Authors: Professor Michael Hardt,Antonio Negri
Tags: #Philosophy, #Political, #Political Science, #General, #American Government
over every element ofthe communicative relationship, all the while
dissolving identity and history in a completely postmodernist fash-
ion.28 Contrary to the way many postmodernist accounts would
have it, however, the imperial machine, far from eliminating master
narratives, actually produces and reproduces them (ideological mas-
ter narratives in particular) in order to validate and celebrate its
own power.29 In this coincidence ofproduction through language,
the linguistic production ofreality, and the language ofself
-
validation resides a fundamental key to understanding the effective-
ness, validity, and legitimation ofimperial right.
Intervention
This new framework of legitimacy includes new forms and new
articulations of
the exercise of legitimate force.
During its formation, the new power must demonstrate the effectiveness of its force at
the same time that the bases ofits legitimation are being constructed.
In fact, the legitimacy of the new power is in part based directly
on the effectiveness of its use of force.
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The way the effectiveness of the new power is demonstrated
has nothing to do with the old international order that is slowly
dying away; nor has it much use for the instruments the old order
left behind. The deployments of the imperial machine are defined
by a whole series ofnew characteristics, such as the unbounded
terrain ofits activities, the singularization and symbolic localization
ofits actions, and the connection ofrepressive action to all the
aspects ofthe biopolitical structure ofsociety. For lack ofa better
term we continue to call these ‘‘interventions.’’ This is merely a
terminological and not a conceptual deficiency, for these are not
really interventions into independent juridical territories but rather
actions within a unified world by the ruling structure ofproduction
and communication. In effect, intervention has been internalized
and universalized. In the previous section we referred to both the
structural means ofintervention that involve the deployments of
monetary mechanisms and financial maneuvers over the transna-
tional field ofinterdependent productive regimes and interventions
in the field of communication and their effects on the legitimation
ofthe system. Here we want to investigate the new f
orms of
intervention that involve the exercise ofphysical force on the part
ofthe imperial machine over its global territories. The enemies that
Empire opposes today may present more ofan ideological threat
than a military challenge, but nonetheless the power ofEmpire
exercised through force and all the deployments that guarantee its
effectiveness are already very advanced technologically and solidly
consolidated politically.30
The arsenal of legitimate force for imperial intervention is
indeed already vast, and should include not only military interven-
tion but also other forms such as moral intervention and juridical
intervention. In fact, the Empire’s powers of intervention might
be best understood as beginning not directly with its weapons of
lethal force but rather with its moral instruments. What we are
calling moral intervention is practiced today by a variety ofbodies,
including the news media and religious organizations, but the most
important may be some ofthe so-called non-governmental organi-
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T H E P O L I T I C A L C O N S T I T U T I O N O F T H E P R E S E N T
zations (NGOs), which, precisely because they are not run directly
by governments, are assumed to act on the basis ofethical or moral
imperatives. The term refers to a wide variety of groups, but we
are referring here principally to the global, regional, and local organi-
zations that are dedicated to reliefwork and the protection ofhuman
rights, such as Amnesty International, Oxfam, and Me´decins sans
Frontières. Such humanitarian NGOs are in effect (even if this runs
counter to the intentions ofthe participants) some ofthe most
powerful pacific weapons of the new world order—the charitable
campaigns and the mendicant orders ofEmpire. These NGOs con-
duct ‘‘just wars’’ without arms, without violence, without borders.
Like the Dominicans in the late medieval period and the Jesuits at
the dawn ofmodernity, these groups strive to identify universal
needs and defend human rights. Through their language and their
action they first define the enemy as privation (in the hope of
preventing serious damage) and then recognize the enemy as sin.
It is hard not to be reminded here ofhow in Christian moral
theology evil is first posed as privation ofthe good and then sin is
defined as culpable negation ofthe good. Within this logical frame-
work it is not strange but rather all too natural that in their attempts
to respond to privation, these NGOs are led to denounce publicly
the sinners (or rather the Enemy in properly inquisitional terms);
nor is it strange that they leave to the ‘‘secular wing’’ the task of
actually addressing the problems. In this way, moral intervention
has become a frontline force of imperial intervention. In effect, this
intervention prefigures the state ofexception from below, and does
so without borders, armed with some of the most effective means
ofcommunication and oriented toward the symbolic production
ofthe Enemy. These NGOs are completely immersed in the bio-
political context ofthe constitution ofEmpire; they anticipate the
power ofits pacifying and productive intervention ofjustice. It
should thus come as no surprise that honest juridical theorists of
the old international school (such as Richard Falk) should be drawn
in by the fascination of these NGOs.31 The NGOs’ demonstration
ofthe new order as a peaceful biopolitical context seems to have
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37
blinded these theorists to the brutal effects that moral intervention
produces as a prefiguration ofworld order.32
Moral intervention often serves as the first act that prepares the
stage for military intervention. In such cases, military deployment is
presented as an internationally sanctioned police action. Today
military intervention is progressively less a product ofdecisions that
arise out ofthe old international order or even U.N. structures.
