Nikolaj von Kreitor
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RUSSIA AND THE NEW WORLD ORDER
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THE GEOPOLITICAL PROJECT OF PAX EURASIATICA
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For the period after the end of Second World War, the United
States gained increasing prominence as the leading power of imperialist
reaction, taking Germany’s place in this respect... And its ruling class
managed, particularly during the imperialist era, to have the democratic
forms so effectively preserved that by democratically legal means, it achieved
a dictatorship of monopoly capitalism at least as firm as that which Hitler
set up by tyrannical procedures...And this democracy could, in substance,
realize everything sought by Hitler.
Gyorgy Lukacs(1)
Resoluteness does not first take cognizance of Situation and put
that Situation before itself; it has put itself into that Situation already.
As resolute, Dasein is already taking action.
Martin Heidegger(2)
We don’t have enemies in the East.
Bismarck
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| The concept of the state presupposes the concept of the political.
The specific political distinction to which political actions and motives
can be reduced is that between friend and foe, wrote Carl Schmitt.(3) The
affirmation of the political is a recognition of the reality of the political
and thus a recognition and identification of the foe. Only by affirmation
of the political in an act of decision, which by necessity is a meta-existential
choice, can a nation as a collective entity assert its own sovereignty
and thus political future.
In the aftermath of the dissolution of Soviet Union in 1991 which reduced
the former Great Power to a state without politics and thus to a landmass
in chaos, a sort of a Weimar-republic of the 90-ties, and in the face of
the new American expansionism, the ideological discussion and search for
viable political orientation within the former Soviet Union has intensified.
Professor Nikolaj Zagladin pointed recently that the competition between
the Soviet Union and the United States during the period of the Cold War
must be characterized as a real war during which actual military power
had been used to a very limited extend- mostly in proxy wars. This was
so not because of a lack of will but because of the nature of the military
technology— the existence of nuclear weapons made the war impossible. The
nature of the war between the United States and the Soviet Union, known
as the Cold War, was to its essence technology specific. But the Cold War
was in fact the Third World War, claims Zagladin.(4) To a similar conclusion
comes Zbigniew Brzezinski, the former National Security Advisor to President
Carter, and presently one of the major ideologists of the «Expansionists
of 1991», who wrote, paraphrasing von Clausewitz, that «the
Cold War can be defined as warfare by other (non-lethal) means. Nonetheless,
warfare it was. And the stakes were monumental. Geopolitically the struggle,
in the first instance, was for control over the Eurasian landmass and,
eventually, even for global preponderance».(5)
Obviously the Soviet Union gave up much more in the settlement than
the United States, agreed to the dissolution of the Warsaw Pact, although
the military arm of American domination of Western Europe, NATO, continues
to exist and is steadily expanding. Soviet Union unilaterally reduced its
engagement in the Third World while the United States escalated her interventionist
foreign policies. Soviet Union even supported the war in Iraq, a war that
to its essence was a war for the control of the oil in the Persian Gulf
and thus a war against the national interest not only the Soviet Union,
but also of other European countries; a war that made it less likely that
an accommodation between the Soviet Union and Western European countries
could be reached. Soviet Union even agreed to withdraw its military forces
from Germany while the United States intends to permanent her occupation
of Germany, a fact that was clearly stated by President Bush during the
November 7-8, 1991 NATO summit meeting in Rome.
And that brings us to the post Cold War settlement, its consequences
for Russia and for the international order. A critical observer will characterize
this settlement as analogous to a Second Treaty of Versailles. Zbigniew
Brzezinski point out that as a consequence of the Second Treaty of Versailles,
the defeated Russia is passing into American receivership.
«This is an outcome historically no less decisive and no less
one-sided than the defeat of Napoleonic France in 1815, or of Imperial
Germany in 1918. Unlike the Peace of Westphalia, which ended the Thirty
Years War in a grand religious compromise, cuius regio, cuius religio ,
does not apply here. Rather, from a doctrinal point of view, the outcome
is more similar to 1815 or 1945; the ideology of the losing side has itself
been repudiated. Geopolitically the outcome is also suggestive of 1918,
the defeated empire is in a process of dismantlement. As in previous termination
of war there was a discernible moment of capitulation, followed by postwar
political upheavals in the losing state. That moment came most probably
in Paris on November 19, 1990. At a conclave marked by ostentatious displays
of amity designed to mask the underlying reality, the erstwhile Soviet
leader, Michael Gorbachev, who had led the Soviet Union during the final
stages of the Cold War, accepted the conditions of the victors by describing
in veiled and elegant language the unification of Germany that had taken
place entirely on Western terms as a ‘major event’. This was the functional
equivalent of the act of capitulation in the railroad car in Compiegne
in 1918 (the capitulation of Germany) or on the U.S.S. Missouri in August
1945 (the capitulation of Japan).»(6)
George Kennan remarked that «the collapse of the Soviet system
amounted to the unconditional surrender we envisaged-a voluntary one if
you will, but surrender nevertheless.»(7) And as a result the United
States is attempting to impose on Russia terms of surrender stated in the
National Security Council Memorandum 20/1 (NSC 20/1) which already in 1948
defined the American war aims in the Cold War and envisioned a post Cold
War settlement tailored after the Brest-Litovsk treaty of 1918(8) , leading
to the partition of the Soviet Union, disarmament, destruction of the national
economy of Russia and establishment of American protectorate over large
parts of the territory of the former Soviet Union:
(...)Such terms would have to be harsh ones and distinctly humiliating...They
might well be something along the lines of the Brest-Litovsk settlement
of 1918...(We) would have to demand:
a. Direct military terms (surrender of equipment, evacuation of key
areas, etc) designed to assure military helplessness...
b. Terms designed to produce a considerable economic dependence on
the outside world.(9)
NSC 20/1 stated further that the unified geopolitical space of the Soviet
Union—the «fortress Heartland»—had to be destroyed by partitioning
of the country and inclusion of above all the Baltic States and Ukraine
into a Shatterbelt of U.S.A controlled territory.
Wolfram Henrieder has pointed out that de Gaulle wanted the German
issue solved- the unification of Germany, because it constituted a decisive
cause and justification for American continuous military presence in Europe,
a cause that would be eliminated with the solution of the German question,
leading to the dissolution of the Cold War military alliances and speeding
American withdrawal from Europe(10) , creating an emancipated Europe to
the Urals. «The creation of unified Europe requires political decision
which is tantamount to a will of independence... A united Europe, in this
sense, could be build only in opposition to America.»(11) By her
dominant position within the alliance America has kept Europe in a straitjacket,
has made her fearful of speaking in her own voice. Since Europe has lost
its elan and has borrowed an American personality, it must be forced to
reassume an identity. As this identity does not exists, it must be created.
If Europe can be roused only by instilling an apprehension over American
hegemony, then this must be done for the sake of Europe’s survival, claimed
de Gaulle for whom a truly emancipated Europe was an America-free Europe.
From this perspective Gorbachev’s foreign policy and the geopolitics
of implosion of Perestrojka negatively effected the possibilities for emancipation
of Europe. In the ongoing political debate in Russia but also in France,
it has been asserted that the defeat of the Soviet Union begins to appear
as a defeat for Europe as well.
Lenin once characterized the original Treaty of Versailles in the following
words:
“What is the Versailles Treaty? This unheard of, predatory peace, enslaves
tens of millions of people, including the most civilized. This is not a
treaty but dictates imposed by robbers with a knife in hand on a defenseless
Germany. Germany has been deprived from all her colonies by virtue of the
Versailles Treaty. Turkey, Persia and China have been enslaved. Seventy
percent of the world population live in conditions of enslavement...And
that is why this international order, which rests on the Versailles Treaty,
rests in reality on a volcano."(12)
And while Russia at the moment is in the same predicament as Germany
after the W.W.I, the predatory New World Order, proclaimed by President
Bush and implemented by the present Clinton administration, also rests
on a volcano.
The intensifying confrontation of Russia with the dictates of the New
World Order has led to intensive ideological debate about the future of
Russia. This debate has resulted in a renewed interest for the writings
of the prominent German jurist Carl Schmitt whose book, “The Concept of
the Political”, has already been translated into Russian and published
in the sociological magazine Voprosy Sotsiologij.(13) The known Russian
politician and chief editor of the influential magazine Elementy (Elements)
Alexander Dugin must be credited with the first comprehensive introduction
of the works of Carl Schmitt in the essay “Carl Schmitt- Five Lessons for
Russia”, published in the Journal of Russian Writers ‘Nash Sovremennik’
(Our Contemporary)(14) and with the creative applications of his writing
to the contemporary political and ideological chaos in Russia.
“For Russia the writing of Schmitt are of special interest and significance
because of his brilliant analysis of state of emergency and exceptional
situations in contemporary political reality and the necessity of a decision
to preserve the national existence of people. ..People exists politically
only if they constitute an independent political community/entity and only
if they as an entity oppose other political entities in order to preserve
its understanding of the cultural specificity of its own community...The
theory of exceptional circumstances and with it related theme of decision
are of paramount importance for us today, because we are now in such historical
juncture of the history of Russian people and Russian state in which the
state of emergency has become a natural state of our nation, permeating
and constituting the Being of our nation...We Russians must discover and
understand our national essence and existence because we live in a time
of emergency which demands a act of collective existential choice, an act
of supreme decision.”(15)
Here one can see a Heideggerian motif- the political identifies the
essence and existence of community; it is the empirical Russian nation
which in a time of national emergency must become fully political in an
act of self-choice and decision and thus choose itself and its own historical
destiny.(16) The act of self-choice presupposes a nation that has become
political because only the political being of Russia gives existential
meaning to the friend-enemy antithesis, what does not politically exist
cannot consciously decide(17) , political unity is grounded on political
existence. Political sovereignty is an existential question because it
concerns the resolution of an existential conflict. Not only does every
politically-existing people decide on the question of its own political
existence and any possible danger to it; it decides also on whether an
existential question actually exists- a question which is political by
its very nature. Since for politically-existing people there is always
the possibilities of an existential conflict, the question of sovereignty,
i.e. the ultimate existential decision, always remains open.(18) «Every
existing political unity has its value and existential justification not
in the rightness or usefulness of norms but in its existence. Juridically
considered, what exists as apolitical force has value because it exists.
From this stems its ‘right to self-preservation’, the presupposition of
all further considerations; it seeks above all to maintain its existence
, it protects its existence, its integrity, its security, and its constitution
- all existential values»(19)
Carl Schmitt points out that «as long people exists in the political
sphere, it must itself make use of the distinction between friend and enemy,
at the same time reserving it for extreme conjunctures which it itself
judges as such. This is where the essence of its political existence lies.
From the moment it lacks the capacity or the will to use this distinction,
a people ceases to exist politically...If the people should no longer have
the strength or the will to continue in the political sphere, this is not
the end of politics in the world. It is only the end of weak people...If
the state refuses or is unable to make a decision in an exceptional situation,
it inevitable runs the risk that other forces will make one in its place
and establish their norms.»(20) Building on this theme Alexander
Dugin sees the elements of will, decision and time intertwined in the quest
for historical existence of Russia:
«Decisionism not only amplifies and focuses on the state of emergency
and the exceptional circumstances, but it is also a defense reaction against
those circumstances: in the moment of historical decision for authentic
national future, the people and the nation actualize their past and decide
their future in a dramatic mobilization of the present. The present then
becomes the focal point and synthesis of three qualitative characteristics
of time: its source, i.e. the past when people entered into a historical
existence, the will of the people directed toward the future, and the political
self-assertion of the historically existing people in an act of decision
which at the same time is an act of authenticity, in the present. In the
supreme mobilization of the decision the historically existing Russian
people reveals, recaptures and mobilizes its timeless historical uniqueness
and identity. Therefore the political and historical future of Russian
people is build on understanding and affirmation of its historical past...
