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The Last Totalitarians - It’s not a completely new war.
National Review Online ^ | 09/28/2001 | Brink Lindsey

Posted on 09/28/2001 12:26:25 PM PDT by Fury

The Last Totalitarians
It’s not a completely new war.

By Brink Lindsey, senior fellow at the Cato Institute and author of the upcoming book Against the Dead Hand: The Uncertain Struggle for Global Capitalism . This article is adapted from the book.
September 28, 2001 1:00 p.m.

 

That President Bush has called the first war of the 21st century has much in common with the great wars of the century just past. Now, as then, the root cause of the carnage lies in radical discontent with modern industrial society — a hydra-headed historical phenomenon that is well described as the Industrial Counterrevolution.

At first glance, shadowy Islamist terrorists look very different from any enemy we have ever faced. And indeed, the tactics they employ are novel, as are the tactics that must be used to defeat them. But the fundamental nature of our present adversaries, once seen plainly, is all too familiar. The evil we confront today is the evil of totalitarianism: Osama bin Laden, al Qaeda, and their coconspirators are the modern-day successors of Lenin and Stalin, Mussolini and Hitler, Mao and Pol Pot.

The atrocities of today's terrorists are the last shudder of a historical convulsion of unprecedented fury and destructive power. It was spawned by the spiritual confusion that accompanied the coming of the modern age, and consists of a profound hostility toward the disciplines and opportunities of human freedom. With the collapse of the Soviet Empire we thought we were done with totalitarianism. But it lives still, and lives to do harm. As we prepare once more to face this old and dangerous adversary, we need to reacquaint ourselves with its origins and nature.

To understand what gave rise to the totalitarian plague, you have to appreciate the radical historical discontinuity represented by the technological dynamism of the past 150 years. In the second half of the 19th century, various strands of economic development — new energy sources, new production techniques, breakthroughs in transportation and communication — were woven into new organizational forms to produce a wealth-creating capacity of unprecedented scale, complexity, and power. It was during this great confluence that the scientific method was first systematically integrated into economic life; technological and organizational innovation became normal, routine, and ubiquitous. Nobel prize-winning economist Douglass North refers to the "wedding of science and technology" as the "Second Economic Revolution" — the first being the advent of agriculture ten millennia ago.

The Industrial Revolution was the economic expression of a much more general transformation, a radical new form of social order whose defining feature was the embrace of open-ended discovery: open-endedness in the pursuit of knowledge (provisional and refutable hypotheses supplanting revelation and authority), open-endedness in economic life (innovation and free-floating market transactions in place of tradition and the "just price"), open-endedness in politics (power emerging from the people rather than the divine right of kings and hereditary aristocracies), and open-endedness in life paths (following your dreams instead of knowing your place). In short, industrialization both advanced and reflected a larger dynamic of liberalization — a dramatic and qualitative shift in the dimensions of social freedom.

The emergence of this new liberal order in the North Atlantic world came as a series of jolting shocks. Kings were knocked from their thrones or else made subservient to parliaments; nobles were stripped of rank and power. Science displaced the earth from the center of the Universe, dragged humanity into the animal kingdom, and cast a pall of doubt over the most cherished religious beliefs. As if these assaults on age-old verities were not enough, the coup de grace was then applied with the eruption of mechanized, urbanized society. The natural, easy rhythms of country life gave way to the clanging, clock-driven tempo of the city and the factory, and new technologies of miraculous power and demonic destructiveness burst forth. Vast riches were heaped up in the midst of brutal hardship and want; new social classes erupted and struggled for position.

In countries outside of the North Atlantic world, the experience of modernization was, if anything, even more vertiginous. Social changes were often accelerated by the confrontation, all at once, with Western innovations that had taken decades or centuries to develop originally. Moreover, these changes were experienced not as homegrown developments, but as real or figurative conquests by foreign powers. Modernity thus came as a humiliation — a shocking realization that the local culture was hopelessly backward compared with that of the new foreign masters.

It is unsurprising that, in all the wrenching social tumult, many people felt lost — adrift in a surging flux without landmarks or firm ground. The deepest thinkers of the 19th century identified this anomie as the spiritual crisis of the age: Friedrich Nietzsche proclaimed the death of God, while Max Weber wrote of society's "disenchantment." But it was Karl Marx who traced most clearly the connection between this spiritual crisis and the economic upheavals of his day. As he and Friedrich Engels wrote in this breathtaking passage from the Communist Manifesto:

Constant revolutionising of production, uninterrupted disturbance of all social conditions, everlasting uncertainty and agitation distinguish the bourgeois epoch from all earlier ones. All fixed, fast-frozen relationships, with their train of ancient and venerable prejudices and opinions, are swept away, all new-formed ones become antiquated before they can ossify. All that is solid melts into air, all that is holy is profaned….

