| WORLD
POLICY JOURNAL
ARTICLE
EXTRACTS: Volume XVII, No 4, WINTER 2000/01
The
Rusty Tools of Peace
Brian Urquhart
For the moment,
the threat of nuclear war has mercifully abated, the jousting of
superpowers has receded, and the world has more international machinery
for keeping the peace than ever before. Yet ironically, not since
the Second World War has violence been more widespread, and international
institutions and regional coalitions less able to control it. Wars
between sovereign states no longer account for most of the global
crop of violence. Ethnic, religious, or other conflicts within national
borders are now the typical scourges. The global arms trade, of
which more than 80 percent emanates from the five permanent members
of the United Nations Security Council, feeds much of the mayhem.
We need to
recall that existing global and regional organizations were not
set up to deal with such situations. They were intended to prevent
aggression between states, and to promote international harmony
and prosperity. To deal with violence within national borders, multinational
organizations have had to improvise, and for a variety of reasons
sovereign states have been reluctant to systematize such activities.
The concept
of national sovereignty remains far stronger in the political sphere
than in any other area of international activity: financial, cultural,
communications, environmental, or scientific. The idea of collective
intervention, humanitarian or otherwise, is, in the abstract at
least, repellent to many governments. There is a good deal of confused
thinking, indeed humbug, about this question. To cite only one example:
the failure to act during the Rwanda genocide in 1994 is now universally
deplored, but who would have supported the U.N. secretary general
had he proposed strong action when the first warnings of the planned
massacres were received, some four months before the genocide actually
started? Such a proposal would almost certainly have been generally
opposed as a violation of the sovereignty of a U.N. member (Rwanda
was actually a member of the Security Council at the time), and
therefore as a dangerous precedent. The strong opposition to Secretary
General Kofi Annan's ideas about intervention in cases of gross
violations of human rights makes one wonder, in spite of the after-the-fact
criticism of the U.N. failure in Rwanda, what the world really learned
from that catastrophe.
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Europe:
Superstate or Superpower?
Martin Walker
Tony Blair,
the most enthusiastically European of British prime ministers since
the Conservative premier Edward Heath who took Britain into the
European Economic Community almost 30 years ago, has devised the
new vogue phrase that captures Europe's somewhat ambivalent ambition.
Speaking to the Warsaw Stock Exchange in October, a venue which
itself illuminates the transformations that old continent has undergone
since the end of the Cold War, Blair said that he saw Europe as
"a superpower, not a superstate." The phrase has since been widely
echoed across Europe, notably by the former Italian premier Romano
Prodi, who currently presides over the European Commission in Brussels,
the institution that sees itself as the custodian of the European
project.
The European
Union (EU), in terms of the combined wealth of its constituent member
states, has been an economic superpower for decades. Its current
total population of 376 million slightly out-produces the 275 million
Americans in total GDP. But it has long chosen to be a military
pygmy and a political dwarf, content to leave its security to NATO
and American leadership. That curious combination of wealth without
power is now being reconsidered, and a European superpower is beginning
to take uneasy and so far ungainly shape.
The process
is sporadic, and far from guaranteed of success. But its implications
are compelling for Europeans, for the current lone superpower of
the United States, and for Europe's neighbors in Russia, the Middle
East, and North Africa. In the course of the twentieth century,
the world gained two new great powers and lost several more. The
former nation-state powers of Europe declined with defeat and the
shedding of their colonial empires. The old power of Russia assumed
monstrous shape under Soviet rule and has sunk into what will be
a long, if temporary, eclipse. Japan could not long sustain its
great-power status and now emulates what Europe used to be, a lopsided
(and currently stumbling) economic giant with atrophied limbs where
its military prowess and strategic pretensions once flourished.
The two new regional powers of China and India are already forces
to be reckoned with in the global equation.
But the prospect
of a European superpower is fundamentally and qualitatively different.
Europe's combination of wealth and high technology, and its prominent
role in global trade and finance, puts it at least potentially into
the category now occupied by the United States alone.
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Tumbling
Onto a Wider Stage: Europe and the Outcome of the Italian Elections
Mark Gilbert
Italian politics
can seem like a never-ending opera buffa in which governments
rise dramatically and fall ignominiously. The show is diverting
to the international audience, but nobody takes it seriously, and
the governments leave little of substance behind.
Dismissing
Italian politics as mere melodrama has never exactly been sensible.
Throughout the postwar years, Italy was a crucial ideological battleground
for the democratic world. When the 50-year rule of the Christian
Democrats came to an end at the beginning of the 1990s, the country
nearly went belly-up economically. The wildly fluctuating lira and
the gigantic Italian national debt posed major problems for the
economies of Italy's European partners.
A decade of
austerity by technocratic and center-left governments has bludgeoned
Italy's public finances into somewhat better order. But financial
rigor is rarely popular with the voters. This spring, it seems probable
that Italy will choose a right-wing coalition headed by the media
mogul Silvio Berlusconi to be its new government. The coalition,
in addition to Berlusconi's Forza Italia, contains the "post-fascist"
National Alliance and the xenophobic and virulently anti-American
Northern League. Its main platform planks are hostility to immigration
and tax cuts.
