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Chapter 7
The Kennedy offensive and the new liberalism
1.
Centrifugal Tendencies in the 1950s
As
the 1944-47 period saw the shift from universalism to Cold War, so the 1950s saw
the reemergence of sphere-of-interest politics and rivalry in the context of
Atlantic integration. 1950 indeed was a turning point in several respects.
Interacting with a slackening of real economic expansion, trade policy lost its
liberal impetus, as the
Democrats
proposed peril-point clauses in trade legislation. Meanwhile, as productive
capital started losing ground in the profit- distribution process from 1950 on,
and rentier incomes in due course improved relatively to corporate income, the
offensive international posture the United States had hitherto adopted lost part
of its domestic raison d’être.
The
decreasing pressures for internationalization of American capital were
reciprocated by mounting obstacles to US penetration in Europe.2 Following the
restoration of their hegemony through American intervention, the European
bourgeoisie tended to adopt postures reflecting their prewar orientations.
Although important preconditions for a fundamental restructuration of European
class relations towards the corporate-liberal pattern had been created by the
Marshall offensive, the narrowness of markets and the obstacles posed by
exchange controls and non-convertibility constrained the export of US capital to
Europe.3 The overall political climate was captured by the influential National
Security Memorandum 68 when it stated that 'there are indications of a let-down
of United States efforts under the pressures of the domestic budgetary
situation, disillusion resulting from excessively optimistic expectations about
the duration and result of our assistance programs, and doubts about the wisdom
of continuing to strengthen the free nations as against preparedness measures in
light of the intensity of the cold war.'4
Against
this background, General Eisenhower was elected President of the United States
in 1952. With the new Republican government, the shadow of Herbert Hoover again
seemed cast upon the stage, waving his deflationary programme in one hand and
the policy of accommodating German nationalism in the other. Domestically, bank
and oil capital were reinforced as part of a general shift wards rentier forms
of accumulation. George Humphrey, the chief strategist of the Cleveland Hanna
group, was put in charge of the Treasury, and the abandoning of economic
controls was one of the Eisenhower cabinet's first measures. Government
enterprises were sold or closed down, almost up to the sale of the Tennessee
valley Authority, which Eisenhower personally favoured but ruled , It as 'going
too far'.5 Rentiers profited from lowered tax rates or provisions. According to
an OECD study, between 1954 and 1962 no changes in the direct tax rates were
made, but as Kolko writes, 'since e 1952 tax law, a rapidly growing number of
special provisions have been created that apply to relatively small groups among
the wealthy but add up to a cumulative trend towards legal tax 'avoidance'.6 An
important provision here was the 4% dividend edit, a tax deduction introduced by
the administration in 1954 to combat taxation 'injustices'.7 As part of the same
movement, bank capital was structurally favoured by the 1956 Bank Holding
company Act, an important step in demolishing New Deal bank legislation. The
1956 Act allowed holding companies owning one bank to own other companies as
long as these were active in the financial or fiduciary sphere. In principle,
the measure returned to the banks the right to operate as holdings, although it
would take until the late 1960s before the functional division into
money-dealing in fictitious capital was completely undone. 8
US
oil companies in this period were particularly pampered. The so-called depletion
allowance, a 30% tax deduction, was originally introduced to stimulate oil
prospecting by small companies during World War One, and later generalized for
all types of land ownership by Treasury Secretary Mellon. Its wide range of
application notwithstanding, 80% of this ground rent levied on the taxpayer
accrues to oil and gas companies, who are the owners of one-quarter of all
privately owned land in the United States.9 Within three months of taking
office, the Eisenhower administration dropped the federal claim to the US
three-mile off-shore zone, leaving it to the Coastal states, which effectively
meant company control. Two months later, the zone beyond the three-mile limit
was placed under Federal jurisdiction, but at the same time, it was parcelled
out to Private bidders for exploration. 10
Foreign
policy meanwhile, became the domain of John Foster Dulles, whose Germanophiliac
outlook retained the mark of his interwar experiences and interests. Discussing
Soviet peace proposals in closed sessions with the Senate Foreign Relations
Committee soon after taking office, Dulles argued the need for restraint. 'We
need to have policies which we can live with for some time', he declared,
'rather than policies which would so exhaust US that there would be an internal
collapse, . . . what Stalin talked about in "Our Strategy and Tactic
". (Stalin) said the moment for the decisive blow will come when the
imperialist powers are so divided among themselves and have so exhausted
themselves in a struggle beyond their power that they have fallen into virtual
bankruptcy. Now, that is one of the dangers that we have got to look out for.'
11
The
recognition of their basically defensive position in the light of slackening US
industrial performance did not turn the ruling group into moderates. On the
contrary, Dulles in particular often displayed a bellicose aggressiveness. To
many the Secretary of State was the
very embodiment of Amencan Cold War foreign policy at its worst. But as with
Truman in 1945-46, the aggressive rhetoric and, occasionally, behaviour, only
apparently contradicted the fundamentally conservative and non-universalist
tendencies of the administration. This generally defensive posture, in turn,
reflected the tendential regression reminiscent of the interwar years, in which
an Atlantic circuit of money capital connected autarkic industrial blocs in a
gradually hardening spheres-of-interest context. In the 1950s, threats had to
make up for the absence of any positive plan for the world. 'Strategically, it
was a defensive age', Calleo observes, 'even if the tactics were often
aggressive'. 12
With
respect to the periphery, the anti-communism and anti-colonialism which in the
Marshall Plan had been depicted as a transcendent Free World strategy, now
degenerated into rivalry as short-term considerations became the sole point of
reference. At least until 1956, European colonial powers actively sought to
reinforce and recapture imperial positions, encouraged by the defensive posture
of the United States. In some cases, as in the Suez affair, the susceptibilities
of Middle Eastern and African countries were taken into account by US
policy-makers for tactical reasons. Broadly speaking, however, there was no
comprehensive effort on the part of the United States to actively create viable
social relations in the underdeveloped world which would secure its dependence
on metropolitan capitalism in a post-colonial era.
Dulles
preferred 'exerting our influence quietly' in matters concerning colonialism,
rather than upsetting the status quo by grand announcements in the universalist
tradition. 13 In Asia, support for dictators was justified by the immediacy of
the Communist threat, which in his opinion precluded any attempt to include
moderate elements in the local power structure. 'They are not the people, under
normal circumstances, that we would want to support', Dulles confided in 1953,
speaking of Syngman Rhee, Chiang Kai- Shek, and their fellow autocrats. 'We
would be trying to get somebody else, but in times like these, in the unrest of
the world today, and the divided spirit, we know that we cannot make a
transition without losing control of the whole situation. Now, that is my
philosophy.' 14 This philosophy also entailed a certain accommodation of
European colonialism; but as the colonial powers became more and more entangled
in their attempt to suppress the struggle for national independence, it became
increasingly clear that imperialism might lose control of the whole situation.
It would wait until the advent of the Kennedy regime before a further attempt
was made to construct a viable neo-colonial order.
With
respect to Germany, the relative contraction of American involvement allowed the
forces working for the restoration of full sovereignty, including rearmament, to
reassert their prominence. A strong Western Europe fitted into the general trend
towards fiscal economy in American policy as well. The French proposal for a
European Defence Community in late 1950 was the first result of American
pressure to rearm the Western half of Germany. 'Out of (its) ratification',
Dulles told US Senators, 'will come a substantial German force which will be the
greatest shield that we could get, and. . . with that in creation we can
gradually cut down our aid.'15 Hence his much publicized threat of an 'agonizing
reappraisal' of American military commitments to Europe if EDC failed to be
ratified, and the temporary suspension of military aid to France and Italy on
account of their hesitations. As it proved impossible to press the EDC on the
French, however, West German rearmament eventually was accomplished by including
Italy and the Federal Republic in the group of the Brussels Treaty, renamed
Western European Union, and, seven months afterward, by making Western Germany a
member of NATa (May 1955).16 French concern over the renewed ascendancy of
Germany, which it had initially tried to contain by launching the Pleven Plan
for an EDC, was alleviated by formal WEU control of the level of German
armaments.
In
the sphere-of-interest configuration resulting from the loss of impetus in
American policy, supranational Western European integration could make strides.
The contradictory impulses towards, on the one hand, the adoption of the Fordist
accumulation model implicit in the Marshall Plan, and, on the other, the
tendency towards US disengagement, led to a growing discrepancy between American
liberal preferences for European integration and the actual contents of the
process. Between the Schuman Plan and the establishment of EEC and Euratom in
1957-58, the abortive EDC project testified to the temporary interruption of the
transformation of the European class structure towards a corporate-liberal
pattern and to the resurgence of the unreconstructed liberal-internationalist
bourgeoisie, revealed most dramatically by the Suez affair. The EDC still
represented a compromise between American Cold War entrenchment and 'classical'
Franco-British imperialism (which eventually accounted for its failure); the
EEC, however, represented a compromise between French and West German strategies
for adjusting to the requirements of mass production and to the reorientation
towards an Atlantic circuit of finance capital, albeit still from a
sphere-of-interest vantage-point which eventually would propel the
internationalist bourgeoisie into action.