Thus did industrialization beget a massive backlash — a reaction against the dizzying plenitude of open-endedness, a lurch toward some antidote to the jarring, jangling uncertainty of a world where "all that is solid melts into air." The Industrial Counterrevolution was protean and, in its many guises, captured minds of almost every persuasion. But in all its forms, it held out this promise: that political power, whether at the national or global level, could recreate the simplicity, certainty, and solidarity of preindustrial life. The appeal of that promise powered a disastrous century of collectivist experimentation.

The promise of redemption through politics — of reintegration into some larger whole — was present even in the milder incarnations of the collectivist impulse. As against the "chaos" and "anarchy" of the market order, a central state with expanded fiscal and regulatory powers offered the reassurance that somebody was "in charge." In particular, the nationalization or regulation of previously autonomous private enterprises reasserted the primacy of the group, which had always held sway in earlier times. In all the various permutations of incremental collectivism — social democracy, the welfare and regulatory state, Keynesian "fine tuning," development planning — the emotional appeal of group cohesion buttressed the intellectual arguments for greater government involvement in economic life.

But it was in the radical centralizing movements of totalitarianism that the rebellion against open-endedness overwhelmed all other considerations. Robert Nisbet, in his seminal Quest for Community, identified the rise of totalitarianism in modern times as an effort to recreate, through the state, the lost sense of community that had obtained in the premodern world. "The greatest appeal of the totalitarian party, Marxist or other," wrote Nisbet, "lies in its capacity to provide a sense of moral coherence and communal membership to those who have become, to one degree or another, victims of the sense of exclusion from the ordinary channels of belonging in society."

And in his great but too little remembered 1936 book, The Good Society, Walter Lippmann diagnosed the totalitarian threat as a "collectivist counter-revolution" against industrial society's complex division of labor. "[T]he industrial revolution," he wrote, "has instituted a way of life organized on a very large scale, with men and communities no longer autonomous but elaborately interdependent, with change no longer so gradual as to be imperceptible, but highly dynamic within the span of each man's experience. No more profound or pervasive transformation of habits and values and ideas was ever imposed so suddenly on the great mass of mankind." Opposition to that transformation, he continued, had hatched the monstrous tyrannies that at that time menaced the world:

[A]s the revolutionary transformation proceeds, it must evoke resistance and rebellion at every stage. It evokes resistance and rebellion on the right and on the left — that is to say, among those who possess power and wealth, and among those who do not…. Though these two movements wage a desperate class struggle, they are, with reference to the great industrial revolution of the modern age, two forms of reaction and counter-revolution. For, in the last analysis, these two collectivist movements are efforts to resist, by various kinds of coercion, the consequences of the increasing division of labor.

The misbegotten secular religions of totalitarianism won their devoted and ruthless followings by offering an escape from the stresses of modernity — specifically, from the agoraphobic panic that liberal open-endedness roused. They aspired to "re-enchant" the world with grand dreams of class or racial destiny — dreams that integrated their adherents into communities of true believers, and elevated them from lost souls to agents of great and inexorable forces. With their insidiously appealing lies, the false faiths of communism and fascism launched their mad rebellion against the liberal rigors of questioning and self-doubt — and so against tolerance and pluralism and peaceable persuasion. They inflicted upon a century their awful, evil perversion of modernity: the instrumentalities of mass production and mass prosperity twisted into engines of mass destruction and mass murder.

The liberal revolution survived the reactionary challenge. Fascism was put to rout, at horrible cost, in the great struggle of World War II; Communism was contained and waited out until it imploded, just a decade ago. And coincident with Communism's demise has come a global rediscovery of liberal ideas and institutions. Free markets and democracy have registered impressive gains around the world. However, the dead hand of the collectivist past still exerts a powerful influence: The inertia of old mindsets and vested interests blocks progress at every turn, and so our new era of globalization is a messy and sometimes volatile one. But it is an era of hope, and of possibility.

