China Daily Global Weekly

US ideologica­l crusade imperils us all

Washington’s export of ‘democracy’ has wrought havoc globally, puts world’s future at risk

- By JASNA PLEVNIK The author is president of the Geoeconomi­c Forum, Croatia. The views do not necessaril­y reflect those of China Daily.

Democracy, in different forms, is the most followed political system in the world. But there are contrastin­g views on it. For China, democracy belongs to all — it is not the property of any one country, and is related to human values. China’s fast-paced economic developmen­t and the eradicatio­n of extreme poverty show the Chinese government works for the common good of the people. According to an Open Society Barometer survey last year, many respondent­s said they believe China’s growing global influence would be “a force for good”.

Beijing has never been interested in imposing its political system or form of government on other countries. China has reiterated that the world should not be dominated by one country.

The United Nations, according to China, should act as a central pole of internatio­nal democracy, especially when it comes to global decisionma­king and enforcing internatio­nal law. In contrast, the United States sees itself in the pole position, not the UN. Washington even wants Beijing to become a neoliberal democracy and pursue the values which the US believes in.

The US thinks the type of neoliberal democracy it follows has proved to be best for governance, both in theory and praxis, even though many of its important allies think US-style neoliberal democracy is going through a crisis globally.

In the US’ foreign policy “democracy” is as significan­t as military or ecological security. The US’ expanded approach to safeguard its national interests and national security, and the balance of power politics, mean Washington could force its model of democracy globally.

In the interest of neoliberal democracy, the US has taken many anti-democratic actions, and triggered and/or fought wars, in order to engineer regime change in different countries. The results have been a devastated, unstable Iraq, a shambolic Libyan society and economy, and a war-ravaged Afghanista­n now ruled by the Taliban, whose eradicatio­n the US had promised while invading the country in 2001. Yet the US does not see the chaotic and tragic developmen­ts as a defeat or debacle of its “global democracy spreading” campaign.

Under the excuse of spreading “democracy”, the US in the “IndoPacifi­c” region has establishe­d new political and military alliances and is even flirting with idea of expanding NATO in the Asia-Pacific, so as to make the region an “open, democratic, peaceful” place governed by rule of law.

Now the US’ top geostrateg­ic interest is to shield the values of “democracy” in Eastern Europe. That expansive ideology behind protecting “democracy” in Ukraine began 10 years ago when the US supported a coup in that country and decided to make Ukraine a NATO member. The problem for the US is that Russia immediatel­y understood it as casus belli.

The US has been sending weapons to Ukraine on the pretext of helping it defend itself against Russia, which has cost the lives of thousands of Ukrainian and Russian people, and billions of dollars in damages. It is another matter that the combined efforts of the US, the European Union and NATO have had no impact on Russia.

It seems that no cost for the Russia-Ukraine conflict is too high for them. The conflict has not only forced the civilian population in a life-threatenin­g crisis, and destroyed the economy, cultural institutio­ns and political democracy in Ukraine but also made the EU less democratic and a more propaganda-loving narrative generator.

In many parts of Europe, democracy has been under constant attack. Russian opera singers, conductors, writers, actors and athletes have been banned in much of the West, and historical monuments connected with Russia demolished.

In the political sphere, former German chancellor Gerhard Schroder was almost expelled from Germany’s ruling Social Democratic Party over his close ties with Russia. Anybody who does not see the UkraineRus­sia conflict as a way of protecting “democracy” has been called pro-Russia and/or morally corrupt, which perfectly reflects the hypocritic­al attitude of the US towards democracy in Europe.

In Europe, it is no longer possible to support peace without being attacked as traitors of democracy.

With the Russia-Ukraine conflict entering its third year, the situation has become increasing­ly different for the EU. What is evident now is that the US has spread the battlefiel­d from Ukraine to the whole of Europe, all in the name of spreading “democracy” while a nuclear Armageddon seems to be looming. The whole world is at risk, and that is a serious threat to the future of democracy. The question is: Can democracy survive without the people?

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