World Order in the Age of Obama. By Charles Hill
November 30, 2012 | 2:30 am
http://www.advancingafreesociety.org/the-caravan/world-order-in-the-age-of-obama
Excerpts:
[...]
What ominous factors caused Kepler to shiver? Disturbances,
uphealvals and conflicts. Merchants moaned about untrustworthy bankers.
Diplomats strutted even as they wavered. The masses sullenly made deals
they needed to survive when the gathering storm broke. Varieties of
religious fervor caused many to prepare to be slain rather than submit
to rule by others.
The 1648 settlement at Westphalia, though setbacks were many and
vicious, enabled procedures fostering what eventually would be called
“the international community,” a term that curled many a lip in the
midst of twentieth-century world wars. Those wars were attempts to
overthrow the established world order. Those wars failed, but in recent
decades have become seemingly interminable, and have required the
stewards of world order to confront what George Shultz labels
“asymmetrical” warfare in which professional standards have been turned
into self-imposed liabilities by enemies who reject civilized
international conduct.
No international order has proved immortal. Kepler today might note
that the world order shaped by the war he predicted, might now fail to
survive to celebrate its 375th anniversary. As President Obama ponders his Second Inaugural Address, what Keplerian factors are now “prepared” for war?
The causes of war as discerned ever since Thucydides’ time are three: wars of ideology, of fear, and of gain.
The ideology of Islamism has been on the rise for generations and now
aims to expropriate the Arab Spring. The ambitions of the1979 Iranian
Revolution and Sunni fanaticism are transmogrifying into the kind of
major religious war that the Treaty of Westphalia sought to forestall.
Thucydides traced the war that ruined ancient Greece to Sparta’s fear
that Athens’ growing power was crossing the line where it would be
impossible to contain. Israel faces that threat from Iran, as today’s
international structures for the maintenance of international security
have failed to halt Iran’s drive, propelled by religious ideology, to
possess nuclear weapons. Israel, bereft of its traditional sense of
American support, is making ready to act against Iran’s menace to its
existence. President Obama’s priority must repair relations with Israel
by visiting the Jewish state and convincing its leaders that the U.S.
understands Israel’s uniquely dangerous position.
And there now grows a deepening appetite for gain. America, perceived
as eager to shed the burdens of world order in order to be
“fundamentally transformed” through European-style social commitments,
talks of engagement even when Iran’s “diplomacy” is a form of protracted
warfare. The enemies of world order translate the American election
results into the lexicon of abdication, telling themselves that their
time has come: there is a world to be gained.
Only America’s return to world leadership can halt this
deterioration. “Sequestration” will relegate the U.S. to a second rate
power and must be reversed to enable American strength and diplomacy to
be employed in tandem. Without this the prediction of a Kepler for today
must be grim. As the biographer of Augustus Caesar wrote in the years
just before the Second World War, “Once again the crust of civilization
has worn thin, and beneath can be heard the muttering of primeval fires.
Once again many accepted principles of government have been overthrown,
and the world has become a laboratory where immature and feverish minds
experiment with unknown forces. Once again problems cannot be
comfortably limited, for science has brought the nations into an uneasy
bondage to each other.”
In this maelstrom lie opportunities not for idealism but for the
cold, austere use of power, soft and hard, in order to, as Augustus was
advised, teach the arts of peace to all. The old platforms for the
region, including the “peace process,” are gone. New structures must be
built and only the US can lead the construction job. Peace is not at
hand, but statesmen can see the possibility of laying foundations for a
new Middle East in Syria-Lebanon, Egypt-Gaza, Saudi Arabia and the Gulf,
and even, should we finally get serious, in Iran.
Charles Hill is the Brady-Johnson Distinguished Fellow in Grand
Strategy at Yale University and co chair of the Herb and Jane Dwight
Working Group on Islamism and the International Order, Hoover
Institution.
These excerpts are from a post that is part of The Caravan, a periodic discussion
on the contemporary dilemmas of the Greater Middle East. Other
commentary in this symposium on Obama’s Second Term – Middle Eastern
Memos is provided by Russell Berman, Itamar Rabinovich, Robert Satloff, Asli Aydintasbas, Habib Malik, Reuel Gerecht, Leon Wieseltier, Tammy Frisby, Abbas Milani, and Fouad Ajami.
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