If the Russian people can self-assert themselves and their historical
choice in this fateful and dramatic juncture, and if the Russian people
are able to reveal and designate friends and enemies, recapturing from
the flow of history its political self assertion, then the supreme political
decision of the Russian people would be an authentic, historical and existential
decision , an affirmation of thousand years of history of Russian people
and the Russian state. If on the other hand political decisions will be
taken by others, i.e. by the United States in the guise of the insidious
ideology of pseudo universalism, which the United States is in the process
of establishing as the only legitimate ideology in the New World Order,
then our future will be un-Russian, i.e. the future will cease to exist
for us. The historical Being of Russian people, Russian state and the Russian
nation will became a Being without a future and thus a non-Being. Thus
also Russian past will loose its meaning, will dissipate into nothingness:
the historical drama of Russian history in the post-Gold War period will
became a tragedy of submission under the dictates of the American New World
Order, a tragedy of annihilation of Russian future».(21)
«Past, present, and future are existential characteristics, and
thus render possible fundamental phenomena such as understanding, concern
and determination. This opens the way for the demonstration of historicity
as a fundamental existential determination.»(22) Alexander Dugin
emphasizes that the essence of a nation’s being-in-the world is a hermeneutical
process of questioning and problematization of a crisis situation, a state
of emergency. The concept of political existence of the Russian nation
is actualized in a time of radical disintegration and regression, a time
of emergency and outer and inner danger which creates awareness of being
situated in a crises which must take on a political form. The understanding
of the political roll of Russia in contemporary world after the dissolution
of the Soviet Union, is a power to grasp the nation’s possibilities for
being, which by necessity not only requires a disclosure of the nation’s
concrete potentialities for being, in a sense of preserving itself and
maintaining its own authenticity, but also the revealment of the sources
for an inauthentic national existence. This revealment presupposes the
identification of the foe which in the process of a national self-understanding
becomes manifest; the hermeneutical circle thus closes - the reached understanding
leads to resoluteness and demands a political decision on the part of the
Russian nation;(23) because the potentiality for authentic national Being
remains a mere potentiality unless accompanied by political decisionism.
It is the decision to choose itself and thereby to oppose the foe and thus
become political, which is the supreme political act of the nation.
Those are the issues that are entertained in the most recent issues
of Elementy (Elements), the ideological organ of the Russian opposition,
dedicated to geopolitical discourse and ideological alternatives in the
post-Cold War Russia, a period in which in the words of Aaron Friedberg,
Professor in political sciences in Princeton, « the United States
has emerged as a single, unchallenged ‘Great Satan’, against whom all ideological
energies must be mobilized». The magazine is published by the Center
for Special Meta-Strategical Studies in Moscow and beside Alexander Dugin,
who is the publisher, lists among its co-editors the editor of the most
important opposition newspaper Zavtra (formely Den’), Alexander Prochanov,
the New European Right’s ideologists Alain de Benoist (editor of the French
magazines Neuvelle Ecole, Elements, Krisis), Robert Steuckers (editor of
the Belgian magazines Orientations, Synergies Europeennes and Vouloir)
the Italian geopolitician Claudio Mutti, the Serbian geopolitician Dragosh
Kalajic, as well as the controversial Russian politician and member of
the former Parliament, colonel Victor Alsknis.(25) The interesting issues
contain a translation of Carl Schmitt’s essay on “Nomos and the principle
of Grossraum”, Karl Haushofer’s work on “Continental geopolitical unity”
as well as contributions of authors such as Alain de Benoist and the Austrian
general Heinrich Jordis von Lochhausen, the foremost theoretician of contemporary
geopolitics and advocate of European liberation from American occupation.
Alexander Dugin must be credited with both political imagination and
ideological creativeness. He introduces a new vocabulary of resistance.
In the tradition of a true iconoclast he identifies not only the foe of
Russia and, in the future, of Europe— the United States , but also exposes
the most pervasive ideological mystification— Der Mythus des 20. Jahrhunderts—
namely the Myth of American Democracy and its claim of pseudo-universality.
And finally he argues for the establishment of a new Grossraum in Europe,
Pax Euroasiatica , opposing Pax Americana, and based on a coalition of
Russia with Central European powers such a Germany and France—a new geopolitical
continental block. In essence this concept could be described as a Monroe
Doctrine for Europe which will exclude every American intervention in European
affairs as well as necessitate a dissolution of NATO and withdrawal of
all American military forces from European soil. A Monroe Doctrine for
Europe is also a radical departure from the established American paradigm
of international order- defined by Zbigniew Brzezinski as »American
domination of Europe is axiomatic»(26) —,a paradigm that has been
transformed into oppressive political theology and exercise of American
hegemony.
The relevance of Dugin’s writings as well as the magazine Elementy lies
in the formulation of the geopolitical doctrine of Eurasian defense against
American expansionism. The geopolitical discourse translates itself into
a vision of future liberation which, according to Dugin, must become a
categorical imperative for Russia’s-being-in the-world.
THE PRINCIPLE OF GROSSRAUM
The most fundamental principle in geopolitics is the principle of
Grossraum formulated by Carl Schmitt in his book “Voelkerrechtliche Grossraumordnung
mit Interventionsverbot fuer raumfremde Maechte” and seen by him as a foundation
for the science of international law. A Grossraum is «an area dominated
by a power representing a distinct political idea. This idea was always
formulated with a specific opponent in mind; in essence, distinctions between
friend and enemy would be determined by this particular political idea.
As an example Schmitt cited the American Monroe Doctrine and its concept
of nonintervention by foreign powers in the American Raum»(27)
This is the core of the great original Monroe Doctrine, a genuine Grossraum
principle, namely the union of a politically-awakened people, a political
idea and, on the basis of this idea , a politically-dominant Grossraum
excluding foreign intervention.(28)
According to the concept of Grossraum the national sovereignty of a
country depends not only on its military power, technological development
and economic base but also on the size and geographical location of its
land. The sovereignty of a country depends on its geopolitical independence
and self-sufficiency of the geographical region. Countries that strive
to achieve sovereignty must resolve the problem of territorial self-sufficiency.
The Grossraum is a geopolitically unified and economically autarchic space—
a spatial power. It is a «territory with rounded-out production and
consumption which, if necessary, may exist by itself within closed doors.»(29)
As such it protects itself from intervention by spatially alien states
and from any other potential Grossraum,(30) and above all from American
«Open Door» imperialism—defined by Isiah Bowman as American
version of Nazi-Germany’s Lebensraum—in its geopolitical, economical or
military manifestation.
Prior to the dissolution, or as Alexander Dugin claims, subversion
of the Soviet Union in 1991(31) , in the bipolar world of two Superpowers
, there existed two competing Great Areas (Grossr?ume) or two opposing
political blocks, each with its sphere of influence and ideology: the Atlantic
Grossraum dominated by the United States and the Eurasian Grossraum dominated
by the Soviet Union. The political competition between the two blocks gave
a substantial latitude for autonomy and independence for countries included
in the sphere of influence of the two blocks. However after 1991 a completely
new world system has been created. The bipolar world landscape of two superpowers
has been transformed into a mono landscape of one superpower imposing its
will on the rest of the world.
«The existence of the socialist block and the Warsaw Pact was
a decisively positive factor for the prospective European unity, continental
integration and future sovereignty of Eurasia. The end of the bipolar world
and the emergence of the unipolar New World Order, is a blow on Eurasia,
a blow on the continentalism and on the future of all Eurasian countries.
If Russia would not immediately start to reconstruct her Greater Area (confirmed
by the Helsinki Agreement) ...she would bring to a catastrophe not only
herself, but also all people on the World Island...Today Russia, situated
in the heart of the Eurasian continent, represents from a geopolitical
point of view Europe as a continental block. Therefore the geopolitical
interests of Russia and Europe not only confluence but are identical.»(32)
In order to understand the historical background of the conflict between
the Atlantic Grossraum and the Eurasian Grossraum as well as Dugin's analysis
of the American New World Order as a final attempt by the United States
for world domination, — a Monroe Doctrine for the whole world as envisioned
already by President Wilson at the end of the WWI—, a short account of
geopolitical concepts is necessary.
It was the British author Halford Mackinder who in 1904 proposed the
notion that the continental part of Eurasia, by virtue of its land mass
and geo-strategical importance, forms the world Heartland. The power that
controls the Heartland threatens the sea powers-once Great Britain, now
the United States—that control the World Island— that is our planet. In
1919 he claimed the necessity for control of the Eastern Europe by the
sea power. After the Versailles settlement the new Eastern European countries,
concieved as exclusive sphere of influence of the sea powers, had to form
a cordon sanitaire between Germany and Russia preventing the geopolitical
consolidation of Eurasia. «Who rules East Europe commands the Heartland.
Who rules the Heartland commands the World Island. Who rules the World
Island commands the World,»(33) asserted McKinder.
In 1943 MacKinder reformulated his theory— the state that controls
the Heartland will dominate the World Island.(34) At the same time McKinder
acknowledged that «The Heartland is the greatest natural fortress
on earth. For the first time in history it is manned by a garrison sufficient
both in number and quality»(35) The American geopolitician Alfred
Mahan formulated the idea that world hegemony of sea powers can be maintained
by control of series of bases around the Eurasian continent. Sea powers
could dominate land powers by enclosing them in. The American geopolitician
Nicholas Spykman developed the concepts of MacKinder and Mahan but put
the emphasis on the control of Eurasian coastal regions which he called
the Rimland or Inner Ring. He maintained that the United States could assert
control over the Heartland by controlling the Rimland. The Rimland can
be seen as an America controlled buffer zone or a huge Cordon Sanitaire,
including the NATO countries, Scandinavia, China, India and Indochina.
In spite of prolonged wars—the Korean War, the occupation of Taiwan, the
war in Vietnam—, the United States has never been able to fully dominate
the countries of the Rimland and thus to globalize her Grossraum. The theory
and practice of containment born of the Cold War—United States creating
NATO, SEATO (Southeast Asia Treaty Organization) and CENTO (Central Treaty
Organization), putting bases surrounding the Soviet Union, maintaining
puppet regimes around the world, are derived from MacKinder’s, Mahan's
and Spykman’s geopolitical ideas. If Soviet Union was a fortress, «then
to deal with a fortress is to surround it and seal it...This is known as
containment»(36) Heartland theory stands as the first premise of
the United States geopolitical doctrine and military though during the
Cold War. American containment policy «represented a validation of
MacKinder«(37) and acceptance of the necessity of destruction of
the Hartland. NSC-68 was a statement of this primary objective of the American
postwar foreign policy: world domination through destruction of the fortress
Hartland— the Soviet Union—and imposition of preponderance of American
power in Eurasia. Also U.S. primary foreign policy objective in the New
World Order —the conquest of Eastern Europe through «inclusion»
of the former Warsaw Pact countries in the military instrument of the global
Monroe Doctrine— NATO, is derived from both MacKinders ideas and identical
objectives in NSC-68.
One can see the similarities between MacKinder’s and Frederick Jackson
Turner’s geopolitical ideas,(38) between the MacKinder’s assertion that
the geopolitical dynamics inevitable will lead to a creation of one World
Empire (an Anglo-Saxon) and Turner’s «frontier thesis» , defining
the essence of the United States as perpetual expansionism. The merger
of the Monroe Doctrine, the «Open Door» imperialism and geopolitics
in the frontier-expansionist Weltanschaung which has defined the U.S. foreign
policy during this century, led after the end of the W.W.II to the grand
design of an American Century and an American World Empire enbracing the
globe.(39) NSC 68 was a statement of strategy and tactics to achieve those
objectives.
However the contraposition between the Atlantic Grossraum and the Eurasian
Grossraum does have, according to Dugin, even a wider and more profound
context that transcends the geopolitical power competition. In this conjunction
one can recall de Gaulle objections in the past to Britain’s entry into
the Common Market based on his perception of England as a type of civilization
different from that of Europe . The English, as he saw it, were lacking
cultural and historical identity with the Continent and were not interested
in building a Europe distinct from America.
«England is, in effect, insular, maritime, linked through its
trade, markets and food supply to very diverse and often very distant countries.
