Mahbubani on western hypocrisy, etc.

Longtime JWN readers will know that I’m quite a fan of Kishore Mahbubani, an extremely smart strategic thinker who was Singapore’s ambassador to the UN until a couple of years ago. Yesterday, he had a great piece of commentary in the Financial Times on “the meaning of the Georgian war.” (HT to Bernhard of MoA.)
Mahbubani writes:

    Sometimes small events can portend great changes. The Georgian fiasco may be one such event. It heralds the end of the post cold-war era. But it does not mark the return of any new cold war. It marks an even bigger return: the return of history.
    The post cold-war era began on a note of western triumphalism, symbolised by Francis Fukuyama’s book, The End of History. The title was audacious but it captured the western zeitgeist. History had ended with the triumph of western civilisation. The rest of the world had no choice but to capitulate to the advance of the west.
    In Georgia, Russia has loudly declared that it will no longer capitulate to the west. After two decades of humiliation Russia has decided to snap back. Before long, other forces will do the same. As a result of its overwhelming power, the west has intruded into the geopolitical spaces of other dormant countries. They are no longer dormant, especially in Asia.
    Indeed, most of the world is bemused by western moralising on Georgia. America would not tolerate Russia intruding into its geopolitical sphere in Latin America. Hence Latin Americans see American double standards clearly. So do all the Muslim commentaries that note that the US invaded Iraq illegally, too. Neither India nor China is moved to protest against Russia. It shows how isolated is the western view on Georgia: that the world should support the underdog, Georgia, against Russia. In reality, most support Russia against the bullying west. The gap between the western narrative and the rest of the world could not be greater.
    It is therefore critical for the west to learn the right lessons from Georgia. It needs to think strategically about the limited options it has…

The fourth paragraph there describes something that “westerners” crucially need to be able to understand. Westerners do not monopolize either humankind’s smarts, or its sensibilities, or its way(s) of looking at the world. Indeed they (we) are in a distinct minority, and badly need to understand that.
Especially given that one of our bedrock values in the world is that of the equality of all human persons…. Well, it still is, isn’t it?
Mahbubani has a lot more there, too. Including this:

    In the US, leading neo-conservative thinkers see China as their primary contradiction. Yet they also support Israel with a passion, without realising this stance is a geopolitical gift to China. It guarantees the US faces a hostile Islamic universe, distracting it from focusing on China. There is no doubt China was the bigger winner of 9/11. It has stabilised its neighbourhood, while the US has been distracted.
    Western thinkers must decide where the real long-term challenge is.* If it is the Islamic world, the US should stop intruding into Russia’s geopolitical space and work out a long-term engagement with China. If it is China, the US must win over Russia and the Islamic world and resolve the Israel-Palestine issue. This will enable Islamic governments to work more closely with the west in the battle against al-Qaeda.
    The biggest paradox facing the west is that it is at last possible to create a safer world order. The number of countries wanting to become “responsible stakeholders” has never been higher. Most, including China and India, want to work with the US and the west. But the absence of a long-term coherent western strategy towards the world and the inability to make geopolitical compromises are the biggest obstacles to a stable world order. Western leaders say the world is becoming a more dangerous place, yet few admit that their flawed thinking is bringing this about. Georgia illustrates the results of a lack of strategic thinking.

* I guess my only criticism of this analysis is over Mahbubani’s argument that “Western thinkers must decide where the real long-term challenge is,” with the choice presented being a strictly dyadic one between it being “the Islamic world” and it being China. Actually, I don’t think the choice is anywhere near as dyadic as this implies (and anyway, the policies that he prescribes for either choice are broadly similar.)
But here’s the deeper problem: he is still in the mindset at that point of arguing that the “west” needs to identify a main enemy– or as he says, a “real long-term challenge”– that is another state or bloc of states. But then, in the last paragraph he goes against that thinking– certainly, with respect to China– when he underlines that China, like India, wants to work with the US and west. And here’s an addendum to that: so do most governments in “the Islamic world”, and so, indeed do most Muslims… provided this cooperation with the US and the west is on a basis of mutual respect and fair cooperation.
Neither China nor the vast majority of members of “the Islamic world” want to overthrow any western governments and dominate their countries, which is what, for a period of time, the Soviet Union aspired to do.
So where is the real “long-term challenge” that the west faces? I believe it is the challenge, for Americans, of starting to see themselves (ourselves) as co-equal members of the world community rather than standard-bearers in some kind of existential, life-or-death contest with enemy states that requires us to bear the huge costs of maintaining our bloated military and using it to “keep order” right around the world: 360 degrees, 24/7.
And then, oh yes, there are plenty of other, very serious long-term challenges that we and the rest of the world community all face together. Challenges like dealing with:

  • climate change;
  • global inequality and the suffering of our brothers and sisters in the low-income world;
  • weapons proliferation;
  • the occurrence of conflict-driven atrocities;
  • the anti-humane violence perpetrated by Islamist extremists and others…

So please, while we’re facing serious challenges like those ones, let’s not, as “westerners,” go round the world looking for whole blocs of people and governments to make war on, as well.
Kishore Mahbubani was quite right there, in his last paragraph, when he wrote that few western leaders were prepared to admit that their own flawed thinking has been making the world a more dangerous place. But I think the greatest flaw in the thinking of most westerners has been this need to organize the world, and mobilize one’s own resources and activities, around the definition of a state or bloc of states as our enemies, to be faced down or toppled with our military power. It is that tendency that has made the world more dangerous for everyone– ourselves, along with many, many others. Now, we need to adopt the much more realistic stance of aligning ourselves at the side of the world’s other six billion people, facing the challenges that confront all of us, together.

