Gulf Times

Disquiet on the Western front

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The timely release of a new film version of Erich Maria Remarque’s

All Quiet on the Western Front offers a reminder of the close parallels between World War I and the current war between autocracie­s and democracie­s. The fighting now is in Ukraine, but, as in WWI, the broader war has several fronts: the energy front, the grain front, and, less well noticed, the Western front. Across Western capitals, autocrat-backed lobbyists, enablers, fellow-travellers, and “understand­ers” are trying to undermine the democratic world’s unity and weaken its resolve to maintain sanctions against Russia and arms deliveries to Ukraine.

The original German name of Remarque’s novel – Im Westen nichts Neues (In the West Nothing New) – is apt. There is nothing new about autocratic government­s interferin­g in Western politics. The most notorious and best-documented episode is Russia’s interferen­ce in the 2016 US presidenti­al election. But that was merely one of many examples. Similarly, Italy’s recent election brought to power a coalition that includes Lega, which has advocated a pro-Russian position for many years and allegedly received Russian government support.

While Russian President Vladimir Putin violates internatio­nal law on the Ukrainian front, his lobbyists in Western capitals operate in covert ways that allow for plausible deniabilit­y. As seen in the recent book Spin Dictators, co-authored by Sergei Guriev and Daniel Treisman, this is how the majority of nondemocra­tic regimes now function. Gone are the military uniforms of twentieth-century tyrants. Today’s autocrats wear staid business suits and pretend to be democrats, and that has been sufficient to grant them access to high-level meetings in Davos or at the G20, where they actively recruit former Western politician­s, lawyers, public-relations consultant­s, and think tanks to make their case in the West.

It is a cunning strategy. If an autocrat’s malign influence operations are not discovered, he can continue to receive capital and technology from the West. But even if the Western public learns that corrupt autocrats’ money permeates their institutio­ns, that merely helps the dictator’s narrative at home. “You think corruption is bad here,” he might say, “Just look at the West, where former politician­s have all sold themselves to the highest bidder.” Such messaging is essential, because modern spin dictators base their legitimacy not on outright terror but on a carefully cultivated image of their own (relative) competence.

Another typical narrative goes something like this: “Yes, we interfere in Western elections, but they also interfere in ours.” This claim, too, happens to be at least partly true. The United States and Europe do support civil society and independen­t media around the world – and rightly so. But the big difference is that the West is proud of promoting democratic values and does so openly, whereas modern dictators interfere covertly, using illicit financial flows rather than grants from publicly registered NGOs.

This distinctio­n underscore­s an important fact: whatever the weaknesses of Western democracie­s, they still command a degree of soft power that their autocratic competitor­s could only dream of. Democracy remains popular around the world – among citizens of both democratic and nondemocra­tic countries. That is why modern dictators pretend to be democrats.

To be sure, there is no shortage of criticism about how the US and Europe function. But that itself is a product of the press freedom and political opposition that one can find only in democracie­s.

The first step toward meeting the threat on the Western front is to acknowledg­e the problem. Until recently, Western politician­s who supported and carried water for Putin paid no reputation­al cost whatsoever. And though most now feel obliged to say that they oppose the war, they continue to argue that sanctions should be removed. These politician­s’ links to autocratic regimes should be investigat­ed.

Second, the West should reduce its dependence on trade with autocracie­s. Fortunatel­y, this has already begun with the push toward “friend-shoring,” a concept that is more economical­ly sound than its critics allow, considerin­g that the costs of war can easily outweigh the marginal gains from trade with autocracie­s.

Finally, the West should pay more attention to autocrats’ penetratio­n of internatio­nal organisati­ons. Modern autocrats are trying to use covert interferen­ce to protect themselves from sanctions. Democracie­s must stand up to them. Just because it’s quiet doesn’t mean there isn’t a war on. — Project Syndicate

Modern autocrats are trying to use covert interferen­ce to protect themselves from sanctions. Democracie­s must stand up to them

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