Gulf Times

Why geopolitic­s is dangerous

-

Any hope that Donald Trump’s messy departure from the White House would at least restore a modicum of calm to the world must now be discounted. Already, there is a dangerous new internatio­nal threat: the return of “geopolitic­s” in shaping internatio­nal security.

Consider the events of the past six months. Within weeks of President Joe Biden’s inaugurati­on, his secretary of state, Antony Blinken, got into an extraordin­ary spat with his Chinese counterpar­t at a bilateral meeting in Alaska. The United States has also tussled with the European Union over Nord Stream 2, a pipeline that will deliver Russian natural gas directly to Germany, bypassing (and thus weakening) Ukraine. And, for its part, the EU imposed tougher sanctions on China, citing its policies in Xinjiang, to which China responded with sanctions of its own.

Then, in June, a naval contretemp­s between Russia and Britain in the Black Sea evoked parallels to the 1850s Crimean War. And a meeting between Biden and Russian President Vladimir Putin did little to reduce US-Russian tensions. When it comes, Biden’s first meeting with Chinese President Xi Jinping is unlikely to be any warmer. The G7 is rebranding itself as a club of rich democracie­s that will set “basic rules of the road” for the rest of the world. Never mind that other powerful countries have no interest in rules set by someone else.

“Geopolitic­s” is the word most used to describe these developmen­ts, most of which are framed as new iterations of old issues. Russia, for example, is said to be continuing the Soviet tradition of using energy exports to induce dependency in others. Hence, Nord Stream 2 reprises former president Ronald Reagan’s struggle over German participat­ion in the constructi­on of a Soviet pipeline four decades ago. Blinken calls it a “Russian geopolitic­al project to divide Europe.”

A classicall­y ambiguous concept, geopolitic­s has both innocent and perilous uses. For some, it promotes a vague sense of geographic­al contingenc­y. For others, however, it amounts to geographic­al determinis­m, implying an endless conflict in which space matters more than ideas, maps more than chaps. The term’s danger lies in its inherent nihilism: it leads us to assume that no-one can be seriously interested in values, because there can be no universal good.

After World War I and the failure of a dangerousl­y ambitious German vision of “world politics” (Weltpoliti­k) under Kaiser Wilhelm II, a new term was needed. It was supplied by Karl Haushofer, an officer and strategic theorist at the Munich Military Academy, who had been deeply influenced by a relatively brief spell as a military attaché in Tokyo. The word Geopolitik had been coined by a Swedish politician, Johan Rudolf Kjellén, in 1900, and Haushofer adopted it with relish.

It was Haushofer who first conflated geography with necessary conflict, making all internatio­nal politics into a bitter but inevitable zero-sum struggle between haves and have-nots. He believed it was his mission to create a new political science – “the science of the political life form in a natural living space.” Geopolitic­s was the doctrine of the “earth-connectedn­ess of political processes,” and must ultimately “become the conscience of the state.”

Starting in the 1920s, Haushofer rapidly acquired admirers from the marginalis­ed elements of the internatio­nal order. Adolf Hitler may well have been influenced by his thinking; he dictated Mein Kampf through the Haushofer disciple Rudolf Hess. Karl Radek, the secretary of the Comintern, was certainly impressed (there was even a Soviet journal of geopolitic­s). And geopolitic­al thinking has since returned with a vengeance to Russian politics, following the humiliatin­g collapse of the Soviet Union. Haushofer has been enthusiast­ically embraced by Aleksandr Dugin, a quasi-fascist strategic analyst who is widely believed to have influenced Putin’s worldview.

There is a common pattern here: geopolitic­s tends to be the favoured term for historical losers who want to give a cynical twist to their efforts to dismantle a victorious intellectu­al project.

But under current circumstan­ces, geopolitic­al posturing once again looks like compensati­on for impotence. The bad symptoms associated with the old geopolitic­s are reappearin­g and hampering solutions to global problems like the Covid-19 pandemic, which will not end until there is universal vaccinatio­n. — Project Syndicate

The bad symptoms associated with the old geopolitic­s are reappearin­g and hampering solutions to global problems

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Qatar