-Caveat Lector-

>From http://www.theatlantic.com/issues/99apr/9904candlestick.htm


A P R I L  1 9 9 9



More Atlantic articles looking ahead to the 21st century.


>From the archives:

"The Conceptual Poverty of U.S. Foreign Policy," by Jonathan Clarke
(September, 1993)
We have heard it now from two Administrations, two parties, in a row: yes,
the Cold War is over, but the world is more dangerous, because less
predictable, than it was while the Cold War was still on. The world is
indeed dangerous, the author argues, but not more dangerous to the United
States.

"Why We Will Soon Miss the Cold War," by John Mearsheimer (August, 1990)
The conditions that have made for decades of peace in the West are fast
disappearing, as Europe prepares to return to the multi-polar system that,
between 1648 and 1945, bred one destructive conflict after another.

"What Should We Do in the World?", by Stanley Hoffman (October, 1989)
The dominant foreign-policy goals of the United States were long essentially
reactive; they were defined by the Cold War with the Soviet Union. That will
no longer do: we have to confront the new time with a new question.


Living in Candlestick park

In the twenty-first century geopolitics might well take its metaphors from
geology, as the state system of international relations gets shaken to its
foundations

by John Lewis Gaddis

 THE images that stick in our minds reveal a lot about how we think. Surely
the memory most of us retain from the end of the Cold War is that of the
Berlin Wall coming down, on November 9, 1989: the toppling of that
concrete-block obscenity, to the cheers of ecstatic topplers, seemed to
signal a new and more enlighted age. Almost ten years into it, though,
enlightenment is hard to find, and other, more disturbing images crowd our
minds.

Since the Cold War ended, we have seen victims of genocide being disinterred
in Central Europe; African rivers choked with mutilated bodies; armed
teenagers ruling Third World cities from the backs of pickup trucks;
defeated dictators refusing to accept their own defeat; women forced back
into isolation in the name of religion; emigrants clamoring to abandon old
cultures for new ones they know only from television; terrorism striking
with deadly efficiency where one might least expect it -- in the American
heartland. It is enough to evoke a certain nostalgia for the old world
order. The new one, as the French author Philippe Delmas points out,
contains far too many people who are prepared "to turn around and disembowel
one another over an acre of land, a hamlet, or some ancient totem."

 What happened? How did patterns of behavior that most of us had thought
buried in the past suddenly become our future? It might help, in explaining
these unpleasant surprises, to retrieve a different image from the year
1989. The date was October 17, the time 5:04 P.M. Pacific Daylight, the
place San Francisco's Candlestick Park. The Oakland Athletics and the San
Francisco Giants were about to begin the third game of the World Series when
a distant rumbling suddenly became an uncomfortable shaking, and the great
Loma Prieta earthquake proceeded to pre-empt everything planned for that
afternoon and for some time to come. Television cameras, before they were
knocked off the air, caught the astonishment on the faces of players, fans,
and anchorpersons alike as they abruptly acquired a Shakespearean insight:
that there were more things in heaven and earth than had been dreamt of --
or at least adequately taken into account -- in their philosophy.

 GAMES and the settings in which games are played are very different things.
The Cold War once seemed a matter of life and death; but as the years rolled
by and the Apocalypse did not arrive, it took on the character of a
latter-day "great game," reminiscent of the long nineteenth-century conflict
between the British and the Russians in Asia, which never quite produced a
great war. Even the language of the Cold War became that of games:
policymakers warned gravely of falling dominoes; theorists built
billiard-ball models of world politics; critics of détente complained that
the Soviet Union was playing chess while the most the Americans were
managing was checkers. And in the end -- whatever Washington's ineptitude at
chess -- the West somehow "won."

Implicit in all these metaphors was an important assumption: that however
intense the rivalry, no one was going to hurl the checkers and chess pieces
to the floor, or run off with the dominoes, or rip the billiard table's
fabric down the middle. Whatever the game might be, the playing field would
remain level. No earthquakes were anticipated. Even a nuclear war, a few
strategists once thought, might be fought within certain "rules of the
game," and an entire discipline -- game theory -- grew out of efforts to
discover what those rules might be.

