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The future capitalism offers

The last century saw two world
wars and a prolonged cold war as up-and-coming capitalist states tried
to challenge the domination of the world by the powers that had got
there first – Britain and France with their
colonial empires. Each time the top dogs beat off the challenge. In the
end, America reduced Britain and France to second-rate status too. Now
a new challenger is emerging: China.
The rulers of China have set
themselves the task of building up their state as an industrial and
military super-power to rival America and have begun investing in
Africa and Latin America with a view to securing supplies of raw
materials such as iron ore, copper, nickel, cobalt and, of course, oil.
And the world’s currently-dominant power –
America – and its satellites like Britain
are worried. “Insatiable Beijing scours the
world for power and profit” was the shrill
headline in the Times of London on 12 January. Already their
defence (the Orwellian word for war) strategists are planning to build
up their military might yet further to counter the challenge from
China. So much for the so-called “peace
dividend” of which there was briefly talk
after the challenge from Russia was seen off.
Access to oil has already caused
many wars in the Middle East and was a factor in the last world war.
Hitler’s apparently mad decision to invade
Russia was prompted by a desire to gain control of the oil resources of
the Caspian area. One of Japan’s aims, too,
was access to oil in British-controlled Burma and Dutch-controlled
Indonesia.
China today is in the same
position as Japan before the last world war. That is the analysis of
the Washington-based Worldwatch Institute in its annual State of
the World report, for 2006, published last month. According to the
summary in the Times, the report “draws
the parallel between Japan in the 1930s and China today. It recalls
that it was Japan’s inability to secure its
oil supplies from South-East Asia that prompted its entry into the
Second World War. Today Beijing is strengthening its Navy to protect
its energy supplies, shipped at great distances from the Middle East,
Africa and Latin America”.
The report risked an
understatement:
“The prospect
of countries ranging from the United States and China to Japan and
Saudi Arabia – together with the world’s terrorists – vying for
physical control of the world’s oil does not sound like a prescription
for global security.”
After adding that India too
would be involved in the scramble for oil and other resources,
Worldwatch President, Chris Flavin, concluded: “We
therefore face a choice: rethink almost everything, or risk a downward
spiral of political competition and economic collapse”.
Yes, that’s the choice we really
do face. The Worldwatch Institute was set up by the advocate of world
government, Lester Brown, in 1974. Treating the world as one unit, so
that issues such as resource allocation and protection of the global
environment could be tackled on the only scale they can be, is
certainly rethinking on the right lines. But world government in the
context of continuing capitalist production for profit would not work.
What is required – as the only way to avoid
the risk of the 21st century being a repeat of the 20th
– is world socialism as
a world community without
frontiers where the natural and industrial resources of the Earth have
become the common heritage of all Humanity.
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