Feeds:
Posts
Comments

When veteran peace activist Hugh Romney aka Wavy Gravy travelled America in the late 1960’s with the Hog Farm Hippie Collective protesting the Vietnam War, he said he had a surefire way to stop the police from beating them at demonstrations. “We’d whip out a bunch of cameras and they’d immediately start behaving themselves.” A good idea. The police don’t like to be seen as sadistic bullies. Cameras show what happens.
 
But as we near the end of the first decade of the 21st century, is an aimed
camera still a deterrent to police brutality in America? It’s certainly not
so in Britain any more. Following an amendment to Section 76 of the United
Kingdom’s Counter Terrorism Act, if you so much as point your lens at a
copper in Blighty these days you’re likely to find you and your camera under
arrest.
 
The new amendment, which came into law on February 16th makes it an offence
to ‘collect or make a record of information about members of the armed
forces, intelligence services and the police force, of a kind likely to be
useful to a person committing or preparing an act of terrorism.’ ‘Record’
includes a ‘photographic or electronic record.’

Prime Minister Gordon Brown supports the police in their right to restrict
photography if the need arises. “The law applies to photographers as it does
to anybody else in a public place,” he said. “There may be situations in
which the taking of photographs may cause or lead to public order situations
or raise security considerations.”
 
On the day the amendment became law some 200 photographers gathered outside
Scotland Yard’s headquarters in London to protest that the law could be
misused to stop any pictures from being taken – especially images involving
police abuse and behaviour at demonstrations.
 
“This law makes it much more difficult to photograph any kind of public
demonstration or riot,” said Marc Vallee, a protester and photographer. “The
police are already suspicious of photographers and this just gives them more
ammunition to stop us at our work.”
 
Intimidation by police in Britain of photojournalists has been on the
increase with surveillance cameras turned on them at political
demonstrations; the demanding of name and address from photographers despite
their showing of presscards, and innumerable occasions when police officers
have demanded photographs to be deleted. Under the new law officers may
allow photographers to keep taking pictures in some cases, or ask them to
stop and threaten them with arrest in others. Those who refuse to stop
after a warning face arrest and the possibility of detention for several
days without charge, followed by unspecified fines or up to 10 years in
prison.
 
Metropolitan Police Federation’s chairman Peter Smyth admitted in a press
release that Section 76: “is open to wide interpretation or, rather,
misinterpretation…poorly-drafted anti-terrorist legislation could be used to
justify unwarranted interference in their (press photographer’s) lawful
activities.”
 
Just recently the Chief British Superintendent of the Metropolitan police’s
Public Order Branch, David Hartshorn, announced that police are preparing
for a “summer of rage” when victims from the economic downturn who have lost
their jobs, homes or savings will take to the streets in violent mass
protests to demonstrate and vent their anger against against banks and
headquarters of multinational companies and other financial institutions.
He pinpointed the kick-start for trouble to begin as a demonstration planned
in the city of London to coincide with the G20 meeting of world leaders of
industrial nations in early April.
 
The event, dubbed ‘Financial Fools Day’, is likely to cause mass disruption
as thousands of demonstrators try to block traffic and buildings as they
demonstrate against the financial system in the heart of the City.
 
One of the visiting world leaders will be Barak Obama. Perhaps it was his
election slogan that helped to inspire this manifesto of the protestors:
 
MELTDOWN MANIFESTO
 
Can we oust the bankers from power?
 
Can we get rid of the corrupt politicians in their pay?
 
Can we guarantee everyone a job, a home, a future?
 
Can we establish government by the people, for the people, of the people?
 
Can we abolish all borders and be patriots for our planet?
 
Can we all live sustainably and stop climate chaos?
 
Can we make capitalism history?
 
YES WE CAN!
 
