‘Strategic Competition’ is War by Other Means

A Troubling Legacy of the Westphalian System

By

Vice Admiral (retd) Vijay Shankar (to be published)

A debate rages amongst western scholars and strategists of the significance and what elements of statecraft make for the essence of “Strategic Competition”. The argument is centrally about influence over the international system.

The phrase “Strategic Competitiveness” first made its appearance as a polcy touchstone, notably, in the 2018 National Defence Strategy of the USA. The document identified the revisionist states of China and Russia as strategic competitors. China for using “predatory economics” to intimidate lesser endowed nations while militarizing and persisting with its illegal claims in the South China Sea; and Russia as an “autocratic nationalistic state that eschewed the economic, diplomatic, and security aspirations of its erstwhile bloc”. The document further envisages challenges in every arena of human endeavour and the only answer it presents is to “field a lethal, resilient and rapidly adapting Joint Force. The Joint Force is combined with a robust constellation of allies and partners…aim being to achieve favourable balances of power that safeguard the free and open international order”.  

This understanding of the policy has indeterminate strategic significance, rather cramped relevance and harps on a chord reminiscent of the cold war in its quest for ‘Balance of Power’ and the carving out of two adversarial military Blocs. In a sense it entails substantial economic, political and military risks not just to the protagonists but to the world at large; and significantly excludes nations who may choose not to accept a confrontational posture or retain strategic autonomy.  

The Westphalian Paradox

The Peace of Westphalia, signed in 1648, ended long drawn out wars between feuding Christian societies in Europe. Its purpose was to consolidate a teetering Holy Roman (German) Empire that had been ravaged by wars, fragmentation and economic depredation. It created the “framework for relations” within West-Central Europe. Concepts of state sovereignty, new to Europe, and diplomacy find mention in the text of this Treaty.

While it was one of the attempts at codifying relations between states through an accepted set of laws, there was a looming threat that it provided a shield against. For, not only did it provide a basis to hold together Christendom as existed in West-Central Europe, but was an elemental collective pledge to confront the Ottoman Empire which was rampaging to its peak of power, wealth and expansion in South East Europe. What the Ottoman began as conquests in Asia Minor, led to the annexation of vast territories in Bulgaria, Greece and much of the Byzantine Empire. With the fall of Constantinople during the reign of Mehmed II (1432-1481), the Sultan’s dominion extended well into central Europe and was an ominous portent to the ‘Holy Roman Empire’.

Historical facts remind us that through the ages no International Order has ever been absolute nor has any one hegemon been endowed with the necessary power to control an Order in perpetuity. The emergence of rising powers provides the necessary dynamics for transformation of International Order; which in a way, mistakenly, provokes the mind to accept the simplistic axiom that “wars occur when the established order is challenged”.

The lamentable paradox is that the Westphalian System still remains the model for international relations, politics, concept of state sovereignty, basis of treaties/conventions and, critically, sets the criterion for “Global Governance”. This despite the arrangement not having space for emerging powers of autonomous bent. Just how pernicious the system can be was captured in  President George W. Bush’s confounding declaration to a joint session of Congress on 20 September 2001 where he left the comity of nations with a Hobson’s choice, “…Every nation, in every region, now has a decision to make, either you are with us, or you are with the terrorists.”

Contrarian states are recast as a threat to order; this crudely was the essence of the system. Competing powers within the fetters of the Westphalian Model are projected to be disruptive entities that seek to topple the balance of power and rebuff the institutions that are at the heart of Global Order extant. The system ironically was conceived to provide a security arrangement specifically for the Christian principalities of Germany (of the 17th century) while keeping some form of cohesiveness amongst believers of the faith within the ‘Holy Roman Empire’, significantly to serve as a bulwark against the rampaging Ottoman Empire to the South East. Its applicability was constrained by geography, race, identity, ethnicity and critically belief; its purpose was specific for Hapsburg control (1438-1740). Indeed, as a professor of military history at the National Defence Academy asserted …in this realm, command was neither “Holy nor Roman and not even was it an Empire!”   

