By Eric Vandenbroeck and co-workers
The world is between orders; it is adrift. The last coherent response by
the international system to a transnational challenge came at the London summit
of the G-20 in April 2009, when in the wake of the 2008 financial crash,
leaders took steps to avert another Great Depression and stabilize the global
banking system. The subsequent international response to climate change, the
metastasizing debt crisis in developing countries, and the COVID-19 pandemic
can only be described as pathetic.
That failure stems from the fact that fewer and fewer countries,
including the ones that built the previous international order, seem committed
to maintaining it. The United States led two orders after World War II: a
Keynesian one that was not inordinately interested in how states ran their
internal affairs in a bipolar Cold War world (a socialist India, therefore,
could be the largest recipient of World Bank aid in the 1950s, 1960s, and
1970s), and, after the Cold War, a neoliberal one in a unipolar world that
ignored national sovereignty and boundaries where it needed to. Both orders
professed to be “open, rules-based, and liberal,” upholding the values of
democracy, so-called free markets, human rights, and the rule of law. In
reality, they rested on the dominance and imperatives of the U.S. military,
political, and economic power. For much of the era that followed the demise of
the Soviet Union, mosauthoritiesrs, including a
rising China, generally went along with the U.S.-led order.
Recent years suggest that this arrangement is a thing of the past.
Major powers exhibit what may be called “revisionist” behavior, pursuing thein
ends to the detriment of the international order and seeking to change the
order itself. Often, revisionism takes the shape of territorial disputes,
particularly in the Indo-Pacific: China’s friction with its neighbors India,
Japan, Vietnam, and others in maritime Asia comes to mind. Russian President
Vladimir Putin’s invasion of Ukraine was a violation of international norms and
a further rebuke to the notion that Russia could find a comfortable role within
a U.S.-led order in Europe. Revisionism also manifests in the actions of a
plethora of other powers, including the growing skepticism about free trade in
the United States, the military build-up in once-pacifist Japan, and the
rearmament of Germany. Many countries are unhappy with the world as they see it
and seek to change it to their advantage. This tendency could lead to meaner,
more contentious geopolitics and poorer global economic prospects. Coping with
a world of revisionist powers could be the defining challenge of the years
ahead.
Few of the world’s major powers are content with the international
order as it exists. As the sole global superpower, the United States is
committed to extending President Joe Biden’s domestic agenda under the rubric
of “Build Back Better World.” The program’s name indicates that the order the
United States has presided over so successfully for over half a century needs
improvement. The foreign policy establishment within the United States seems
riven by fault lines separating those who preach a modern form of isolationism
and restraint and those who have embarked on an ideological quest to divide the
world between democracies and autocracies. The United States has turned away
from international institutions it built, such as the United Nations and the
World Trade Organization. It has stepped back from its commitments to free
trade by withdrawing from agreements such as the Trans-Pacific Partnership. The
view from Washington has grown darker, with great power threats looming on the
horizon: China and Russia, which have in many ways been expelled from the
international order that sought to remake it in the image of the West.
China was the greatest beneficiary of the globalized order led by the
United States. In President Xi Jinping’s words, it now wants to “take center
stage.” Beijing explicitly seeks to rearrange the balance of power in Asia and
a greater voice for China in international affairs. But Chinese leaders have
yet to present an alternative ideology that attracts others or confers
legitimacy to their quest for dominance. Even in its immediate neighborhood,
China’s influence is contested. Major flashpoints and security dilemmas,
including the future of Taiwan and territorial disputes with India and Japan,
surround China. These disputes are a consequence of how China has disrupted the
balance of regional and global power. China’s assertive actions since 2008 make
clear that Beijing seeks to change the global order.
For its part, Russia never really fit in the global order that Western
powers tried to squeeze it into in the years immediately following the end of
the Cold War. Instead, Moscow resents its decline and reduced influence after
the collapse of the Soviet Union. The invasion of Ukraine is only the latest
expression of this sense of grievance, which leads Russia to work with China to
undermine U.S. global leadership and to try to shake up Europe, where Russian
power still matters both economically and militarily.