Needless to say police are on full alert and will be out in huge numbers on
the day. The new amendment to Section 76 of the Counter Terrorism Act will
be a great help to them to cover up evidence of their violence and
brutality. By the end of the day they expect to have the archive shelves of
Scotland Yard groaning with cameras, and the cells filled with bruised and
groaning photographers, wishing they’d used their mobile phones to record
events instead.
 
Former head of MI5, Dame Stella Rimington recently accused the British – as
well as the U.S. government — of exploiting the fear of terrorism and
trying to bring in laws that restrict civil liberties. The amendment to
Section 76 of the Counter Terrorism Act, along with Home Office plans to
expand powers for police and security services to monitor email, telephone
and internet activity, makes Gordon Brown’s New Labour Britain a strong
candidate for the world’s number one Big Brother state.
 
http://www.counterpunch.org/dickinson03062009.html
 
By MICHAEL DICKINSON

- a London G20 Communiqué

 

from the Confidential Insurrection Unit, via email, 26 February 2009:

ENOUGH IS ENOUGH!

The bankers are having a laugh – still – at our expense. They pocket £650,000 a year pensions – for life! We get redundancies, closed shops, houses repossessed, the dole queue, no future for our kids.

Gordon Brown and Peter Mandelson are responsible for the credit crunch as much as their banker pals – pals shared with Cameron and Osbourne’s City slickers.

The pathetic TUC can only organise boring bog standard marches from A to B addressed by Labour has-beens – trying to keep a lid on our anger.

In every street there are empty Woolworths which should be seized and turned into action centres or indoor car boot sales. Sacked workers should occupy factories and offices, home repossessions should be resisted.

We should kick the bankers and their political cronies out of power.

This is really the beginning of the end…

IF YOU MUG A PENSIONER ON THE STREET YOU GET NICKED… IF A BANKER ROBS SOMEONE’S PENSION HE GETS A YACHT -THREE DAYS TO FIGHT BACK!


The Spring Offensive

 

March 28th – “Put People First,

Embankment (11am) marching to Hyde Park

April 1st – “Financial Fools Day

Bank of England (12pm noon) Assemble Cannon Street, Moorgate, Liverpool Street or London Bridge 11am

April 1st – “Climate Camp

European Climate Exchange (12pm noon)

Hasilwood House, 62 Bishopsgate EC2N 4AW

April 2nd – “G20 Meltdown

ExCel Centre Canning Town (all day)

See http://www.g20-meltdown.org/

For Freedom

For Solidarity

For Mutual Aid

For Anarchism

For Revolution

wag2frontforweb1

                       JOIN THE SPRING OFFENSIVE!

No to NATO

natoshirt90

The preparations for the protests against this year’s NATO summit in Strasbourg, France and Baden-Baden, Germany on the 3rd-5th April at which 40 heads of state and government leaders will meet are well underway. The summit will mark NATO’s 60th birthday – 60 years of co-ordinating war and oppression on a global scale. There are plans to agree on a new, more ‘pro-active’ strategic direction, meaning most likely increased powers to intervene and wage war as well as increased blurring of external and internal security.

“What the Western allies face is a long, sustained and proactive defence of their societies and way of life. To that end they must keep risks at a distance, while at the same time protecting their homelands.” – quoted from the NATO discussion paper ‘Towards a grand strategy for an uncertain world’

After the mass mobilisation against the G8 summit in Germany in 2007 as well as the repression around it, a movement has continued to build that combines militancy and grassroots mass action, and a wider alliance to co-ordinate protest and blockades at the NATO summit has been formed alongside other regional groups and campaigns and the broad international co-ordination.

In France too a variety of groups, networks and NGOs have been organising around the summit, apparently with some polarisation between the ‘more traditional peace movement’ and NGOs, and groups around the Dissent network. However, a planning conference on the 14th/15th February in Strasbourg drew 400-500 people from all over Europe and a co-ordinated framework for actions was successfully agreed upon.

