What
Sort of World Are We Headed for?
The liberal world order
never really existed. Great-power politics are here to stay.
OCTOBER 2, 2018
Lately, international relations hands such as Patrick Porter, Graham Allison,Thomas Wright, Robert Kagan, Rebecca Lissner, Mira
Rapp-Hooper, yours truly, and a host of
others have been caught up in a lively discussion about the current world
order. Much of the debate has centered around whether that order was, is, or
will be “liberal.” IR theory mavens out there could spend several days sifting
through the various contributions and pondering who makes the better case. But
to be honest, I’m not entirely convinced it would be worth your time.
Why? Well, for starters, I’ve never fully
understood what “world order” means. Plenty of authors use the term—the
statesman Henry Kissinger even wrote a fat doorstop of a bookwith that
ponderous title—and I confess that I’ve used it myself on occasion. Yet it
remains a vague and fuzzy concept on which there is little consensus.
Is “world order” merely the configuration of power in
the world? And if so, how is power being defined?
Is it the distribution of power plus whatever
system of formal or informal rules and norms the strongest states devise and
enforce, except for those occasions when they decide to ignore or rewrite them?
Is the term meant to signify a more or less predictable pattern of behavior
among key global actors, where the observer gets to decide which players and
behaviors matter most, or is it just a lazy catchall term pundits use to refer
to a particular international system at a particular point in time?
If nobody really knows what “world order”
actually means, let’s lower our sights a little. Instead of trying to figure
out what the—portentous drum roll—“world order” is, we could just try to
anticipate what the central features of global politics are likely to be in a
few years’ time. In other words, if somebody asked you to describe the main
features of world politics in 2025, what would you tell them?
As it happens, someone did
ask me that question recently. My answer focused primarily on the implications
for the United States, but for what it’s worth, here’s what I said.
Overall, the world of 2025 will be one of
“lopsided multipolarity.” Today’s order isn’t a liberal one (a number of key
actors reject liberal ideals), and 2025’s won’t be either. The United States
will still be the single most consequential actor on the planet, because no
other country will possess the same combination of economic clout,
technological sophistication, military might, territorial security, and
favorable demography. But its margin of superiority will be smaller than it
used to be, and the country will still face long-term fiscal problems and deep
political divisions. China will be the world’s No. 2 power (and it will exceed
the United States on some dimensions), followed by a number of other major
players (Germany, Japan, India, Russia, and so on), all of them considerably
weaker than the two leading states.
In this system, the United States will
need to be more selective in making commitments and using its power abroad. It
will not revert to isolationism, but the hubristic desire to remake the world,
which characterized the unipolar era, was fading long before Donald Trump
became U.S. president. It is not coming back, no matter how many nostalgic
neoconservatives try to rescue it.
As is already clear, U.S.
foreign and defense policy will focus mainly on countering China. In addition
to trying to slow China’s efforts to gain an advantage in a number of emerging
technologies, the United States will also seek to prevent Beijing from
establishing a dominant position in Asia. In practice, this will mean maintaining,
deepening, and if possible expanding America’s alliance ties there, even as
China tries to push the United States out and bring its neighbors into its own
loose sphere of influence. Maintaining the United States’ position in Asia will
not be easy, because the distances are vast, America’s Asian allies want
to preserve their current economic ties with China, and some of those allies
don’t like each other very much. Holding this coalition together will require
deft U.S. diplomacy, which has been in short supply of late, and success is by
no means certain. But neither is failure, because China will face accumulating
problems of its own, including that most of its neighbors do
not want Beijing to dominate the region.
But as realists have been warning for
more than 15 years, the emerging rivalry between the United States and China
will be the single most important feature of world politics for at least the
next decade and probably well beyond that.
By contrast, no country presently
threatens to dominate Europe. For this reason, the U.S. role there will
continue to decline (as it has since the end of the Cold War). Despite alarmist
fears about a resurgent Russia, it is too weak to pose the same threat to
Europe as the bad old Soviet Union. The case for a major U.S. commitment to the
region is therefore much weaker than it was during the Cold War. Europe has a
combined population in excess of 500 million people, whereas Russia’s
population is roughly 140 million, is aging rapidly, and is destined to shrink
in the near future. Europe’s combined economy is about $17 trillion—Germany’s
alone is about $3.5 trillion—and Russia’s is worth less than $2 trillion. Most telling of all, NATO’s European
members spend three to four times what Russia does on defense every year. They don’t spend it very effectively, but
what Europe needs is defense reform, not open-ended U.S. subsidies. And the
real problems Europe faces—such as defending its borders against unregulated
immigration—are not things the United States can solve for it.
Moreover, Europe and NATO simply won’t
have much of a role to play as Washington focuses more and more on Asia.