Its activities are essentially industrial and commercial, and only slightly
agricultural... In short, the nature, structure and economic context of
England differ profoundly from those of other States on the Continent.»(40)
For Dugin the Atlantic Grossraum and the Atlanticism versus the Eurasian
Grossraum and the Eurasianism represent two different paradigms of societal
organization that can not be reconciled. Halford Mackinders geopolitical
theories as well as Carl Schmitt’s work “Land und Meer” and to a lesser
extend Oswald Spengler’s “Prussentum und Socialismus” and Werner Sombart’s
“Haendler und Helden”, form here the theoretical framework. Dugin distinguishes
two types of civilization: sea-oriented Atlantian and land-oriented Continental
or Eurasian and sees the future rapprochement between Russia and Western
European countries on the basis of the principle called Continentalism
or Eurasianism, which he opposes to English and American Atlanticism. The
antagonism between Atlanticism and Continentalism/Eurasianism, between
a seagoing civilization and land civilization, goes back to ancient times,
constituting the major tension of world history.(41) Atlanticism, exemplified
by the legendary Atlantis, by ancient Carthage and by contemporary England
and the United States, is characterized by the spirit of trade and profit
and it values mercantilism and cosmopolitanism. Continentalism, best represented
by legendary Hyperborea, and by historical Roman, German and Russian Empires,
emphasizes the organic unity of people in their spiritual bonds with the
earth and their fidelity to national tradition. Thus the very form of the
landmass supporting a people influence the substance or their culture and
national character.
«In ancient history a sea power that become a symbol for sea civilization
was Phoenicia-Garthage. The land civilization in opposition to Carthage
was then the Roman Empire. The Punic wars reflected the irreconcilable
differences between the sea-oriented and land-oriented civilizations. In
modern history the Queen of Seas - Great Britain - raised as the sea pole
of world politics, later to be overtaken by the United States. In the same
way as Phoenicia and Carthage in the past , Great Britain used in the first
place commerce, trade and colonialism as instrument for her hegemony. The
geopolitical paradigm of Anglo Saxon sea orientation created a particular
‘commercial-capitalist-market’ oriented civilization, based primarily on
economic and material interests and on the principles of economic liberalism.
In spite of historical variation, the most common type of ‘sea civilization’
has always expressed the fundamental idea of the ‘primacy of economics
over politics’. Mackinder clearly shows, that during the period of modern
history ‘sea orientation’ meant Atlanticism, and today sea powers are United
States and England, also the Anglo Saxon countries. In opposition to the
Atlanticism stands the Eurasianism, the land based civilization. In modern
history the Eurasian orientation is above all characteristic for Germany
and Russia. Therefore the historical tradition of those countries has been
and would be in opposition to the ideology and the geopolitical interests
of the Atlanticist- the United States. Whereas Atlanticism can be equated
with capitalist individualism, economic liberalism and commercial notion
of imperialism, Eurasianism means communitarianism, social welfare, economic
democracy , the precedence of general welfare over self-interest, of the
societal ‘whole’ over the parts, and the primacy of politics over economics.»(42)
Referring to the fundamental differences between the two paradigms of
societal organization, Dugin projects that the world will one day witness
a war between Eurasian continentalism, championed by Russia, and the global
Atlanticism—the New World Order—, upheld by the United States, or, as Alain
de Benoist writes: « Eurasia against America would be the decisive
battle of the future. The United States is the enemy of humankind-hostis
humani generis-, the Carthage that must be destroyed.»(43)
THE NEW WORLD ORDER
The essence of the New World Order proclaimed by President Bush
, and terminologically and conceptually borrowed from the lexicon of Nazi
Germany, as well as Woodrow Wilson’s expansionist ideas of a Monroe Doctrine
for the whole world, is a new geopolitical project to transform the world
into a single Grossraum- in Carl Scmitt’s thought a new Nomos of the Earth—,
dominated, controlled and orchestrated by the United States with the corollary
of subversion of international law, the United Nations and the sovereignty
of other countries except the United States. United Nations is bound to
loose all significance, becoming a disciplined puppet and instrument of
American expansionism and assertion of global jurisdiction and system of
interventionism, a sort of pseudo legitimizing facade through which U.S.
will unilaterally act to further her expansionist interests. What seems
to be in the future is a global Latin-Americanization of the world with
the United Nations reduced to a sort of OAS (Organization of American States
) , i.e. a well-behaved puppet in American hands.
«It is obvious that the American concept of Atlantic Grossraum
- the American New World Order - totally excludes any form of real state’s
and political sovereignty on part of any other country and people. The
preexisting bipolar world prior to 1991 gave incomparably more freedom
and sovereignty to countries that were included in the sphere of influence
of the then existing Superpowers and competing Grossr?ume. The emerging
Atlantic Grossraum of the American architects of the New World Order will
lead to disintegration of the very principle of state sovereignty because
power suppression - by military and economic means- will become the only
instrument of control.
The new situation in the world puts other countries, and in particular
the countries that previously were members of the geopolitical block opposing
the Atlantic Alliance, before the following alternatives: either a forced
integration in the U.S. dominated New World Order— the Atlantic Grossraum—
with subsequent renunciation of their sovereignty, or a creation of a new
Grossraum which will be able to oppose the United States and thus will
give them chance to preserve their sovereignty and cultural autonomy».(44)
History in general and U.S. behavior in particular show us that predatory
countries abhor power vacuum. It is certain, and it is happened, that the
United States would hasten to exploit the withdrawal of Soviet Union from
the word arena and impose unilateral advantage over other countries until
now protected by the balance of power and the U.S. -Soviet competition.
In retrospect one may say that the end of the Warsaw Pact and the dissolution
of the Soviet Union have gone a long way toward decreasing stability in
Europe and elsewhere.
A substantial part of Alexander Dugin’s geopolitical analysis is focused
on the Pentagon’s Defense Planning Guidance , drafted under supervision
of Paul D. Wolfowitz, the Pentagon’s Under Secretary for Policy, and provided
to the New York Times in February of 1992,(45) and which in all respects
could be called a blueprint for total domination of the world. In the 46-page
classified document the Defense Department asserts America’s political
and military will be to insure that no rival superpower is allowed to emerge
in Western Europe , Asia or the territory of the former Soviet Union. American
mission and strategy is summarized in the document as follow:
«Our first objective is to prevent the reemergence of a new rival,
either on the territory of the former Soviet Union or elsewhere, that poses
a threat on the order of that posed formerly by the Soviet Union. This
is a dominant consideration underlying the new regional defense strategy
and requires that we endeavor to prevent any hostile power from dominating
a region whose resources would, under consolidated control , be sufficient
to generate global power. These regions include Western Europe , East Asia,
the territory of the former Soviet Union, and Southwest Asia. There are
three additional aspects to this objective: First , the U.S. must show
the leadership necessary to establish and protect a new order that holds
the promise of convincing potential competitors that they need not aspire
to a greater role or pursue a more aggressive posture to protect their
legitimate interests. Second, in the non-defensive areas, we must account
sufficiently for the interests of the advanced industrial nations to discourage
them from challenging our leadership or seeking to overturn the established
political and economic order. Finally we must maintain the mechanisms for
deterring potential competitors from even aspiring to a larger regional
or global role...
... NATO is the primary instrument of Western defense and security,
as well as the channel for U.S. influence and participation in European
security affairs. While the United States supports the goal of European
integration, we must seek to prevent the emergency of European only security
arrangements which will undermine NATO».(46)
The document further outlines strategies to subvert the United Nations
by substituting it in reality with the United States dominated and controlled
NATO and also postulates the right of the U.S. to sidestep United Nations
in acting independently and unilaterally.(47) The political development
since 1991 can only be described as determined implementation of the American
master plan for world domination, outlined in the Pentagon’s Defense Planning
Guidance which is a mirror image of identical objectives stated in NSC-68.
The document is interesting, as Dugin points out, because it allows
for the obvious conclusion that the future enemies of the United States
could be her former allies and that the threat that U.S. poses against
the Russia now may become a threat against France, Germany and Japan tomorrow.
And it is just a matter of time before the antagonism between Western European
countries and U.S. will surface and articulate itself as opposition between
different national interests. Despite the political transformation in Europe
United States has resolved that NATO and the U.S. military presence on
the continent should be a permanent geopolitical fixtures. Disbanding of
the Warsaw Pact in July 1991 was not followed by the disbanding of NATO
. The American alarm concerning the prospect of creation of a Franco-German
joint force is understandable since such force will not only inevitably
lead to assertion of sovereignty on part of European countries (48) but
also to articulation of European identity and collective national interest
different from that of the United States. The difference in national interest’s
is emphasized by general H.J. von Lochhausen who in his article “The War
in Iraq is a War Against Europe” writes:
«U.S. has understood that in order to maintain its worldwide domination
she must position herself against her enemies of tomorrow i.e. Japan and
united Europe. U.S. has chosen to take a firm control of those oil resources
on which Japan and Germany will depend in the future ...The war in Iraq
was such positioning and it was made possible only because the Soviet Union
was eliminated as a player on the world arena and thus also as a deterrent
to American aggression. One must remember that the country that controls
the oil in the Persian Gulf controls also Western Europe and Japan...And
it is deeply disturbing that U.S. forced Germany and Japan to finance the
war which ultimately was aimed to their weakening and control in the future».(49)
To a similar conclusion comes Samir Amin who points out that »I
believe that the decision to go to war in the Gulf was taken deliberately
by Washington as a method of preventing the formation of ‘European bloc’
:by weakening Europe (the supply of oil now being unilaterally controlled
by the United States; by revealing the essentially fragile political union
of Europe...and by neutralizing Moscow».(50)
|
THE NEW WORLD ORDER AND INTERNATIONAL LAW
I would like to examine in more detail two issues that are central
to Alexander Dugin’s criticism of the New World Order namely the framework
of new international law it creates and its consequences for Russia and
Europe as exemplified by the war in Yugoslavia. The issue of international
law can be seen in the light of Dean Acheson’s statement concerning the
American concept of sources of and obligations under international law.
»Much of what is called international law is a body of ethical distillation,
and one must take care not to confuse this distillation with law...Further,
the law trough its long history has been respectful of power, especially
that power which is close to the sanctions of law...the law simply does
not deal with such questions of ultimate power- power that comes close
to the sources of sovereignty»(51) , and the tendency on the part
of the U.S. to assert her will as the sole source of international law.
In this conjunction it is interesting to recall that already de Gaulle
saw at the end of the World War II in President Roosevelt’s grand design
for United Nations not only America’s bid for world hegemony through creation
of international body subservient to and controlled by the United States
but also «a permanent system of intervention that he (Roosevelt)
intended to institute by international law»(52) , a design that re-emerged
and came to realization in the New Word Order.
The war in Yugoslavia on the other hand is of particular importance
since it has been perceived in Russia not only as a contemporary analogy
to the Spanish Civil War with the U.S. assuming the role of the former
fascist powers but also as a general rehearsal to what may happen to Russia
in the event U.S. gains a strategic nuclear superiority. And as before
during the 30-ties in Spain a number of Russians has volunteered to serve
in the Serbian forces.(53) A particular alarm in Russia has caused the
so called Presidential Directive 13 which outlines American plans for massive
cover operations as well as outright military intervention in Russia under
the familiar disguise of so called peace keeping operations in former Soviet
republics and formulated with the objective to prevent any recognition
of a Russian Monroe Doctrine in the former Soviet Union.(54)
A starting point for the analysis of the transformation of the concept
of international law must be a discussion on the nature and development
of the unilaterally proclaimed Monroe Doctrine which from its very inception
has been the ideological basis of American imperialism and assertion of
an ever increasing extra-territorial jurisdiction. The Monroe Doctrine
designated an area far exceeding the territory of the United States- The
Western Hemisphere- as a Grossraum with the U.S. assuming the role of imperial
power vested with absolute sovereignty in the region while depriving other
countries in the same region of rights to sovereignty and self-determination.(55)
U.S. unilaterally reserved for herself the right of intervention in the
Western Hemisphere creating a qualitatively new form of colonialism with
the right of intervention as a cornerstone for political control and domination.