Russia’s invasion of Ukraine prompted German Chancellor Olaf Scholz to
announce that the world had reached a Zeitenwende or
turning point. For decades an economic powerhouse with limited political
ambitions, Germany is now taking a more assertive regional and international
role by seeking to build up its military, arm Ukraine, and reassess its
significant relationships with China and Russia. The fear of abandonment that
the Donald Trump presidency induced in U.S. allies, such as Germany and Japan,
has encouraged many of them to beef up their security capabilities.
Japan has reassessed its role in the region and the global order thanks
to China’s rise. Japan is transitioning from an economy-focused, pacifist,
noninterventionist power burdened by the legacy of World War II to a much more
normal country, looking after its security interests and taking a leading role
in the Indo-Pacific. Shinzo Abe, the recently assassinated former prime
minister, embodied and made this shift possible, which now enjoys broadening
public support. Japan’s verbal commitment to the principle of a free and open
Indo-Pacific, the Quad (the Quadrilateral Security Dialogue, a partnership with
Australia, India, and the United States), and other initiatives arise from its
fear of both China’s rise and the United States’ possible retrenchment. India,
which embraced and benefited from the U.S.-led liberal international order
after the Cold War, remains a dissatisfied member. Its quest for a permanent
seat on the UN Security Council is the most visible example of India’s desire
to have amore significantr
say in the international system, commensurate with its economic and
geopolitical weight.
Losing faith
If major powers harbor doubts about the rules-based order, weaker countries
have steadily lost faith in the legitimacy and fairness of the international
system. This is undoubtedly true of countries in the global South. They have
seen the UN, International Monetary Fund, World Bank, World Trade Organization,
G-20, and others fail to act on issues of development and, more urgently, the
debt crisis plaguing developing countries—a crisis made worse by the COVID-19
pandemic and food and energy inflation caused by the Ukraine war. According to
the IMF, over 53 countries are at risk ofseveres debt
crises.
That recent history of economic failure is compounded by the record,
just in this century, of serial invasions, interventions, attempts at regime
change, and covert interference engineered bysignificantr
powers. Russia’s invasion of Ukraine is only the most recent and egregious
example of such violations of national sovereignty, but many Western powers
have also been guilty of these actions. This behavior has led many developing
countries to feel even more insecure and to doubt the international order.
Confidence in the pillars of that system is eroding. It has been
several years since economic sanctions or military actions against particular
countries were taken to the UN Security Council or other multilateral forums
for approval. Instead, sanctions regimes and military interventions rely on the
force ofthe U.S. or Western power for their
efficacy. The fractious nature of major power relations has made international
institutions progressively less effective. With international law not
constraining the actions of the powerful, the legitimacy of these institutions
has steadily declined. Long-established norms are beginning to fray; see, for
instance, the increased likelihood of nuclear proliferation in Northeast Asia,
where Japanese leaders are more willing to discuss acquiring nuclear submarines
and the return of U.S. nuclear weapons to the region.
A dangerous world
A kind of anarchy is creeping into international relations—not anarchy
in the strict sense of the term, but rather the absence of a central organizing
principle or hegemon. No single power can dictate the terms of the current
order, and the major powers do not subscribe to a clear set of principles and
norms; it’s hard to establish the rules of the road when so many countries are
on their paths. In both word and deed, China and Russia today question major
aspects of the Western liberal order, particularly its norms relating to
universal human rights and the obligations of states. They invoke the principle
of state sovereignty as a shield to operate as they wish while seeking to set
new rules in domains such as cyberspace and new technologies. But they do not
yet offer an alternative or one that is sufficiently attractive to others.
Indeed, their treatment of their neighbors—in Ukraine, the South China Sea, the
East China Sea, and the India-China border—suggests an overwhelming reliance on
hard military and economic power to the detriment of norms and institutions.