European countries will not want to give up profitable economic ties with China
and will be neither willing nor able to do much to balance Beijing. If
Sino-American competition heats up, as I expect it to, this issue will be
another point of friction between the United States and its European partners.
Trump could accelerate this process by continuing to bash Europe on trade and
by foolishly imposing secondary sanctions on European states that are trying to
keep the Iran nuclear deal alive, but even if he doesn’t, the slow devolution
of trans-Atlantic relations will continue. There’s nothing surprising or tragic
about this, by the way; it is simply the gradual but inevitable consequence of
the collapse of the Soviet Union and the rise of Asia.
As for Europe itself, it will continue to
punch below its weight. The EU project remains deeply troubled, the outcome of
the Brexit process is uncertain, economic growth on the continent is uneven,
and extremist parties are flourishing in several countries. The EU has become
too large and heterogeneous to make rapid and bold decisions, and it faces
opposition from illiberal and xenophobic elements within. Given the millions of
young people in Africa and the Middle East who face dim economic prospects at
home and will keep trying to migrate elsewhere, the refugee issue, which has
convulsed domestic politics throughout Europe, is not going away.
Look to Europe to be
looking inward for quite some time.
There is, however, one wild card for the
continent, which also involves the United States. That wild card is the
possibility of detente—or even rapprochement—with Russia. After all, it would
be in Europe’s interest if Russian interference in Ukraine diminished, its
meddling in European politics ended, and the potential threat to the Balkans
declined. It would be in Russia’s interest if sanctions were lifted and if
Moscow no longer worried about the EU or NATO moving farther east. And it would
be in the United States’ interest to wean Russia away from its growing
relationship with China and to avoid further commitments to countries that are
neither vital interests nor easy to defend. The two giants are not natural
allies, and one suspects that Russian President Vladimir Putin likes being
Chinese leader Xi Jinping’s junior partner about as much as Mao liked being
Khrushchev’s.
Here we have the raw material for a mutually
beneficial deal, and it’s possible that Trump wanted to play nice with Russia
not because Putin has something on him but because it makes sound geopolitical
sense. But Trump and his minions’ tangled dealings—and their inability to tell
a straight story about them—have left the U.S. president compromised and unable
to do much on this front. A strategic breakthrough with Russia will have to
wait for a second term or a new president (whichever comes first).
As for the Middle East, it will remain a boiling
cauldron for many years to come. In addition to facing its own
demographic challenges, the region is now divided along multiple
dimensions: Sunni vs. Shiite, Arab vs. Persian, Saudis vs. Qataris, Israel vs.
Palestinians, Kurds vs. Turks, jihadis vs. everyone (and each other)—the list
goes on. Plus, there are now deeply dysfunctional states (or no state at all)
in Iraq, Libya, Syria, and Yemen, with outside powers meddling in each.
different countries, but it kept its own
military presence to a minimum. Instead, it relied on other states or local
allies to uphold the regional balance of power. That policy shifted with
Operation Desert Storm in 1990 and the adoption of “dual containment” in 1993,
and even more so with the invasion of Iraq in 2003 and the ill-fated attempt at
regional transformation that followed. Die-hard neoconservatives may not have
learned the right lesson from that debacle, but the rest of the country did.
Looking ahead, the United States will continue to draw down its military
presence—as it is already doing today. It will rely instead on local clients, backed up by U.S.
airpower, drones, or special forces when absolutely necessary. But barring a
major threat to the regional balance of power, the U.S. presence in the Middle
East will continue to decline, no matter who sits in the Oval Office. And
that tendency will accelerate if the world begins to rely less on fossil fuels,
thereby reducing the region’s overall strategic importance.
It is a mistake, by the way, to call this
shift a “retreat,”
a loaded word that implies a cowardly loss of will or purpose. Whether in
Europe or the Middle East, it is more accurate to describe this broader trend
as a sensible, hard-headed realignment of interests and commitments after a
period of overextension, and thus as a rational response to the emerging
configuration of power.
What sort of world order (oops, there’s that term again!) am I
depicting? A messy one, to be sure. I’ve left a lot out—climate change,
cybersecurity in all its manifestations, artificial intelligence, most of
Africa, and Latin America—along with various black swans that are easy to
imagine. But at the risk of seeming old-fashioned, I’d argue that none of these
features will alter the basic nature of world politics. Then-U.S.
presidential candidate Bill Clinton once said that “the cynical calculus of
pure power politics … is ill-suited to a new era,” and then-Secretary of State
John Kerry criticized Russia’s seizure of Crimea by saying, “You just don’t in
the 21st century behave in 19th-century fashion.” Alas, they were
wrong, as countless optimists have been in the past. Great power politics is
alive and well, and that means we are headed toward a world of competition and suspicion,
where cooperation continues but is always delicate and leaders’ follies often
result in unnecessary suffering. Or, to be more precise: into a world we never
really left.
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