The essence of the Monroe Doctrine and its subsequent codification in the
Rio Treaty, is the repudiation of the main principle of the United Nations
Charter namely the principle of equality and sovereignty of nations on
which the body of international law rests. And already Hegel knew that
international law-jus gentium-presupposes and is based on sovereignty of
states. In a situation where only one state in the international community
is a possessor of absolute sovereignty, the international law as such can
not exist- it will be the application of the domestic law of the dominating
state disguised into an universal principle.(56)
After the conclusion of the W.W.I, at the Paris Peace Conference, which
resulted in the signing of the Treaty of Versailles and creation of the
League of Nations , president Woodrow Wilson presented his Fourteen Points
which proclaimed a new universalism as well as , employing what later will
be called a Orwellian New Talk, the right of self-determination as a foundation
for the postwar world order. At the same time his Secretary of State, Robert
Lansing, wrote a memorandum explaining the meaning of the Monroe Doctrine
:
«In its advocacy of the Monroe Doctrine the United States considers
its own interests. The integrity of other American nations is an incident,
not an end. While this may seem based on selfishness alone, the author
of the Doctrine had no higher or more generous motive in its declaration.»(57)
United States refused to enter the League of Nations unless its "Charter
incorporated the Monroe Doctrine - a demand less concerned with the right
of self-determination than with American domination in the Western Hemisphere.
As it turned out, even though Art. 21 of the Chapter did incorporate the
Monroe Doctrine, the U.S. did not join the League. In Schmitt’s view, Art.
21 symbolized the triumph of the Western Hemisphere over Europe.»(58)
the grand design of President Wilson was to transform the Treaty of Versailles
and its creation, the League of Nations , into a instrument of American
imperialism and dominance of Europe.(59)
Of particular interest are United States fifteen reservations which
did not provide for ratification but, rather, for the nullification of
the Treaty. Some of those reservations form a distinct doctrinaire body
concerned with the nature of U.S. obligations under international law.
1. The United States so understands and construes article 1 that in
case of notice or withdrawal from the League of Nations...the United States
shall be the sole judge as to whether all its international obligations
and all its obligations under the said covenant have been fulfilled...
4. The United States reserves to itself exclusively the right to decide
what questions are within its domestic jurisdiction and declares that all
domestic and political questions relating wholly or in part to its internal
affairs ...are solely within the jurisdiction of the United States and
are not under this treaty to be submitted in any way either to arbitration
or to the consideration of the council or of the assembly of the League
of Nations, or any agency thereof, or to the decision or recommendation
of any other power.
5. The United States will not submit to arbitration or to inquire by
the assembly or by the council of the League of Nations, provided for in
said treaty of peace, any questions which in the judgment of the United
States depend upon or relate to its long-established policy, commonly known
as the Monroe Doctrine; said doctrine is to be interpreted by the United
States alone and is hereby declared to be wholly outside the jurisdiction
of said League of Nations...
14. ..The United States assumes no obligation to be bound by any decision,
report, or finding of the council or assembly arising out of any dispute
between the United States and any member of the league.(60)
Those reservations express the specific American dualistic position
in respect to international treaties: treaties are to be used as a vehicle
for other countries to assume obligations while the U.S. does not assume
any obligations.(61) Treaties were to be so designed solely to promote
United States interests by securing action by foreign governments in a
way deemed advantageous by the U.S. and not for the U.S. to undertake any
international obligations. The purpose of this dualistic doctrine has historically
been to solidify and promote American hegemonical claims. Recognizing the
true nature of the pseudo-universalism of the international law created
after the W.W.I which appeared not to rest on respect for existing sovereignties
but was merely a pretext for complete political and economic domination
by the United States, Carl Schmitt wrote that «Behind the facade
of general norms of international law lies, in reality, the system of Anglo-Saxon
world imperialism»(62)
After the W.W.II United States needed a further disguise to unilaterally
assert U.S. power and to underscore Washington’s hemispheric hegemony.
It resulted in a creation and signing of the Interamerican Treaty of Reciprocal
Assistance, signed in Rio de Janeiro in September of 1947, and a subsequent
pact concluded in Bogota in April of 1948, which established the Charter
of the Organization of American States (OAS). The significance of the Rio
Treaty goes beyond the formal codification of the Monroe Doctrine. First,
in view of the fundamental professed principle of the Charter of the United
Nation namely the principle of sovereignty and equality of member states
, a regional treaty which in substance repudiates the very principle of
sovereignty save for the sole sovereignty of the United States , must be
seen as incompatible with the U.N. Charter. Secondly OAS became a
prototype of a pseudo-international organization with a pseudo-universal
ideological facade, an instrument for American interventionism in the region.
And finally it must be seen as a paradigm of American concept of organization
of a Grossraum in particular and World Order in general the globalization
of which is the very essence of the New World Order. Or as Noam Chomsky
points out « For the U.S. , the Cold War has primarily been a history
of worldwide subversion, aggression and state-run international terrorism,
with examples to numerous to mention. Secondarily , it has served to maintain
U.S. influence over the industrial allies, and to suppress independent
politics and popular activism.»(63)
An additional aspect of the New World Order seems to be the U.S. repudiation
of one of the most fundamental rules of international law namely that treaties
must be performed in good faith; the rule of “pacta sunt servanda”. The
massive cover operations undertaken by the United States in Poland during
the 80-ties after President Reagan signed a secret national-security-decision
(NSDD 32)(64) that authorized a wide range of subversive measures by the
CIA to destabilize the country , were motivated by the U.S. resolve to
nullify the Yalta Agreement.(65)
The U.S. invasion of Panama in December of 1990 was based on the Washington
design to prevent the effect of the treaty that would transfer the control
over Panama canal to Panama. I can certainly agree with Noam Chomsky’s
conclusion that the Panama war which resulted in more than 20.000 civil
casualties «is a historic event in one respect. It is the first U.S.
act of international violence in the post-World War II era that was not
justified by the pretext of a Soviet threat.»(66) And finally the
war in Yugoslavia and the subsequent partition of the country which, historically
seen, is almost analogous to Hitler’s partition of the country: a Croatian
puppet state has been established by the neo-Ustachi. The general perception
in Russia is that the so called Bosnian forces, promoted by the U.S. ,
are no more than the equivalent of the so called Contras in Nicaragua and
the war is the first example of Latin-Americanization of Europe. But the
partition of Yugoslavia, which in not so distant past was one of the leaders
on the non-aligned countries, is seen as a flagrant violation of the Helsinki
Accord of 1975 which essence was inviolability of frontiers and territorial
integrities of states as well as guaranties of sovereign equality of nations
and respect for the rights inherent in sovereignty(67) and on which all
security arraignments in Europe were based. In pertinent part the Helsinki
Accord states that:
The participating States will respect each other’s sovereign equality
and individuality as well as the rights inherent in and encompassed by
its sovereignty, including in particular the right of every State to judicial
equality, to territorial integrity and to freedom and political independence...The
participating States regard as inviolable all one another’s frontiers as
well as the frontiers of all States in Europe and therefore they will refrain
now and in the future from assaulting these frontiers...
The participating States will respect the territorial integrity of
each of the participating States.
Accordingly, they will refrain from any action inconsistent with the
purposes and principles of the Charter of the United Nations against the
territorial integrity, political independence or the unity of any participating
State, and in particular from any such action constituting a threat or
use of force.
While the partition of Yugoslavia must be seen as violation of the
Helsinki Accord, the issuing war and the U.S. outright military intervention
and occupation of part of Yugoslavia—Bosnia—,do have wider implications
since those measures involve and articulate the relationship between the
U.S. and the United Nations. Summarizing the intentions of Washington William
Safire in an article in the New York Times(68) writes concerning the prospective
air-strikes against Serbian forces that the Clinton Administration has
adopted a new resolute policy vis-?-vis the United Nations- «Don’t
ask, tell Policy...Coercive diplomacy would become the order of the day»
A State Department spokesman, Michael McCurry, asserted that « The
United States would be ready to carry out an air campaign against advancing
Serbian forces whether or not it received the approval of European allies
at a NATO meeting in Brussels on August 2, 1993.»(69) He further
omitted all references to any necessary authorization by the United Nations.
Although the Clinton Administration was rebuffed by the U.S. Secretary
General who rightfully asserted that the U.S. does not have jurisdiction
over U.N. forces and that furthermore, any decision in respect to air-strikes
must be sanctioned by the United Nations(70) , United States has persisted
in claiming that U.S. alone can decide whether or not to strike. Or as
the former State Department official John Bolton correctly pointed out:
«We are the central multilateralists. The idea that there is some
collective international will out there is just fairly land stuff. The
true measure of America’s diplomatic clout will always be the military
resources we are willing to commit.»(71)
After a meeting in Washington with Alija Izetbegovic, the U.S.’s man
in Bosnia, and a former officer of the Waffen SS (72) , President Clinton
stated on September 8, 1993, that any military intervention in Yugoslavia
must be undertaken «by a peacekeeping force from NATO — not the United
Nations but NATO». The French reaction was understandable. Richard
Duque, a spokesman for the Foreign Ministry, said France believed that
any such operation should be «under the authority of the United Nations».(73)
The French reaction must be seen also in light of the Defense Secretary
Les Aspin’s assertion that any peacekeeping forces should be under NATO
command, that is, under the ultimate direction of the Supreme Allied Commander,
a post always held by an American officer. France however does not belong
to the NATO’s integrated command and apparently sees the American statements
as an attempt to infringe upon her sovereignty.
The American objectives in Yugoslavia were fully realized. For all practical
purposes NATO tog over all the essential functions of the United Nations,
in fact replacing the United Nation. The Daytona «agreement»
seen by many as a Second Munich , embodied not only the essence of the
diplomacy of ultimatums but also the American attempts to subvert the of
international law. In fact the Daytona Agreement is a nullity according
the international law(74) . The agreement, modeled after the Platt Amendment
in regard to Cuba, created a virtual American protectorate in Bosnia.
The French geopolitician General Pierre-Marie Gallois, one of the leaders
of the Resistance movement during the WWII, the creator of the military
doctrine of France and one of the closest advisers of General de Gaulle
sees the war and the partition of Yugoslavia as an integral part of the
American design for world domination, embodied in the concept of the New
World Order. And thus it serves the geopolitical strategy of the ultimate
extension of American Lebensraum—the Monroe Doctrine for the whole world.
In his words one can hear the voice of General De Gaulle:
«The pursuit of truth and justice made me involved in a resolute
struggle against the greatest absurd and evil which flow out of the totalitarian
idea of the New World Order. The partition and destruction of Yugoslavia
, the aggression against Iraq , the murder of hundred of thousands of innocent
civilians in Iraq, all those abominable acts are all but pages of the same
scenario: the imposition of the evil will of one over all who are perceived
as obstacles for the imposition of American Weltherrschaft over humankind...It
is rather obvious that the partition of countries in Europe has not ended
yet.
Our participation in NATO and the occupation of Yugoslavia is a threat
to the independence of France, a betrayal of our national interests. The
Balkan crisis is an expedient device to justify the unjustifiable: the
expansion of the American military presence in Europe. And at the same
time UN, rather than being an institution for promotion of international
understanding and peace, has been transformed into an instrument for collective
aggression. NATO is not on a peace mission in Yugoslavia. NATO’s forces
in Yugoslavia are an act of aggression, an act of outright occupation.»(75)
At the same time, points and emphasizes Galouas , the war in Yugoslavia,
serves an important geopolitical purpose, designed to imperil the desire
for geopolitical independence of Europe:
«Germany will grow stronger and soon she would no longer tolerate
the presence of American military forces on her soil. Therefore a reserve
position for the American NATO forces is necessary, the addition of an
ideal geopolitical region for stationing and regrouping of the military
instrument of American foreign policy. Albania, Bosnia and Macedonia form
that region...The world according to American recipes is an absolute and
total negation of the old tradition of respect for rights and freedoms.
After the genocidal bombing of civilian Serbian targets and the economic
embargo serving the same purpose—weakening of the Serbs—, United States
created Bosnia as her protectorate...That is abominable. But those atrocities
serve the overriding geopolitical goal of the United States: to remain
in Europe at any cost...Dayton Agreement is the latest embodiment of the
new American diplomacy, aggressive and uncompromising , confident in its
power, the diplomacy that knows and uses only the language of ultimatums...