The Post-Cold War Order

Global Governance is a post-Cold War concept (1995). Recognizing the new climate in international relations, former West German Chancellor Willy Brandt, in 1989, brought together a group of international leaders to explore new approaches to managing global relations.  His efforts laid the foundations for the establishment of an overdue Commission on Global Governance. Indeed the inabilities of the Westphalian Model can be seen in various modern international institutions including the United Nations which is a leading example of how civilizational experiences of diverse societies that make up the international milieu of the day are excluded. The UN in addition to its many spectacular failures —often as a result of indecision but more on account of its weaknesses is a case study in what ‘Global Governance’ ought not to be. There are neither binding rules to forge agreements nor can the power of veto be reined-in through the intellectual science of reasoning. What carries the day is which side is backed by brute power. As in the war in Syria; when agreement falls prey to selfish interests; or in Rwanda, where the genocide of 1994 is yet to find closure. Selectively applied international norms that suit privileged interests, is another agent, as in Iraq and in the Russia – Ukraine conflict; or more perilously due to finance driven bigotry, as during the recent Covid 19 pandemic. In all cases the very purpose of the UN to maintain peace and security, uphold human rights, provide humanitarian aid and put in place a model for sustainable development amounts to little else than empty talk, bereft of value and at times, an instrument to justify malfeasance.

Recognising the weaknesses of the Westphalian Model the Commission suggested the creation of “a multilateral regulatory system of management focussed on development of global independencies and sustainable development”. The idea has in its original form lost traction over time and wobbles on the edge of history’s garbage pail. Was this an act of geopolitical short sightedness or self-centredness of Western elites and influencers or was it a deliberate act that saw in the post-Westphalian world the need to cement a place for the Global Hegemon?    

The Focus; Sway over International Systems

The method of conducting international relations and the institutions that enabled the creation of alignments are pre-disposed to the idea of Realpolitik and are, consequently, interpreted in terms of the national interests of the resident hegemon. The coming of an emerging power, accordingly, sends out the call for an impending confrontation. One of three possible fallouts of such interplay is; assimilation into the Order, defeat by force of arms or advent of a new Order.

International benchmarks for accomplishment in Strategic Competition are five-fold: vitality of citizenry, technological prowess, strength of economy, demography and geographic endowment. These characteristics form the basis for determining two critical competitive priorities:  degree to which rivalry can be advanced and at what stage rivalry turns to “unfavourable-antagonism”, both priorities are driven by blinkered national interest, defy common understanding and border on brinkmanship. Since the struggle is, in many ways, over the essential character of the international system its institutions, rules and conventions; it is the individual perception of ‘universal application’ that prevails over the narrative. Morality, in the matter, plays a minor part. The key lies in how the anecdotal can be reconstituted to present a convenient reality. Indeed, it will also explain the power exertions that dominate this pursuit.  

The dangerous dichotomy lies in the divergent pulls that exist between a globalised world economy and exclusive state polity. While the world economy relies on a secure and stable system of governance for trade, communications and development for which organisations exist on land and in the air controlled and regulated by United Nations institutions such as the International Chamber of Commerce, the International Civil Aviation Organisation, the World Trade Organisation; and on the oceans it is built on the bedrock of the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS). UNCLOS lays out rules for everything from global shipping enterprise and management of offshore natural resources including fisheries, critical minerals, oil, and natural gas—all managed primarily through the convention’s authority. Yet, Strategic Competition is not about how best these institutions can collectively be governed; but about control of these very institutions.      

Outcome of Competition: Collapse, Capitulation or Compromise

Studies refer to the concept of strategic competition over a range of interpretations; from a tautological point of view as “the act of competing” to the more nuanced “attempt to gain advantage over a nation or group of nations that are believed to pose a threat through self-interested pursuit of power and influence.” Two phrases in the latter description that become significant are:  ‘…believed to pose a threat’ and ‘…pursuit of power and influence’, both of which remain open ended in their implication and substance. While the issue of what comprises a ubiquitous threat and what commonly is recognised as the object of power and influence remains masked. Indeed, for a nation to announce that it is embracing Strategic Competition says nothing about how it will do so—that is, what specific instruments of state power to achieve success it will employ—or what it will prioritize. 

