Connecting Mumbai to globalization--as it should be
Saturday, December 13, 2008 at 2:52AM
Thomas P.M. Barnett

OP-ED: "They Hate Us--and India Is Us," by Patrick French, New York Times, 8 December 2008.

OP-ED: "Trouble in the Other Middle East," by Robert D. Kaplan, New York Times, 8 December 2008.

Two great pieces that say this is really all about globalization.

Kaplan on why Hindu-Muslim relations are getting hot again:

The culprit has been globalization. The secular Indian nationalism of Jawaharlal Nehru's Congress Party, built around a rejection of Western colonialism, is more and more a thing of the past. As the dynamic Indian economy merges with that of the wider world, Hindus and Muslims have begun separate searches for roots to anchor them inside a bland global civilization.

This is why I have long argued for a globalization-centric grand strategy for the U.S., or one that puts in focus the real change dynamics of the world today--ones triggered purposefully by our historical trajectory that propels our American System into an international liberal trade order into a West into a globalization.

Kaplan's conclusion echoes my argument that America doesn't "leave" the Middle East until the Middle East joins the world:

The Middle East is back to where it was centuries ago, not because of ancient hatreds but because of globalization. Instead of bold lines on a map we have a child's messy finger painting, as the circumvention of borders and the ease of communications allow the brisk movement of ideas and people and terrorists from one place to another. Our best strategy is, as difficult and trite as it sounds, to be at all places at once. Not with troops, necessarily, but with every bit of energy and constant attention that our entire national security apparatus--and those of our allies--can bring to bear.

I call it the SysAdmin function: more civil than military, more USG than just DoD, more rest of the world than just the U.S., and more private-sector invested than public-sector funded.

Where I differ with Kaplan: my focus on the private sector and my stronger argument that we need to widen our pool of allies beyond the West.

French's argument on Mumbai echoes my own long-standing explanation for 9/11: it's got nothing to do with Kashmir or any other grievance (just like I reject Michael Schuerer's analysis that says, give al Qaeda what it wants and this will all end).

In the end, this remains all about globalization, whether or not our enemies are smart enough to realize it, much less articulate it. The "grievances" cited are just a child's excuse of "he hit me first." Eliminate them and the real problems still remain: these traditional societies simply aren't ready for dealing with globalization's triggered social revolutions.

The real compromises are not about U.S. military withdrawals or acceding to al Qaeda's dreamy demands for civilization apartheid, but more about understanding that, with connectivity must come content control. In short, traditional societies will want "parental controls" on globalization's connectivity.

Article originally appeared on Thomas P.M. Barnett (https://thomaspmbarnett.com/).
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