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War, War, War See other War, War, War Articles Title: American Decline: What the Foreign Policy Elite Really Fear There is a fixation in elite foreign policy circles these days to speculate on the impending decline of Americas global economic and military hegemony and to lament that decline as the dangerous end to international order. Without global American dominance, goes the thinking, lawless competition and chaos will rule. Former Carter administration national security advisor Zbigniew Brzezinskis latest book Strategic Vision goes through this lament. He worries that, absent U.S. hegemony, regional powers will be less restrained. Russia will bully tiny Caucasian states like Georgia; China will bully Taiwan; North Korea will threaten South Korea; diminished unilateral support for Israel would destabilize the Middle East; et cetera. Thomas P.M. Barnett in World Politics Review takes a look at Ian Bremmers forthcoming book Every Nation for Itself, another lament of American decline. Post-hegemony, states will be superseded by a generalized anarchy in an era [that] begets a free for all and witnesses Asias rise, or even more ominously, Chinas rise. Bremmer fears a world without the global leadership of America to keep the peace. Indeed, this is the most interesting insight I drew from Bremmers book: The real danger of a G-Zero world is not the accelerated decline of the West but the unbridled and unpoliced appetites of the East. As Bremmer points out repeatedly, Western states need not fear a world of regions, his term for an era of pronounced regionalism. By and large, their national structures are more than robust for that scenario. But if its regionalism run amuck, the clash of civilizations most unlikely to unfold is not East versus West or West versus South, but East versus South without a West as referee. To buy into this is to have very little ability to self-criticize. This line of thinking assumes that the West, and America specifically, has acted like an impartial referee over the international system, which is really an absurd suggestion. What people like Brzezinski and Bremmer and Barnett really fear is not that the Benevolent Empire and the global order it preserves will be no more. Rather, the fear is that the selfish, unscrupulous, hypocritical, coercive disposition of other states will prevail instead of the U.S. governments selfish, unscrupulous, hypocritical, coercive behavior. Other states will get to do the horrible things that only weve been able to do for decades. Overthrowing governments that threaten the states supremacy, supporting the worlds worst dictators, committing the supreme international crime of unprovoked war, military bases spanning the globe
these things will no longer be solely American prerogatives. The concern over decline, writes Nikolas Gvosdev, is not that the U.S. is about to stop being a superpower; it is that future likely adversaries are not going to be the pushovers the U.S. has gotten used to for the past 20 years. Daniel Larison comments: What doesnt make much sense about anti-declinist fearmongering along these lines is that relative decline isnt something that the U.S. can avoid by making certain policy choices rather than others. Its certainly possible to sap and exhaust U.S. resources in the fruitless quest to reclaim an unsustainable position. We have spent the last decade doing just that. The U.S. can react to a multipolar world by demonizing and vilifying other major powers and by punishing them when they fail to fall in line on every international issue, which seems to be the preferred response of the most vocal anti-declinist presidential candidate, or it can attempt to find common interests with these other powers. The latter seems advisable, not least because a multipolar world is one in which the demands on and costs to the U.S. are fewer. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest
#1. To: F.A. Hayek Fan (#0)
It's the international jiz-bankers hegemony that they fear losing.
Break the Conventions - Keep the Commandments - G.K.Chesterson |
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