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Saying Good-Bye to Dubai: Bidding Adieu to Globalization?
by
Leon Hadar
by Leon Hadar
Philip
Bobbitt's The
Shield of Achilles: War, Peace, and the Course of History
(Alfred A. Knopf) received a few glowing reviews when it was published
in early 2002 but did not get much attention beyond the confines
of think-tanks and academia.
Perhaps the
book was too heavy for the broader readership (well, with more than
1,000 pages, it certainly was) and it is quite possible that in
the aftermath of the Sept. 11, 2001 terrorist attacks on New York
and Washington, not a lot of people were interested in reading a
Big Picture analysis on the future of globalization.
But, in fact,
the scenarios about the prospects of globalization drawn up by Bobbitt
were – and are – very relevant to any discussion of the post-9/11
global reality and the campaign against terrorism. If anything,
as the controversy over the sale of US port operations to an Arab-owned
company has demonstrated, the kind of American nationalist fury
that exploded after 9/11 and the ensuing Afghanistan and Iraq wars
that have helped ignite Arab and Muslim rage and stir up anti-American
sentiment worldwide could become a volatile political mix, and together
with more economic nationalist pressure in Europe and the coming
to power of left-wing governments in Latin American could end up
blowing up the open global economic system, with its emphasis on
the free flow of products, investments and people.
Or to put it
differently, rising sense of nationalism that manifests itself in
antagonism to the "other" – Arab companies in the United
States, American companies in Latin America, Arab immigrants in
Europe, Latin immigrants in the United States – are likely to provide
momentum to the forces of economic nationalism and prove to be the
most serious challenge to the idea of globalization.
In his book,
Bobbitt sketches the outlines of three possible worlds that could
be brought into being by the choices that nation-states, and in
particular the global hegemon and other leading powers, make in
response to the political, economic and cultural pressures that
globalization produces:
First, there
is the world of The Meadow that is a society of states in
which entrepreneurial "market-state" – replacing the archaic
nation-state – has become predominant. In this world, success comes
to those who exploit the fast-moving opportunities brought about
by high technology and the global market which transcends the borders
of the state. The United States, the political-military and economic
hegemon becomes the locomotive the drives this global transformation
by providing the global "public goods" that are necessary
in order to maintain the open system, including by forming coalitions
aimed at containing military aggressors and leading the efforts
to liberalize trade and investment.
Then there
is the world of The Park which reflects an international
society in which the values and attitudes of the managerial market-state
have prevailed and government plays a far larger role in defining
the common interest and using the political power of government
to assert that interest. ). Political and economic interest groups
play a crucial role in determining policy outcomes in Washington
(and other world capitals). The global economy is being grouped
in competing regional markets: a U.S.-led hemispheric bloc; the
European Union; an East-Asian system dominated by China.
Finally, there
is The Garden in which government's role is less a regulatory
and more a central-supportive one, providing long-range strategic
planning based on the perceived good of the national society where
a sense of common identity based on ethnicity, religion and race
overrides individual assertiveness and the power of interest groups.
The states here have become more and more protectionist, ethnocentric,
and more protective of their respective cultures, creating the condition
in which international conflicts, ranging from trade war to military
confrontations become more likely.
Bobbitt had
written the book during the height of the roaring 1990s, during
which political and economic elites, the Davos Men and Women were
quite confident that globalization – dramatized by the growing flow
of trade and investment across borders, the integration of the former
Soviet bloc and China, a booming Wall Street and the birth of the
Internet – would indeed create a global political, economic and
cultural environment in which would resemble The Meadow.
Those were the years when pundits were speculating about the Decline
of the State and the rise of the Sovereign Individual and proposing
that in a world of corporate mergers, rising immigration, and peaceful
coexistence, the answer to "Who is US?" was not as simple
as it used to be.
When the book
was published against the backdrop of the bursting of the high-tech
bubble, a bearish stock market and 9/11, things were starting to
look a bit different. "US" was suddenly perceived as a
national community being under attack by pre-globalization (pre-modern,
some would argue) religious fanatics. We were discovering that the
Dow would not rise forever to the stratosphere and that the Business
Cycle was still alive and well. In fact, Bobbitt warned in the book
that a failure by the United States to lead the campaign against
terrorism through a multilateral front combined with protectionist
pressures in the US would make it more likely that the international
system would take the form of The Park and encourage the
creation of regional security and economic blocs. In retrospect,
he seems to have been too optimistic.
Public pressure
Indeed, it
is looking more and more that many of the elements in The Garden
scenario are becoming dominant in the evolving international system
as the leaders of the global hegemon are beginning to respond to
pressure from a public that is less willing to pay the costs of
providing those "public goods" that Bobbitt argued were
needed in order to maintain the stability of a free and open global
economy and to counter the challenges from nationalism.
Bobbitt introduces
us to The Garden by imagining the results of the future 2008
US elections, which led the new leaders in Congress and the White
House to conclude that the governance of the preceding years, both
Democratic and Republican, has been misguided. A slow recovery from
an economic recession encouraged protectionist barriers to trade;
these further constrained the global recovery and invited foreign
criticism that Americans found irksome.
Moreover, "American
preeminence in many arenas was perceived abroad as hegemony and
contributed to a US/European estrangement. Traditional ethnocentrism
in Asia coupled with mercantile trade policies intensified the sense
of mutual alienation that arose between Americans and Asians."
