Beyond the Post-Cold War World
An era ended when the Soviet Union
collapsed on Dec. 31, 1991. The confrontation between the United States
and the Soviet Union defined the Cold War period. The collapse of Europe
framed that confrontation. After World War II, the Soviet and American
armies occupied Europe. Both towered over the remnants of Europe's
forces.
The collapse of
the European imperial system, the emergence of new states and a struggle
between the Soviets and Americans for domination and influence also
defined the confrontation. There were, of course, many other aspects and
phases of the confrontation, but in the end, the Cold War was a
struggle built on Europe's decline.Many shifts in the international
system accompanied the end of the Cold War. In fact, 1991 was an
extraordinary and defining year. The Japanese economic miracle ended.
China after Tiananmen Square inherited Japan's place as a rapidly
growing, export-based economy, one defined by the continued pre-eminence
of the Chinese Communist Party. The Maastricht Treaty was
formulated, creating the structure of the subsequent European Union. A
vast coalition dominated by the United States reversed the Iraqi
invasion of Kuwait.
Three things defined the post-Cold
War world. The first was U.S. power. The second was the rise of China as
the center of global industrial growth based on low wages. The third
was the re-emergence of Europe as a massive, integrated economic power.
Meanwhile, Russia, the main remnant of the Soviet Union, reeled while
Japan shifted to a dramatically different economic mode.
The post-Cold War world had two
phases. The first lasted from Dec. 31, 1991, until Sept. 11, 2001. The
second lasted from 9/11 until now.
The initial phase of the post-Cold
War world was built on two assumptions. The first assumption was that
the United States was the dominant political and military power but that
such power was less significant than before, since economics was the
new focus. The second phase still revolved around the three Great Powers
-- the United States, China and Europe -- but involved a major shift in
the worldview of the United States, which then assumed that
pre-eminence included the power to reshape the Islamic world through
military action while China and Europe single-mindedly focused on
economic matters.
The Three Pillars of the International System
In this new era, Europe is reeling economically and
is divided politically. The idea of Europe codified in Maastricht no
longer defines Europe. Like the Japanese economic miracle before it, the
Chinese economic miracle is drawing to a close and Beijing is beginning
to examine its military options. The United States is withdrawing from Afghanistan and reconsidering the relationship between global pre-eminence and global omnipotence. Nothing is as it was in 1991.
Europe primarily defined itself as
an economic power, with sovereignty largely retained by its members but
shaped by the rule of the European Union. Europe tried to have it all:
economic integration and individual states. But now this untenable idea
has reached its end and Europe is fragmenting. One region, including
Germany, Austria, the Netherlands and Luxembourg, has low unemployment.
The other region on the periphery has high or extraordinarily high unemployment.
Germany wants to retain the European
Union to protect German trade interests and because Berlin properly
fears the political consequences of a fragmented Europe. But as the
creditor of last resort, Germany also wants to control the economic
behavior of the EU nation-states. Berlin does not want to let off the
European states by simply bailing them out. If it bails them out, it
must control their budgets. But the member states do not want to cede
sovereignty to a German-dominated EU apparatus in exchange for a
bailout.
In the indebted peripheral region,
Cyprus has been treated with particular economic savagery as part of the
bailout process. Certainly, the Cypriots acted irresponsibly. But that
label applies to all of the EU members, including Germany, who created
an economic plant so vast that it could not begin to consume what it
produces -- making the country utterly dependent on the willingness of
others to buy German goods. There are thus many kinds of
irresponsibility. How the European Union treats irresponsibility depends
upon the power of the nation in question. Cyprus, small and marginal, has been crushed while larger nations receive more favorable treatment despite their own irresponsibility.
It has been said by many Europeans
that Cyprus should never have been admitted to the European Union. That
might be true, but it was admitted -- during the time of European hubris
when it was felt that mere EU membership would redeem any nation. Now,
Europe can no longer afford pride, and it is every nation for itself. Cyprus set the precedent that
the weak will be crushed. It serves as a lesson to other weakening
nations, a lesson that over time will transform the European idea of
integration and sovereignty. The price of integration for the weak is
high, and all of Europe is weak in some way.
In such an environment, sovereignty
becomes sanctuary. It is interesting to watch Hungary ignore the
European Union as Budapest reconstructs its political system to be more
sovereign -- and more authoritarian -- in the wider storm raging around
it. Authoritarian nationalism is an old European cure-all, one that is
re-emerging, since no one wants to be the next Cyprus.
I have already said much about
China, having argued for several years that China's economy couldn't
possibly continue to expand at the same rate. Leaving aside all the
specific arguments, extraordinarily rapid growth in an export-oriented
economy requires economic health among its customers. It is nice to
imagine expanded domestic demand, but in a country as impoverished as
China, increasing demand requires revolutionizing life in the interior.
China has tried this many times. It has never worked, and in any case
China certainly couldn't make it work in the time needed. Instead,
Beijing is maintaining growth by slashing profit margins on exports.