A realistic scrutiny of the relationships involved conforms to the historical concept of ‘Great Power Rivalry’, which in the past determined foreign policy, economic rapacity and national security; all characteristics that underpinned domination. The question that begs an answer is ‘in what way does Strategic Competition differ from Belligerent Hegemony?’  If the former refers to the combination of one group of people or groups of people exploited by another group of people; then there is little difference. The process of competition is invariably a tussle of differentials in growth rates, technological prowess, ideology distinction and economic stability; which in turn impacts on political and ominously, military balance.

Our own experience of competitive rivalries since the age of colonial antagonism to the present, tend to ignore the critical question of outcomes as planners fail to occupy themselves with where ‘Competition’ is leading to. History of intense rivalries between nations, tell us, they end for one side, in one of three ways: Collapse, Capitulation, or Compromise. Outcomes that terminate in consequences other than these three often set the stage for a return to confrontation.

We are then faced with a strategic dilemma which Michael Howard (war and social change-an essay) underscored, “…there is no war without resistance; but without resistance and the possibility of resistance, there is no International Order.”

Strategic Competition in Ukraine; Hazards of Wavering Resolve

The downside of being a part of a group engaged in strategic competition is the danger of rapid escalation and ‘wavering-resolve’. The on-going conflict in Ukraine is an example of how rapidly the situation can escalate to armed conflict and how diffidence can queer the pitch when engaged in strategic competition. Jens Stoltenberg, the ‘On-Off’ NATO Secretary General, suggested Ukraine might today have to decide on some “kind of compromises”. The former Commander of the UK’s Joint Forces Command went a step further when he warned that Ukraine could face defeat by Russia in 2024. General Barrons is quoted as saying “there is a serious risk” of Ukraine losing the war this year. The reason, he attributes, is “because Ukraine may come to feel it can’t win”. “And when it gets to that point, why will people want to fight and die any longer, just to defend the indefensible?”

Why people will want to fight and die is very convincing logic, but to have reached this conclusion in a proxy war after two years of so much disruption, wasteful destruction and sapping of global economies is baffling, to say the least.   

Enervating Frailties and the Virtue of Biding One’s Time 

While the agitation continues with academics and think-tanks over whether there exists a red-line between ‘Competition’ and ‘Conflict’; China has embarked on its own discernment since the 1970s, of ‘What is’ and ‘How’ Strategic Competition is to be prosecuted. At its heart are two pivotal precepts: the first is that the accumulation of power, beyond a point, can turn on itself; for the essence of competitiveness is to recognise that ‘Power’ plays a covering role as a bulwark against precipitate recourse to arms. Targeting frailties of the adversarial system and measures taken to enervate them (over time) through the manipulation of information and undermining values; till decay and doubt sets in is the aim. Beijing believes they can wait. The second is to guard against reckless acts by the adversary that may compromise China’s festering debilities and, indeed, undermine their scheme of enervating the adversary. Not having put a time frame for their strategic plans has lent considerable credibility to China’s position as a major power. Going back over the last half century, it is apparent that Beijing has persisted with this policy of playing one superpower against the other and yet, often, acted in defiance of the two. Despite its vulnerabilities, it neither yielded nor has it been pliant to the entreaties of Moscow or Washington. For these very reasons and as a participant in the many political and military conflicts of the post-cold war era China has today attained a singular stature in the international system as a superpower.

As China’s power grows and the contours of its Grand Strategy of ‘Rejuvenation and Revision’ are fully unveiled, the four ‘Initiatives’ or instruments of its strategy can be seen from a perspective that is set on competing and overturning existing order:

  • The first is the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) that poses to finance and boost infrastructure of dependent and client economies and in turn become the engine of Beijing’s geo-strategic military, financial reach and political clout.
  • Second, the Global Development Initiative (GDI) launched in 2021 at the UN General Assembly targets developing nations with small-scale projects that address poverty alleviation, digital connectivity, climate change, and health and food security; aim being to further their hold and reliance on Beijing. At its core is Beijing’s emphasis on economic development as the basis for human rights rather than equality and dignity.
  • Third, the Global Security Initiative (GSI), launched in 2022 seeks to promote China as the central arbiter to coordinate security needs of the region first, followed by global demands, through diplomacy contingent upon China.
  • Lastly, the Global Civilizational Initiative (GCI) introduced in March 2023, promotes a state-focused and state-defined values system that serves to eliminate universal values such as human rights and democracy. In a GCI-related address, Xi called “peace, development, equity, justice, democracy and freedom” “common aspirations”, and not rights, of humanity. The GCI argues that the perceptions of such “common” aspirations are “relative” and that countries must “refrain from imposing their own values on others.