U.S. literally bombed to pieces Iraq, poisoned the nature and the ecological
environment , with unparalleled barbarity killed hundreds of thousands
of civilians, only in order to control the supply of oil and dictate its
price as it pleases Washington...As a result of the embargo against Iraq
570.000 civilians were murdered....And this is a crime against humanity
par excellence.
And again and again decisions are made in Washington which will result
in murder of innocent elderly, sick and poor. And then Washington dears
to teach the world morality...Or take the so called War Tribunal in Hague,
allegedly set up to represent moral and truth but in reality an instrument
of war (war with other judicial means) and continuous aggression against
the Serbs.(76) What better evidence of the absurdity of this tribunal than
the fact that there were no war crime tribunals for all war crimes and
crimes against humanity committed during the bombing of Dresden and Hamburg,
the nuclear annihilation of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, for the massive war
crimes committed in Vietnam, an for the war crimes committed in Iraq during
the operation Desert Storm. It is as if all those massive war crimes did
not happen or were insignificant compared to the Serbs resistance against
the conquest of their country...I can not accept such perverted American
logic, and I am very sorry that my country is forced to participate in
those American atrocities.(77)
The obvious conclusion is that the partition of Yugoslavia, and the
subsequent war, serve several purposes:
a. Expansion of the American Grossraum with the establishment of a
Bosnian puppet state controlled by the U.S., as well as, in all probability,
establishment of U.S. permanent military bases on the Adriatic;
b. Prevention of the emergence of any independent European foreign
policy initiatives and thereby the emergence of Europe as an unified new
Grossraum;
c. Consolidation of the control over the Rimland;
d. Abrogation, in fact, of the Helsinki Accord;
e. Subversion and factual demise of the United Nations as an international
body and finally
f. A rehearsal for, as it is perceived in Russia, an impending war
of aggression against Russia.
In any event, it is quite obvious, that substitution of United Nations
with NATO will render the veto power of the permanent members of the U.N.
Security Council inoperative, which will effect the interests of not only
Russia but also France and China.
If the incorporation of the Monroe Doctrine in Article 21 of the Chapter
of the League of Nations signified the subversion of the universality of
international law and Europe’s defeat by the U.S. , the war in Yugoslavia
and air-strikes against Serbian forces signifies even more important historical
event namely the subversion of the United Nations and its transformation
in the future , if U.S. is not resolutely opposed , to a functional equivalent
of the OAS i.e. to a pseudo-international body serving as a rubber stamp
for American hegemony and wars of aggression disguised as so called peace
keeping operations in countries that, prior to the peace keeping initiatives,
have already been destabilized by the U.S. covert and overt subversion.
The partition of Yugoslavia can very well became a second Munich for Europe.
It is obvious that Washington is seeking to impose its absolute authority
over the rest of the world. To achieve this aim United States will have
to effect the complete subversion and forcible destruction of the machinery
of government and structure of society in , above all, former socialist
countries and their replacement by an apparatus and structure subservient
to and controlled from Washington.
Hitler left the League of Nations preparing for aggressive wars; United
States strategy on the other hand is much more dangerous - the subversion
of the United Nations to further the same end . Recognizing the changing
nature of the United Nations in the post 1991 era and the issuing crisis
of legitimacy, one of the founders of the National Salvation Front in Russia
and the former editor of the Military-Historical Journal general B. Filatov
wrote that
«When the National Salvation Front comes to power and that will
happen very soon, we will leave the United Nations which has become a fascist
punitive organization, an instrument of CIA. We will put our rockets on
alert. Then we will see who will dare to attack Serbia.»(78)
The necessary strategy for Russia and other European countries, Germany
and France above all, must be a geopolitical project to create a new Grossraum
- Pax Eurasiatica- in opposition to Pax Americana and its corollary , the
New World Order, because only in opposition to the United States can Europe
begin an independent geopolitical life and reach a genuine emancipation,
writes Dugin. The purpose of a new Kulturkampf is to problematize the American
hegemony as a threat to Europe as a historical formation in general and
to its culture in particular. Finding the authenticity of European destiny
and political life implies by necessity a rejection of any false claims
of universalism advanced by the U.S., which to its substance is both an
ideological facade and concealment of American particular national interests.
European revival is conditioned upon the dissolution of NATO which today
is solely an instrument of American control over its alleged allies and
a pretext to maintain U.S. occupation forces in Europe /for more than one
hundred years» as President Bush asserted. The strategical objectives
of the U.S. controlled NATO have been defined by Wolfram Hanrieder in his
book Germany, America, Europe(79) as a strategy of «double containment»:
containment of the Soviet Union in the past on one side and of American
allies on the other. «The logic of this strategy was put bluntly
by Lord Ismay in his famous dictum about NATO’s purpose in Europe (which
could have described the U.S. policies toward the Japanese) ‘Keep the Americans
in, the Russians out, and the Germans down.’»(80)
Europe as a collective entity must enter the famous hermeneutical circle
and walking there must find the truth about its separate and unique collective
existence which during the Cold War years has been concealed. As Heidegger
has pointed out , the attempt to achieve national authenticity is always
expressed in resoluteness and resoluteness is the true substance of Kulturkampf.
Dugin proposes the revival of the concept of Mitteleuropa, originally
formulated by Friedrich Naumann, as an ideological platform for a new geopolitical
orientation opposing Pax Americana and creating a competing Grossraum—Pax
Eurasiatica— which will exclude and oppose the United States. Closely associated
with the concept of Mitteleuropa is the specific political extrapolation
of the Kultur/Zivilization dichotomy as formulated by Thomas Mann in his
book “Reflections of a Nonpolitical Man”(81) in which he counterpoises
German «culture» against largely Anglo-Saxon «civilization».
Dugin elaborates on that dichotomy reaching the conclusion that not only
Europe’s national interest differs from that of the United States but that
also its cultural tradition is the antithesis of the hollow shell of «civilization»
in the U.S. Whereas «culture» in European countries is expression
of national identities and of organic historical tradition, the American
«civilization» is the bearer of an all-embracing commercialism
and consumerism whose penetration dissolves all national identities. A
rather paradoxical conclusion emerges from the revival of the concept of
Mitteleuropa namely an anti-West oriented Europe. Dugin sees the term West
as largely an American ideological construct, an Atlanticist mold thrown
over Europe, and regards de Gaulle’s decision in 1966 to withdraw from
NATO’s integrated command, which, as de Gaulle emphasized, deprived France
of her sovereignty, not only as the first assertion of European identity
separate and different from that of the United States, but also as the
first anti-West manifestation by an European country in the U.S.’s sphere
of influence. De Gaulle emphasized that the American design has always
been to transform a cohesive European community into a larger and looser
Atlantic community under American control.(82) Recognizing that Atlanticism
was virulently aggressive as ever, he was compelled to look for ways of
resisting American hegemony in Europe. »There were two options: he
could either take unilateral measures to challenge American hegemony or
he could seek alternative partners with a common interest in breaking down
hegemonic control.»(83) France’s withdrawal from the NATO’s integrated
command become de Gaulle’s ultimate gesture of anti-hegemonism.
The failure of the Soviet Union, due to defeatist and de facto anti-national
foreign policy of the Gorbachev administration, to condition the unification
of Germany on her withdrawal from NATO, was a major self-inflicted political
defeat affecting not only Russia but also Germany in the future. For Russia
it means a weakening of its strategic potential and for Germany a lost
chance to gain full sovereignty by not having foreign occupation forces
stationed on her territory. And for Europe as a whole it signifies a lost
momentum to replace NATO, i.e. American power projection and an instrument
of containment against U.S.’s former allies, with a pan-European security
system.
In this perspective one must se the alternatives for Europe as envisioned
by the Maastricht treaty which may lead to gradual unification: either
a Federated Europe as a power projecting Grossraum or as an even more divided
and weakened Europe under the oppressive and leveling effect of the American
pseudo-universalism, which in substance will amount to an Atlanticist police
state with the NATO’s strategy of containment directed toward the U.S.’s
former allies. In the latter case the Maastrich treaty will lead to deligitimization
of national sovereignties and to weakening and dissolution of national
identities of member states. Instead of a new European self-identity, the
result will be the creation of an amorphous space with obliterated national
and cultural identities and functionally integrated into the American Grossraum.
Already de Gaulle foresaw that possibility when he stated that if the United
States is not opposed «at the end there would appear a colossal Atlantic
community under American dependence and leadership which would completely
swallow up the European community.»(84) Against the anti-European
concept of Atlantic community, devised as an ideological vehicle for subjugation
of independent European geopilitical existence, stands the concept of a
Monroe doctrine for Europe, claims Alain de Benoist :
«What bothers me is that I do not see the Maastricht Treaty leading
to an autonomous, politically sovereign Europe determined to acquire the
equivalent of what the Monroe doctrine was for the United States, but rather
a phantom of Europe, a Europe a unemployment, absent and impotent, a free
trade zone governed on the theoretical level by ultra-liberal monetary
principles and, on the practical level , by administrators and bankers
who neither have a political project nor democratic legitimacy...Nietzsche
said: «Europe will create itself on the edge of a tomb». For
my part, I believe it will create itself over and against the United States,
or it will not create itself.»(85)
In historical perspective the Anglophone powers , Great Britain in the
past, United States now, have always been an obstacle to consolidation
of Europe and thus a true geopolitical adversary.
«The urge to evict the Americans, and before us , the British
from the Continent has deep roots in reaction to the role of the English-speaking
countries in foiling every attempt to unify Europe since the Renaissance.
With the exception of the more misguided members of the House of Stuart
, every English-speaking head of state from Elizabeth Tudor to Harry Truman
opposed the consolidation of the Continent. Elizabeth I fought Spain; from
the time of Marlborough to the time of Wellington the English fought France;
from Asquith to Churchill and Roosevelt the «Anglo-Saxon» fought
Germany. Even when American policy shifted under Truman to support the
peaceful integration of Western Europe , it was out of desire to fend off
the greater menace of the Soviets...The positive contribution to European
civilization of the old «divide and rule» policy cannot, however,
disguise its essentially negative goal. The British sought to keep the
Continent embroiled in quarrels while they assembled a global empire and
grew rich. The United States relied on Britain to maintain a European balance
that kept the Europeans from interfering in the New World while we, like
our British cousins, traded freely with all quarters of the globe...In
the twentieth century the Elizabethan realpolitik of the Anglophone powers
acquired a Wilsonian overlay...The Elizabethan and the Wilsonian policies
remain at the core of American interests today. As good Elizabethans, we
understand that it is not in America’s interests...for European integration
to take place under the hegemonic leadership of a single power, whether
this power is based in Moscow or Berlin. Nor would it be in America’s interests
for European integration to proceed in such a way as to create a single
hegemonic power center in Brussels»(86).
The grand design of the United States, particularly now, when Washington
is aggressively advancing the plans to globalize NATO, and thus its Monroe
doctrine, is the Latin-Americanization first of the former socialist countries,
including Russia and second, of her former West European allies. And as
long as United States is not displaced from her position of hegemony in
Europe and ultimately driven out of Eurasia, European countries will never
acquire that which is necessary for independent geopolitical existence.
A federated Europe with American military forces on its soil is no more
than an obedient satellite. During the 60-ties de Gaulle warned against
a supranational Europe of the Common market which he then considered a
divided Europe under the mentorship and hegemonial design of the United
States.
Reading Dugin one may paraphrase Bismarck and say that if the power
of Russia is ever broken , it will be difficult for the former members
of the socialist block to avoid the fate of Poland in the past that is
the destiny of divided and contested area to be claimed by the United States
as «glacis and perimeter of battle». By the same token a weak
Russia may spell weakness also for other European countries.
But does it mean that Dugin envisions a sort of a new Rapallo treaty(87)
as a political foundation for a new geopolitical orientation? I can agree
with Rudolf Barho’s assertion that »A new Rappalo would break Western
Europe from North America«.(88) However, a new Rapallo can only be
used as a metaphor for diplomatic and political initiatives that may lead
to a possible alliance between Germany, France, Russia and China as central
powers. A new equivalent of Rapallo treaty is a geopolitical and existential
imperative for Europe, a fundament for future continental unity and continental
defense against American expansionism, against the pseudo universalism
and totalitarian claims of the American Imperium Monde.
