This chart is a “sovereign nation” chart. Spot the only sovereign nation.
Japan could be a great power, but right now it is still an American subject state. South Korea obviously is, and so is India. Of these four, only China is sovereign. The rest have to do what they are told to by the United States.
This period is ending. The US (primary) and European (secondary) stranglehold on the world payments system WILL come to an end, and the world is most likely to split into two primary trade blocks.
Since things like the US-imposed Iranian sanctions are crimes (along with the strangling of various other countries, as is killing people–with reports of Iranians dying from shortages of insulin as a result of the sanctions), the end of the US unipolarity will be a good thing.
Those who abuse their power should lose it.
That does not mean that China is a nice and cuddly power either, but they have more respect for most other countries’ sovereignty than the US does and want a “great power” influence area, not a “superpower” area (i.e., they do not want to control the world).
The process of this split is ongoing. The recent NAFTA renegotiations were about breaking the near-satrapies to American will. Mexico gave in immediately, Canada crumbled under auto export tariff threats. You can tell this is about the split, because the new trade agreement, the USMCA, had in a clause intended to stop Mexico or Canada from having new trade deals with China.
This is the new world being born. It doesn’t have to be better than the old one, and may not be, but that doesn’t mean the old order doesn’t need to die.
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Tom
Turkey got an exemption from the sanctions. Suspect horse trading over the Khashoggi and Brunson affair led to it. Erdogan is playing the longest strip tease ever on the Khashoggi murder, letting the Sauds lie, then leak new evidence that shows it to be a lie.
https://www.yahoo.com/news/cias-communications-suffered-catastrophic-compromise-started-iran-090018710.html?.tsrc=fauxdal
Amazing how rapidly Iran and China rolled up a CIA Network and carried the fight beyond their borders. Aiding the disaster was the CIA’s refusal to listen to a whistle blower.
China knows what it is doing, and the first fight it is winning is within. Question is, can its leadership prepare its successors to well enough that they know what to do? If not, their successes will die with their current leadership.
entropy
“Ahead of Friday’s call, a senior administration official said Japan, India and South Korea were among those getting waivers. China — the leading importer of Iranian oil — is still in discussions with the U.S. on terms, but is among the eight, according to two people familiar with the discussions who also asked not to be identified. Others could include Taiwan and Turkey”
Johnnygl
Good point. Trump’s very overt, obnoxious form of imperialism helps clarify who calls the shots.
I don’t think the unipolar moment is over, but US dominance is being damaged by inept use of soft power and by incompetent use of hard power. Pushing Russia, China, and Iran into a near alliance was really stupid. If India or S. Korea or Saudi Arabia break further away from the USA, then it’s a big blow.
I’m amused at Erdogan’s Turkey. They’ve brilliant and ridiculous at various moments.
Brazil SHOULD be able to exercise more sovereignty, and started to do so under PT leadership, but have been undone by a combo of their own mistakes and a conniving, ruthless opposition.
bruce wilder
I think India is focussed right now on getting a major purchase of Russian arms past U.S. sanctions (on Russia).
By focussing the foreign policies of major powers on negotiating exemptions, the U.S., it seems to me, is extending the period of its dominance. The bureaucratic detail with which sanctions can applied (to individual billionaires and major electronic companies) and exempted is kind of impressive.
Still, history suggests revolutions in regional and world affairs often get started with the organizational efforts of smugglers and black market communities. Information technology changes the means by which this can be done, but not that it will happen. The end-run is coming.
Raven Onthill
“[China has] more respect for most other countries sovereignty than the US”
What nonsense.
And, by the way, the Han Chinese (which is most Chinese) make our white supremacists look like amateurs at racism.
Synoia
“Since the Iranian sanctions (along with the strangling of various other countries, are crimes”
I believe sanctions are actually a Declaration, or act, of War.
Herman
In a way I am sad about the end of the unipolar world dominated by the United States. Multipolar systems tend to be more explosive and prone to war. I think our world is looking more and more like the world before World War I. The world before World War I was also very globalized and there were Steven Pinker types back then saying that everything was getting better and better thanks to economic growth, technology and trade. Then 1914 came and war broke out over “some damn foolish thing in the Balkans.”
