The Mercury News

Don't wish for a post-Pax Americana

- By Bret Stephens Bret Stephens is a New York Times columnist.

Who knows, at this writing, what Vladimir Putin will decide to do with the forces he's massed along Ukraine's borders?

If Putin backs down, the Biden administra­tion will deserve full credit: whipping into line our European allies, particular­ly Germany; thwarting Russian covert operations by leaking details to the media; expanding America's military presence in front-line NATO states; working on ways to supply Europe with liquefied natural gas; refusing to negotiate at Ukraine's expense; threatenin­g sanctions against Moscow that, for once, have real teeth.

If Putin doesn't back down, these were still the right and necessary steps. They just weren't sufficient.

Either way, the crisis should serve as a tutorial on what the so-called post-Pax Americana world will look like. In a fantasy version of that world, the United States trades the burdens of being a superpower for the modest but more manageable, affordable and humane ambitions of a normal country.

Our military shrinks to a size adequate for national defense. We spend the savings on mending the frayed edges of society. Our foreign policy becomes more collaborat­ive. We lose the illusion that we can, or should, solve other people's problems. Our economic policies shift to adapt to a lessglobal­ized world.

What's wrong with those ideas? For starters, global order is not a self-generating phenomenon. In the absence of Pax Americana, would the United Nations be capable of enforcing rules of the road, like freedom of navigation in the South China Sea, over which as much as one-third of the world's commercial traffic passes? How about regional alliances, like the European Union or the Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations? Don't count on it.

This has some obvious knock-on effects. It's an invitation to predatory behavior — precisely of the kind we're witnessing on Ukraine's borders and also seeing signs of over the Taiwan Strait. And predatory behavior is rarely satisfied. A Russia that possesses more of Ukraine or a China that seizes Taiwan will each want more. They'll be in a stronger position to get it.

Another obvious consequenc­e: There will be no peace dividend in a post-Pax Americana world. Contrary to convention­al wisdom, the United States today spends historical­ly little on defense — about 3.7% of gross domestic product, compared to more than 5% in the last year of the Carter administra­tion. But military spending would have to return to Cold War levels for an era in which core U.S. interests were constantly threatened by hostile and confident powers.

We would also find ourselves perplexed and frightened by the behavior of our traditiona­l allies. Instead of having freeloader­s, we would enter a world of freelancer­s, countries aggressive­ly out for themselves, irrespecti­ve of American wishes or establishe­d norms. Without the assurance of U.S. protection, what would keep a future Japanese government from rapidly fielding a vast nuclear arsenal as a response to China? Why shouldn't Turkey and Saudi Arabia go nuclear, too, particular­ly if Iran winds up with a bomb?

A world in which several combustibl­e regions each have multiple nuclear powers in varying configurat­ions of alliance and hostility is a recipe for miscalcula­tion, accident and tragedy.

It's also not a formula for prosperity. The idea that the United States should aspire to some sort of autarky is divorced from any conceivabl­e economic reality. In a postPax Americana world, we would simply have to depend on flows of trade at the mercy of hostile powers and unexpected events.

Most dangerousl­y, the postPax Americana world is one in which liberal democracy would wither. This is already happening abroad, from Budapest to Ankara to Mexico City. Why shouldn't it happen here, too?

Charismati­c dictatorsh­ips often inspire a current of admiration among democratic publics; it's why a corner of the progressiv­e left admired the Castro regime in Cuba, just as the new far right is quietly infatuated with Putin. Anyone who says it can't happen here must have slept through the past five years.

Whatever happens next in Ukraine, it won't matter as much as the lessons we draw from it. Only the innocent think that an America that turns its back on the world will be left alone in turn.

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