June 28, 2012 | Standpoint

Yes We Still Can

June 28, 2012 | Standpoint

Yes We Still Can

In 1999, as America prepared to enter the new century, French leaders decried its rising status as a “hyperpower”. A hyperpower, explained then French foreign minister Hubert Védrine, is one that is so dominant in all spheres, that there is no counterbalance. For Védrine and his colleagues that was a problem. As the New York Times reported in May 1999, “The remarks were in line with recent attempts by President Jacques Chirac, Prime Minister Lionel Jospin and Mr Védrine to draw attention to what France now calls American unilateralism, and to attract other countries to the idea of counteracting it through French-led multilateral initiatives.”

Thanks to Védrine's successor, Dominique de Villepin, and his efforts on behalf of President Chirac to shield Saddam Hussein from American unilateralism in the run-up to the 2003 Iraq War, French anti-Americanism became legendary, earning both fame and scorn in the early days of George W. Bush's presidency.

Historians will debate, no doubt, whether America ever was a hyperpower or just the cause of envy for an inflated French ego. Right now, it appears though that France's desire to see a balance to American influence has succeeded. However, it is hard to argue that this aspiration has yielded a better world than the one supposedly dominated and policed by America.

One does not need to wait for historians to know that even at the height of its power in the days that followed the end of the Cold War, America did not rule the world the way other hyperpowers of the past did. Védrine mentioned the Persian, the Ottoman and the British empires, among other terms of historical reference; yet America achieved new heights of power while displaying more restraint towards its adversaries and more magnanimity towards its clients.

America was also much more aloof and restrained than the French quip about l'hyperpuissance suggests. America failed to stop genocides in our time — think of Rwanda or Sudan. It walked away from crises it could not understand, let alone solve — think of Somalia. It misunderstood old enemies — think of North Korea. But its unchallenged supremacy was unquestionable when the French objected. And where America chose to act, it did make a difference. The Balkans would not be at peace today had it not been for America's hyperpower. Multilateralism there, by contrast, only produced deadlock and supervised crimes against humanity.

But the days of American hyperpower seem to have morphed into the days of American impotence. Those who longed for America's power to be checked should beware of what they wished for. With revolutions shaking the Middle East, America will at most “lead from behind”, code for the abdication of America's leadership even at the price of inaction. When Sudan launches another round of its war of extermination against its largely defenceless neighbour, South Sudan, America will not even supply anti-aircraft guns, to say nothing of some rhetorical succour, which costs little. After nearly 16 months of ferocious government repression in Syria, America is behind — and not even leading — the ineffectual international efforts to solve the crisis. The result is horrific civilian casualties and the very possible survival of the Syrian regime which is inflicting them. In both cases, America's eclipse is counterbalanced by the rise of new powers who fill the void. They are not as benign.

This is the meaning of putting a check on the hyperpower, and the world of 2012 looks infinitely more dangerous as a consequence of declining expectations that America will intervene to solve crises.

In the past, America's military umbrella did not always open to protect struggling nations at the four corners of the earth. America did not always intervene; even when it did it sometimes happened late in the game and it was not always the best course of action. But it often made the difference. Its rhetoric of freedom offered hope to those under the boot of tyrants. And its record gave the impression that America might act on its words. Besides, the knowledge that America's aircraft carriers might be around the corner gave pause to those wishing ill upon its allies and friends.

That is no longer the case. America has disengaged. Its president seems to have bought Védrine's argument. And with that, America's competitors will gladly take its place. Their contempt for America is worse than their fear, because unlike their fear it feeds on America's weakness. They will reshape the world in their own image, unless America stops them.

A world at peace needs an American gendarme. The US's temporary retreat has left a sense that troubles will now fester and solutions may turn out to be worse than the problems — think of Russia bailing out Greece, Bashar al-Assad remaining in power in Syria, or Iran getting nuclear weapons. It is not a pretty picture.

And probably not one that even Hubert Védrine would subscribe to today.

Emanuele Ottolenghi is a Senior Fellow at the Foundation for the Defense of Democracies

Issues:

Issues:

Iran Russia Syria

Topics:

Topics:

Bashar al-Assad Cold War Emanuele Ottolenghi France French Greece Iran Middle East North Korea Russia Rwanda Saddam Hussein Somalia Sudan Syria The New York Times United Kingdom United States