| June 27, 2003THE CONDOMINIUM OF THE RICH: A REPLY TO
          ROBERT SKIDELSKY
            by  W. Warren Wagar 
            
          It is tempting to hope that the Project for a New American Century currently enshrined
          as the policy of the United States may soon meet with a concerted effort by other
          significant elements of the international community to temper and restrain American
          initiatives. Traditionally, in the modern world-system forged by Western Europe between
          the 16th and 20th Centuries, such "elements" did come
          forward to prevent any one state from achieving preponderant power. But given the
          overwhelming military and economic might of the United States at the beginning of the 21st
          Century, what chance is there of such an outcome? 
          In a provocative recent article in Prospect Magazine ("The American
          Contract," July 2003), Robert Skidelsky of Warwick University sees little chance of
          implementing the old "balance of power" strategy any time soon. The armed force
          and the political will are not available, not in Europe, not in all of Eurasia, not
          anywhere. 
          Nevertheless, there may be a third option, beyond acquiescing in American hegemony or
          mustering a formidable military alliance of anti-American nations, which Skidelsky labels
          "a new multilaterialism." What if, by utilizing all the diplomatic, political,
          economic, and moral resources at their disposal, the rest of the worlds "great
          powers" can work together to bring the United States back into the
          "international fold"? Can they collectively persuade the United States to let
          its sisters share fully in maintaining peace and promoting justice throughout the globe?
          Skidelsky does not believe that the bid of the United States to run the world as it
          pleases can ever be successful. But if Americas ambitions are not checked, they will
          lead to the destabilization of the world order and the eventual collapse of the American
          empire itself through a process of "overstretch." 
          So it becomes the historic task of the European Union, Russia, and China to assume
          leading roles in the oversight of weaker nations, the stemming of conflict, and the
          prevention of humanitarian disasters. Skidelsky speaks of "an agreed distribution of
          responsibilities," and furnishes a few examples of what might be done. Europe could
          join the U.S. "as an effective partner in the search for peace in the middle
          east." China could help the U.S. disarm North Korea. Pan-European forces could
          replace the U.S. on the European continent and also prevent "the slide of parts of
          Africa into barbarism." 
          Some15 years ago, in my book "A Short History of the Future," I imagined (but
          with abundant sarcasm) an almost identical future for the first 40-odd years of the 21st
          Century. Subsequent editions, the latest published in 1999, have retained this vision. I
          called it "the partition of the world into zones of special influence." The
          great powersthe United States, the European Union, Russia, and an alliance of Japan
          and Chinaagreed at a conference in Vienna to carve up the planet. In my 1999
          scenario, the United States received a more or less free hand in Latin America, the
          Pacific islands, and the western half of the Middle East. Japan and China took charge of
          South and Southeast Asia (I neglected to mention North Korea). Russia was entrusted with
          Central Asia, Iran, and Afghanistan. The European Union had the care of Africa. 
          In another context, I have referred to this scheme as "the condominium of the
          rich." The major capitalist powers manage the world. Attempts by breakaway states or
          movements to challenge the world-system are crushed. Stability returns, America settles
          for a partnership that helps to protect its economy, and the world is at
          "peace," a peace that in my fictional scenario lasted until 2044. For various
          reasons, which need not detain us here, the international system did collapse at that
          point, but until then it had performed quite well, from the perspective of those in
          charge. 
          Skidelsky, however, speaks not just of "maintaining peace" but also of
          "promoting justice." Can he be serious? In whose interest would this condominium
          of great powers manage their world? In the interest of imperilled weak peoples, the
          autonomy and welfare and dignity of weak peripheral peoples, or in the interest of
          megacorporate elites and other ruling circles in their own overdeveloped countries? Since
          when has it been the business of big business to promote worldwide justice? Did the United
          States invent the imperialism and capitalism peculiar to the modern world-system? Does it
          signify that more than half of the worlds top multinational corporations are
          headquartered and owned primarily by capitalists in countries other than the United
          States? The "mad professors" in Washington currently, and rightly, command our
          horrified gaze, but let us not forget the history of the last 500 years, or what, in the
          light of all such previous exploits, may yet lie ahead. 