Pax Americana could have been a real force for good in the world but we blew it because we didn’t live up to our best values. Instead of helping Russia like we did with Japan and West Germany we expanded NATO eastward and promoted devastating shock therapy that produced excess deaths in the millions. Instead of supporting a global New Deal and Marshall Plans for the developing world we supported right-wing dictators and violent religious fanatics in the name of anti-communism.
Sadly, I think China has the potential to be even worse than the United States but only time will tell. China has not been powerful enough for long enough to really judge how it will act as an imperial power. However, looking at China’s domestic policies I cannot say that I am hopeful. When I look at China’s lack of basic freedoms, its creepy, authoritarian social credit system and the way the Chinese government dismantled many of the better aspects of the old socialist system I don’t feel hopeful about Chinese power. Too many people on the Left (not you, Ian) display a reflexive anti-Americanism and think that any power that opposes the United States must be a good guy.
Sara K.
“And, by the way, the Han Chinese (which is most Chinese) make our white supremacists look like amateurs at racism.”
No. There are some extremists among the Han Chinese who demonstrate impressive levels of racism, but generally, Han Chinese people (who have very diverse views on social issues since there are a lot of them and they do not form a hive mind) are not nearly as racist as white supremacists.
That said, as someone who has lived in Taiwan for a few years, I find it really hard to believe that China’s government is better at respecting other countries’ sovereignty than the US. That is obviously not true with regards to Taiwan, and I doubt that is true in any part of the world which is of particular interest to China’s government.
Stirling Newberry
Chine does want to rule the world.
scruff
I’m getting the impression from other comments here that some people seem to be holding a peculiar belief that the measure of an imperial nation’s evil derives from the nature of its people rather than from its imperialistic direction. I’m reluctant to adhere to a saying so cliche as “Power corrupts, and absolute power corrupts absolutely”, but what else really explains the history of civilization?
Looking at small scale issues, it makes sense to me; if you want to expand a human population beyond its environment’s carrying capacity, you have to engage in unsustainable exploitation of ecological resources, and do so invariably at the expense of other lifeforms. This is easy for people to overlook as the cost is something they don’t see, but it’s an evil that cannot be avoided if your goal is to meet that end of growing population beyond its former parameters.
What evils then are necessary means towards the ends any imperial system will have to pursue in order to compete on the scale that imperialism works on today? Will not the evils of China as a world power be determined by how powerful they will seek to become? And perhaps more importantly – and for this question I have no ready answer – is it even possible for a system that represses its own citizens to survive if it does not seek to ever expand its power?
Is the reduction of diverse interests to unipolar interests not also a kind of war? The nature of ecology is multipolar if you have to think of it in those terms, and yes there might be individual tragedies inherent in such a system but it produces healthy systems overall with great potential for newness, even ridiculous things like an ape with a uniquely outsized brain. Nuclear weapons are the obvious counter argument, and they win the argument of course, since now that they’re on the table the potential reduction to a better world is possible to destroy utterly. Still, when the alternative is the grey goo of unipolar imperial power, I’m not sure a sterilized Earth is worse, from a cosmic point of view.
Ten Bears
I disagree, Stir, but we shall see what we shall see, shan’t we? Tis moot never-the-less, in the generally accepted vernacular, as the atmosphere, the thin layer of exponentially more toxic gasses we live in enveloping the only ball of rock we know of we can live on recognizes no borders.
mago
So Raven Onthill, it wouldn’t be a good idea for the Han co-ed to bring her Belgian boyfriend home to meet mom and dad, eh?
Herman
@scruff,
From an environmental perspective a multipolar world is probably worse than a unipolar world. If Great Power competition heats up then no country can adopt the necessary limits on economic growth and technological expansion that will be needed to prevent catastrophic environmental disaster. If any of the powers decides to take the green route and limit economic growth and technological development it will become a sitting duck for more aggressive powers.
