Articles by James Petras

We found 138 results.


Colombia: Extractive Capital and Peace Negotiations
Prof. James Petras – TRANSCEND Media Service, 17 Sep 2012

In late August 2012, President Santos announced that the Colombian regime was opening peace negotiations with the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, (FARC), with the aim of ending nearly 50 years of civil war. Several economic, social, political and military changes account for the Santos regimes abrupt shift from a policy of “peace” through extermination of the guerrillas to a policy of a negotiated peace.

→ read full article

Iran’s Strategic Diplomatic Victory over the Washington-Israeli Axis: Its Larger Political Consequences
Prof. James Petras – TRANSCEND Media Service, 10 Sep 2012

Iran chaired, hosted and led the recently rejuvenated Non-Aligned Movement (NAM) meeting in Teheran, attended by delegates from 120 countries, including 31 heads of state and 29 foreign secretaries of state. Even the United Nations General Secretary Ban Ki-Moon, notorious mouthpiece of Washington, felt obligated to address, a forum attended by two-thirds of the member countries of the UN, despite State Department and Israeli objections.

→ read full article

Notes on Globalization and Class Struggle: Latin America, Europe and Asia
Prof. James Petras – TRANSCEND Media Service, 27 Aug 2012

Introduction: The principle axes of the class struggle are found in Latin America, Europe and Asia, each following its own trajectory.

→ read full article

The Two Faces of a Police State: Sheltering Tax Evaders, Financial Swindlers, and Money Launderers while Policing the Citizens
Prof. James Petras – TRANSCEND Media Service, 13 Aug 2012

Never in the history of the United States have we witnessed crimes committed on the scale and scope of the present day by both private and state elites.

→ read full article

The Great Transformation: From the Welfare State to the Imperial Police State
Prof. James Petras – TRANSCEND Media Service, 16 Jul 2012

The United States has experienced the biggest political upheaval in its recent history: the transformation of a burgeoning welfare state into a rapidly expanding, highly intrusive and deeply entrenched police state, linked to the most developed technological innovations.

→ read full article

Greece: What Can Be Done?
Prof. James Petras – TRANSCEND Media Service, 2 Jul 2012

Greece faces the unenviable choice between accepting the terms of “the Troika” and facing the continuation and deepening of a socio-economic crises, which includes five years of negative growth, over 23% unemployment, an astronomical rise in poverty (from less than 15% to over 40%) and mounting suicides, or a rejection of the “memorandum”, and a likely cut-off of Eurozone funding and capital markets with virtually few reserves to cover salaries, pensions or public services.

→ read full article

When the Respectable Become Extremists the Extremists Become Respectable
Prof. James Petras – TRANSCEND Media Service, 28 May 2012

By any historical measure, whether it involves international law, human rights conventions, United Nations protocols, socio economic indicators, the policies and practices of the United States and European Union regimes can be characterized as extremist.

→ read full article

US-Israel War on Iran: The Myth of Limited Warfare
Prof. James Petras – TRANSCEND Media Service, 23 Apr 2012

Washington and Tel Aviv claim and appear to believe that their planned assault on Iran will be a “limited war”, targeting limited objectives and lasting a few days or weeks – with no serious consequences.

→ read full article

The Bloody Road to Damascus: The Triple Alliance’s War on a Sovereign State
Prof. James Petras – TRANSCEND Media Service, 19 Mar 2012

There is clear and overwhelming evidence that the uprising to overthrow President Assad of Syria is a violent, power grab led by foreign-supported fighters who have killed and wounded thousands of Syrian soldiers, police and civilians, partisans of the government and its peaceful opposition.

→ read full article

China: Rise, Fall and Re-Emergence as a Global Power – Some Lessons from the Past
Prof. James Petras – TRANSCEND Media Service, 12 Mar 2012

The study of world power has been blighted by Eurocentric historians who have distorted and ignored the dominant role China played in the world economy between 1100 and 1800.

→ read full article

Colombia’s Quest for Peace and Justice
Prof. James Petras – TRANSCEND Media Service, 5 Mar 2012

Between April 21 -23 [2012], the National Patriotic Council will convoke thousands of activists from most of the major urban and rural social movements and trade unions, human rights groups and indigenous afro-colombian movements, who will meet to unify forces and launch what promises to be the most significant new political movement in recent history. The democratization of Colombia requires the growth of independent social movements, judicial investigation and prosecution of ex narco-President Álvaro Uribe and his closest collaborators, and needs to extend to the present Santos regime.