          As Samir Amin has often reminded us, the conquest of Amerindia, Africa, and most of
          Asia from the 16th Century onward was principally the work of the nations of
          Western Europe. What we like to call "globalization" is more accurately labeled
          "Europeanization" or, at most, "Westernization." Nor should we
          overlook the history of Russia, which built one of the largest empires ever known over the
          span of five centuries and lost most of it only a few years ago. Even China has a
          well-defined imperial tradition, dating back at least to the doubling of its territory
          under the aegis of the Ching emperors in the 17th and 18th
          Centuries. Japans predatory exploits from 1894 to 1945 are still (or should be)
          fresh in memory. The reanimation of all or any of these imperial traditions under the
          right future circumstances is far from implausible. 
          Further. How representative of humankind are these great powers deemed worthy of
          sharing the world? Three of the four boast a Christian heritage, greatly attenuated by
          secularization, but still powerfully influenced by Rome and Byzantium, not to mention
          Wittenberg and Geneva. The vast majority of their people are racially Caucasian. The
          fourth great power has a Confucian and Mahayana Buddhist heritage, even more greatly
          attenuated by secularization, but unique to Northeast Asia. All four are hell-bent on
          "modernization," which means higher and higher tech, mass production, and
          finishing off the worlds fossil fuels, forests, and whales. Are these the powers,
          and the cultures, that know how to manage the worlds of Islam, Hinduism, Hinayana
          Buddhism, Latin and Caribbean America, and animism? Are these the appropriate role models
          for the weak and the impoverished? Very doubtful. 
          I conclude that although a new global order in which Americas sister great powers
          play a more forceful part might be more stable, from their point of view, than a world
          under ceaseless attack from American bombers, helicopters, and missiles, it would not be
          more just and might even, if it did its work well, diminish the quality of life for
          billions of the Earths people. 
          Despite what I have just written about the possible fateful reanimation of imperial
          traditions in Europe and elsewhere, another substantial issue remains. Is it realistic to
          expect that the sisters even canin cold factrise up, take heart, pool their
          energies, and collaborate effectively in the task of curbing American power? Do they have
          the resources and the will to loop a leash around Washingtons neck? 
          Some observers find solace in a recent article written for the Frankfurter Allgemeine
          Zeitung by two of Europes leading philosophers, Jacques Derrida of France and
          Jürgen Habermas of Germany, in which they appeal for a unified European foreign policy
          designed to function as a counterweight to the imperial pretensions of the United States.
          That Derrida and Habermas do not occupy the same philosophical space is irrelevant.
          Somehow they managed to agree on this one point, and they opted to speak with a single
          voice. 
          The most effective response that I have seen to their initiative is an article in The
          Guardian (U.K.) by the Yale historian Paul Kennedy, published on June 24 of this year. But
          the comments he offers could have been made by almost anyone with an awareness of
          contemporary European politics and public sentiment. It turns out (but is this a
          surprise?) that Western Europeans are no less self-centered and self-engrossed than the
          people of Texas or New York. World peace and world justice do not occupy a high rung on
          the stepladder of their priorities. 
          Kennedy suggests six measures that the E.U. could take to gain respect as a global
          leader from its own people, from the United States, and from the whole international
          community. It would need to invest heavily in the development of professional (not
          conscript) armed forces well equipped with state-of-the-art hardware, press for reform of
          the United Nations by enlarging the non-European permanent membership of the Security
          Council, abandon its fierce protection of European agricultural goods in the interests of
          fair and free world trade, significantly enlarge its commitment to international
          development assistance, raise its economic growth rates, and actively promote an increase
          in the fertility of its younger generations. 
          All this might help, but will any of it really happen? Kennedy is dubious, and I am
          even more dubious. Europe is still not a nation, much less a state. The E.U. has grown
          steadily over the years, but despite its bureaucracy and economic institutions, and its
          parliament, it lacks a chief executive, a foreign policy, an army, or a common law. The
          real Europe is a Eurasian peninsula consisting of 42 sovereign nations. Its rate of
          population increase per year is minus one-tenth of one percent. Including all of eastern
          Europe and the European part of the former Soviet Union, its population of 728 million
          people will shrink to 651 million by 2050, at current expected rates of reproduction and
          immigration. The richest of its nations, the Federal Republic of Germany, has an annual
          product equal to one-fifth of the annual national product of the United States, whose own
          current population of 290 million is expected to grow to 415 million by 2050. And all of
          these 415 million people will acknowledge the supreme authority of a single president and
          live under a single flag. In 2050, by contrast, there will be only 65 million Britons, 68
          million Germans, 65 million French. 