In
the early 1950s, there was another cause of anxiety for the Atlanticist
bourgeoisie, and that was the thaw in the Cold War. Neutralist statements by
elder statesmen and related incidents in West Germany, if often merely staged in
order to activate the forces in the West working for German rearmament and
sovereignty, 17 yet added to the growing impression in the United States that
'an alarming reduction in the degree of realism in the thinking about Russia'18
was in full progress in Europe. This was not limited to Germany either. In sharp
contrast to the previous situation with its inspiring array of 'governments to
the Americans' liking', it was noted in late 1953 that due to the conciliatory
moves of Stalin's successors, 'in every Western government there were officials
who acted or prepared to act as though the Soviet menace were actually on the
wane'. 19
Atlantic
Unity Under Stress
In
1952, Joseph Retinger, who had brought together liberal capitalists in wartime
London and had assisted in forming ELEC, contacted Paul Rijkens, President of
Unilever, to discuss ways of reversing the trend to open rivalry between America
and Western Europe. Rijkens took Retinger to Prince Bernhard of the Netherlands,
whom they knew from their war days in London. With Paul van Zeelan than prime
minister and first chairman of ELEC a plan was drawn to assemble one leading
bourgeois politician and one Social Democrat from each Western European country
in order to have a catalogue their criticisms of American policy in the presence
of selected representatives from the other side of the Atlantic. When the
proposal was sent to the United States, the 1952 election campaign in full
swing, and nothing came of the plan for the moment. Yet it testifies to the
importance attached to the project by its initiators that they
did not want it to become a partisan issue; Eisenhower's hestion to use the
idea in his campaign was firmly rejected by the Dutch Prince. 20
It
took two more years before the Americans accepted the invitation to confer near
Arnhem at the Bilderberg Hotel (after which the subsequent conferences would be
named). The hesitant American reaction and the fact that ultimately a
collaborator of Eisenhower future senator, C.D. Jackson, and W. Bedell Smith,
head of the CIA, were the men who secured American participation, testify to
lack of enthusiasm for Europe among the American ruling class at the time.
Rather than discussing Atlantic arrangements in a positive way, the US mood was
sceptical of the efforts being made in Europe to confront Communism. The
American bourgeoisie in majority seemed to support the McCarthy campaign - which
in raised anxieties amongst the European elite. Actually, it was 'Eisenhower's
awareness of European reactions to McCarthyism wich prompted his support for the
eventual Bilderberg Conference.21
The
Conference was held in May 1954. It was paid for by Unilever and the CIA. Its
agenda catalogued the leading topics of Atlantic discord: (a) Communism and the
Soviet Union; (b) Dependent regions and overseas peoples; (c) Economic policy
and economic problems; (d) European integration and the European Defence
Community. According to Rijkens, a very frank discussion bordering on an open
row took place. Rather than constituting an all powerful secret Atlantic
directorate, Bilderberg served, at best, as environment for developing ideas in
that direction, and secrecy is necessary for allowing the articulation of
differences rather than keeping clear-cut projects from public knowledge. In
this sense, Bilderberg functioned as the testing ground for new initiatives for
antic unity.22 The presence of the Social Democrats was functional in order to
orient these initiatives to the modernizing elements in the Western European
class structure and insert them in a Fordist compromise from the start. 184
A
few months following the first Bilderberg Conference, the rejection of EDC by
France greatly widened the gulf between the NATO partners. In an attempt to
reverse the tide, a Declaration of Atlantic Unity was made public on 4 October
1954. It was a symbolic and propagandistic action meant to counter a further
deterioration of Atlantic relations rather than offering a practical way out of
the impasse. On the American side, the signatories of the Declaration included
Will Clayton, Christian Herter, Lewis Douglas, Thomas Finletter, Averill
Harriman, John McCloy, Owen Young, Henry Ford II, and other magnates of Wall
Street and industry. Several of these men had occupied leading posts in
Democratic administrations, and the signature of Harry Truman further enhanced
the Democratic coloration. Eisenhower himself was in favour of the Bilderberg
initiative, but the dominant sphere-of- interest orientation in his cabinet
prejudiced official support for Atlantic unity. Alone in the administration,
Nelson Rockefeller favoured a more closely integrated Atlantic Union, but the
concept was considered premature by Secretary Dulles, and Rockefeller's approach
to Atlantic unity retained marked federalist and sphere-of- interest aspects.23
The
Declaration of Atlantic Unity clearly could not reverse the centrifugal trends
of the period, which after 1954 developed along two interrelated axes: NATO
nuclear strategy and the approach to the imperialist periphery. As far as the
military aspect was concerned, the reduction of federal expenditure by the
Eisenhower administra- tion, interacting with the slack industrial performance
and the general contraction of US international activism, led to an emphasis on
nuclear retaliation in American strategy. A conflict over the massive
retaliation doctrine in the Joint Chiefs of Staff was decided in favour of
Admiral Radford in 1954, and Generals Maxwell Taylor, Ridgeway and Gavin, who
advocated a more flexible strategy and a greater Army role, had to vacate their
posts. In July 1956, Radford carried his approach into the realm of Atlantic
relations by proposing a US troop reduction in Europe which then could be
compensated for by 'a demonstrable superiority in retaliatory means'.24
The
major European powers reacted to the Radford doctrine by stepping up their
nuclear programmes, both to meet US competition and to underwrite their
imperialist position militarily. In May 1957, Defence Minister Strauss secured
parliamentary support for a policy of nuclear armament by the Federal Republic.
In the same month, Britain exploded its first hydrogen bomb in the Pacific.
France had been working on a nuclear capacity since World War Two, and according
to subsequent American newspaper disclosures had already agreed with Germany to
store German nuclear warheads on French soil.2s
De
Gaulle's coup d'etat in June 1958 entailed a prompt cancellation of
nuclear cooperation. After offering the Germans cooperation in the conventional
field only, de Gaulle sent a memorandum to Eisenhower and Macmillan, challenging
the American nuclear monopoly in NATO on the grounds that it was no longer
effective. Referring explicitly to the situation in South-East Asia, de Gaulle
judged the existing structure of NATO inadequate to the effective defence of the
West, and in particular, to French interests. Hence he proposed to create a
triumvirate within NATO consisting of the United States, Britain and France, to
deal with nuclear matters. Finletter interprets de Gaulle's memorandum as 'a
last desperate effort to persuade the United States to work with its allies in
dealing with the problems of Southeast Asia'. To Spaak, the French President
declared in 1959 that a supplementary agreement concerning Africa should be
attached to the North Atlantic Treaty. 26
Rivalry
in the periphery was indeed recognized as a major cause for the discord between
the North Atlantic allies. 'One fact which had not been sufficiently appreciated
in 1949', Spaak recalled later, 'became crystal clear in 1956: it is very
difficult for Powers to act as allies in one part of the world while they are
locked in violent conflict in another. '27 In the report of the Three Wise Men
(Pearson, Lange and Martino: the Foreign Secretaries of Canada, Norway and
Italy), submitted to the North Atlantic Council in December of that eventful
year, imperialist rivalries were considered a more acute danger than socialism.
'NATO has not been destroyed, or even weakened, by the threats or attacks of its
enemies', the Report stated. 'It has faltered at times through the lethargy or
complacency of its members: through dissension or division between them; by
putting narrow, national considerations above the collective interest. '28
As
the decade moved to a close, planning for Atlantic unity clearly focussed on the
two chief areas of discord. Among offensive-minded US politicians, it was
increasingly recognized that the challenge of socialism was shifting from Europe
to the underdeveloped periphery. 'I do feel', Chester Bowles told Senators upon
his return from a UN tour in 1957, 'that the battle of the next ten years is
going to be economic, basically, and political and it is going to take place in
Asia and Africa. '29 In a Foreign Affairs article, John F. Kennedy
articulated this impression by advocating a return to universalism, based on a
flexible approach to the Soviet Union and on Atlantic cooperation in fostering
economic development in the periphery. Instead of the rigid two-camp attitude,
the United States should be ready to 'accept partial gains in order to undercut
slowly the foundations of the Soviet order'. The demands of the national
bourgeoisie in the under- developed world should be met half-way in order to
stabilize an increasingly vulnerable world economy. The United States, Kennedy
estimated, should 'strike a realistic balance between the legitimate appeals to
national self-determination which pulsate through the uncommitted world and the
gravitational pulls towards unity which grow from the technological and economic
interdependence of modem states.' 30
It
was former Secretary of State Acheson who in a book published in 1958
emphatically warned against American unilateralism in meeting the revolutionary
challenges in the Third World. American leadership in rallying the
underdeveloped world against Communism was necessary, but not enough. 'A
principle which is as fundamental as it is disregarded, is that in the
organization and maintenance of power, relations with states which are closest
geographically and in interest and purpose are the most important', Acheson
wrote. 'Primacy must be given to maintaining confidence and trust in these
relations. In our case, these states are those of the Western Hemisphere and
Europe. Here lies the Central Power which will support - if it is to be
supported at all - a non- Communist world system. To say this is not to minimize
the importance of Asia and Africa; but if the center is not solid, relations
with the periphery will not supply strength.'31 The attraction exerted from a
unified Atlantic bloc meanwhile would not be limited to the underdeveloped
periphery: In Eastern Europe, too, its effects would be felt. But Atlantic unity
was necessary to give sufficient weight to the Western position in this respect.
'Without American association with Western Europe, independent national life in
Eastern Europe cannot revive'. 32
Primarily
because of the nuclear controversy, an Atlantic Congress was convened in London
in 1959, attended by key advocates of a more flexible nuclear strategy like
Henry Kissinger. Actual discussions however centred on economic rather than
military matters, thus bringing out the spread of an awareness that the
challenge of Communism had come to reside particularly in the area of rival
development models for the newly independent nations in the periphery.
