http://www.chroniclesmagazine.org/?p=719#comments

 


 <http://www.chroniclesmagazine.org/?p=719> A Major War: Not Just Rumors


by Srdja Trifkovic

The crisis in relations between the United States and Russia over Georgia
heralds a particularly dangerous period in world affairs: the era of
asymmetrical multipolarity. A major war between two or more major powers is
more likely in this configuration than in any other model of global balance
known to history.

The most stable system is bipolarity based on the doctrine of Mutual Assured
Destruction (MAD), which was prevalent from the 1950s until the end of the
Cold War. The awareness of both superpowers that they would inflict severe
and unavoidable reciprocal damage on each other or their allies in a nuclear
war was coupled with the acceptance that each had a sphere of dominance or
vital interest that should not be infringed upon.

With Brest-Litovsk and the Barbarossa in mind, Stalin "intended to turn the
countries conquered by Soviet armies into buffer zones to protect Russia"
(Kissinger). The Western equivalent, also essentially defensive, was defined
by the Truman Doctrine (1947) Proxy wars were fought in the grey zone all
over the Third World, most notably in the Middle East, but they were kept
localized even when a superpower was directly involved (Vietnam,
Afghanistan). This model was the product of unique circumstances without an
adequate historical precedent, however, which are unlikely to be repeated in
the foreseeable future.

The most stable model of international relations that is both historically
recurrent and structurally repeatable in the future is the balance of power
system in which no single great power is either physically able or
politically willing to seek hegemony. This model was prevalent from the
Peace of Westphalia (1648) until Napoleon, from Waterloo until around 1900,
and from Versailles until 1933. It demands a relative equilibrium between
the key powers (usually five to seven) that hold each other in check and
function within a recognized set of rules that has come to be known as
"international law." Wars between great powers do occur, but they are
limited in scope and intensity because the warring parties tacitly accept
the fundamental legitimacy and continued existence of their opponent(s).

If one of the powers becomes markedly stronger than others and if its
decision-making elite internalizes an ideology that demands or at least
justifies hegemony, the inherently unstable system of asymmetrical
multipolarity will develop. In all three known instances—Napoleonic France
after 1799, the Kaiserreich from around 1900, and the Third Reich after
1933—the challenge could not be resolved without a major war.

The government of the United States is now acting in a manner structurally
reminiscent of those three powers. Having proclaimed itself the leader of an
imaginary "international community," it goes further than any previous
would-be hegemon in treating the entire world as the American sphere of
interest. As  <http://www.chroniclesmagazine.org/?p=712> I pointed out two
weeks ago, the formal codification came in the
<http://service.gmx.net/de/cgi/derefer?TYPE=3&DEST=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.whitehou
se.gov%2Fnsc%2Fnss%2F2002%2Findex.html> National Security Strategy of
September 2002, which presented the specter of open-ended political,
military, and economic domination of the world by the United States acting
unilaterally against "rogue states" and "potentially hostile powers" and in
pursuit of an end to "destructive national rivalries." To that end, the
administration pledged "to keep military strength beyond challenge, thereby
making the destabilizing arms races of other eras pointless, and limiting
rivalries to trade and other pursuits of peace."

Any attempt by a single power to keep its military strength beyond challenge
is inherently destabilizing, and results—sooner or later—in the emergence of
an effective counter-coalition. Napoleon finally faced one at the
Völkerschlacht at Leipzig in 1813. "There is no balance of power in Europe
but me and my twenty-four army corps," the Kaiser famously boasted in 1901.
Within years he was also building a high seas fleet. By 1907, Wilhelmine
Germany engendered a counter-coalition that prompted even traditional rivals
like Britain and Russia to join forces (the latter to be replaced by the
United States in 1917). And as for the most recent Griff nach der Weltmacht,
by the second week of December 1941 Germany was irrevocably doomed to
another defeat.

An early yet certain symptom of destabilizing asymmetry in action is the
would-be hegemon's tendency to claim an ever-widening sphere of influence or
interference at the expense of his rivals. In the run-up to 1914 this was
heralded by the Kruger Telegram (1896) and exemplified by the German bid to
build the railway from Berlin to Baghdad (1903) and by the First Moroccan
Crisis (1905). Neither Napoleon nor Hitler knew any «natural» limits, but
their ambition was essentially confined to Europe. With the United States
today the novelty is that this ambition is extended—literally—to the whole
world. Not only the Western Hemisphere, not just the «Old Europe,» Japan, or
Israel, but also Taiwan, Korea, and such unlikely places as Georgia,
Estonia, Kosovo, or Bosnia, are considered vitally important. The globe
itself is now effectively claimed as America's sphere of influence, Russia's
Caucasian, European and Central Asian back yards most emphatically included.

Four weeks ago the game itself became alarmingly asymmetrical. For America
it is still ideological, but for Russia it has become existential. Russia is
now acting as a conservative, pre-1914 European power in seeking to protect
its "near abroad." America is acting like a global revolutionary power,
whose "near abroad" is literally everywhere.

It is therefore futile for Russia to try to "manage" the crisis in a
pre-1914 manner and hope for some elusive softening on the other side,
because the calculus in Washington is not rational. The counter-strategy of
unpredictability, exemplified by Medvedev's recognition of South Ossetia and
Abkhazia, is an eminently rational response, however. It may yet force the
remnant of sanity inside the Beltway to try and exercise some adult
supervision over the bipartisan "foreign policy community" of smokers in the
arsenal.

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