Robert Cooper
Observer.co.uk, Sunday 7 April 2002
Senior British diplomat Robert Cooper has helped to shape
British Prime Minister Tony Blair's calls for a new internationalism and a new
doctrine of humanitarian intervention which would place limits on state
sovereignty. This article contains the full text of Cooper's essay on "the
postmodern state". Cooper's call for a new liberal imperialism and
admission of the need for double standards in foreign policy have outraged the
left but the essay offers a rare and candid unofficial insight into the
thinking behind British strategy on Afghanistan, and Iraq.
In 1989 the political systems of three centuries came to an
end in Europe: the balance-of-power and the imperial urge. That year marked not
just the end of the Cold War, but also, and more significantly, the end of a
state system in Europe which dated from the Thirty Years War. September 11
showed us one of the implications of the change.
To understand the present, we must first understand the
past, for the past is still with us. International order used to be based
either on hegemony or on balance. Hegemony came first. In the ancient world,
order meant empire. Those within the empire had order, culture and
civilisation. Outside it lay barbarians, chaos and disorder. The image of peace
and order through a single hegemonic power centre has remained strong ever
since. Empires, however, are ill-designed for promoting change. Holding the
empire together - and it is the essence of empires that they are diverse -
usually requires an authoritarian political style; innovation, especially in
society and politics, would lead to instability. Historically, empires have
generally been static.
In Europe, a middle way was found between the stasis of
chaos and the stasis of empire, namely the small state. The small state
succeeded in establishing sovereignty, but only within a geographically limited
jurisdiction. Thus domestic order was purchased at the price of international
anarchy. The competition between the small states of Europe was a source of
progress, but the system was also constantly threatened by a relapse into chaos
on one side and by the hegemony of a single power on the other. The solution to
this was the balance-of-power, a system of counter-balancing alliances which
became seen as the condition of liberty in Europe. Coalitions were successfully
put together to thwart the hegemonic ambitions firstly of Spain, then of
France, and finally of Germany.
But the balance-of-power system too had an inherent
instability, the ever-present risk of war, and it was this that eventually
caused it to collapse. German unification in 1871 created a state too powerful
to be balanced by any European alliance; technological changes raised the costs
of war to an unbearable level; and the development of mass society and
democratic politics, rendered impossible the amoral calculating mindset
necessary to make the balance of power system function. Nevertheless, in the
absence of any obvious alternative it persisted, and what emerged in 1945 was
not so much a new system as the culmination of the old one. The old
multi-lateral balance-of-power in Europe became a bilateral balance of terror
worldwide, a final simplification of the balance of power. But it was not built
to last. The balance of power never suited the more universalistic, moralist
spirit of the late twentieth century.
The second half of the twentieth Century has seen not just
the end of the balance of power but also the waning of the imperial urge: in
some degree the two go together. A world that started the century divided among
European empires finishes it with all or almost all of them gone: the Ottoman,
German, Austrian, French , British and finally Soviet Empires are now no more
than a memory. This leaves us with two new types of state: first there are now
states - often former colonies - where in some sense the state has almost
ceased to exist a 'premodern' zone where the state has failed and a Hobbesian
war of all against all is underway (countries such as Somalia and, until
recently, Afghanistan). Second, there are the post imperial, postmodern states
who no longer think of security primarily in terms of conquest. And thirdly, of
course there remain the traditional "modern" states who behave as states
always have, following Machiavellian principles and raison d'ètat (one thinks
of countries such as India, Pakistan and China).
The postmodern system in which we Europeans live does not
rely on balance; nor does it emphasise sovereignty or the separation of
domestic and foreign affairs. The European Union has become a highly developed
system for mutual interference in each other's domestic affairs, right down to
beer and sausages. The CFE Treaty, under which parties to the treaty have to
notify the location of their heavy weapons and allow inspections, subjects
areas close to the core of sovereignty to international constraints. It is
important to realise what an extraordinary revolution this is. It mirrors the
paradox of the nuclear age, that in order to defend yourself, you had to be
prepared to destroy yourself. The shared interest of European countries in
avoiding a nuclear catastrophe has proved enough to overcome the normal
strategic logic of distrust and concealment. Mutual vulnerability has become
mutual transparency.
The main characteristics of the postmodern world are as
follows:
· The breaking down of the distinction between
domestic and foreign affairs.
· Mutual interference in (traditional) domestic
affairs and mutual surveillance.
· The rejection of force for resolving disputes
and the consequent codification of self-enforced rules of behaviour.
· The growing irrelevance of borders: this has
come about both through the changing role of the state, but also through
missiles, motor cars and satellites.
· Security is based on transparency, mutual
openness, interdependence and mutual vulnerability.
The conception of an International Criminal Court is a
striking example of the postmodern breakdown of the distinction between
domestic and foreign affairs. In the postmodern world, raison d'ètat and the
amorality of Machiavelli's theories of statecraft, which defined international
relations in the modern era, have been replaced by a moral consciousness that
applies to international relations as well as to domestic affairs: hence the
renewed interest in what constitutes a just war.