Summarizing the contents of the Atlantic Congress Report adopted at the
Conference, .Szent-Miklosy says that a central element was the recognition that
economic welfare had to be exported beyond the Atlantic area. The Report
recommended economic expansion and further trade liberalization, which would
require a combined development of European economic integration and Atlantic
integration. 'The attainment of internal strength, as well as the development of
the newly emerging nations, must be viewed with a sense of urgency because of
the Communist countries and their shift in emphasis to the economic front in the
Cold War'.33
The
Suez affair, however, had destroyed the essentially Anglo-American basis for the
hitherto prominent Atlantic Union concept. The ultra-imperialist assumptions
underlying that concept created opportunities for the Soviet Union to challenge
classical European and the new American imperialism and endangered the
allegiance of if the newly Independent states in the periphery. The eventual
second Declaration of Atlantic Unity which
resulted from the Congress accordingly left the Atlantic Union and Euratlantic
concepts behind, adopting, instead, a posture which left more room for European
independence in the overall framework defined by Atlantic unity. Within the
Atlantic unity movement, the pragmatic line ready to subscribe to the emerging
Euramerican/Atlantic Partnership concept thus triumphed over Streit's group,
which had developed a dogmatism which was no longer relevant. In 1961, the
moderates merged into the Atlantic Council of the United States. 34
Of
the concrete recommendations made at the London Congress, very few materialized
in their originally proposed form, but several became policy by a detour. The
proposal to restructure the OEEC into a new Organization of Atlantic Economic
Cooperation (OAEC) was rejected by the neutral capitalist countries, (like
Sweden, Switzerland), who feared an implicit association with NATO. The OECI)
eventually became the compromise between these conflicting ambi- tions,
retaining, however, the concern for coordinating metropolitan economic policy
towards the periphery. Another idea originating from the London Congress was the
proposal made in late 1961 by Herter, Clayton and Ball to liberalize trade and
to coordinate development aid policies on the basis of an Atlantic Partnership
(the 'Giant Step' programme),
which, as Kennedy declared at a press conference in January 1962, had served as
the basis for his Atlantic Partnership proposal. 35
Due
to the formation of the EEC and the prominence of fractions of the European
bourgeoisie oriented to the continent, concern for Atlantic unity gravitated
from Europe to America again. While at the time of the first Bilderberg
Conference, the European initiators still had had to press the United States to
participate, now the Americans in the context of a new universalist offensive
were recruiting the European bourgeoisie and activating the elements favourable
to Atlantic unity.
State
Monopolism Revived
In
Europe, the establishment of the EEC led to the emergence of a corporatist
pattern of class relations comparable to the situation immediately after the
war. Then, the inclusion of Communists in governments of national unity and the
prominent role of Christian Democrats and conservative nationalists had been
functional in keeping the social fabric of capitalist society intact. The
Marshall offensive had liberated the European capitalist class from this
constraint, but in its aftermath, particularist and retrograde concepts of
control reasserted themselves.
In
Germany, Erhard's anti-cartel law was shipwrecked in Federal parliament in 1953
which simultaneously enacted a tax reform aimed at stimulating dividend
payments. 36 In France, too, the subsiding of the American offensive saw the
resurgence of protectionism and cartel practices, mocking Pinay's anti-cartel
legislation of 1952.37 In Britain, the backlash against the modernization policy
implicit in the Labour nationalizations took shape as a virulent campaign
against the latter. Prominent in this campaign were the Iron and Steel
Federation and Aims of Industry Ltd., a lobby dominated by family capitalists
and headed at the time by Lord Perry of Ford, Lyle of Tate & Lyle, and J.A.
Rank of the firm of the same name.38 In the Netherlands and Italy, real
accumulation within certain limits was favoured by state economic policy; but in
Belgium, where conservatism was strongest, rentier interests had absolute
priority. 39
The
failure of the EDC plan, the Suez crisis, as well as Soviet successes in space
and in the Third World, contributed to a reorientation in Western Europe towards
a resumption of the social and economic transformation initiated by the Marshall
Plan. As Spaak explained, Nasser's decision to nationalize the Suez Canal
Company had brought out the 'definite lack of esteem for the great European
nations'4O and the EEC was established to shore up the power of Western Europe
again. Between 1957 and the early 1960s, when the Kennedy offensive sought to
reestablish Atlantic unity, the European states passed through a phase of
accelerated restructuration in the direction of a Fordist mass-market mode of
accumulation; due to the absence of active American involvement, however, the
liberalism this entailed was restricted by the sphere-of-interest configuration
prevailing in the North Atlantic area. As an autonomous European initiative, the
formation of the EEC put American hegemony to the test. This time, moreover, the
epicentre of the restructuration of class relations lay well within the
capitalist class; the Communists no longer were part of the intricate web of
com- promises necessary to make the transition.
The
need to keep the working class under control while allowing the necessary
'euthanasia' of subordinate class fractions associated with pre-war patterns of
capital accumulation and colonial enterprise again led to an essentially
temporary nationalism and corporatism, meant to shore up the legitimacy of the
various governments and cement transitional inter-bourgeois class alliances
needed to combat both the working class and the reactionary imperialists. In all
of Western Europe, the unity of the bourgeoisie necessary for raising the rate
of exploitation and accumulation of capital in order to allow its insertion into
the emerging Atlantic circuit of finance capital was most easily achieved by
appealing to nationalism. As Simon Clarke has written, "Nationalist"
policies with regard to particular capitals tend to improve the terms on which
"national" capitals are integrated into the world circuit of capital
rather than to resist that integration'. 41
The
most dramatic example of such a process of transitional nationalism was
Gaullism, which George Catlin, the British advocate of Atlantic Unity, still
feared in 1969 might engender 'a great chauvinist counter-revolution against the
entire internationalist endeavour built up since 1914'. The centralization of
the government structure in France, accompanied by a devaluation of the role of
Parliament and a gerrymandering operation inflating the countryside vote, made
the formation of a unitary ruling-class party possible. The Gaullist UNR
profited most from the new two-ballot system by offering the catch-all
government ticket in the countryside. The liberal parties, Radicals and UDSR,
went down in the process, and the Left was seriously reduced. In the Radical
Party, the breakthrough of Mendes-France and the group of Servan-Schreiber, who
triumphed over Mayer (expelled from the party in 1955) and also outmanoeuvred
Edgar Faure, who was linked to the Boussac textile interests, reflected the rise
of a corporate-liberal concept. But the Radicals lacked the dramatic outsider
position of de Gaulle, and Mendes-France hardly made a Bonapartist candidate.
Only the Christian Democrat MRP was able to survive the first, corporatist phase
of the de Gaulle regime lasting until 1962. Within the Gaullist party, a liberal
tendency headed by Chaban-Delmas (who incidentally had been a Radical deputy
from 1946 to 1951) function to capture part of the liberal vote for the UNR and
its successors.
For
the French bourgeoisie, the reinforcement of executive versus parliamentary
power was rational because it allowed French capital to obtain direct access to
the government in its effort to secure an independent basis for capital
accumulation in metropolitan France compensating for the loss of its empire. The
state-monpoly tendency in the bourgeoisie was prominent in advocating this shift
of power. Leon Noel, director of Rhone-Poulenc and Esso Standard, in his booklet
Our Last Chance of 1956 had argued against the impediments which the
existing parliamentary system in France posed in the way of an active economic
policy beneficial to capital accumulation. Under de Gaulle, Noel became
president of the stitutional Council. 43
Claude
traces Gaullism straight back to the state monopolism of the 1930s represented
by Mercier and Tardieu. As a concept of control in the circumstances of 1958, it
combined authoritarian and nationalism with the need to restructure French
capital and the class structure in which it operated to the requirements of the
new Fordist accumulation pattern. The most prominent supporter of the Gaullist
concept of control in the French bourgeoisie capital were Rothschild - through
Roger Frey (RPF treasurer and from 1959 on, minister in various departments) and
Georges Pompidou—and Paribas - through Emmanuel Monick (its president from
1959 to 1962, who in 1945 already had co-authored a book with Debré
recommending the installation in France of a 'Replican Monarch').44 Gaullism was
also supported by the steel industry and the Indochine group, but from a
different point of view the Indochine bankers, supported American hegemony first
of all, yet rallied to de Gaulle because his government created the conditions
for raising the rate of exploitation in France. Their orientation towards the
Atlantic economy gave them a new interest in the competitivity of the French
economy, but it took until the Kennedy Offensive before their political leader,
Valery Giscard d'Estaing, would be appointed to the key Ministry of Finance.
The
alliance of all fractions of the bourgeoisie except the die-hard colonialists
was essential. Although the basic concept of control underlying the Gaullist
experiment was designed around the needs of big capital, accommodation was also
made to the situation of small capital. One example was Pinay, the
representative of small capital, who led the Gaullist government until 1960. In
1959, a tax reform meant to reduce 'the excessive burden on incomes other than
wages and salaries', a tax credit on dividends and a rise in the corporate
profit tax combined to prop up the position of farmers and small capital in the
profit-distribution process. Their income share improved in 1960, for the first
time in a decade, and again in 1962, and so did rentier incomes.45 These
examples testify to how the need for intra-bourgeois compromise paid dividends
to a declining class at the price of helping to create the conditions of its
further demise in a subsequent stage. In the other countries, the initial EEC
period likewise witnessed the political resurgence of small capital. Small
capital represented a powerful political factor within Christian Democracy, and
it was largely within the Christian parties (in the Netherlands, three separate
parties at the time) that the class compromise between small and big capital,
complemented by a corporatist approach to labour, actually took shape. The
protectionist and otherwise regionalist aspects of the EEC in its early stages,
on the other hand, tended to alienate the liberals and Liberal parties.
