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Canada loses in "The New New World Order"

Edward Campbell

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Here, reproduced under the Fair Dealings provisions (§29) of the Copyright Act, is an interesting piece from the March/April issue of Foreign Affairs:

http://www.foreignaffairs.org/20070301faessay86203-p0/daniel-w-drezner/the-new-new-world-order.html
The New New World Order

By Daniel W. Drezner
From Foreign Affairs, March/April 2007

________________________________________
Summary: Controversies over the war in Iraq and U.S. unilateralism have overshadowed a more pragmatic and multilateral component of the Bush administration's grand strategy: its attempt to reconfigure U.S. foreign policy and international institutions in order to account for shifts in the global distribution of power and the emergence of states such as China and India. This unheralded move is well intentioned and well advised, and Washington should redouble its efforts.

Daniel W. Drezner is Associate Professor of International Politics at the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy at Tufts University and the author of "All Politics Is Global."

RISING AND FALLING

Throughout the twentieth century, the list of the world's great powers was predictably short: the United States, the Soviet Union, Japan, and northwestern Europe. The twenty-first century will be different. China and India are emerging as economic and political heavyweights: China holds over a trillion dollars in hard currency reserves, India's high-tech sector is growing by leaps and bounds, and both countries, already recognized nuclear powers, are developing blue-water navies. The National Intelligence Council, a U.S. government think tank, projects that by 2025, China and India will have the world's second- and fourth-largest economies, respectively. Such growth is opening the way for a multipolar era in world politics.

This tectonic shift will pose a challenge to the U.S.-dominated global institutions that have been in place since the 1940s. At the behest of Washington, these multilateral regimes have promoted trade liberalization, open capital markets, and nuclear nonproliferation, ensuring relative peace and prosperity for six decades -- and untold benefits for the United States. But unless rising powers such as China and India are incorporated into this framework, the future of these international regimes will be uncomfortably uncertain.

Given its performance over the last six years, one would not expect the Bush administration to handle this challenge terribly well. After all, its unilateralist impulses, on vivid display in the Iraq war, have become a lightning rod for criticism of U.S. foreign policy. But the Iraq controversy has overshadowed a more pragmatic and multilateral component of the Bush administration's grand strategy: Washington's attempt to reconfigure U.S. foreign policy and international institutions in order to account for shifts in the global distribution of power. The Bush administration has been reallocating the resources of the executive branch to focus on emerging powers. In an attempt to ensure that these countries buy into the core tenets of the U.S.-created world order, Washington has tried to bolster their profiles in forums ranging from the International Monetary Fund (IMF) to the World Health Organization, on issues as diverse as nuclear proliferation, monetary relations, and the environment. Because these efforts have focused more on so-called low politics than on the global war on terrorism, they have flown under the radar of many observers. But in fact, George W. Bush has revived George H. W. Bush's call for a "new world order" -- by creating, in effect, a new new world order.

This unheralded effort is well intentioned and well advised. It is, however, running into two major roadblocks. The first is that empowering countries on the rise means disempowering countries on the wane. Accordingly, some members of the European Union have been less than enthusiastic about aspects of the United States' strategy. To be sure, the EU has made its own bilateral accommodations and has been happy to cooperate with emerging countries in response to American unilateralism. But European states have been less willing to reduce their overrepresentation in multilateral institutions. The second problem, which is of the Bush administration's own making, stems from Washington's reputation for unilateralism. Because the U.S. government is viewed as having undercut many global governance structures in recent years, any effort by this administration to rewrite the rules of the global game is naturally seen as yet another attempt by Washington to escape the constraints of international law. A coalition of the skeptical, which includes states such as Argentina, Nigeria, and Pakistan, will make it difficult for the United States to engineer the orderly inclusion of India and China in the concert of great powers.

Despite these difficulties, it is in the United States' interest to redouble its efforts. Growing anti-Americanism has revitalized groupings of states traditionally hostile to the United States, such as the Nonaligned Movement. To overcome such skepticism, the United States must be prepared to make real concessions. If China and India are not made to feel welcome inside existing international institutions, they might create new ones -- leaving the United States on the outside looking in.

PLUS ÇA CHANGE

When the United Nations, the IMF, the World Bank, the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT), and NATO were created in the late 1940s, the United States was the undisputed hegemon of the Western world. These organizations reflected its dominance and its preferences and were designed to boost the power of the United States and its European allies. France and the United Kingdom had been great powers for centuries; in the 1950s the rules of the game still accorded them important perquisites. They were given permanent seats on the UN Security Council. It was agreed that the IMF's executive director would always be a European. And Europe was de facto granted a voice equal to that of the United States in the GATT.

Today, the distribution of power in the world is very different. According to Goldman Sachs and Deutsche Bank, by 2010, the annual growth in combined national income from Brazil, Russia, India, and China -- the so-called BRIC countries -- will be greater than that from the United States, Japan, Germany, the United Kingdom, and Italy combined; by 2025, it will be twice that of the G-7 (the group of highly industrialized countries).

These trends were already evident in the 1990s -- and the end of the Cold War presented an opportunity to adapt international institutions to rising powers. At the time, however, Washington chose to reinforce preexisting arrangements. The GATT became the World Trade Organization. NATO expanded its membership to eastern European states and its sphere of influence to the Balkans. The macroeconomic policies known as the Washington consensus became gospel in major international financial institutions. There were few institutional changes to accommodate rising powers, besides the creation of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) forum in 1989 and China's hard-won admission to the WTO in 2001. Many of the new forums, such as the Financial Action Task Force on Money Laundering, comprised the usual suspects: the United States and its industrialized allies.