While such a system does deal with the problems that made
the balance-of-power unworkable, it does not entail the demise of the nation
state. While economy, law-making and defence may be increasingly embedded in
international frameworks, and the borders of territory may be less important,
identity and democratic institutions remain primarily national. Thus
traditional states will remain the fundamental unit of international relations
for the foreseeable future, even though some of them may have ceased to behave
in traditional ways.
What is the origin of this basic change in the state system?
The fundamental point is that "the world's grown honest". A large
number of the most powerful states no longer want to fight or conquer. It is
this that gives rise to both the pre-modern and postmodern worlds. Imperialism
in the traditional sense is dead, at least among the Western powers.
If this is true, it follows that we should not think of the
EU or even NATO as the root cause of the half century of peace we have enjoyed
in Western Europe. The basic fact is that Western European countries no longer
want to fight each other. NATO and the EU have, nevertheless, played an
important role in reinforcing and sustaining this position. NATO's most
valuable contribution has been the openness it has created. NATO was, and is a
massive intra-western confidence-building measure. It was NATO and the EU that
provided the framework within which Germany could be reunited without posing a
threat to the rest of Europe as its original unification had in 1871. Both give
rise to thousands of meetings of ministers and officials, so that all those
concerned with decisions involving war and peace know each other well. Compared
with the past, this represents a quality and stability of political relations
never known before.
The EU is the most developed example of a postmodern system.
It represents security through transparency, and transparency through
interdependence. The EU is more a transnational than a supra-national system, a
voluntary association of states rather than the subordination of states to a
central power. The dream of a European state is one left from a previous age.
It rests on the assumption that nation states are fundamentally dangerous and
that the only way to tame the anarchy of nations is to impose hegemony on them.
But if the nation-state is a problem then the super-state is certainly not a
solution.
European states are not the only members of the postmodern
world. Outside Europe, Canada is certainly a postmodern state; Japan is by
inclination a postmodern state, but its location prevents it developing more
fully in this direction. The USA is the more doubtful case since it is not
clear that the US government or Congress accepts either the necessity or
desirability of interdependence, or its corollaries of openness, mutual
surveillance and mutual interference, to the same extent as most European
governments now do. Elsewhere, what in Europe has become a reality is in many
other parts of the world an aspiration. ASEAN, NAFTA, MERCOSUR and even OAU
suggest at least the desire for a postmodern environment, and though this wish
is unlikely to be realised quickly, imitation is undoubtedly easier than invention.
Within the postmodern world, there are no security threats
in the traditional sense; that is to say, its members do not consider invading
each other. Whereas in the modern world , following Clausewitz' dictum war is
an instrument of policy in the postmodern world it is a sign of policy failure.
But while the members of the postmodern world may not represent a danger to one
another, both the modern and pre-modern zones pose threats.
The threat from the modern world is the most familiar. Here,
the classical state system, from which the postmodern world has only recently
emerged, remains intact, and continues to operate by the principles of empire
and the supremacy of national interest. If there is to be stability it will
come from a balance among the aggressive forces. It is notable how few are the
areas of the world where such a balance exists. And how sharp the risk is that
in some areas there may soon be a nuclear element in the equation.
The challenge to the postmodern world is to get used to the
idea of double standards. Among ourselves, we operate on the basis of laws and
open cooperative security. But when dealing with more old-fashioned kinds of
states outside the postmodern continent of Europe, we need to revert to the
rougher methods of an earlier era - force, pre-emptive attack, deception,
whatever is necessary to deal with those who still live in the nineteenth
century world of every state for itself. Among ourselves, we keep the law but
when we are operating in the jungle, we must also use the laws of the jungle.
In the prolonged period of peace in Europe, there has been a temptation to
neglect our defences, both physical and psychological. This represents one of
the great dangers of the postmodern state.
The challenge posed by the pre-modern world is a new one.
The pre-modern world is a world of failed states. Here the state no longer
fulfils Weber's criterion of having the monopoly on the legitimate use of
force. Either it has lost the legitimacy or it has lost the monopoly of the use
of force; often the two go together. Examples of total collapse are relatively
rare, but the number of countries at risk grows all the time. Some areas of the
former Soviet Union are candidates, including Chechnya. All of the world's
major drug-producing areas are part of the pre-modern world. Until recently
there was no real sovereign authority in Afghanistan; nor is there in upcountry
Burma or in some parts of South America, where drug barons threaten the state's
monopoly on force. All over Africa countries are at risk. No area of the world
is without its dangerous cases. In such areas chaos is the norm and war is a
way of life. In so far as there is a government it operates in a way similar to
an organised crime syndicate.
The premodern state may be too weak even to secure its home
territory, let alone pose a threat internationally, but it can provide a base
for non-state actors who may represent a danger to the postmodern world. If
non-state actors, notably drug, crime, or terrorist syndicates take to using
premodern bases for attacks on the more orderly parts of the world, then the
organised states may eventually have to respond. If they become too dangerous
for established states to tolerate, it is possible to imagine a defensive
imperialism. It is not going too far to view the West's response to Afghanistan
in this light.