Timeline

Before the summit even starts, there will be demonstrations on Saturday, the 28th March with ‘We won’t Pay for your Crisis’ demonstrations in Berlin and Frankfurt in Germany, as well as an anti-NATO demo in Freiburg on the 30th March, where there’ll also be a convergence centre (opening from the 25th March).

The main action camp will kick off with a festival in Strasbourg on the 1st April and a day of action around ‘European Security Architecture’. The Thursday has been declared a day of action around war and crisis.

A counter summit in Strasbourg will start on Friday 3rd. On the same day, there are plans to disrupt the ministers’ meeting in the afternoon, and the formal dinner in the evening in Baden-Baden.

On Saturday, it looks like there will be a variety of actions, including a large demonstration in the afternoon in Strasbourg and blockades of the summit in the morning. On Sunday, the counter summit will continue, and actions will focus on anti prison struggle and prisoner solidarity.

Predictably enough, security around the summit will be high, with millions being spent and thousands of officers being deployed as well as a whole range of other security agencies down to the military, and attempts to create no go areas for demonstrators. The whole of Strasbourg promises to be turned into a police state with a ban on cars in the city centre, the cancellation of sporting events and other such measures. In Germany various new laws and measures are threatening freedom of assembly and giving the police more powers to prevent protest.

Information at: http://www.gipfelsoli.org/ where you’ll find a whole range of useful links

www.no-to-nato.org

The man who predicted the 1987 stock market crash and the fall of the Soviet Union is now forecasting revolution in America, food riots and tax rebellions – all within four years, while cautioning that putting food on the table will be a more pressing concern than buying Christmas gifts by 2012.

Gerald Celente, the CEO of Trends Research Institute, is renowned for his accuracy in predicting future world and economic events, which will send a chill down your spine considering what he told Fox News this week.

Celente says that by 2012 America will become an undeveloped nation, that there will be a revolution marked by food riots, squatter rebellions, tax revolts and job marches, and that holidays will be more about obtaining food, not gifts.

“We’re going to see the end of the retail Christmas….we’re going to see a fundamental shift take place….putting food on the table is going to be more important that putting gifts under the Christmas tree,” said Celente, adding that the situation would be “worse than the great depression”.

“America’s going to go through a transition the likes of which no one is prepared for,” said Celente, noting that people’s refusal to acknowledge that America was even in a recession highlights how big a problem denial is in being ready for the true scale of the crisis.

Celente, who successfully predicted the 1997 Asian Currency Crisis, the subprime mortgage collapse and the massive devaluation of the U.S. dollar, told UPI in November last year that the following year would be known as “The Panic of 2008,” adding that “giants (would) tumble to their deaths,” which is exactly what we have witnessed with the collapse of Lehman Brothers, Bear Stearns and others. He also said that the dollar would eventually be devalued by as much as 90 percent.

The prospect of revolution was a concept echoed by a British Ministry of Defence report last year, which predicted that within 30 years, the growing gap between the super rich and the middle class, along with an urban underclass threatening social order would mean, “The world’s middle classes might unite, using access to knowledge, resources and skills to shape transnational processes in their own class interest,” and that, “The middle classes could become a revolutionary class.

In a separate recent interview, Celente went further on the subject of revolution in America.”There will be a revolution in this country,” he said. “It’s not going to come yet, but it’s going to come down the line and we’re going to see a third party and this was the catalyst for it: the takeover of Washington, D. C., in broad daylight by Wall Street in this bloodless coup. And it will happen as conditions continue to worsen.

“The first thing to do is organize with tax revolts. That’s going to be the big one because people can’t afford to pay more school tax, property tax, any kind of tax. You’re going to start seeing those kinds of protests start to develop.

“It’s going to be very bleak. Very sad. And there is going to be a lot of homeless, the likes of which we have never seen before. Tent cities are already sprouting up around the country and we’re going to see many more.

