Why Migration
Harry Targ
(“The vice president’s speech in Munich, expressing support for far-right, anti-immigration parties and criticizing suppression of conservative voices, was a global extension of his core political themes.” Mchael C. Bender, Vance Shocks Europe With a Message That He Has Long Promoted at Home” New York Times, February 14, 2025)
People migrate from one place to another for a variety of reasons. A good part of that migration has to do with international relations, national economies, and the increasingly globalized economy. Literally millions of people have moved from one geographic space to another in the twenty-first century, in most cases for reasons of physical fear or economic need. Two prominent causes that “push” people to leave their communities and homeland relate to “hybrid wars” and neoliberal globalization.
Hybrid
wars refer to the long-term policies of imperial powers to systematically
undermine political regimes that pursue policies and goals that challenge their
global hegemony. Over long periods of time imperial powers have used force,
covert operations, supporting pliant local elites, and funneling money to
disrupt local political processes. If targeted countries still reject outside
interference the imperial power uses force to overthrow recalcitrant
governments. In the 1980s all these tactics were used by the United States to
crush revolutionary ferment in Central America. Of course, the US hybrid war
strategy has been a staple of United States policy in the region ever since
President Franklin Roosevelt declared the policy of “The Good Neighbor.”
Neoliberalism refers
to the variety of policies that rich capitalist countries and international
institutions such as the International Monetary Fund, the World Bank, and the
World Trade Organization have imposed on debt-ridden poor countries. These
policies require poor countries to cut back on public services, deregulate
their economies, reduce tariffs that protect their own industries and
agriculture, and in other ways insist that poor countries open their economies
to foreign investment and trade penetration. The impacts of neoliberalism have
been to impose austerity on largely marginalized populations. Their agriculture
and industries have been undermined by subsidized agribusinesses from the
Global North and global investors. Since the initiation of neoliberal policies
in the 1970s gaps between rich and poor nations and rich and poor people within
nations have grown all across the world, with a few exceptions such as China.
In sum,
people everywhere have experienced the creation of repressive regimes and
economic policies that have shifted vast majorities from modest survival to
deep poverty. (Susan Jonas once wrote that the Guatemalan people lived more
secure lives before the arrival of Spanish colonizers in the fifteenth century
than ever since). The globalization of the economy, increased violence and
repression within countries (largely involving United States interference),
increasing income and wealth inequality and poverty, and the rise of repressive
regimes everywhere, has led to massive emigration. Some estimates indicate that
37 million people left their home countries (some 45 countries) between 2010
and 2015 for humanitarian reasons.
One of the ironies of world history is that capital in the form of investments, trade, the purchase of natural resources, the globalization of production, and military interventions have been common and necessary features of capitalism since its emergence in the sixteenth century. But, paradoxically, and except for the global slave trade and selected periods of history, the movement of people has been illegal. (Sometimes branding migrants as “illegal” has been a device to cheapen their labor). The idea of national sovereignty has been used to justify categorizing some human migrants as “illegal.” If capital is and has been legal, the movement of people should be legal as well. It makes no sense, nor is it humane, to brand any human beings as “illegal.”
In sum, the expression of fear, outrage, and lack of sensitivity for those who have been forced to migrate by Vice President Vance reflects a cruelty and lack of humanity that is central to United States foreign and domestic politics. And he, and his administration, are becoming allied with those Europeans who share his ideology.