As the horrible events of September 11 made clear, we are not yet finished with the totalitarian threat. In the tragic, broken societies of the Islamic world — where free markets have gained little foothold, and democracy even less — radical hostility to modernity still festers on a large scale. And it has given rise to a distinctive form of totalitarianism: one that uses a perverted form of religious faith, rather than any purely secular ideology, as its reactionary mythos. For the past quarter-century, radical Islamist fundamentalism has roiled the nations in which it arose. Now it has reached out to wage a direct, frontal assault on its antithesis — its "Great Satan": the United States.

Despite the trappings of religious fervor, Islamist totalitarianism is strikingly similar to its defunct, secular cousins. It is an expression, not of spirituality, but of anomie: in particular, a seething resentment of Western prosperity and strength. Consider the origins of the Muslim Brotherhood. Founded in 1928 to resist the British presence in Egypt, the Brotherhood was the original radical Islamist terror network. As detailed in David Pryce-Jones' powerful The Closed Circle, the official account of its formation records this statement at the group's initial meeting: "We know not the practical way to reach the glory of Islam and serve the welfare of Muslims. We are weary of this life of humiliation and restriction. Lo, we see that the Arabs and the Muslims have no status and dignity."

And — just like its Communist and fascist predecessors — Islamist totalitarianism seeks redemption through politics. It is animated by the pursuit of temporal power: the destruction of the "decadent" (i.e., liberal) West and creation of a pan-Islamic utopian state featuring unrestrained centralization of authority. Whether the utopian blueprint calls for mullahs, commissars, or Gauleiters to wield absolute power is of secondary importance: It is the utopian idea itself — the millennial fantasy of a totalitarian state — that unites all the radical movements of the Industrial Counterrevolution.

The point bears emphasis. Radical Islamist fundamentalism not does content itself with mere rejection of the West's alleged vices. If that were all there was to it, its program might be simply to stage a retreat from modernity's wickedness — to do, in other words, what the Amish have done. But Islamist totalitarianism, though it claims otherworldly inspiration, is obsessed with worldly power and influence. It does not merely reject the West; it wants to beat the West at its own game of worldly success. Osama bin Laden is constantly claiming that the United States is weak and can be defeated; he and his colleagues lust for power and believe they can attain it. And so, although it attempts to appropriate a particular religious tradition, Islamist totalitarianism is not, at bottom, a religious movement. It is a political movement — a quest for political power.

Indeed, Islamist fundamentalism shares with other totalitarian movements a commitment to centralization not just of political power, but of economic control as well. Consider Iran, where the first and greatest victory for Islamist totalitarianism was won. As Shaul Bakhash describes in his Reign of the Ayatollahs:

[T]he government took over large sectors of the economy through nationalization and expropriation, including banking, insurance, major industry, large-scale agriculture and construction, and an important part of foreign trade. It also involved itself in the domestic distribution of goods. As a result, the economic role of the state was greatly swollen and that of the private sector greatly diminished by the revolution.

Today, the sectaries of radical Islamism continue to uphold various collectivist strains of "Islamic economics" — trumpeted as righteous alternatives to the secular and individualist corruption of "Eurocentric" globalization.

Before the September 11 attacks, it appeared that Islamist totalitarianism was a movement in decline. In the decades since the Iranian revolution, formidable Islamist opposition movements have built up around the Islamic world, but totalitarian regimes have come to power only in the Sudan and Afghanistan — backwaters even by regional standards. Elsewhere, insurgencies have been crushed (in Syria) or at least brutally repressed (in Algeria, Egypt, and Chechnya). In Iran, revolutionary fervor steadily gave way to disillusionment and cynicism; the reformist government of Mohammed Khatami has moved gingerly toward a more moderate course.

In the wake of September 11, it is unclear whether the U.S. military response will precipitate a new wave of radicalization in the Islamic world — one which might topple existing regimes and bring totalitarians to power. It is unclear whether terrorists will be able to outmaneuver the escalation of security and intelligence activity now underway, and bring off further successful attacks in the United States or elsewhere. It is, in short, unclear what further horrors must be endured, at home and around the world, because of Islamist totalitarianism.

But this much is clear: The United States is now at war with the totalitarians of radical Islamism. And in prior conflicts with the totalitarian impulse of the Industrial Counterrevolution, the United States has been undefeated. Americans triumphed first over fascism, then over Communism — movements with ideologies of potentially global appeal, and with political bases in militarily formidable great powers. Americans will rise again to this latest challenge. Unlike its predecessors, radical Islamism speaks only to the disaffected minority of a particular region, and none of the governments of that region holds any hope of prevailing against the resolute exercise of U.S. power. However long the present war must last, and however costly it must be, the final outcome cannot be doubted: interment of Islamist totalitarianism in what President Bush so stirringly referred to as "history's unmarked grave of discarded lies."