What growth exists is neither what it used to be nor anywhere near as
profitable. That sort of growth in Japan undermined financial viability
as money was lent to companies to continue exporting and employing
people -- money that would never be repaid.
It is interesting to recall the
extravagant claims about the future of Japan in the 1980s. Awestruck by
growth rates, Westerners did not see the hollowing out of the financial
system as growth rates were sustained by cutting prices and profits.
Japan's miracle seemed to be eternal. It wasn't, and neither is China's.
And China has a problem that Japan didn't: a billion impoverished
people. Japan exists, but behaves differently than it did before; the
same is happening to China.
Both Europe and China thought about
the world in the post-Cold War period similarly. Each believed that
geopolitical questions and even questions of domestic politics could be
suppressed and sometimes even ignored. They believed this because they
both thought they had entered a period of permanent prosperity.
1991-2008 was in fact a period of extraordinary prosperity, one that
both Europe and China simply assumed would never end and one whose
prosperity would moot geopolitics and politics.
Periods of prosperity, of course,
always alternate with periods of austerity, and now history has caught
up with Europe and China. Europe, which had wanted union and
sovereignty, is confronting the political realities of EU unwillingness
to make the fundamental and difficult decisions on what union really
meant. For its part, China wanted to have a free market and a communist
regime in a region it would dominate economically. Its economic climax
has left it with the question of whether the regime can survive in an
uncontrolled economy, and what its regional power would look like if it
weren't prosperous.
And the United States has emerged
from the post-Cold War period with one towering lesson: However
attractive military intervention is, it always looks easier at the
beginning than at the end. The greatest military power in the world has
the ability to defeat armies. But it is far more difficult to reshape
societies in America's image. A Great Power manages the routine matters
of the world not through military intervention, but through manipulating
the balance of power. The issue is not that America is in decline.
Rather, it is that even with the power the United States had in 2001, it
could not impose its political will -- even though it had the power to
disrupt and destroy regimes -- unless it was prepared to commit all of
its power and treasure to transforming a country like Afghanistan. And that is a high price to pay for Afghan democracy.
The United States has emerged into
the new period with what is still the largest economy in the world with
the fewest economic problems of the three pillars of the post-Cold War
world. It has also emerged with the greatest military power. But it has
emerged far more mature and cautious than it entered the period. There
are new phases in history, but not new world orders. Economies rise and
fall, there are limits to the greatest military power and a Great Power
needs prudence in both lending and invading.
A New Era Begins
Eras unfold in strange ways until
you suddenly realize they are over. For example, the Cold War era
meandered for decades, during which U.S.-Soviet detentes or the end of
the Vietnam War could have seemed to signal the end of the era itself.
Now, we are at a point where the post-Cold War model no longer explains
the behavior of the world. We are thus entering a new era. I don't have a
good buzzword for the phase we're entering, since most periods are
given a label in hindsight. (The interwar period, for example, got a
name only after there was another war to bracket it.) But already there
are several defining characteristics to this era we can identify.
First, the United States remains the
world's dominant power in all dimensions. It will act with caution,
however, recognizing the crucial difference between pre-eminence and
omnipotence.
Second, Europe is returning to its
normal condition of multiple competing nation-states. While Germany will
dream of a Europe in which it can write the budgets of lesser states,
the EU nation-states will look at Cyprus and choose default before
losing sovereignty.
Third, Russia is re-emerging. As the
European Peninsula fragments, the Russians will do what they always do:
fish in muddy waters. Russia is giving preferential terms for natural
gas imports to some countries, buying metallurgical facilities in
Hungary and Poland, and buying rail terminals in Slovakia.
Russia has always been economically dysfunctional yet wielded outsized
influence -- recall the Cold War. The deals they are making, of which
this is a small sample, are not in their economic interests, but they
increase Moscow's political influence substantially.
Fourth, China is becoming
self-absorbed in trying to manage its new economic realities. Aligning
the Communist Party with lower growth rates is not easy. The Party's
reason for being is prosperity. Without prosperity, it has little to
offer beyond a much more authoritarian state.
And fifth, a host of new countries
will emerge to supplement China as the world's low-wage, high-growth
epicenter. Latin America, Africa and less-developed parts of Southeast
Asia are all emerging as contenders.
Relativity in the Balance of Power
There is a paradox in all of this.
While the United States has committed many errors, the fragmentation of
Europe and the weakening of China mean the United States emerges more
powerful, since power is relative. It was said that the post-Cold War
world was America's time of dominance. I would argue that it was the
preface of U.S. dominance. Its two great counterbalances are losing
their ability to counter U.S. power because they mistakenly believed
that real power was economic power. The United States had combined power
-- economic, political and military -- and that allowed it to maintain
its overall power when economic power faltered.
A fragmented Europe has no chance at
balancing the United States. And while China is reaching for military
power, it will take many years to produce the kind of power that is
global, and it can do so only if its economy allows it to. The United
States defeated the Soviet Union in the Cold War because of its balanced
power. Europe and China defeated themselves because they placed all
their chips on economics. And now we enter the new era.
Read more: Beyond the Post-Cold War World | Stratfor

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