Equally, it is misguided to see today another Cold War defined by the
sharp bipolarity of two blocs: a “free world” and a realm of “autocracies.” The
transatlantic alliance has consolidated, and China and Russia appear united ina coalitione of animus against
the West, but this is far from another Cold War. Several democracies
increasingly display the characteristics of autocratic states. The world’s
reactions to the Ukraine war and Western sanctions on Russia show no unified
bloc outside the transatlantic alliance. The economic interdependence of China
and the United States has no precedent in the Cold War when the chief
adversaries were poles apart. Besides, there is no equivalent to the
ideological alternatives posed by the Cold War rivals, the United States and
the Soviet Union; nothing like the appeal of communism and socialism to
developing countries in the 1950s and 1960s is apparent today. The prime
authoritarian, China, does not offer an ideological or systemic alternative but
attracts other countries with financial, technological, and infrastructure
promises and projects, not principles.
Instead, geopolitics grows more fractured and less cohesive. A world of
revisionists is one in which each country goes it's way. The globalized world
economy is fragmenting into regional trading blocs, partially decoupling in
high technology and finance. In the process, a more dangerous world is
emerging.
Coping mechanisms
States must learn to cope with this world of revisionist powers, a
world between orders, and prepare for an uncertain future. One solution is to
turn inward. China, India, the United States, and others have all done so in
recent years, stressing self-reliance in one form or another: China’s “dual
circulation” model, Biden’s pledge to “build back better,” and India’s
commitment under Prime Minister Narendra Modi to pursue self-reliance. At
the same time, as they want to become more economically independent, states
also want to be more militarily secure. All major powers have sought to expand
their defense and nuclear capabilities. Global defense spending crossed $2
trillion for the first time in 2021 despite the economic fallout of the
COVID-19 pandemic.
Another response to a world of revisionism is for states to forge ad
hoc coalitions. The last decade has brought a rash of plurilateral and
multilateral arrangements—including the Quad, BRICS (a partnership featuring
Brazil, Russia, India, China, and South Africa), the Shanghai Cooperation
Organization, and the I2U2 grouping featuring India, Israel, the United Arab
Emirates, and the United States. Each problem seems to birth a new acronym.
These arrangements are expedient and serve particular ends. Although they might
help tighten certain bilateral relationships, they do not come close to
resembling the more rigid alliances or blocs of the Cold War era.
Inevitably, many middling and more minor powers will straddle divides
and seek to balance their ties to more extraordinary powers. The response of
the Association of Southeast Asian Nations to growing contention between the
United States and China and the consolidation of Israel’s ties with the Sunni
monarchies in the Gulf states through the Abraham Accords are examples of this
trend. Most recently, many African, Asian, and Latin American countries with
strong ties to the West resisted joining sanctions against Russia after it
invaded Ukraine. Such balancing and hedging behavior will encourage the pursuit
of local solutions to local problems, whether in the form of regional economic
and trading arrangements or locally negotiated solutions to political disputes.
Yet action at the local level is insufficient for grappling with big
global problems. Take, for instance, the debt crisis. Sri Lanka’s debt default
and economic crisis have led the island nation to lean on neighbors within the
subcontinent, with India providing food, fuel supplies, and credit to the tune
of $3.8 billion. Major foreign lenders, including China and the West, have yet to
reschedule Sri Lanka’s debt. For years, wealthy countries have refused to act
upon calls to reschedule or cancel the debts of developing countries teetering
on the precipice of default. Nobody looks likely to offer indebted developing
countries a soft landing. More iterations of Sri Lanka’s collapse may follow.
In effect, a world of revisionists is between orders where the significant
issues of the age—uneven development, climate change, and pandemics—are not
addressed.
In limbo
As the old order disintegrates and the new one struggles to be born, the
advantage lies with states that clearly understand the balance of forces and
conceive of a future cooperative order that serves the common good.
Unfortunately, the capacities of many significant powers have diminished, and
many of their leaders exhibit little interest in foreign affairs, managing
crises, or solving global problems, precisely when widespread revisionism makes
crises more likely and dangerous. As a consequence of their contentious
domestic politics, none of the significant revisionist powers, each of which
wishes to change the international system, has a compelling vision of what that
change might be. Nor is the rapidly shifting balance of power likely to provide
the basis for a stable order for some time. Instead, the authorities will probably
muddle along from crisis to crisis as their dissatisfaction with the
international system and with one another grows, in the form of motion without
movement.
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