The Perils of Empire By James Laxer: 
		
		A Book Review By Jim Miles
		ccun.org, April 22, 2008  
		 
		Viking (Penguin), Toronto. 2008.
		 
		The concept of empire has been discussed quite rigorously by various 
		authors since the advent of the Bush administration, with views ranging 
		from neocon jingoism through more academic apologists to those berating 
		empire for the ills of the world.  While not all ills of the world 
		arise from imperialism, certainly a good portion of them do as many of 
		them are strongly correlated - world debt, militarism, war, 
		insurrection, global warming, the newly emerging food crisis are all 
		related strongly with the imperial drive.  The discussion of empire 
		includes the obvious historical comparisons and the discussion as to 
		whether or not the U.S. runs an empire, and again many authors with a 
		wide range of views either deny what has tended to become a self-evident 
		truth, to those that are capable of digging into the dirty world of 
		empirical hubris and seeing it for what it has been historically and 
		what it is currently.  James Laxer’s “The Perils of Empire” is 
		another useful addition to the imperial genre but it lacks the rigour of 
		many of the more powerful works, at best it is an ‘adequate overview’.
		 
		The first section of the book is a relatively academic overview of the 
		arguments swirling around empire, but mostly the apologetics of 
		Brezenski, Fukuyama, Ignatieff, Fergusen, the Wilsonians, and the neocon 
		PNAC members.  There is little in the way of advocacy for a 
		position to be argued and the author’s position remains somewhat 
		ambivalent.  There is a definite sympathy at times for the American 
		empire starting with 9/11 as a “time of such understandable American 
		popular fury,” that unleashed the wars on Afghanistan and Iraq.  
		However, there is no mention of the artifice of that fury created by 
		American ignorance of its own background, historical amnesia concerning 
		various American massacres at home and abroad, and the media circus and 
		simplistic views that built upon that ignorance and amnesia.  
		
		 
		When “Facing Up to Empire,” one of the initial statements is “An empire 
		is first, last, and always an affair of blood,” while shortly Laxer 
		says, “the benefits of empire are many,” without defining what the 
		benefits are.  The somewhat contradictory position is brought 
		together indirectly by subsequent discussion on the “ruling class,” the 
		“aristocrats,” the “upper classes,” suggesting that perhaps the many 
		benefits accrue to the wealthy upper classes while the affair of blood 
		remains mainly with the poor classes -  suggested but not made into 
		a central argument of his thesis.  The concept of “elitism” recurs 
		very frequently throughout the work, acting as a unifying theme, but it 
		is not stated as such.  I’ll return to this critique in a moment, 
		but allow me to move on to another definition.
		 
		Three different types of empire are described, but one of the strongest 
		tie-ins is the statement that “slavery and empire were the underpinnings 
		for the emergence of civilization.”  Certainly there are strong 
		correlations between empire and slavery but one does not necessitate the 
		other, nor do the two of them in any way create the basis for 
		civilization.  Would the corollary hold true, that because we have 
		slaves and own land, we are civilized?  Were all civilizations 
		empires (consider the Minoans here)?   As for civilization, is 
		technology being mistaken for the sole arbiter of its development or do 
		cultural components come into effect as well?   And would not 
		empires absorb the culture and technology – not to mention the wealth – 
		of subordinate or conquered areas?
		 
		Laxer then slips into a short apologetics for empire saying that the 
		demise of empire had the effect that “people reverted to more primitive 
		ways,” which carries the assumption that empires are better than the 
		previous existing civilization and after them is only primitiveness.  
		Will the world be in a more primitive state with the demise of the 
		American empire (those who know my writing will know my response to 
		this)?  Did the Soviet Union enter a more primitive state, or did 
		it survive the ravages of free market racketeers to become a stronger, 
		smaller more effective state called Russia?  
		 
		Again, another truth followed by an unsubstantiated assumption: “the 
		history of the species has been written by and on behalf of the 
		privileged [not to be mistaken for social Darwinism]”; followed by “The 
		idea that wealth, the arts, sciences, and literature rest on the 
		exploitation of the vast majority of the human race.”  Yes, the 
		winners write the history (the privileged part of the victors at any 
		rate) and yes, the accumulation of wealth has a direct correspondence to 
		empire, but empire is not necessarily the cause neither of wealth nor of 
		advances in arts and science.
		 
		While discussing legitimacy of empire, the idea of cultural, moral, 
		religious, and technological superiority abound, primarily directed 
		again at the elites, but America also draws significantly on “soft” 
		power for “winning the hearts and minds…through the power of American 
		popular culture.”  By other definitions, soft power equates to 
		propaganda and economic dominance; more currently soft power has 
		certainly not captured the hearts and minds of the Middle East. 
		
		 
		Laxer then discusses the rise and fall of various empires and the forces 
		that contributed to both their ascent and descent.  Two main themes 
		stand out, and had they been stated as themes in the introduction, the 
		book would have made for a more solid presentation.  As it stands, 
		the historical comparisons are academically well enough done, creating a 
		good historical overview of the various civilizations explored.  
		The empires viewed start with Egypt and range through Athens, China, 
		Rome, Spain, and ending with Britain (while mentioning other smaller 
		empires along the way).  The two themes common to all of them are 
		elitism and militarism.
		 
