Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)

‘Homeland’ is on the money

The series certainly understand­s internatio­nal politics in ways scholars simply don't comprehend

- HENRY FARRELL and ABRAHAM NEWMAN

SHOWTIME’S hit show Homeland understand­s a key political dynamic that pundits and internatio­nal relations scholars often fail to understand.

Global politics is less and less about conflicts between states and more and more about actors who work across state boundaries to build alliances and fight battles, often using such alliances to circumvent rules that would prevent them from doing things that they really want to do.

The current season (M-Net Edge on DStv channel 102 at 3am on Tuesdays, repeated at 8pm on Tuesdays) of Homeland ( SPOILER ALERT) opens with the revelation that German intelligen­ce agencies are in cahoots with the CIA.

The CIA uses a secret programme to tap into German social media and other internet data, so as to target Islamic extremism. It then shares the informatio­n it gathers with the BND (the German equivalent of the CIA). Importantl­y, German privacy laws prevent the BND from collecting the data themselves.

This plot is revealed by an awkward alliance between a libertaria­n German hacker, who moonlights in an internet porn shop, and a journalist in self-imposed exile from the US, who is depicted (at least in the first two episodes) as a civil liberties zealot. When the programme is unmasked, shock waves reverberat­e through the transatlan­tic partners. The problem for the German chancellor is not that the programme existed, but that it was made public.

Melodramat­ics (and controvers­ial depictions of Islam) aside, Homeland’s version of transatlan­tic counter- terrorism politics gets a lot of things right. There are journalist­s and civil liberties activists who have left the US for Berlin, which has become a dissidence hub like London in the 19th -century era of Karl Marx.

WikiLeaks data makes it clear that German Chancellor Angela Merkel was far more tolerant of US incursions into privacy in private than she was in public and her right hand man, Wolfgang Schaeuble, was privately enthusiast­ic about US proposals to limit privacy in favour of homeland security.

Homeland’s account of the relationsh­ip between Europe and the US also does better than the standard arguments of pundits such as Robert Kagan. In his well-known and influentia­l book, Of Paradise and Power, Kagan caricature­s the US as coming from Mars and Europe as coming from Venus.

In other words, the US relies on unilateral, coercive tools to fight the global war on terror, while the EU cares more about rules and legal structures. This suggests that EU-US arguments over spying and privacy are straightfo­rward battles between big states and jurisdicti­ons, over whose rules win.

While there’s something to this way of thinking, it also misses out on a lot. Our recent research on the new interdepen­dence provides an alternativ­e account that is closer to Homeland than Kagan. Instead of looking at internatio­nal politics as interactio­ns between states, it looks at how collective actors beneath the level of the state – companies, bureaucrac­ies and interest groups – play a key role in shaping politics.

In a globalised world, these collective actors find it much easier to make alliances across borders. This has parallels with Homeland, in which securocrat­s work together to expand the tools available to fight terrorism, sometimes breaking national laws. At the same time, civil liberties advocates are joining forces transnatio­nally to leverage difference­s among political systems to fight for fundamenta­l rights, different political systems to maintain and promote fundamenta­l rights.

It suggests that the big battle isn’t between the US and the EU, but between two loose alliances, one of security actors across the Atlantic, and the other of privacy activists who have allied across jurisdicti­ons to fight them. Each of these alliances is using the global stage to fight for their agenda.

Homeland further gets it right in highlighti­ng the big issue that these alliances are fighting over – data sharing. If you look at two recent public agreements between the US and Europe regarding airline passenger data and financial transactio­n records, you will see that both require Europe to share data with US counterpar­ts.

Both contain a reciprocit­y clause, which stipulates that Europeans may make requests of US agencies regarding transferre­d data. Yes that is right – European agencies may ask US agencies for data that they have themselves transferre­d to the US.

Germany is now embroiled in a big privacy scandal about how the BND has helped the National Security Agency spy on German and European targets.

The season has just begun! – Washington Post

 ?? Homeland, ?? NOT AT HOME: Carrie (Claire Danes) in
M-Net Edge on DStv channel 102 at 3am on Tuesdays, repeated at 8pm on Tuesdays.
Homeland, NOT AT HOME: Carrie (Claire Danes) in M-Net Edge on DStv channel 102 at 3am on Tuesdays, repeated at 8pm on Tuesdays.
 ?? Homeland. ?? SILENT WARRIORS: Mandy Patinkin, Nazanin Boniadi, Claire Danes and Rupert Friend star in
Homeland. SILENT WARRIORS: Mandy Patinkin, Nazanin Boniadi, Claire Danes and Rupert Friend star in
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