Today, though, the metaphors have shifted: geopoliticians sound more like
geologists than like game theorists. The political scientist Samuel P.
Huntington warns of "fault line conflicts" in which clashes of civilizations
are bound to occur. The economist Lester C. Thurow sees "tectonic plates"
colliding, with unpredictable consequences. The journalist Robert D. Kaplan
predicts that seismic shocks will result from demographic and ecological
pressures: "Though the havoc is unanticipated, stresses that build up
gradually over the years cause the layers of crust to shift suddenly."

This new "tectonic" geopolitics suggests the need to rethink an old
conflict. The Soviet-American "great game," it now appears, was taking place
all along within an international system -- in effect, an arena -- whose
stability we should not have taken for granted. Reminiscent of the teams at
Candlestick Park, the Cold War superpowers competed even as historical
processes of which they were only dimly aware were determining their future.
It took the upheavals of 1989 to reveal these: to make it clear that the old
rules, even the old games, may no longer apply.


Very Big News


WHEN geologists want to know the future, they look at the past: at the
record of forces operating beneath the earth's crust that drive everything
from the imperceptibly slow drifting of continents to the fault-line slips
that cause catastrophic earthquakes. This method assumes -- safely enough,
it would seem -- that processes in motion for millions of years are not
about to disappear or reverse themselves overnight. Geologists still cannot
say just where or exactly when a fault will give way. But that it will,
sooner or later, is as certain as anything on this planet can be.

The end of the Cold War was an earthquakelike event in that it revealed deep
and hitherto hidden sources of geopolitical strain. As is often the case in
geology, though, it has taken a while to map these, and to find the faults
they have produced. First impressions were that the critical fracture lay
between democracy and capitalism on the one hand, and authoritarianism on
the other. The Soviet Union collapsed, according to this view, because it
was unable to feed or free its people at a time when prosperity and liberty
had become normal for most of the rest of the developed world. Kremlin
leaders found themselves in a classic Catch-22: their country could save
itself only by ceasing to be what it was.

But this geopolitical map implied that democratization and marketization
proceed in the same direction -- that no fault exists between them. If that
were indeed the case, the disappearance of Soviet authoritarianism should
have produced a stable post-Cold War landscape -- one in which the United
States, which has sought a world safe for democracy and capitalism since at
least the days of Woodrow Wilson, should be relatively comfortable. This has
not happened, though. The aftershocks are continuing, and few Americans --
or others, for that matter -- feel at ease among them. So perhaps larger
fractures lie elsewhere.

The tremors originate, some geopoliticians now believe, along a deeper
fault, which separates processes of economic globalization and political
fragmentation that began well before the Cold War and are sure to survive
it. Ian Clark, of the University of Wales, Aberystwyth, explains
"globalization" as "integration, interdependence, multilateralism, openness,
and interpenetration." "Fragmentation," conversely, involves
"disintegration, autarchy, unilateralism, . . . separatism, and
heterogeneity." What is unsettling about this geopolitical map is that the
fault it traces could be threatening the stability of all great powers. As
the shakiest among them, the Soviet Union would simply have been the first
to go.

States justify their existence, in large part, by securing their citizens'
well-being, whether by creating and maintaining jobs, providing a social
safety net, or protecting the environment. A regime that must leave its
people at the mercy of market forces is not likely to enhance its reputation
in their eyes. And yet globalization requires placing national economies
within an inherently unpredictable international marketplace. When
corporations can base themselves anywhere, when capital crosses boundaries
as easily as birds do, when communication takes place at the speed of light
and at virtually no cost, governments have little choice but to learn to
live with invisible hands. A laissez-faire economic system is emerging at
the global level a century after the invention of the welfare state limited
laissez-faire economics at the national level. The social and political
compromises that saved capitalism through an expansion of state authority
early in the twentieth century no longer constrain it. And states now are as
ill positioned as towns and villages were then to resist the buffeting of
markets, or to relieve the dislocations they can produce.

Meanwhile, political fragmentation, by proliferating sovereignties, is
diminishing sovereignty. It was easy to applaud the formation of new states
when the result was to break up the old European colonial empires, or to
bring down the former Soviet Union. But the process has not stopped there.
Democracies, too, are feeling the centrifugal forces of separatism, as the
Canadians, the British, the Spanish, the Belgians, and the Italians can
testify. Indeed, with their respect for the principle of self-determination,
democracies may be particularly vulnerable to such pressures. How many of
them today would follow the American example and fight a blood-drenched
civil war to deny some portion of their own citizenry the right to secede?
And yet can we assume -- with examples like Chechnya and the former
Yugoslavia in mind -- that secessions will always promote peace and justice?
In a world of weaker states politics could become as volatile and
indifferent as economics already is.