The United States, Japan and China all learned these lessons when confronted by more powerful industrial powers from Europe hence their adoption of mercantilism to industrialize and gain the economic power needed to have enough military power to defend themselves against predatory empires. In the American and Japanese examples they eventually developed their own empires. China might do the same in the future.
You are right that a unipolar world requires its own imperialism. The Roman Empire was fairly close to a unipolar world power even though it had some peer competition from Parthia/Persia and eventually from the big tribal confederations outside the limes. In order to establish the Pax Romana the Romans had to violently conquer the Mediterranean world and eliminate peer competitors like Carthage and the Hellenistic monarchies and even after the Romans wiped out their competitors the Empire was still rocked by periodic civil wars. So a unipolar world has its problems but I sometimes wonder if benevolent empire has its place. Would we have been better off if Napoleon won his wars against the various coalitions thrown at him? We might have been spared the two world wars of the twentieth century and maybe France would be a better world hegemon than the United States or China. Maybe a hegemonic empire could impose the necessary environmental reforms on the rest of the world by eliminating peer competition.
A better multipolar world might be something like the Middle Ages where you had a great diversity of powers none of which were really all that powerful. The Lombard League of North Italian cities managed to defeat the Holy Roman Emperor Frederick Barbarossa at Legnano. Could a group of cities and towns defeat any major national power today? The growth of modern techno-industrial society makes nations so powerful that I fear we are stuck with a choice between an imperial world hegemon or an escalation of Great Power competition which might lead to World War III and environmental catastrophe. I wish this was not the case but I cannot think of a viable alternative.
Ideally I would rather have a “small is beautiful” world with decentralization and more power devolved to smaller organizations closer to the people. But it seems like anarchist and similar societies cannot compete with powerful nation-states. They will eventually be crushed or they will only exist at the sufferance of the State like the Amish and other intentional communities. If the State wanted to it could destroy the Amish and similar communities with ease.
Eric A. Anderson
The new world order being born will be governed by mass movements dictated by resource scarcity.
It won’t be better. But, maybe what grows from the ashes will.
Ten Bears
Mass movements dictated by resource scarcity is migration.
It’s already begun. It can’t be stopped.
Tom W Harris
Actually it can be stopped. Easily. Just say no. But hey, you knew that.
bob mcmanus
“The new world order being born will be governed by mass movements dictated by resource scarcity”
“Mass movements dictated by resource scarcity is migration.”
Nice. I’m impressed.
*Not* governed by resisting nation-states at borders, but by migrating masses (and sympathetic indigenous)
Facing not a couple thousand at the border, but hundred thousands will even Trump incarcerate or shoot them all? The wall is ridiculous, but shows some foresight. And once they’re in, they must be provided for, however well. I still don’t know from “govern” but the relations to migrants and refugees will partly determine domestic politics in receiving nations.
Ten Bears
My G’da had a fifty Ford one-ton pick-up, back in the day. A custom: had a heater. But no electric wipers. Not even two wipers, just single drivers’ side blade you reached up operated with a handle above the windscreen. Asked him once “g’da how come you got no wipers?” Said “see beyond the the windscreen boy, see beyond the windscreen.”
I don’t know whither or no to take you seriously, Tom, but no, you’re not going to stop millions or tens of millions, perhaps even hundreds of millions of people determined to leave someplace that has become uninhabitable by just saying no. A part of the world is rapidly becoming uninhabitable, and the people are leaving, you’re not going to stop it. And it is playing out equally on both sides of the planet:
When we look to the middle east and look beyond the oil and the religious insanity we find drought. Mega-drought, rapid desertification, and the outright theft of one nation/state’s water by her neighbor to the south. And famine. That population fleeing north. It can’t be stopped.
So too on our side of the pond, something I’ve been pointing to for several years but only recently catching the attention of the mainstream with the advent of drumpf uck’s ooga-booga caravan of Central American refugees fleeing not just crime and violence but drought. Mega-drought, rapid desertification and famine. That population is fleeing north. It can’t be stopped.
You can’t stop the migration. Ask the Neanderthal.