In
West Germany, the arch-liberal Erhard had argued strongly against the
supranational approach to European integration. 'The best form of European
integration that I can imagine does not reston the creation of new offices and
forms of administration or expanding bureaucracies,' he wrote later, 'but rests
first of all on the re-establishment of a free international order, which is
expressed best and completely by the free convertibility of currencies.
Convertibility of currency self-evidently includes full freedom and the free
flow of commodities, services, and capital'.46 The liberal Free Democrats voted
against ratification of the EEC and Euratom treaties because of their
protectionist character; in 1957, the party already had left the second Adenauer
government. The changes in the German class structure in the meantime had led to
a crisis in the FOP. As American influence receded, the militant free-world
ideology degenerated into reactionary nationalism, in which the former Nazi
general, Von Manteuffel, played a role of his own. In 1956 this led to a
conflict over the role of former Nazis in the party, and the election of a new
leadership behind E. Mende and Walter Scheel, both committed to the
corporate-liberal synthesis and ready to align the party more closely to the
positions of the 'reformed' SPO of Willy Brandt. 47
In
Italy, the Liberal PLI and the modernizing liberal party PRI both were excluded
from the government in the period 1958-62. In the Netherlands and Belgium, the
Liberal parties did participate in the government during this period, but the
conservative orientation represented by the Christian Democrats (in the
Netherlands more particularly by the Catholic party KVP) was hegemonic. In both
countries, the renewal of the alliance between Christian Democrats and Liberals
following the ratification of the EEC and Euratom treaties was preceded by
exclusively Christian Democratic governments (the Beel cabinet of 1958-59 in the
Netherlands and the Eyskens II cabinet in the second half of 1958 in Belgium).
Britain
remained outside the EEC, but not outside the process of restructuration towards
a corporate-liberal synthesis. When Eden resigned in 1957, Butler was widely
expected to takeover, but to strike a balance with the financial interests and
the upper-class imperialists, Macmillan, heir to the publishing firm and married
to a daughter of the highest aristocracy, prevailed, and with blessing of The
Times and of Churchill himself. 48 Butler instead got the Home Office in the
Macmillan cabinet, in which Sandys, Churchill's son-in-law and proponent of
European Movement, became Secretary of Defence.
The
transition Britain was about to undergo was made palatable to the
British bourgeoisie by a careful policy of influencing the profit-distribution
process to the benefit of strata that were at the same time cut down to size in
structural terms. In 1957, the Parker Tribunal exposed the behind-the-scenes
policy-making of the merchant bank to community of the City. It
thus contributed to transferring the powers for conducting economic
policy to the government, but Macmillan's cabinet compensated the groups
involved by strongly favouring rentier incomes, which emerged as 'the most
rapidly growing sector of personal income since 1957'.49 The Rent Act of 1957 brought windfall profits to landlords, and the City
itself was accommodated by the raising of the bank rate in order to prop up the
pound. Macmillan, who according to Bulmer-Thomas ‘found it useful to assume
the pose of aristocratic grandeur to balance the essential liberalism of his
views',so personally intervened whenever fractional interests threatened to
block the smooth transistion towards a corporate-liberal class compromise on
which he intended to base the reorientation of British capitalism. In March
1957, he forced the engineering federation EEF to give in to trade-union
demands; and when the Chancellor of the Exchequer, Thorneycroft, wanted to
intensify the deflationary policy embarked upon in 1957, he again intervened and
replaced Thorneycroft by Heathcoata Amory, who changed economic policy to one of
raising purchasing power.
At
the level of the Atlantic economy, the establishment of the EEC was accompanied
by a shift from commercial to financial American penetration. The European
Payments Union of 1950 enlarged the purchasing power of the member states and
thus favoured trade in the first place. American exports to Europe benefited
from it, while jollar investments were seriously hampered. Internally, EPU was
modified several times in order to reinforce the gold or dollar content of the
periodical settlements among the participant states.51
In
December 1958, the European Monetary Agreement, originally signed in 1955,
finally came into effect. Its purpose was to maintain European monetary
cooperation after the restoration of convertibility of the major currencies
(achieved on 28 December). Yet numerous obstacles remained and in mid 1960 the
IMF still had to declare that 'time was running out on (the) supposedly
temporary post-war currency restrictions' and to urge further liberalization. 52
In September 1957, Britain had limited the use of sterling for financing foreign
trade to sterling-area trade. This prompted London- based banks to use US
dollars for financing those transactions for which the use of the pound no
longer was allowed. This combination of convertibility and restrictions acted as
a spur to the development of a foreign currency money and capital market in
Europe, the 'Eurodollar' market, which eventually would develop into the pivot
of the post-Atlantic world economy. 53
The
major difference between the European Monetary Agreement and the European
Payments Union in terms of liberalizing the flow of capital in an Atlantic
context was that mutual credit through the clearing union was eliminated and
that all settlements were to be made in US dollars. The EPU, after having
encouraged American commercial expansion towards Europe when the European
currencies still functioned as counterpart to the dollar, by the late 1950s had
turned into an obstacle to the direct role of the dollar as an international
means of payment, and to direct American investment. 54 The shift from
commercial to financial penetration was confirmed by the formation of the EEC.
The new Common Market dramatically changed American prospects for expansion in
this respect. This was recognized by American capitalists, and one instance of
how they reacted may be briefly cited as an illustration. At a conference of the
American Management Association in February 1958, a number of prominent EEC
officials and American businessmen were gathered to inform those present about
their chances in dealing with a united Western Europe. In his contribution to
the conference, George Ball, a Lehman partner and advocate of Atlantic
Partnership, who had close ties with Monnet and the existing ECSC establishment,
explained the nature of the change by pointing to the deteriorated trade
position of American capital. The OEEC, Ball explained, had taken measures with
the aim of liberalizing dollar imports from1955 on, but these had only
materialized for raw materials, seleted foodstuffs, and a restricted number of
capital goods items. Now the Common Market External Tariff was added to the
handicaps already existing. The tariff was the average of the various national
tariffs which hitherto had been operative. But tariffs had been highest in
countries to which the USA exported relatively little, and low in the case of
countries like the Netherlands and Germany, with which the USA had extensive
trade relations. On balance, therefore, the enlargement of the European market
implied a worse situation for US exports.
'There
is only one way in which this problem may be minimized, Ball argued. 'If
Congress should pass a sufficiently liberal Trade Agreements Act, the US
Government will negotiate, not with individual European nations, but with the
Community as a whole. Through such negotiations it may be able to effect
substantial reductions in the external tariff on items that are important to
American business.'55 In the meantime, there was only one category of American
firms for which the negative effect of the external tariff was offset by the
advantages of the enlarged European market: firms owning production subsidiaries
within the EEC. Accordingly, the advice which Ball offered to American
capitalists was to follow their example and reap the fruits of the first
harvest. 'An American firm planning to exploit the Common Market may well lose
an opportunity if it does not move quickly. '56
Eventually,
it was Ball himself who as Under-Secretary of State would help execute the trade
liberalization he recommended. Liberalization was intended to allow the
intra-company division of labour to assume Atlantic dimensions and thus overcome
the compartmentalization still hampering the full development of an Atlantic
circuit of finance capital. For the moment, however lack of American
liberalizing initiatives tended to work in favor the regional consolidation of
the modernizing state-monopoly tendency in Europe and to its bolstering by the
massive wave of tariff-hopping US direct investment. 57
French-German
rapprochement in the early 1960s was meal have been the culminating point in the
sphere-of-interest policies pursued by the state-monopolistic European
leadership. In a; fact, the conclusion of the Franco-German treaty on 22 January
1963, one week after the French veto on British EEC membership, no longer
reflected the real relationship of forces prevailing at the time. Corporate
liberals, profoundly aware that Atlantic integration remained essential to the
continued growth of European finance capital, were alarmed that the
Franco-German Treaty might be interpreted as a renunciation of Atlantic unity.
In March 1963, a declaration was made public in which Abs, Siemens, Overbeck of
Mannesmann, Thyssen director Birrenbach, the German employers' organizations BDI
and BDA, and the association of German bank capital expressed concern over the
anti-Atlantic element in the Treaty, together with Atlanticist politicans from
all parties: Brentano, Mende, Erler, Brandt, and Heuss.58 These men rather than
the group around Adenauer which had concluded the Treaty with France,
represented the new centre of power in West Germany. This was not lost on the
Americans. 'As Adenauer's tenure comes to a close, de Gaulle's influence on
German policy is likely to decline', State Department adviser Robert Bowie wrote
in Foreign Affairs. 'The successors of the Chancellor. . . do not seem
inclined to lend themselves to de Gaulle's purposes. Their handling of the
Franco-German treaty is an encouraging sign.'59
2.
Kennedy's Grand Design
The
1960-65 period would see the third American offensive of the type analysed in
this study. The activist turn of US foreign policy, sustained by a half-decade
of exceptionally high domestic growth and a concomitant reassertion of the
corporate-liberal synthesis in American class relations, acted as a spur to
corresponding social transformations in Western Europe and gave them a markedly
liberal bent. If Kennedy's name most appropriately identifies the new offensive,
this does not mean, however, that the new President or his administration
actually effected the change. Kennedy rather fitted into a wider trend towards
activism provoked by the forma- tion of the EEC, the rise of Third World
nationalism, and the suc- cesses of the Soviet Union.