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To: novakeo
Well, yes, actually, although it's arguable whether we actually created him, or just trained him to fight. ALL policies have unintended consequences, and what the people who argue that we never should have opposed the Soviet Union's expansion attempt in Afghanistan never say is what the preferred policy would have been. Let the Soviets expand unrestrained? What was next, Pakistan, India? Who knows? It's easy to be a perfect armchair quarterback when the game is over.

The salient point is that Cold War tactics kept the fight out of our back (and front) yards. Looks like a win to me.

101 posted on 09/28/2001 6:20:19 PM PDT by walden
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To: SwimmingUpstream
my objections

You mean Russell Kirk's objections? His airy generalizations and lack of definition of terms makes your chosen quote totally useless for discussion.

102 posted on 09/28/2001 6:21:15 PM PDT by Torie
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To: Torie
You mean Russell Kirk's objections? His airy generalizations and lack of definition of terms makes your chosen quote totally useless for discussion.

No, I mean MY objections in my #60 to your gratuitous and general-to-the-point of meaningless statement.

Evidently you are a dodger, a commonplace on this site. I had hoped for something more from you, evidently in vain. Such is life.

103 posted on 09/28/2001 6:29:41 PM PDT by SwimmingUpstream
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.
104 posted on 09/28/2001 6:37:01 PM PDT by independentmind
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To: walden
This war on ALL terrorism will be somewhat different then the cold war. To many random elements. Also, they have the ability to hit us here at home, and the determination to do just that. Whats next, bio or chemical? I agree this will be a long war and we will see many more casualties, here at home, before its over. I do not accept the concept of creating murderers to kill murderers as a moral and viable strategy to fight world terrorism.
105 posted on 09/28/2001 6:42:22 PM PDT by novakeo
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To: sinkspur
You and Askel5 are quite a pair. Maybe you'd make a good tag-team on WWF if you didn't bore the audience to death.

That sentence was the most recent in a long line of dull thuds coming from your direction.

106 posted on 09/28/2001 7:28:07 PM PDT by Mmmike
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To: Torie, Askel5
I thought about looking up Irma actually, but it was too late, since I don't carry around a laptop.

Awwwww, geeeez, Torie! You shoulda just smelled the gumbo!

Next time LET US KNOW! ;-)

107 posted on 09/28/2001 8:27:22 PM PDT by Irma
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To: tpaine
I see this war to be about much more than just material concerns.

I agree it's not about material concerns, but I think it's the result of material disparities. Those of theological bent would assert that material success often undermines Man's spirituality. It's a chicken or egg question which I would answer differently: Material deprivation drives Man to seek purpose and meaning outside the material realm. The less hope that exists in this world the greater the motivation to believe justification will be found in the next.

This will be a cultural clash, if it goes global.

Yes, cultural in its present manifestation, but economic at its core, IMO. The cultural differences wouldn't exist -- at least they would not be so severe -- without the economic disparities. Resentment born of the disparity is rationalized by the resenters to other causes: religious, cultural, moral, societal. Those on the short end of the stick almost universally feel their lot is the result of being victimized and/or unwilling to commit the "evils" which they believe have led to the material success of the resented.

The matter of "open-endedness" can be stated as chicken or egg as well, but perhaps more likely is a self-feeding progession. No question that there's a tendency to fear change, and to fear it most when the nature and extent of it is unknown (open-ended). The less security (confidence? self-sufficiency?) an individual or group believes it has, the more likely he/she/it will be driven by fear to pay a high price trying to achieve it. Sometimes the price is mere gold; sometimes it is freedom; usually it is both.

108 posted on 09/28/2001 8:45:47 PM PDT by LSJohn
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To: Askel5
All a matter of priorities, I guess.

Pretty good, seein' as how you're just guessin'.

Oh, and about all them furiners you love? I'll bet I'd love 'em too, 'cept them Ayrabs -- they're eeeevil, ya know.

109 posted on 09/28/2001 8:51:07 PM PDT by LSJohn
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To: SwimmingUpstream
You are such a cry baby! You play the word game of subtle insult then try to plead that someone has dodged your too-cute-by-half smarm. Amazing. 'Evidently you are a dodger, a commonplace on this site. I had hoped for something more from you, evidently in vain. Such is life.' Actually, after reading lo these many post from your puter, I don't expect anything from you ... why do you condescend to visit our FR home?
110 posted on 09/28/2001 8:56:10 PM PDT by MHGinTN
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To: LaBelleDameSansMerci
I really think Bill Clinton has become an unhealthy fetish for some people. The idea that the bombing of the Serbs was solely his brainchild is too fantastic to be believed.