The Clinton administration had good reasons for not doing more. Remaking international institutions is a thankless task that requires holders of power to voluntarily cede some of their influence. There was no urgent need to undertake it in the 1990s: China and India were rising, but their great-power status still seemed a long ways off. Even minor shifts in long-standing U.S. foreign policy -- such as the reduction of U.S. troops in Germany -- caused great controversy. Most important, the Clinton administration's reinforcement approach worked. The creation of the WTO strengthened the global trade regime. NATO led effective operations in Bosnia and Kosovo. The Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty (NPT) was renewed indefinitely. Despite the occasional gripe about American hyperpower, the United States seemed able to legitimately advance its interests through the adroit use of multilateral diplomacy. By and large, American hegemony went unchallenged.

These gains, however, came with hidden costs. Many of the rising powers believed that the existing global governance structures stacked the deck against them. The IMF's perceived highhandedness during the Asian financial crisis of the 1990s bred resentment across the Pacific Rim. New Delhi was frustrated by Washington's objections to its 1998 nuclear tests and grew tired of being viewed by Washington strictly through the prism of South Asian security. China resented the drawn-out negotiations to enter the WTO. And NATO's bombing of Kosovo was triply problematic for Beijing: the accidental hit on the Chinese embassy in Belgrade aroused nationalist passions, Washington's willingness to cross international borders to protect human rights clashed with Beijing's notion of state sovereignty, and the United States' decision to bypass the United Nations and act through NATO highlighted the limits of China's effective influence over world politics. Heading into the new millennium, the fastest-growing economies in the world were nursing grudges toward the United States.

THE NEW DEAL

The Bush administration's response to the September 11 attacks has triggered an avalanche of books about how to rethink U.S. grand strategy. Most of them, pointing to the chaos in Iraq and setbacks in the war on terrorism, condemn the Bush administration's penchant for bellicose unilateralism and assert that a better way is possible. Given the administration's rejection of multilateralism in the context of the Biological Weapons Convention, the Geneva Conventions, and Operation Iraqi Freedom, this criticism is well grounded.

But the analysis is incomplete -- even though the rhetorical excesses of former UN Ambassador John Bolton and former Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld make it easy to think otherwise. Myriad reasons explain Washington's recent outreach to emerging powers and its concomitant effort to revamp global governance. In part, changes in personnel motivated this shift: it is no coincidence, for example, that most of these outreach efforts have taken place since Condoleezza Rice became secretary of state and have accelerated since Henry Paulson became secretary of the Treasury. In part, change has been foisted on the administration from the outside world. As Philip Gordon, of the Brookings Institution, pointed out in Foreign Affairs last year, failure in Iraq rendered neoconservatism an unsustainable strategy.

But in part, the effort to institutionalize a new great-power concert has been a long-standing component of the Bush administration's foreign policy. And Washington-style multilateralism is above all a means to further U.S. goals. Accordingly, the Bush administration defers to institutions it sees as being effective (say, the WTO) and has consistently sought the enforcement of multilateral norms and decisions it deems important (be they IMF lending agreements or UN Security Council resolutions). But it scorns multilateral institutions that fail to live up to their own stated standards (such as other UN bodies). The 2006 National Security Strategy reiterates Washington's dual position by arguing that great-power consensus "must be supported by appropriate institutions, regional and global, to make cooperation more permanent, effective, and wide-reaching. Where existing institutions can be reformed to meet new challenges, we, along with our partners, must reform them. Where appropriate institutions do not exist, we, along with our partners, must create them."

Global institutions cease to be appropriate when the allocation of decision-making authority within them no longer corresponds to the distribution of power -- and that is precisely the situation today. The UN Security Council is one obvious example; the G-7 is an even more egregious one. The G-7 states took it upon themselves to manage global macroeconomic imbalances in the 1970s. They were moderately successful at the job during the 1980s, when they accounted for half of the world's economic activity. Today, however, even when they meet with Russia (as the G-8), they cannot be effective without including in their deliberations the economic heavyweight that is China.

Incorporating emerging powers while placating status quo states is no simple feat. But the task should appear less daunting when it is understood that success will benefit ascendant states as much as it will the United States. It will bring ascendant states recognition and legitimacy to match their new power. Granted, they will have to accept a multilateral order built on U.S. principles. But they -- especially China and India -- have grown phenomenally by doing just that. Now that they are concerned with sustaining their current high rates of economic growth, emerging powers share some interests with the United States on issues such as the security of energy supplies and the prevention of global pandemics.

ONE-ON-ONE

The Bush team has already made significant efforts to keep up with the changing world. A few years ago, it started to reallocate resources within the U.S. government. More recently, it has spearheaded multilateral efforts to integrate China and India into important international regimes.

The Defense Department was the first U.S. bureaucracy to make major changes to reflect the new new world order. It started by moving around U.S. troops stationed abroad. In 2004, more than 250,000 troops were based in 45 countries, half of them in Germany and South Korea, the battlegrounds of the Cold War. To improve troop mobility in the face of ever-changing threats, President Bush announced in August 2004 that the number of U.S. armed forces stationed overseas would be reduced and that 35 percent of U.S. bases abroad would be closed by 2014. Many of these troops will be based in the United States, but others will be redeployed in countries on the periphery of the new zone of threat: in eastern Europe, in Central Asia, and along the Pacific Rim.

