However, it is also true that the Iraqis will be far better off
without Saddam Hussein; and there is a chance that the middle east will be reshaped for
the better. The main problem in international relations is to define the scope of lawful
and acceptable military interventions in today's world.
The traditional theory of international relations, based on the principle of national
sovereignty, would not have sanctioned the Iraq war. Each state is deemed to be sovereign
in its own territory; that is, secure in law, although not necessarily in fact, against
aggression by another state. The badness of a state is not grounds for attacking it; only
its aggression, actual or expected, against another state. Self-rule is better than
foreign rule. These remain the bedrock principles of international sentiment and law.
The system of international relations to which these principles gave rise is sometimes
known as the Westphalian system, from its origins in the Peace of Westphalia in 1648. This
established the European state system on the basis of national political sovereignty and
religious toleration, as opposed to dynastic rule and religious monopoly. Largely through
the agency of two murderous world wars, the Westphalian system became a world system after
1945, as the big European states lost the power and will to hold on to their imperial
positions. Today there are over 190 national units, each one claiming sovereignty-freedom
from foreign intervention-within its own internationally recognised borders.
The UN not only enshrined the principle of national sovereignty in its charter, but
provided a mechanism-collective security-for upholding it. The attack of one member
against another would be met by a collective response authorised by the security council,
including, if necessary, military force. This was intended to be a great improvement on
the older "balance of power" system, which aimed to protect the security of the
great powers-and the peace of the world-by maintaining a sufficient balance of power to
deter or defeat a would-be aggressor.
Although balance of power thinking was discredited by the two world wars, it revived after
1945 in the form of "bipolarity." There were now just two superpowers, which
were supposed to deter each other from an attack on themselves and their allies through
their possession of large stocks of nuclear weapons. Nuclear weapons ruled out major
inter-state wars in a way conventional weapons did not. National sovereignty, proclaimed
in law by the UN charter, was preserved in fact by the "balance of terror." But
it was a qualified national sovereignty. Western Europe and Japan became, in effect,
protectorates of the US, trading independence for prosperity. The illusion of great power
status, briefly entertained by Britain and France after the war, collapsed at Suez in
1956. Britain discovered its vocation as America's permanently loyal ally, while France
embarked on its career of high-profile dissenting gestures.
From the fragments of the defunct European colonial empires, a "third world"
emerged, in which the superpower blocs competed against each other through arms sales and
security-linked trade and aid policies. The result was a relatively stable pattern of
dictatorial client states and spheres of influence in the middle east and central America,
and low-level proxy wars in parts of ex-colonial Africa. Only the largest and strongest of
third world states like China and India were able to preserve a genuine independence.
Although the postwar system of international relations was not static, it is right to call
it postimperial. Except for the occupation of Germany and Japan, both superpowers abjured
military conquest leading to direct rule. Thus, however impaired it was in practice, the
principle of national sovereignty was not overtly challenged. Soviet intervention in
Hungary and Czechoslovakia came nearest to breaching it.
Moreover, after Vietnam, it seemed that the bipolar world was breaking up into a
multipolar one, with the emergence of Opec and the rise of the EU, Japan and China. There
was talk of "imperial overstretch." But the bipolar era did not end in
multipolarity. It ended with a single "hyperpower"-the US. The one thing the
analysts had left out of the account was the collapse of the Soviet Union.
Today there is no settled theory of international relations. The doctrine of national
sovereignty is in retreat, but nothing solid has taken its place. The idea has grown that
military interventions are justified for humanitarian reasons or to remove
rogue states, and reform failed ones. The right of self-defence,
authorised by article 51 of the UN charter, has been replaced in US strategic thinking by
a potentially unlimited doctrine of pre-emptive action. This means that the UN
charter is no longer binding on its most powerful member. But what is binding? Is
anything binding?
The collapse of the Soviet Union had three big consequences. First, it gave the US
absolute military superiority over any combination of powers. Second, it established the
world supremacy of capitalism, and particularly the US version of it. Finally, the end of
the cold war revived the politics of religion and race. The global aspect of this was the
emergence of an Islamic challenge to secularised Christianity.
Americas initial reaction to the fall of communism was restrained. The Gulf war of
1991 was the first real UN war. (The Korean war was authorised by a security
council minus the Soviet Union.) It seemed to bear out Fukuyamas prognosis that with
the end of ideological conflict, peacekeeping, where needed, would be police work.