→ read full article

Social Opposition in the Age of Internet: Desktop “Militants” and Public Intellectuals
Prof. James Petras – TRANSCEND Media Service, 28 Nov 2011

The internet is the alternative to the capitalist mass media and its propaganda, a source of news and information that relays manifestos and informs activists of sites for public action. Because of the internet’s progressive role as an instrument of the social opposition it is subject to surveillance by the repressive police-state apparatus. For example, in the USA over 800,000 functionaries are employed by the “Homeland Security” police agency to spy on billions of emails, faxes, telephone calls of millions of US citizens.

→ read full article

Latin America: Growth, Stability and Inequalities – Lessons for the US and EU
James Petras – Information Clearing House, 3 Oct 2011

The contrasting performance between Latin republics and Euro-American empire builders is striking. The US and EU should shed their self-centered images of “successful” developed countries and outdated stereotype of Latin America as a collection of “volatile”, coup prone underdeveloped countries.

→ read full article

Colombia: Pillage, Promise and Peace
Prof. James Petras – TRANSCEND Media Service, 8 Aug 2011

Colombia stands at the crossroads: it can follow in the footsteps of its predecessor, narco-President Alvaro Uribe and remain a military dependency, a lone outpost of the US Empire in South America.

→ read full article

Imperialism: Bankers, Drug Wars and Genocide
Prof. James Petras – Information Clearing House, 23 May 2011

While the Pentagon arms the Mexican government and the US Drug Enforcement Agency enforces the “military solution”, the biggest US banks receive, launder and transfer hundreds of billions of dollars to the drug lords’ accounts, who then buy modern arms, pay private armies of assassins and corrupt untold numbers of political and law enforcement officials on both sides of the border.

→ read full article

The Social Basis of America’s Imperial Politics: Rethinking Imperialist Theory
Prof. James Petras – Global Research, 27 Dec 2010

The ‘fluidity’ of US power relations with Latin America is a product of the continuities and changes in Latin America. Past hegemony continues to weigh heavy, but the future augurs a continued decline. The current balance of power will however be determined by shifts in world markets, in which the US is destined to play a lesser role. Hence the greater probability of more divergences in policy, barring major breakdowns within Latin America.

→ read full article

Latin America: Crises, Upheavals, Roads to Twenty-First Century Capitalist Development
Prof. James Petras – Global Research, 1 Nov 2010

A wealth of data based on extensive field interviews, statistical studies published by international development agencies, reports by economic consultancies and business and investment houses, as well as discussions with independent social movement leaders provides ample documentation to argue that Latin America has taken multiple roads to 21st century capitalism, not socialism or anything akin to it.

→ read full article

The Ecuadorian Coup: Its Larger Meaning
Prof. James Petras – Global Research, 18 Oct 2010

The abortive military-police coup in Ecuador, which took place on September 30, has raised numerous questions about the role of the US and its allies among the traditional oligarchy and the leftist social movements, Indian organizations and their political parties.

→ read full article

Imperialism and Imperial Barbarism
Prof. James Petras – Global Research, 4 Oct 2010

Imperialism, its character, means and ends has changed over time and place. Historically, western imperialism, has taken the form of tributary, mercantile, industrial, financial and in the contemporary period, a unique ‘militarist-barbaric’ form of empire building. Within each ‘period’, elements of past and future forms of imperial domination and exploitation ‘co-exist’ with the dominant mode. For example , in the ancient Greek and Roman empires, commercial and trade privileges complemented the extraction of tributary payments. Mercantile imperialism, was preceded and accompanied initially by the plunder of wealth and the extraction of tribute, sometimes referred to as “primitive accumulation”, where political and military power decimated the local population and forcibly removed and transferred wealth to the imperial capitals.

→ read full article

US – Venezuela: The Empire Strikes Back (and Loses)
Prof. James Petras – ICH, 16 Aug 2010

US policy toward Venezuela has taken many tactical turns, but the objective has been the same: to oust President Chavez, reverse the nationalization of big businesses, abolish the mass community and worker based councils and revert the country into a client-state.