The State Department is also adjusting. In a January 2006 address at Georgetown University's School of Foreign Service, Secretary of State Rice said, "In the twenty-first century, emerging nations like India and China and Brazil and Egypt and Indonesia and South Africa are increasingly shaping the course of history. ... Our current global posture does not really reflect that fact. For instance, we have nearly the same number of State Department personnel in Germany, a country of 82 million people, that we have in India, a country of one billion people. It is clear today that America must begin to reposition our diplomatic forces around the world ... to new critical posts for the twenty-first century." Rice announced that a hundred State Department employees would be moved from Europe to countries such as India and China by 2007.

Washington has also strengthened its bilateral relationships with China and India. After an awkward beginning -- the Bush team's first foreign policy crisis came when a U.S. spy plane collided with a Chinese jet fighter -- the Bush administration reoriented its approach to Beijing. "It is time to take our policy beyond opening doors to China's membership into the international system," then Deputy Secretary of State Robert Zoellick announced in September 2005. "We need to urge China to become a responsible stakeholder in that system" so that it will "work with us to sustain the international system that has enabled its success." The "responsible stakeholder" language has since become part of all official U.S. pronouncements on China, and the theory behind it has guided several initiatives. Last fall, Washington launched the U.S.-China Strategic Economic Dialogue. In December, Treasury Secretary Paulson led six cabinet-level U.S. officials and the chair of the Federal Reserve in two days of discussions with their Chinese counterparts on issues ranging from energy cooperation to financial services to exchange rates. On matters as diverse as dealing with North Korea and Darfur, reigniting the Doha Development Agenda, and consulting with the International Energy Agency, Washington has tried recently to bring China into the concert of great powers.

The United States has reached out to India as well. For most of the 1990s, the United States was primarily concerned with managing India's dispute with Pakistan over Kashmir and defusing potential nuclear crises. Even though Pakistan is a significant U.S. ally in the war on terrorism, the U.S.-Indian relationship has warmed considerably over the past five years. In November 2006, the U.S. Department of Commerce arranged its largest-ever economic development mission to India, expanding the commercial dialogue between the two countries. Last year, they also concluded a bilateral agreement to cooperate on civilian nuclear energy -- a de facto recognition by the United States that India is a nuclear power. The agreement reinforces India's commitment to nonproliferation norms in its civilian nuclear program, but it keeps India's military program outside the orbit of inspections by the International Atomic Energy Agency. Critics of the deal have warned that it threatens the NPT. But the Bush administration argues that India is emerging as a great power, the nuclear genie cannot be put back in the bottle, and because India is a democracy, the genie will do no harm. According to the 2006 National Security Strategy, "India now is poised to shoulder global obligations in cooperation with the United States in a way befitting a major power."

ALL-INCLUSIVE

More ambitiously, the Bush administration has tried to reshape international organizations to make them more accommodating to rising powers. In some instances, the changes have occurred almost as a matter of course. The formation of the G-20 bloc of developing countries, for example, compelled the United States to invite Brazil, India, and South Africa into the negotiating "green room" at the September 2003 WTO ministerial meeting of the Doha Round of trade talks, in Cancún. Since then, U.S. trade negotiators have been clamoring for greater participation from China in the hope that Beijing will moderate the views of more militant developing countries.

Similarly, the United States has encouraged China to participate periodically in the G-7 meetings of finance ministers and central-bank governors. Washington's aim is to recognize China's growing importance in world politics and economics and in return get Beijing to concede that its exchange-rate policies and its repression of domestic consumption contribute to global economic imbalances. Officials from Brazil, India, and South Africa have also been invited to G-7 meetings on occasion, on the theory that, as a recent paper from the Treasury Department argued, "addressing global [macroeconomic] imbalances requires engaging heavily with new actors outside the G-7."

Also with a view to giving greater influence to China (as well as Mexico, South Korea, and Turkey), the Bush administration has pushed hard to change the voting quotas within the IMF. China's formal quota grossly underrepresents the country's actual economic size. Timothy Adams, the undersecretary for international affairs at the Department of the Treasury, told The New York Times in August 2006 that "by re-engineering the IMF and giving China a bigger voice, China will have a greater sense of responsibility for the institution's mission." At a meeting in Singapore in the fall of 2006, the IMF's International Monetary and Financial Committee agreed to reallocate quotas to reflect shifts in the balance of economic power. Clay Lowery, the assistant secretary for international affairs at the Department of the Treasury, restated Washington's position at the time: "We came to the view awhile ago that if we do not take action to recognize the growing role of emerging economies, the IMF will become less relevant and we will all be worse off." Washington also recently signaled its willingness to have China join the Inter-American Development Bank.

