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SOCIAL
SCIENCE RESEARCH COUNCIL / AFTER SEPT. 11
The
End of the Unipolar Moment:
September 11 and the Future of World Order
Steve
Smith, Professor and
Pro-Vice Chancellor of the University, University of
Wales, Aberystwyth
The events
of September 11 mark the end of a period in international
relations, a period known as the unipolar moment, when the
US was the sole superpower, and debate raged over what
kind of world order and power structure would characterise
and then emerge from this moment. Contrary to many of the
main interpretations, the likely effects of the September
11 terrorist bombings will be to usher in an era where US
foreign policy is more multilateral than before, an era
that indicates both the essential interconnectedness of
world politics and the fact that the US can neither act as
world policeman nor retreat into isolationism.
The end of the Cold War brought to an end a period of
international bipolarity and since then academics,
journalists and policy-makers have tried to work out
exactly what kind of power structure would replace it.
There were two main views: first that the United States
would withdraw from international entanglements since
there was no longer any great enemy, no global cause to
structure US foreign policy, nor any clear reason for the
US to continue to spend so much money acting as world
policeman. Add to this the changing nature of US internal
politics, and specifically the shifts within its ethnic
mix, and one clear possibility was for the US to reduce
its commitments to its old alliances, notably towards
Europe where the development of the European Union implied
to some the possibility of a united European defence and
foreign policy effort that did not require US involvement.
The second, and opposite, view was that the US would be
able to influence world politics like never before: it was
a unipolar moment, in which the US was the world’s only
remaining superpower. According to this view, no one power
or group of powers could challenge US hegemony for the
foreseeable future. And, of course, there were those who
saw some kind of self-interested combination of these two
positions being the likely outcome, with the US pulling
back from international commitments that were not seen as
central to its interests while aggressively pursuing other
interests through its overwhelming economic, political,
cultural and military power.
These views found expression in a number of extremely
influential articles and books, chief amongst them Samuel
Huntington’s The Clash of Civilizations and the
Remaking of World Order (1993). Benjamin
Barber’s Jihad vs McWorld (1996) and Francis
Fukuyama’s The End of History and the Last Man
(1992). My concern in
this brief paper is to look at how the events of September
11 affect these popular conceptions of future world order.
Of the three views the one that has, since September 11,
received the most attention is Huntington’s notion of
the clash of civilizations. At first it seems to have
much to recommend, certainly over Fukuyama’s more
optimistic notion of the end of history, and a future
world order dominated by a growing liberal zone of peace.
Certainly Fukuyama seems to have been far too ethnocentric
when he asked whether ‘it makes sense for us once again
to speak of a coherent and directional History of mankind
that will eventually lead the greater part of humanity to
liberal democracy? The answer I arrive at is yes’ (1992,
p xii). The motivations of those involved in the terrorist
attacks on September 11 could hardly have been further
from this liberal ideal. Fukuyama’s reliance on the
twin mechanisms of economic development and the struggle
for personal recognition to push the world towards
liberalism seem irrelevant to the concerns not just of
those involved in the attacks but to a far more extensive
part of humanity, which as I write is currently opposing
military action against Afghanistan. They are not part of
the liberal project; indeed, it is precisely this project
that they oppose, not least because of the kinds of
Islamic regimes that liberalism promotes and supports. In
this light, attacking Bin Laden was exactly what he wanted
since it would open up exactly this split between
modernising and traditional Islam, thereby radicalising
Muslim opinion and (hopefully in his view) leading to the
overthrow of pro-Western, pro-modernising Islamic regimes.
No amount of economic development and no amount of
personal recognition under liberalism can alter this view
since it is liberalism and modernisation themselves that
are the enemies.
Huntington’s
argument has been referred to constantly since September
11, and of course there is a sort of common-sense reason
for this. At first sight the current crisis can seem as if
it is one between civilizations, and of course in his book
he discussed at length the conflict between the Western
and Muslim worlds as being a main fault lines for future
war. Huntington sees two possible future world orders. The
first is a major inter-civilizational war ‘most likely
involving Muslims on one side and non-Muslims on the other’
(1996, p 312); the second, which he prefers, is for the US
(and other core civilizational states) to abstain from
involvement in conflicts in other civilizations, and to
negotiate amongst each other so as to contain wars at the
fault lines between civilizations. My overwhelming worry
about Huntington’s argument follows from my view that
the social world is something that we constitute by our
theories, and it is that Huntington’s language is
self-fulfilling since the analysis creates exactly the
kinds of identities and ultimately the very foreign policy
mindsets that bring such world orders into existence.
Thankfully, neither of Huntington’s alternatives seems
to have guided US policy since September 11. On the one
hand, the US has found out that it is unavoidably involved
in the Muslim world, and that staying out of the politics
of far-away places is not an option. On the other hand,
the Bush administration has said loudly and repeatedly
that this is not a clash between the West and Islam, that
it is not a clash of civilizations; indeed the main
weakness in Huntington’s thesis is that neither states
nor civilizations are anything like as united and
monolithic as his account logically requires. The current
conflict pits members of the same civilization against one
another, in both the Muslim and the non-Muslim worlds.
