As I write, the invasion of Iraq by the
forces of the US, Britain and Australia
has just begun. War is always tragic,
no matter what justifications are made.
In the end, two of the greatest military
powers on earth, plus Australia, are invading
a country the population of which is mostly
women and children. For the next few weeks,
months and perhaps years, their lives
will be dominated by terror, pain and
death. This is undeniably a bad thing,
a simple tragedy for the people of Iraq
and a setback for all humanity.
We all know that something has gone
wrong on our planet. Horrific violence
has become normal, ordinary people live
with a sustained dread, and lies and hypocrisy
run rampant. It is a hard time to be clear-eyed.
But we must look beyond the veniality
and tragedy, identify the underlying reasons
why these things are happening and make
some hard choices about our future. The
people of Iraq are suffering directly
because of the failure of our practices
of international relations to deal with
underlying changes in technology and the
development of new weapons. They are also
suffering because there are shifts occurring
in global power relations that will have
a radical impact on the progress of civilisation
on Earth.
The most profound fear is that we will
find ourselves back in an anarchic world
with no rules, but with new, incredibly
potent weapons. For most of history, and
even modern history, the notion of a global
order overseen by an authoritative body
like the UN was a dream. After the horrors
of the long war from 1914 to 1945, when
industrial civilisation itself tottered
and almost fell, we seemed to have eventually
achieved something like a set of rules
and appropriate structures. In the event,
the core institution of this hoped-for
global order, the UN, was always held
hostage to the rivalry between the nuclear
superpowers. But it was there.
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The fate of the UN is central to the
fate of humanity. The world is just too
dangerous a place for there to be no rule
other than force or the threat of force.
There are too many nuclear bombs in too
many different hands. There are too many
new kinds of chemical and biological weapons,
and they are becoming so readily available,
thanks to the march of technology, that
soon almost anyone with access to basic
resources will be able to possess them.
We are an increasingly global economy,
with a global infrastructure. Disruption
of this infrastructure of communications
and transport would severely undermine
economic wellbeing - and we are increasingly
linked in terms of health as jet planes
transmit new diseases around the world
in a matter of hours. These diseases,
like AIDS or West Nile or the new SARS,
which has people worried right now, can
kill and maim many human beings. Others,
carried in suitcases or in the bilge water
of ships, attack indigenous species, including
economically important ones.
Increased global interconnection and
cooperation are the only answers if we
are to maintain some kind of functional
world system. How this global order is
to work is exactly what the war in Iraq
is really all about.
There is a range of options. The construction
of a global order that consciously interconnects
everyone in a sustained discourse on matters
of common interest is one way. The necessary
networks of people and experience for
this to happen are in formation, and the
required communications and transport
infrastructure is available. For the first
time in history, the potential for a genuine
global society that functions for the
common good is realisable.
On the other hand we have the prospect
of a world order unilaterally imposed
by the only hyperpower, which happens
to be the US. There is now an argument
emanating from core members of the Bush
administration that the US is the only
appropriate model for social development,
and that the US has the right to impose
that model on the rest of the world. What
this actually means is not that other
nations could be like the US so much as
no other nation must challenge US supremacy.
This supremacy is to be defended by everything
up to and including nuclear weapons. There
are some already identified "rogue"
states who do supposedly threaten US supremacy,
and who will presumably be dealt with
after Iraq.
The US can impose its will because it
is militarily so powerful. Right now,
if the US went to war with the rest of
the world it would probably win. It has
leveraged its technological capacity to
build the world's most effective military
force, able to deliver vast firepower
to anywhere on earth with remarkable precision.
But as things stand, this military hyperpower
status has a use-by date. The US is no
longer the largest economy, that position
being taken over by the European Union.
China, the sleeping giant of history that
has apparently wakened, is in the ascendancy
as well and explicitly looking to translate
rapid economic growth into technological
and military power. The US may not be
able to maintain its technological advantage
- and technology is increasingly the key
to military power - because its underlying
economic position is increasingly fragile.
The harsh realities of geopolitics differ
greatly from the idealistic rhetoric of
statesmanship. Geopolitics is about power,
while the rhetoric is concerned with ideas
of freedom, peace and justice. Nation
states are primarily concerned with things
like security, commerce, access to resources
and new technology, not freedom, justice
or peace. These are nice ideas but will
not guarantee national survival. However,
in the 19th century national leaders found
that they needed the rhetoric of such
great concepts to mobilise populations
to work hard, endure suffering and fight
for national survival or advantage.
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All national leaders and their advisers
know this. Indeed, these harsh realities
are taught in university courses on international
relations and international political
economy. But leaders must use the language
of grand abstraction, with ideas like
peace and justice and freedom, to justify
the use of violence. They know that largely
cowed or opportunistic academics will
not openly criticise, and they know that
the sensation-centric mass media will
not ask too many questions. And so in
the end, innocents, like the people of
Iraq, will suffer.
In the final analysis the men, women
and children of Iraq are sacrificial victims,
ordained in this role by hard-headed men
in Washington, London, Madrid and Canberra
mulling over maps. Their fault is to be
ruled over by a regime that does not agree
with the new order demanded by the global
hyperpower. But their sacrifice may well
be in vain. Their experience of fear,
injury and death may be just the prelude
to much more suffering around the world
as other "rogue" states are
brought into line.
Or it may be, along with the casualties
of the coalition forces, the example that
forces a rethink of the whole trajectory
of US policy and global development. Americans
themselves are very uncomfortable about
the whole thing because it weakens the
very social and political basis of their
revered republic. The price of supposed
safety from terrorism is evidently the
very freedoms that Americans claim make
their nation so great. Americans will
hopefully rethink their support for the
Bush doctrine, and join the growing international
opinion that it is just too risky. They
can then choose a path that optimises
the capacity of the hyperpower to initiate
the establishment of a genuinely representative,
democratic and stable new world order.