Q: Where is the United States heading in terms of world power and influence?

HZ: America has been heading - for some time, and is heading right now - toward less and less world power, less and less influence.

Obviously, since the war in Iraq, the

rest of the world has fallen away from the United States, and if

American foreign policy continues in the way it has been - that is

aggressive and violent and uncaring about the feelings and thoughts of

other people - then the influence of the United States is going to

decline more and more.

This is an empire which is on the one hand the most powerful empire

that ever existed; on the other hand an empire that is crumbling - an

empire that has no future ... because the rest of the world is

alienated and simply because this empire is top-heavy with military

commitments, with bases around the world, with the exhaustion of its

own resources at home.

[This is] leading to more and more discontent and home, so I think

the American empire will go the way of other empires and I think it is

on its way now.

Q: Is there any hope the US will change its approach to the rest of the world?

HZ: If there is any hope, the hope lies in the American people.

[It] lies in American people becoming resentful enough and indignant

enough over what has happened to their country, over the loss of

dignity in the world, over the starving of human resources in the

United States, the starving of education and health, the takeover of

the political mechanism by corporate power and the result this has on

the everyday lives of the American people.

[There is also] the higher and higher food prices, the more and more insecurity, the sending of the young people to war.

I think all of this may very well build up into a movement of rebellion.

We have seen movements of rebellion in the past: The labour

movement, the civil rights movement, the movement against the war in

Vietnam.

I think we may well see, if the United States keeps heading in the

same direction, a new popular movement. That is the only hope for the

United States.

Q: How did the US get to this point?

HZ: Well, we got to this point because ... I

suppose the American people have allowed it to get it to this point

because there were enough Americans who were satisfied with their

lives, just enough.

Of course, many Americans were not, that is why half of the population doesn't vote, they're alienated.

But there are just enough Americans who have been satisfied, you

might say getting some of the "goodies" of the empire, just some of

them, just enough people satisfied to support the system, so we got

this way because of the ability of the system to maintain itself by

satisfying just enough of the population to keep its legitimacy.

And I think that era is coming to an end.

Q: What should the world know about the United States?

HZ: What I find many people in the rest of the world don't know is that there is an opposition in the United States.

Very often, people in the rest of the world think that Bush is popular,

they think 'oh, he was elected twice', they don't understand the

corruption of the American political system which enabled Bush to win

twice.

They don't understand the basic undemocratic nature of the American

political system in which all power is concentrated within two parties

which are not very far from one another and people cannot easily tell

the difference.

So I think we are in a situation where we are going to need some

very fundamental changes in American society if the American people are

going to be finally satisfied with the kind of society we have.

Q: Do you think the US can recover from its current position?

HZ: Well, I am hoping for a recovery process. I mean, so far we haven't seen it.

You asked about what the people of the rest of the world don't know

about the United States, and as I said, they don't know that there is

an opposition.

There always has been an opposition, but

the opposition has always been either crushed or quieted, kept in the

shadows, marginalised so their voices are not heard.

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People in the rest of the world hear the voices of the American leaders.

They do not hear the voices of the people all over this country who

do not like the American leaders who want different policies.

I think also, people in the rest of the world should know that what

they see in Iraq now is really a continuation of a long, long term

of American imperial expansion in the world.

I think ... a lot of people in the world think that this war in Iraq

is an aberration, that before this the United States was a benign power.

It has never been a benign power, from the very first, from the

American Revolution, from the taking-over of Indian land, from the

Mexican war, the Spanish-American war.

It is embarrassing to say, but we have a long history in this

country of violent expansion and I think not only do most people in

other countries [not] know this, most Americans don't know this.

Q: Is there a way for this to improve?

HZ: Well you know, whatever hope there is lies in

that large number of Americans who are decent, who don't want to go to

war, who don't want to kill other people.

It is hard to see that hope because these Americans who feel that

way have been shut out of the communications system, so their voices

are not heard, they are not seen on the television screen, but they

exist.

I have gone through, in my life, a number of social movements and I

have seen how at the very beginning of these social movements or just

before these social movements develop, there didn't seem to be any hope.

I lived in the [US] south for seven years, in the years of the civil

rights movements, and it didn't seem that there was any hope, but there

was hope under the surface.

And when people organised, and when people began to act, when people

began to work together, people began to take risks, people began to

oppose the establishment, people began to commit civil disobedience.

Well, then that hope became manifest ... it actually turned into change.

Q: Do you think there is a way out of this and for the future influence of the US on the world to be a positive one?

HZ: Well, you know for the United States to begin

to be a positive influence in the world we are going to have to have a

new political leadership that is sensitive to the needs of the American

people, and those needs do not include war and aggression.

[It must also be] sensitive to the needs of people in other parts of

the world, sensitive enough to know that American resources, instead of

being devoted to war, should be devoted to helping people who are

suffering.

You've got earthquakes and natural disasters all over the world, but

the people in the United States have been in the same position as

people in other countries.

The natural disasters here [also] brought little positive reaction - look at [Hurricane] Katrina.

The people in this country, the poor people especially and the

people of colour especially, have been as much victims of American

power as people in other countries.

Q: Can you give us an overall scope of everything we talked about - the power and influence of the United States?

HZ: The power and influence of

the United States has declined rapidly since the war in Iraq because

American power, as it has been exercised in the world historically, has

been exposed more to the rest of the world in this situation and in

other situations.

So the US influence is declining, its power is declining.

However strong a military machine it is, power does not ultimately depend on a military machine. So power is declining.

Ultimately power rests on the moral legitimacy of a system and the United States has been losing moral legitimacy.

My hope is that the American people will rouse themselves and change

this situation, for the benefit of themselves and for the benefit of

the rest of the world.