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It is the USA that has used military force and the threat of it to build and support its exceptional privilege based upon the global dominance of the petrodollar.
This is a cargo cult mentality. You're looking at the external trappings of wealth. The US did not get rich by having a large military. It got rich first, then it bought a large military. And US dollar dominance is a market choice that is unenforceable by military intervention. No one is forced to buy the dollar or US debt. They might be forced to accept it as a payment method, but actively buying and holding it is a personal decision.
it is a mixed economy based upon the combined use of free market competition and state lead strategic development and capital allocation.
There's no such thing as "mixed." Either the state or the market is in control of capital allocation. It's a win-lose competition. They have completely different interests. You just call it mixed to pay lip service to the idea that the market has some kind of input when it doesn't. The state does not care about the market's preferences, or it wouldn't be meddling in economic decisions in the first place.
Nearly all high tech military applications require rare earths to manufacture
It's your subjective preference to count helicopters instead of bitcoins.
Study the history of the USA- no other nation has in modern times infiltrated, assassinated and other-thrown more governments and killed more people than the USA- all in the name of US wealth, power and hegemony.
There is absolutely such a thing as a mixed economy- study economics and learn. It is for example where China directs capital to the mining and refining of rare earths which are in turn used by multiple Chinese companies to make all manner of modern high tech products from drones to EVs, PVs, electric motors, generators, rockets, robots and many many more military industrial products all giving China real and significant strategic and economic advantage over the 'free market' west where they do not have an assured supply of rare earths and now cannot fight a war of any size for at least ten years.
China won the trade war using the mixed economy model and now looks like gaining global hegemony because the crony capitalist west forgot the huge importance of strategic investment in supply chains, skills and infrastructure- something a mixed economy can do very well.
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no other nation has in modern times infiltrated, assasinated and other-thrown more governments and killed more people that=n the USA- all in the name of US wealth power and hegemony.
And you think it worked? You think the US got rich by invading Iraq?
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Since Iraq the US empire has been in obvious decline. Most of the oilfields in Iraq are being developed and operated by Chinese engineers and companies- because China has built a more effective global mercantile and resource development program than the corrupt militaristic US one. Chinas mixed economy model is beating the west at its own game.
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And you're still missing the point. When the government levies a tax, that is militarism. That is a military extracting value from civilians by force. You're suggesting it serves some long term goal that in some indirect roundabout way eventually provides partial benefit to the civilians it stole from is a question not worth exploring because the initial theft is a human rights violation.
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China has won the trade war and dominates global supply chains and commodity markets.
China now calls the shots militarily as well because it controls the supply of rare earths.
USA is on the back foot and cannot fight a war of any size without Chinas assistance.
Chinas power and wealth are increasing with its rapidly expanding, competitive, strategically structured, planned and profitable mixed economy while the USA is in decline, drowning in debt, due to its crony capitalist decadence and bloated sense of entitlement and superiority.
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America and China are friends. You're talking about communist seditionists. China will never be a communist country.
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Talk nonsense because you cannot refute the facts and issues raised.
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But you're saying the US became rich through military force. So if it wasn't Iraq and it wasn't Vietnam, when did military spending make the US richer?
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WW2 and then Iran in the 1950s Indonesia in the 1970s Latin America since the 1880s etc etc etc
Read some history you lazy mendacious cunt.
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But there's no monetary gain to the US. It's Indonesia and Chile that benefited from purging communists. The US did them a favor.
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Read some of the history you ignorant troll. This week, the non-profit National Security Archive, along with the National Declassification Center, published a batch of U.S. diplomatic cables covering that dark period. While the newly declassified documents further illustrated the horror of Indonesia’s 1965 mass murder, they also confirmed that U.S. authorities backed Suharto’s purge. Perhaps even more striking: As the documents show, U.S. officials knew most of his victims were entirely innocent. U.S. embassy officials even received updates on the executions and offered help to suppress media coverage. While crucial documents that could provide insight into U.S. and Indonesian activities at the time are still lacking, the broad outlines of the atrocity and America’s role are there for anyone who cares to look them up.
