“We've been sitting here since Christmas 1914, during
which time millions of men have died, and we've advanced no further than an
asthmatic ant with some heavy shopping”.
Edmund Blackadder in Blackadder Goes Forth
Alphen,
Netherlands. 12 February. The West is in headlong strategic retreat because it’s
‘leaders’ have abandoned the first rule of successful statecraft; leverage. Three events this week reveal the extent of this retreat into
strategic pretence; the Munich Syria agreement, NATO's counter-trafficking mission to the Aegean; and David Cameron's Brexit speech in Hamburg. All three events share a common problem; the West's lack of strategic leverage.
Strategic Pretence 1 – Syria: There was
a chilling symmetry that yesterday’s ‘peace in our time’ meeting of the seventeen-state Syrian Contact Group took place in Munich. Indeed, the agreement to 'cease hostilities' (not a ceasefire
agreement) even sounds like Neville Chamberlain’s ill-fated 1938 ‘accord’ with Adolf
Hitler. The ceasefire will begin to begin in a week (or so), before that humanitarian aid will begin to flow (how???), but Russia will
still get to decide if groups are ‘terrorists’ under its own interpretation of the
agreement. Munich not for the first time witnessed Realpolitik meeting the League
of Nations meeting Neville Chamberlain all over again. Indeed, whilst the
divided West seeks peace without power, Vladimir Putin will exert his ‘peace’ through
power. Worse, as the tragedy of Aleppo demonstrates Russia is ‘winning’ the
Syria War on its own Chechen-style terms and does not give a hoot if 250,000
people have been killed if that means Russian influence enhanced and the West
eclipsed.
Strategic Pretence 2 – Migration: NATO
this week agreed to send ships to the Aegean Sea to monitor the activities of
human traffickers in an attempt to curb the flow of asylum seekers and migrants
crossing from Turkey to Greece. However, far from stopping the traffickers the
ships will simply pass information to the Turkish and Greek coastguards. Within
twenty-four hours of the decision, and shortly after the Munich agreement, Turkey’s
President Erdogan suddenly threatened to “open the gates” to Europe for some
600,000 more migrants. Clearly, if Turkey wanted to stop the traffickers it
could but it does not. Indeed, even Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte described the
NATO mission as ‘symbolic’.
Strategic Pretence 3 – Brexit: In
Hamburg this evening British Prime Minister, sorry second-hand Rolls Royce salesman
David Cameron will give a speech in which he will lay out his ‘vision’ for a
reformed EU in the presence of German Chancellor Angela Merkel. No doubt Merkel
will pretend to agree with Cameron and laud him for his leadership, and no
doubt Cameron will pretend he has achieved a negotiating breakthrough and thank
Merkel for her support. In fact, Cameron’s ‘renegotiation’ of Britain’s membership
of the EU is pure piffle and has been from the beginning of this sorry exercise
in political chicanery. There is no question that had Cameron really been
prepared to walk Europe’s second biggest economy and leading military power
away from the EU (and meant it) he would have achieved far more than what one
British Conservative MP rightly called “very thin gruel”. Gruel which at next
week’s EU Summit will be further watered down, or to use British diplo-speak, will
‘benefit’ from some minor technical adjustments. Never has a British prime minister promised so
much reform, and delivered so little at a moment when much reform is so
patently needed.
Why has the
West become so supine even in dealing with issues that threaten its own security?
Two words; Afghanistan and Iraq. The disastrous 2003 invasion of Iraq and the
failure in Afghanistan (and Libya) have left Western leaders scarred to such an
extent they no longer believe they can prevail. This failure of will is generating
three dangerous strategic paradoxes; the triumph of the short-term over the
long-term, the abandonment of hard power for soft power; and a determined focus
on low politics at the expense of high politics.
The result is
a West that is locked into ever-decreasing circles of self-reinforcing failure.
One reason for strategic pretence is that leaders such as Obama, Cameron, and Merkel
simply do not want to confront their respective publics with uncomfortable
truths. However, because of that refusal
they are unable to manage crises effectively. Such failure has led a broad
cross-section of said to conclude that mainstream leaders are incompetent, even
if publics would be equally uncomfortable with the actions that needed to resolve
said crises. Not surprisingly, political insurgents and populists have
exploited well-placed cynicism to advantage thus making said crises far more
difficult to resolve.
The prospects
are not good. Even though the world is about to enter a very dangerous period
indeed demanding of the West unity, sophistication and determination in equal measure
the free world could conceivably end up being led by either Donald Trump or Bernie
Sanders. Indeed, imagine a world in which
the three most powerful figures are Donald Trump, Vladimir Putin, and Xi
Jingping.
Behind the nightly
misery, mayhem and manipulation profound strategic tensions lurk that could very
rapidly become very dangerous indeed. In such a world strategic effect can only
be realised by sound statecraft backed up with the power to exert real leverage,
and the backbone to apply it. Any candidates?
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.