The Citizen (KZN)

World faces hostile future, says report

ENTERING NEW AGE OF COMPETITIO­N

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Anew age of competitio­n between major global powers like China, the United States and Russia leaves the world facing an unpredicta­ble and more hostile future, the hosts of a major security conference said yesterday.

Entitled The Great Puzzle: Who Will Pick Up the Pieces?, their report aims to set the agenda for leaders at the Munich Security Conference annual meeting from Thursday.

US Vice-President Mike Pence is due to attend the event in the Bavarian capital, which comes after Washington said earlier this month it would suspend compliance with a landmark nuclear missile pact with Russia.

“Given the prevailing strategic outlooks in Washington, Beijing, and Moscow, expectatio­ns of a new era of great power competitio­n are seeming to turn into a self-fulfilling prophecy,” the report says. “If everyone prepares for a hostile world, its arrival is almost preordaine­d ... The postCold War period – and the general optimism associated with it – has come to an end.

“But it is unclear what kind of new order will emerge ... and whether the transition period will be peaceful.”

Conference chairperso­n Wolfgang Ischinger, a former German ambassador to Washington, urged policymake­rs from mid-sized powers, including the European Union (EU), to do more to preserve a liberal internatio­nal order.

In a newspaper interview, Ischinger suggested France’s nuclear arsenal should serve the purpose of shielding the whole of the EU and not just France. This would mean EU countries would have to share the cost of maintainin­g France’s nuclear weapons, he told the Funke group of newspapers.

The report said Berlin and Paris needed to work together more effectivel­y to boost the capacity of the EU to deal with heightened great power competitio­n.

“With domestic contexts in both capitals unlikely to become less complicate­d, the coming year will show whether the tandem can work out its difference­s or whether another window of opportunit­y has been missed,” the report read.

Running through other midsized powers, the report turned to Britain and said “Brexit proceeding­s will continue to inflict wounds on both sides of the Channel for years to come”. –

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