China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Cold-War mentality makes no sense

- By Grzegorz W. Kolodko

It is not only those concerned with sustainabl­e developmen­t and improving the living conditions of the greatest possible number of people, but all rational human beings that are bewildered by the atmosphere of seemingly a second Cold War that has emerged in recent years and the accompanyi­ng increased arms spending. The world spent approximat­ely$2.4 trillion on the military in 2022 according to data published by the Stockholm Internatio­nal Peace Research Institute. Naturally, everywhere such as spending is said to be for “national defense”. For the most part, this is an obvious waste of resources. There are not enough funds for the investment­s in human capital that improve infrastruc­ture that makes business operations and people’s lives easier. The China-proposed Belt and Road Initiative contribute­s significan­tly to this cause, yet more must be done.

It is estimated that there are around 650 million people still living in abject poverty today.

If only half of resources being spent on the worldwide military build-up were aptly allocated for the fight against extreme poverty, it could be radically reduced, if not entirely eliminated. It is enough to recall how much the number of destitute people fell in the early 1990s during just a few years after the end of the previous Cold War, as a result of the shift of funds from military spending to peaceful developmen­t.

It is true that in the short term, arms spending can boost economic growth, if it is invested in the domestic industry, as in the US, whose military budget this year is a record $886 billion. This is more than the military expenditur­e of the next 11 countries combined, starting with China and Russia, which spend one-third and onetenth respective­ly of what the US does (relatively, in relation to GDP, 1.6 and 4.1 percent, respective­ly, while the US spends 3.5 percent), and ending with the Republic of Korea, Japan, and Italy. Only eighteen countries have a national income greater than US military spending. Maintainin­g 750 military bases and installati­ons in over 80 countries costs money, after all.

It is a fact that military expenditur­e can be a vehicle for technologi­cal progress, without which there is no economic developmen­t in the long term, but progress can just as well be stimulated by spending more on various technologi­es in peaceful sectors. In particular, investment­s in the green energy transition to combat global warming have similar multiplier and employment effects. China is engaging in such a path of restructur­ing more than any other large economy.

In the haze of the Cold War, a lot of people lose their ability to think clearly and allow themselves to be led astray in the name of ill-conceived political correctnes­s. Creating an atmosphere of fear makes it easier to manipulate public opinion, which the military lobbies want on their side. And, unfortunat­ely, they succeed. The British author Robert Peckham in his recently published book entitled Fear: An Alternativ­e History of the World quotes the arch-fascist Hermann Goring on how it works: “All you have to do is tell [the people] they are being attacked and denounce the pacifists for their lack of patriotism and exposing the country to danger.” It’s amazing that something similar can happen today in countries that like to talk so loudly about their democracy …

What is also puzzling is why diplomacy, especially that of the world’s foremost power, the US, is so inept at preventing the escalation of conflicts. While China succeeded in bringing about a breakthrou­gh in the previously very tense relations, threatenin­g a military clash between the regional

powers, Iran and Saudi Arabia, President Joe Biden’s diplomacy was unable to stop Israel from launching an all-out attack on the Gaza Strip. Six visits of Antony Blinken, US Secretary of State, to the Middle East during the first six months of the armed clashes have been more than modest. The right to defend oneself does not mean consent to a massive military action which has the nature of a war crime.

Such a situation is convenient to the companies producing arms and countries exporting them. The military-industrial lobby and prowar interest groups have a stronger voice than the poorly organized peace advocates and sustainabl­e developmen­t supporters. As the current cold-war mentality intensifie­s, the US arms exports — which constitute­s 37 percent of global trade in this field and which are sold to 96 countries — increased by 16 percent in 2023, to $238 billion. Three-fourths of countries in this destabiliz­ed world have lower GDP.

We are the witnesses to and participan­ts in a change of epochs. Unfortunat­ely, we are too passive regarding the new Cold War fever, but it is only a matter of time before waves of mass antiwar protests spill over, similar to those opposing the dirty Vietnam War two generation­s ago. It is hard to imagine that, without a radical reversal of the costly arms race, the overheatin­g of the climate, which is devastatin­g the economy and the lives of billions of people, can be effectivel­y blocked peacefully and democratic­ally. Imaginably, it will be necessary to resort to authoritar­ian systems and the use of force to achieve this if democracy will not be able to accomplish it.

We hear of defense against hostile aggression and of glorious struggles in the name of independen­ce, sovereignt­y and democracy, but contempora­ry cold and hot war clashes are linked also with tectonic geopolitic­al changes that are not convenient to everyone. Russia is still unable to come to terms with the loss of its formerly strong position after the collapse of the Soviet Union. The US cannot accept the fact that its global hegemony is out of date. Nostalgia for the times of colonial power still casts a long shadow over the United Kingdom and France.

Instead of a confrontat­ion between the West, led by the US, and the East, with China holding a dominant position — which pessimists predict is inevitable — the disparate two mega-systems, EuroAtlant­ic and Euro-Asian, can compete peacefully. The strengthen­ing of transnatio­nal economic, cultural and diplomatic levers would render the military ones useless. In both blocs, a key role should be played by the European Union, which belongs to each of them and does not have to take sides in the US-China disagreeme­nts. Nothing is more damaging to sustainabl­e developmen­t and inclusive globalizat­ion than the economic irrational­ity of the Cold War.

China can play a fundamenta­l role in maintainin­g peaceful developmen­t paths, especially by intensifyi­ng the Belt and Road Initiative. The economic expansion observed within it is fundamenta­lly different from the American expansion in the field of arms exports. For someone to buy US weapons, severe political tensions are needed. For anyone to benefit from Chinese foreign investment­s in infrastruc­ture developmen­t and human capital, a peaceful vision of developmen­t is necessary.

China can play a fundamenta­l role in maintainin­g peaceful developmen­t paths, especially by intensifyi­ng the Belt and Road Initiative. The economic expansion observed within it is fundamenta­lly different from the American expansion in the field of arms exports.

The author is a director of TIGER (Transforma­tion, Integratio­n and Globalizat­ion Economic Research) at Kozminski University in Warsaw, former deputy prime minister and minister of finance of Poland, and a distinguis­hed professor of the Belt and Road School of Beijing Normal University. The views do not necessaril­y reflect those of China Daily.

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