More often it is dictated unilaterally by the United States, which
charges itselfwith the primary task and then subsequently asks its
allies to set in motion a process ofarmed containment and/or
repression ofthe current enemy ofEmpire. These enemies are
most often called terrorist, a crude conceptual and terminological
reduction that is rooted in a police mentality.
The relationship between prevention and repression is particu-
larly clear in the case ofintervention in ethnic conflicts. The conflicts
among ethnic groups and the consequent reenforcement of new
and/or resurrected ethnic identities effectively disrupt the old aggre-
gations based on national political lines. These conflicts make the
fabric of global relations more fluid and, by affirming new identities
and new localities, present a more malleable material for control.
In such cases repression can be articulated through preventive action
that constructs new relationships (which will eventually be consoli-
dated in peace but only after new wars) and new territorial and
political formations that are functional (or rather more functional,
better adaptable) to the constitution ofEmpire.33 A second example
ofrepression prepared through preventive action is the campaigns
against corporative business groups or ‘‘mafias,’’ particularly those
involved in the drug trade. The actual repression ofthese groups
may not be as important as criminalizing their activities and manag-
ing social alarm at their very existence in order to facilitate their
control. Even though controlling ‘‘ethnic terrorists’’ and ‘‘drug ma-
fias’’ may represent the center ofthe wide spectrum ofpolice control
on the part ofthe imperial power, this activity is nonetheless normal,
that is, systemic. The ‘‘just war’’ is effectively supported by the
‘‘moral police,’’ just as the validity ofimperial right and its legitimate
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functioning is supported by the necessary and continuous exercise
ofpolice power.
It is clear that international or supranational courts are con-
strained to follow this lead. Armies and police anticipate the courts
and preconstitute the rules ofjustice that the courts must then apply.
The intensity ofthe moral principles to which the construction of
the new world order is entrusted cannot change the fact that this
is really an inversion ofthe conventional order ofconstitutional
logic. The active parties supporting the imperial constitution are
confident that when the construction ofEmpire is sufficiently ad-
vanced, the courts will be able to assume their leading role in the
definition ofjustice. For now, however, although international
courts do not have much power, public displays oftheir activities
are still very important. Eventually a new judicial function must be
formed that is adequate to the constitution of Empire. Courts will
have to be transformed gradually from an organ that simply decrees
sentences against the vanquished to a judicial body or system of
bodies that dictate and sanction the interrelation among the moral
order, the exercise ofpolice action, and the mechanism legitimating
imperial sovereignty.34
This kind ofcontinual intervention, then, which is both moral
and military, is really the logical form of the exercise of force that
follows from a paradigm of legitimation based on a state of perma-
nent exception and police action. Interventions are always excep-
tional even though they arise continually; they take the form of
police actions because they are aimed at maintaining an internal
order. In this way intervention is an effective mechanism that
through police deployments contributes directly to the construction
ofthe moral, normative, and institutional order ofEmpire.
Royal Prerogatives
What were traditionally called the royal prerogatives ofsovereignty
seem in effect to be repeated and even substantially renewed in the
construction ofEmpire. Ifwe were to remain within the conceptual
framework of classic domestic and international law, we might be
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39
tempted to say that a supranational quasi-state is being formed. That
does not seem to us, however, an accurate characterization ofthe
situation. When the royal prerogatives ofmodern sovereignty re-
appear in Empire, they take on a completely different form. For
example, the sovereign function of deploying military forces was
carried out by the modern nation-states and is now conducted by
Empire, but, as we have seen, the justification for such deployments
now rests on a state ofpermanent exception, and the deployments
themselves take the form of police actions. Other royal prerogatives
such as carrying out justice and imposing taxes also have the same
kind ofliminal existence. We have already discussed the marginal
position ofjudicial authority in the constitutive process ofEmpire,
and one could also argue that imposing taxes occupies a marginal
position in that it is increasingly linked to specific and local urgen-
cies. In effect, one might say that the sovereignty of Empire itself
is realized at the margins, where borders are flexible and identities
are hybrid and fluid. It would be difficult to say which is more
important to Empire, the center or the margins. In fact, center
and margin seem continually to be shifting positions, fleeing any
determinate locations. We could even say that the process itselfis
virtual and that its power resides in the power ofthe virtual.
One could nonetheless object at this point that even while
being virtual and acting at the margins, the process ofconstructing
imperial sovereignty is in many respects very real! We certainly do
not mean to deny that fact. Our claim, rather, is that we are dealing
here with a special kind ofsovereignty—a discontinuous form of
sovereignty that should be considered liminal or marginal insofar
as it acts ‘‘in the final instance,’’ a sovereignty that locates its only
point ofreference in the definitive absoluteness ofthe power that
it can exercise. Empire thus appears in the form of a very high tech
machine: it is virtual, built to control the marginal event, and
organized to dominate and when necessary intervene in the break-
downs ofthe system (in line with the most advanced technologies
ofrobotic production). The virtuality and discontinuity ofimperial
sovereignty, however, do not minimize the effectiveness of its force;
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on the contrary, those very characteristics serve to reinforce its