5 thoughts on “Mahbubani on western hypocrisy, etc.”

  1. On Aug.20 Ron Smith wrote in The Sun Paper “And when Sen. John McCain, whose chief foreign policy adviser, Randy Scheunemann, is a lobbyist for Georgia, says, “In the 21st century, nations don’t invade other nations” — a statement quickly echoed by President Bush — laughter is heard around the world. If what Mr. McCain said is true, how is one to account for our invasions of Iraq and Afghanistan, and the forces we’ve arrayed against Iran while powerful voices argue for us to attack it? Talk about cognitive dissonance.
    “The president complained that Russia’s response was “disproportionate,” perhaps forgetting that he found nothing disproportionate about Israel invading, blockading and bombing Lebanon for more than a month in 2006 following the abduction of two Israel Defense Forces soldiers by Hezbollah fighters.” (www.baltimoresun.com/news/
    opinion/oped/bal-ronsmith0820,0,4237022.column)
    The trouble is Russia is not laughing. When a top Russian general warned that “Poland is risking
    attack, and possibly a nuclear one, by deploying the American missile defense system.” Rice called this “unhelpful.” NATO’s Secretary General called it “pathetic rhetoric.”
    The carnage wrought by the invasion of Iraq pales in comparison to what is coming if these blind, mad people are not stopped.

  2. Georgia is important, but I would argue that Iran was first in successfully resisting American world hegemony. Iran has led the US on a merry chase for years now, always promising to take a fresh look at the most recent US demands, and it has a lot of support in the third world especially. One can say that Russia is now following Iran’s example.
    Western Hypocrisy is driven by American Exceptionalism. Here I give the UK, Germany, France and Poland, for example, the benefit of the doubt as to why they’re not more like Switzerland and Ireland. Their politicians can be, and have been, bought, Tony Blair style.
    The real “long-term challenge” that the US faces is resistance to American exceptionalism, that unshakable belief that America is the best place on earth and therefore Americans, due to their blessed birthright, know best, and any disagreement with this “truism” and its economic requirements constitutes a challenge.
    The new National Defense Strategy published by the Pentagon has nonsensically determined the following, in part:
    o “For the foreseeable future, this environment will be defined by a global struggle against a violent extremist ideology that seeks to overturn the international state system.”[overturn the international state system? Wow.]
    o “The Iranian regime sponsors terrorism and is attempting to disrupt the fledgling democracies in Iraq and Afghanistan.”[Iran is best buddies with Iraq, and helped the US in A.]
    o “we will need to hedge against China’s growing military modernization and the impact of its strategic choices upon international security.”[Tell me again how many aircraft carriers China has and how many countries it has invaded?]
    o “Russia’s retreat from openness and democracy could have significant security implications for the United States” [How are these “retreats” a security threat?]
    http://www.defenselink.mil/news/2008%20National%20Defense%20Strategy.pdf
    There are enemies everywhere, and we are in a “long war.” But with the Pentagon determining US foreign policy, with not a dissenting whimper from our elected representatives, or the ineffectual US State Department, what can we expect except belligerency? That’s their business.
    The bottom line IS the bottom line: The US, and their bought-and-paid-for western acolytes, don’t want a safer world order, they want a more profitable-for-the-US-and-friends world order, and if the world is “a more dangerous place,” that’s all to the good. US foreign military sales are expected to top $50b this fiscal year, with 3/4 to Middle Eastern countries, which is a sign of policy success (they think).

  3. Helena,
    thanks for diving into Mahbubani piece – I didn’t had time today to do so.
    I have the same critic you have. He tries to “sell” China as an “primary concern” and enemy.
    He is pretty anti-Chinese in most of what I’ve read from him.
    Still, his diagnosis of Saakashvili’s splendid little war is correct. The “west” was a. impotent and b. hypocrite about the whole affair. And the whole world watched that pretty intensively.
    This will have some deep long-term consequences in the 90% part towards the 10% part.
    The 10% will not like that and I am afraid they will resort to violence against the 90% because they believe their own propaganda.
    We need to urgently think about how to break the “western narrative” that leads the “west” into this cul de sac.
    (b=Bernhard)

  4. Regarding the Georgian fiasco. America has active rivals that are evidently more effective and far less decadent; even, (for Pete’s sake), Russia!.
    What more needs to be said?
    Except perhaps, (and God knows it will probably not save us), that the entire “western” world does not share or support American Imperialism.
    It has neither rational basis nor emotional appeal to so many of us. Notwithstanding those ridiculous American claims of our mutual “white man” guilt for proposedly equivalent harm to various other nations; both past and present.

  5. Could not agree more.
    The “flawed thinking” which has created a more dangerous world is the Ideological or “mythic” thinking which the west has indulged in, particularly George W. Bush.
    By not being self-critical, this type of thinking requires an unusual amount of “good luck” to be effective.
    Iraq is an example; the delusion of happy citizens cheering the arrival of US troops was a good example of mythic thinking with a long provenance in literature and films.
    The notion of American Exceptionalism, another form of Fukuyama’s “end of history”, is another mythic story of long pedigree.
    This also shows up as forms of “chosen” people.
    (Note: mythic thinking does not mean something is false or true; it merely refers to the nature of the thinking itself and its validity within a mythic system, not whether it is true or false.)
    We may be awakening.
    It could have been – and may be – much worse.

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