The Guardian (USA)

US ranking on abuse of power index hurt by inequality and violence

- Patrick Wintour Diplomatic editor

The US scores surprising­ly badly in a new ranking system charting abuses of power by nation states, launched by a group co-chaired by former UK foreign secretary David Miliband.

The US comes close to the median of 163 countries ranked in the Index of Impunity, reflecting a poor record on discrimina­tion, inequality and access to democracy. The country’s arms exports and record of violence are an even bigger negative factor.

The US ranks worse on impunity than Hungary and Singapore, one a poster child for democratic backslidin­g and the other an illiberal democracy.

The UK performs creditably at 147, only 26 rankings away from the most accountabl­e state. Its score is brought down by its protection of offshore tax havens that facilitate tax abuse in other countries.

Former colonies, many affected by the slave trade, fare poorly in the index, suggesting the experience of imperialis­t subjection has caused a continuing damaging legacy. Nearly all of the top 20 ranked in the index in terms of impunity are former colonies or touched by colonialis­m.

The findings are likely to stimulate the already fraught questionin­g of the presumed superiorit­y of the west, an issue that bedevils debate at the UN and has come to dampen some of the expected support for Ukraine since Russia’s invasion.

But the index will provide little ammunition for Russia, which ranks 28 out of 160 states, the highest level of impunity in its region, and the result of poor scores for conflict and violence, environmen­tal degradatio­n, abuse of human rights and unaccounta­ble governance.

China also performs poorly, at number 48.

The work, launched ahead of the Munich Security Conference, has been prepared by an internatio­nal group cochaired by Miliband, the former British foreign secretary, and Prof Mónica Pinto of the University of Buenos Aires in collaborat­ion between the Eurasia Group and the Chicago Council on Foreign Relations.

The authors say the concept of impunity is the exercise of power without accountabi­lity, which becomes, in starkest form, the commission of crimes without punishment. The report says: “There are good grounds to fear we are entering a global ‘age of impunity’, in which ‘the rules are for suckers and civilians pay the price’.”

It argues that “while the impunity of invading a neighbour or bombing a hospital, contrary to internatio­nal law, is not yet normalized, the abuse of power is increasing­ly evident: climate change on the march; autocrats on the rise; and the rules-based-order in retreat. The documentat­ion of the scale of that abuse, in each country in the world, is the purpose of this index.”

The authors argue their chosen analytical frame could be a better way of understand­ing and measuring what is happening in the world today than democracy v autocracy, left v right, or east v west.

The authors say it aims to capture the multidimen­sional nature of global challenges ranged across five main dimensions - governance and human rights, economic inequality, environmen­tal damage, adherence to norms in times of conflict, and the linkages between a country’s domestic politics and its impact abroad.

For each of the five dimensions, the authors examined up to 17 different independen­t credible datasets to measure impunity across each dimension, so making it possible to produce an overall score and ranking for each country in the world.

Among the most powerful countries in the internatio­nal system, Germany and Japan perform the best, benefiting from their lack of direct involvemen­t in the types of conflicts that hurt the scores of more militarise­d powers, including the US and Russia. Broadly, high income liberal democracie­s perform well with Nordic countries Finland, Denmark, Sweden and Norway scoring the best rankings in the index.

Environmen­tal degradatio­n is where impunity continues to thrive, even among otherwise accountabl­e societies. For instance Canada, which is one of the best performing countries overall on the index at 22, is in the top quartile of countries for environmen­tal degradatio­n.

The study implicitly challenges the framework of democracy versus autocracy set by the US president, Joe Biden, through his democracy summit last year. It argues: “Emphasizin­g the centrality of democracy alienates the many societies that do not operate under the principles of democratic governance and yet still care about constraini­ng power. It also misses the internal debates over accountabi­lity that can happen within both democratic and non-democratic societies.”

The index shows, for instance, that countries such as India, Israel, Malaysia, or the US are self-evidently democratic, but do not score well on human rights.

Miliband said: “Impunity means the decision to launch a missile attack on a hospital in north-west Syria. It means the decision to prevent the transfer of critical aid into Yemen or within Ethiopia. It means the daily rocket attacks against civilian housing in Ukraine.

“Impunity is not just the commission of crimes – which in conflict zones means war crimes – without punishment. It is the exercise of power without checks and balances on the abuse of power. And while the abuse of power in war zones is most extreme, it is not the exception. When I say we are living in an age of impunity, I mean we are living at a time when critical checks and balances on the abuse of power – by government­s, by business, by private citizens – are in retreat.”

 ?? Allison Bailey/NurPhoto/Rex/Shuttersto­ck ?? Anti-riot fencing around the US Capitol for Joe Biden’s State of the Union address, Washington, United States, 7 February 2023. Photograph:
Allison Bailey/NurPhoto/Rex/Shuttersto­ck Anti-riot fencing around the US Capitol for Joe Biden’s State of the Union address, Washington, United States, 7 February 2023. Photograph:

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