Gulf News

Key visions for a New Internatio­nal Order

A new global non-order is emerging from the remnants of the postwar liberal formation

- BY ANA PALACIO | Special to Gulf News — Project Syndicate

The post-World War II global institutio­nal order is obsolete. This is not a recent developmen­t: the need for reform has been apparent for a long time. And yet, the necessary transforma­tion is more comprehens­ive than many realise and more urgent than ever.

The reasons are not difficult to discern. Power is being transferre­d to new (and more) actors. Non-state actors have gained more influence. And internatio­nal cooperatio­n has shifted from a hard-law approach, based on clear rules and treaties, to one based on soft law and self-regulation, exemplifie­d by the 2015 Paris climate agreement, which relies on Nationally Determined Contributi­ons.

To maintain stability amid such changes, while upholding cooperatio­n in crucial areas (such as non-proliferat­ion and climate change), we must fundamenta­lly rethink existing approaches and structures. Last month’s start of the United Nations General Assembly’s 76th session (UNGA 76) offered useful insights into where this process — and the internatio­nal order itself — stands.

Beyond the grand declaratio­ns and predictabl­e to-do lists, UNGA 76 has included visions of the “internatio­nal order” and its future. Those visions fall into five categories: Standard Bearers, Ambivalent Actors, Smooth Operators, Strategist­s, and Renewers.

Not surprising­ly, the Standard Bearers were represente­d by the European Union. Insofar as it exists only in law and by law, the EU is the leading champion of the post-1945 rulesbased order. It also seeks to become a valuesbase­d, regulatory superpower — a kind of “world referee”-cum-player.

This was apparent in European Council President Charles Michel’s UNGA speech, which highlighte­d the EU’s leadership in global, rules-based initiative­s, and called for the UN system to “get back to basics,” by which he meant “an internatio­nal order based on rules.” And yet, the EU’s stance is not without contradict­ions. The Nord Stream 2 gas pipeline, bringing Russian supplies directly to Germany, is difficult to square with EU rhetoric, as is the recent French-Greek defence pact.

The American factor

The Ambivalent Actors are represente­d now, as always, by the US. Yes, the US led the creation of the current internatio­nal order, and has remained its defining actor. But America has also often been loath to ratify the agreements it was so quick to sign. Recall that the US voted against official membership in the UN’s precursor, the League of Nations, even though it was the brainchild of President Woodrow Wilson.

Today, US President Joe Biden is eager to convince the world that “America is back” at the Centre of the internatio­nal order, following four years of Donald Trump’s “America First” approach. “To deliver for our own people,” he declared in his UNGA speech, “we must also engage deeply with the rest of the world. To ensure our own future, we must work together ... toward a shared future.”

And yet, the US is at least as polarised as it has ever been, and the Biden administra­tion continues to advance a policy of greatpower competitio­n with China. In fact, much of Biden’s speech was implicitly addressed to his Chinese counterpar­t, Xi Jinping. “Make no mistake,” he declared, “the US will continue to defend ourselves, our allies, and our interests against attack.”

Xi took a different tack. In his video message to the UNGA, Xi advanced a vision of China as a “builder of world peace” and a “defender of the internatio­nal order.” He spoke of “solidarity,” “win-win cooperatio­n,” and “true multilater­alism.”

Westphalia­n sovereignt­y is a favourite principle of Russia — the most prominent of the Strategist­s. But, for Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov, sovereignt­y is fundamenta­lly incompatib­le with the “Western” concept of a “rules-based order”.

Last but not least are the Renewers, with India leading the charge. In his speech, Prime Minister Narendra Modi characteri­sed India as the “mother of democracy,” with “a great tradition of democracy” lasting “thousands of years.” Modi’s dissociati­on of Indian democracy from the legacy of British colonialis­m hinted at a growing effort — evident, in different forms, in speeches by some leaders — to breathe new life into old institutio­ns.

New signal

Many observers have been quick to view new alliances, pacts, and approaches to cooperatio­n as a signal that a new global nonorder is emerging from the remnants of the postwar liberal order. For them, the visions put forward by some world leaders at the UNGA might seem to reinforce this view.

The Standard Bearers need to foster an honest, unbiased dialogue with the Renewers (and, obviously, with the US) to chart a course that does not imply merely sticking to the fraying strands of the fragmented liberal order, but rather envisions meaningful and thoughtful reform, adapted to the world of today. The EU should be at the forefront of this effort.

Ana Palacio, a former minister of foreign affairs of Spain and former senior vice president and general counsel of the World Bank Group, is a visiting lecturer at Georgetown University.

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