In
1958 the first signs of a reversal of the protectionist tendency in American
trade policy became apparent, although the ensuing negotiations with the EEC
over mutual tariff reductions were still hampered by the very limited
tariff-cutting authority Congress had granted the Executive in the 1958 renewal
of the Trade Agreements Act.60 In domestic economic policy, the Eisenhower
administration likewise seemed to explore untried paths when, in response to the
crisis developing from January 1960 onwards, it stepped up military and
government purchases, thus accelerating countercyclical forces and stimulating
industrial production.61
More
fundamentally, after half a decade of slow growth and unimaginative policies,
social tensions were inexorably building up. The generation born in the war
years was reaching maturity and the civil rights movement was gathering force in
the South. Fron several quarters, proposals for a social-imperialist
articulation of domestic reform and a foreign-policy offensive were forthcoming.
On the eve of the election, Whitney Griswold, a veteran of th Council on Foreign
Relations, argued that the remedy for the un favourable international position
of the United States lay in th domestic realm, and more particularly in what he
called 'unfinished social and economic business', 'One way to strengthen our
foreign policy', Griswold wrote, 'is to get on with that business'. 62 A few
years before, the social-imperialist imperative had begun formulated in an
influential report co-authored by W . W . Rostow. In a chauvinist tone heralding the future excesses of the new
leadership, the report stated that 'The United States is now within sight,
solutions to the range of issues which have dominated political life since 1865.
The farm problem, the status of big business in a democratic society, the status
and responsibilities of organized labour, the avoidance of extreme cyclical
unemployment, social equity for the Negro, the provision of equal education
opportunity, the equital distribution of income - none of all these great issues
is resolved; but a national consensus on them exists within which' are clearly
moving forward as a nation.' The authors urged the authorities to undertake
foreign involvement all the more vigorously, because with so many
accomplishments at home, 'we run' danger of becoming a bore to ourselves and the
world'.63 Rostow himself was to playa crucial role in averting this danger, 'A
classic example of the militarized liberal'64, Rostow was to become prominent
among those 'New Mandarins' criticized by Noam Chomsky, whose 'high mood of
confidence and self-righteousn and 'keen sense of control over events' would
lead the United States into the Vietnam War and keep it there until it came out
on knees.65
Although
an early supporter of Senator McCarthy, Kennedy the late 1950s had compiled a
liberal record which made him an adequate executor of any social-imperialist
programme. In closing weeks of the Presidential campaign, Kennedy's brother
Robert was able to obtain the release of Black leader Martin Luther King,
imprisoned for four months for a traffic offence. Duly publicized, this even
implied a commitment to the emancipation of the black population after the
election as well. With respect to organized labour, Kennedy campaigned for a
'repeal of the anti-labor excesses which have been written into our labor
laws'.66 To his domestic reform program, the new President added the concept of
meeting the socialist challenge by a flexible, but basically offensive approach
outlined in his 1957 Foreign Affairs article. Kennedy, Williams writes,
'persistently reiterated the classic goals of the old Progressive Movement:
reform at home to improve and save the system coupled with the necessary and
righteous extension of American power abroad'. 67
These
goals, updated to fit the particular requirements of the early 1960s, were
reflected in the composition of the Kennedy cabinet. The Secretary of Labour,
lawyer Arthur Goldberg, not only had a background in the CIA mass-production
trade-union movement, but also supported its Atlantic extrapolation through his
director- ship of the American Committee on a United Europe (ACUE). The
appointment of the labour-friendly soap manufacturer Mennen Williams as
Assistant Secretary of State for African Affairs also had the aspect of
mobilizing organized labour for expansion abroad. With Under-Secretary Bowles,
whose millions had been earned in the advertising business and whose previous
government career likewise had been consistently devoted to smooth relations
with organized labour, Williams was the main advocate of an offensive programme
of support for moderate nationalism in the Third World, irrespective of the
short-term consequences for Atlantic relations. 68
At
the same time, Kennedy was keen to secure the support of the traditional East
Coast centres of Atlanticism. Following his narrow victory, he turned to Robert
Lovett, who had been Assistant Secretary of State and Secretary of Defence at
the time of the Marshall Plan and the Korean War respectively. Lovett, the son
of the general counsel to Harriman's Union Pacific, and married to the daughter
of Brown Bros. senior partner James Brown, was a 'power broker who carried the
proxies for the great law firms and financial institutions' and as such was the
counterweight to the less solidly established liberals like Bowles and Adlai
Stevenson.69 Lovett gave Kennedy a list of 'right people' for key cabinet posts.
The choice of Ford executive McNamara, who had served under Lovett in World War
Two, at Defence, did not literally represent the penetrationinto the Kennedy
cabinet, but was still highly significant in other aspects. First, in the light
of the shift to productive capital in the accumulation pattern of the early
1960s, Detroit was decisive in the competition with the EEC and in the
confrontation with the socialist world. Secondly, McNamara represented the
technocratic element associated with the new prominence of the rationalization
of production. McNamara had been one of a team of 'Whiz Kids’ at Ford which
rehabilitated the company after having lagged behind General Motors since the
late 1920s. Under Henry Ford II, the company once again became a pioneer of
social organization, s~ the pace of the new technocratic arrogance that would in
due course spill over to the international policies pursued by the Kennedy
administration. Hence, McNamara was not a 'Ford' man in the capital-group sense,
but very much so in a 'Fordist' sense, although the Atlantic orientation of
Henry Ford II in this respect may be mentioned as well. 70
For
the
handling of the intricate problem of the declining dollar Kennedy chose Douglas
Dillon as Secretary of the Treasury from Lovett's list after David Rockefeller
(and Lovett himself) had turned down the offer. The new prominence of West
Germany in EEC and its projected role in an Atlantic Partnership help explain
the presence of Dillon, Read and Rockefeller-group representatives to the
Kennedy cabinet, and accounts for the
element of cont with the previous administration. Although the universalist
concetp guiding the Kennedy policy differed from the sphere-of-interest concept
of the Eisenhower administration, the power equation between the United States
and West Germany had not changed. Kennedy was averse to German nuclear
ambitions, and the American activism in this respect tendentially undermine
position of the proponents of a German Alleingang like Strauss. Isolated
by the pervasive Atlanticist trend, they were replaced by proven Atlanticists in
1962-63. Making American influence live in Germany, however, required that the
new weight of the German economy in the North Atlantic context was reck one in
the choice of cabinet personnel as well.
The
relative decline of Britain, both in economic power and in terms of its role in
Atlantic unity, contrasted to the ascendancy of West Germany in both respects.
It also sheds light on the promenence of Chase men (Dillon, too, was a director
of Chase Manhattan) in the Kennedy administration where otherwise Morgan men
might have been expected to predominate. (The Chase Manhattan Bank,
incidentally, had risen to the first place among US banks in the 1950s, whereas
its rival, the Morgan Bank, was in trouble after having merged with the Guaranty
Trust in 1959) Kennedy and Lovett obviously thought that Dillon's experience in
negotiating with the European states on trade liberalization was an asset in
handling the precarious relations with the Atlantic allies on this score.71
Dean
Rusk, a Southerner and President of the Rockefeller Foundation, was selected as
Secretary of State. Rusk, according to Halberstam, was expected to be a
low-profile Secretary of State, allowing Kennedy and his advisors to give
foreign relations a greater personal imprint. Under-Secretary Bowles, however,
became the target of attack from the traditional East Coast establishment
looking over the shoulder of 'low profile' Secretary Rusk. By mid 1961, Bowles
had become concerned over US policy with respect to Cuba and South-East Asia,
and in a memorandum of June of that year he presented a synthesis of his ideas
about a better course. In this memorandum, he argued the need to drop the
militarist elements in US foreign policy and adopt a consensus-seeking policy
instead. Bowles's recommendations to outflank rather than frontally attack
Castro and the Soviet Union were in line with Kennedy's own preferences, but his
rejection of colonialist Portugal and racist South Africa as Free World allies
was not compatible with American imperialist interests. The most critical
passage in Bowles's memo- randum concerned Germany. Although he repeated the
familiar argument on an Atlantic community, he openly contemplated the
possibility of allowing Germany to unite on its own terms, become a neutral, and
even associate itself with the Soviet Union. 12
The
memorandum did not fail to mobilize his opponents, and in the press stories
began to appear suggesting Bowles's dismissal. In November 1961, in spite of
Kennedy's personal assurances, Bowles was replaced by George Ball. Ball, too,
opposed the militarist stand in South-East Asia, but mainly because 'he feared.
. . that it was going to divert America from its prime concern in the world,
which was the European alliance'. 73 Also in November, Averell Harriman became
Assistant Secretary of Far Eastern Affairs. In the spring of 1963, he would take
George McGhee's post as Under-Secretary of State for Political Affairs.
Thus
by 1963 a cabinet well qualified for supervising the expan- sion of real
capital, for dealing with the working class, and for guiding the policy of
Atlantic Partnership along a path compatible with the interests of the major
economic interests involved, had definitely established itself. Its support in
the traditional East Coast power-centres and in the industrial Mid west seemed
secure. The was one section missing from the traditional universalist class
coalition, however, and that was the South.
