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A Selection
of Excerpts from
GREAT POWERS:
America
and the World After Bush
By Thomas
P. M. Barnett
Why our grand strategy needs
to be realigned with the world
"When
9/11 struck, America, feeling proprietary about the international liberal
trade order we created and nurtured into global dominance, naturally
felt the need to propose all manner of new rules. But in our haste to
demonstrate their effectiveness to the world, we not only botched their
initial employment in many instances (Afghanistan and Iraq being preeminent),
we scared off many old allies and alienated much of the rest of the
world in the process. Meanwhile, globalization's nosebleed trajectory
continued unabated, even as America routinely blew its whistle to interrupt
game play after every post-9/11 international crisis to announce our
latest new rule set for global order. Sometimes our new rules were ignored
and other times they met opting-out responses--such as "We'll take
our business/tourism/IPOs elsewhere!" Other times, rising great
powers simply proposed their
own, competing rule sets. For example, while America got fixated on
"transforming" the Middle East, the EU focused on eastward expansion,
Russia concentrated on extending pipelines in all directions (save north),
and China cast its nets pretty much over the rest of the developing
world, with India in hot pursuit. Inevitably, America's new definition
of post-9/11 "normal" put us increasingly at odds with significant
global trends, many of which seemed to accelerate just as we Americans,
whose trade-liberalization schemes sent this whole world spinning, began
plaintively asking globalization to slow down so that we might regain
our strategic balance, feeling--as we were--both subpar and "subprime."
Not surprisingly, much of the world has stopped listening to America
over the past few years. Bush-Cheney's push for primacy achieved its
desired effect but on an unintentional scale: Most of the world's
nations neither fear nor respect America as they once did. As such,
we face a series of difficult realignments across all major elements
of our grand strategy." (pp. 162-163)
Thank God for the Whiz Kids
of Wall Street
"Not surprisingly, given
Wall Street's latest meltdown, Americans are polling glum, even if
the rest of the world isn't. Global opinion trends over the past half-decade
portray a rising tide of human happiness among nations that have opened
up to globalization and thus enjoyed increasing per capita income. Across
the Islamic world, we also see a broad decline in popular support for
terrorism and, in particular, al Qaeda's brutality. We're losing
old allies over Iraq, but Osama bin Laden is losing the future.
As
for recent fears that China will soon rule the world, go slow on that
one. The World Bank recently recalculated the purchasing power of China's
economy and found it to be about 40 percent smaller than we imagined.
China won't be overtaking the U.S. economy anytime soon, if ever.
Moreover, while we may fret over Beijing's dollar reserves, you have
to remember that China's rapid industrialization has been built on
a very shaky environmental and demographic foundation, meaning most
of the economy's vast liabilities have been pushed into the future
on a scale that makes our Social Security overhang look modest by comparison.
China will grow old before it gets rich, and it'll become increasingly
unhealthy before it superfunds its environmental cleanup.
Rather
than complain about rising multipolarity in our global financial order,
like the rise of the euro as an alternative reserve currency, why not
be grateful that the enterprise no longer depends solely on the spend-thrift
American consumer? Frankly, we all knew we were living beyond our collective
means these past few years, and deep down, we were hoping somebody would
apply some discipline to this unsustainable dynamic.
Given that our political system
didn't seem up to the task, I say thank God for those whiz kids on
Wall Street--you know, the ones who seem to come up with some new,
dazzlingly complex risk-management scheme every ten years or so, like
junk bonds in the 1980s or the rise of financial derivatives in the
1990s. I'm not being facetious. It's that type of edgy innovation
that keeps the United States the most competitive economy in
the world, triggering not just
our booms but also the necessary corrections--to wit, our pressing
need for a global Securities & Exchange Commission. If Wall Street's
recent series of financial crises proved one thing, it's that globalization's
interdependency has reached the point where the forces of both contagion
and correction have gone global, meaning there is no such thing as significant
"decoupling," nor the unique discrediting of any economic model.