Dugin’s concept of a new European geopolitical orientation resembles
de Gaulle’s visions during the ‘60s. Rejecting American hegemony de Gaulle
conjured an alliance, an European coalition, which, without infringing
on the sovereignty of the member states would constitute an alternative
European Grossraum. He recognized that the ideology of Atlantic unity is
in fact the ideology of American domination and counterpoised his concept
of European unity which today only can be seen as America free Europe.
However de Gaulle recognized that a genuine European alliance could not
be created without there being in Europe today a federator with sufficient
power, authority and skills.(89) At that time there was no such strong
federator. In his memoirs de Gaulle noted that «The American President’s
(F.D. Roosevelt) remarks ultimately proved to me that, in foreign affairs,
logic and sentiment do not weight heavily in comparison with the realities
of power; that what matters is what one takes and what one can hold on
to; that to regain her place, France must count only on herself».(90)
United States believed that the Frenchmen «in a grip of sort of neurasthenia
would gradually relax into the status of an American protectorate...The
alternative, as de Gaulle constantly proposed it, was for Frenchmen to
continue the arduous struggle for national self renewal until they again
became masters of their own fate.»(91)
In his advocacy of a new continental geopolitical orientation and in
his definition of Pax Eurasiatica, Alexander Dugin criticizes and rejects
the old ideology of Panslavism. The difference between the Panslavism and
Eurasianism is summarized by him as a difference between two principles
— «the principle of blood» and «the principle of soil
(realm)». For the Panslavism the emphasis is on the concept of ethnic
identity—in other words the primacy of blood over the soil. For the traditional
Eurasianism on the other hand, the land takes precedence: as ideology it
expresses the primacy of the soil over the blood. «It presupposes
the ideological choice of continental, Eurasian values over narrow ethnic
or racial values.»(92)
A further differentiation of the concept of Eurasianism can be made
by distinguishing between two sub directions of the Eurasian ideology.
The first one is centered on the notion of a specific Eurasian identity—the
concept of polyphonic ethos of Russia—defined in terms of ethos and land.(93)
The second one defines Eurasianism in terms of geopolitical realities and
necessary geopolitical strategy, also in terms of realm and Grossraum.
The emphasis here is on the land power status of Russia as opposed to the
atlanticist sea power status of the United States. Alexander Dugin is a
proponent of this definition of Eurasianism. From a geopolitical point
of view the past observation of Halford MacKinder that the greatest danger
to Anglo Saxon hegemony would be a political union and a geopolitical block
of Russia and Germany, bears particular relevance. The concept of Eurasian
resistance against the dictates of the American New World Order and the
global American hegemony articulates the geopolitical and the national
meta— existential necessity to create such geopolitical block able to stop
the steamroller of the New World Order.
An additional aspect of Dugin’s analyses of geopolitical orientations
and strategies concerns the future relationship between Russia and Islam.
The starting point is Robert Steuckers view that Russia must make a common
cause with Iran against American interests.(94) Continental, Islamic —
revolutionary Iran is contrasted with the Atlanticist secular Turkey and
the Arabic theocratic variant of Islam of Saudi Arabia. Turkey is the primary
agent of American influence in the region and a virtual colony of the U.S.,
an Asian forpost of American geopolitical interests which serves as a cordon
sanitaire between the Asian East of Russia and the Arab world. A conflict
between Russia and Islam countries is the main purpose of the U.S. foreign
policy, a main conduit for which is Turkey.
A similar roll serves also Saudia Arabia, a country which in fact must
also be seen as an American colony. The interests of Saudy dynasty and
of the American Atlanticism coincide, forming a bullwark against creation
of an Arabic Great Area. Through the control of Saudi Arabia U.S. controls
the supply of oil. And the U.S. controlls the economy of Europe through
control of the oil in the Gulf region. Therefore, to counterbalance American
hegemony in the region, Russian foreign policy must be oriented toward
Iran, asserts Dugin.
In today perspective the events of 1991 are of paramount importance
because, as Dugin points out, 1991 is the year of destruction of the Eurasian
Grossraum, the only one that possessed resources to withstand American
expansionism and which consisted of all countries belonging to the socialist
block. Central Europe in general and Germany in particular, as geopolitical
entity are only a pure potential at present time. Central Europe can constitute
itself in the future only in alliance with Russia which occupies a unique
position as a centrum of the Eurasian continent, as a Heartland. Russia
occupies also a key strategical and geographical position in the world
with its huge landmass and human potential. A new geopolitical orientation
must take into account the so called Atlantic factor which Dugin in length
discusses.
The Atlantic factor is the United States strategy to impose her will
on former Soviet republic and socialist countries and to transform those
into satellite countries in the American orbit, linking them into a Cordon
Sanitaire around Russia. Certainly one can already see the shadow of the
Atlantic masters over the Baltic republics. As the Russian jurist Vladimir
Ovzinski asserts the «CIA already works totally in the open in Lithuania
, not only through American Embassy in Vilnius but also through American
advisers to the Supreme Council of the Republic. And the situation is similar
in both Latvia and Estonia».(95) The Atlantic factor is a geopolitical
consequence of what William Appleman Willams has called the American «frontier
thesis» —the perpetual expansionism in pursuit of new western frontiers.
United States has a perspective for real world hegemony only if no competing
Grossraum is allowed to arise. Therefore both NSC-68 after the end of the
WWII and its mirror image—the Pentagon Planning Guidance after the «end»
of the Cold War, envision control or destruction not only of any competing
Grossraum but also any geopolitical area which can consolidate itself in
the future into power projecting Grossraum. The conclusion is that the
primary objectives of the American geopolitics are to destroy any potential
geopolitical alliance as well as to prevent its building. To paraphrase
Clemenceau the American politics of peace vis-?-vis Russia are nothing
else but continuation of war with other means. The Cold War has been replaced
by Military Peace. Therefore creation of Cordon Sanitaire around Russia,
which by necessity mandates the conquest of the second Europe—Eastern Europe—under
the guise of enlargement of NATO, is the most important objective of the
American foreign polic
Cordon Sanitaire consists of territory of countries and people situated
between two geopolitical blocks. It is created by virtue of hegemonic control
or, as in the American creation of a puppet Bosnian state in the failed
attempt to create a Georgian state under Schevernadze, and in the war in
Chechnya, with outright force and subversion. The countries that potentially
will be included in the Cordon Sanitaire are those countries whose unity
or membership in a competing Grossraum would constitute a geopolitical
disadvantage to the United States.
United States is actively pursuing her double-edged foreign policy objective
of further expansion of her extra-territorial jurisdiction and transformation
of former socialist countries into a Cordon Sanitaire through plans outlined
by the Secretary of Defense Les Aspin at the NATO meeting in Travem?nde
on October 21, 1993 to expand the North Atlantic Treaty Organization by
inclusion of former members of the Warsaw Pact.
Cordon Sanitaire in the beginning of this century consisted of countries
situated between Russia and Germany and were controlled by England. Those
countries, being an agent and tool of the Anglo-Saxon West, were breaking
the Grossraum of Mitteleurope and the Grossraum of Russia. In present days
the perfidious Albion has been replaced by the perfidious Washington and
the American objectives can be summarized as assertion of hegemonic control
and transformation of former Soviet republics into virtual American colonies
in which, with employment of coercive measures: subversion, terror, aggression,
economic warfare, United States will install marionette rulers without
any trace of political independence. Or as Noam Chomsky puts it «One
consequence of the collapse of the Soviet block is that much of it may
undergo a kind of ‘Latin-Americanization’ , reverting to the service role,
with the ex-Nomenclatura perhaps taking the role of the Third World elites
linked to international business and financial interests»(97)
In conjunction with this it is important to bear in mind that American
attempts to partition Russia and gain control of her huge natural resources
predate the Cold War period and NSC-68. In October of 1918 the American
government drafted secret commentaries to President Wilson’s 14 points
which outlined U.S. plans to partition Russia into small regions in order
for the United States to assert her hegemony and gain control over Russian
territories and natural resources in Siberia and Caucasus. On the map prepared
by the Department of State titled «Proposed Borders of Russia»
and presented by President Wilson at the Paris Peace Conference, all that
is left of Russia is her central part , the Mid-Russian Plateau. In an
appendix to the map it was stated that «All Russia must be divided
into large natural regions, each with its own economy. However none of
those regions should be sufficiently independent to build a strong state».(98)
Those long-standing American plans make it even more urgent for Russia
to make a decisive geopolitical orientation. Of course, if President Yeltsin
turns out to be a Russian Quisling,(99) and his September 21,1993 coup
with subsequent destruction of the Russian Parliament most certainly suggests
this possibility(100) , then the prospects for a new geopolitical orientation
will become more difficult to realize.
In his 1938 study “Ueber das Verhaeltnis der Begriffe Krieg und Feind”,
Carl Schmitt, anticipating the future of the Cold War, described the world
as moving toward an ‘intermediary situation between war and peace’, a kind
of a bellicose peace which is neither war nor peace, which Carl Schmitt
called military peace, i.e. a world condition of global confrontation which
tends to take the form of a total war. In “Totaler Feind, Totaler Krieg,
Totaler Staat”, published in 1937, Carl Schmitt related the idea of total
war to the idea of total State, a war that
«will be total for two reasons. First because it would not be
localized in the sense that it would enfold in on a battle field, but it
would be spread across the entire planet including sidereal space. Next,
because it would not only be military, given that all the activities -scientific,
technological, economic-and all of the material and ideal aspects of existence
will be directly implicated in this gigantic conflict. Protected zones
will no longer exist since both the military and the non-military will
be engaged in this conflict. Politically speaking, there will no longer
be a distinction between those who fight and those who do not».(101)
During the Cold War two kind of Grossraum confronted each other- the
existential categories of friend and enemy applied also to the concept
of Grossraum- and out of that confrontation a world order build on plurality
of Grossr?ume was maintained. However the end of the Cold War did not lead
to revival of the concept of state sovereignty but to renewed attempt to
universalize the ordering principles of the American Grossraum and establishment
of a Monroe Doctrine for the whole world- an overriding objective of American
foreign policy since the time of President Willson- under the slogan of
a New World Order. Alexander Dugin equates the New World Order with American
world wide hegemony, which, in order to be established, requires the totalization
of the ‘intermediary situation between war and peace’, i.e. a new Cold
War with different ideological justification but with the same aim: total
American world domination.
«The total war, previously localized in the Cold War confrontation
between U.S. and the Soviet Union, is the essence of American universalism.
Military peace is the present substance of the New World Order with which
Russia and other countries are confronted now and the American implementation
of this New World Order can only lead to a new total war.»(102)
As a paradigmatic figure of Russian resistance to the New World Order,
of what he calls the Endkampf, Alexander Dugin takes the symbol of the
Russian partisan. The phenomenon of partisan is for Carl Schmitt «a
paradigmatic figure for the decomposition of the classical Nomos and for
the appearance of bellicose peace. The figure is remarkable because it
still has a landlocked reality-described by Schmitt as its ‘telluric character’»(103)
The partisan embodies the concept of Resistance, his physical existence
is overshadowed by his political existence- Existenze des Wiederstand-
and he takes his law from hostility, i.e. from his sense of supreme distinction
between friend and enemy. His struggle is against the New World Order,
its dictates and its total claim of annihilation of Russian future. For
Dugin the American New World Order is a triumph of global totalitarianism.
The Partisan is the answer to the illegitimate legality of the New World
Order.