In neighboring
Austria a year ago, Jýrg Haider's far-right Freedom Party won a
quarter of the vote and a place in the national government. Diplomatic
sanctions from mainstream governments elsewhere in Europe followed,
but Austria's government held its ground and the European Union
(EU) was obliged to back down. How will Europe respond to the spectacle
of the far-right in power in Rome? Italy is not Austria. It is a
$1.4 trillion economy whose public finances are still shaky and
whose position at the heart of the Mediterranean makes it central
to NATO strategy. Germany, which was strenuously opposed to Italian
participation in the euro for much of the 1990s, and whose government
holds no brief for extremists of the Haider kind, is rumored to
be aghast at the prospect of a swing to the right in Italy.
Are such fears
justified? It appears that policymakers in other Western governments
are right to worry about political developments in Rome. All of
a sudden, Italian politics seems less divertente, and an
awareness that the rest of Europe is not a spectator, but a participant
in the Italian melodrama, is beginning to grow.
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The
New Struggle in Central Asia: A Primer for the Baffled
Ahmed Rashid
Central Asia
today is a still-uncharted battleground for world powers competing
for its vast oil, gas, and mineral resources. Their ambitions collide
with those of Islamic fundamentalists who see the region as fertile
territory for new holy wars, and with leaders of a hundred or more
ethnic groups striving to carve out new fiefdoms. All competitors
confront entrenched ruling elites, mostly holdovers from the Soviet
era, now bent on clinging to power by crushing all dissent and opposition.
The outcome of this contest is of immense importance to the future
stability of the Asian heartland, as well as to neighboring Russia,
China, Iran, and South Asia.
The recent
successes of the extremist Taliban movement in Afghanistan have
led to a wave of panic in Central Asia. Yet seen from afar, an understanding
of the tangled geopolitics of this region, a replay of the Great
Game, the nineteenth-century rivalry between Tsarist Russia and
Great Britain, still remains the province of experts rather than
the general reader. Untangling Central Asia and providing a primer
for the baffled is what this essay attempts to do.
Generalizations
about this diverse region are difficult. But it can be credibly
said that Central Asia's problems are primarily internal. In all
its states, the lack of genuine economic reform or real development,
the persistent centralized controls of a Soviet-minded bureaucracy,
and the growing cancer of corruption and public cynicism have made
its governments increasingly fragile. None of the Central Asian
states can claim even a modicum of democracy or a relatively open
society. State controls over its people's private lives remain almost
as suffocating as they were under communism. Moreover, the ruling
elites, with their jealousies and rivalries rooted in the Communist
past, have been unable to unite to form a common Central Asian market
that could jointly improve their economies and shared security.
No Central
Asian state has had a change of leadership since the Communist era
ended in 1991, and none are prepared to deal with the obvious issue
of readying for a transition to a new generation of leaders. This
is an increasingly pressing challenge, since more than 60 percent
the region's 50 million people are under the age of 20-a generation
restlessly pressing for change that is unlikely to tolerate a continued
decline in living standards and lack of rudimentary freedoms. A
social and political explosion seems inescapable unless the demands
of the young are addressed. Finally, religion remains an intensely
combustible issue.
By refusing
to accommodate traditional Islam, or to acknowledge the role of
Sufism or the liberal Jadids and other traditionally moderate forms
of Islam, or to help people rediscover or revive their Islamic heritage,
the governments of the region are only fueling the fires of extremism.
There is a palpable cultural vacuum at the heart of Central Asia,
which cannot be filled with consumerism or imitations of Western
culture. By ignoring a heritage that in the past has given much
to the Islamic world, Central Asia's rulers are unable to justify
their acts of repression and omission, or to give their people the
modern but rooted identity that they so badly need. While denigrating
Islam, the postcommunist elites have been unable or too frightened
to nurture a vibrant multiethnic nationalism.
Today, Islamic
militants are recruiting dissidents from all Central Asian ethnic
groups, and from among the Muslim Uighurs in China as well, and
they are swiftly becoming a transnational group with support across
the region. These insurgents fund their military operations through
the narcotics and weapons trade from Afghanistan, with support from
the Saudi terrorist Osama bin Laden, the Taliban movement, and Pakistan's
Islamic parties. The rise of these guerrillas suggests all too compellingly
how the authoritarian and antidemocratic nature of the Central Asian
regimes is driving the opposition into extremist positions. If change
does not come quickly from within Central Asia, explosive uprisings
will overwhelm these states and plunge the region into chaos.
