OPINION

Who Is Your Daddy?

November 10, 2007
Dr Bhaskar Dasgupta

Recently, I had the privilege of attending an event, which had one of the highest concentrations of international relations intellectuals that I have ever seen. The luminaries were discussing a very fundamental topic recently arising after the Iraq War fiasco, namely, “After the Unipolar Moment: How Fragile is the World Order?” As you know, the words hyperpower and unipolar world were used for the USA after the Soviet Union collapsed. But now Gulliver has been tied down and the limits of his power have been rather cruelly exposed. So what did the luminaries say and what do I think about this? Who is the world’s daddy then? 

The event was chaired by Dr. John Chipman, Director General & Chief Executive of the International Institute for Strategic Studies, London, which is one of the premier think tanks in the world in this area. Then we had Professor Sir Adam Roberts, Montague Burton Professor of International Relations, Oxford University, Dr. Edward Luttwak, Senior Advisor, Center for  Strategic and International Studies, Washington, Professor Sir Lawrence  Freedman, Professor of  War Studies and Vice-Principal (Research) Department of War Studies, King’s  College, London (he is my doctoral supervisor, so be warned!) and Professor David Calleo, University  Professor, Dean Acheson Professor and Director of European Studies  Program,  John’s  Hopkins University’s Paul H. Nitze School of Advanced International Studies,  Washington, D.C.. As one can see, I wasn’t exaggerating when I said that the lecture theatre was fronted by a huge concentration of intellectuals. 

The questions that were posed to the panel related to

(1) What is the world order?

(2) How fragile is it?

(3) Which countries take the lead in preserving order?

The world order has been defined as the group of rules, regulations, rights and institutions, etc. which all together make up the world's political system. Also, people and countries will intervene to defend this world order. One additional aspect which was brought out was that this is primarily based around the Anglo Saxon framework, where individual rights are paramount over community rights. An example of community rights is the Islamic one with a single Ummah concept, where the ideal state means all Muslims in the world are under a caliphate ruling over them all. Edward Luttwak mentioned that after the fall of Communism, even China has now bought into this concept.

As for fragility, there was agreement that the world order is pretty much okay at this moment, despite USA’s troubles in Iraq. International war has been reduced dramatically; major issues are on the way to resolution - such as the Cyprus problem, the Northern Ireland Problem, the Indo-Pakistani issue, etc. The United Nations is working reasonably well; EU is bedding down and expanding, etc. etc. Professor Michael Howard, who was also in the audience, (see? I told you it was serious mental horsepower on tap) commented that there was unparalleled prosperity, travel became easy and widely used, trade is growing rapidly and polarity is collegiate. From a long term perspective, the long term impacts of colonisation and imperialism are still working its way through the system. Some element of disorder is actually good, competition is good and political change is good, because order taken to extreme is status quo. 

There was some debate about who will get to intervene to preserve the world order. It depended upon the issue, such as Saudi Arabia taking a lead with Palestine, China with North Korea, UK in Sierra Leone, France in Ivory Coast, etc. The world is getting quite small and people are getting quite excitable about political and social issues around the world. This means that people want their governments and supranational organisations to react to political issues. But interventions are getting very dangerous and difficult. So the world is no longer US-centric unipolar as people tend to think, but it is multi-polar with India, EU, China, Russia, etc also in the picture. It goes back a long time to the empires - the British came in with their gunboat diplomacy, then the Americans, who worked with hegemony’s imposing order, culture, etc. Now it is the use of soft power along the lines of how the EU operates. Professor Freedman talked about the fact that non-state-actors, ranging from NGO’s to terrorist groups are unable to live with collegiate polarity and don’t really like it. 

So to summarise what the worthies said, the world is not unipolar, it’s not really fragile, and people will defend the world order even though intervention is difficult. Also, the idea of intervention is changing from hard military efforts to soft economic (trade) and legal (ICC, etc.) efforts. I agree with most of what was said, but I believe that there is more unipolarity than they think. I want to pick up on one point which David Calleo mentioned, but did not explore fully due to the format of the event. He said that interventions need to be judged on the basis of who wants an intervention and who can intervene. In other words, it is important for us to know who has the capability to intervene. A further point is, who is against the intervention?

At this moment, there are only very few countries who are capable of intervening in situations which are either morally driven or are very large in magnitude. For example, at this current situation with the USA and UK along with some support from NATO are all pretty much tied up in Iraq and Afghanistan. This, besides some other reasons, is why Darfur will keep on bubbling away, as nobody else has the (technical and logistics) capability to put effective troops on the ground. On the other hand, the entire Muslim and Arab world is against any interventions in Darfur. This is where the inconsistencies come out. The same groups in the USA and UK who were marching against the war in Iraq and Afghanistan and for Palestine, are now split into two. The classical liberals plumping for intervention in Darfur, but the others not wanting anything to do with it. In other words, if it is Muslims killing Muslims, it is acceptable, but not if its outsiders doing the same. So the western powers are caught in a cleft stick, their people request intervention, but the ground realities will not allow it to do a Bosnia or a Kosovo in Darfur. 