«In the condition of the state of emergency, in the intensifying
atmosphere of ‘military peace’ or ‘peaceful war’, the defense of national
soil, history, people and nation are the sources of his legitimacy. He
heralds the beginning of a total war with the total enemy...In Russian
history his prototype is the partisan during the war against Napoleon,
the partisan of the World War II, the resister to the Nazi German New World
Order. Now he is the resister of a new New World Order- the American. The
partisan is the harbinger of the healing power of national soil and historical
national space of the Russian people. In the post-Cold War period of intensifying
‘military peace’ only the Russian partisan can show the way to a Russian
historical future». (104)
However the only viable alternative to the totalitarian globality of
the New World Order is the reconstitution or creation of a new Grossraum
opposing American world empire and the emancipation of the principles of
international pluralism. The pseudo-legality of the New World Order must
be confronted by a new alternative legality. Against the all-embracing
American pseudo-universalism must stand the will-formation of national
particularism and mobilization of geopolitical resistance. Against the
steamroller of the American New World Order and the American invasion in
the geopolitical vacuum of Eurasia after the destruction of the Soviet
Union a new continental geopolitical unity must be consolidated resulting
in proclamation of a Monroe doctrine for Europe. Therefore, referring to
the Pentagon’s Defense Planning Guidance, Alexander Dugin writes:
«The overriding objective of the United States is to prevent the
creation of any real geopolitical alternative. Therefore our main objective
must be the creation of any new geopolitical alternative.»
This is a good point of departure because it presupposes the concept
of the political. And after all, to paraphrase Heidegger, the political
is the house of Being.
|
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ENDNOTES
(1) Gyorgy Lukacs -The Destruction of Reason (Humanities Press,
Atlantic Highlands, 1981 at pp.765,770.
(2) Martin Heidegger -Being and Time (Harper and Row, New York, 1962)
at p. 347.
(3) Carl Schmitt - The Concept of the Political (Rutgers University
Press, New Brunswick, 1976) at p.p.19, 26.
(4) Nikolaj Zagladin -Pochemu zavershilas ‘holodnaja vojna’ - Kentavr,
January/February 1992, Moscow, pp. 45-60
(5) Zbignief Brzezinski -The Gold War and Its Aftermath -Foreign Affairs,
Fall 1992 (Council on Foreign Relations, New York) - at p. 32
(6) Zbigniew Brzezinski - ibid. at p. 34
(7) George F. Kennan-The Failure in Our Success -New York Times, March
14, 1992, p. A17
(8) The Treaty of Brest-Litovsk , signed March 3, 1918, ended the war
between Soviet Russia and Germany. As a result of the treaty Soviet Russia
was partitioned and lost 34 percent of the population and 54 percent of
the industrial production. According to the terms of the treaty Germany,
enlarging her Lebensraum, was to occupy Ukraine , Byelorussia, Caucasus
, the Baltic provinces etc. With the defeat of Germany the treaty was repudiated.
(9) Thomas H. Etzold and John Lewis Gaddis Containment. Documents on
American policy and Stategy, 1945—1950 (Columbia University Press, New
York, 1978) p. 196. NSC 20/1 was subsequently incorporated in the infamous
NSC 68. On this subject in Russian debate see Nikolaj von Kreitor Geopolitika
holodnoj vojny , Juridicheskaja gazeta No. 26, 1996, Moscow.
(10) Wolfram Henrieder -Germany, America, Europe (Yale University Press,
New Haven, 1989) - at p. 17
(11) Here quoted after Ronald Steel -Pax Americana (The Viking Press,
New York, 1967)- at p.p. 79-80.
(12) Lenin Collected works, vol. 41, p.p. 353-354
(13) Voprosy sotsiologij , nr 1, 1992 (Moscow )
(14) Alexander Dugin -Carl Schmitt –piat’ urokov Rossii (Nash Sovremmennik,
nr. 8.1992, Moskow)
(15) Alexander Dugin - ibid , at p.p. 129, 130,135
(16) Agnes Heller has analyzed the problem of a meta-existential choice
of a nation in a context of friend\foe dichotomy in the essay The Concept
of Political Revisited , published in Political Theory Today , edited by
David Held (Stanford University Press, Stanford, 1991).
(17) Carl Schmitt -Verfassungslehre (Duncker&Humblot, Berlin 1970)
- at p. 50. Schmitt writes further that «because every being is a
particularly-constituted being, every concrete political existence has
some sort of constitution. But not every politically existing force decides
in a conscious act concerning the form of this political existence and
succeeds in consciously determining the concrete type of its political
existence as did the American states with their Declaration of Independence
and the French nation in 1789. ibid. p.23 .See also G.L.Ulman -Anthropological
Theology, Theological Anthropology (Telos, Nr.93, Fall 1992, New York)
at p. 71.
(18) G.L. Ulmen Anthropological Theology...ibid p.71,72; Carl Schmitt
Verfassungslehre -ibid.p.372.
(19) Carl Schmitt Verfassungslehre ibid. p. 22
(20) Carl Schmitt The Concept of the Political
(21) Alexander Dugin- Carl Schmitt, pjat’ urokov Rossii- ibid. p. 131,
132
(22) Herbert Marcuse «Contribution to the Phenomenology of Historical
Materialism» (Telos, Number 4, 1969), here quoted from Richard Wolin
«Introduction to Marcuse and Heidegger» (New German Critique,
Number 53, 1991, New York) p. 23
(23) For a discussion on Heidegger’s concept of hermeneutics in Being
and Time se Richard Palmer Hermeneutics ( Northwestern University Press,
Evanston, 1969)
(24) Aaron L. Friedberg-The Future of American Power (Political Science
Quarterly, Vol.109, Spring 1994) at p. 17.
(25) Colonel Victor Alsknis’ father general Jacov Alsknis has been
a close friend of marshal Mikhail Tukhachevski; in 1937 general Alsknis
participated in the military commission investigating the treason charges
against Tuchachevski.The transcript of the commission’s proceedings, classified
secret, has never been released. First in 1990, after the intervention
of the then Chairman of the KGB Krutchkov, colonel Alsknis gained access
to the transcripts and after reading them came to the conclusion that during
the 30-ties there was a pro-German conspiracy in the Red Army in which
marshal Tukhachevski participated. Alexander Dugin claims that marshal
Tukhachevski was a member of Nordlich Light- Elementy -at p.p.10,11.
(26) Zbigniew Brzezinski A Plan for Europe (Foreign Affairs, January/February
1995) p. 26
(27) Joseph W. Bendersky -Carl Schmitt (Princeton University Press,
Princeton, 1983), at p.253.
(28) G.L. Ulmen - American Imperialism and International Law: Carl
Schmitt on the US in World Affairs- Telos, Nr. 72, Summer 1987; se also
Carl Schmitt- Voelkerrechtliche Grossraumordnung, op.cit., p.20.
(29) Rudolf Kjellen Der Staat als Lebensform (Berlin, 1924) p. 139.
Kjellen writes that the autarchic principle envisions the geopolitical
space of the state as «People’s Home». The principle of autarchy
«is a reaction against the industrialist type of the nineteenth century.
The latter was fundamentally cosmopolitan; in the name of free trade it
exposed national households to competition on the world market where the
strong always succeeded in swallowing the weak. Its first setback occurred
with the adoption of the protectionist system during the second half of
the century. Here the state acts in defense of the household (People’s
Home). It blocks the road to foreign conquerors by tariff walls behind
which national economy can prosper like a true nursery protected from the
storm of the sea...The autarchic principle ... replaces «open doors»
with «closed spheres of interest» Ibid. p.p. 139, 140. In contemporary
perspective the autarchic principle and concept of protected geopolitical
space conceived as «People’s Home» is the antagonistic opposite
of the American «open door» imperialism.
(30) The concept of Grossraum is discussed in Nikolaj von Kreitor Problemy
bol’shich prostranstv i buduschee Rossii Nash Sovremennik, No 3 , 1996,
Moscow and Nikolaj von Kreitor Stoletie novogo mira. Universalizm protiv
pljuralizma, Kentavr, No. 6, 1995, Moscow.
(31) The National Security Council Memorandum 68 (NSC-68 ) promulgated
in 1950 called for a roll-back strategy aiming to hasten the decay of the
Soviet system from within and to foster the seeds of destruction within
the Soviet system by a variety of covert and other means that would enable
the U.S. to negotiate a settlement with the Soviet Union or a successor
state or states. The memorandum further called , adopting the objectives
of Hitler, to dismantle the Soviet Union into smaller states-se also Noam
Chomsky -On Power and Ideology (South End Press , Boston, 1987) at p. 15.
In different articles published during 1991 and 1992 in the Moscow newspaper
Denj (DAY) have surfaced assertions that during the years of the so called.
Perestrojka United States has invested more than 50 billion dollars for
covert subversion in the Soviet Union.
(32) Elementy , Number 4, 1993, p. 33
(33) Halford McKinder Democratic Ideals and Reality (W.W. Norton &
Company, N.Y. 1962) p. 150
(34) Se Gerald Chaliand, Jean-Pierre Rageau-Strategic Atlas-(Harper
Perennial, N.Y. 1992)- at p. 30
(35) Halford MacKinder The Round World and theWinning of the Peace
, Foreign Affairs, 21 , New York, 1943. p.p. 595-605. The article is included
in the book Democratic Ideals and Reality. See also W.G. Fast How Strong
is the Heartland, Foreign Affairs, 29, New York, 1950 p.p. 78-93 and D.J.
M. Hooson A New Soviet Heartland , Geographical Journal , 128 (1962) p.p.
19-29.
(36) Peter J. Taylor Political Geography (Longman, London, 1985) p.
42
(37) Richard Muir Modern Political Geography (John Wiley & Sons,
New York, 1975) p. 195. For geopolitical analysis in Russia see E. A. Pozdnjakov
Geopolitika (Progress-Kuljtura, Mpscow, 1995. Nikolaj von Kreitor Ot doktriny
Monro do Novogo Mirovogo Porjadka , Molodaja Gvardija No 9, 1995, Moscow
and Nikolaj von Kreitor Amerikano-fascistkaja geopolitika na sluzhbe zavoevania
mira, Molodaja Gvardija No. 8, 1996, Moscow.
(38) See James C. Malin The Turner-MacKinder Space Concept of History
in Eassays on Historiography (Lawrence, Kansas, 1946) p.p. 1-45; Per Sveaas
Andersen Westward in the Course of Empires. A Study of the Shaping of an
American Idea: Frederick Jackson Turner’s Frontier (Oslo University Press,
Oslo, 1956).
(39) See William Appleman Williams The Contours of American History
(W.W. Norton & Company, New York, 1988) p. 17.
(40) David P. Calleo Europe’s Future. The Grand Alternatives (W.W.
Norton & Co, New York, 1967) p.p. 89,90.
(41) Carl Schmitt claimed in his book Land und Meer that world history
is the history of perpetual conflict between land powers and sea powers.
(42) Alexander Dugin Konspirologia (Arktogej, Moscow, 1993) p.p. 92,
93
(43) Alain de Benoist , Den’ No 1(29) , Moscow, 1992
(44) Elementy nr 3, 1993 - at p. 18
(45) Patrick E. Tyler- U.S. Strategy Plan Calls for Insuring No Rivals
Develop - New York Times, March 8, 1992, p. 14
(46) Excerpts from the document published in New York Times , March
8, 1992
(47) Patrick E. Tyler - US Strategy Plan...
(48) President Bush stated after the November 7-8, 1991 NATO summit
in Europe that security interests of the United States and Europe were
indivisible and, therefore , the Atlantic alliance could not be replaced
even in the long run and also that the United States presence in Europe
would be needed for a century of so. see Ted Carpenter-- In Search for
Enemies-(CATO Institute, Washington D.C. 1992, at p.p. 11-12; also White
House, Office of Press Secretary, Press Conference by the President, November
8, 1991, transcript, p.1.
(49) H. J. von Lochhausen - The War in Iraq - a War Against Europe
- Elements p.p. 34,35,36. von Lochhausen asserts also that the war against
Iraq, i.e. a war for the control of the oil , was planned a long time in
advance and its blueprint was worked out by Henry Kissinger and published
in 1975 in the magazine Commentary and later in Harper’s Magazine.
von Lochhausen writes points out that studies of American relations
with her allies show that U.S. is prone to take advantage against them
i.e. using the war as a vehicle to transform her allies into vassals. In
both W.W.I and W.W.II the American participation was largely parasitic.
While the allies made the decisive efforts the United States reaped the
fruits of the victory . See Elementy - ibid p.p. 35, 36. It is interesting
to note that both right-wing and left-wing interpretations of the Gulf
War coincide in their condemnation of American expansionism. For a left-wing
parallel to von Lochhausen see Dario Da Re, Rosanna Munghiello and Dario
Padovan Intellettuali, sinistra e conflitto del Golfo: un’interpretazione
retrospettiva del dibattito (Altreragioni, No. 2,1993) p.p. 151-174.