This leads us to an intriguing set of questions: which came first, Sukarno’s leaning to the left or the US’ overwhelming support of the right? Was the US responsible for throwing off the balance of the “great puppet master” largely unprovoked, or did Sukarno’s foreign policy change significantly and aggravate the US to do so? From the available research, it still does not seem clear. But the remaining US-Indonesian relations to be examined may bring us closer to an answer. A second threat to US interests that may have led to coercive action is the security of US oil fields in Indonesia. In 1965, before the coup, Sukarno threatened to expropriate two major US oil companies in Sumatra: Caltex and Stanvac[6]. Furthermore, as a means of completely eradicating the legacy of Dutch colonialism, Sukarno wanted to rewrite the laws governing exploitation of the country’s resources[7]. These potential new oil laws were seen as a great obstacle to US companies’ investment plans, and this perceived threat is often overlooked when examining US foreign policy toward Indonesia during this fateful year. A third factor leading up to the tension between Sukarno and Washington was Sukarno’s proposed ambitions for Muslim Malaysia. Although the Eisenhower administration may have recognized Sukarno as a neutralist, it feared that his international ambitions and potential loss of control over the PKI might destabilize the region[8]. H.W. Brands claims that these fears came with Sukarno’s 1963 campaign against British neo-colonialism in Malaysia as well as against Malaysia itself. This contributed to the worsening of the economy, and by the end of the year, the Jakarta government was verging on bankruptcy and the PKI was becoming increasingly militant. Arguably the most drastic shift in the role of the US during this time came with Lyndon Johnson’s accession to the Presidency after Kennedy in 1963. While Kennedy had initially increased economic aid to Sukarno and Indonesia, it began to decrease when Johnson came to office with a much more anti-Sukarno approach, under pressure from Congress[9]. In fact, from 1962-65 there was a gradual but complete cutoff of all economic aid from the US to Indonesia. However, this cutoff in economic aid was accompanied by an increase in military aid: $39.5 million went to the Indonesian army during these four years as opposed to the $28.3 million of US military aid during the thirteen year period of 1949-61[10]. Furthermore, extensive CIA support and training of the paramilitary anti-PKI groups was also happening during this time[11]. As Robert McNamara boasted, the government invested $5 million in bringing approximately 2,100 Indonesian military personnel to the US for training[12]. Sukarno’s 1964 declaration to the western powers, “Go to hell with your aid”[13] is indicative of the brewing tensions between Washington and Sukarno. This famous speech expressed Sukarno’s extreme anger at the US’ aid-with- strings-attached approach to economic assistance, for instance threatening to stop aid unless Sukarno called off the confrontation with Malaysia[14]. This rhetoric inflamed Washington and fed the western perception that Sukarno was moving significantly further toward the left, and therefore toward the PKI. The turning point that sparked the massacre began with the Gestapu, an acronym of the “Indonesian September 30 Affair”[15]. The “official” understanding of this event is that it was carried out by the PKI, although more recently the research points to a General in the Palace Guard who started it in order to pre-empt an expected coup against Sukarno[16]. In the early hours of the morning on October 1st 1965, six generals of the Indonesian Army High Command were murdered[17]. This prompted a US-backed movement to exterminate the PKI and all communists affiliated with them. It resulted in the burning of the Chinese embassy and the slaughtering of over 500,000 Javanese civilians[18], as well as the complete destruction of the PKI as a competitor for power in Indonesia[19]. It was a short- lived catastrophe, lasting from this incident to March 1966[20]. Bradley Simpson asserts that although there is no evidence that directly implicates the US in the September 30th movement or in the ousting of Sukarno, it unquestionably sought to encourage the PKI in a coup attempt in order to provoke a violent reaction from the military, who would presumably put it down[21]. Brands, however, argues that the US had almost no role in the downfall of Sukarno, and agrees with Harold Crouch’s notion that the events of 1965 and following were merely a display of a trend toward a politicization of the military[22]. Although it may or may not be true that US organizations did not directly plot the Gestapu and removal of Sukarno, it is absurd to claim that they had almost no role in Sukarno’s downfall. Supplying a vast sum of money and extensive training to the Indonesian military, which in effect represented one party, while simultaneously cutting off economic E-International Relations ISSN 2053-8626 Page 2/5 Re-Examining US Intervention in Indonesia Written by Emma Kastassistance to the Sukarno government as a form of blackmail for noncompliance were nothing short of manipulation tactics, with profound consequences on the region. The training and aid created a strong military that was able to respond quickly and violently to the Gestapu and cause the deaths of half a million people. Therefore, this aid was likely a contributing cause of the proposed politicization of the military. As Peter Dale Scott explains, it would be foolish to assign all the blame to one group—the US, the Indonesian military, the PKI, or Sukarno[23]. Of course, intelligence in Britain, Japan, and Australia had a significant and similar influence on the Indonesian military. On the opposing side, the Chinese were supplying arms directly to the PKI and the Soviet powers were providing them with economic assistance. But US organizations, most notably the CIA, seemed to most directly manipulate the political stage in the region. In addition, Scott asserts that there is extensive evidence of CIA propaganda that aided in instilling a sense of fear of communists and stirring up militaristic attitudes against them that may have led to the coup[24]. What ensued was a severe tension between the CIA and Sukarno, or a “war of words”[25]. We now have evidence that a committee whose mission was to review and authorize covert operations sent a telegram to Jakarta proposing a clandestine liaison with anti-communist groups in Indonesia, political action within existing organizations, and an exploitation of PKI factionalism[26]. It is impossible to ignore the evidence of US infiltration in Indonesian political organizations that was used to carry out an anti-PKI, anti-Sukarno agenda. In fact, Sukarno was even convinced that the CIA was plotting to kill him—an issue the CIA took so seriously, it felt compelled to publicly announce otherwise. Again, without assigning a causal role to the US’ involvement in the coup, this can help explain the extent and consequences of US intervention by suggesting that this propaganda played a larger role in throwing off the balance of power in Indonesia than is traditionally recognized. In the conclusion of the The Year of Living Dangerously, we see a polarization of ideology, representative of the cold war, which had disastrous consequences for Indonesia. The US and Indonesia’s contradicting interests came out into the open in 1965 with Sukarno’s declaration of the Jakarta-Beijing axis on Indonesian Independence Day in 1965[27], as this publicly ended the non-alignment movement and neutralist policies of Sukarno. The short coup resulted in General Suharto taking power with the US behind him. Although extremely corrupt, Suharto’s regime ended the famine and initially contributed to the growth of the Indonesian economy—so it is difficult to judge whether US involvement was on some level ultimately helpful, or if the famine would have never happened in the first place if it had not been for the US. But at the very least it is important to acknowledge the prominent role of the US in what Sukarno declared the “year of living dangerously” and the events leading up to it that completely changed the face of Indonesia. Most importantly, examining these events can tell us a great deal about the role of covert government operations in developing countries that often end in massive loss of life and are purely driven by US interests. These operations are often overlooked when explaining the outbreak of chaos in these regions, including civil war. Bibliography Berger, Mark T. “The End of Empire and the Cold War,” in Contemporary Southeast Asia, ed. Mark Beeson, 29-45. New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2009.
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All of these mass murders happened because of statism. This is what it means to have a mixed economy. It means there's a mix of peaceful market trade and violent statist tax disputes.