		Elitism is the empirical practice of supporting a small group within a 
		larger population to act as leaders.  They could be racial 
		minorities raised to a more powerful position, or a class minority, the 
		‘capture’ and utilisation of an existing cultural or economic elite 
		already within the ruled area. All the empires mentioned practiced some 
		form of elitism[1]. That is clearly what has happened, if not very 
		successfully, with the Karzai government in Afghanistan, and is but a 
		broken dream in Iraq.  It has been used very widely in the past, 
		successfully one could argue for Japan and Germany where the pre-war 
		elites remained in power, less successfully for Chile under Pinochet.  
		Saudi Arabia is another example of cultural elitism that has 
		successfully maintained the house of Saud and its dominance over the 
		Arabian Peninsula.  
		 
		The latter is also a good example of the other force of empire, the 
		military.  Again, Laxer develops the idea of military conquest, 
		military surveillance, and military support as one of the key structures 
		of all empires.  There can be little doubt for this argument, and 
		there can be no doubt that it is the main support behind the American 
		empire, including its “soft” empire.  A further aspect of this is 
		the increasing use of mercenaries, vassal state armies, and hired 
		militaries as the empire became wealthier and the citizens themselves 
		less inclined to fight their own wars.  With businesses such as 
		Blackwater in Iraq, and the many states that fight alongside the U.S. 
		(with the NATO coalition – including Canada - being one set of hired 
		guns for empire whether they like to think that way or not) indicate the 
		late developments of a declining empire. 
		 
		The final section of the book examines more particularly the American 
		empire, mainly the post WWII period.  The statement made near the 
		beginning of this discussion that “the underlying purpose of empire is 
		to extract labor” is partially correct.  Certainly cheap labour is 
		one requisite of empire, but having labour immobilized such as it is now 
		under various free trade agreements and then subject to decreasing wages 
		and marginal opportunities for employment puts it under the main impetus 
		for empire – the accumulation of wealth from the hinterland to the 
		heartland (read homeland for America). 
		 
		Laxer’s discussion of current trends within the American empire are 
		reasonable but reinforce some of the ambivalence in his tone.  Hugo 
		Chavez is described as a “rebellious leader,” with a “populist left wing 
		regime” being one of the “disquieting signs of moving out of 
		Washington’s orbit.”  Why disquieting?  Why not a positive 
		sign?  Why “rebellious”, or is that a compliment referring to the 
		American rebellion against the British (rhetorical)?  And is he 
		“populist” or simply very popular and truly democratic as he has won, 
		very democratically, several elections and referendum, and the one he 
		lost recently he accepted and continued on without calling in the 
		military or goon squads as Central American U.S. supported leaders tend 
		to do?  Chavez is also said to be “reconciled to constitutional 
		democracy,” but more correctly he appears to be committed to it as 
		indicated by his last referendum defeat.  Later his policies are 
		described as a “well funded and sophisticated threat…” to whom?  
		American oil interests or the good of the Venezuelan people?  I 
		would have to ask the author is there really an underlying intention to 
		denounce what has become one of the stronger democratic states in the 
		Americas?
		 
		More semi-apologetics come into the work.  Laxer implies that the 
		American empire does not rely “on slave labor and on plunder” but on 
		“the free flow of capital in every part of the world.”  Well, not 
		quite free, as the rules and regulations of the WTO, the IMF, the World 
		Bank, the OECD and their various treaties guarantee only the free flow 
		of capital [wealth] from less developed countries to the imperial 
		American heartland.  Were not slave labour and plunder an essential 
		part of the conquest of the North American continent?  
		 
		Oil is recognized as being important to the American empire as it 
		“transformed life in America, reshaping the cities with the emergence of 
		suburbs, and gave Americans a freedom of movement” except that oil was 
		originally an industrial resource and the suburbs did not arise until 
		the advent of a relatively cheap internal combustion engine combined 
		with the automaker imposed demise of major cities’ streetcar systems.  
		Great Britain and the U.S. have long been involved in schemes to control 
		Middle East oil, sometimes through military force, sometimes through 
		corporate force.  
		 
		Finally the discussion ends with prospects for the American empire.  
		I have provided above some significant criticism of Laxer’s ideas and 
		word choice but his conclusion on the empire is hopeful: “What is coming 
		is no less than the dethroning of the United States as the central 
		economy around which the global system revolves.”  There is no 
		suggestion that the actual global system will change leaving the U.S. as 
		a smaller player in the corporate empires of the world.   The 
		ramifications from that are unknown, from possible more intense military 
		actions, to a more multilaterally cooperative state, to a global 
		economic downturn that could seriously affect the nature of corporate 
		power around the world.   We should find out soon enough.
		 
		Okay, damned with faint praise and some serious critique, “The Perils of 
		Empire” is not the best read on imperial adventures.  More 
		advocated focus on the elitism-militarism duality plus recognition of 
		the corporate power that finds strength in the Washington consensus 
		would improve the stream of argument.  As for authors thinking of 
		future books on defining or arguing about empire…enough.  From 
		Andrew Bacevich, James Carroll, Amy Chua, and Chalmers Johnson among 
		others, through to the apologists for empire as presented in the first 
		section of this book the American empire is a well-established truth.  
		By all means maintain the critiques of the current empire, but an empire 
		it is.  
		 
		Note: 
		[1] see also Amy Chua’s works World on Fire and Day of Empire, both of 
		which deal significantly with elitism.  
		 
		Jim Miles is a Canadian educator and a regular 
		contributor/columnist of opinion pieces and book reviews for The 
		Palestine Chronicle.  Miles’ work is also presented globally 
		through other alternative websites and news publications.
		 
		
		jmiles50@telus.net
		 
		www.jim.secretcove.ca/index.Publications.html