Thus states are getting hit from both sides: whether as the result of global
economic trends or of particularist political pressures, their authority is
diminishing. Since the prevailing view throughout most of this century has
been that the power of states was increasing, this is very big news indeed.
It is roughly the equivalent of finding that the San Andreas fault runs
right under one's house. Confronted with such information, one would want to
try, at a minimum, to understand the tectonics involved, to anticipate the
damage when the fault finally slips, and to take whatever precautions might
be possible now to shore up foundations, reinforce walls, and stabilize
crockery.


The Origins of the State


STATES as we know them date back only about five centuries. Other ways of
organizing human affairs existed prior to that time: monarchies,
principalities, cities, clans, tribes. None, however, possessed the modern
state's defining attribute, which is its claim -- not always achieved -- to
monopolize the means of violence. Accomplishing that may not sound like
progress, but consider the alternative: a world with the instruments of
coercion shared among predatory warlords, roving mercenaries, invading
hordes, urban gangs, bandits, and pirates. That is what the pre-state era
often was like, and it was to provide some semblance of security from the
prevailing disorder that states originated.

They certainly did not produce peace. But the organized wars of the
eighteenth century were a distinct improvement over what had preceded
them -- notably the Thirty Years' War, of 1618-1648, "an anarchic
free-for-all of violently changing fortunes," as the historian David Kaiser
has described it, which may have reduced Germany's population by as much as
half. When, therefore, the early-nineteenth-century Prussian strategist Carl
von Clausewitz wrote that war was an extension of policy by other means, he
was not so much glorifying war as reacting against its excesses. Having
lived through, and fought in, the Napoleonic Wars, he had every reason to
know what the unconstrained use of force might involve.

Clausewitz insisted on the control of military conflict: on limiting
violence to the minimum necessary to achieve belligerents' objectives. He
was sensitive, as few other strategists have been, to war's
unpredictabilities. He knew how easily terror, fatigue, and friction can
frustrate even the most sophisticated planning. But this fear of chaos -- of
losing control -- made all the more compelling Clausewitz's insistence that
the initiation and conduct of war should be rational acts, in the sense of
maintaining as close a correspondence as possible between the purposes of
violence and its scale.

Subsequent wars, especially the two world wars, did not always meet that
standard: hence their conduct has often been criticized from a Clausewitzian
perspective. But those who started them sought to link available force with
intended objectives. "Statesmen have sometimes been surprised by the nature
of the war they have unleashed," Sir Michael Howard, one of the most astute
students of Clausewitz, has pointed out, "and it is reasonable to assume
that in at least fifty per cent of the cases they got a result they did not
expect. But that is not the same as a war begun by mistake and continued
with no political purpose."

The Cold War, in contrast, was Clausewitzian to the core. With the
development of nuclear weapons, the means of violence had swollen to
unimaginable proportions; but the great powers maintained such tight control
that none resorted to any of those devices. Confronted with the possibility
of their use, leaders as dissimilar as Eisenhower, Khrushchev, Macmillan, De
Gaulle, and Mao Zedong found common ground in the urgency of living to play
the game another day. Clausewitz's insistence that the instruments of
violence not overwhelm the uses to which they are put has served us well,
therefore. We probably owe our survival to it.

Cold War statesmen behaved so rationally, in fact, that theorists today rely
heavily on "rational choice" models in thinking about the future. "Realists"
and "neo-realists" assume that states know their interests and will
consistently pursue them; a few have even advocated the controlled
proliferation of nuclear weapons, apparently on the grounds that if these
weapons induced rationality during the Cold War, they will do so at all
times and in all places. Political economists, assuming aggregate if not
individual rationality, are confident that states contemplating war in a
globally interdependent economy will find that they cannot afford it.
Democratic peace theory, too, takes rationality as a given. The argument
here is that since no democracy has ever gone to war with another democracy,
such states must prefer and will therefore choose peaceful over violent
means of resolving disputes with each other. The number of democracies is
increasing; so, too, should the prospects for peace.

Game theorists have even devised a mathematical concept to simulate these
patterns of behavior, and its name is revealing: expected utility. The
assumption, quite simply, is that people act only when they anticipate
benefits from their actions. And given existing military, economic, and
political realities, it is hard to see -- from a rational-choice
perspective, at least -- how starting a war could benefit anyone in this day
and age.