Meanwhile globally nations in the West and Asia are determined to push back against what is seen as Chinese hegemonic designs and revisionism. Multilateralism in this milieu provides a tremendous advantage, particularly so when strategic interests converge when confronted with a Beijing that seeks ‘Rejuvenation’.

Beijing has emerged and has thrown the gauntlet to unsettle the existing status-quo. In strategic terms the greatest risks in the competition are that contestants develop policies and technologies that threaten existing critical economic networks and informational dependencies within the prevailing international structures. This provides the logic for preparations by the military to fight an indefinable and often elusory conflict through the formation of coalitions and arming to the teeth. Who then benefits from Strategic Competition?

The Indispensible Enemy

               Daniel Ellsberg, the late, well acclaimed whistle-blowing author of the Pentagon Papers, posed a query: ” In the current state of world affairs where, uncertainty and conflicts are the rule; who benefitted from war?” Certainly in Ukraine, the South China Sea and Gaza it cannot be the chief protagonists but the contrivers and puppeteers of conflict.

The proxy war in Ukraine benefits most the USA; for the conflict has turned back to history and revived a threat from an “alliance of authoritarian powers” working against Western democracies. It has paved the way for American growth and leadership, and fashioned an antagonistic bloc comprising Russia, China, Iran and North Korea. And so too potentially, has the brewing conflict in the South China Sea; the conflict in Gaza is complex for it has gone beyond retribution.

Israel’s war against Hamas may have been justified by the latter’s murderous assault of 07 October 2023, but for the battering of Gaza to be prosecuted with a perverse and unrelenting ferocity for over ten months begs an explanation that cannot be vindicated by the idea of ‘rightful-reprisal’. Indeed, is there more to this conflict? Could it be that carnage provides the opportunity to take the first step towards realising the long sought after alternative to the bothersome absence of control over the Suez Canal? The Ben Gurion Canal project proposes to connect the Gulf of Aqaba (Eilat) in the Red Sea with the Mediterranean Sea and would pass through Israel and end in or near the Gaza Strip (Ashkelon). And if this Canal became a reality the Suez moves to the background for it can handle deeper draught and greater volumes of traffic. Most critically the Canal would be under firm control of the USA, Israel and the Western powers.

The key to continuing Great Power status, as Ellsberg ominously suggested, was the incessant availability of an indispensible enemy and the will to competition with that foe.

Global Governance and the Quest for a Stable World Order

The ‘Authoritarian Bloc’ is in a perilous struggle to bring about the decline and collapse of its perceived rivals with the aim to don the mantle of world leadership. In such a calculus, international affairs of the day, presents a world in which it is not just the ‘balance of power’ that is sought to be toppled; but every element of society—economy, diplomacy, law, trade, cyberspace, social media, journalism, culture and indeed the very nature of peoples—have become tools in a strategic competition. States with political authority over the sources of power of a nation are uniquely positioned to impose costs on other states. They have the advantage, in the short term, since they can wield elements of ‘soft and hard power’ unquestioned and direct through central control of these instruments. This state of affairs can only last as long as citizens remain convinced of motivations and kept blind to hazards of such competition.

With proliferation of nuclear weapons and the growing inclination towards the use of low-yield weapons to salvage a troubled conventional campaign; balance of power has ceased to be a fully relevant and credible principle of global order. However, it still retains a presence in international relations, more particularly, in the sphere of regional relations among states. So it is neither balance of power nor the exercise of brute force or even the emergence of a global hegemon that will assure a stable world order. Global governance in its pristine form is order that emerges from institutions that recognise the equality of humankind, acknowledged processes, formal agreements, and informal time-honoured mechanisms that negate unilateral military action and regulates collective action for a common good.

Global governance encompasses activity at the international, transnational, and regional levels that transcend national boundaries. In this conception of global governance, cooperative action based on rights and rules that are enforced through a combination of financial and moral incentives and, should the need arise; collective military power that proposes to replace disruptive strategic competition. If not, as Willy Brandt in 1980 put it, “Are we to leave our successors a scorched planet, impoverished landscapes and ailing environment?”