Clintons strategic doctrine of 1996, formulated after the disastrous Somalia
venture, asserted US leadership but limited the use of force to a narrow range of
objectives, and stipulated an exit strategy. His doctrine was consistent with
the predominant reliance on soft power to realise the promise of globalisation
and was much influenced by a post-Vietnam horror of casualties. If this was hegemony, it
was hegemony with a light touch.
At the same time, though, came an upsurge of foreign policy evangelicalism. The feeling
grew that the end of the cold war had freed foreign policy to pursue ethical goals; that
the victory of the west over communism might be turned into a moral crusade to spread its
values. Positive peace, the realisation of justice, should prevail over negative peace,
the absence of interstate armed conflict. Tony Blair, more than Bill Clinton, embodied
this new moralism. The collapse of Yugoslavia in the 1990s brought the vista of an ethical
foreign policy squarely up against the limitations of the UN charter. In a major speech
delivered in Chicago on 22nd April 1999, during the Nato attack on Kosovo, Blair expounded
what he called the new doctrine of the international community. It can be seen
as a key document in the transition from the world of Clinton to that of Bush, just as
Blair is the link between the old British ethical imperialism and the new doctrines of
benevolent global hegemony which started to gain strength in Washington at the
end of the Clinton era.
Globalisation, said Blair, is not just economic. It is also a political
and security phenomenon
we cannot turn our backs on conflicts and the violation of
human rights in other countries if we want to be secure. This new doctrine required
an important qualification to the principle of non-interference in the
internal affairs of other countries. Blair suggested that the UN charter should be
amended to make this possible, and also the quasi- permanent military occupation of
countries or regions where humanitarian norms were being systematically violated. His key
assertion was that values and interests could no longer be separated. The spread of
our values makes us safer. But the new doctrine was not quite what it seemed. The
unlimited scope it gave to righting wrongs was heavily qualified by prudence. Blair
mentioned only two dictators: Slobodan Milosevic and Saddam Hussein.
A similar defence of humanitarian intervention was made by UN Secretary General Kofi Annan
in a speech in June 1998. Referring to article 2.7 of the charter, preventing UN
intervention in matters within the domestic jurisdiction of states, Annan said: Yet
in other contexts the word intervention has a more benign meaning
Medicine uses the word to describe the act of the surgeon, who saves life by intervening
to remove malignant growths.
The Blair-inspired strategic doctrine proclaimed by Natos heads of
government in Washington on 24th April 1999 called for a redefinition of
defence to include threats posed to the security of Nato members by
ethnic and religious rivalries, territorial disputes
the abuse of human rights
and the dissolution of states, as well as the proliferation of nuclear weapons,
sabotage and organised crime. The tendency in this doctrine to enlarge the scope of
military intervention, and to decouple it from security council authorisation, was
certainly disturbing, but it still coexisted with a view of the world which held that
humanitarian and other interventions would be exceptional. Indeed, those of us who opposed
the Kosovo war as signalling a new imperialism were assured that it was a
one-offclearing up a mess in Europes backyard.
Imperialism had become impossible because western nations, especially the US, were too
risk-averse. The most they would do in the way of hard power was airstrikes.
The chance to use force more ambitiously was opened up by 11th September. Before it, US
foreign policy under Bush had grown more assertive and unilateral, but it had
not strayed beyond the limits of soft power. What 9/11 provided was a political
opportunity for elements close to the Bush administration to activate their project for a
New American Century. Terrorism would not just be stopped dead in its tracks,
but a world would be brought into being in which terrorism could not exist. The key Bush
innovation was the doctrine of pre-emption, which linked security to regime
change. The war against Iraq was the first pre-emptive war.
The project for a New American Century is the first coherent design for a new system of
international relations since the end of communism. Practical people will dismiss it as
the ravings of mad professors. But one generations ravings have a habit of becoming
the next generations common sense.
So where are we headed? What future system of international relations does such a design
portend? There are three main possibilities. First, the New American Century project
points to a Pax Americana, which, unlike the Pax Britannica, would be worldwide in scope.
More power, hard and soft, is currently concentrated in the US than in any previous state
in world history. Both kinds of power will be used to create a world supportive of US
values and interests. Such a Pax would not conform to the contours of classical
imperialism: the element of conquest and direct rule would be marginal.
Second, the classic answer to a hegemonic project is the emergence of a balance of power
to oppose it. In this scenario, the EU, Russia and China, singly or together, would rebel
against US dominance. Multipolarity would become a fact, not an aspiration.