I'm sure -- between sneaking out of the White House for sex and the bombing of Sudan for spite -- indeed it was Bill Clinton who strategized the means by which the GOP Senate eschewed a real trial and BOTH former President Bush AND Albania Bob Dole stood up to send a message during impeachment that actual removal of the Mad Bomber would ruin the decorum of the semen-stained office.

Another one of those Slick moves ... like the way he let the GOP hand him a police state he and Reno live-fired for the hell of it at Waco only to have Danforth wipe their weapons clean on November 8, 2000 under cover of election crisis.

I think it's pretty clear that -- even if some of his former lays or "graduates" form one of rings of folks who protect him from himself and he's still such a Mommy's boy that Hillary can abuse him like a dog -- Bill Clinton probably is ruling the world to this day.

(Or else he's the biggest shell the game's ever seen since Kennedy's skull got cracked.)

111 posted on 09/28/2001 8:57:16 PM PDT by Askel5
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To: MHGinTN
He may be harsh on our marathon man Torie but SwimmingUpstream's cool. I can direct you to some posts which may prove my point.
112 posted on 09/28/2001 9:01:09 PM PDT by Askel5
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To: walden
If you don't like our pluralistic society, why don't you try Afghanistan, or Iran?

A pluralistic society must accomodate the non-pluralists among it. Otherwise it becomes a monistically Pluralist culture, which is a contradiction in terms.

113 posted on 09/28/2001 11:39:21 PM PDT by Dumb_Ox
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To: Torie

I might add that it is my impression that America is considerably less hated in Latin America than it was 50 years ago. The animus really does seem to largely reside in certain precincts of the Muslim world (and of course in France). And that is because America has the courage sometimes when it counts to just say no.

Don't get off the island much, do you? America is roundly despised throughout the entire former communist world by everyone except the former communists themselves, who have made a living pledging unyeilding fealty to the strong-man hovering over them. All others, who mistakenly saw the end of communism as an opportunity to finally decide for themselves how they were to be governed and by whom, are either quietly resentful of American meddling and bullying or openly disdainful. Ask Meciar supporters, Lukashenka supporters, Tudjman supporters, Csurka supporters, and all those leaders who didn't rush to privatize the national crown jewels to foreign multinationals and ended up being overthrown by a CIA-backed "people's uprising".

Anyone who has been abroad for more than a little holiday and who doesn't associate exclusively with the nomenklatura or its offspring knows that the U.S. is perceived abroad is with great dislike and suspicion -- kind of how the former USSR was viewed.

114 posted on 09/29/2001 8:15:07 AM PDT by Zviadist
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To: Fury; SwimmingUpstream; Zviadist; independentmind; Askel5; novakeo; randalcounsins; sinkspur; Torie
How hard will the US government cling to those "brinkian" delusions?

John Gray
Monday 24th September 2001
Terror in America: Essay 2 -- Communism failed, but market liberalism then tried to impose its own utopia. The atrocities should mark the end of that crusade.
By John Gray

The dozen years between the fall of the Wall and the assault on the Twin Towers will be remembered as an era of delusion. The west greeted the collapse of communism - though it was itself a western utopian ideology - as the triumph of western values. The end of the most catastrophic utopian experiment in history was welcomed as a historic opportunity to launch yet another vast utopian project - a global free market. The world was to be made over in an image of western modernity - an image deformed by a market ideology that was as far removed from any human reality as Marxism had been.

Now, after the attacks on New York and Washington, the conventional view of globalisation as an irresistible historical trend has been shattered. We are back on the classical terrain of history, where war is waged not over ideologies, but over religion, ethnicity, territory and the control of natural resources.

We are in for a long period - not months but years, perhaps decades - of acutely dangerous conflict, from which it will be impossible, as well as wholly wrong, for Britain to stand aside. It will be a type of conflict with which many regions of the world are all too familiar, but which overturns many of our preconceptions about war and peace. Its protagonists are not the agents of states, but organisations whose relationships with governments are oblique, ambiguous and sometimes indecipherable.

