The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

The United States no longer exists as a policeman for the world, and that’s fine

- Alex Bell

Goodbye America. The world’s cop is turning in its badge. President Biden says the era of American interventi­on is over. “This decision about Afghanista­n is not just about Afghanista­n. It’s about ending an era of major military operations to remake other countries,” said the president, defending his decision to pull out of Kabul.

From now on, he suggested, American troops would stay at home.

We have been here before. America became the world’s richest state around the beginning of the 20th Century.

Big population, advanced economy, industrial strength – all the ingredient­s for a global leader. It was a role that never sat easily with the public.

It came late to the world wars and by Vietnam had learnt that projection of force did not work.

That’s 1917 to 1975. A 50-year period. Which ended roughly 50 years ago.

President Biden is not radical in ending the era of interventi­on, but conservati­ve.

It’s tempting to write him off after Kabul, but his latest speech coupled to his hugely radical economic recovery plan, means he might yet emerge as the man who reinvented America.

For Britain, the news is disastrous. As America’s ally, the UK stood on the shoulders of Uncle Sam, a dutiful parrot to its master.

Now it finds itself outside Europe, dumped by America and short of friends. It is hard to imagine a worse position. The bigger issue is global security. The temptation is to say we are staring into the abyss.

A strong China, chippy Russia, unstable Iran, barmy North Korea – alongside the crisis in land use and resources prompted by climate change – is a combustibl­e mix.

Yet, there are many reasons for optimism too.

The Asia Foundation has been surveying public opinion in Afghanista­n for 20 years.

The results show majority support for women’s rights, economic developmen­t and support for peace.

The Afghan people want what we all want. A peaceful life with the chance to develop. Its struggle is to find leaders in tune with the people.

African countries report similar findings. And while the African continent has a long way to go in achieving western-style stability, it’s made huge advances in the last two decades.

In part, Africa has been helped by China which is investing billions in infrastruc­ture projects around the world.

The world is not dividing. It is becoming unified by the internet

Chinese roads, rail and ports are boosting global developmen­t.

Beijing partly does this to claim natural resources, but that is no different to the foreign policy objective of Washington or London before it.

India is light years ahead in terms of education, health and economic developmen­t.

Its politics still spasm to nationalis­t sentiment, but there is no reason to think it’s about to inflate border scuffles with Pakistan and China into war.

The world is not dividing. It is becoming unified by the internet and mobile phones.

It is much harder to paint one nation as other or different in the age of connectivi­ty.

Government­s may try, but population­s resist.

The idea that you can export democracy to a country, like opening a new branch of Ikea, doesn’t work.

At the time of the Arab Spring, when a number of countries in North Africa and the Middle East revolted, western observers were keen to say it showed the triumph of democracy.

A few weeks ago the last country not to fall back into authoritar­ian rule, Tunisia, closed its parliament.

The fact of the matter is that nation building and developmen­t is a messy business.

People with a common identity need to be left to muddle through as best they can.

The role of the richer nations is to let them. Offer help if it’s welcome, but don’t intervene.

Global security can still be achieved. Cyber-scrutiny, intelligen­ce gathering and co-operation will do more to control weapons of mass destructio­n or track terrorists that large armies.

The preservati­on of internatio­nal trade governed by set standards allows all nations to play the global game.

The free travel of people and goods, the blending of all races and cultures, is as good a path to freedom as carrying sticks. That said, America isn’t giving up.

It may not be the world’s cop, but it’s still the biggest bruiser on the planet.

Until that ends, there are good reasons for optimism.

 ??  ?? MOVING ON: Joe Biden’s new America is starting to shift away from attempting to intervene in disputes around the world.
MOVING ON: Joe Biden’s new America is starting to shift away from attempting to intervene in disputes around the world.
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