5 thoughts on “‘Strategic Competition’ is War by Other Means

  1. Jagjit Singh Bedi

    Wed, Sep 4, 6:05 PM (17 hours ago)

    Thanks,

    Interesting reading. Quite a novel subject to say the least. Thanks for sharing. As always a delight to read

    You have not dwelled upon as to how far is “‘Strategic Competition’  driven by personality/ Head of State. Moot Q is, will China be the same if Xi is deposed or if Trump returns to power. Games Nations play is very much dictated by “players on the field”.With best wishes–Cheers

    • Thanks Jaggi, I agree with you.

       Continuity in security and foreign policy is a given amongst the bigger players. For the US, it has been a Pentagon/ Deep State run enterprise, ever since the Cold War (confounded democracy be dam…). While with China, since Deng, from ‘deceptive-partnership’ to Xi’s confrontation it has been a saga of continuity (however much the West may have fooled themselves to believe otherwise). Putin’s Russia may have wanted to change but it had to be at the cost of their military clout. True, it is amongst the smaller players that their popular leadership often is inveigled by the narrative of the day and is prone to manipulation or regime change. 

      Regards and fair winds, Vijay  

  2. jagatbir singh

    Sun, Sep 1, 9:19 AM (5 days ago)

    Good Morning Sir,

    I enjoyed reading this superb article by you immensely With your permission may I publish it in the next issue of Salute.

    With deepest regards

    Jagat.

  3. murali dharan

    Sun, Sep 1, 2:04 PM (5 days ago)

    Very well analyzed Sir. Hile looking at global governance, wwhat stuck me was that UNO has become toothless organisation. Slowly missing out the very purpose for which it was conceived.

    High regards,

    Murali. 

  4. The Meaning of Trump leadership: America First Doctrine. America First as Restoration, Not Innovation. 1913 as the Yankee Constitutional Breaking Point; the transformation of the US Republic to a managerial bureaucratic government behind the government. The illegal Administrative State as a De Facto 4th Branch unconstitutional Main branch of the Federal government that has supplanted Congress like Truman’s turning to the UN to declare War causing the Korean crisis.

    The Biden Era “Green Agenda” as dead as the mental capacity of Biden to think. The absolute disgrace of mass hysteria over ‘global warming’ or ‘government enforced socialist health care – like the mass Covid-19 injections – which treated humans as some ‘Western medicine corporate monopoly guinea pigs! Pie in the Sky mass hysteria – sucks.

    Clearly Russia today does not compare to post WWII USSR; modern Europe does not in any way shape or form compare to post Oct 7th 2023 Gaza! The time has come for the US to pull its troops out of Germany and all Europe! European societies need to wean themselves from the American tits. The Trump Administration, by taking over S. American oil reserves and Greenland’s critical minerals serves to maintain post WWII American economic dominance, especially when challenged by BRICS counter-currency; competition the basis of economic health.

    Europe a post Shoah cursed childless dying society that’s fast transforming its culture unto a Muslim dominated civilization. Actions have their consequences, the guilt of the Shoah disgrace has murdered the religion and good name reputation of Xtianity. The establishment of the EU a clear “over-reaction” to two 20th Century European Civil Wars. The “One Size Fits All” Soviet socialism collapsed in failure back in 1991. Restoration of European nation state political independence represents the European framers vision post the Napoleonic wars!

    Western European states must respect post Napoleon and Hitler invasions of Russia through the Ukraine. Better to partition Ukraine like unto 19th Century Poland than assume that Russia post these two horrific Western European utterly crushed defeats of imperialism/invasion – to preach while standing on a soap box that Russia must accept the inevitable that the Ukraine joins NATO. Especially when the US intends to get out of NATO, in accordance with the founding Fathers of America which strongly advised not getting entangled into European alliances … but rather focus and maintain the Monroe Doctrine.

    The “Big Three” explicitly agreed to respect Soviet security concerns. Hence the Great Powers established Eastern Europe as a buffer zone to protect from still another Western invasion attempts in the future. Stalin’s demand blunt: Never again allow a hostile military power to mass on Russia’s western frontier. The unification of Germany – began the negation and crooked Western chisel away from the West’s commitment to respect the concerns of Stalin post war. James Baker (US Sec. of State) famously said: “NATO will move not one inch eastward.”