Meanwhile, the Bush administration has moved toward greater cooperation with emerging powers on other issues as well, especially energy, the environment, and nuclear proliferation. Washington has engaged China through APEC's Energy Working Group. It has encouraged China and India, which are anxious to secure regular access to energy, to work with the International Energy Agency in order to create strategic petroleum reserves. It has launched, along with Australia, China, India, Japan, and South Korea, the Asia-Pacific Partnership on Clean Development and Climate to facilitate energy efficiency and environmentally sustainable growth. (Because its members account for more than half of the global economy, the partnership has the potential to affect global warming more than does the Kyoto Protocol.) The United States has also relied on China and India to help halt nuclear proliferation. It is depending on Beijing to bring Pyongyang back into the six-party talks and to implement financial sanctions limiting North Korea's access to hard currency. In October 2006, following North Korea's nuclear test, for the first time China endorsed a UN Security Council resolution mandating sanctions against the regime. Similarly, Washington has relied on India's support for the United States' objections to Iran's nuclear program, as well as India's presence on the governing board of the International Atomic Energy Agency, in presenting its case against Tehran to the UN Security Council.

IN THE WAY

It is too soon to tell whether Washington's moves to bring Beijing and New Delhi into the great-power concert will succeed. Some U.S. initiatives have failed or yielded meager results. The IMF's initial internal reform has so far been modest: China's voting quota was increased from 2.98 percent to 3.72 percent. Reform of the UN Security Council has stalled because the proposals emanating from UN bodies themselves have seemed impractical and the key powers have not been able to agree on which countries merit permanent membership. One of the many stalemates paralyzing the Doha Round is the EU's refusal to further cut agricultural subsidies unless the G-20 countries agree to open access to their nonagricultural domestic markets. And opponents of the U.S.-Indian nuclear deal argue that the arrangement cannot be reconciled with Washington's hard-line stances against Iran and North Korea.

But skeptics should consider that such undertakings only bear fruit over time. Separate studies by Robert Lawrence and Iain Johnston, both professors at Harvard University, have shown that China's continued participation in international economic and security regimes have slowly, over many years, transformed Beijing from a revolutionary to a conservative status quo regime. The Strategic Economic Dialogue with China, which has received fair to middling reviews so far, has only just started. As with the Structural Impediments Initiative conducted with Japan over 15 years ago, which eventually opened up the Japanese market to U.S. retailers, progress with China will not come quickly.

Another difficulty is that rewriting the rules of existing institutions is a thorny undertaking. Power is a zero-sum game, and so any attempt to boost the standing of China, India, and other rising states within international organizations will cost other countries some of their influence in those forums. These prospective losers can be expected to stall or sabotage attempts at reform. Although European countries are still significant, their economic and demographic growth does not match that of either the emerging powers or the United States. Having been endowed with privileged positions in many key postwar institutions, European countries stand to lose the most in a redistribution of power favoring countries on the Pacific Rim. And since they effectively hold vetoes in many organizations, they can resist U.S.-led changes. The Europeans argue that they still count thanks to the EU, which lets them command a 25-member voting bloc in many institutions. But if the EU moves toward a common policy on foreign affairs and security, it will be worth asking why Brussels deserves 25 voices when the 50 states comprising the United States get only one.

Developing countries on the periphery of the global economy can be expected to back Europe in resisting U.S.-led reform efforts: they do not want to lose what little influence they have in multilateral institutions. Such resistance may be all the more common in the future because the Bush administration, having displayed a penchant for unilateralism in some matters, has elevated suspicions about its motives. Many countries are likely to view Washington's reform efforts as an opportunistic attempt to free itself from the strictures of preexisting multilateral arrangements. Moreover, rising anti-Americanism across the globe has made it harder for those governments willing to cooperate with the United States to do so.

The Bush administration faces obstacles at home, too. Some Democrats in Congress opposed the White House's initiative to give China greater influence within the IMF on the grounds that doing so meant rewarding an unfair player in the global economy; thanks to the 2006 midterm elections, this kind of opposition will now have an even louder voice. Exit polls showed strong support among voters for geopolitical realism and economic populism -- positions that could complicate efforts to rework global governance arrangements. On the one hand, Americans seem more likely to endorse any multilateral security initiative that would take some pressure off the overstretched and overburdened U.S. military; on the other hand, they seem primed to oppose the accommodation of rising economic powers.

IN OR OUT?

It may seem odd for the United States today to seek to disenfranchise its long-standing allies in Europe in order to reward governments that often have agendas that deviate from its own. But the alternative is even more disconcerting: if these countries are not integrated, they might go it alone and create international organizations that fundamentally clash with U.S. interests. In the past few years, fueled by anti-Americanism, dormant groups such as the Nonaligned Movement have found new life. If India and China are not made to feel like co-managers of the international system, they could make the future very uncomfortable for the United States. Nationalists in rising powers will be eager to exploit any policy fissures that may develop between their countries and the United States.

China, in particular, has already begun to create new institutional structures outside of the United States' reach. The Shanghai Cooperation Organization, for example, which consists of China, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Russia, Tajikistan, and Uzbekistan (with India, Iran, Mongolia, and Pakistan as observers), has facilitated military and energy cooperation among its members, although still at a low level. At the SCO's June 2006 summit in Beijing, Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad proposed that the organization "ward off the threats of domineering powers to use their force against and interfere in the affairs of other states." The joint declaration issued at the end of the summit appeared to endorse this sentiment, noting that "differences in cultural traditions, political and social systems, values and models of development formed in the course of history should not be taken as pretexts to interfere in other countries' internal affairs."