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Love
My Nanny: Singapore's Tongue-tied Populace
Joshua Kurlantzick
Modeled on
its prototype in London's Hyde Park, Singapore's heavily publicized
new Speakers Corner opened for business last September. More than
100 local and foreign journalists thronged to Hong Lim Park to watch
the landmark event. In this tiny Southeast Asian island country,
where public speeches to more than five persons had long been prohibited,
and where opposition politician Chee Soon Juan was jailed for attempting
such a speech a year before, the government was now permitting citizens
to assemble to speak and be heard. It seemed a significant change.
Yet, so far
Speakers Corner has hardly become a forum for spirited political
dialogue. On an average day in the park, an elderly man clambered
atop his soapbox and railed at length-about how loudly a neighbor
played his music. The spectators chatted among themselves and paid
the speakers little heed. When the human rights activist James Gomez
challenged the audience to debate, to ask questions, there was scarcely
a ripple; several young Singaporeans asked Gomez if, under the law,
they were allowed to pose questions.
The Speakers
Corner experience is instructive: despite predictions that the city-state's
prosperity would foster political consciousness, it appears unlikely
that real change in this direction is in Singapore's near future.
The experiment does show that the government, dominated by the People's
Action Party (PAP), realizes that Singapore must become somewhat
freer and more innovative if it is to continue its heady run of
economic growth. Like most instances of political change in Singapore,
Speakers Corner was initiated by senior leaders (in response to
pressures brought to bear by nongovernmental groups) and directed
by high-level policymakers. The restrictions placed on speakers
by the regime are an example of the familiar tactic of allowing
limited liberalization while retaining tight control.
The tepid popular
response suggests that, for the time being, most of Singapore's
4 million people are either satisfied with the authoritarian government's
performance or have been ensconced in the island's self-censoring,
conformist cocoon for so long that they are incapable of change.
There are a few signs of growing political awareness. The Internet
has given rise to political discussion groups and satirical online
magazines that poke fun at the PAP, and some controls on free expression
have been lifted.
But unlike
Spain in the 1970s, where an elite-led democratic transition was
embraced by the populace, Singapore seems locked in place: the ruling
party will only budge so far, and most Singaporeans are not ready
to push. Contrary to recent reports of a "new Singapore," it may
take years before the most important determinant of political dominance,
control of Parliament, is either ceded by or taken from the PAP.
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A
Jewish Affair
The Jewish State: The Struggle for Israel's Soul, by Yoram
Hazony
Dov Waxman
To many observers,
the recent wave of violence in the West Bank and Gaza, and within
Israel proper, was an abrupt and shocking occurrence that shattered
the relative calm that had descended upon the region in recent years.
Until the sudden outbreak of the "al-Asqa Intifada," peace finally
appeared to be coming to a region long torn asunder by conflict
and hatred. Israel, it seemed, was at last finding security, its
existence assured through its overwhelming military dominance in
the Middle East, its close relationship with the world's only superpower,
and the growing (albeit reluctant) acceptance of it by the Palestinians
and the surrounding Arab states. Israelis themselves, reared for
decades on a sense of existential dread, real or imagined, had started
to relax and concentrate their energies on more mundane matters.
With the national dream secure at last, Israelis could begin to
tend to their personal dreams.
That this semblance
of peace was fragile and insecure is now brutally apparent. That
its fruits were not enjoyed by all-least of all by the Palestinian
inhabitants of the West Bank and Gaza-is also now obvious. What
is far less obvious, however, is the claim that Israel's existence
was never secure, that the Jewish state remained imperiled. This
is precisely the argument advanced by Yoram Hazony in The Jewish
State: The Struggle for Israel's Soul. Contrary to those who
emphasize Israel's material power and success, and hence view the
Jewish state as indestructible, the central message of Hazony's
book is that the future of the Jewish state is in serious jeopardy.
In fact, Hazony, director of the Shalem Center, a neoconservative
think tank in Jerusalem, and former advisor to Benjamin Netanyahu,
argues that not only is Israel still at risk, but it faces perhaps
a greater danger than ever before.
But this is
an argument with a twist. The reader would be forgiven in thinking
that those who warn of the threat to the Jewish state have in mind
the Palestinian and Arab masses whose hatred of Israel has been
displayed nightly on our television screens as they burn Israeli
flags and call for jihad, for a holy war. Or perhaps they
refer to our familiar enemies Saddam Hussein, Colonel Qaddafi, or
the ayatollahs in Iran who remain steadfastly opposed to Israel's
existence. In fact, the threat of which Hazony writes is of a different
nature entirely. According to Hazony, the danger that Israel-or
more precisely Israel as a Jewish statefaces today does not come
in the form of genocidal Arab masses or despotic, villainous leaders.
Instead, the danger is closer to home: in fashionable Tel Aviv coffee
shops, theaters, art galleries, university lecture halls, and school
classrooms. For Hazony, the enemy is within, and the weapons being
used are not bullets, tanks, and missiles but newspaper editorials,
novels, poems, plays, and school textbooks. These pose no less a
threat to the existence of the Jewish state. As Hazony puts it,
"the state need not be defeated militarily to be defeated utterly.
The entire job may be done on the battleground of ideas."
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