Contemporary politics,local and international current affairs, science, music and extracts from the Queensland Newspaper "THE WORKER" documenting the proud history of the Labour Movement.
MAHATMA GANDHI ~ Truth never damages a cause that is just.
Wednesday, 18 October 2017
Donald Trump is ripping up the alliances that keep the world safe. We must defend them
From the Iran deal to Unesco, the US president is undermining global
cooperation. The fallout could be catastrophic, and Europe will not be
immune
‘No one in the Oval Office before Trump has ever so openly and
ideologically run a bulldozer into US-built, post-1945 institutions.’
Photograph: Richard Drew/AP
Five months ago, Donald Trump’s national security adviser HR McMaster penned a column attempting to persuade the world
that “America first” did not mean “America alone”. Last week Trump took
two decisions that landed the US in a strikingly lonely position: he
pulled his country out of Unesco, and took a massive swipe at the 2015 Iran nuclear deal.
The two moves were very different, but both demonstrated utter
disdain for the mechanisms and principles of multilateralism, as
enshrined in the UN-based international order. Unesco was created to
promote culture and education as a vehicle for peace. The Iran accord
was painstakingly negotiated by Trump’s predecessor, along with
America’s allies Russia and China, to thwart the danger of all-out war
across the Middle East and possibly beyond. Importantly, it was
unanimously endorsed by UN resolution 2231. That kind of consensus does not come easily – and now it is being wrecked.
Unesco expresses deep regret at US decision to leave organisation – video
Trump’s decisions gave their full meaning to key sentences in the
McMaster article, and offered a clear illustration of this
administration’s foreign policy outlook. “The world is not a ‘global
community’ but an arena where nations, non-governmental actors and
businesses engage and compete for advantage,” said that text, adding:
“Rather than deny this elemental nature of international affairs, we
embrace it.”
So
here we all are, thrown into the “arena”. Multilateralism seems to be
dying before our eyes. Europe cannot, and will not, be immune. For one
thing, recent elections in Austria have shown
populism is still at work, tearing at the fabric of EU values. If
anything, this will only add to the difficulties already encountered by
those who dream of transforming Europe into “the leader of the free
world” – to quote Emmanuel Macron, the continent’s current poster child for liberal democracy.
It’s true that other US presidents have lashed out at Unesco
in the past; the organisation is not exactly flawless. But no one in
the Oval Office before Trump has ever so openly and ideologically run a
bulldozer into US-built, post-1945 institutions. Trump had laid it out
in his speech at the UN general assembly last month. “The best vehicle
for elevating the human condition,” he said, “is the nation state.” Not
international cooperation, not global regulation, and certainly not
universal values.
With that, the US has now bluntly demonstrated that it is ready to go
it alone. In the case of the Iran deal, the consequences for
international security are potentially immense, and could unravel
quickly. One US senator may not have been exaggerating when he warned
that Trump risked putting his country “on the path to world war three”.
Trump has refrained from instantly tearing up the nuclear agreement,
but he’s put conditions on its survival that Congress and US allies
alike will now struggle to address; and he has threatened to deliver a
final blow if they don’t comply.
To understand the scale of what is happening, remember how intensely
Obama wanted to achieve this UN-endorsed 2015 deal with Iran, and how
convinced he was that a price worth paying was inaction in Syria against
the Assad regime, despite the massacres. Assad is Iran’s protege.
Civilians were slaughtered by a dictator’s army. Radicalisation grew.
For Europe, the outcome was a massive refugee phenomenon as well as
terrorism – which upended the continent’s politics and contributed to
Brexit.
Now
think about what a war over Iran’s nuclear programme would do to the
Middle East and the wider world: it’s a scenario Trump’s reckless
policies have now put back on the table. To be sure, multilateralism has
hardly been in good shape in recent years. Focusing solely on
Trump-related risks makes us forget about how other powers and leaders
have already chipped away at a global order designed to prevent conflict
and human rights violations. Need one mention George W Bush and Tony
Blair’s 2003 decision to invade Iraq?
Russia’s 2014 aggression against Ukraine
was another watershed: Crimea’s annexation was the first unilateral
redrawing of borders through use of force in Europe since the second
world war. It amounted to throwing crucial multilateral agreements, such
as the 1975 Helsinki Final Act and the 1990 Paris Charter, straight in the bin.
China has shown little interest in UN-sponsored laws of the sea, as
it seeks to establish its hold on contested maritime territories. North
Korea keeps tearing up the 1970 Non-Proliferation Treaty.
Add to that the collective failure to deal with the global refugee
crisis, and it is clear that multilateralism has been in deep trouble
for some time.
Much has been said about the danger hanging over the Paris climate accord.
Just as worrying is the fact that institutions created in the aftermath
of 20th-century atrocities, in an effort to uphold the promise of
“never again”, have increasingly come under assault. Several African
states have turned their backs on the international criminal court, a
body set up in 2002 as a reaction to the Rwanda genocide and the killing
fields of Bosnia.
Drone footage shows Rohingya refugees entering Bangladesh – video
The UN and its council on human rights have been obstructed on crises ranging from Syria to Yemen, not to mention the Rohingya
tragedy. European weaknesses were evident when, earlier this year and
for the first time ever, an EU statement (on China’s human rights
record) was blocked by one of its member states
(Greece). It’s not just that authoritarian powers are actively trying
to devalue multilateralism; the problem is that there are now fewer and
fewer reliable defenders of it.
Are we past the tipping point? Trump may well have his handlers, the so-called “adults in the room”.
But much will depend on whether liberal democratic forces in Europe and
elsewhere can unite to prevent more institutions from being
disembowelled, and crucial agreements from unravelling entirely.
As far as Britain is concerned, the combination of Brexit and of
rising leftwing anti-western sentiment does not bode well for the
future. Young British Labour voices saying they want to get rid of Nato
should be careful what they wish for. Alliances don’t threaten the
global liberal order: they are part of what underwrites it.
With America running amok and Britain shrinking into itself, the two
countries that have historically set the foundations of the
international liberal order may one day find themselves working together
to undermine it. Trump is, no doubt, a major problem. But for Britain
and the rest of Europe, getting priorities right will matter immensely.
The global “arena” theory is not just words. It is fast becoming
a reality.
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