Third comes the preferred option of most non-American leaders and thinkersa
co-operative hegemony of the US and the other great powers. US actions would be
constrained by the need to reach agreement on the most important issues, although the US
would continue to have the greatest weight in all decision-making bodies. The
institutional structure for a new multilateralism remains vague.
Pax Americana. Some building blocks of a Pax Americana are already in place. First,
the US and its allies currently occupy and administer Iraq. No one expects a rapid
disengagement. Second, in the concepts of failed and rogue states,
regime change, nation-building, war against terrorism,
and the stress on hard power to keep the peace, we already have the linguistic basis of an
imperial ideology. The central elements of the ideology are clear. Certain states, in
their present form, do not deserve to count as independent members of the international
community. Either they cannot sustain themselves, or they are an inherent threat to
others. So they need to be reshaped as new nations, tooled with the skills of good
government, equipped with the values of democracy. Ever since Woodrow Wilson, the
definition of US security has been loosely linked to the spread of American values.
Bushs pre-emption doctrine made this link explicit. We can see here how Republican
realism, based on the need to rid the world of terrorism, sits quite well with Democrat
idealism, based on the notion that democracy is the way to end war. We can also see why
Blair is so easily able to straddle the worlds of Clinton and Bush.
The enterprise sounds imperialist and this is enough to damn it in the eyes of
anti-imperialists on both sides of the Atlantic. From American anti-imperialists you will
often hear that imperialism is contrary to the US tradition; its history is
anti-imperialist, its constitution is not designed for an imperial vocation. This argument
is not compelling. Nations do not start off as imperial: they sometimes have imperialism
thrust upon them, and develop a vocation. (Germany is an exception to this rule: it was no
good at being an imperial power, but tried desperately to become one.) And those Americans
opposed to the project also ignore the role which the US played in reshaping
and re-equipping the free world to meet the
challenge of communism.
The Bush hawks would deny that their project is imperial. They would admit that the idea
of exporting democracy is not in itself much different from the
civilising mission and trusteeship doctrines of the late European
imperialists. The crucial difference, they insist, is that they have an exit strategy,
whereas the imperialists did not. This is based on two propositions: that democracy, like
capitalism, is easily exportable, and that democracy is the pacific form of the state.
Because democracy is inherently pacific and welfare-enhancing (so the argument goes),
American occupation is inherently self-liquidating. Thus the New American Century project
will be punctuated by imperial moments, but is basically non-imperial.
But this whole train of argument is based on an illusion. It is influenced by US
experience of building democracy in Germany and Japan after the second world war. But it
is particularly crass to apply this model of self-liquidating rule to Iraq or Iran.
Germany was part of a political civilisation in which liberty was the norm and Nazism
aberrant or pathological; Japans militarism was largely a product of the depression,
and interrupted nearly a century of imitation of western values. Following military
defeat, there was little or no cultural resistance to the re-westernisation of both
countries. Moreover, even in their case, the idea of a rapid exit can be overdone. Until
the collapse of communism, Germany and Japan were US military protectorates.
In the middle east, by contrast, the project of creating democracies runs up against the
culture of Islam, which has never produced a single functioning democracy. Middle east
expert Fred Halliday argues strongly against the demagogy of cultural
confrontation and dismisses the faultline babble about unbridgeable
gulfs. But can one really dismiss the tendency to theocracy in Islam, which has
precluded the development of secularism, and suggests that Islam may be impossible to
secularise on our terms? If this is true, it means that any brand of democracy will have
to be derived from Islamic principles, not from their rejection. It cannot be imposed from
outside by legions of Washington think-tankers.
The second plank of the exit strategy is based on the dictum that democracies dont
go to war with each other. This view of democracy as inherently pacific derives from the
experience of a very restricted number of western democracies, which are either nationally
homogeneous and therefore unthreatened by civil war, or which have a long history of
secularisation. Many of todays humanitarian disasters arise from civil wars. It is
not dictators who cause these wars, but the extreme difficulty in some states of
reconciling competing claims to ethnic or religious self-rule within a single polity.
Indeed, dictatorship is the only thing which stops such states from breaking up: it was
the emergence of democracy in Yugoslavia which led directly to ethnic cleansing. Europe
had to undergo a 30-year civil war in the 17th century to establish the principles of
political liberty and religious tolerance, and even then they were not fully secure. Where
the tradition of rule is theocratic (as in most Muslim countries), democracy is no
guarantee of pacifism. Rather it may be the most effective instrument of mobilising state
policy behind religious passion. It is no coincidence that the western-leaning Muslim
states are autocracies.