Continued...
The online version of this article appears in two parts. Click here to go to
part two.

A Tenacious Affinity for Killing

BUT what if behavior is not always rational? What if there are deeper
forces -- rooted in the structure of international politics, or in the
cultures that populate the world, or in human nature itself -- that get in
the way of calculating expected utility? What if, in assuming rationality,
we are continuing to play an old game even as we feel the earth beginning to
shake beneath our feet?

Rational-choice scenarios, it is worth noting, assume the continued
viability of states. Theorists who favor proliferating nuclear weapons
expect them to remain under national authority: no one would want to pass
them out to the Aum Shinrikyo cult, or the Montana militia, or some
brilliant Unabomberlike loner. Businessmen look to states for the order
within which commerce can flourish and contracts can be enforced; there is
no rush these days to invest in places like Somalia or Sierra Leone, where
such conditions are absent. Democracy could hardly survive if the
constitutional protections that states provide were to vanish. If the spread
of democracy promotes peace, therefore, that condition, too, requires that
states survive and prosper.

 Perhaps they will. States are not likely to disappear in the near future,
and it is reasonable to expect that they will still be around in some form
when the twenty-first century ends. The question is, In what form? Even
rational-choice enthusiasts agree that states will not be as powerful as
they have been -- that in contrast to the Orwellian nightmares that haunted
much of this century, wide areas of human activity in the next one will lie
beyond state control. The effects will in some ways be liberating, because
states have so often been sources of oppression. But they have also brought
stability, and that stability could be the precondition for such rational
choices as human beings have made in managing violence over the past several
hundred years.

One way to test that hypothesis would be to examine the geopolitical
tectonics: to look at how wars were waged in the medieval, ancient, and even
prehistoric eras, before states existed. Military historians are doing just
that, and what they have found is causing some of them to question the
relevance of Clausewitz to the post-Cold War world. John Keegan, whose
writings have revolutionized the field, makes the argument most bluntly:
"War is not the continuation of policy by other means.... Warfare is almost
as old as man himself, and reaches into the most secret places of the human
heart, places where self dissolves rational purpose, where pride reigns,
where emotion is paramount, where instinct is king." The Clausewitzian view
of war, the Israeli historian Martin van Creveld says, "is ... a modern
invention ... Having been invented at a certain point in time, there is no
reason to think that it possesses some kind of inherent validity, nor that
it necessarily has a great future."

These experts are suggesting that if rationality does indeed mean matching
the scale of violence to its purposes, then it is not clear who or what in a
world of weaker states would perform that function. The historical
indicators are not encouraging. For a thousand years following the fall of
Rome, Van Creveld points out, "armed conflict was waged by ... barbarian
tribes, the Church, feudal barons of every rank, free cities, even private
individuals." To view such wars as Clausewitzian makes no sense, for they
were "scarcely ... distinguishable from simple rapine and murder." Primitive
society was no better: as the anthropologist Lawrence H. Keeley has shown,
there were few if any "peaceful savages."

 It is too deterministic to say that people are programmed for violence,
like some aggressive species of ants. But the archaeological evidence shows
that men -- and often women as well -- have been fighting wars for at least
5,000 years. Organized conflict emerged independently in cultures that had
little or no contact with one another. It appears to have been as frequent
among the inhabitants of pre-conquest North and South America as in Europe,
Asia, and Africa. And collective killing goes back much further than that.
It evolved initially, the social critic Barbara Ehrenreich argues in Blood
Rites, as a defense against being eaten by wild animals at a time when our
precursors as a species were themselves making the transition from prey to
predator.

If this is true, if violence is that deeply embedded in human nature, then
it must be at least as ancient as is the belief in the supernatural. "War
appears to be far more robust than any particular religion," Ehrenreich
observes, "perhaps more robust than religion in general." The revival of
religion over the past quarter century would surely qualify as the
sociological equivalent of a tectonic upheaval: this worldwide phenomenon is
not what one might have anticipated in a supposedly secular age.

 But what about the possibility that as state-sponsored violence declines,
individually and culturally based violence may emerge, as unexpectedly as
did religion, to replace it? If the human affinity for killing is as
tenacious as faith, and if the states that have channeled that instinct into
Clausewitzian patterns of rationality over the past several hundred years
are, like secularism, beginning to decline, then another tectonic surprise
may be on the way. What happened in Bosnia and Rwanda could be only the
beginning of a future that turns out, as in geology, to reflect a very
distant past.

