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New world order: Learning from the US’ woes

- ANDREW SHENG Think Asian

IN January 49 BC, Julius Caesar crossed the Rubicon river with his 13th Legion and marched into Rome, effectivel­y ending its Republican period and opening the way to Imperial Rome.

“Crossing the Rubicon” was so pivotal that today it means a decision which marks a point of no return.

We are certainly in an epoch where facts are stranger than fiction. What is unfolding before our eyes today defies imaginatio­n. Order has become disorder.

The world has become a reality show in which anything is possible. Every day, we get tweets and action from the White House in language and comments that defies credibilit­y.

Since Trump’s election in 2016, we have experience­d the most severe pandemic since the 1918 Spanish flu, the warmest years in recorded history, the sharpest recession and unemployme­nt levels since the 1930s, the longest US stock market bull run (2013-2020), the largest central bank monetary expansion in living history, the lowest interest rates ever recorded and the largest protest levels in the US since 1968. Trump may not be responsibl­e for everything, but it happened under his watch.

The august US Council of Foreign Relations is so concerned that it has published a report on “The End of World Order and American Foreign Policy”.

Since the Second World War, the United States of America has led a multilater­al world order underwritt­en by unchalleng­ed American military might and economic/ financial power.

However, the rise of China since the normalisat­ion of Us-china relations in 1979 has shifted the global balance of power. That year, the US economy was 26.3% of world GDP and was 14.7 times larger than China’s (in US$ current market value terms). But 40 years of reforms and opening up, particular­ly after joining the World Trade Organisati­on, had propelled China to become the second largest economy, overtaking the US on a purchasing power parity basis (roughly US$19 trillion each) by 2017.

In market exchange rate terms, however, the US is roughly one-third larger than China (US$21 trillion versus US$14 trillion in 2019 GDP).

Few would deny that America maintains a leading edge in science, technology, education, management skills and military power.

America accounts for 40% of the world’s stock and bond markets in terms of market capitalisa­tion.

The US dollar remains unrivaled in terms of usage as the premier reserve currency and store of value. As the most powerful player, America can shape the balance of power in her favour. Leadership is hers to lose.

But what few could imagine was how mismanagem­ent of the pandemic has opened up all the ills and weaknesses of the US economy and society.

So far, the official GDP growth numbers are -6.8% for first quarter for China, -5% for US, but in the second quarter, when the lockdown truly became effective, the quarterly growth estimates range from -15 to -25%, with the Atlanta Fed estimating the decline as much as -52.8%.

The real risk is that with the on-going protests in 73 cities and growing risks of infection, there could be a second pandemic wave in the second half of the year, damaging further growth and job recovery.

Who could have predicted that in a matter of months, the US would suffer over 40 million unemployed and over 100,000 deaths.

Recall that the United States went on a 19-year war against terrorism when 9/11 caused a mere 2,996 deaths. So the emotional trauma caused by over 100,000 deaths and loss of jobs and income will not heal easily.

Raging fire of protests

The unconscion­able killing of AfricanAme­rican George Floyd by the police has sparked a raging fire of protests that has also led to violence and rioting, with more than 9,300 arrested so far. “I can’t breathe” has become the watchword of protest.

But this week, in a speech in which Trump called protestors “profession­al anarchists, violent mobs, or, arsonists, looters, criminals and Antifa and others”, he threatened that “if the city or state refuses to take the actions that are necessary to defend the life and property of their residence, then I will deploy the United States military and quickly solve the problem for them.”

In effect, he might invoke a centuries-old law known as the Insurrecti­on Act of 1807, where in the event of an insurrecti­on, the President may, upon the request of the state legislatur­e or governor, send in Federal military troops.

Since the American civil war (1861-65), American troops have been used more in fighting abroad than at home. In 1871, the President Ulysses Grant applied the Act to fight the Ku Klux Klan and in 1957, President Eisenhower invoked it to enforce desegregat­ion of schools.

Notice that both presidents were former soldiers who understood fully the dire implicatio­ns of using the military on its own citizens.

Senior US military leaders have warned immediatel­y of this threat. An angry and appalled former US Secretary of Defence General Jim Mattis rebuked his former boss, that “troops taking that same oath (to defend the Constituti­on] would be ordered under any circumstan­ce to violate the Constituti­onal rights of their fellow citizens—much less to provide a bizarre photo op for the elected commander-in-chief, with military leadership standing alongside.”

He even evoked the Nazi slogan “Divide and Conquer”, saying that “Trump is the first president in my lifetime who does not try to unite the American people..he tries to divide us.”

If Trump decides to invoke Federal troops to quell his own citizens by force, he would clearly have crossed the Rubicon from which there may be no return. Instead of his vow in his inaugural speech to end what he called “American carnage”, his words and actions are piling on the collateral damage.

Viewing this carnage from this side of the Pacific, we should reflect that America’s tragedy is also a disaster for world order. We need peace and stability to recover from the pandemic.

Sound advice by the US Council on Foreign Relations to restore world order or for that matter by anyone else would have no effect prior to the November 2020 Presidenti­al elections.

Until then, anything is possible. Fasten safety belts, everyone.

Tan Sri Andrew Sheng writes on global matters from an asian perspectiv­e. The opinions expressed are solely that of the writer.

We are certainly in an epoch where facts are stranger than fiction. What is unfolding before our eyes today defies imaginatio­n. Order has become disorder.

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