In
this
region, important changes both in terms of class structure and in political
outlook had taken place between the Marshall offensive period and the Kennedy
years. By the early 1960s, traditional free traders in the cotton and textile
industries had joined the traditional protectionists, small oil and gas drillers
and coal mining. Gradually, the small-town and rural conservatism of the
traditional Democratic homeland, with its strong attachment to the wide
English-speaking Atlantic connection, gave way to the radical rightism that grew
popular in the expanding and industrialialization in Southern cities and was
sponsored in particular by the new right. Their hatred of 'socialist' state
intervention and of taxes for expensive foreign adventures had put a stamp on
Southern thinking. By 1962', Lerche writes, 'the South had earned - and was
apparently quite proud of - the distinction of being the most anti-foreign
region of the United States'. 74
The
centrepiece of Kennedy's Atlantic Partnership strategy 1962 Trade Expansion Act,
could no longer depend on the votes of Southern Democrats. Although the Kennedy
offensive functioned to mobilize what remained of support for internationalism,
the liberalization programme was burdened by an oil quota system drafted by oil
Senators Robert Kerr and Lyndon Johnson (now Vice-President) to which was added
a voluntary quota system the cotton-textile industry established in two stages
in 1961 and 1962, and compensatory tariff protection for the glass and lumber
industries.75
Kennedy's
concern over the weakness of his coalition had prompted him to seek the
confidence of the New York leagal and banking establishment, but also led him to
reach for support amongst the formally pro-Nixon camp. In October 1961
McCone, a new rich and ultra-conservative shipbuilder from California, was
appointed head of the CIA. McCone had been Secretary of the Air Force under
Truman, chairman of the Energy Commission under Eisenhower, and had
directorships in California banking and later also joined the ITT board. Kennedy
chose McCone, according to Hillsman, 'to make the conservatives in business, in
industry, the military, and Congress feel that their foreign and defense policy
interests would be represented.
On
the other hand, the recruitment of support from the new rich did not negate the
liberal element in the Kennedy administration. Prominent among those continuing
to keep the President and his 'leftist' associates under fire was Texas oil
millionaire H.L. Hunt. Of Hunt, Lundberg writes that 'the violence of the
diatribes in his subsidized radio programs - carried to 331 . . . stations - led
many observers to see them as having at least helped nurture the mood for the
assassination of President Kennedy'. Of ]ohnson, on the other hand, Hunt in 1964
said that he 'wouldn't mind seeing him in there for three terms'. 77 If in the
meantime the Vietnam war had not been decided upon by the remaining liberals in
Washington, this wish might well have been fulfilled.
'Liberalism'
at home, embodied in such programmes as the 'War on Poverty' which particularly
infuriated conservatives, was in fact necessary to allow the offensive turn of
foreign policy. The outward thrust of the Kennedy policy was based firmly in
domestic reforms and expansionary measures, even if it was often left to his
successor to win final congressional approval, In his own lifetime, Kennedy
succeeded in having passed an improved minimum wage, low-cost housing projects
and urban renewal, as well as a $900 million public works programme. 78
Employment
was still recovering from the 1958 and 1959/60 recessions when Kennedy came to
power. At first, the new administration refrained from substantial state
intervention and seemed to continue the passive attitude of its predecessor,
allowing unemployment to rise again in 1961. By 1962, however, capital
accumulation accelerated and employment opportunities improved accordingly.
Early in the year, the administration intervened in the labour relations area by
establishing wage-price controls. These 'guide- posts' were part of a general
activist turn in the Kennedy administration's economic policy. As usual,
controls were particularly effective in restraining the trend of wages only.
Price policies, as part of the reassertion of the Fordist emphasis in capital
accumulation, were intended to favour finished consumer products industries over
basic industries like steel, with which the Kennedy administration fought a
pitched battle. 79 The steep rise in the US Index of Consumer Research,
measuring consumer optimism, from 1960 through.1965, as well as its counterpart
in actual expenditure and the production trends for automobiles and household
appliances (underpinned by sustained investment in fixed capital), corroborated
the administration's policies.80
The
Atlantic Partnership Concept
By
1960, both at the elite and the popular levels, the interest in Atlantic unity
was again on the rise in the United States. In Foreign Affairs all aspects of the eventual Kennedy offensive were discussed in detail from
1959 on, while propagandistic activities included the choice of
Atlantic federation as the debating topic in American high schools for
the scholastic year 1960-61.84 In the Presidential election, both candidates had
to formulate a position on the issue of
Atlantic unity. Nelson Rockefeller in June 1960 proposed a North Atlantic
Confederation, and this was reiterated in a joint statement by Rockefeller and
Nixon in July. Rockefeller's position, however, was not typical of
the Republican party at the time: Nixon in' fact had been forced to adopt
the internationalist stance at Rockefeller's prodding, much to the dismay of
Eisenhower (who felt that the Rockefeller dictate 'seemed like a
repudiation of his eight years in office') and conservative Republican leader
Goldwater. 82 The offensive contents of Atlantic federal unity envisaged by Rockefeller - i.e. that it
should serve as the launching ground for a 'worldwide union of
the free'83 - had a much longer tradition in the Democratic Party. At the
outset of the Presidential campaign of 1960, the Democrats adopted a platform which promised 'a
broader partnership' in the Atlantic Community, transcending NATO.
To
Roosevelt, Atlantic unity had been the precondition for American universalism to
be brought to bear on the British Empire and peacefully shift imperialist
hegemony to the United States; to the architects of the Marshall offensive, Atlantic unity meant the contraction of
the previously projected global dimensions of
this transition to the US-dominated Free World, pitted against the Soviet
orbit. Faced with new challenges in the underdeveloped world, Kennedy again took
up the universalist concept. But to accommodate Western European ambitions, and
more specifically, to allow the ongoing process of class formation in the area
to sustain the modernizing, corporate-liberal thrust which already was an aspect
of the formation of
the EEC, rather than simply reactivate commercial liberalism, the US
offensive sought to enlist active Western European support for its Grand Design
on a more equitable, 'ultra-imperialist' basis. This was the Atlantic
Partnership concept.
If
Atlantic unity was to be reemphasized, the most urgently needed revision of
policy had to involve defence and, more particularly, the nuclear field.
At the December 1960 NATO ministerial meeting, Secretary Herter, following
earlier suggestions by General Norstad, NATO commander in Europe, proposed the
formation of a seaborne NATO deterrent consisting of submarine and surface ships
armed with Polaris missiles. '(Herter) called it a concept rather than a
proposal because the Eisenhower administration was in its last weeks. . . and it
would be for the Kennedy administration to make the proposal, if any. '84
Herter's 'concept' was a last-ditch attempt to satisfy West German demands,
taking British and French nuclear capacities for granted. Strauss had visited
the United States and discussed Polaris missiles with Secretary of Defense
Thomas Gates in June. In December 1960, Stikker, who was about to become
Secretary-General of NATO, in a private letter to former Secretary of State
Acheson warned that if the NATO nuclear force proposal was not put into effect,
the Germans would go it alone. Stikker knew what he was talking about, since the
Norstad plan had first been discussed, with Spaak, Adenauer, and the general
present, in Stikker's lake resort in Italy.85
Kennedy's
position on the Norstad/Herter legacy, renamed Multilateral Force (MLF), was the
one formulated by H. Van Buren Cleveland when he wrote that 'the MLF made sense
in terms of American interests precisely because it was not
a step toward the sharing of nuclear control, but rather a way of
channelling Europe's - and especially Germany's - nuclear interests and energies
away from the development of independent nuclear forces.'86 The American aim was
to reconstruct a world configuration of forces in which the United States again
commanded a central, mediating position and as far as the attitude towards a
military role for Germany was concerned, there was even the hint of a re-
emergence of the wartime coalition between the Soviet Union and the United
States, spurred on by German nuclear ambitions. In an Izvestia interview,
Kennedy declared his opposition to a West German nuclear capability, and his
refusal to allow a military reaction to the construction of the Berlin Wall
likewise reflected a determination not to activate German militarism. Comparing
the new American attitude with the policies of the previous period still adhered
to by men like Adenauer, Kennedy's National Security Assistant, McGeorge Bundy,
claimed that 'among the allies. . ., we are the moderates'. 87
The
first partner the United States turned to in the new Atlantic offensive was
Great Britain. Here, as we have seen, Harold Macmillan's rise in the
Conservative Party corresponded to the break- through of the corporate-liberal
synthesis as the hegemonic concept for British capitalism; a trend that was
reinforced in 1960 with the appointment of Edward Heath as Lord Privy Seal with
Foreign Office responsibilities. Macmillan now embarked upon a full-scale policy
reorientation towards the EEC, and it became Heath's task to bring British
policy in line with the thrust towards Atlantic and liberal European unity
emanating from the United States. In August 1961, the House of Commons approved
a motion supporting Britain's application for EEC membership.88
This
fitted the profile of a British role in Atlantic Partnership as it was envisaged
by the American administration. In the joint statement made public following
Kennedy's first meeting with Macmillan in April 1961, there was not a trace of
the former Anglo- Saxon chauvinism, the 'fraternity of English-speaking peoples'
or the special relationship. 'We have talked as partners', Kennedy and Macmillan
let it be known, 'but with a full awareness of the rights and interests of the
other nations with whom we are closely associated.'89 In 1962, the Kennedy
administration withdrew the American offer, made by its predecessor, to supply
the British with Skybolt air-to-ground missiles. This left the United Kingdom
without a delivery system for its nuclear bombs, since a British ballistic
missile had failed to get off the ground. Instead, in December 1962, Kennedy and
Macmillan concluded an agreement at Nassau by which Britain acquired three
nuclear submarines plus Polaris missiles. This force, including the nuclear
warheads, was subsequently placed under NATO, (read American) command. On in a
national emergency, were the British entitled to use this force by themselves.90
In the communiqué issued after the Nassau agreement, in which Kennedy also for
the last time emphasized the need for Britain's admission to the EEC, there were
no references the Anglo-American fraternal relations either. 91
Still,
the revival of interest in Atlantic unity, which according to Beloff was 'the
most striking feature of the discussion' during the first year-and-a-half of the
Kennedy administration, inevitable worked to reactivate the 'orthodox'
protagonists of Atlantic Union as well. Streit's Union Now was
republished in combination with an autobiographical account, and in the course
of 1961, enthusiast about the future of Atlantic unity seemed to leave Kennedy's
careful calculations behind. In Foreign Affairs, the chairman of the
Senate Foreign Relations Committee, Fulbright, drew the picture of Great
Britain, Canada, and the United States 'moving toward full participation' in
European integration in order to establish the 'inner community' of a
prospective world system. 92
In
early 1962, therefore, the administration elaborated its concept of Atlantic
unity in greater detail. 'It is not our intent to join the European Common
Market', Secretary of State Rusk declared in an address on February 22. '. . .
