture," enculturation
has broken down even among whites.
A country whose civil rights and
immigration policies have produced a nation of
adversaries with differential group rights and no
common culture, and whose foreign policy is
eliminating its ability to project power, will not
continue to be a major player on the world scene. A Chinese warlord
looking ahead 30 years could easily conclude that the
U.S. will not be an obstacle.
Paul
Craig Roberts is the author (with Lawrence M. Stratton)
of The
New Color
Line : How Quotas and Privilege Destroy Democracy
COPYRIGHT 2001 CREATORS
SYNDICATE, INC.
April 10, 2001