    Russia sees NATO expansion as encirclement, no different than Arab State encirclement of Israel. Post 1991 NATO kept expanding without integrating Russia. NATO expansion violates the spirit of the Big Three agreements. Russia will never accept NATO on its borders, most especially Ukraine. While the Big Three agreements not a formal treaty, my grand father taught me: if a Man’s word: no good, the Man no good.

    Post WWII America can never return the released genie from its bottle of 1930s American Isolationism any more than post Napoleon and Hitler invasions Russia will ever willingly permit Western European domination. This post war reality will only change if and only if Europe defeats both the US and Russia in a third World War!

    American Industries cannot “compete” if they flee to foreign lands with cheap labor costs like as happened under Post WWII bureaucratization “Sovietization” of Washington bureaucracies! The government establishment of Corporate monopolies – starting with the Federal Reserve abomination under Wilson in 1913 requires immediate uprooting. Not the place of Washington to manage a controlled economy like both LBJ and Nixon “managed” the Vietnam defeat from DC! This means Washington must restore the Commerce Clause and the 10th Amendment – States Rights – which the Trump Supreme Court started with revoking Roe vs. Wade; the abortion industry only the States of the Republic should regulate. The same holds true with Agriculture, Healthcare, Insurance in all shape manner and forms starting with the Social Security fraud.

    To maintain US economic growth and dominance, especially post WWII wherein the US supplied the oil and gas etc to the Allied war effort against the Central and Axis alliances, America First must never forget the post Andrew Jackson independent banking established in 1825 and the British Hong Kong free banking models.

    America prior to Wilson’s socialism did not require an IRS direct taxation of the American people. Washington taxed the States not the individuals living within the States of the Republic. The inherit corruption of Pelosi and lifetime politicians not as easily tolerated when State Legislatures appointed their two Senate “ambassadors” sent to DC. Pre-WWI US joining the WWI Allied alliance occurred chiefly because Central Bank (private monopoly Federal Reserve) made huge loans to England and France without Congressional oversite and consent! Had Washington joined the Central Alliance in 1917 Britain and France would have negated their debt obligations to America much like post Bolshevik Russia did with its loans made with European central banks.

    In the 19th Century Washington relied primarily upon imposing protective tariffs upon foreign governments industrial competition with American goods and services. Obviously during the American Civil War Lincoln’s ‘greenbacks’ modified Jackson’s ‘free banking’ by forcing banks to hold US treasury bonds. The first federal income tax was a temporary wartime measure during the Civil War (Revenue Act of 1861), imposing a 3% flat rate on incomes over $800, later graduated to 5% on higher earnings.

    The 16th Amendment, ratified in February 1913 (just before Wilson’s inauguration), explicitly allowed Congress to levy income taxes “without apportionment among the several states.” This enabled the Revenue Act of 1913, creating a graduated federal income tax (1% on incomes over $3,000, up to 7% on over $500,000) and expanding the Bureau of Internal Revenue (precursor to the IRS). Critics at the time, and since, viewed this as enabling “socialism” by centralizing fiscal power, shifting from state-apportioned burdens to direct individual taxation. This change marked a key expansion of federal authority, aligning with Progressive Era reforms but diverging from the Founders’ emphasis on limited central government.

    The early 20th Century post Civil War shift away from the States-Rights American Republic unto direct elections “democracy” ignores the basic facts of Confederate concerns of Central Government domination over the State, like as exemplified by the The post Civil War Interstate Commerce Act of 1887 negated the States Rights Commerce Clause of the US Constitution. This Act, according to the popular rhetoric propaganda (Obamo like “change” political slogan) sought to curb the monopolistic practices of railroads, particularly the unfair pricing strategies and discrimination against certain customers and promote competition.

    Bunk. Interstate Commerce Commission (ICC), the first federal agency established to regulate economic activity across the board! Not simply limited to Railroad monopoly abuses!

    The Interstate Commerce Act marked a critical shift in the balance of power between state and federal authorities. By regulating interstate commerce, the federal government asserted its authority over economic activities that previously fell under state jurisdiction, challenging the States’ Rights perspective that had been a significant aspect of the U.S. political landscape.