China is also aggressively courting resource-rich countries. In October 2006, it hosted a summit with more than 40 leaders from Africa to ensure continued access to the energy-rich continent. And its leaders have proposed creating free-trade areas within the SCO and APEC -- displaying such willingness to go ahead that President Bush was forced to remove the global war on terrorism from the top of his APEC agenda, and in November 2006, he called for an APEC free-trade zone.

China's efforts do not necessarily conflict with U.S. interests, but they could if Beijing so desired. From a U.S. perspective, it would be preferable for China and India to advance their interests within U.S.-led global governance structures rather than outside of them. The United States could get something in return for accommodating these states in institutions such as the UN and the IMF and giving them the recognition and prestige they demand: a commitment by Beijing and New Delhi that they will accept the key rules of the global game.

The United States faces a challenging road ahead. European countries remain vital allies. On issues such as human rights and democracy promotion, Europe speaks with a powerful, constructive voice. Bringing China and India into the concert of great powers without alienating the EU or its members will require prodigious amounts of diplomatic will and skill. The Bush administration has gotten off to a solid start. As it proceeds, its task is simple to articulate but hard to execute: keep the United States' old friends close and its new friends closer.

The key points, for Canada, are:

• We must recognize the essential truth of Prof. Drezner’s thesis – power is a zero sum game.  The power gains for China and India will, must come at the expense of the power of the USA, the EU and Canada.

• We need to promote, actively, the “ALL INCLUSIVE” strategy.  We need to convince the USA and the EU to bring China and India into the club without expelling small, weak members, like Canada.

• The BRIC is outdated and should be discarded.  Brazil’s potential is, indeed, great, so is Russia’s, but both have been very poor performers, quite unlike China and India.

• We need to court both China and India as independent great powers and, simultaneously, try to reduce the EU to a single voice and to add the Latin Americans (ALADI/MERCUSOR) and Asians (ASEAN) as additional single voices.  In so doing we may have to accept a subordinate role as an American NAFTA partner.  The key is to accept subordination if that avoids exclusion.  Thus the New G7 would be:

1. ALADI,
2. ASEAN,
3. China,
4. EU + Council of Europe (includes Russia and e.g. Norway, Switzerland, etc),
5. India,
6. Japan,
7. USA + NAFTA





 
I may be out to lunch here, but I do not view Canada as a major player. We are a bit player, but a player. Our loyalties basically lie with the US and Nato, et al....Sometimes we puff up with importance, but really, we have little influence.
 
GAP - you see that, however the majority of Canadians incorrectly feel the world revolves around them....
 
GAP said:
I may be out to lunch here, but I do not view Canada as a major player. We are a bit player, but a player. Our loyalties basically lie with the US and Nato, et al....Sometimes we puff up with importance, but really, we have little influence.

Bingo!  And we have to maximize the benefits we derive from using whatever influence we have in each situation.  We can, as we have in the past, "punch above our weight" if we clearly and coolly identify our own self interest and then pursue it with vigour and effect, for oue own benefit.
 
E.R. Campbell said:
Bingo!  And we have to maximize the benefits we derive from using whatever influence we have in each situation.  We can, as we have in the past, "punch above our weight" if we clearly and coolly identify our own self interest and then pursue it with vigour and effect, for oue own benefit.

We have not been doing that. We confuse selfish interest with self interest and end up looking like whinny little kids, wanting everything just because we ask. There are some who have represented this country admirably and have done exactly what you suggest, but anyone looking at this country's internal turmoil would only see a weak vacillating crowd that don't know sh*t from shinola.

I guess we are normal
 
    I agree we will never be a military superpower but economically with forestry, oil, natural gas, water and other resources we are no slouch. We may look small from a G8 perspective but we are significant.  Also nobody has a better diplomatic voice in the world than Canada. India agrees with me!

Russia and Canada – the two emerging economic superpower
Balaji Reddy
Feb. 18, 2007





It will will not be the military might that will determine the real strength of a country. The Japanese understood that at the end of the second world war. America finnaly understood that at the end of 2006 with the oucome of the Iraq war. It is the economic strength that will matter. The economic strength is based on two real factors. First, the energy reserves and second, the inherent out of means standard of living.

Out of means standard of living is defined as borrowed prosperity. America, India and China are all enjoying prosperity that cannot exist for long. Chin and India depends on Western Foreign Direct deposit and trade surpluss to fuel their survival and some prosperity. America needs $3.5 billion of foreign Capital unflow every day to continue its current standard of living.

In the middle of all this energy is scarce. One can say clean coal technology. Some one else can say nuclear technology. And yet another cice can shout out solar, hydrogen, ethanor and so on. Bottom line is simple. Crude oil and Natural Gas reserves will provide 75% of world’s energy needs.

Russia and Canada are well positioined. The standard of living comapred to debt is moderate in bothe countries. Both the countries have frantastic oil and natural gas reserves. Russia and Canada are the two emerging economic superpower


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WORLD ARTICLES
Russia and Canada – the two emerging economic superpower
Balaji Reddy
Russia and Canada are well positioined. The standard of living comapred to debt levels is moderate in both the countries. Both the countries have fantastic oil and natural gas reserves. Russia and Canada are the two emerging economic superpower.
http://www.indiadaily.com/editorial/15697.asp
 
Just wait until somebody notices that and we will become a territory.  ;D
 
GAP said:
Just wait until somebody notices that and we will become a territory.  ;D

    That is what is great about having economic power. Make friends with everyone and make money off of the big military dogs selling them your resources and other products. If any country threatens you sick one of the big dogs after them.  Ergo no requirement for a large military. We rock!  ;D :cdn:
 
Bigmac said:
    That is what is great about having economic power. Make friends with everyone and make money off of the big military dogs selling them your resources and other products. If any country threatens you sick one of the big dogs after them.  Ergo no requirement for a large military. We rock!  ;D :cdn:

Unless one of the Great Powers decides it is in its best interests to take the resources (and deny them to the other power(s)) instead.
 
