Alphen, Netherlands. 5
September. Is the G20 the real Security Council? Over the past two days the heads
of state and government of the G20 (Group of Twenty) top world economies met in
Hangzhou in China to discuss a whole host of weighty topics. It is certainly
interesting how the G20 seems to be steadily eclipsing both the Western-weighted
G8 and the UN Security Council as the place where real power meets.
It is also worth stating just
which states are in Hangzhou: Argentina, Australia, Brazil, Canada, China,
France, Germany, Indonesia, India, Italy, Japan, South Korea, Mexico, Russia,
Saudi Arabia, South Africa, Turkey, UK and US, plus (of course!!!!) the EU. This
year the likes of Egypt, Spain and Singapore were also invited, along with the
leaders of leading regional powers, together with a host of institutions.
Whilst the agenda was essentially
economic in flavour the context was doggedly and decidedly about strategy and
power. And, whilst the states represented come from all the world’s flashpoints
it is also clear to see three emerging twenty-first century strategic groups;
the World-Wide West, the Illiberal Great Powers, and the New Non-Aligned. In a sense G20 more than
any other forum captures the way of the world in 2016; a strange, dangerous and
unpredictable world of power, weakness and informality. It is a rapidly changing
world in which state power matters more than ever, but in which there are also
a whole host of weak and failing states. It is a world in which international institutions
proliferate, but their influence over world events appears to be failing. It is
a world in states dominate, but are challenged by the anti-state more than ever
before.
Take the United Nations
Security Council (UNSC) which, since its 1945 founding and for all its many
travails, has remained the formal focus of state power interaction, even during
the Cold War. Indeed, it was the UNSC which during the Cold War provided the
theatre for much dramatic confrontation between the West and the former Soviet
bloc. However, even though it appeared paralysed for many years the very
bipolar nature of the Cold War made it possible for institutional conflict
resolution to play an important part in its eventual resolution.
The world today is
decidedly multipolar with institutions not only paralysed but fractured by many
different disputes with no dominant state or bloc, not even the United States.
Indeed, one notable aspect of this G20 were the divisions within the West,
which would have been noted by all others present, particularly Presidents
Putin and Xi. The strange sight of President Obama both reaffirming the ‘Special
Relationship’ with Theresa May’s Brexit Britain and then dissing it was
indicative of a new age in which power relationships even between close allies
are as fluid as at any time since 1939.
That strategic fluidity ran
through the G20 and with it the danger that ‘might’ will progressively replace ‘right’
as the shaping force of twenty-first century geopolitics. In a fluid strategic
environment the ability of a state to decide and act quickly is at a premium,
whilst multilateral institutions are rendered ponderous and reactive.
The whole purpose of post-1945
institutional architecture was to embed states in institutions to prevent
extreme state action. However, be it China’s claims to much of the East and
South China Seas, Russia’s illegal annexation of Crimea, or the West’s
selective interpretation of UN Security Council resolutions over the past twenty-five
years, it is clear why formal international relations and the 1945
institutional construct is beginning to fail.
Hence G20. Since its
founding in 1999 the G20 has steadily become the forum for real power. Naturally,
the architects of the G20 would beg to differ. They would claim that as a place
where power can talk G20 reinforces rather than diminishes institutional
international relations. However, in much the same way as informal coalitions
within alliances eventually threaten to destroy said alliances, regimes such as
G20, reflective of power as they are, and indeed where power actually resides,
over time inevitably eclipse and then destroy formal international institutions.
Therefore, if one places
this week’s G20 in its rightful strategic context one sees a world teetering on
the brink between might and right. Much like prior to World War One it is a
world in which big state power is increasingly eloquent. This means that even
if a powerful state defects from a set of accepted rules and norms, and even if
it might be condemned for so doing, its very power means that it could not be
punished. There simply would not be sufficient countervailing power to exact punishment,
nor sufficient willingness on the part of other states to join together to re-impose
agreed norms, precisely for fear of the power of the defecting state.
So, is the G20 the real
Security Council? No, because such a council is where accepted norms and rules
are applied. However, it is a ‘regime’ in which true power resides. And, as
Thomas Hobbes once warned, “Covenants, without the sword, are but words, and of
use to secure a man at all. The bonds of words are too weak to bridle man’s
ambition, avarice, anger, and other ambitions, without the fear of some
coercive power”.
Forget the formal agenda
of the G20. The real agenda in Hangzhou concerned power, change, who is up…and
who is going down.
Julian Lindley-French
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