THE prospect is a bleak one, and we should not accept it uncritically. As
the end of the Cold War demonstrated, gloomy scenarios have no monopoly on
getting the future right. The peaceful demise of a superpower showed that
unprecedented events can occur -- that the past is not always a reliable
guide to what is to come. It is by no means certain that the post-state era,
if that is what we are entering, will echo its pre-state counterpart; there
may be ways of preserving Clausewitzian rationality "by other means," even
if states do gradually lose their capacity to perform that function.

International organizations are one possibility. As the Cold War wound down,
hopes rose that the United Nations would at last fulfill its promise in
resolving old conflicts and deterring new ones. But whether because of
ineffective leadership, because of inadequate support from its most powerful
members (especially the United States), or because too much was expected of
it in the first place, the UN has yet to demonstrate any significant
capacity to control large-scale violence over an extended period of time.
Failures like those in Bosnia, Somalia, and Cambodia have forced a lowering
of expectations. We have a long way to go before the UN can plausibly
substitute for states as the keeper of Clausewitzian order.

Regional organizations are more robust, but their priorities are narrow.
Even as it expands, the North Atlantic Treaty Organization concerns itself
more with exclusion than inclusion. Keeping Russia out seems particularly at
odds with the universally acclaimed example set by post-Second World War
security structures, which brought Germany and Japan in. The European
Union's priorities look equally askew: is creating a common currency really
more vital than removing the economic disparities that divide Europe today
almost as dramatically as did the old Iron Curtain? In the Asia-Pacific
region, where cooperative action failed to prevent an economic crash,
pressures are building for a return to controlled markets. Controlled
politics have never disappeared there.

Meanwhile, the majority of the world's population remains saddled with
economic systems that have failed, or never took off in the first place. But
the telecommunications revolution -- which functions in all societies -- is
making these have-nots more aware than ever of what they do not have, even
as demographic pressures and ecological deterioration endanger the little
they still possess. If, as the historian Paul Kennedy has warned, "the
continued abuse of the developing world's environment leads to global
warming, or if there is a massive flood of economic refugees from the poorer
to the richer parts of the world, everyone will suffer." No transnational
institution, governmental or nongovernmental, has even begun to address this
problem, despite its potential as the greatest of all breeding grounds for
violence in the twenty-first century.

For all their good intentions and often impressive accomplishments,
international organizations have a common problem: it is that of collective
leadership commanding limited resources. As Clausewitz could have pointed
out, restraining violence, like unleashing it, requires both capabilities
and resolve; these are hard to achieve when many are in charge and the
instruments at hand are few. Transnational institutions, then, face their
own Catch-22. They may someday be in a position to counter the decline of
states and the disorder that will probably follow. But like the old Soviet
Union, they will accomplish this task only by ceasing to be what they now
are.

IF the institutional approach seems unpromising, what about the opposite end
of the spectrum: a change in the behavior of individuals, so that there
would be less violence for states -- or their successors -- to restrain in
the first place? The idea is not as far-fetched as it might seem. We are,
after all, creatures of evolution, and our survival suggests at least
limited success in moderating self-destructive tendencies. Violence is not
the only characteristic of our character -- and character itself can change.

The political scientist James Q. Wilson has pointed out that regardless of
culture, region, or religious belief, most people today would agree on what
constitutes an atrocity -- there is a nearly universal sense of horror.
Shifts in standards of behavior must have produced this consensus, for it
cannot always have been present: societies that once tolerated human
sacrifice and slavery, for example, no longer do so. With the twentieth
century's quantum leap in the speed and ubiquity of communication, this
shared moral sense seems likely to expand.

Political behavior, too, may be changing. The political scientist Francis
Fukuyama detects a gradual but irreversible trend toward self-government and
away from the old tradition of authority by imposition. The proliferation of
democracies, he insists, arises out of a long-term change in human
collective consciousness. And the political scientist John Mueller has made
the case that attitudes toward war itself are evolving: that in light of the
devastation twentieth-century conflicts have caused, the very idea of
fighting a war in the twenty-first century -- among the great powers, at
least -- will attract more ridicule than respect.