“We’re going to start seeing huge areas of vacant real estate and squatters living in them as well. It’s going to be a picture the likes of which Americans are not going to be used to. It’s going to come as a shock and with it, there’s going to be a lot of crime. And the crime is going to be a lot worse than it was before because in the last 1929 Depression, people’s minds weren’t wrecked on all these modern drugs – over-the-counter drugs, or crystal meth or whatever it might be. So, you have a huge underclass of very desperate people with their minds chemically blown beyond anybody’s comprehension.

The George Washington blog has compiled a list of quotes attesting to Celente’s accuracy as a trend forecaster.

“The Trends Research Institute is the Standard and Poors of Popular Culture.
” – The Los Angeles Times

“If Nostradamus were alive today, he’d have a hard time keeping up with Gerald Celente.
“- New York Post

So there you have it – hardly a nutjob conspiracy theorist blowhard now is he? The price of not heeding his warnings will be far greater than the cost of preparing for the future now.

ungov

“There’s going to be growing conflict between the classes and if people are unemployed and really hurting, hell, there could be even riots!” said Brzezinski, President Jimmy Carter’s national security advisor, in a recent interview with NBC.

A Planet at the Brink

Will Economic Brushfires Prove Too Virulent to Contain?

As people lose confidence in the ability of markets and governments to solve the global crisis, they are likely to erupt into violent protests or to assault others they deem responsible for their plight, including government officials, plant managers, landlords, immigrants, and ethnic minorities. (The list could, in the future, prove long and unnerving.) If the present economic disaster turns into what President Obama has referred to as a “lost decade,” the result could be a global landscape filled with economically-fueled upheavals.

Indeed, if you want to be grimly impressed, hang a world map on your wall and start inserting red pins where violent episodes have already occurred. Athens (Greece), Longnan (China), Port-au-Prince (Haiti), Riga (Latvia), Santa Cruz (Bolivia), Sofia (Bulgaria), Vilnius (Lithuania), and Vladivostok (Russia) would be a start. Many other cities from Reykjavik, Paris, Rome, and Zaragoza to Moscow and Dublin have witnessed huge protests over rising unemployment and falling wages that remained orderly thanks in part to the presence of vast numbers of riot police. If you inserted orange pins at these locations — none as yet in the United States — your map would already look aflame with activity. And if you’re a gambling man or woman, it’s a safe bet that this map will soon be far better populated with red and orange pins.

For the most part, such upheavals, even when violent, are likely to remain localized in nature, and disorganized enough that government forces will be able to bring them under control within days or weeks, even if — as with Athens for six days last December — urban paralysis sets in due to rioting, tear gas, and police cordons. That, at least, has been the case so far. It is entirely possible, however, that, as the economic crisis worsens, some of these incidents will metastasize into far more intense and long-lasting events: armed rebellions, military takeovers, civil conflicts, even economically fueled wars between states.

Every outbreak of violence has its own distinctive origins and characteristics. All, however, are driven by a similar combination of anxiety about the future and lack of confidence in the ability of established institutions to deal with the problems at hand. And just as the economic crisis has proven global in ways not seen before, so local incidents — especially given the almost instantaneous nature of modern communications — have a potential to spark others in far-off places, linked only in a virtual sense.

A Global Pandemic of Economically Driven Violence

The riots that erupted in the spring of 2008 in response to rising food prices suggested the speed with which economically-related violence can spread. It is unlikely that Western news sources captured all such incidents, but among those recorded in the New York Times and the Wall Street Journal were riots in Cameroon, Egypt, Ethiopia, Haiti, India, Indonesia, Ivory Coast, and Senegal.

In Haiti, for example, thousands of protesters stormed the presidential palace in Port-au-Prince and demanded food handouts, only to be repelled by government troops and UN peacekeepers. Other countries, including Pakistan and Thailand, quickly sought to deter such assaults by deploying troops at farms and warehouses throughout the country.