→ read full article

Leader of Death Squads Wins Colombian Election
Prof. James Petras - ICH, 5 Jul 2010

A Great Victory For Democracy? Juan Manuel Santos, notorious Defense Minister in the regime of outgoing President Alvaro Uribe and closely identified with high crimes against humanity “won” the recent Presidential elections in Colombia, June 2010.

→ read full article

Israeli’s Nuclear Policy: From South Africa to Iran
Prof. James Petras – TRANSCEND Media Service, 7 Jun 2010

On May 24, 2010, the Guardian (U.K.) published a highly confidential document released by the South African government. The 1975 document reveals a secret military agreement signed by Shimon Peres, Israel’s Foreign Minister at the time (and today Israel’s President) and South Africa’s Defense Minister P. W. Botha. Israel offered to sell the apartheid regime, weapons of mass destruction, including nuclear, chemical and conventional weaponry to destroy and defeat the million person African resistance movement.

→ read full article

(Castellano) Terrorismo de Estado en Nombre de la Paz
Prof. James Petras – TeleSur, 10 May 2010

No cabe duda de que el Presidente Uribe ingresará en el Libro Guinness de los Récords, cuenta con el respaldo de más narco-diputados que cualquier otro Presidente o Primer Ministro del mundo (incluida Afganistán), es responsable del desplazamiento de más personas (4 millones de refugiados) en el plazo más breve (8 años) que cualquier otro Presidente del mundo. (Ha desbancado a Israel en su medio siglo), es responsable de la matanza de más militantes y dirigentes sindicales que cualquier otro líder mundial.

→ read full article

Colombia: State Terror in the Name of Peace
Prof. James Petras - ICH, 10 May 2010

The first casualty of state terror is the corruption of language, the invention of euphemisms, where words mean their opposite and slogans cover great crimes: There is no longer a world consensus that condemns crimes against humanity. This is because mass murder and assassinations secure investor ‘confidence’, because Indians are dispossessed so the mines can be exploited; oil workers disappear so the petroleum will flow; and the international financial press praises the success of el Presidente for “pacifying the country”.

→ read full article

MOSSAD’S MURDEROUS REACH: THE LARGER POLITICAL ISSUES
James Petras – Dissident Voice, 26 Feb 2010

On January 19 Israel’s international secret police, the Mossad, sent an eighteen member death squad to Dubai using European passports, supposedly ‘stolen’ from Israeli dual citizens and altered with fake photos and signatures, in order to assassinate the Palestinian leader, Mahmoud al Mabhouh. The evidence is overwhelming: The Dubai police presentation of detailed security videos […]

→ read full article

NEOLIBERALISM AND THE DYNAMICS OF CAPITALIST DEVELOPMENT IN LATIN AMERICA (Part 1)
Profs. James Petras and Henry Veltmeyer – Dissident Voice, 20 Nov 2009

An analysis of the dynamics of capitalist development over the last two decades has been overshadowed by an all too prevalent “globalization” discourse. It appears that much of the Left has bought into this discourse, tacitly accepting globalization as an irresistible fact and that in many ways it is progressive, needing only for the corporate […]

→ read full article

NEOLIBERALISM AND THE DYNAMICS OF CAPITALIST DEVELOPMENT IN LATIN AMERICA (Part 2)
Profs. James Petras and Henry Veltmeyer – Dissident Voice, 20 Nov 2009

Whither Socialism in a Sea of Crisis and Neoliberal Decline? A serious discussion of the prospects for socialism in Latin America today must take into account world economic conditions in the current conjuncture, the state of US-Latin American relations relative to the project of world domination and imperialism, the specific impact on Latin American countries […]

→ read full article

IMPERIAL GLOBALIZATION AND SOCIAL MOVEMENTS IN LATIN AMERICA
Profs. James Petras and Henry Veltmeyer, 20 Oct 2009

The unimpeded growth of Euro-American capitalism following the collapse of Soviet and European communism, the conversion of China and Indochina to state capitalism, and the rise of US backed, free-market military dictatorships in Latin America give new impetus to Western empire building, labeled “globalization”. The process of globalization was the result of ‘external’ and ‘internal’ […]

→ read full article

LATIN MERICA’S TWENTY-FIRST CENTURY SOCIALISM IN HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE
Prof. James Petras, 14 Oct 2009