The men who struck the Pentagon and the World Trade Center, using penknives and passenger jets as weapons, were soldiers in a new kind of war. A monopoly of organised violence is one of the defining powers of the modern state, achieved slowly and with difficulty. Now war, like so much else in the age of globalisation, has slipped out from the control of governments - and it has done so, moreover, with astonishing speed over the past decade.

The world is littered with collapsed states. In much of Africa, in Afghanistan, in the Balkans and a good deal of Russia, there is nothing that resembles a modern state. In these zones of anarchy, wars are fought by irregular armies commanded by political and religious organisations, often clan-based, and prone to savage internecine conflicts. No power is strong enough to enforce peace.

The results expose the weaknesses and contradictions of the global free market constructed after the cold war. Rich societies cannot be insulated from the collapsed states and new forms of war. Asylum-seekers and economic refugees press on the borders of every advanced country. But while trade and capital move freely across the globe, the movement of labour is strictly limited - a very different state of affairs from the late 19th century, a period of comparable globalisation in which barriers to immigration hardly existed. This is a contradiction rarely noted by tub-thumpers for the global market, but it will become more acute as travel is monitored and controlled ever more stringently by governments.

With the assaults on New York and Washington, the anarchy that has been one of the by-products of globalisation in much of the world can no longer be ignored. The ragged, irregular armies of the world's most collapsed zones have proved that they can reach to the heart of its richest and most powerful state. Their brutal coup is an example of what military analysts call "asymmetric threat" - in other words, the power of the weak against the strong. What it has shown is that the strong are weaker than anyone imagined.

The powerlessness of the strong is not new. It has long been revealed in the futile "war" on drugs. The trade in illegal drugs is, along with oil and armaments, one of the three largest com-ponents of world trade. Like other branches of organised crime, it has thrived in the free-for-all created by financial deregulation. The world's richest states have squandered billions on a vain crusade against a highly globalised and fabulously well-funded industry.

Rooting out terrorism will be even more difficult. After all, most of the worst effects of the drug trade can be eradicated simply by legalising it. There is no parallel remedy for terrorism. The atrocities in Washington and New York did more than reveal the laxity of America's airport security and the limitations of its intelligence agencies. It inflicted a grievous blow to the beliefs that underpin the global market.

In the past, it was taken for granted that the world will always be a dangerous place. Investors knew that war and revolution could wipe out their profits at any time. Over the past decade, under the influence of ludicrous theories about new paradigms and the end of history, they came to believe that the worldwide advance of commercial liberalism was irresistible. Financial markets came to price assets accordingly. The effect of the attack on the World Trade Center may be to do what none of the crises of the past few years - the Asian crisis, the Russian default of 1998 and the collapse of Long Term Capital Management, an over-leveraged hedge fund - was able to do. It may shatter the markets' own faith in globalisation.

Some people say that this was the purpose of the attack, and that we would be craven to give in to it. Instead, we are told, we must reassert the verities of the global free market and seek to rebuild it. And, with luck, it may not be too late to stave off worldwide recession. But the name of the game has changed for ever. The entire view of the world that supported the markets' faith in globalisation has melted down. Whatever anyone tells you, it cannot be reconstituted.

The wiser course is to ask what was wrong with it. It is worth reminding ourselves how grandiose were the dreams of the globalisers. The entire world was to be remade as a universal free market. No matter how different their histories and values, however deep their differences or bitter their conflicts, all cultures everywhere were to be corralled into a universal civilisation. What is striking is how closely the market liberal philosophy that underpins globalisation resembles Marxism. Both are essentially secular religions, in which the eschatological hopes and fantasies of Christianity are given an Enlightenment twist. In both, history is understood as the progress of the species, powered by growing knowledge and wealth, and culminating in a universal civilisation.

Human beings are viewed primarily in economic terms, as producers or consumers, with - at bottom - the same values and needs. Religion of the old-fashioned sort is seen as peripheral, destined soon to disappear, or to shrink into the private sphere, where it can no longer convulse politics or inflame war. History's crimes and tragedies are not thought to have their roots in human nature: they are errors, mistakes that can be corrected by more education, better political institutions, higher living standards.

Marxists and market liberals may differ as to what is the best economic system - but, for both, vested interests and human irrationality alone stand between humankind and a radiant future. In holding to this primitive Enlightenment creed, they are at one. And both have their dogmatic, missionary side.

