by broken robot » Sat May 03, 2014 12:49 am
okay so basically there seems to be a major contradiction in your posts. you say you accept that the us has an essentially unchallenged global hegemony, but then you go on to emphasize competitors that are challenging it. you mention russian incursion into ukraine and how the us wouldn't have "stood for it" thirty years ago, but what happened during prague spring of 1968? what's really changed? other than the fact that now russia's sphere of influence is limited to a region, as opposed to the world. same can be said of china. (your india-pakistan example isn't working by the way. neither china nor russia have a major stake in the battles of the subcontinent) i suppose you're managing this contradiction through the assertion that "There are more actors capable of asserting themselves regionally, and everybody has reason to pursue a decrease in American influence" but you need to flesh this idea out more. wouldn't the fact that there is decreased conflict on a global scale in fact indicate less complexity? in addition, i and i suspect others still don't buy into your somewhat simplistic notion that the cold war was just fought between two ideological rivals. in fact as i pointed out earlier, the sino-soviet split had a major impact on proxy wars throughout the world. just go back to the congo example. read that and tell me if that makes any sense at all. how is it less complex than the conflicts that are playing out today?
moreover, you haven't addressed your other point which is the idea that terrorism, climate change, etc. are new global problems that undermine the traditional boundaries of the nation-state. how would such a notion fit with the new reality you're describing of challenges to the us's authority based precisely on regional power assertion by nation-state competitors such as russia and china?
so which is it: is the us unchallenged or is it facing decline on a global scale? is russia, china, etc. a regional or global competitor? are there new problems that result in increased interdependency, or could the nation-state be stronger than ever in certain respects? again, i'm having a hard time tracking where your stances on these issues prove that the world is more complex than after the cold war.
The Subversives