The electoral victory of center left regimes in at least three Latin American countries, and the search for a new ideological identity to justify their rule, led ideologues and the incumbent presidents to embrace the notion that they represent a new 21st century version of socialism (21cs). Prominent writers, academics and regime spokespeople celebrated a […]

→ read full article

LATIN AMERICA AND THE END OF SOCIAL LIBERALISM
Prof. James Petras, 10 Sep 2009

The current world recession and the potential recovery of some countries reveals all the weaknesses of the traditional “export market” – free trade – comparative advantage doctrines. Nowhere is this more evident than in the recent experience of Latin America. Despite recent popular upheavals and the ascent of center-left regimes in most of the countries […]

→ read full article

BERNARD MADOFF: WALL STREET SWINDLER STRIKES POWERFUL BLOWS FOR SOCIAL JUSTICE
Prof. James Petras, 23 Dec 2008

“We never thought he would do this to us, he was one of our people”, member of Palm Beach Country Club. In a few days, one individual, Bernard Madoff, has struck a bigger blow against global financial capital, Wall Street and the US Zionist Lobby/Israel-First Agenda than the entire US and European left combined over […]

→ read full article

THE GREAT LAND GIVEAWAY: NEO-COLONIALISM BY INVITATION
James Petras, 2 Dec 2008

Colonial style empire-building is making a huge comeback, and most of the colonialists are late-comers, elbowing their way past the established European and US predators. "The deal South Korea’s Daewoo Logistics is negotiating with the Madagascar Government looks rapacious…The Madagascan case looks neo-colonial…The Madagascan people stand to lose half of their arable land." Financial Times […]

→ read full article

WESTERN PROGRESSIVE OPINION: BRING ON THE VICTIMS! CONDEMN THE FIGHTERS!
James Petras, 24 Nov 2008

We know in some detail of the willing and gratuitous support, which tens of millions of American citizens have bestowed on the White House and Congressional perpetrators of crimes against humanity. The Clinton Administration was freely re-elected in 1996 after deliberately imposing a starvation embargo on Iraq and mounting a relentless, unopposed bombing campaign on […]

→ read full article

MASS MEDIA AND MASS POLITICS
James Petras, 8 Nov 2008

Conservative, Liberal and Marxist Perspectives The role of the mass media (MM) in influencing mass and class behavior has been a central concern among critical writers, especially since the turn of the Twentieth century.  Debates and studies on the MM have focused on its political bias, ownership and links to big business, relationships and ties […]

→ read full article

LATIN AMERICA?S ?NEW LEFT? IN CRISIS AS THE ?FREE MARKET? COLLAPSES
James Petras, 29 Oct 2008

           Latin America is entering a period of profound economic recession, financial crises, collapsing stock market quotations, prices, deep devaluation of its currencies, growing unemployment, declining revenues and the prospect of a prolonged socio-economic recession.              The economic breakdown, which is still unfolding, affects the entire political spectrum, extending from the far-right Uribe regime in […]

→ read full article

ECOLOGY AND INDIAN MOVEMENTS: ?DIVERSITY WITH INEQUALITY IS NOT SOCIAL JUSTICE?
Prof. James Petras, 17 Oct 2008

A Class Perspective Introduction There are two opposing approaches to the analysis of ecological destruction and the emergence of Indian movements in Latin America: the liberal and the Marxist. The liberal approach emphasizes ‘universal responsibility" for the destruction of the environment – rich and poor, mining companies and miners, factory owners and factory workers, auto […]

→ read full article

HAITI: IN SOLIDARITY WITH ITS FIVE FREEDOMS
James Petras, 6 Oct 2008

Today the acid test for all democrats in North and South America is the issue of the military occupation of Haiti ,the economic pillage and denial of elementary political and human rights of the Haitian people. In 2004 a US-led invasion force overthrew the democratically elected government of Jean Bertrand Aristide and subsequently promoted and […]

→ read full article

Human Rights Watch in Venezuela
Prof. James Petras, 30 Sep 2008

Lies, Crimes and Cover-ups Human Rights Watch, a US-based group claiming to be a non-governmental organization, but which is in fact funded by government-linked quasi-private foundations and a Congressional funded political propaganda organization, the National Endowment for Democracy, has issued a report “A Decade Under Chavez: Political Intolerance and Lost Opportunities for Advancing Human Rights […]

→ read full article