For market liberals, there is only one way to become modern. All societies must adopt free markets. If their religious beliefs or their patterns of family life make this difficult for them, too bad - that is their problem. If the individualist values that free markets require and propagate go with high levels of inequality and crime, and if some sections of society go to the wall, tough - that is the price of progress. If entire countries are ruined, as happened in Russia during the time of neoliberal shock therapy, well - as an earlier generation of radicals nonchalantly put it - you can't make an omelette without breaking eggs.

During the 1990s, this crudely rationalistic philosophy was hugely influential. It had a stronghold in the International Monetary Fund, as it blundered and bungled its way across the world exercising its power to impose identical policies on countries with vastly different histories, problems and circumstances. There was only one route to modernity - and the seers who ruled the IMF were resolved that it be followed everywhere. In fact, there are many ways of being modern, and many of failing to be so. It is simply not true that liberal capitalism is the only way of organising a modern economy. Bismarck's Prussia embodied a different model, as did tsarist Russia, and each of them might well have been with us still in some form had the First World War ended differently.

The Japanese and German forms of capitalism have never conformed to the free market model and - despite orthodox opinion everywhere telling us the contrary - it is a safe bet that they never will. We cannot know in advance what modernity means for any given society, or what it takes to achieve it. All we know for sure is that different countries have modernised successfully in a variety of ways.

The atrocities of 11 September have planted a question mark over the very idea of modernity. Is it really the case that all societies are bound, sooner or later, to converge on the same values and views of the world? Not only in America but also, to some degree, in most western countries, the belief that modernisation is a historical imperative that no society can ignore for long made it harder to perceive the growing risk of an anti-western backlash. Led by the US, the world's richest states have acted on the assumption that people everywhere want to live as they do. As a result, they failed to recognise the deadly mixture of emotions - cultural resentment, the sense of injustice and a genuine rejection of western modernity - that lies behind the attacks on New York and Washington.

In my view, it is reasonable to regard the struggle against the groups that mounted those attacks as a defence of civilised values. As their destruction of ancient Buddhist relics demonstrated, the Taliban are hostile to the very ideas of toleration and pluralism. But these ideas are not the property of any one civilisation - and they are not even peculiarly modern. In western countries, the practice of toleration owes much to the Reformation and, indeed, to the Enlightenment, which has always contained a sceptical tradition alongside its more dogmatic schools.

Beyond Europe, toleration flourished long before the modern era in the Muslim kingdoms of Moorish Spain and Buddhist India, to name only two examples. It would be a fatal error to interpret the conflict that is now under way in terms of poisonous theories about clashing civilisations.

Effective action against terrorism must have the support of a broad coalition of states, of which Britain should certainly be part. Crucially, these must include Muslim countries (which is one reason why American military action must entail new attempts to seek peace in Israel). Not only Russia and China - each of which has serious problems with Islamic fundamentalism - but even Iran could conceivably join in a US-led coalition. Constructing such a far-reaching alliance will be an exercise in realpolitik in which ideas of global governance of the kind that have lately been fashionable on the left become largely irrelevant. The US will find itself supping with former enemies and courting states that are in no sense committed to liberal values. In waging war against the Taliban, it will do battle against a force it backed only a few years ago to resist the Soviet invasion.

Such ironies can no more be conjured away by international courts than by global markets. They are built into an intractably disordered world. Bodies such as the United Nations can play a useful role in the labyrinthine diplomacy that will inevitably surround military action.

But anyone who thinks that this crisis is an opportunity to rebuild world order on a liberal universalist model has not understood it. The ideal of a universal civilisation is a recipe for unending conflict, and it is time it was given up. What is urgently needed is an attempt to work out terms of civilised coexistence among cultures and regimes that will always remain different. Over the coming years, the transnational institutions that have built the global free market will have to accept a more modest role, or else they will find themselves among the casualties of this great upheaval. The notion that trade and wealth creation require global laissez-faire has no basis in history. The cold war - a time of controls on capital and extensive intervention in the economy by national governments - was, in western countries, a time of unprecedented prosperity. Contrary to the cranky orthodoxies of market liberals, capitalism does not need a worldwide free market to thrive. It needs a reasonably secure environment, safe from the threat of major war, and reliable rules about the conduct of business. These things cannot be provided by the brittle structures of the global free market. On the contrary, the attempt to force life everywhere into a single mould is bound to fuel conflict and insecurity.

As far as possible, rules on trade and the movement of capital should be left to multilateral agreements between sovereign states. If countries opt to stay out of global markets, they should be left in peace. They should be free to find their own version of modernity, or not to modernise at all. So long as they pose no threat to others, even intolerable regimes should be tolerated.