          As for state-of-the-art military hardware, the professional armed forces of the United
          States today enjoy what appears to be an insurmountable lead over those of Europe, even if
          European leaders should decide tomorrow to double or triple their defense budgets, which
          in any case they will not and cannot do. Americas nuclear arsenal, its armada of
          supercarrier battle groups and attack submarines, its immense air force and supporting
          aerial tanker fleet, its heavy armor dwarfing anything fielded by anyone, its smart
          munitions and stealth technologies, its array of reconnaissance satellites, and much more
          leave all the other nations of the world combined in its dust. Nor should it be overlooked
          that the United States has also made by far the worlds largest investment in higher
          education, with more students, more faculty, more research facilities, and more campuses
          than any other continent, and perhaps more (although meaningful comparative statistics for
          both quantity and quality are difficult to come by) than the whole rest of the planet put
          together. 
          Of course the United States courts financial catastrophe by overextending its global
          reach, amassing huge debts and budget deficits, neglecting its balance of trade, rewarding
          its elites at the expense of its poor, and otherwise building down, in some future decade,
          to the mother of all economic depressions, but the story in Europe and Japan is not much
          more edifying. There, too, the costs of government rise, growth is sluggish, unemployment
          festers, debts accumulate, and surpluses to bankroll major initiatives do not exist. This
          author would bet his last Euro that such doldrums will persist for many years. The image
          of a European goliath emerging from the confabulations of fusty technocrats and multiple
          premiers beggared by entitlement programs they already cannot afford is an image not to be
          entertained seriously for some time to come. 
          Now all this could turn around at a conceivable later juncture. Clearly, the E.U., at
          least, possesses the technological and human infrastructure to compete with and perhaps
          overtake the United States in every department of business and political and military
          endeavor. By 2025 or 2050 our current alarm over unbridled American imperialism and
          European impotence may seem laughable. Nevertheless, our alarm today is quite rational,
          grounded in facts and trends obvious to every objective observer, and I think it will take
          much more than a clarion call from two justly celebrated intellectualsDerrida and
          Habermasto set Europe on a radically new course. 
          With respect to the other "great powers" invoked by Skidelsky, even more
          caution is advisable. The notion that Russia is still a great power at all may be
          questioned. Its economy, based on technologies and assumptions already long obsolete in
          the 1980s, totally collapsed after the débâcle of 1989-1991, and is only just now on a
          path to modest recovery. Except for its fossil fuels, it has little to offer the rest of
          the world. The value of its exports is about the same as the value of the exports of
          Sweden, a country with 6% of Russias population. Its once vaunted armed forces are
          in shambles. It has also experienced a demographic catastrophe, with death rates soaring,
          fertility rates plummeting, and projections of a further population decline of 30% over
          the next 50 years. It is reasonable to assume that the outlook for Russia will improve as
          the new century wears on, but when I contrast the 100 million Russians expected to be
          alive in 2050 with the 415 million Americans thriving in that same year, I do not
          automatically think of a competitive edge for Russia. 
          Then there is that increasingly unlikely quadruped, the alliance of Japan and China.
          For many years a great number of social scientists, including those in the camp of
          world-systems analysis, have expected some sort of new colossus to emerge on the far
          western (or is it eastern?) edge of the Pacific Rim. It made so much sense. The
          technological prowess of Japan and some of its smaller potential allies, from Singapore to
          South Korea, argued the imperative of a coalition of East Asian powers, with populous and
          industrious China in the center, that would restore the area to the world primacy it had
          enjoyed for at least a millennium before the "rise of the West." China had the
          intelligent human and invaluable natural resources to support such a confederacy, the
          others would invest strenuously, and voilá! What George Orwell dubbed
          "Eastasia," a new global superpower, would take its honored place on the stage
          of world politics. 
          I subscribed to this vision, too, in "A Short History of the Future." Most
          world-system analysts, from Immanuel Wallerstein to Andre Gunder Frank, still believe it
          implicitly. The nosedive of the Japanese economy in the past decade has muted some of the
          rhetoric, and often Japan is hardly mentioned at all, as in Skidelskys article. But
          the thought is that, even if Japan does not "make it," the Chinese economy is
          still in hyper-drive, and in any case China has 11 times as many people, not to mention
          incomparably more mineral wealth. 
