Alphen, Netherlands. 15
March. “The ides of March have come” says Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar. Standing
in the Vatican’s St Peter’s Square Tuesday, watching on a big, incongruous screen the Princes of the Roman
Universal Church file into Mass I was struck by the power of
this moment when a new Pope is chosen to lead the world’s 1.3 billion Catholics. I am not a Catholic and I happened to be
walking past St Peter’s but one could feel the electricity of change in the
air. The sense of occasion was made all
the more powerful by the tented media city that had sprung up all around St
Peter’s. It was as though Charlemagne’s
army had returned to enforce the Emperor’s fiat. Something else was apparent; the interaction
of the ancient with the utterly modern, of faith, belief and identity and how
across much of the world that friction is casting an ancient world in a new
light but only so often to highlight old thinking.
There is a almost a presumption of future conflict which sure enough
will guarantee it.
It is in the domain of
power politics that the interaction of old and new with power, prejudice and
paranoia is now more intense than at any time since the end of the Cold War. Nowhere is this more apparent than in the world’s
most important power relationship, that between the US and China. Naturally, as a Briton and a European my instincts
are for and with democratic America. That
said, there is nothing in my soul that is particularly anti-Chinese, although
like many westerners I am having to force myself to recognise the consequence
of Europe's wilful decline and learn to think anew about
this new power world.
Equally, I am no
European apologist for China. There are
many aspects of China’s one-party rule that I find disturbing and there are
quite a few aspects of China’s increasingly aggressive foreign and security
policy that worry me. Whilst there is no
reason to believe conflict is imminent, as China has clearly invested in a
system the West invented, danger (the ides of March) lurks.
The metaphor of future conflict is the developing cyber cold war. A close friend of mine has just come back
from Beijing where he attended a high-level conference on all things cyber. What struck him was the extent to which
American concerns about China’s strategic hacking are mirrored in Chinese concerns
that the Americans are embedding software in programmes that will enable
Washington to pirate Chinese secrets.
That the
Chinese are carrying out strategic hacking there can be no doubt. This is all part of the presumption of future
conflict generated by then strategic hyper-competition that is emerging between China and the US. And, for the sake of
fairness, I will avoid being dewy-eyed about my American allies. I am old enough to recall those long lost
days back in the 1980s when the US routinely exaggerated Soviet military
capability to justify a huge defence budget and control over allies.
The American tendency towards power, prejudice and paranoia is certainly
no less pronounced than the Chinese. Sadly,
it is just such power, prejudice and paranoia (not Europe’s wilful weakness)
that is today setting the rules of this new/old strategic game.
Therefore, in his
humble way Pope Francis seemed to be saying something new to all of us –
Catholic and non-Catholic alike; we still have free-will and the power of choice. We can decide not to presume future
conflict. We can if we want to change
the terms of the engagement with each other and in so doing better understand
the perspective of the other. Even a
hard-bitten Realist like me can recognise the dangerous logic of so embracing the past that we instinctively repeat it.
That was what I was
trying to do in St Peter’s Square – challenge myself to see the world through
the perspective of a faith I was brought up to distrust. Ironically, so much of my healthy English
realism about Brussels and the EU has its roots deep in the Protestant
Reformation of the sixteenth century when England stood alone against the
Catholic princes of Europe.
Have I undergone some
Damascene conversion? No. Do I think the world will become less
adversarial? Probably not. However, I think it wrong to assume that
conflict and friction are the natural state and that somehow the period of
relative (and I stress relative) strategic calm of the recent past will automatically
be replaced by confrontation and friction and ulitmately conflict
and war between America and China.
The idea that a new East-West showdown is sooner or later inevitable to establish the world's new strategic pecking order is sadly implicit in far too much that is written these days.
The risk is certainly
there. For as Shakespeare wrote, “The
ides of March have come. Ay Caesar, but not gone”.
Julian Lindley-French
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