Here, reproduced under the Fair Dealing provisions (§29) of Copyright Act, is an interesting pice from today’s Globe and Mail.  I include it in this thread because I think it illustrates the dilemma facing Canadians – closing the gap between deeply ingrained myths and reality:

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20070228.wxpeacekeeping28/BNStory/Afghanistan/home/?pageRequested=2
The myth of Canada as peacekeeper
Despite high-minded policy statements and public perception, Canada's global role, Michael Valpy reports

MICHAEL VALPY
From Wednesday's Globe and Mail

It's so hard to square mythology with reality. While 70 per cent of Canadians consider military peacekeeping a defining characteristic of their country, Canada has turned down so many United Nations' requests to join peacekeeping missions during the past decade that the UN has stopped asking.

In 1991, Canada contributed more than 10 per cent of all peacekeeping troops to the UN. Sixteen years later, its contribution is less than 0.1 per cent.

On this month's fifth anniversary of Canadian troops being sent to Afghanistan and one year after assuming responsibility for the counterinsurgency campaign -- a war by any other name -- in Kandahar province, one of the country's biggest unanswered questions is: What is Canadian military policy? It's certainly not to be the global leader in peacekeeping the country once was.

Little more than a year ago, Colonel Michael Hanrahan, the Canadian Armed Forces' top expert on peacekeeping, was offered the job as chief of staff of the UN's Department of Peacekeeping Operations. His Ottawa superiors nixed the idea. There is, in fact, not a single Canadian officer in the UN's peacekeeping headquarters.

The Department of National Defence website touts in glowing terms Canada's support and participation in SHIRBRIG -- the Danish-inspired multinational Standby High Readiness Brigade for United Nations Operations designed to provide rapid deployment of peacekeeping troops for up to six months. In reality, Canada's SHIRBRIG commitment is a will-o'-the-wisp.

Canada invented the doctrine of Responsibility to Protect that the UN accepted in 2005. Since then, successive Liberal and Conservative governments have stood by with their hands pretty much in their pockets while the doctrine glaringly failed its first test: The call for robust and, if necessary, uninvited UN military intervention to halt the genocide in the Darfur region of Sudan.

The military has been given the money to upgrade its equipment, increase its personnel and enhance its capability. Now, what's it supposed to do? In particular, what's it supposed to do after Afghanistan?

Is it to play deputy sheriff to the U.S. military in hot spots such as Afghanistan, fighting so-called three-block wars few people believe can be won?

Is it to fight terrorism militarily? Or acknowledge that resistance to international terrorism likely comes first and foremost from intelligence and the military should be used for other tasks?

Should it follow a Canada-first policy -- which, as former UN ambassador Paul Heinbecker points out, leads inevitably to the next question: What would the military be defending Canada against? "I don't see a threat myself," he says.

Should it serve Canada's national interests, however those are defined? David Carment of Carleton University's Norman Paterson School of International Affairs, suggests the Conservative government has little enthusiasm for a military mission in Africa, but more interest in treating the Caribbean and Latin America -- regions with large diasporas in Canada and considerable Canadian economic involvement -- as a sphere for possible engagement in the event of trouble.

Should it reflect Canadian values and interests in advancing the concept of Responsibility to Protect -- R2P, as it's abbreviated? If so, how does Canada persuade the world to embrace a doctrine that supersedes the principle of sovereignty of states, because Sudan does not want a UN force on its territory?

Or is the problem really as described by Ann Livingstone, director of research for Ottawa's Pearson Peacekeeping Centre: In the wake of the Cold War, where everyone more or less knew the rules and what to do, no one today, including the Americans, has accurately nailed down what the role of their respective militaries should be.

"The hard reality of the complexity of conflict is so significant that our reactions and responses universally are changing," she says. "How do you deal with the intersection of security with development? And how do you deal with the intersection of development and humanitarian assistance, negotiations at the diplomatic level and safety and security? It's another huge conundrum."

The best anyone can do is look at patterns, Dr. Livingstone says. Although, she adds, to predict the future on that basis would be an act of hubris. "We're feeling our way into a new way of thinking . . . and I think acting as responsibly as anyone does in the middle of significant change."

Fen Hampson, director of the Norman Paterson School, notes that, while the world overall is more peaceful since the Cold War ended at the close of the 1980s, significant terrorist attacks have risen steadily, global crime networks have become key players in today's conflicts, more nations are acquiring nuclear weapons and great power rivalries are coming back into fashion (with China and India, for example).

In addition, he says, the conflicts still remaining in the world are becoming more intractable and more prone to escalation, and separatist clashes are on the rise. And while the world needs the United States to maintain international order, the U.S. also threatens it -- it got things horribly wrong in Iraq, Prof. Hampson says -- and it may become isolationist post-Iraq, which would put it in opposition to Canada's tradition of multilateral global involvement.