Beyond the rogue states which have to be democratised are the
failed statesmainly in sub-Saharan Africawhose peoples have to be
rescued from humanitarian disasters. Contemporary discussion of such failureexcept
where it spills over into genocideis conducted exclusively in soft power forums like
the WTO, IMF, and World Bank. Checklists of good practice in governance are dutifully
drawn up, with aid made conditional on performance. But such language fails to do justice
to the collapse of any form of government in the poorest parts of Africa. No one envisaged
the extent of the retrogression that has occurred since the end of colonial rule. Over
wide swathes of sub-Saharan Africa a clear contradiction has emerged between
self-government and good government. Here is another area where a rationale has developed
for the use of hard power to eliminate poverty, with no clear exit strategy.
The key question is how far the New American Century project will survive its
confrontation with reality. It is unrealistic to expect Bushs policy to end with
Bush, and to stop in Iraq, just as it was foolish to expect Kosovo to be a one-off. An
imperial momentum has already been established in the middle east. American intervention
in Iraq is likely to trigger a string of collapsing states, riven by civil war, or
engulfed by Islamic fundamentalism. Above all, there is the security of Israel,
Americas client, to attend to. I do not believe in the Bush/Blair/Aznar road
map to peace because I do not think Israel does, and the US will never put enough
pressure on Israel to make it work. Rather, the US might easily get drawn into
underwriting further Israeli colonisation of Palestine. So a long-term US presence in the
middle east will be needed. This can be sold politically by yoking US and Israeli
interests in the fight against terrorism while emphasising the advantages of control over
oil resources. Along the way, the project of bringing democracy to the middle east will be
quietly dropped.
The doctrine of self-liquidating interventions is a bold attempt to reconcile national
sovereignty with a revived imperial vocation. It will not work. Nation-building will take
far longer to achieve the results the new imperialists want than they imagine; it may
never do so. If the New American Century is seriously attempted it will generate serious
resistance.
A new balance of power. The instinctive response to overweening power is to form a
combination of powers to check it. The idea of a balance of power is associated with the
notion of multipolarity, which is the official doctrine of Russia, China and
some countries in the EU. Indeed, when people talk like this they have in mind the
possibility of the EU, Russia and China getting together to check US expansionism.
However, if we look at what a new balance of power would entail, we can see how far away
we are from it. In the now-collapsed bipolar world, the Soviet Union had an effective veto
on US actions which threatened the world balance of power, and vice versa. This imparted a
conservative bias to the postwar system. The formal veto given to the permanent five
members of the security council in 1945 was a recognition of the real power they had to
check each others actions. With France and China this was a matter of courtesy.
Britain soon fell out of the reckoning. Then there were two: the US and the Soviet Union.
Now there is one. Today, Russia, China and (possibly) India can prevent a direct US attack
on their homelands. China retains regional independence by being able to threaten
retaliation on US allies Japan, South Korea and Taiwan, which are within range of its
missiles. But they are not global competitors of the US in either hard or soft power.
The EU can and does stand up to the US in terms of soft power (trade negotiations), but
has less hard power than Russia and China, and even less prospect of developing any. Apart
from the small professional forces of Britain and France, the EU military sector, which
consumes over e160bn a year, is little more than an expensive part of the social security
system. EU countries are neither willing to spend more on defence nor to pool what they do
spend for more purposeful action. It is symptomatic of Europes weakness that the
despatch of 1,400 troops to the Congo, where thousands are being massacred at present, is
hailed as an important step in its military revival. Europe will not develop a significant
military capacity unless Germany decides to become a serious military power again. With
the encouragement of its European partners, Germany will need, for the first time in its
history, to find a middle way between militarism and pacifism.
Recreating a global balance of power would mean recreating a global balance of hard power.
Given the difficulty of such a project, it would be childs play for US diplomacy to
nip it in the bud by a strategy of divide and rule. Russia and Europe will draw closer
together, with oil providing a geopolitical nexus. But Russia is decades away from being a
military colossus. The worst that might be expected, from a US perspective, is a form of
aggressive non-cooperation from Russia and the EU: the refusal of overfly rights, the
rejection of US military bases and so on.
There is another type of hard power which might discomfort the Americans: terrorism. The
Iraqi war, if coupled with the failure of the road map to produce a Palestinian state, may
mean a global rise in terrorthough the shock and awe effect of US
military technology may have an opposite, sobering effect. But terrorism on its own will
no more drive the US out of the middle east than it has dislodged Israel from Palestine or
Russia from Chechnya.