We all feel one another's pain now because we all seek to mitigate
collective risks--globalization as one giant credit-default-swapping
network. So for all of you who've long dreamed of the day when America
wouldn't have to run the world by itself, the good news is, that day
has come." (pp. 183-184)
The different world America
sees
"Today,
America sees a very different world from that seen by the rest of the
planet: We want it instantly tidied up with no terrorists and no autocrats
and no environmental damage--a grand strategy predicated on some notion
of perfection. Meanwhile, that young, ambitious non-Western chunk of
humanity focuses on an entirely different agenda--a grand strategy
that entails getting ahead at all costs. As a result, when our
leaders speak to the world,
they are not heard. That's a big problem, not so much because America
is the only nation capable of leading as because the world is a more
uncertain and less secure place when we are perceived as having lost
our way. Our "go-go" economic philosophy has long been countered,
as well it should have been, by Europe's "go-slow" focus on successfully
integrating its poorer neighbors. The world is a better
place for having that debate
as long as both sides admit there's something to learn from the other.
But today, too much of the world seems to view our "go-go" as having
gotten up and gone off the deep end in the service of extreme, self-serving
goals, and unsustainable consumption.
That's
not to condemn emerging markets for wanting all the same things we enjoy.
Heck, we talked them into going down this path in the first place! Rather,
it's just pointing out how much all that non-Western economic activity
is reshaping our world, because that's where we find the truly inescapable
challenges--and opportunities--of our age. But instead of looking
those challenges--especially the cumulative environmental ones--straight
in the face, we obsess over (1) global terror, the vast majority of
which never comes close to touching American lives; (2) democracy in
the shallowest form of free elections and little else; and (3) worst
of all, nuclear weapons--a bogeyman without parallel in our minds."
(pp. 211-212)
A world eager to herald
America's return
The good news, of course, is
that America's new president will face a world eager to herald our
return. Our new commander in chief is looking at 50 percent being taken
off the top in terms of other leaders' price tags for renewed friendship
and alliance. No surprise there, as the world greatly fears for its
future whenever America is perceived to have gone off on an ideological
bender. Nonetheless, President Obama is looking at a serious task: getting
other powers to recognize that we now realize the limits of our power.
If that realization cannot be demonstrated, or if the Obama administration
somehow fails at signaling such awareness (the temptation to circle
the West's wagons here is great), then America will most definitely
be looking at (1) a continuing effort by many of our true allies to
dissuade us from further overextension, and (2) increasingly open displays
by rising powers of their willingness to seek one another's solidarity
on security issues while pointedly excluding the United States.
If
we remain on this ill-advised course, then the most likely great-power
flash point for the United States in coming years will be either China
or Russia, with the latter vaulting now into the lead thanks to its
invasion of Georgia. Neither represents a systemic threat, because each
supports globalization's advance, and so regards the world's dangers
much as we do. But it's also clear that while the rest of the world
fears globalization primarily in terms of a perceived extension of U.S.
soft power, in America we now essentially view globalization in terms
of a perceived extension of Chinese soft power, much as Europe fears
Russia's growing domination of its energy markets. But since China's
soft sell will only grow more oblique in its application over time (i.e.,
they continue to "hit 'em where we ain't"), Russia, under Putin's
continued stewardship, is
more likely to become the East's
de facto standard-bearer in any future attempts to contain a United
States that refuses to mend its ways, much the way Brazil and India,
with great diplomatic skill, manage to represent the Gap's economic
interests in global forums.
If
the Obama administration does not seek a more discreet and less martial
tack with the world, then engaging Russia negatively on this score will
be a big mistake--the ultimate diversion in this long war."
(pp. 227-228)
What comes next in the
"long war"
"Two realities inform our
thinking about what comes next in this long war: (1) Paul Collier's
"bottom billion" is clustered mostly in sub-Saharan Africa and Central
Asia; and (2) today's radical Salafi jihadist movement is centered
in Southwest Asia (from Egypt to Pakistan), a region that effectively
links those two impoverished areas. To the extent that we're successful
in dislodging al Qaeda from Southwest Asia, the center of gravity is
likely to shift to either Central Asia or Africa. If the Shanghai Cooperation
Organization truly represents the will of great powers surrounding Central
Asia to keep that region relatively clean of violent extremism, and
I think it does, then the radical Salafist movement, to the degree it
either must flee Southwest Asia or attempt to expand its influence from
that base, is more likely than not to move into Africa over time. The
recent rise of the Salafist Group for Preaching and Combat (GSPC) in
North Africa would seem to confirm that judgment. The grand strategic
response to that scenario is therefore clear: accelerate Africa's
integration into the global economy in a strategic flanking maneuver
designed to deny radical Islam's successful penetration there.
