John
McCain's :
‘League of
Democracies’
Is a
Frightening
Thought
The world
already has
a
peace-maintaining
institution:
the UN
By Robert
Skidelsky
25/06/08 "Taipei
Times"
-- US
Republican
presidential
candidate
John McCain
has been
calling for
the creation
of a “League
of
Democracies.”
This new
international
group would
possess a
formidable
military
capacity,
based partly
on NATO and
partly on a
“new
quadrilateral
security
partnership”
in the
Pacific
between
Australia,
India, Japan
and the US.
Neither
Russia nor
China, of
course,
would be
invited to
join:
Indeed,
McCain wants
to exclude
Russia from
the G8.
The league
is
necessary,
argues
McCain,
because in
matters
vital to the
US, such as
fighting
Islamic
terrorism,
humanitarian
intervention
and
spreading
liberty,
democracy
and free
markets, the
US and its
democratic
partners
must be able
to act
without
permission
from the UN
— and thus
from Russia
and China.
In other
words, the
League’s
main purpose
is to
marginalize
Russia and
China in
world
affairs.
The most
damning
criticism of
McCain’s
plan is that
it would
launch a new
Cold War
between
states
labeled
democracies
and
autocracies.
This is not
only
dangerous,
but
incoherent.
Russia and
China do not
“threaten”
the “free
world” with
a powerful
ideology and
massive
armed
forces, as
they did
during the
Cold War.
Moreover,
the world’s
democracies
are
themselves
divided on
how to deal
with Islamic
terrorism or
genocide in
Darfur: It
was France,
after all,
that led the
opposition
in the UN
Security
Council to
the US
invasion of
Iraq.
On issues
like
terrorism,
nuclear
proliferation
and climate
change, the
US needs
Russian and
Chinese
help.
Stigmatizing
Russia and
China will
not get them
on board.
In fact,
Russia has
mostly
cooperated
with the US
in the “war
against
terrorism.”
Finally, the
idea is
impracticable.
One cannot
imagine
India or
Brazil
wanting to
be part of
any such a
combination.
So we would
all spare
ourselves an
awful lot of
trouble if
McCain’s
brainchild
were buried
as quickly
as possible.
Yet
underlying
this idea is
a serious
proposition,
to which
former
British
prime
minister
Tony Blair
often gave
eloquent
expression:
Democracies
don’t fight
each other,
so if the
whole world
were
democratic,
wars would
stop.
Presumably,
McCain’s
League of
Democracies
is designed
to bring
philosopher
Immanuel
Kant’s dream
of perpetual
peace closer
to
realization
by putting
pressure on
non-democracies
to change
their ways,
by force if
necessary.
Leave aside
the fact
that efforts
to make
democracy
bloom have
become
bloodily
unstuck in
Iraq and
Afghanistan.
Is it true
that
democracies
never fight
each other?
The
affirmative
answer seems
to depend on
two separate
claims.
The first is
that
democracies
have, as a
matter of
historical
record,
never fought
each other.
This is true
of a rather
small group
of rich
countries —
India is a
partial
exception —
mainly in
western
Europe and
its overseas
offshoots,
since World
War II.
Moroever,
they are
“our kind”
of democracy
—
constitutional
democracies
that contain
all the
features we
take for
granted in
modern
Western
systems, not
“Islamic
democracies”
like Iran.
A reasonable
generalization
from this
rather small
sample would
be that
“prosperous
and
constitutional
democracies
tend to live
in peace
with each
other.”
The second
claim is
that these
countries
live in
peace
because they
are
democracies.
But is it
democracy
that has
brought them
peace and
prosperity,
or is it
peace and
prosperity
that have
brought
democracy?
Is it
democracy
that has
kept Europe
peaceful
since 1945,
or is it the
long period
of peace
since 1945
that has
allowed
democracy to
become the
European
norm?
The world
already has
a
peace-maintaining
institution.
The UN was
created
under rules
designed to
enable
states of
different
political
colors to
live
together.
Members
accept the
obligation
not to use
force except
in
self-defense
or unless
authorized
by the
Security
Council.
The US is
frustrated
by not being
able to get
its way at
the UN. But
the UN
exists to
protect all
states from
lawless
behavior,
including by
the US.
By
implicitly
bypassing
the UN and
dividing the
world into
two armed
camps, the
League of
Democracies
would
increase the
danger of
war.
The world
also already
has a
prosperity-spreading
mechanism.
It is called
trade. It is
full of
faults, but
these can be
corrected.
The only
purpose of
the League
of
Democracies
seems to be
to
legitimize
war-making
by
democracies
— in order
to spread
democracy!
This is the
thrust of
McCain’s
message. As
he put it,
the US was
built for a
purpose — to
serve
“eternal and
universal
principles.”
Its
God-given
task is to
build an
“enduring
global peace
on the
foundations
of freedom,
security,
prosperity
and hope.”
Noble
rhetoric!
But if that
is the
league’s
purpose then
it is a
danger to
peace.
This is
because its
advocates
believe that
no long-term
co-existence
with
non-democracies
is possible.
This is
crazy and
unhistorical.
It is up to
the
chastened
nations of
Western
Europe,
which
broadly
share US
values but
have learned
something
about
political
patience, to
rein in the
US fantasy
of remaking
the world in
its own
image.
I am all for
spreading
Western-style
democracy,
but not at
the cost of
making the
world more
warlike.
Peaceful
coexistence
between
different
political
systems is
an
attainable
objective.
Robert
Skidelsky, a
member of
the British
House of
Lords, is
professor
emeritus of
political
economy at
Warwick
University
and a board
member of
the Moscow
School of
Political
Studies.
COPYRIGHT:
PROJECT
SYNDICATE
Copyright ©
1999-2008
The Taipei
Times