          First of all, Japan is not going to "make it," not into the ranks of the
          superpowers. We all overestimated its potential in the 1980s and 1990s. Its culture is not
          as elastic as we once thought, its centrally-directed institutions (almost like those in
          the former Soviet Union) do not quickly respond to challenges, and its population is
          graying more rapidly than Europes, thanks not only to low fertility but also to a
          virtual absence of immigration from other countries. Japan is expected to lose 20% of its
          citizenry by 2050, bringing the total to just 100 million, the same as Russia in that
          year. Sheer size of population is not the only index to a nations potential, but if
          all other things are equal, 100 million people cannot outthink and outproduce 400 million
          people with comparable assets. 
          China is clearly a different country altogether, with almost unlimited potential. Its
          astonishing industrial performance since the 1970s and its success in enhancing living
          conditions, economic opportunity, and political stability for its gargantuan population
          are worthy of sustained applause, despite the cost to civil liberties. But I do not see
          any chance of a common political front with Japan or the other smaller East Asian
          capitalist powers, or any chance of catching up militarily with the United States, or any
          likelihood of bonding with the E.U. and Russia to offer a concerted diplomatic rebuttal to
          American ambitions. China will also be hard-pressed to continue feeding its people. Long
          self-sustaining, it has now become a net importer of agricultural products, as the direct
          result of unwisely headlong urban and industrial development. 
          Let us make no mistake. Diplomatic alliances occur because they are in the strongly
          perceived national interests of all the parties concerned. To counter the manifest
          ambitions of France, or Germany, or Japan when each was on the warpath in earlier years,
          improbable bedfellows did accept one anothers company. I doubt that Chinas
          leadership in this decade loses much sleep over American designs for preponderant power.
          During the Korean War in 1950 it did, and it responded accordingly and effectively when it
          saw its own vital national interests at immediate risk. That was another era. To expect
          todays China to conspire with the E.U. and Russia to restrain American initiatives,
          for example in the Middle East, is unrealistic. The United States is Chinas largest
          trading partner, and I cannot imagine that Beijing labors under any illusions about the
          long-term value of its awkward (and obsolete) ideological fraternity with an increasingly
          dysfunctional and embarrassing Pyongyang. 
          All of this, too, can change, without advance notice. A new American Napoleon, even
          more rabid and reckless than George W. Bush, might prompt a serious diplomatic revolution
          electrifying the most complacent of present-day regimes. The United States might find
          itself confronted and encircled by Skidelskys woeful sisters, fiercely determined to
          set it straight at any cost. 
          But that is not really what Skidelsky looks forward to. He simply wants the sisters to
          step in and mitigate American ambitions, here and now. Let the other "great
          powers" prevail upon Columbia to accept full-time partners in policing and bringing
          justice to this troubled world. I take his point. 
          The problem is that the hands of these other estimable great powers are not clean.
          They have all been complicit in previous, and may imaginably be complicit in
          future, efforts to exploit the rest of the planet in the best interests of their corporate
          and ruling classes. Russia is now a full-fledged capitalist nation, and China, for all
          practical purposes, is the same. They are not primarily or secondarily or in any way
          committed to worldwide social justice. They seek peace, but not if it interferes with
          their own agendas, whether in Tibet, or Taiwan, or Palestine, or Chechnya, or the Balkans,
          or wherever. And if millions die in strife in sub-Saharan Africa, well, it is easy to look
          the other way. 
          So even if Paul Kennedy is too much the pessimist, and against all odds the E.U. can
          rise to its historic challenge, and the other sisters clamber on board, and the United
          States gets its well-deserved comeuppance, so what? 
          Perhaps Skidelskys new multilateral world order will succeed, in its time. It
          might also last a lot longer, exploit working people everywhere more remorselessly, and
          destroy indigenous cultures more efficiently than any Pax Americana. Be careful what you
          wish for. Under the jaws and claws of a rogue male lion, you might prefer a different
          fate, but I doubt that an assault by an entire pride would improve your chances of
          survival. 
            
           --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 
          W. Warren Wagar 
          Department of History, Binghamton
          University
                
          
           |