Thus,
after being ignored since the beginning of time (save for its slaves
and its treasure), Africa just got strategically important enough for
America to care about. The Bush administration's decision to set up
Africa Command is historic, but not for the reasons given or assumed.
There aren't enough Islamic terrorists in Africa to stand up a full
combatant command. If all we wanted were flies on eyeballs, a small
number of special operations trigger-pullers would have sufficed for
the foreseeable future. There's oil there, but the United States would
get its share whether Africa burns or not, and it's actually fairly
quiet right now. The Chinese are arriving en masse, typically embedded
with regimes we can't stand or can't stand us, like Sudan and Zimbabwe.
But the Chinese aren't particularly liked in Africa and seem to have
no designs for empire there. Beijing
just wants its energy and minerals,
and that penetration, such as it is, doesn't warrant Africa Command,
either. So, in my mind, America sets up an Africa Command for the same
reason people buy real estate--it's a good investment. As the Middle
East "middle ages" over the next three decades and Asia's infrastructural
build-out is completed, only Africa will remain as a source for both
youth-driven revolution and cheap labor and
commodities. Toss in global
warming and you've got a recipe for the most deprived becoming the
most depraved." (pp. 25-286)
Connectivity and the global
middle-class
"What's
so scary about globalization today is that it's triggering a global
consciousness regarding the possibilities of individual liberty, and
in doing so, it places a lot of elites in nondemocratic societies in
a tough place. In tandem, they must justify their rule by exploiting
globalization's connectivity to raise individual incomes while resisting
globalization's cultural "pollution" (i.e., all those dangerous
ideas of individual freedom), which only raises individual expectations.
In other words, their sell on regime legitimacy becomes, "I'm making
this connectivity happen in a way that enriches our nation while protecting
all of you from content that will threaten our collective identity."
I'm not saying the same isn't true for leaders in democratic nations,
just that it's a whole lot easier for them, because, by and large,
popular expectations are easier to meet in our type of democracy.
Why?
American-style democracies tend to come with a substantial middle class,
whose ideology is one of self-improvement through self-empowerment,
meaning these people look to the government primarily for its role in
keeping the playing field reasonably level. The rich, in contrast, look
to the government primarily to protect them (and their wealth) from
the demands of the poor, while the poor look to the government for protection
from their very circumstances. What we're missing right now in globalization
is that sense of a worldwide middle-class ideology that says, "We're
the hardworking members of this global community and this is what we
think would be a fair deal." Invariably, too many experts today describe
the world as a superelite sitting high above the bottom billion, reducing
everything to the extremes of haves versus have-nots. We have no global
leaders of note speaking to the global middle right now, just narrow-minded
populist leaders echoing the hopes and fears of their own "middle"
back home, typically promising them refuge from the storm when they
should be linking those hopes and fears to what Jeffrey Sachs dubs globalization's
emerging "common wealth" overwhelmingly found in the global middle
class." (pp. 296-297)
The practical challenge
America faces
"So
here's the practical challenge as I see it: America has gone so long
since the last period when we had to rethink the world and how it works
that we've basically lost the grand-strategy skill set. Worse, this
is the first time in our nation's history when our trajectory of success
has led to such a clustering of rising great powers that our instinct
for continued leadership could easily be overwhelmed by fears of competitive
disadvantage--that is, we're left holding the bag on global security
while all our competitors catch up. The realist school would tell us
to cut back on our leadership in global security to get our own economic
and social house in order for the inevitable great-power conflicts to
come, when, of course, doing so will most assuredly trigger a lot of
fear-threat reaction on the part of those same rising great powers,
thus making the outcome as "inevitable" as the realists claim--a
self-fulfilling prophecy if ever there was one. So here's where our
faith in this world system of our creation comes most into play. We
need enough confi dence in our model of economic-development-forcing-political-pluralism
that we don't abandon our bodyguard role in protecting globalization's
continued advance and sub-sequent network consolidation. If we can't
muster that confidence, we'll be unable to lead the shift from defense
to security that must occur amid all this worldwide infrastructure/network
construction, the result being a world afraid of the inevitable "chaos"
that ensues. At that point, we'd be looking at an end-of-the-repeating-cycle,
Matrix-like collapse and globalization reboot, an outcome that answers
the prayers of only the survivalists among us, who've long preached
a return to such primitive, localized communitarianism." (pp. 419-420)
From GREAT POWERS, to be published by G. P. Putnam's on February 5, 2009.