Cracks me how the rough, tough white-dogs, with their sub-conscious genetic memories of a time when three to perhaps thirteen percent of their genetic ancestry were assimilated by a dark swarthy horde out of the south dictating their sense of “superiority” have their panties in a twist over a bunch of women and children. A dying breed, the white-dogs, and they know it.
XFR
China historically tries to assimilate entities it considers “internal” and takes a much more standoffish approach to ones it considers “external”, more like Great Britain’s Continental policy. Taiwan is an extreme case of the former–OTOH I recall some U.S. observers complaining that China was “exploiting” African countries because it was simply trading with them without
interfering with“improving” their governance.Go read Benjamin Constant, or War and Peace. The Napoleonic Empire’s constitution served as an inspiration for some of the most despotic regimes of the modern era, including the Third Reich. Though the mad scramble for colonies that followed Napoleon’s defeat was a horrendous thing in its own right.
It’s a big question in my mind whether nuclear non-proliferation was really a good idea.
The alleged original goal of total abolition almost immediately fell by the wayside in favor of a system where a handful of “legitimate” nuclear powers act as “protectors” of non-nuclear states, which supposedly reduces the chances of catastrophic wars by reducing the number of possible combatants.
However historically the most such wars between major powers started out with a conflict between a pair of small nations, each allied with a different great power, that then escalated uncontrollably into a total war. A world in which a few countries possess the “ultimate weapon” and the rest must either go effectively defenseless or else ally with one of them seems tailor-made to produce such highly dangerous situations.
On the other hand, permitting minor states to possess such massively powerful weapons would give them a serious recourse against external bullies without having to seek the protection of a more powerful state’s “umbrella”, which would seem to make the larger powers less likely to have an extensive system of “entangling alliances”. And given the staggering cost of even a “very small” nuclear war, even for its ultimate “winner”, would a world with widespread possession of nuclear weapons really be less stable than a “non-proliferation” world?
XFR
Gah, “…historically most such…”
XFR
But hegemonic powers are also almost always ultimately technologically reactionary. Could even a hegemon sustain a livable industrial civilization over the long term with only the present technological toolset at its disposal?
Tal Hartsfeld
Too bad the U.S. can’t simply focus on taking care of its own people and handling its own affairs.
Its own over-inflated ego “must come first” I guess.
Willy
Its own over-inflated ego “must come first” I guess.
These days “the U.S.” is mostly a small group of donor corrupted politicians with the rest of the population being taken along for the ride, willingly or not. Maybe it was always that way, but ever obviously increasing incompetence in taking care if its own is suggesting the egos of those PTB is getting over-inflated.
Willy
Its own over-inflated ego “must come first” I guess.
These days “the U.S.” is mostly a small group of donor corrupted politicians with the rest of the population being taken along for the ride, willingly or not. Maybe it was always that way, but ever obviously increasing incompetence in taking care if its own is suggesting the egos of those PTB is getting over-inflated.
Dan
It’s a simple point and a good one, but Krieger reminds me of a dozen other “macro” economic forecasters who parlay their gamblers’ intuitions (and paranoia) with a little knowledge of history and culture (enough to fool most people into thinking they’re well educated or experts) which they mash together to develop a conspiracy theory. Fans arrive, and they become gurus. Low-level internet fame.
The main differences are who gets scapegoated, and who is defined as the implied audience of enlightened goodshits who will come out okay if they just heed the master. Blame reptilians, Republicans, Zionists, the party of Davos, whatever.
It’s a sad indicator of nothing good that this is the type of miscreant who says something obvious about sovereignty and great realignments of power, not a newspaper of record. It’s like watching Steve Bannon be smarter than David Frum by stating the obvious.
Eric A. Anderson
“It’s like watching Steve Bannon be smarter than David Frum by stating the obvious.”
I didn’t watch, of course.
But the only obvious thing either could have said is: Everyone is fiddling while the world burns.
Pretty sure neither did. Thus, neither is smart.
mago
Go Ten Bears. All about the water. And you know, other stuff.
Tom W Harris
Well TB, Viktor Orban just said no. Ain’t nobody gonna turn him around, either.