A looser, more fragmented, partly de-globalised world would be a less tidy world. It would also be a safer world. It will be objected that de-globalisation defies the dominant trend of the age. But while it is true that technology will continue to shrink time and distance, and in that sense link the world more closely, it is only a bankrupt philosophy of history that leads people to think that it will produce convergence on values, let alone a worldwide civilisation.

New weapons of mass destruction can - and quite possibly will - be used to prosecute old-style wars of religion. The Enlightenment thinking that found expression in the era of globalisation will not be much use in its dangerous aftermath. Even Hobbes cannot tell us how to deal with fundamentalist warriors who choose certain death in order to humble their enemies.

The lesson of 11 September is that the go-go years of globalisation were an interregnum, a time of transition between two epochs of conflict. The task in front of us is to forge terms of peace among peoples separated by unalterably divergent histories, beliefs and values. In the perilous years to come, this more-than-Hobbesian labour will be quite enough to keep us occupied.

John Gray, professor of European thought at the London School of Economics, is the author of False Dawn: the delusions of global capitalism (Granta) © The Author © New Statesman Ltd. 2001. All rights reserved. Please contact the publisher. The New Statesman is registered as a newspaper in the UK and the USA

...Gray has a few delusions of his own, but the article is a tidy counterpoint to Brink in wonderland....

115 posted on 09/30/2001 2:17:17 PM PDT by LaBelleDameSansMerci
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To: LaBelleDameSansMerci
"...Your kind Torie, is a killer...."

A bit of scenery chewing there, I'm afraid. I'm sorry.

(But it's all your fault, you know. If you didn't say the things you say, and think the things you do, I wouldn't have to chew the scenery....)

116 posted on 09/30/2001 2:21:42 PM PDT by LaBelleDameSansMerci
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To: LaBelleDameSansMerci
Your insults don't bother me LaBelle. They reflect only on yourself.

As to the article, it is long, turgid, repetitive, disorganized and mushy.

Suffice it to say that the "globalists" have never forced modernity on anyone. What happens is that countries get into hock to the IMF or other countries, and then they want more money for a bailout, and the IMF says if you want more money, you need to adopt more effective economic policies so that we have some hope of getting repaid.

With the exception of Indonesia, and to some extent Egypt, the IMF and globalization has largely bypassed the Islamic world.

Free trade can be conducted between nations of different cultures and political systems, and has been done so for a long time. I do agree that free trade and/or economic liberalization do not always imply Westernization or the adoption of pluralism and democracy ala the Wall Street Journal model.

117 posted on 09/30/2001 2:33:30 PM PDT by Torie
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To: LaBelleDameSansMerci
Agreed on the smattering of delusions but all in all very nice ... has that been posted as a stand-alone?
118 posted on 09/30/2001 2:35:28 PM PDT by Askel5
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To: randalcousins
"...As an interesting aside, on the subject of western "secular fundamentalism", I watched the news tonight on the BBC. They had a reporter from inside Afghanistan reporting on the arrest of another BBC reporter inside Afghanistan (bear in mind all western reporters were kicked out of Afghanistan by the Taliban recently). The first reporter (a woman) expressed concern for the well-being of the other reporter (another woman) because, among other things, of the "well-known dislike of the Taliban for western women". Why is the BBC sending female reporters into a country where they are in much more danger than men would be? Is it just a politically correct refusal to send in only male reporters, or a provocation? ..."

The interesting asidesoften provide a clearer picture of the problem than all of the "scholarly" opinion put together--don't they? This bothered me the first time I read the news too. It's really a big deal, if you think about it, from so many angles.

I remember reading in Roman Polanski's autobiography that when he first came to the USA everyone wanted his opinion about hippies. He observed something to the effect that hippies proved that America really was the richest entity on earth because no other People could afford such waste and unreality.

That sense of waste and unreality seems to stalk much of the "developed" world. It makes me wonder just exactly what it is we've been developing all these years. We seem to have developed along the lines of breast implants. You know---developed, yes, but there is no THERE, there....

119 posted on 09/30/2001 2:35:35 PM PDT by LaBelleDameSansMerci
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To: Askel5
I don't think so. But you know how it is. It might be posted under another title like: "CRAZED LIMEY PENS ANTI-AMERICAN DIATRIBE!!!! WE FOUGHT THE COLD WAR AGAINST THE WRONG FOREIGNERS!!!"

...and all that jazz...

120 posted on 09/30/2001 2:48:44 PM PDT by LaBelleDameSansMerci
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