Global Politics

Immigration and international security

 

In this piece I focus on the reasons behind the massification of immigration, looking at   issues such as imperial wars, multi-national corporate expansion and the weakness of the trade union and solidarity movements. It is also important to identify some countries affected by US and EU wars leading to massive immigration.

The US invasions and wars in Afghanistan and Iraq uprooted several million people, destroying their lives, families, livelihood, housing and communities and undermining their security.

As a result, most victims faced the choice of resistance or flight. Millions chose to flee to the West since the NATO countries would not bomb their residence in the US or Europe.

Others who fled to neighbouring countries in the Middle East or Latin America were persecuted, or resided in countries too poor to offer them employment or opportunities for a livelihood.

Some Afghans fled to Pakistan or the Middle East but discovered that these regions were also subject to armed attacks from the West.

Iraqis were devastated by the western sanctions, invasion and occupation and fled to Europe and to a lesser degree the US, the Gulf States and Iran. Libya prior to the US-EU invasion was accepting and employing millions of Africans, providing them with citizenship and a decent livelihood. After the US-EU air and sea attack and arming and financing of terrorist gangs, hundreds of thousands of sub-Saharan immigrants were forced to flee to Europe. Most crossed the Mediterranean Sea to the West via Italy, Spain, and headed toward the affluent European countries that had savaged their lives in Libya.

The US-EU financed and armed client terrorist armies which assault the Syrian government and forced millions of Syrians to flee across the border to Lebanon, Turkey and beyond to Europe, causing the so-called ‘immigration crises’ and the rise of rightwing anti-immigrant parties.

This led to divisions within the established social democratic and conservative parties, as sectors of the working class turned anti-immigrant.

Today Europe is reaping the consequences of its alliance with US militarised imperialism whereby the US uproots millions of people and the EU spends billions of euros to cover the cost of immigrants fleeing the western wars. Most of the immigrants’ welfare payments fall far short of the losses incurred in their homeland. Their jobs homes, schools, and civic associations in the EU and US are far less valuable and accommodating then what they possessed in their original communities. Furthermore, US wars, military intervention and economic exploitation have forced millions of Latin Americans to immigrate to the US. James Petras says that countries such as Nicaragua, El Salvador, Guatemala and Honduras engaged in popular struggle for socio-economic justice and political democracy between 1960 – 2000. On the verge of victory over the landed oligarchs and multinational corporations, Washington blocked popular insurgents by spending billions of dollars, arming, training, advising the military and paramilitary forces. Land reform was thus aborted, trade unionists forced into exile and thousands of peasants fled the marauding terror campaigns. The US-backed oligarchic regimes forced millions of displaced and uprooted people into unemployed and landless workers who were then forced to flee to the US.

US supported coups and dictators resulted in 50,000 displaced in Nicaragua, 80,000 in El Salvador and 200,000 in Guatemala according to Petras.  President Obama and Hillary Clinton supported a military coup in Honduras that overthrew Liberal President Zelaya, which led to the killing and wounding of thousands of peasant activists and human rights workers, and the return of death squads, resulting in a new wave of immigrants to the US.

The US   promoted free trade agreement or NAFTA drove hundreds of thousands of Mexican farmers into bankruptcy and into low wage servitude while others were recruited by drug cartels. As a result of this migration chaos, the US business secured hundreds of thousands of Latin American low wages, agricultural and factory workers almost all without health insurance or benefits though they paid taxes. Immigration doubled profits, undermined collective bargains and lowered US wages. Unscrupulous US ‘entrepreneurs’ recruited immigrants into drugs, prostitution, the arms trade and money laundering. Politicians exploited the immigration issue for political gain, blaming the immigrants for the decline of working class living standards distracting attention from the real source: wars, invasions, death squads and economic pillage. Having destroyed the lives of working people overseas and overthrown progressive leaders like Libyan President Gadhafi and Honduran President Zelaya, millions were forced to become immigrants. Iraq, Afghanistan, Syria, Colombia, Mexico witnessed the flight of millions of immigrants, all victims of US and EU wars. Washington and Brussels blamed the victims and accused the immigrants of illegality and criminal conduct.

In conclusion I suggest that in order to restrain immigration the first step is to end imperial wars, withdraw troops, and cease financing paramilitary and client terrorists. Secondly, the West should establish a long term multi-billion-dollar fund for reconstruction and recovery of the economies, markets and infrastructure they bombed. I have also realised that the demise of the peace movement allowed the US and EU to launch and prolong serial wars which led to massive immigration. The decline of trade unions and worse, their loss of militancy have led to the loss of solidarity with people living in the midst of imperial wars. Many workers in the imperialist countries have directed their ire to the immigrants rather than to the imperialists who directed the wars which created the immigration problem.

Immigration, war, the demise of the peace and workers movements, and leftwing parties has led to the rise of the militarists, and neo-liberals who have taken power throughout the West. Their anti-immigrant politics are a serious threat to international peace and security.