(50) Samir Amin -U.S. Militarism in the New World Order-Polygraph,
5/1992 (Durham, NC) -at p.23
(51) 1963 Proceedings of the American Society of International Law
13. Discussing further the legal justification of the Cuban quarantine
in 1962, Dean Acheson emphasized that « I must conclude that the
propriety of the Cuban quarantine is not a legal issue. The power, position
and prestige of the United States has been challenged by another state;
the law simply does not deal with such questions of ultimate power., se
also Noyes Leech, Covey Oliver,Joseph Sweeney-The International Legal System-
at p. 105.
(52) Charles de Gaulle -Unity, Documents (Simon & Schuster, New
York 1960) -at p. 269. Se also David Calleo- Europe’s Future. The Grand
Alternatives (W.W. Norton & Company , New York,1967) - at p.112.
(53) The memory of the American intervention in Soviet Union in 1918
in Archangelsk and Vladivostok in the Far East prompted by the U.S. interest
to gain control of the natural resources of Siberia as well as by senator
Lodge plan to divide Soviet Union into smaller states in order for the
United States to gain control over Ukraine has resurfaced and the issue
have been debated in the mass media. See on this subject A. Nevins-Nenry
White: Thirty Years of American Diplomacy, N.Y. 1930, p.354; Ljudmila Gviashvili-Sovietskaja
Rossija i Soedinennije Schtaty 1917-1920 -(Foreign Relations Publishing
House, Moscow,1970.)
In the Russian debate it has been pointed out that the objectives of
the U.S. foreign policy will be to achieve strategic superiority in the
field of nuclear armaments and through aggressive and adventurous foreign
policy initiatives to force Russia to further unilateral disarmament and
even to attempt to gain control over the nuclear potential of Russia which
is the only deterrent that prevents an outright intervention.
(54) U.S. Peacekeeping Policy Debate Angers Russians-N.Y.Times, August
29, 1993. An editorial in Krasnaja Zvezda or Red Star, the magazine of
the Russian army called Directive 13 ‘outrageously cynical and a direct
and unceremonious interference in the domestic affairs of Russia.’ Although
U.S. opposes a Russian Monroe Doctrine it is in a process of unilaterally
extend its Monroe Doctrine to include former members of the Warsaw Pact
as well as Baltic countries, which in the new American doctrinal thinking
are to form a Cordon Sanitaire surrounding Russia- se N.Y. Times, February
17, 1992.
(55) What the Monroe Doctrine meant for other Latin American countries
was the freedom of U.S. to rob and exploit those countries.- Noam Chomsky
- ibid. op. cit. p. 7.
(56) Hegel -The Philosophy of Right Oxford University Press, London,1967)
p.p. 208-216.
(57) Noam Chomsky - ibid. at p. 14
(58) G.L. Ulmen - ibid. at p. 59, 60
(59) Y. Semenov- Fashistkaja geopolitika na sluzhbe amerikanskogo imperializma
(Gospolitizdat, Moscow,1952)-at p.32.
(60) Ferdinand Czernin -Versailles 1919 (Capricorn Books, N.Y. 1964)
at. pp.404-406
(61) «Treaties should be designed to promote United States interests
by securing action by foreign governments in the way deemed advantageous
to the United States. Treaties are not to be used as a devise for the purpose
of effecting internal social changes... in relation to what are essentially
matters of domestic concern» and the United States being the sole
judge of what constitutes domestic matters - see Department of State Circular
No. 175, (December 13, 1955), reprinted in 50 Am. J. Intl. L. 784(1956).
(62) Carl Schmitt -V?lkerrechtliche Grossraumordnung... p. 43.
(63) Noam Chomsky - Terrorizing the Neighborhood. American Foreign
Policy in the Post-Cold War Era (AK Press, Stirling and San Francisco ,
1991) - at p. 24.
(64) se The Holy Alliance - Time magazine, February 24, 1992- at p.32
(65) Times- ibid. - at p. 29
(66) Noam Chomsky -Terrorizing the Neighborhood - at p. 19.
(67) Helsinki Accord, Declaration on Principles Guiding Relations between
Participating States. The full text is published in Thomas Buergenthal
(ed) -Human Rights, International Law and the Helsinki Accord-(Allanheld,
Osmun/Universe Books, New York, 1979) at pp.161-165
(68) William Safire -Bosnia vs. the United Nations - N.Y.Times. , August
9, 1993
(69) N.Y.Times , August 2, 1993 - at p. A3
(70) N.Y.Times. , Aug. 5, 1993 - p.1.
(71) Newsweek, August 28, 1993
(72) See Pravda, March 30, 1995
(73) N.Y.Times, September 12, 1993
(74) Article 52 (Coercion of a State by the threat or use of force)
of the Vienna Convention of the Law of Treaties of May 22, 1969 states
«A treaty is void if its conclusion has been procured by the threat
or use of force in violation of the principles of international law embodied
in the Charter of the United Nations.»
(75) Pravda 5, No. 24, 1996, p. 10-11. Interview of General Galuas
by Jole Stanischic.
(76) In Russian debate the Haag War tribunal has been described as
an instrument of continuous aggression, to paraphrase Clausewitz, as war
with other, judicial means, a tribunal set up by the war criminals in Washington
to justify the American territorial conquests under the guise of establishment
of a New World Order—a Monroe Doctrine for the whole world—, and persecution
Serbs— the partisans of the Resistance against dictates of the New World
Order. A historical equivalent of Hague Tribunal would have been a tribunal
set up by Nazi Germany to persecute the partisans of the Resistance during
an earlier version of the New World Order- Hitler’s. General Gallois ,
one of the organizers of the Resistance movement in France, fully realizes
the absurdity of Hague Tribunal.
(77) Pravda 5, ibid.
(78) See Novoe Russkoe Slovo , March 23, 1993- at p. 9.
(79) Wolfram Henrieder -Germany, America, Europe (Yale University Press,New
Haven,1989
(80) Hans W. Maull -Germany and Japan: The New Civilian Powers (Foreign
Affairs, Wintern 1990/91, Council of Foreign Relations, N.Y. 1991) - at
p. 93.
(81) Referring to Goethe Thomas Mann defines culture as « intellectualization
of the political» and expression of the identity and self-realization
of a nation: »The nation is not only a social being; the nation,
not the human race as the sum of individuals, is the bearer of the individual,
of the human quality; and the value of the intellectual-artistic-religious
product that one calls national culture...that develops out of the organic
depth of national life-the value, dignity and charm of all national culture
therefore definitely lies in what distinguishes it from others, for only
this distinctive element is culture, in contrast to what all nations have
in common, which is only civilization. Here we have the difference between
individual and personality, civilization and culture, social and metaphysical
live». Thomas Mann Reflections of a Nonpolitical Man (Frederick Ungar
Publishing Co, N.Y. 1983)- at p. 179.
(82) Andrew Shennan -De Gaulle (Longman, New York, 1993)- at p. 118.
(83) Andrew Shennan - ibid , p.118.
(84) David P. Calleo Europe’s future. The Grand Alternatives (W.W.
Norton & Company, New York, 1967) p. 90
(85) Interview with Alain de Benoist , Le Monde, 15 Mai, 1992 (Paris)
(86) Walter Russel Mead The United States and the New Europe (World
Policy Journal, New York), Winter 1989-90 p.p. 53,55,56
(87) The Rapallo Treaty was concluded on April 16, 1922 between Germany
and the Soviet Union. It allowed the Soviet Union to break the monolithic
capitalist encirclement by the Versailles powers while for Germany it signified
the road to revision of what was perceived as the Versailles dictate. Discussing
the possible political orientation of Russia in the future , Dugin elaborates
on the issues of a Russian-German Sonderweg as a historical background
to a common political union.
(88) Rudolf Bahro -Rapallo-Why Not- (Telos, No. 51, Spring 1982, N.Y.)
- at p. 125.It is interesting to note that the German Foreign Minister
Klaus Kinkel stated during his a meeting in Bavaria with his Russian counterpart
Andrej Kozyrev that «Creation of a partnership axis Bonn-Moscow is
an objective for German foreign policy»—Izvestija, Moscow, August
24, 1993.
(89) David Calleo -Europe’s Future -ibid. p.89; se also de Gaulle-Unity-
ibid. pp.176-177.
(90) Charles de Gaulle Unity ibid. p. 271
(91) David Calleo Europe’s Future ibid. p. 124
(92) Alexander Dugin Konspirologija ibid. 96 . Dugin refers to the
works of Konstantin Leontief in which the primacy of the principle of land
over the principle of blood was first articulated.
(93) In contemporary Russian political discourse the main proponent
of this notion has been Lev Gumilev.
(94) Robert Steuckers The Asian Challenge, Elementy , nr 3, p. 24
(95) Vladimir Ovzinski -Konterperestrojka -Nash Sovremennik -5-1992,
Moscow, at p.128.The author who has made interviews with a large number
of former KGB operatives from Lithuania, claims on the basis of those interviews
that U.S pursues four different objectives:1.Assertion of American hegemonical
interests in Lithuania in opposition to German interests. 2. Subversion
of what CIA perceives to be a Communist opposition as well as organizations
defending the interests of the Russian minority in the country. 3. Collection
of materials concerning former Lithuanian KGB operatives in order to either
persecute or recruit them. 4. Sending of recruited agents to other former
Soviet republics.
(96) See Elaine Sciolino- U.S. to Offer Plan on a Role in NATO for
Ex-Soviet Block -N.Y. Times, October 21, 1993; Stephen Kinzer- NATO Favors
U.S. Plan for Ties With the East, but Timing is Vague-N.Y.Times, October
22, 1993. President Clinton made a formal proposal for the expansion of
NATO at the NATO’s summit meeting in January of 1994.
(97) Noam Chomsky -A View from Below in Michael Hogan -The End of the
Cold War (Cambridge University Press, New York 1992) at p.142.
(98) Y.Semenov -Fascistkaja geopolitika -ibid. p. 29
(99) General Victor Filatov compares Yeltsin with the W.W.II traitor
general Vlasov-see Denj, Nr 25, 1993, Moscow, June 27, 1993. Stephen Cohen
points out that since 1991 the U.S. policy has been characterized by a
steadily escalating interventionism in the Russian domestic matters which
has created the impression among patriotic movements that Yeltsin’s government
is a U.S. sponsored ‘occupation regime’. United States interventionism
resulted in a resolution passed on March 21, 1993 by the Russian Parliament
condemning the American interference in the internal affairs of Russia.
«The Clinton Administration has steadily escalated this kind of interventionism-by
contriving the April Vancouver summit as an attempt to ‘help Yeltsin’ in
his ongoing conflict with the Parliament, by supporting the Russian President’s
threats to disband the legislature , by endorsing Yeltsin’s effort to seize
dictatorial or special powers from virtually all of Russia’s other democratic
institutions and even by suggesting that Clinton might go instead to Moscow
for a solidarity summit with Yeltsin. The result has been to put U.S. government
in very bad institutional company. Opposed to Yeltsin’s power grab was
not only Russia’s Parliament but also its Constitutional Court, Attorney
General, Justice Minister and Vice President.»- see The Nation, April
12, 1993 , at p.p.477,478.
(100) The events surrounding the September 21, 1993 coup allow for
the impression that Yeltsin undertook the coup in collusion with the United
States and, not unthinkable, on instigation of the United States.
(101) Julien Freund-The Central Themes in Carl Schmitt’s Political
Thought ,Telos, nr 102, New York 1994, at p. 31
(102) Alexander Dugin- Carl Schmitt. Pjat’ urokov Rossii-ibid. at p.
134
(103) Julien Freund - ibid. p. 31
(104) Alexander Dugin- ibid. p. 134
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New York 1994-96
This article was initially published in abreviated form in the American
political journal "Telos" and in different version has been published in
other journals.
The full version was published in German: "Rusland, Europa und Washingtons
Neue Welt-Ordnung. Das geopolitische Project einen Pax eurasiatica"
ETAPPE, Heft 12/Juni 1996
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