Twilight
of the Oligarchs
Dmitry
Orlov
11
November, 2014
Last
week I published a brave prediction:
I
see the political elites and their oligarch puppet-masters becoming
endangered species in the United States before too long as the
populace, including their own bodyguards, turns against them.
As
usual, I made no attempt to specify what I mean by “before too
long” because making predictions as to timing is a fool's game.
And, as usual, I got a flurry of emails expressing a wide range of
rationalizations but all adding up to the same sentiment: “not any
time soon.”
Some
people thought that the populace, consisting as it does of zombified
overfed clowns addicted to Facebook and internet porn is unlikely to
stage the revolution. Others thought that the oligarchy will manage
to manipulate financial markets, destroy one country after another in
order to drain all remaining wealth out of the world and consume it,
and by so doing manage to placate the populace with bread and
circuses, well into the future. The bodyguards are unlikely to rebel,
some said, because they are so well paid.
Getting
back to basics, it is a fairly obvious and increasingly
well-recognized fact that the American empire, the empire of military
bases, the Federal Reserve, the IMF and the World Bank, is on its way
out. And it is a well-known fact about empires that when they fail
those who held positions of power and privilege within them are
quickly recycled into punching bags and pincushions. Oddly, nobody
mentioned any of the mechanisms by which this transformation tends to
take place, so I thought I'd mention them briefly.
First,
when empires start falling apart, this is manifested in a few ways.
One is loss of control over the periphery, as a shrinking pool of
resources is used to shore up the center. Another is loss of control
over the use of violence, as a wide variety of violent entrepreneurs
enter the scene and the center is forced to play them against each
other and make deals with them. And as the unraveling progresses, the
violent entrepreneurs develop agendas of their own, which,
inevitably, involve having the cooperation flow the other way:
instead of cooperating with those formerly in charge, they demand
that those formerly in charge start cooperating with them. And it is
here that the scene turns bloody.
The
violent entrepreneurs tend to follow certain general outlines as
well. They form war bands by recruiting angry young men—a
demographic which is in ever more plentiful supply in a failing
empire. The war band is a totalitarian structure, in which the
recruits pledge absolute allegiance to the organization and pass an
initiation ritual that involves an arbitrary act of murder. In the
case of groups as radical as ISIS, this may involve mass murder.
There tends to be a clean break with the old, collapsing society,
which is motivated by money and prestige within society at large,
because these entrepreneurial groups are motivated by honor and
prestige within the in-group only. Another feature is the extent of
radicalization that happens within these groups, which influences the
type of warfare these groups tend to wage. Whereas official military
forces follow certain rules of engagement, such as trying to spare
civilians, and especially women and children, and have as their goal
the enemy's surrender, followed by negotiations, these groups aim for
simple extermination, and, as any exterminator will tell you,
exterminating the adult males of a population is not as effective as
exterminating their young. This level of radicalization can be
observed right now among the neo-Nazis in the Ukraine, whose death
squads have been specifically targeting schools and maternity clinics
in the east of the country; burials of some of the schoolchildren
recently murdered by Ukrainian artillery were held just week. If you
think that Ukraine is too extreme an example to apply to the US,
think again: Uncle Sam and his Ukrainian mail-order bride happen to
have a lot in common.
Of
course, such practices are repugnant to the populace at large, but
here we encounter the other key aspect of such developments:
terrorized by the war bands, the populace becomes powerless to act.
What's more, the level of cognitive dissonance between the public
messages they hear and the daily reality to which they are subjected
causes a large percentage of the population to become psychotic; this
is also clearly the case in today's Ukraine, where many of the
returning enlisted men are found to be too psychologically damaged to
serve in any capacity whatsoever. For now, the Ukrainian oligarchs
and their CIA puppet-masters are holding it together by throwing the
radicalized groups at a phantom enemy—the so-called “Russian
separatists,” while most of the country is being controlled by
mercenaries hired by the oligarchs, to whom the American-installed
junta handed out regional governorships after the February coup. But
that campaign is going very badly, with extraordinarily high casualty
rates and no victories to report, and it is a matter of time before
the radicalized groups turn on those who sent them into battle: the
junta and the oligarchs.
The
oligarchs are protected by their various bodyguards and security
services which go by a variety of names, but there is one name that
fits particularly well: mercenaries. These people are paid to fight,
and money, it turns out, is far less effective as a motivating factor
than the honor and allegiance of a war band. In his chapter on
mercenaries, Niccolò Macchiavelli points out a constant about them:
they prefer to run away rather than die. This is true even today: in
Ukraine, the American and Polish mercenaries fighting on the side of
the junta saw very little action and were mostly kept away from areas
where casualty rates were high. Some Polish mercenaries did get to
see the front lines (and died there). Some said that this was because
their life insurance is cheaper. But the general principle still
holds: don't expect mercenaries to die for you; they work for money,
and working for money involves staying alive long enough to spend it.
And
so it stands to reason that the battle between the war bands and the
oligarchs will be a short and uneven one: the oligarchs' body guards
and mercenaries run away and the war bands take over. Some of the
action is bound to be quite shocking; for instance, while the elites
and the oligarchs themselves are rather well defended, at least
initially, their children, ensconced in various elite schools,
academies and universities, comprise a soft target, setting the stage
for school take-overs, mass kidnappings and shootings of a very
different sort from the ones seen to date. The general populace will
jump of its skin to pledge support to whatever war band intimidates
them the most. And the old political elites and their oligarch
puppet-masters will fade from view.
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