The riots only abated at summer’s end when falling energy costs brought food prices crashing down as well. (The cost of food is now closely tied to the price of oil and natural gas because petrochemicals are so widely and heavily used in the cultivation of grains.) Ominously, however, this is sure to prove but a temporary respite, given the epic droughts now gripping breadbasket regions of the United States, Argentina, Australia, China, the Middle East, and Africa. Look for the prices of wheat, soybeans, and possibly rice to rise in the coming months — just when billions of people in the developing world are sure to see their already marginal incomes plunging due to the global economic collapse.

Food riots were but one form of economic violence that made its bloody appearance in 2008. As economic conditions worsened, protests against rising unemployment, government ineptitude, and the unaddressed needs of the poor erupted as well. In India, for example, violent protests threatened stability in many key areas. Although usually described as ethnic, religious, or caste disputes, these outbursts were typically driven by economic anxiety and a pervasive feeling that someone else’s group was faring better than yours — and at your expense.

In April, for example, six days of intense rioting in Indian-controlled Kashmir were largely blamed on religious animosity between the majority Muslim population and the Hindu-dominated Indian government; equally important, however, was a deep resentment over what many Kashmiri Muslims experienced as discrimination in jobs, housing, and land use. Then, in May, thousands of nomadic shepherds known as Gujjars shut down roads and trains leading to the city of Agra, home of the Taj Mahal, in a drive to be awarded special economic rights; more than 30 people were killed when the police fired into crowds. In October, economically-related violence erupted in Assam in the country’s far northeast, where impoverished locals are resisting an influx of even poorer, mostly illegal immigrants from nearby Bangladesh.

Economically-driven clashes also erupted across much of eastern China in 2008. Such events, labeled “mass incidents” by Chinese authorities, usually involve protests by workers over sudden plant shutdowns, lost pay, or illegal land seizures. More often than not, protestors demanded compensation from company managers or government authorities, only to be greeted by club-wielding police.

Needless to say, the leaders of China’s Communist Party have been reluctant to acknowledge such incidents. This January, however, the magazine Liaowang (Outlook Weekly) reported that layoffs and wage disputes had triggered a sharp increase in such “mass incidents,” particularly along the country’s eastern seaboard, where much of its manufacturing capacity is located.

By December, the epicenter of such sporadic incidents of violence had moved from the developing world to Western Europe and the former Soviet Union. Here, the protests have largely been driven by fears of prolonged unemployment, disgust at government malfeasance and ineptitude, and a sense that “the system,” however defined, is incapable of satisfying the future aspirations of large groups of citizens.

One of the earliest of this new wave of upheavals occurred in Athens, Greece, on December 6, 2008, after police shot and killed a 15-year-old schoolboy during an altercation in a crowded downtown neighborhood. As news of the killing spread throughout the city, hundreds of students and young people surged into the city center and engaged in pitched battles with riot police, throwing stones and firebombs. Although government officials later apologized for the killing and charged the police officer involved with manslaughter, riots broke out repeatedly in the following days in Athens and other Greek cities. Angry youths attacked the police — widely viewed as agents of the establishment — as well as luxury shops and hotels, some of which were set on fire. By one estimate, the six days of riots caused $1.3 billion in damage to businesses at the height of the Christmas shopping season.

Russia also experienced a spate of violent protests in December, triggered by the imposition of high tariffs on imported automobiles. Instituted by Prime Minister Vladimir Putin to protect an endangered domestic auto industry (whose sales were expected to shrink by up to 50% in 2009), the tariffs were a blow to merchants in the Far Eastern port of Vladivostok who benefited from a nationwide commerce in used Japanese vehicles. When local police refused to crack down on anti-tariff protests, the authorities were evidently worried enough to fly in units of special forces from Moscow, 3,700 miles away.

In January, incidents of this sort seemed to be spreading through Eastern Europe. Between January 13th and 16th, anti-government protests involving violent clashes with the police erupted in the Latvian capital of Riga, the Bulgarian capital of Sofia, and the Lithuanian capital of Vilnius. It is already essentially impossible to keep track of all such episodes, suggesting that we are on the verge of a global pandemic of economically driven violence.

