Henry
Kissinger’s most recent book was called, very simply, World Order. The
title may be taken as ironic, for at present, Kissinger said, there is no such
thing. “Our age is insistently, at times almost desperately, in pursuit of a
concept of world order,” and unless the major powers, the United States and
China in particular, but not them alone, manage to reach a new kind of
accommodation about their roles on the global stage, “chaos threatens.” The
outlines of that accommodation are not yet clear, and will require all the
ingenuity and imagination of which statesmen are capable. But of one thing
Kissinger was quite certain: “No single country, neither China nor the United
States, is in a position to fill by itself the world leadership role of the
sort that the United States occupied in the immediate post–Cold War period.”
Millions of Americans and, it would seem, the majority of our
politicians have not yet gotten the message, perhaps with reason. There is an
understandable nostalgia for the postwar period of American supremacy—military,
economic, political, cultural—and it is easy to overlook the artificiality of that
supremacy, based, as it was, on the fact that the rest of the world lay in
ruins. Complacency was possible at the time because American values seemed to
be striking roots worldwide. Liberal economics, democratic politics, human
rights and respect for the individual undergirded the system. The United States
had achieved an extraordinary congruence: its national interests and values
aligned perfectly with the movement of history. Everyone was becoming American.
The British may have done more to elaborate that indisputably indigenous
American art form, rock and roll, but it didn’t matter because rock and roll
was here to stay.
The Golden Age, or what the French called “les trentes glorieuses,”
was never as golden, nor as glorieuse, as it appears today—golden ages
never are. In 1962, the two superpowers came within a hair’s breadth of blowing
the world up. Anticommunism was always the flipside of the American credo, the
team’s defense, inextricably entwined with its liberal offense. But it
contained gnawing contradictions. The “free world” included states like Saudi
Arabia, Pakistan and Iran, even though there was nothing free or liberal about
them; Turkey, forever teetering between military dictatorship and enfeebled
democracy, was a member in good standing of NATO. There were usually sound
strategic reasons for these marriages of convenience, but they could never
escape the whiff of hypocrisy, and from the perspective of America’s liberal
world order, they were intellectually untenable. Rationalizations were
necessary, usually featuring the argument that with enlightened American
encouragement the anticommunist dictatorships were “evolving” in the direction
of the West. After all, having rejected the lure of Marxism, they had nowhere
else to go.
The collapse of the Soviet Union, and the crises that have ensued, have
made it clear that in fact there were many other places to go. When empires
fall and political legitimacy is called into question, the results are often
bloody. Millions died as the British, French, Ottoman and Austro-Hungarian
regimes yielded their authority for the sake of freedom and
self-determination—the freedom to kill one’s neighbors, the self-determination
to promote one’s own group or nationality over that of others. Almost
miraculously, the Soviet Union imploded with a minimum of mayhem. The Czechs
and the Slovaks went their own ways with little fuss, although the breakup of
Yugoslavia, a consequence of the Soviet breakup, brought familiar scenes of
ethnic cleansing and tribal massacre; the Chechens have not gone quietly into
the night; and the world holds its breath over the outcome of the Ukrainian
crisis. Devolution is rarely pretty.
As for the dominance of the United States, it has always been a mistake
to speak of “American imperialism” in the same way that one speaks of Russian
or British imperialism. And yet the end of anticommunism as a meaningful force
in international affairs has diminished Washington’s global influence, with
consequences much like those that followed the collapse of the more traditional
empires. The liberal ethos that has been the foundation of American primacy is
proving to be a weak barricade against national, ethnic or religious identity,
even deep within the Western alliance. Democracy provides no answer when tribal
animosities take hold and groups are pitted against groups. The horrors of
Africa and the Middle East are one result of the force of devolution, but so
too is the more benign Brexit vote. Belgium may split in two, Scotland may gain
independence and so may Catalonia—or God knows what other neglected pockets of
European discontent. In regions where political institutions are less stable,
Syria may not be the future, but it could be a future.
All of which is to say that American primacy, as we know it, is dead.
Those who seek its restoration by doubling down in their support of “democrats”
in trouble spots around the world are chasing a mirage, as are those who
promise to make America great again by . . . whatever. America was
great. It remains great. But it will never have the authority or power that it
enjoyed following the Second World War, and Washington would be wise to husband
the power it does have. To borrow a formula from Hans Morgenthau, America’s
policymakers must learn to distinguish, first, between what is essential in
foreign affairs and what is desirable, and, second, between what is desirable
and what is possible. What is essential is for the United States to find ways
to coexist with other great powers—Russia and China at the present time;
possibly India, Indonesia, Japan and Brazil in the future—and that means
understanding that those countries have national interests of their own that one
ignores at one’s peril, even when they clash with American values. To view
compromise and accommodation as diminutions of power while invoking images of
Munich is a dangerous exercise.
To try to slow the tide of devolution, meanwhile, may be desirable—it is
surely not in the national interest to sit passively by as the European Union
disintegrates—but it may not be possible, since it is not clear what can be
done to oppose demands for self-determination. In some cases, devolution might
not make much difference: Is anyone in Washington losing sleep over the
possibility of Scottish independence? In other cases, defining the desirable is
not easy: Are American interests best served by supporting the creation of a
Kurdish state, opposing it or promoting a solution somewhere in between?
From a longer perspective, however, the growing demand for
self-determination and independence can be viewed only with suspicion and
anxiety. The more states, statelets and autonomous regions there are in the
world, the greater the prospects for instability and conflict. Israel offers a
valuable lesson here. Surrounded by hostile and irredentist neighbors, it has
taken whatever steps it thinks necessary to insure its security, and its
existential ace in the hole is its nuclear deterrent. Other newly created
states will find themselves in similar situations, and we should make no
mistake: self-determination is a recipe for nuclear proliferation. It is
probably only a lack of technological knowhow that prevents South Sudan or
Eritrea from building nuclear weapons—and that will change. As a general
policy, therefore, it is desirable to discourage devolution, and it may even be
essential at times. The problem is that it doesn’t seem to be possible.
Barry Gewen is an editor at the New York Times Book Review
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