We look to a partnership between the United States and an increasingly unified
Europe. The organs of Atlantic cooperation which are at hand - in NATO and the
DECO - are the active instruments of that partnership'.93 The Partnership
concept had already been emphasized the previous month in a speech by the
President on the Trade Expansion programme. 'An integrated Western Europe,
joined in trading partnership with the United States, will further shift the
world balance of power to the side of Freedom', Kennedy stated before Congress.
Whatever reticence might have existed on the degree to which Atlantic unity was
to be formalized, it was abandoned in the debate over its projected economic
foundation, the proposed Trade Expansion Act. Requiring for its Congressional
approval 'an unparalleled campaign to sell (the administration's) ideas', and
eventually burdened by the escape clauses already referred to, the Act granted
Kennedy negotiating authority 'greater than ever before and incomparably greater
than that under which the Dillon Round negotiators were struggling'. 94
Significantly,
one of the provisions of the Act aimed at completely liberalizing the market for
technologically advanced equipment. Under the so-called 'Dominant Supplier
Provision', the President was authorized to reduce to zero the tariff on
products in which 80% of capitalist world trade was accounted for by the exports
of the United States and the EEC combined, assuming British membership. This
provision by its Atlantic demarcation aimed at the establishment of an
integrated circuit of finance capital, including the intra-company division of
labour aspect, at the North Atlantic level. As far as the American side was
concerned, 'the passage of the Trade Expansion Act of 1962 represent( ed) in
many ways a halt and partial reversal of the protectionist trend of the
1950's'.95
George
Ball, Under-Secretary of State and one of the architects of the Trade Expansion
programme, in April outlined the notion of an Atlantic Partnership more
explicitly. In late 1961, together with Christian Herter and Will Clayton, Ball
had proposed to make an Atlantic Partnership the basis for trade liberalization
and the co- ordination of development aid. Now he repeated the advice. Ball
stressed the value of the newly-formed DECO for coordinating economic policy
between the North Atlantic states and for jointly organizing their intervention
in the underdeveloped world via aid programmes. These two goals replaced the
trade liberalization objective advanced by the original OEEC and reflected the
structural growth of state intervention as well as the projected widening of the
international circuit of finance capital beyond the North Atlantic area.96 On 4
July, finally, the President made his famous statement that the United States
was 'ready for a "Declaration of Interdependence" , and was 'prepared
to discuss with a United Europe the ways and means of forming a concrete
Atlantic partnership. '97
Concentrating
the decisive military assets in American hands in the meantime was a crucial
aspect of the Partnership concept. Both in defence spending and in the actual
application of military force abroad, the Kennedy offensive reached
unprecedented level of peace-time standards. The US defence budget for the first
time since the Korean War broke the $50 billion ceiling in 1962 (measure
1960 dollars); more than one-third of all US armed intervention abroad in the
period 1946-75 fell in the 1961-65 offensive.98
While the nuclear role of Western Europe was to be trimmed, a major sales
drive was launched to supply the European armies with advanced weapons.
Strangely, the contours of an emerging Atlantic military industrial complex were
thrown into relief by the establishment of the World Wildlife Fund in 1961 under
the sponsorship of Prince Bernhard of the Netherlands. Next to the Dutch Prince,
which Inspector-General of the Dutch armed forces was in a position to influence
arms purchases, such renowned 'friends of the an world' as the directors of
Northrop and Lockheed, (and Lockheed agent for Europe, Fred Meuser) joined the
new organization. Hence forward, this dimension of the Atlantic bond would
increasingly conflict with the civilian-economic dimension expressed in the rise
of a corporate-liberal bourgeoisie, interested in utilizing military research
for establishing a technologically advanced infrastructure for supporting an
autonomous internationalization of capital. Whereas
the bourgeoisie associated with the latter tendency responded positively to the
Partnership policy and even looked beyond it, the Atlantic liberals involved in
US arms deals with Europe perforce remained committed to a much more subordinate
Atlantic Union concept, and as Sampson writes, 'their weakness reflected in
corruption and in increasingly "Latin American" attitudes'. 99
The
reassertion of the American nuclear monopoly, and the exponential proliferation
of advanced conventional arms sales underlay the announcement by Secretary
McNamara in June 1962 of a fundamental change in US military strategy.
Henceforward, only Soviet military sites would be targeted in an American
nuclear strike; enemy cities were to serve as hostages to keep the Soviet Union
from retaliating. Commenting on the new strategy of 'flexible response', RAND
analyst Malcolm Hoag wrote that 'independent nuclear options (had) become
anachronisms.' 100
Relations
with France rapidly deteriorated as a consequence. From de Gaulle's 1958
memorandum and his refusal to have France participate in an integrated NATO
tactical air force in 1959, tensions had developed in several stages. Ten days
after McNamara had outlined the doctrine of graduated deterrence at a NATO
meeting in Athens in May 1962, the French President gave a press conference in
which he announced the formation of an independent Force de Frappe. Two days
later, Kennedy declared that independent deterrents were un- desirable. That
autumn, an American offer to supply Polaris- equipped submarines was withdrawn.
Following the Cuban missile crisis, de Gaulle publicly complained about not
having been consulted by the American leadership. From there, the crisis in US-
French relations spilled over to the apparently non-military problem of British
admission to the EEC, of which in French eyes, after the reintegration of the
British nuclear force in NATO, only the economic disadvantages remained.l0l
In
a sense, Kennedy's Partnership strategy was effectively thwarted by the French
decision to veto British EEC membership the following January. De Gaulle had
well understood that militarily, as Dean Acheson's article in Foreign Affairs
that month stated in both its title and its content: 'The Practice of
Partnership' would first of all mean a return to the American nuclear monopoly
and hence, a controlling position for the United States in setting the
parameters of international politics.102 Speaking in Frankfurt in June 1%3,
Kennedy conceded that 'the Atlantic Community will not soon become a single
overarching superstate. But practical steps towards a stronger common purpose
are well within our grasp'. The future of the West, he maintained, 'lies in
Atlantic partnership'.ID3 One month later, he once again outlined the connection
between Atlantic unity and American universalism which the EEC had failed to
appreciate. 'In time', he told an Italian audience, 'the unity of the West can
lead to the unity of East and West'. 104
3. The Imperialist Imperative
The
unity of East and West was still far away, however, and the Kennedy offensive
hardly succeeded in overcoming the Cold War or avoiding confrontation with the Soviet Union. With respect to the
socialist countries, the period even saw an upsurge of economic warfare against
the Soviet Union and Eastern Europe. In
the 1950s, the embargo imposed in the Marshall offensive gradually
lost its effectiveness as revisions of the COCOM list of strategic goods failed
to keep up with expanding trade between Western European and Eastern European
states. In 1956, in order
to capitalize on centrifugal tendencies in the Soviet orbit, Poland was even
accorded preferential treatment by the United States an exempted from a number
of COCOM restrictions. Although th Kennedy administration was inspired by
Roosevelt's universalists and from this vantage-point sought to renew the
approach of under mining the Soviet orbit of planned economies by conciliator
policies, the alarmist tone of the new President's campaign and initial policy
statements cut across such a project. In
1961, Congress curtailed Presidential discretion with respect to
Poland and Y ugoslavia. Through a 1962 amendment to the Export Control Act of
1949, the list of goods which by their military significance were considered
harmful to the national security of the United States if exported to socialist
countries was extended to cover goods of economic significance. The same year
also brought 'a more important. . . and enduring limitation on the President's
East-West trade policy making powers'. 105
It was
not until 1963 that the Kennedy administration was to brake this wave of
economic warfare. The announcement of the Soviet- American wheat deal heralded a
gradual normalization, to which the 1964 hearings on US East-West trade policy
by the Senate further contributed. By this time, however, the impetus of the
Kennedy offensive was spending itself, and further economic detente would be
part of the process towards renewed contraction rather than expansion of
American influence.