If these trends hold up, we will face some interesting possibilities. New
patterns of behavior may evolve in time and with sufficient strength to
compensate for the decline of states and the probable ineffectiveness of
international organizations. One tectonic force could counter another.
Scientists have found that under certain circumstances even inanimate
objects -- molecules, crystals, representations of randomness on a computer
screen -- have the capacity for self-organization. If some similar
phenomenon could work in the world of geopolitics -- if we could
"self-organize" rationality without having to rely on states or
international institutions to enforce it -- then the prospects for the next
century would be a good deal better than one might think.

Will Empires Return?

THERE is, however, another, darker path to order in a disorderly world that
few people today want to talk about: "empire" is the form of governance that
hardly dares speak its name. Surely, it would seem, we are living in a
post-imperial age. European colonial empires have long since crumbled; and
even though Soviet and American spheres of influence took on imperial
attributes during the Cold War, those structures, too, are mostly part of
the past. If economic integration and political self-determination are
eroding the authority of states, then these forces ought to be all the more
destabilizing for empires, founded as they so often were on the denial of
just those principles.

And yet -- a geologist would caution that before we consider volcanoes
extinct, or faults stable, we should check the underlying tectonics. After
all, states have existed for roughly 500 years, but empires -- like war --
go back almost ten times as long. What assurance do we have that our epoch,
which is clearly one of inactive empires, is also the one uniquely
privileged to witness the end of empires for all time?

None whatever, if science fiction is any guide. Perhaps it should be, since
novelists and filmmakers spend at least as much time as anyone else relating
past and present trends to the long-term future. Empires have hardly
disappeared from their imagined worlds; indeed, they show up so
frequently -- in everything from Isaac Asimov's classic Foundation series to
George Lucas's hugely popular Star Wars sagas -- that it is hard to imagine
the genre without them. Viewing the future through Darth Vader's eyes may
seem, well, slightly flaky. But to anyone who failed to understand the
purpose, so would the sight of miners carrying canaries into mine shafts.
Early-warning systems must be both impressionable and expressive -- and
false alarms by no means render them useless. For these reasons alone we
should not too quickly rule out a future for empires.

The historical record here supports the visionaries. No empire has endured,
but cycles of imperial consolidation and decline -- the rise and fall of
empires -- are one of the few persistent patterns in history. Astronomers
know that stars are constantly igniting and burning themselves out. The fact
that none ultimately survive is no reason to regard the process that
produces them as extinct -- or as irrelevant to the future. Empires, on this
planet at least, appear and disappear in much the same way.

What is it, then, that causes them to do so? The arrogance of ambitious
leaders, to be sure: Alexander the Great, Napoleon, and Hitler built
empires -- and quickly lost them -- through the force of personality. But
such instances are relatively rare. Empires have more often arisen from a
determination to spread a religion or an ideology, or out of hope for
economic gain, or as a response to the prospect of anarchy along one's
borders. The first two inducements may be obsolete: in an age of global
communication and markets, empires are hardly necessary to disseminate ideas
or secure profits. But empires as a method of imposing order -- that is
another matter entirely.

For all their injustices, empires have frequently achieved a kind of
Clausewitzian rationality. Like states, they have sought to monopolize the
means of violence; and because their purposes paralleled one another,
empires and states coexisted for several hundred years. Some states, like
England and France, transformed themselves into empires; certain empires,
like those of the Hapsburgs and the Ottomans, spawned new states. But as
democracy spread in the twentieth century, the priorities of empires and
states began to diverge.

The democratic state must assume -- even if it does not in every respect
ensure -- the equality of those subject to its rule. Empires, in contrast,
require inequality: a powerful center asserts its authority over weaker
peripheries, at times with their consent, more often without it. That is
why, as this "democratic" century ends, there are no traditional empires
left. Some of the processes that produced them remain in place, though, and
that raises an interesting question about the next century: Is equality or
inequality likely to be the dominant theme?

An answer is already emerging, and it is not reassuring. The new
laissez-faire economics is distributing wealth in an unprecedentedly unequal
manner throughout the world. That, Karl Marx would have said, is what one
would expect from capitalism; he expected an international proletarian
revolution as a consequence. States proved him wrong by cushioning
capitalism's excesses during the twentieth century; had they not done so,
the democratization that dominates our era could hardly have taken hold. How
will democracy fare, though, if the twenty-first century is one of
increasing economic inequality and diminishing state authority?