How should we deal with the pre-modern chaos? To become
involved in a zone of chaos is risky; if the intervention is prolonged it may
become unsustainable in public opinion; if the intervention is unsuccessful it
may be damaging to the government that ordered it. But the risks of letting
countries rot, as the West did Afghanistan, may be even greater.
What form should intervention take? The most logical way to
deal with chaos, and the one most employed in the past is colonisation. But
colonisation is unacceptable to postmodern states (and, as it happens, to some
modern states too). It is precisely because of the death of imperialism that we
are seeing the emergence of the pre-modern world. Empire and imperialism are
words that have become a form of abuse in the postmodern world. Today, there
are no colonial powers willing to take on the job, though the opportunities,
perhaps even the need for colonisation is as great as it ever was in the
nineteenth century. Those left out of the global economy risk falling into a
vicious circle. Weak government means disorder and that means falling
investment. In the 1950s, South Korea had a lower GNP per head than Zambia: the
one has achieved membership of the global economy, the other has not.
All the conditions for imperialism are there, but both the
supply and demand for imperialism have dried up. And yet the weak still need
the strong and the strong still need an orderly world. A world in which the
efficient and well governed export stability and liberty, and which is open for
investment and growth - all of this seems eminently desirable.
What is needed then is a new kind of imperialism, one
acceptable to a world of human rights and cosmopolitan values. We can already
discern its outline: an imperialism which, like all imperialism, aims to bring
order and organisation but which rests today on the voluntary principle.
Postmodern imperialism takes two forms. First there is the
voluntary imperialism of the global economy. This is usually operated by an
international consortium through International Financial Institutions such as
the IMF and the World Bank - it is characteristic of the new imperialism that
it is multilateral. These institutions provide help to states wishing to find
their way back into the global economy and into the virtuous circle of
investment and prosperity. In return they make demands which, they hope, address
the political and economic failures that have contributed to the original need
for assistance. Aid theology today increasingly emphasises governance. If
states wish to benefit, they must open themselves up to the interference of
international organisations and foreign states (just as, for different reasons,
the postmodern world has also opened itself up.)
The second form of postmodern imperialism might be called
the imperialism of neighbours. Instability in your neighbourhood poses threats
which no state can ignore. Misgovernment, ethnic violence and crime in the
Balkans poses a threat to Europe. The response has been to create something
like a voluntary UN protectorate in Bosnia and Kosovo. It is no surprise that
in both cases the High Representative is European. Europe provides most of the
aid that keeps Bosnia and Kosovo running and most of the soldiers (though the
US presence is an indispensable stabilising factor). In a further unprecedented
move, the EU has offered unilateral free-market access to all the countries of
the former Yugoslavia for all products including most agricultural produce. It
is not just soldiers that come from the international community; it is police,
judges, prison officers, central bankers and others. Elections are organised
and monitored by the Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe
(OSCE). Local police are financed and trained by the UN. As auxiliaries to this
effort - in many areas indispensable to it - are over a hundred NGOs.
One additional point needs to be made. It is dangerous if a
neighbouring state is taken over in some way by organised or disorganised crime
- which is what state collapse usually amounts to. But Usama bin Laden has now
demonstrated for those who had not already realised, that today all the world
is, potentially at least, our neighbour.
The Balkans are a special case. Elsewhere in Central and
Eastern Europe the EU is engaged in a programme which will eventually lead to
massive enlargement. In the past empires have imposed their laws and systems of
government; in this case no one is imposing anything. Instead, a voluntary
movement of self-imposition is taking place. While you are a candidate for EU
membership you have to accept what is given - a whole mass of laws and
regulations - as subject countries once did. But the prize is that once you are
inside you will have a voice in the commonwealth. If this process is a kind of
voluntary imperialism, the end state might be describes as a cooperative
empire. 'Commonwealth' might indeed not be a bad name.
The postmodern EU offers a vision of cooperative empire, a
common liberty and a common security without the ethnic domination and
centralised absolutism to which past empires have been subject, but also
without the ethnic exclusiveness that is the hallmark of the nation state -
inappropriate in an era without borders and unworkable in regions such as the
Balkans. A cooperative empire might be the domestic political framework that
best matches the altered substance of the postmodern state: a framework in
which each has a share in the government, in which no single country dominates
and in which the governing principles are not ethnic but legal. The lightest of
touches will be required from the centre; the 'imperial bureaucracy' must be
under control, accountable, and the servant, not the master, of the
commonwealth. Such an institution must be as dedicated to liberty and democracy
as its constituent parts. Like Rome, this commonwealth would provide its
citizens with some of its laws, some coins and the occasional road.
That perhaps is the vision. Can it be realised? Only time
will tell. The question is how much time there may be. In the modern world the
secret race to acquire nuclear weapons goes on. In the premodern world the
interests of organised crime - including international terrorism - grow greater
and faster than the state. There may not be much time left.
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