There is still the question of the logistics and technical expertise to intervene. For example, there are only very few countries which have the ability to move say a light infantry battalion of soldiers at short notice, even if we don’t talk about the availability of the soldiers. Countries such as India, France, UK, USA, Russia, possibly China are capable of doing so. Supporting them - say over one year - is also tight in terms of logistics and economic capability to do so. So in terms of polarity, I would say that the USA is still head and shoulders above other countries. Would it change in the near future? Nope! Not for the next 10-20 years or so. Welcome to interesting times, dear reader!

All this to be taken with a grain of piquant salt!

Dr. Bhaskar Dasgupta works in the city of London in various capacities in the financial sector. He has worked and travelled widely around the world. The articles in here relate to his current studies and are strictly his opinion and do not reflect the position of his past or current employer(s). If you do want to blame somebody, then blame my sister and editor, she is responsible for everything, the ideas, the writing, the quotes, the drive, the israeli-palestinian crisis, global warming, the ozone layer depletion and the argentinian debt crisis.
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Who Is Your Daddy?

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Author: Dr Bhaskar Dasgupta

 

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#1
Chandra
November 10, 2007
04:50 PM

Western domination of our planet will continue for another 50 years. After that who knows. That is a total of 500 years of domination. Not bad at all.

Watch for how the planet handles the wobbling dollar and the potential economic crisis. The outcomes are highly unpredictable.

rgds

#2
temporal
URL
November 10, 2007
05:14 PM

in the foreseeable future the ROW has to tolerate the shenanigans of the uni-power

but the behemoth is hollow

in a few decades a new geo-political structure will emerge

it may include uncle sam as a junior partner with japan and india one one side and russia, china on the other (of course this is an over-simplification)

#3
Shawn
November 11, 2007
05:22 AM

The concept of Muslims uniting under a single Caliphate is not much different than the European Union or the United States. However as for the Caliphate it will not be a state for the Capitalists to continue to EXPLIOT the worlds masses. The Caliphate will as history has shown over its 1300 years prior to be destroying by the Colonilaists as providing full support and justice to all minorities.

If people would open there minds to study Islam rather than basing seminars on assumptions and stereotypes, it would provide the world a long awaited alternative sooner rather than later.

Thanks

asilentworld AT gmail com

#4
Anamika
November 11, 2007
07:26 AM

Good god BD, a Kings man? :-)
Chris Patton (former HK governor)talked recently of the anxiety in the western world about the power shift (HT I think). He didn't go nearly far enough of course but there was clear acceptance that US hegemony is at end. Interestingly David Cameron's least reported statement was made in India when he talked of how UK had a "special" relationship over the past sixty years with the US but it was time to rethink that and establish a "special" relationship with India (it may still be on his India blog).

Personally, I believe that UK is more likely to find its feet in the evolving order. It has ample experience of relying on soft power -even its empire was built primarily albeit not exclusively on this. And there is a far more practical acceptance of political reverses. But quite a few other countries - France, Germany and most of all US will (are) struggle.

At the same time, I think the USA's decline is the most problematic of all. The political culture there will mean that this particular empire will crumble with a great deal of noise and fury - not good for anyone in the world.

SHAWN: I suggest you read the history of the Caliphate. There is no indication that for 1300 years, there WAS a single caliphate for all Muslims or that it was in any way equitable. If the Caliphate had been just (or indeed widely acceptable) there wouldn't be rivalries between gulf Arabs and Levant Arabs, Egyptians and Syrians, and there would definitely not be the long litany of injustice and horrors (like ANY other political empire) in the "Muslim" lands perpetrated by the "Caliph."

#5
bd
URL
November 11, 2007
08:52 AM

Anamika, yes indeed, a Kings Man personified, lol.

Well, medium level powers always found it easier to be flexible with changing circumstances. Compare that with the LARGE thuds heard when the USSR collapsed, or when the Ottoman Empire, the Chinese, etc. etc. collapsed. Not that America is going to do so, but yes, I do agree with you that there is going to be a lot of heat and fire.

Mind you, it took 30 years before UK finally became accustomed to being a medium scale power, and that's after the best victory after WW2, Falklands. Now they cannot replicate Falklands.

Shawn's comment was interesting! :)

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