A Perfect Recipe for Instability

While most such incidents are triggered by an immediate event — a tariff, the closure of local factory, the announcement of government austerity measures — there are systemic factors at work as well. While economists now agree that we are in the midst of a recession deeper than any since the Great Depression of the 1930s, they generally assume that this downturn — like all others since World War II — will be followed in a year, or two, or three, by the beginning of a typical recovery.

There are good reasons to suspect that this might not be the case — that poorer countries (along with many people in the richer countries) will have to wait far longer for such a recovery, or may see none at all. Even in the United States, 54% of Americans now believe that “the worst” is “yet to come” and only 7% that the economy has “turned the corner,” according to a recent Ipsos/McClatchy poll; fully a quarter think the crisis will last more than four years. Whether in the U.S., Russia, China, or Bangladesh, it is this underlying anxiety — this suspicion that things are far worse than just about anyone is saying — which is helping to fuel the global epidemic of violence.

The World Bank’s most recent status report, Global Economic Prospects 2009, fulfills those anxieties in two ways. It refuses to state the worst, even while managing to hint, in terms too clear to be ignored, at the prospect of a long-term, or even permanent, decline in economic conditions for many in the world. Nominally upbeat — as are so many media pundits — regarding the likelihood of an economic recovery in the not-too-distant future, the report remains full of warnings about the potential for lasting damage in the developing world if things don’t go exactly right.

Two worries, in particular, dominate Global Economic Prospects 2009: that banks and corporations in the wealthier countries will cease making investments in the developing world, choking off whatever growth possibilities remain; and that food costs will rise uncomfortably, while the use of farmlands for increased biofuels production will result in diminished food availability to hundreds of millions.

Despite its Pollyanna-ish passages on an economic rebound, the report does not mince words when discussing what the almost certain coming decline in First World investment in Third World countries would mean:

 

“Should credit markets fail to respond to the robust policy interventions taken so far, the consequences for developing countries could be very serious. Such a scenario would be characterized by… substantial disruption and turmoil, including bank failures and currency crises, in a wide range of developing countries. Sharply negative growth in a number of developing countries and all of the attendant repercussions, including increased poverty and unemployment, would be inevitable.”

 

In the fall of 2008, when the report was written, this was considered a “worst-case scenario.” Since then, the situation has obviously worsened radically, with financial analysts reporting a virtual freeze in worldwide investment. Equally troubling, newly industrialized countries that rely on exporting manufactured goods to richer countries for much of their national income have reported stomach-wrenching plunges in sales, producing massive plant closings and layoffs.

The World Bank’s 2008 survey also contains troubling data about the future availability of food. Although insisting that the planet is capable of producing enough foodstuffs to meet the needs of a growing world population, its analysts were far less confident that sufficient food would be available at prices people could afford, especially once hydrocarbon prices begin to rise again. With ever more farmland being set aside for biofuels production and efforts to increase crop yields through the use of “miracle seeds” losing steam, the Bank’s analysts balanced their generally hopeful outlook with a caveat: “If biofuels-related demand for crops is much stronger or productivity performance disappoints, future food supplies may be much more expensive than in the past.”

Combine these two World Bank findings — zero economic growth in the developing world and rising food prices — and you have a perfect recipe for unrelenting civil unrest and violence. The eruptions seen in 2008 and early 2009 will then be mere harbingers of a grim future in which, in a given week, any number of cities reel from riots and civil disturbances which could spread like multiple brushfires in a drought.

Mapping a World at the Brink

Survey the present world, and it’s all too easy to spot a plethora of potential sites for such multiple eruptions — or far worse. Take China. So far, the authorities have managed to control individual “mass incidents,” preventing them from coalescing into something larger. But in a country with a more than two-thousand-year history of vast millenarian uprisings, the risk of such escalation has to be on the minds of every Chinese leader.

