Learning to Love a
Multipolar World
www.project-syndicate.org January 14, 2017
NEW YORK – American foreign policy is at a
crossroads. The United States has been an expanding power since its start in
1789. It battled its way across North America in the nineteenth century and
gained global dominance in the second half of the twentieth. But now, facing
China’s rise, India’s dynamism, Africa’s soaring populations and economic
stirrings, Russia’s refusal to bend to its will, its own inability to control
events in the Middle East, and Latin America’s determination to be free of its de
facto hegemony, US power has reached its limits.
One path for the US is global cooperation. The
other is a burst of militarism in response to frustrated ambitions. The future
of the US, and of the world, hangs on this choice.
Global cooperation is doubly vital. Only
cooperation can deliver peace and the escape from a useless, dangerous, and
ultimately bankrupting new arms race, this time including cyber-weapons, space
weapons, and next-generation nuclear weapons. And only cooperation can enable
humanity to face up to urgent planetary challenges, including the destruction
of biodiversity, the poisoning of the oceans, and the threat posed by global
warming to the world’s food supply, vast drylands, and heavily populated
coastal regions.
Yet global cooperation means the willingness to
reach agreements with other countries, not simply to make unilateral demands of
them. And the US is in the habit of making demands, not making compromises.
When a state feels destined to rule – as with ancient Rome, the Chinese “Middle
Kingdom” centuries ago, the British Empire from 1750 to 1950, and the US since
World War II – compromise is hardly a part of its political vocabulary. As
former US President George W. Bush succinctly put it, “You’re either with us or against us.”
Not surprisingly, then, the US is finding it hard
to accept the clear global limits that it is confronting. In the wake of the
Cold War, Russia was supposed to fall in line; but President Vladimir Putin did
not oblige. Likewise, rather than bringing stability on US terms, America’s
covert and overt wars in Afghanistan, Iraq, Syria, Libya, South Sudan, and
elsewhere created a firestorm stretching across the greater Middle East.
China was supposed to show gratitude and deference
to the US for the right to catch up from 150 years of abuse by Western imperial
powers and Japan. Instead, China has the audacity to think that it is an Asian
power with responsibilities of its own.
There is a fundamental reason, of course, for these
limits. At WWII’s end, the US was the only major power not destroyed by the
war. It led the world in science, technology, and infrastructure. It
constituted perhaps 30% of the world economy and formed the cutting edge of
every high-tech sector. It organized the postwar international order: the
United Nations, the Bretton Woods institutions, the Marshall Plan, the
reconstruction of Japan, and more.
Under that order, the rest of the world has closed
much of the vast technological, educational, and infrastructural gap with the
US. As economists say, global growth has been “convergent,” meaning that poorer
countries have been catching up. The share of the world economy represented by
the US has declined by roughly half (to around 16% currently). China now has a
larger economy in absolute terms than the US, though still only around
one-fourth the size in per capita terms.
None of this catching up was a perfidious trick
against the US or at its expense. It was a matter of basic economics: given
peace, trade, and a global flow of ideas, poorer countries can get ahead. This
tendency is to be welcomed, not shunned.
But if the global leader’s mindset is one of
domination, the results of catch-up growth will look threatening, which is how
many US “security strategists” view them. Suddenly, open trade, long championed
by the US, looks like a dire threat to its continued dominance. Fear-mongers
are calling for the US to close itself off to Chinese goods and Chinese
companies, claiming that global trade itself undermines American supremacy.
My former Harvard colleague and leading US diplomat
Robert Blackwill and former State Department adviser Ashley Tellis expressed
their unease in a report published
last year. The US has consistently pursued a grand strategy “focused on
acquiring and maintaining preeminent power over various rivals,” they wrote,
and “primacy ought to remain the central objective of US grand strategy in the
twenty-first century.” But “China’s rise thus far has already bred
geopolitical, military, economic, and ideological challenges to US power, US
allies, and the US-dominated international order,” Blackwill and Tellis noted.
“Its continued, even if uneven, success in the future would further undermine
US national interests.”
US President-elect Donald Trump’s newly named trade
adviser Peter Navarro agrees. “Whenever we buy products made in China,” he wrote last year of the US and its allies, “we as
consumers are helping to finance a Chinese military buildup that may well mean
to do us and our countries harm.”
With just 4.4% of the world’s population and a falling share of
world output, the US might try to hang on to its delusion of global dominance
through a new arms race and protectionist trade policies. Doing so would unite
the world against US arrogance and the new US military threat. The US would
sooner rather than later bankrupt itself in a classic case of “imperial
overreach.”
The only sane
way forward for the US is vigorous and open global cooperation to realize the potential
of twenty-first-century science and technology to slash poverty, disease, and
environmental threats. A multipolar world can be stable, prosperous, and
secure. The rise of many regional powers is not a threat to the US, but an
opportunity for a new era of prosperity and constructive problem solving.
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