Barber’s portrayal of the future world order seems most
in accord with the world order that is most likely to
emerge from the current crisis. Barber sees a world in
which two forms of international order coexist: the first
‘rooted in race holds out the grim prospect of a
retribalization of large swaths of humankind …in which
culture is pitted against culture…a Jihad…against
modernity itself’. The second is ‘a busy portrait of
onrushing economic, technological, and ecological forces
that demand integration and uniformity…one McWorld tied
together by communications, information, entertainment,
and commerce’ (1996, p 4). It is exactly this duality
that has characterised the response to the events of
September 11. Take as one example the question of proving
Bin Laden’s guilt: most Western observers believe that
the evidence leads to Bin Laden and to Al Qaeda, yet large
parts of the world’s populations do not accept the
evidence, and critically, there may be no information that
would lead them to accept his guilt. Thus just as there
are clear globalizing trends in world politics and
economics, so there remain (and may even be strengthening)
sets of cultural lenses that undermine and literally
prevent the emergence of common global norms.
What, then, are likely to be the main implications of the
events of September 11 for future world order? There are
three main ones; first, the United States has abruptly
ended its brief experiment with unilateralism. For the
initial eight months of the new Bush administration,
observers in many parts of the world worried that the US
was simply not interested in developing multilateral
responses to world problems, with the US withdrawal from
the Kyoto agreement the most high profile example of this
trend. After September 11, the United States has spent
considerable time building exactly the kind of
multilateral response that it had previously eschewed. The
terrorist attacks brought home in the most awful way the
fact that although the US may not be interested in what
happens in far away places, those far away places are
interested in it. This indicates that the future world
order will be marked by a far more active US foreign
policy than seemed likely on September 10. Not only that,
but the clear interconnectedness between the security of
citizens in the US and events in areas such as the Middle
East mean that the US leadership is more likely to see a
need to try and solve some of the most intractable
problems in the world. The key test will be the
Israeli-Palestinian dispute, and as I write this
US-Israeli relations are said to be at their lowest ebb
for many years. In other words, the current crisis will
increase the political will of the US leadership to act to
resolve exactly the same problems that only a few weeks
ago it seemed content to ignore.
The second implication is related to the first, and it is
that the US will emerge stronger, and will thus be in more
of a position to influence world events. This is not just
because the US will considerably increase its military and
intelligence expenditure, but also because of the ability
of the US to impose leadership on allies under the theme
of a war on terrorism. In that sense, fighting terrorism
becomes the new ‘grand cause’ underlying US foreign
policy, and such a cause assists in the creation and
unification of alliances. In other words the US will be in
a stronger position to provide leadership in world
politics.
The third implication is that the events of September 11
shatter the key assumption of many proponents of
globalization that the conveyor belt of economic
development and the spread of liberal democracy were in
some way inevitable, irreversible and universal.
The main political problem facing US leaders is how to
steer a path between these three features of the current
and future world order. The danger is that the impulse to
eradicate terrorism, and thereby make the US safer from
attack, could run counter to the need for the US to
develop multinational coalitions. Specifically, if the
views expressed by Donald Rumsfeld concerning widening the
war to deal with other terrorist groups (for example in
Iraq) win the day, then it is impossible to think of the
coalition holding together. According to Richard Perle (in
a television interview on BBC on 8 October) the US did not
need any coalition to win the war against terrorism, and
he said that he would rather the US act alone than be held
back by the requirement to hold the coalition together. In
this sense the military task may be far easier to achieve
than the political one. If it transpires that the war has
either led to significant civilian casualties and/or is
extended to countries other than Afghanistan, then it is
difficult to see the coalition surviving. Similarly, it is
imperative that the US can present this war as one against
a specific terrorist group. It must do all it can to
prevent it being characterised as a war against Islam,
which could usher in exactly the kind of clash of
civilizations that Bin Laden explicitly said he wanted in
his video released on the day the attacks commenced.
Failure on either of these two grounds would significantly
undermine US security and would lead to the construction
of a world order that would make the achievement of US
foreign policy goals more difficult.
Finally, I want to return to the literature of my academic
specialisation, International Relations. I have spent a
lot of the last twenty years working on the nature of
agency and social action, both in its philosophy of social
science context, and in terms of its policy implications.
Contrary to the dominant tendency in the US International
Relations, which remains committed to treating
international (and all social) structures in such a way as
to downplay agency, I remain convinced of the role of
human agency. I think the ways in which the international
coalition has been so carefully constructed reaffirms the
importance of diplomacy. States are not actors, humans
are; interests clearly influence behavior but they have to
be mediated through identity; and discourse and language
are crucially important in constructing identity and
framing interests. That is why the future of world order
depends on the choices our leaders make and the values we
think they should promote. World orders always reflect
dominant values, are always partial and may well hinder
the search for global justice and peace. They are not
given, they are not natural - they reflect our conscious
or unconscious choices. That is how domestic and
international debates interact, and is why an informed,
questioning and diverse civil society is essential to the
debate now more than ever.
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