All of these factors, he says, "reduce the likelihood of coherent and effective international responses to global security challenges.

"In view of the multiple security challenges we now confront, we should be extremely skeptical about arguments that the days of peacekeeping are over and our armed forces are now only in the business of fighting insurgents and targeting terrorists."

Yet several academics who study Canadian military and foreign policy see patterns of anti-UN bias among senior army officers and a preference for operating beside the United States. The anti-UN bias comes from their experience in UN peacekeeping missions of the past, and their U.S. preference is based on top-grade logistics and tactical support that the U.S. military can offer their own troops.

Thus Afghanistan -- a U.S.-led NATO mission authorized by the UN Security Council -- is ideal for them, even though Department of Foreign Affairs officials have been heard talking about the operation as "un-R2P-able," one that can't be won.

One Canadian academic, who asked to speak anonymously because he works for the military, said he had been told confidently by a senior army officer that Canadian troops would never take part in another UN-led operation. But Prof. Roland Paris, a specialist in international security at the University of Ottawa, is less convinced that Canada is deliberately turning away from the UN. He cites previous cycles of troughs in Canada's peacekeeping involvement.

In any event, the patterns seen by Mr. Heinbecker, now director of the Centre for Global Relations, Governance and Policy at Wilfrid Laurier University in Waterloo, Ont., suggest traditional UN peacekeeping operations are a thing of the past, that they have become more akin to the mission in Afghanistan.

"They are almost all complex missions now. They involve combat. Very often the UN is expected to get involved before the fighting is over. There's very often more than two sides to the fight. In the Congo [where a UN force successfully ended hostilities], at a certain stage there was 12."

Walter Dorn, an academic specialist in security studies at Royal Military College now on sabbatical with the UN, says Canada's military still possesses superb conflict-resolution skills and has enormous expertise in peacekeeping operations. "Yet my fear is that we're rapidly becoming a single-mission military . . . and the UN is being dropped by the wayside."

The difficulty in getting R2P back on track at the UN is sizable, but experts such as Mr. Heinbecker and Prof. Hampson say it lies within Canada's capability -- if the government has the will.

Many poor countries are afraid of it because they think it will be used against them. The U.S. did not help by at one point citing R2P as a rationale for invading Iraq, Mr. Heinbecker said. At the same time, several powerful countries, such as China, don't like it because it might interfere with their interests.

"R2P will be a hard sell," Prof. Hampson says. "And the selling gets harder post-Iraq. Darfur meets the test of R2P, it meets all the benchmarks, and it may make Afghanistan look like a picnic. No one wants to engage in what's becoming a regional conflict. No regional actor is willing to take the lead. It underscores the need for UN leadership."

Says Mr. Heinbecker: "I'm not sure if Canada could lead a Darfur mission. Although Hillier [General Rick Hillier, Chief of the Defence Staff] could lead anything."

BOWING OUT

Canada's contribution to United Nations peacekeeping operations around the world has slipped dramatically since 1991.

Canada's contribution to UN peacekeeping*
Area Troops /Police /Military observers

MINUSTAH Haiti 4 72 -
MONUC Democratic Republic of the Congo - - 9
UNAMI Iraq - - 1
UNDOF Golan Heights 3 - -
UNFYCIP Cyprus 1 - -
UNMIS Sudan 7 2 24
UNMIT East Timor - 6 -
UNOCI Ivory Coast - 5 -
UNTSO Middle East - - 7
Total 15 85 41


*As of Jan. 31, 2007

Total military personnel on UN peacekeeping operations

Jan., 2007: 72,784, Canada's contribution: 56 (0.077%)

Aug., 1991: 10,801, Canada's contribution: 1,149 (10.6%)

(Data included in the original Globe and Mail article.)

A few points:

First, UN Peacekeeping – the myth so loved by so many – is neither dead nor buried but it has morphed into something Ralph Bunche,* Sir Brian Urquhart* and Lester Pearson would hardly recognize.  Peacekeeping has changed because the UN has changed, markedly, since Bunche, Urquart and Pearson tried, with considerable success, to contain conflicts which threatened to expand and suck in the great powers,  The UN changed because the world changed – as Messers Dorn and Heinbecker explained to Valpy.  The cold War is over; conflicts increasingly involve ‘non-state actors’ and the Three Block War is the norm, not the exception.  That does not mean that the UN cannot or should not do peacekeeping, it just means that how the UN manages peacekeeping must change; see Ruxted’s “Changing the Guard”, here.

Second, R2P (Responsibility to Protect) may well, as Prof. Hampson says, be a “hard sell.”  Well, perhaps the dimwits in Canada’s foreign affairs bureaucracy, led by Pink Lloyd Axworthy, should have thought about that before they invested so much of Canada’s good name and reputation in it back in the ‘90s.  Hard sell or not, R2P is our baby and Canada has assumed a moral obligation to promote and give effect to that doctrine.  The fact that R2P has consequences which Axworthy and his minions failed to appreciate is neither here nor there.  If we, Canadians, believe in R2P – and the polling cited by the commentariat says we do – then we need to put money and guns where our mouths are.

Third, Heinbecker pooh-poohs the ‘Canada first’ idea because, he suggests, we are not threatened.  He is (intentionally) naive and dangerously wrong.  Canada is threatened because it is part, indeed a charter member of the secular, democratic, largely liberal West which is, right now, squarely in the sights of the extremist Islamistmovements which have declared us – the West – to be the enemy.