On February 2nd, a top Chinese Party official, Chen Xiwen, announced that, in the last few months of 2008 alone, a staggering 20 million migrant workers, who left rural areas for the country’s booming cities in recent years, had lost their jobs. Worse yet, they had little prospect of regaining them in 2009. If many of these workers return to the countryside, they may find nothing there either, not even land to work.

Under such circumstances, and with further millions likely to be shut out of coastal factories in the coming year, the prospect of mass unrest is high. No wonder the government announced a $585 billion stimulus plan aimed at generating rural employment and, at the same time, called on security forces to exercise discipline and restraint when dealing with protesters. Many analysts now believe that, as exports continue to dry up, rising unemployment could lead to nationwide strikes and protests that might overwhelm ordinary police capabilities and require full-scale intervention by the military (as occurred in Beijing during the Tiananmen Square demonstrations of 1989).

Or take many of the Third World petro-states that experienced heady boosts in income when oil prices were high, allowing governments to buy off dissident groups or finance powerful internal security forces. With oil prices plunging from $147 per barrel of crude oil to less than $40 dollars, such countries, from Angola to shaky Iraq, now face severe instability.

Nigeria is a typical case in point: When oil prices were high, the central government in Abuja raked in billions every year, enough to enrich elites in key parts of the country and subsidize a large military establishment; now that prices are low, the government will have a hard time satisfying all these previously well-fed competing obligations, which means the risk of internal disequilibrium will escalate. An insurgency in the oil-producing Niger Delta region, fueled by popular discontent with the failure of oil wealth to trickle down from the capital, is already gaining momentum and is likely to grow stronger as government revenues shrivel; other regions, equally disadvantaged by national revenue-sharing policies, will be open to disruptions of all sorts, including heightened levels of internecine warfare.

Bolivia is another energy producer that seems poised at the brink of an escalation in economic violence. One of the poorest countries in the Western Hemisphere, it harbors substantial oil and natural gas reserves in its eastern, lowland regions. A majority of the population — many of Indian descent — supports President Evo Morales, who seeks to exercise strong state control over the reserves and use the proceeds to uplift the nation’s poor. But a majority of those in the eastern part of the country, largely controlled by a European-descended elite, resent central government interference and seek to control the reserves themselves. Their efforts to achieve greater autonomy have led to repeated clashes with government troops and, in deteriorating times, could set the stage for a full-scale civil war.

Given a global situation in which one startling, often unexpected development follows another, prediction is perilous. At a popular level, however, the basic picture is clear enough: continued economic decline combined with a pervasive sense that existing systems and institutions are incapable of setting things right is already producing a potentially lethal brew of anxiety, fear, and rage. Popular explosions of one sort or another are inevitable.

Some sense of this new reality appears to have percolated up to the highest reaches of the U.S. intelligence community. In testimony before the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence on February 12th, Admiral Dennis C. Blair, the new Director of National Intelligence, declared, “The primary near-term security concern of the United States is the global economic crisis and its geopolitical implications… Statistical modeling shows that economic crises increase the risk of regime-threatening instability if they persist over a one to two year period” — certain to be the case in the present situation.

Blair did not specify which countries he had in mind when he spoke of “regime-threatening instability” — a new term in the American intelligence lexicon, at least when associated with economic crises — but it is clear from his testimony that U.S. officials are closely watching dozens of shaky nations in Africa, the Middle East, Latin America, and Central Asia.

Now go back to that map on your wall with all those red and orange pins in it and proceed to color in appropriate countries in various shades of red and orange to indicate recent striking declines in gross national product and rises in unemployment rates. Without 16 intelligence agencies under you, you’ll still have a pretty good idea of the places that Blair and his associates are eyeing in terms of instability as the future darkens on a planet at the brink.

Michael T. Klare is a professor of peace and world security studies at Hampshire College and the author, most recently, of Rising Powers, Shrinking Planet: The New Geopolitics of Energy (Metropolitan Books).

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.