Redistribution in the Periphery
By
their capacity to generalize the particular interests of the states involved to
a transcendent 'Western' interest, as well as by its fee trade aspect, the
Atlantic unity offensives in the era of Atlantic integration always functioned
as modes of imperialist redistribution to the benefit of the United States. The
mobilization of European liberals and Social Democrats behind the American call
for unity allowed US capital to penetrate into the European colonies a
spheres-of-influence by holding out the prospect of and general reinforcement of
capitalism, both in the metropolitan and in the peripheral areas. In line with
the thrust of universalism, and crucial with respect to mobilizing Social
Democrats in particular, an attempt was made to base imperialist dominance more
firmly in the local class structure in the periphery. In the Kennedy offensive,
even more than in the Roosevelt or Marshall periods, the Americans probed beyond
established colonial rule or military dictatorships for moderate nationalist,
middle-class groupings in the underdeveloped world.
This
policy at the same time required a firm approach to those Third World states
which were beyond imperialist manipulation. Embargoes like those imposed against
Eastern Europe therefore were used to isolate bridgeheads of socialist
revolution in the periphery. Cuba was subjected to an economic embargo from 1959
on; to which, in 1963, the Foreign Assistance Act added sanctions against
non-obliging third countries. In 1961, North Vietnam, too, was put under a
virtual economic embargo by the United States. 106 The positive counterweight to
these measures was the establishment of the Peace Corps, which fitted into the
tradition of Point Four, and the Alliance for Progress for Latin America.
Meanwhile,
Africa and Asia remained target areas for American expansion, and prominent
Kennedy men argued the need to link the quest for Atlantic unity with the
resolution of remaining inter- imperialist rivalries in these areas. As
Kennedy's eventual UN ambassador, Adlai Stevenson, warned in 1960, if the
existing compartmentalization of the European and Atlantic economy would not be
broken down, 'frictions will be spread to Africa as a last divisive legacy of
colonialism.'107
By
1960, rapid decolonization allowed the Americans to lay their proposals before
the political representatives of the newly emerging states directly. The United
Nations offered an excellent arena for the promulgation of the principles of
American universalism and for their absorption by Third World leaders eager to
take part in the organization of a world of sovereign states along the outlines
of the Atlantic Charter and the United Nations Declaration. American policy
accordingly sought to create a stable basis for agreement between the 'First New
Nation' and its more recent counterparts. As Kennedy's Assistant Secretary for
International Organization Affairs, Harlan Cleveland, put it in 1961, American
strategy was to 'help bind together the nations committed to the (UN) Charter
into an international society' and to 'mobilize the moderate elements of the
Assembly'. 108
In
the colonial mother-countries still clinging to their overseas possessions and
dependencies, the rapid improvement of US- Third World relations caused grave
concern. In his letter to Preside Kennedy of 13 February 1961, Spaak, explaining
his resignation Secretary-General of NATO, put the question squarely. 'Does the
United States attach more importance to the UN than to NATO? In other words, is
it ready, in order to win the support or the friendsh of the non-aligned
countries, to go so far as to sacrifice the interests or to hurt the feelings of
its NATO allies?' Referring to Suez and Algeria, Congo and Portugese Africa as
cases in point, Spaak went on to conclude that 'even if it is decided that NATO
is not to have executive powers in the economic sphere, ought nevertheless
remain the place where Western policy vis â vis the underdeveloped
countries is laid down.' 109
The
special case in which the Belgian now as foreign minister, was to face the
consequences of the new American strategy was the Congo, where the United States
operated 'regardless of the legitimate interests of its NATO partners' according
to Spaak's view. At one time, the dream of swift decolonization, which dated
back to the Roosevelt era, still inspired the policies of the State Department',
wrote in retrospect. 110 In fact, it had taken several new appointments, notably
Mennen Williams's, to bring home the change attitude in this respect as far as
Africa was concerned, and even tht the new forces ran upon powerful vested
interests.
In
October 1962, Bowles, who had been made Kennedy's special adviser upon his
removal from the State Department, visited the Congo. He discovered that an
American mission, which had left before he arrived, was establishing a close
relationship with Tshombe, the stooge of the foreign mining interests and self-
appointed leader of the mineral-rich Katanga province. Believing that African
policy thus was still dictated by the Department European Bureau, 'which was
itself influenced by the Britisl French and Belgian financiers who owned the
copper mines in Katanga', Bowles intervened directly with Kennedy on the ground
that American policy towards black Africa would be wrecked by sticking to the
reactionary course.111 Eventually, Kennedy personal decision was required before
the United States backed UN action in the Congo, and Pentagon and State
Department resistan, was overcome.
Four
years of factional struggles ensued, in which the popul left-wing leader Lumumba
was murdered on American order while UN troops threw out the Russians and
reestablished national unity. Various attempts to establish a moderate
pro-Western leadership acceptable to American and European interests were made,
but no stable ruling group emerged. When the UN troops left, Adoula, one of
those tried in the years before and backed by the Belgian government on account
of neo-colonialist calculations, assumed the government. Soon Tshombe took power
again, but by then the ultra-imperialist approach to Third World disturbances
was well on the wane, and the Americans now secured their interests by putting
Colonel Mobutu in the saddle in 1965.112
In
Asia, the Americans intervened when the Dutch refused to cede New Guinea, which
they had retained at Indonesia's independence in 1949, to Sukarno. Under
Eisenhower, the State Department, as with the Congo, had acquiesced in this
colonial arrangement, and in 1958 Secretary Dulles assured the Dutch foreign
minister, Luns, that the Netherlands could count on American support in the
event of hostilities over the island. 113 As late as 1954, Dulles in closed
session of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee had declared that in his
opinion independence had been given to Indonesia prematurely. 114
Kennedy
reversed American policy, strongly suggesting a solu- tion accommodating
Indonesian aspirations. In late 1961, he appointed Averell Harriman to Far
Eastern Affairs in order to get the pro-European conservatives in the State
Department under control; and in a letter to the Dutch Prime Minister in April
1961, he warned that moderate elements would be eliminated if it came to a con-
frontation. In that case, 'the entire free world position in Asia would be
seriously damaged'. lIS
The
Congo and New Guinea affairs, testifying also to the role of bureaucratic
resistance to Kennedy's Grand Design, of course pale in significance compared to
the developments in Vietnam. The mili- tarized liberals of the Kennedy
administration as early as 1961 re- commended the introduction of regular US
troops to deal with Vietnamese insurgency. General 'Big' Minh, the 'moderate
nationa list' alternative to Ngo Dinh Diem who was assassinated after several
American requests to resign, was able to stay in power for only two months. The
American assumption of the global police role that the European powers had
relinquished in the 1956-1965 period, paved the way for a resumption of European
economic initiatives in the Third World at a later stage. In the meantime, the
Indo-China war would contribute greatly to the loss of American hegemony over
Europe, and even precipitated the crisis of corporate liberalism as such. 212
The Role of the AFL-CIO
The
redistributive aspect of the Kennedy offensive and its strong universalist
accent made the Southern Hemisphere the major target for American imperialism.
In the area of shaping labour relations the emphasis was likewise on the
underdeveloped regions. 'From an economic standpoint', Cox writes of this
period, 'official policy promulgated by agencies such as ILO, the Organisation
for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECO), and the League Nations Special
Fund viewed the improvement of the quality of labor, mainly through occupational
training, as a "preinvestement” condition for economic development. .
.From a political stand point', the struggle for the ideological allegiance of
labor in less developed countries escalated. Somewhat more subtle were efforts
to export models of industrial relations systems to these countries through
bilateral aid programs and through intergovernmental agencies concerned in this
field of policy.' 116
The
American trade-union leadership was active in both dimensions, but the weight
accorded to either the political dimensions combating Communism or the economic
dimension varied for each of the two main traditions combined into the AFL-CIO.
It of the merger of 1955, differences between the AFL and the CIO had not been
fully overcome. Abroad, the CIO tended to adopt amounted to an offensive
position: this had been the case Marshall era already, when Victor Reuther of
the United Auto Workers (UAW) had been the principal CIO envoy in Europe. At the
time, he and his brother Walter had led the struggle against the anti-Communist
hardliners in the AFL leadership. In their attitude towards Communism, the
Reuther brothers were generally closer to the Kennedy and early Johnson
administrations than to the AFL.117
In
1961, as part of the Alliance for Progress, the American Institute for Free
Labor Development (AIFLD) was established in order to aid the development of
stable local class structures capable of averting inherently instable military
dictatorships. The AFL, however, interpreted their mission as intended to
prevent progressive governments from taking or holding power. Walter Reuther's
1966 accusation that the AFL-CIO worked with the CIA was based in particular
AIFLD experience. 118
In
this respect, the Kennedy offensive brought a repeat preformance of the Marshall
episode, in spite of its more consistantly universalist platform. Again, the
specific AFL contribution to expanded trade-union activities abroad fitted into
this oil much easier than would have been the case had the Kennedy policy lived
up to its lofty declarations of intent. The conflict with the UA W accordingly
was postponed to a juncture in which the full consequences of American activism
abroad became visible, and when the gradual contraction of US foreign
involvement allowed a certain thaw in East-West relations.
By
then, the aggressive anti-Communism of the AFL had lost touch with the realities
of the American international position, which in the eyes of both allies and
opponents no longer allowed the self-righteousness of the preceding period. The
walk-out of the American trade-union representatives at the June 1966 ILO Con-
ference to protest the election of a Polish chairman provided the occasion for
Reuther's attack. His action was rebuffed at a special meeting of the AFL-CIO
Executive Council, but it was the overture to departure of the UAW from the
federation. 119