Nevertheless, I believe that the attempt to establish a Pax Americana unilaterally will
break down, despite the absence of hard power obstacles. The reason lies in a combination
of repercussions which will impose ultimately unacceptable costs on the US. The chief one
will be the explosion of anti-Americanism. Well before a classical balance of power
emerges, this will increase the costs to the US of unilateral action. Terrorism on its own
may well strengthen US resolve. But the combination of terrorism and mass civilian unrest
in areas of US military occupation will sap the will of the democratic imperialists.
Uprisings which need to be put down by force will shatter the dream that America is
intervening to liberate people.
Secondly, a unilaterally imposed Pax Americana will drain America of the soft power it
needs to support its hard power, while increasing the demands on its hard power. This
classic progression in the decline and fall of empires may start to bite sooner than the
hawks expect. To put it very simply: the older empires (including the British) lived on
tribute, and died when the costs of empire came to exceed the tribute. The US was not able
to levy an imperial tax for protecting western Europe from communism, but did the next
best thing by persuading the Europeans to accept the seignorage of the
dollarallowing the Americans to print as many IOUs as they wantedbecause it
was in their interest to do so. An American hegemony which is not solidly based on mutual
interests will necessarily forego vital means of sharing burdens. The costs of the first
Gulf war were widely shared, because the coalition consisted of most of the world. The
costs of the recent Iraq war, as well as the reconstruction of Iraq, will be mostly paid
by the US. The expense of subsidising Israel will grow if, as I expect, the road map leads
nowhere. At the same time, the US will find it harder to get its way in trade and monetary
negotiations.
In short, what will make the imperial project unviable is not that a powerful combination
will rise up against it, but that the US will become progressively overstretched. To do
its work, US power requires the co-operation of the main actors in world politics.
A new multilateralism. Most sensible people want multilateralism. But they have
scarcely begun to think of what it would mean in terms of hard power institutions. At its
heart should be a deal whereby the US would be brought back within the fold of
international law through a reform of the UN charter. Reform of the UN should address
itself to a single question: how can military intervention which may be justified in
todays world be reconciled with the rule of law as embodied in the UN charter?
Clearly, one would need to consider interventions to prevent or stop genocide and
humanitarian disaster, prevent the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction and,
possibly, to rescue peoples from the consequences of gross misgovernment. Pre-emption
confined to the case of imminent attack is too limited for todays
weaponry, when devastating weapons of mass destruction can be launched within hours. The
power of the veto in the security council should also, perhaps, be linked in some way to
actual power.
Successful reform of the UN would reconcile international law with contemporary
conceptions of prudence and justice, thus strengthening the rule of law in international
affairs. The US could be offered such a reform as a quid pro quo for abandoning its
unilateral quest for security which brings no real securitysimply an indefinite
extension of insecurity. This would represent a compromise between the old doctrine of
non-intervention and the evolving fact of international community; and a way of
reconciling de facto US hegemony with international co-operation.
It will be objected that this is a scheme for a great power directorate. But it is only
through the involvement of the great powers in the government of the world that US
unilateralism can be checked. The most important need today is not to create a universal
democracya parliament of the worldbut to restore collegiality among those
countries which, however unevenly, have power to shape the future. Such collegiality is
the best way to preserve the independence and protect the interests of small countries.
There should also be an agreed distribution of responsibilities, dictated by resources and
geography, between the great powers for maintaining peace and promoting justice. For
example, Europe should join the US as an effective partner in the search for peace in the
middle east, just as China and the US should be jointly responsible for disarming North
Korea. Europe should come to think of itself as the responsible authority for its own
continent and also for preventing the slide of parts of Africa into barbarism. There is no
compelling reason for US forces to stay in Europe; nor, indeed, for the continued
existence of Nato. But for Europe to function at all in the way I have suggested, it must
develop enough military assets to have the power of independent action. In short, Europe
can and should revive a more audacious sense of its own value and mission.
A new multilateralism is the best way forward from the present impasse. Most likely it
will develop, if it occurs at all, not from a master plan, but through a process of trial
and error, much friction, and mutual accommodation. But unless something like this does
develop, the outlook for the 21st century will be bleak. We will not see a new American
century, but an angry America confronting a resentful world in a ceaseless, frenetic quest
for an elusive security. The consequences of this for the future of peace, democracy, and
globalisation are too awful to contemplate. |