FROM
THE RASPBERRY PATCH
Toward
a Democratic Union
Adam
Garfinkle
April
2, 2003
It takes time for a raspberry
patch to mature. Same goes for the plum and cherry trees we planted at
Chestnut Nook. Last year we had a good yield of berries, but this year,
after a good cold winter and some prudent pruning, we expect an even
better crop. We didn’t get plums or cherries last year; an unseasonable
cold snap hurt the cherries and a hellacious wind ripped the young plums
from their branches. But we have hopes for this season. Fruit growing
teaches you patience, and reinforces the old lesson that the harder you
work the better your luck.
Not all plantings take the first
time, however. About a dozen years ago, in November 1991 to be specific, I
published a proposal for the reorganization of America’s alliance
systems, and, by indirection, its approach to the United Nations and other
existing multinational forums. Borrowing an older idea offered by the late
Robert Strausz-Hupé, I argued that the Western institutions established
to fight the Cold War could and should be reorganized and consolidated
into an integrated alliance system of the world’s liberal democracies.
The sine qua non of the system, the United States, would be at the
center—at its hub, so to speak. The allies would be connected to the hub
by spokes radiating outward, and the spokes in turn would be connected to
each other around a great wheel. This meant that allies would have
responsibilities not only to the United States but also to each other.
Membership, I argued, would be open
to all countries qualifying as liberal constitutional democracies.
Countries that did not wish to adopt such institutions would not be
coerced, but since their dysfunctional political and economic systems were
more often than not the source of their poverty and civil disorder, I
argued that the Democratic Union should not subsidize the pallid economic
logic of autocracy. This was intended as a an incentive system for real
institutional reform that would be far more effective than the plainly
futile and sometimes counterproductive efforts at “foreign aid” that
had dominated “development” thinking for decades. Finally, I suggested
that the United Nations would not so much disappear before the rising
power of the Democratic Union, but would take on a more modest role
commensurate with its actual, very limited capabilities.
For my effort I received a few nice
letters, but most of my friends in Washington thought I was off my nut.
Too hard, and not necessary, they said. Better anyway not to unite the
allies in a system, but rather keep them on a bilateral basis, the better
to leverage American power against them one by one. Besides, the United
States can always deliver the UN Security Council in a pinch to acquire
the diplomatic economies provided by its legitimation. I retorted that our
traditional alliance structures would inevitably be undermined by the
disappearance of the main threat for which they were created, and that in
a unipolar world, the tendency to balance against number 1 would make the
UN a far less agreeable place for the United States. This was all salon
talk; in the end, no one of consequence paid any attention to my proposal.
In recent months I have remembered
this old article because it has become clear that, as is often said, you
can’t fight something with nothing. So as the United States came toward
war with Iraq, and did seek to legitimize its actions by showing a decent
respect for the opinions of mankind, it was led ineluctably to an
institution where Libya recently ascended to the chairmanship of the human
rights committee and Iraq nearly to the chairmanship of the arms control
committee. But once the President was persuaded by its Secretary of State
to engage in what the Australian scholar Coral Bell has called “the
pretence of great power concert,” it had no other place to go.
The idea that an institution
populated by tyrannies and satrapies as well as democracies should have a
moral legitimacy above that of the community of world democracies should
be deeply offensive to the devotees of the Enlightenment among us. But the
world’s liberal democracies are not organized into an institution with
moral gravity comparable to that even of the United Nations because
American leaders have suffered a massive failure of imagination since the
end of the Cold War. The builders of the West after World War II, and even
Secretary of State Charles Evans Hughes after World War I, understood that
new times required new architecture. They were builders. Their like cannot
be found today. Toward the end of the Bush41 administration, we were led
by the sort of conservatives who oppose change even when it is in their
own interests. The Clinton Administration believed that the processes of
globalization, in deus ex machina
manner, would vault American power and values to the heights without need
of policy at all, but just an ad hoc accumulation of mostly unworkable
treaties. And the current administration seems to think of foreign policy
as a series of unilateralist-wrought epiphanies to which the other
countries of the world will pay obeisance, not caring whether their own
interests and views are taken into account.
Not that a union of democracies is
a panacea. France, after all, and Germany are democracies, and they could
make trouble within a Democratic Union as they have within the Security
Council. But the rules and structure of the UN make it particularly easy
for such countries, especially with veto rights, to do so. While it would
not be easy to build a union that avoids all tensions between a very
powerful America and other democracies, it is possible to create a system
that acknowledges the special role of the United States and still
accommodates the interests, and the pride, of others (though this is not
the place to go into details).
The point is that unless we try to
create some multilateral alternative to the UN system, the United States
will be perpetually confronted with a choice between going to the United
Nations and facing with its constraints and entrapments, or going alone
and facing charges of hegemonism, unilateralism and imperialism--even when
it acts in the interest of the global security commons. We’ve already
lost twelve years of a head start tending to this particular patch; when
this war is over, we’ll need to make up for time lost.
Adam Garfinkle is editor of The
National Interest.
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