America As
Superpower:
Shaken, Not
Deposed
Some see
demise, but
others cite
enduring
signs of US
power.
By Howard
LaFranchi
| Staff
writer of
The
Christian
Science
Monitor
09/10/08
"CSM" - -
October 9,
2008 edition
--
Washington -
The
eagle has
crash-landed
– or has it?
The US
financial
crisis that
has all but
certainly
thrown the
world's
largest
economy into
recession is
also
prompting
pronouncements
that what
had been
dubbed "the
American
century" is
over.
From gleeful
declarations
in places
like Iran
and
Venezuela
that the era
of American
superpower
is finished,
to the
more-measured
statements
of European
leaders
about a new
era of "multipolarity,"
the
conclusion
is the same:
A global
power
structure
based on US
predominance
and
leadership
is in
shambles –
never to
rise again.
Such a
conclusion
follows the
predictions
of shrinking
American
global power
that flowed
from the
Iraq
occupation.
Yet others
say, "Not so
fast!" and
predict the
American era
will
continue –
in part
because the
world has
devised no
alternative
to it. If
nothing
else, the
need for
coordination
in the face
of the
globalized
economy's
first epic
financial
crisis will
provide a
test of
where
America's
power and
leadership
really
stand, they
add.
In fact, the
first sign
of a
coordinated
response to
the crisis
came
Wednesday,
with the
United
States
orchestrating
a round of
interest-rate
cuts by the
world's
major
central
banks. The
American
initiative
is designed
to begin
restoring
confidence
in markets
and ease
fears of a
global
recession.
Still, what
seems clear
is that the
experience
of the Bush
years, now
drawing to a
close amid
the worst
economic
calamity in
eight
decades,
have
bolstered
those who
long
predicted a
clipped
American
eagle. "What
George Bush
did was turn
a slow
decline into
a
precipitous
one," says
the noted
Yale
University
sociologist
Immanuel
Wallerstein,
who has been
predicting
the end of
the American
empire since
the 1980s.
"We've had
two standout
factors: the
Iraq war,
which not
only
demonstrated
but actually
accelerated
this decline
in power,
and then the
way this
president
put the
American
government
in such deep
debt," Mr.
Wallerstein
says. "What
we see
playing out
before us is
the
culmination
of these
actions."
What that
scenario
doesn't
consider is
that the
current
financial
crisis is
like a
raging sea
lashing all
boats and
not just the
US, others
counter.
That has
been evident
in this
week's
plunging
markets in
Europe and
Asia, and in
frantic
efforts to
prop up some
tottering
European
banks.
Still others
point out
that the US
economy will
remain the
world's
largest for
the
foreseeable
future, just
as the
American
military
will face no
challenger
to its
global
superiority
for at least
many years
to come.
"The
declinists
predicting
America's
demise as
the
preeminent
global power
are in
overdrive
with the
financial
crisis, and
the
declinists
are wrong
once again,"
says Robert
Lieber,
professor of
government
at
Georgetown
University
in
Washington
and author
of "The
American
Era."
The US, he
says,
maintains a
list of
strengths
over its
international
partners and
rivals that
includes
such
quantifiable
tangibles as
military
superiority
and economic
size and
productivity
– as well as
intangibles
like
flexibility
and "a
capacity for
reinvention."
America's
"structural
advantages
matter much
more than
economic
cycles," Mr.
Lieber says.
More diffuse
power
Yet even as
the debate
goes on, a
number of
realities
are accepted
by all
sides. One
is that new
powers –
China,
India, and
Brazil, to
cite three
examples –
are rising
to make for
a less
monolithic
and more
diffuse
global power
structure.
"Clearly,
lots of
other
countries
count in
ways that
they did not
before,"
says Lieber.
Another is
that no
other
country or
international
institution
appears
ready to
step into
America's
shoes. By
opting last
weekend for
nationalist
strategies
rather than
a common
European
approach to
the credit
crisis, for
example,
Europe's top
finance
ministers
suggested
that even
Europe is
not ready
for a role
of unified
leadership.
Still
another
reality:
Broad
adherence to
the
Washington-driven
international
economic
prescriptions
of recent
decades,
under which
the market
and private
sectors took
over for a
reduced
state, is a
thing of the
past.
"This crisis
has finished
off the
Washington
consensus,"
the standard
package of
free-market
reforms
promoted by
Washington
and the
Bretton
Woods
institutions
to replace
the
state-run
economies of
developing
countries,
says Anatol
Lieven, a
professor at
King's
College
London and a
senior
fellow at
the New
America
Foundation
in
Washington.
"We're going
to see much
greater
state
interventionism."
Yet Mr.
Lieven adds
a caveat:
"That
doesn't mean
there's a
new economic
model to
replace the
old one," he
says. "It's
still much
too early to
know if
China's
authoritarian
capitalism,
as one
example, is
the wave of
the future –
or if its
export
economy
might yet
collapse."
Proponents
of the
shrinking
America
thesis say
it is much
more than
the end of
the
Washington
consensus
that
supports
their
vision. They
cite
everything
from
America's
reduced
leadership
role in the
Middle East
to its fall
from the
lofty
position as
the world's
most admired
power.
"Look at
Georgia,"
says
Wallerstein
of Yale,
noting that
Russian
troops
remain in
that country
two months
after
demands from
Washington
that it
depart. "All
the US can
do is shout
– and not
even shout
that loud."
Yet it
remains
unclear
exactly what
Americans
would be
adjusting to
– since in
many key
categories,
the US
remains
rungs above
any other
world power.
"Keep in
mind how
extraordinarily
broad and
sweeping
America's
claim to
global
leadership
has been,"
says Lieven
of the New
America
Foundation.
"Whatever
decline that
leadership
experiences
will be
relative to
the
weaknesses
of others,
and likely
to leave it
with reduced
but still
unrivaled
power for
some time to
come."
That picture
of reduced
yet still
unrivaled
power is one
that pops up
in a wide
variety of
discussions.
As David
Kay, a
nonproliferation
expert and
former US
weapons
inspector,
said at an
Iran forum
recently, "I
hate to
agree with
[Iranian
President
Mahmoud]
Ahmadinejad
on anything,
but the
American
empire is
gone." He
then added,
"But we can
lead," and
on issues
like Iran's
nuclear
program or
international
nonproliferation
efforts, "We
probably
have the
most
important
leadership
role."
How will the
US and world
adjust?
Regardless
of whether
one sees an
American
eagle of
clipped
wings or one
that is
simply
flying
closer to
the pack of
world
powers, much
appears to
ride on how
both America
and the
world adjust
to the new
era for
world
leadership
ahead.
On one hand,
Wallerstein
says, how
the US
manages its
"descent"
from global
hegemony
will go a
long way in
determining
how
damage-free
the process
is for
America and
the world.
He finds the
process has
recently
taken a
promising
tack:
Compare, he
suggests,
the
unilateral
muscularity
of President
Bush's first
term with a
greater
reliance on
diplomacy in
the second.
Coming from
a different
perspective,
Lieber of
Georgetown
notes that
many world
powers still
choose to
"bandwagon"
with the US
– take India
and the
watershed
alliance it
recently
forged with
America.
But for the
moment, it's
the
financial
crisis that
is providing
a gauge of
America's
enduring
leadership
capacity.
With many
economists
citing
international
coordination
as key to
righting the
global
economic
ship, one
test will
come Friday
when finance
ministers of
the world's
seven major
economies
meet in
Washington.
Copyright ©
2008 The
Christian
Science
Monitor. All
rights
reserved.