Suppose Marx should turn out to have been right after all. Suppose
unregulated capitalism provokes discontent on a global scale similar to what
happened within the industrialized states a century ago. Suppose the anarchy
Robert D. Kaplan anticipates in the poorer parts of the world spreads widely
enough to alarm the richer parts. Not states as presently constituted, or
international organizations, or whatever slow shifts may be taking place in
human nature, are likely by themselves to contain such chaos. Empires,
however, are a time-tested response to inequality and the unrest it
brings -- and the human capacity to package old wine in new bottles
(equipped, of course, with politically correct labels) ought never to be
underestimated.

Incompatible Virtues

WHATEVER the packaging, the advertising will sound familiar: that without
stability -- without some method of countering the human propensity for
violence -- the prospects for advancing civilization are at risk. The
argument has been made so often, and in support of such dubious causes, that
we tend to dismiss it as special pleading -- as an excuse, however feeble,
for aggression, exploitation, or discrimination. It seems a relic of an
earlier age. We like to think that we are beyond the need for hierarchy and
all it implies.

But this perspective, too, may reflect a failure to think tectonically. For
it is not at all clear that the two great priorities of twentieth-century
democratic capitalism -- economic integration and political
self-determination -- will alone produce a better world. If, as appears
increasingly likely, these undeniable virtues do not always complement each
other, if the simultaneous pursuit of both means straddling a fault line,
then seismic shocks are sure to come. And it would be arrogant in the
extreme to assume that the past, which has witnessed so many upheavals, can
offer no useful guidance in preparing for them.

Sir Isaiah Berlin, one of the wisest men of this century, often warned that
values are not necessarily compatible: that the simple-minded pursuit of
single virtues can subvert others. The essence of politics is the balancing
of priorities, and this requires an ecological perspective -- a sense of the
whole, along with a sensitivity to how things relate to one another. That is
what seems to be missing as we approach the twenty-first century: the
willingness to say that there can be too much of any good thing, that
setting up self-determination, or free trade, or anything else, as an
absolute priority is asking for trouble. It is like preparing for
earthquakes only by stabilizing crockery, without worrying about the
shelves, walls, roof, and foundation.

With the plate-tectonics revolution three decades ago, geology became an
ecological discipline. It was possible for the first time to visualize the
earth as a whole, and to understand how processes at work in some part of it
could affect the rest. Geopolitics requires a similarly comprehensive
perspective: we need to focus our attention as much on the arenas within
which games are played as on the games themselves. We are no more likely
than the geologists to predict precise outcomes. But we can at least prepare
ourselves for Candlestick Park surprises: we can reinforce the bleachers,
back up the communications links, mark the exits, and keep the emergency
squad close at hand. We may even find a certain satisfaction -- players,
fans, and anchorpersons alike -- in expanding our philosophy, and hence our
dreams, to accommodate more of the things that are happening, if not in
heaven then at least here on earth.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------
----
John Lewis Gaddis is the Robert Lovett Professor of History at Yale
University. His books include The United States and the End of the Cold War:
Implications, Reconsiderations, Provocations (1992) and We Now Know:
Rethinking Cold-War History (1997).

----------------------------------------------------------------------------
----
Illustrations by Mirko Ilic

>From the archives:

"The Roots of War," by Thomas Powers (August, 1997)
"What we need, if we want to understand the century and take corrective
action, Barbara Ehrenreich argues in Blood Rites: Origins and History of the
Passions of War, is not another theory of international relations but a
theory of war itself, of the heart of war, of killing by men in groups."

>From Atlantic Unbound:

Flashback: "Balkan Epic" (January, 1996)
In 1937 the novelist Rebecca West traveled to the Balkans in search of a
better understanding of that region's historical conflicts. Her classic
account of that journey, Black Lamb and Grey Falcon, appeared first in The
Atlantic Monthly in 1941.

Flashback: "Violence and Unrest in Central Africa" (November, 1996)
A collection of past articles puts the most recent Rwandan refugee crisis in
perspective.

Flashback: "Nations of the World: Unite!" (August, 1997)
Some sixty years ago the international community was debating the creation
of a League of Nations, the precursor to the UN. Articles both by critics
and by supporters of the proposed league appeared in The Atlantic Monthly.

Flashback: "Cold War, Part II?" (February, 1997)
Atlantic articles discuss the history and possible future of NATO.

Copyright © 1999 by The Atlantic Monthly Company. All rights reserved.
The Atlantic Monthly; April 1999; Living in Candlestick Park; Volume 283,
No. 4; pages 65 - 74.




~~~~~~~~~~~~
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