As a long year ends, there is greater uncertainty than ever about the direction of world politics. My end-of-the-year analysis was published on the Observer Research Foundation (ORF) website on the last day of the year, and reproduced below in full.
The Year Ends But the Chaos May Just be Beginning
This year by far has been the most chaotic
year in international politics, since the end of the Cold War. The depredations
of the so called Islamic State terrorists in the Middle East threaten to upturn
borders that have been settled for close to a century. Europe is in the throes
of an unexpected tussle with Moscow, with former Soviet President Gorbachev characterising
the state of relationship between Russia and the West as being on the brink of
a new Cold War. In the South and East China seas, China's aggressiveness, too
clear now to be ignored, is leading to a reluctant quasi-alliance with some
strange bedfellows. And as the year winds to a close, the weird North Korean
regime is back on the front pages, demonstrating that generational change in no
solution for preposterousness.
Though a certain amount of turmoil was
always present in international affairs, the general sense of a gathering
disorder and uncertainty in international affairs today is much deeper. One indicator is that this in itself has
become an issue of debate. Concerns about an emerging global disorder, such as
predicted by Gorbachev, have been disputed by Steven Pinker and Andrew Mack, who
argued recently that statistically speaking, violence is coming down and
"the world is not falling apart". They argue that homicide rates have
fallen, crime against women and children are decreasing, a majority of the world's
countries are now democracies, and that genocide and mass civilian killings are
trending down.
However, this is a simple statistical
sleight of hand: none of this has anything necessarily to do with global
disorder. They do argue that war has also declined: war between states, they declare
confidently, "are all but obsolete." We have heard this before, of
course: a century back, Norman Angell publicised the same conclusion, only to
be proved disastrously wrong when the First World War broke out.
If war is indeed obsolete, nobody told defence
ministries around the world: as SIPRI notes, military expenditures and armspurchases have been steadily raising (though total global military expenditure
declined slightly primarily because US defence budget declined as a consequence
of the winding down of the Iraq and Afghanistan wars). As Thomas Hobbes pointed out a long while back, war is not just about the condition of fighting but of
preparations for it.
The problem with statistical analysis is
that they are meaningless without political understanding. There were few great
power wars for almost a century after the Napoleanic wars ended in 1815. But
competition between rising new powers and existing great powers had created a
tinderbox that was easily lit in 1914. Two world wars in the first half of the
20th century were followed by a bipolar and then a unipolar peace that is
probably now ending.
For two decades after the end of the Cold
War, Europeans and East Asians basked in the liberal myth that greater trade
and economic integration would overcome the fear and conflict that have always
been at the heart of relations between nations.
What we are witnessing is political
fracturing in three key regions: Europe, the Middle East and Asia. Europeans,
long smug about having moved into postmodern politics in which war was for the
history books, are suddenly facing a blast of Russian reality. Both Russia and
the West share the blame for the current crisis, but it is one from which there
is no easy escape either considering that the issues at stake for both sides
are sovereignty and security.
In Asia, expectations that economic
interdependence would ensure that China's rise was peaceful was always the
victory of hope over historical experience. What 2014 demonstrated was that
China is normal, that it would do what other great powers have done before. The
response was equally normal, as states with no tradition of prior partnership
came together to form an as yet amorphous grouping that could one day become a
counter-China alliance. The Asian fracturing is no flash in the pan either because
China's power continues to grow, even if slightly slower than before.
The Middle East has been fractured for
decades, of course, but today's divisions are new. For long, the Palestine issue obscured other
regional differences such as between traditionalist and radical regimes or
between Shia Iran and the rest of the region. All of these have been displaced
today by a sectarian conflict between Sunni and Shia powers which has the
potential to restructure the entire region. This conflict now has local manifestations
all the way from Lebanon to Yemen, each fed by the Iran and the Sunni powers.
What unites all these stories is the
continuing retreat of the U.S. under President Obama from its traditional
global role. From Ukraine to Syria to the Pacific, Obama's reluctance to get
involved has disappointed old partners, who are increasingly looking to local means
of dealing with regional threats rather than dialling Washington. This makes weaker
American allies even more insecure and these conflicts even more intractable because
compromise is that much more difficult when the issue is survival. It also makes
the cost of the inevitable US involvement that much higher, as the US is
learning in both Ukraine and Syria.
This lower profile role is not the
consequence of the much heralded American decline, but rather a deliberate
policy choice. The US may eventually decline to be one among many great powers
but it still remains by far the world's most powerful nation. Anyone who doubts
its capability need only look to what the US has been able to do to Russia over
the last few months. When the US first announced sanctions on Russia over the Ukraine
crisis, it was treated as a joke in Moscow. With the rouble plunging and Russia
facing an economic contraction by as much five percent next year, nobody there
is laughing anymore.
Because this lower profile role is a matter
of choice, it can be reversed fairly quickly. On the other hand, it is unlikely
that Obama will reverse course so late in his presidency. It will take a new
leader in the White House before this course is corrected.
But this year also provides us a preview of
what a multipolar world might look like. American hegemony has its downsides
but it will be nothing compared to its end, especially if it leads to a
multipolar world in which no one is in control.
This has lessons for New Delhi too. India
has for long craved a larger global role and routinely calls for a multipolar
world. This is couched in the language of a more democratic world order, which
barely hides the true intent: a world in which India hopes it will be one of
poles. That desire is but natural for a country the size of India but New Delhi's
longstanding desire to play this larger role should not make it overlook all the
complexities and difficulties that such a world might generate. India has
mostly kept its head down this year but this is a luxury that it might not have
if it is one of poles.
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