    The Interstate Commerce Act laid the groundwork for future federal regulation of various industries beyond railroads, influencing later legislation related to telecommunications, airlines, and more. It set a precedent for the federal government’s role in regulating interstate commerce, establishing a framework for ongoing regulatory bureaucratic State behind the State revolving door bureaucrats with Corporate monopoly “experts”, commonly known today as the Industrial military complex.

    By the 1820s–1830s (e.g., Tariff of 1828, the “Tariff of Abominations”), rates rose to protective levels (averaging 40–60% on dutiable imports) to foster domestic manufacturing. This system reflected Hamiltonian ideas of using tariffs for industrial development. Post-Civil War, high protective tariffs (e.g., Morrill Tariff of 1861 and later acts) persisted, funding Reconstruction and industrial growth while generating surpluses in peacetime. This tariff-heavy model kept federal power limited—no need for a permanent income tax or large bureaucracy—aligning with states’ rights and limited government visions.

    Lincoln/Secretary Chase’s National Banking Acts (1863–1864) centralized the Greenback fiat monopoly money/currency to finance the Civil War Yankee imperialism. States do not compare to counties within States as Lincoln sought to dictate. Lincoln’s creation of nationally chartered banks which required all banks to hold U.S. Treasury bonds as backing for their notes, this standardization of US currency stabilized the US dollar during the Civil War crisis. It taxed state banknotes heavily (10% tax in 1865) to drive them out.

    This approach not only helped manage the economic chaos but also laid the foundation for Wilson’s corrupt IRS/Centralized Bank standardized currency system. Greenbacks complemented this by providing immediate liquidity. By taxing state banknotes, Washington effectively encouraged a shift towards federal currency, thereby consolidating control over the monetary system and minimizing the risks of inflation.

    Greenbacks (Legal Tender Act, 1862): Issued $450 million in fiat currency (backed by future taxes, not gold) to fund 60% of war costs (~$3.2 billion total). Forced banks to accept them and hold U.S. Treasury bonds (National Banking Acts, 1863–1865), creating the First National Bank system. This centralized banking ~1,600 national banks by 1865, crowding out state banks via a 10% tax on their notes. Inflation hit 80% by 1864, but greenbacks were redeemed in gold by 1879 (Specie Resumption Act).

    The Supreme Court’s 1886 Wabash decision, which invalidated state regulation of interstate rail rates as violating the Commerce Clause (exclusive federal domain) compares to how Roe vs Wade made Washington Big Brother so completely dominant over States economic autonomy. The Commerce Clause (Article I, Section 8) – interpreted by Yankee victors to allow federal preemption when activities crossed state lines or affected interstate flow. This challenged Southern/Confederate-era states’ rights concerns about central domination, as railroads symbolized Northern industrial power post-Civil War.

    Initially, the Act applied only to railroads—the first industry federally regulated. The ICC’s scope expanded later via amendments (e.g., Hepburn Act 1906 added pipelines, terminals; Motor Carrier Act 1935 added trucking/buses). In the 1880s–1890s, it was railroad-focused, though it set the template for future agencies (e.g., FCC for telecom, CAB for airlines). Critics argue it birthed the “regulatory state,” with bureaucrats often drawn from (or returning to) the industries they regulated—creating capture and monopoly entrenchment rather than true competition.

    Rep. William Bourke Cockran called the 16th Amendment and Revenue Act of 1913 (the post Civil War Yankee ‘Progressive Centralization pivot) “Socialism”!!! Because it shifted the burden of Washington raising money away from foreign competitors in business to US citizens. It funded Wilson’s corrupt ‘New Freedom expansion rhetoric propaganda (e.g., FTC, Clayton Act). Madison in Federalist No. 10 warned against factions using direct taxes for redistribution of US citizen wealth. By their fruits you shall know them: By 1920, income tax raised 58% of Federal revenue, enabling welfare state growth like LBJ’s Great Society rhetoric propaganda. Passage of the

    17th Amendment (1913) compounded this, replacing state-legislature Senate picks with popular vote—eroding states appointing Federal Senators as ambassadors of State legislatures sent to negotiate with Washington. Establishment of the ICC “Obama-like ‘change’ birthed the first independent Federal regulatory agency octopus monster illegal 4th Branch of the US Government in direct violation of the 3 branches of the US Government established by the Constitution.

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