Thoughts on production, alienation, and ideology

Category: Foreign Policy (Page 1 of 3)

These are posts on foreign policy from the blog Base and Superstructure. Unfortunately left-wing foreign policy is largely locked out of the mainstream press and culture. These posts are mostly overviews of foreign policy issues in specific parts of the world.

A Word On The Israel-Gaza War

Destroyed buildings in Gaza. Buildings destroyed by Israel.

A few readers have noted that I haven’t posted on the Israel-Gaza War. The war has raged since last October, at times overtaking the news and even U.S. political debate.

That’s true enough. I haven’t written anything new on Israel and Gaza in the last few months. Here’s a brief word about why.

First, the things I said a few years ago about the Israel Palestine Conflict, sadly, still apply pretty well. I wrote a post in 2019 introducing readers to the conflict. I also expanded the post into a full chapter in my second book, Left Foreign Policy. In those outlets, I laid out the conflict as one primarily about resources, which then drives the moves Israel makes as the hegemonic power in the region.

Predictably, much of the mainstream press presents the conflict as one about religion or (Israeli) national security. Almost all sources fail to identify the ongoing Israeli occupation of the West Bank and Gaza Strip as the major cause of the current fighting. This all leads the press astray.

Second, I’ve found a few sources worth following closely. Both for the day to day details of the conflict and broader analysis. Early in the Israel Gaza War, the American Prestige podcast established itself as an great source for news, interviews, and commentary. +972 magazine also stands out as a solid source that moves beyond the pro-Israel biases that pervade the U.S. press.

Finally, I’ll admit that I struggle to find useful things to say about the Israel Gaza War. Not that there aren’t things to say, but rather that most of the things worth saying won’t help move us toward a better outcome.

I’ve moved past that phase of life where I think personal displays of awareness on social media do anything positive. Rather, I think people – myself and readers all included – should join orgs like DSA that are trying to build a better U.S. left. DSA, better than any other org, works an internationalist perspective on the Israel Gaza War into a deeper vision of what the left can become. Shouting into the void on Twitter – or even joining single-issue orgs – can’t do anything like that.

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DSA Statement on Russian Invasion of Ukraine

So, the DSA released a statement on the Russian invasion of Ukraine. And boy did liberals hate it! Liberals hated it a lot! You can read it at the link in the first sentence.

However, I’m not going to bother linking to any of the liberal critiques. You can read those at your own leisure. Or you can not read them at all. Whatever. Most of those critiques are so awful they don’t merit a response. All I really wanted to do here is provide a short summary of the statement and the context of it, as far as I can tell.

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Left Foreign Policy (New Book!)

Left Foreign Policy An Organizer's Guide

I spent much of my Pandemic Year hard at work on a new book. And now I’m ready to announce its release! I called the book Left Foreign Policy: An Organizer’s Guide. You can buy the paperback version at the link above. Here’s a page where you can read an in-depth description.

But on this page, I’ll say a bit about the target audience. It’s a book on left foreign policy at a very 101-level. I wrote it for new leftists and for organizers holding discussions with new leftists. In the book, I lay out some general principles for foreign policy organizing, and I invite new leftists to see internationalism as a key piece of leftist strategy and work. So, from this starting point, we can do better organizing.

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U.S. China Policy 101

At the beginning stages of his run for President, Donald Trump oddly fixated on China. He pronounced the word ‘China’ itself with the frenzy of a racist, and he focused on the nation in the context of international trade. Trump accused China of currency manipulation and unfair trade practices. In one heated claim, he accused China of ‘raping‘ the U.S. via its trade policy.

How did this situation arise? What’s the relationship between the U.S. and China? Where is that relationship headed?

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U.S. Nigeria Policy 101

For the sixth installment of the Foreign Policy 101 series, let’s move to sub-Saharan Africa. We’ll take a look at U.S. policy in Nigeria. In most of these foreign policy posts, I approach policy through issues of war and peace. That’s a bit less useful in Nigeria, where economic issues loom large. The extraction of resources looms largest.

Oh, the U.S. fights wars in the region. But not as often as other places and not often at all in Nigeria. The U.S. has long been a Nigerian ally. It spends most of its time there managing its economic interests, especially via primitive accumulation. The U.S. state – and both U.S. and European NGOs – uses Nigeria as a place for gathering capital.

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