In fact ‘Canada first’ is the only acceptable policy for Canada – just as ‘America first’ or ‘Britain first’ or ‘Chile first” and ‘Denmark first’ are the only appropriate policies for other countries.  Our foreign policy must be about what we do about, with, to and sometimes even for other countries – in order to protect and promote our own vital interests.  Sending money and soldiers off for something, anything other than our own interests is silly, wasteful and, potentially dangerous.

The fact that there is no immediate, direct military threat to our claims of sovereignty over our territory does not, in any way, indicate that we are not threatened.  Prof. Heinbecker knows better but he, apparently, believes Canadians so ill informed - even less well informed that I routinely suggest – that he can fool them with a bit of juvenile sophistry.

Finally, the new, more complex international security environment ought to create opportunities for Canada to play a leadership role and, thereby, burnish its credentials in other, more important, political and economic domains.  We can, for example:

• Work within the UN on measure to increase the UN’s capabilities to manage the crisis resolution process – in those diplomatic and political areas in which the UN has great strength and skill; and

• Work with other nations to create coalitions to manage, with a UN mandate, the military aspects of crisis resolution: peacemaking and then peacekeeping.

It doesn’t matter that we contribute fewer and fewer troops to UN missions, but when we do those troops ought to be specialists, never combat troops because the UN is demonstrably unable to manage combat operations.  We should, as we do now, choose only to contribute combat forces through a coalition of militarily capable nations – on a mission by mission basis.  What matters, what Canadians should appreciate is that we are bearing a fair (given our limited capabilities) share of the current burden.  We should do more; we are amongst the world’s most favoured nations – rich, sophisticated, stable, peaceful etc – so we can do more.  If Canadians do, indeed, want to play a useful role in the world as “agents of peace” then we must step up and do a full and fair share of the peacemaking so that we can then help other, less capable nations do the peacekeeping.

----------
* The two fellows (Bunche, an American, and Urquhart, a Brit) who really ‘invented’ UN peacekeeping back in 1948 – eight years before Canadians believe that Lester Pearson ‘invented’ peacekeeping.

† I hate that word because it tends to suggest that Islam, per se, is the enemy.  That’s not the case.  Some movements are using Islam as a centrepiece in their campaigns to return the world to some culturally specific medieval mores”Islamist” saves a paragraph or two of explanatory text so I will continue to use it.
 
"Many poor countries are afraid of it because they think it will be used against them. The U.S. did not help by at one point citing R2P as a rationale for invading Iraq, Mr. Heinbecker said. At the same time, several powerful countries, such as China, don't like it because it might interfere with their interests."

"Second, R2P (Responsibility to Protect) may well, as Prof. Hampson says, be a “hard sell.”  Well, perhaps the dimwits in Canada’s foreign affairs bureaucracy, led by Pink Lloyd Axworthy, should have thought about that before they invested so much of Canada’s good name and reputation in it back in the ‘90s.  Hard sell or not, R2P is our baby and Canada has assumed a moral obligation to promote and give effect to that doctrine.  The fact that R2P has consequences which Axworthy and his minions failed to appreciate is neither here nor there.  If we, Canadians, believe in R2P – and the polling cited by the commentariat says we do – then we need to put money and guns where our mouths are."

Further to your comments Edward and those of the author - I wonder what Lloyd et al envisage R2P as looking like if it doesn't look like Iraq and Afghanistan.

In every case of "R2P" we are looking at taking the side of "the peepul" against their agent "the state".  Given that the state is personified in a head of state with access to all the tools of the state, and even in a poor country the worse dictator will always have allies how exactly do they intend to get the party in power, and all its supporters, to accept being replaced by outside forces.  They can't help but see it as a punishment.

I still get a chuckle out of those that think that adjusting the severity of the punishment will have an influence on the resentment of the miscreant after the punishment is over.

Beating, time-outs (jail-time), fines, writing lines, essays, listening to speeches, forced community service, denying them Jello and Video Games, telling them it is for their own good, none of them produce somebody that is grateful for being chastised.  The best you can ever hope for is resentful and obedient.  The worst you should expect is a killing rage.

The only sure cure is lethal.  But that only cures the individual, not the group.

Beyond that it is time, money and effort - and lives, unfortunately.







 
Kirkhill said:
In every case of "R2P" we are looking at taking the side of "the peepul" against their agent "the state".  Given that the state is personified in a head of state with access to all the tools of the state, and even in a poor country the worse dictator will always have allies how exactly do they intend to get the party in power, and all its supporters, to accept being replaced by outside forces.  They can't help but see it as a punishment.

What makes this observation so interesting is the mdern version of "Liberalism" (as embodied in Canada by the Liberal party) pretty explicitly works on the vision of the State dictating to the People (for thier own good, of course). Since R2P explicitly inverts this, I would be comfortable in suggesting that "Pink Lloyd" Axeworthy and his minions knew and expect3ed that R2P would never be instituted; rather R2P was created as yet another stick to use against the United States in cases like Rwanda or Dafur where there is no national interest to attract the attention of the world's superpower.

+1 to Edward for his succinct deconstruction of yet another piece of MSM silliness. What our place in the "New World Order" will be remains to be seen, but I can say that without a lot of thought and hard effort, we will sink into obscurity and irrelevance.

 
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