And "in
a stunning repudiation of previous policy, a public consensus in
the United States emerged that the multilateral interventions in
the previous twelve years had been a mistake," creating pressures
for US disengagement from the Middle East and other parts of the
world, with the Muslim world being the first "to turn its back
on the West and the ethos of consumerism, secularism and libertarianism
that was the engine of economic growth of this era," leading
to increasing suspicions and tensions – and eventually to military
confrontations – between the Muslim world and the West.
Bobbitt's book
was published before the US invasion of Iraq and even he could not
have predicted the disastrous outcome of that military adventure
and the way it would affect America's global status, its ties with
its European allies and its relationship with the Muslim world.
It is also
very doubtful that even Bobbitt's creative imagination would have
led him to propose the following scenario: US Congress, reflecting
the rising fears and prejudices of their constituents, succeeded
in blocking a Dubai-owned company from taking over the management
of terminals at six US ports. Considering that Dubai is an model
of American-style capitalism in the Middle East and a reliable trade
and military partner of the US, Bobbitt would have found it difficult
to conceive a scenario in which a company from Dubai would become
the target of a nationalist campaign that in the name of national
security was setting to close the American market to foreign trade
and investment. Such a development would not have made sense under
the conditions prevailing in The Meadow or even The Park.
According the
Washington Post, the successful effort by US Congress, which
was backed by close to 80 per cent of the American public, to force
Dubai Ports World to abandon its attempt to take over terminal operations
in the US (after buying the British company that operates terminal
in five US ports) suggested that "the global message (America)
sends – and in particular, to friendly Arab and other Muslim countries
– is that we don't really need your money, and in this post-9/11
world we're going to be very picky about whom we do business with."
Other observers
would probably dispute such dramatic interpretation of the Dubai
debacle, pointing out that if a rival Singaporean bid for the British-based
Peninsular & Oriental Steam would have taken control over the
US ports, the issue would not have aroused any public and Congressional
attention. In fact, foreign companies, including those from Singapore,
Taiwan, South Korea and Denmark, are managing the majority of the
terminals at US ports, especially the big ones such at Los Angeles
and Long Beach in California and New York and New Jersey, and much
of the US merchant marine fleet was bought by foreigners, including
by Singapore's Neptune Orient Line.
Those who argue
that Dubai flap is not a reflection of a growing economic nationalist
sentiment are proposing that fears over Arab terrorism were translated
into concerns over the possibility of US strategic assets being
owned by Arab companies.
But the fact
of the matter is that Americans were sending the same message last
year when a company controlled by the Chinese government was bashed
and hounded out of town after trying to bid on an American oil firm,
UNOCAL. Like in the case of Dubai, a coalition of economic nationalists
and security hawks argued that China should be considered as a threat
to US national interests and should not be allowed to take over
so-called strategic assets as American energy companies.
"Strategic
asset" test
And in fact,
there is growing pressure on Capitol Hill to adopt legislation that
would make it even more difficult, if not impossible, for foreign
firms – not only those owned by Arab and Chinese interests – to
take over a US firm with national security implications. Hence a
Congressional committee has already voted to block the implementation
of a new "open skies" accord that would permit foreign
investors to own more than 25 per cent of the voting stock of a
US airline, and there is now more talk in Washington to apply the
"strategic asset" test to other business sectors.
Economists
would argue that with the US trade deficit reaching a record US$724
billion, the slowing down of foreign investment in the US economy
could lead to higher interest rates and weaken the US dollar. But
the fact is that the anti-Dubai campaign had to do more with politics
and less with economics. The revolt by both Republican and Democratic
lawmakers against the Bush administration's decision to give a green
light to the Dubai deal exposed the rising anxiety among most Americans
about their country's place in the world. It doesn’t make a lot
of sense to the Davos Men and Women who dominate The Meadow or
to the government and business technocrats in charge of The Park.
But in The Garden, it’s The Political Man – a master in exploiting
these fears and anxieties – and not the Economic Man who calls the
shots.
If Chinese
and Arab companies are helping produce economic nationalist pressures
in this country, similar trends can be seen in Europe where a multi-billion
dollar bid by Mittal Steel, the global company headed by Indian
entrepreneur Lakshmi Mittal has been greeted with hostility in France,
Luxembourg and Spain. At the same time, the French government has
designated 11 "sensitive" economic sectors to "protect"
against foreign bids, after locking out an Italian company from
its energy market, while in Latin America, the backlash against
American-led "neo-liberalism" has manifested itself in
the election of leftist governments in Brazil and Argentina, and
the growing power of movements representing the indigenous populations
in Bolivia and Peru.
Historians
would probably be intrigued by the fact that the first White House
occupant to hold an MBA ended up making it possible for the Political
Man to make a comeback. But it was President Bush’s post-9/11 nationalist
agenda, leading to the mess in Iraq and to bloody quagmire in Mesopotamia
that is responsible for the current angry mood among Americans:
They watch on television every day the way US designs to bring democracy
to the Middle East produce anti-American terrorism and the rising
costs on terms of US lives and money: US soldiers are killed, its
embassies are attacked and its flags are burned and spit on.
They blame
the erosion in US industrial base on the "outsourcing"
of jobs to places like China and India. And they are angry over
the continuing flood of illegal immigrants from Mexico and Central
America. In a way, the controversy over the US ports – where trade
is being conducted and where immigrants disembark – has become a
symbol of this angry public sentiment that is directed against the
outside world and is putting pressure on Washington to reexamine
US engagement with the world.
And
it is only an opening shot in what could become a very nasty mid-term
election campaign during which those wishing to get elected (or
reelected) could be expected to bash China and India who are now
replacing the United States as the engines of world economic growth
of "stealing" American jobs, to call for taking more drastic
steps to restrict immigration and to demand that American troops
withdraw from Iraq. If the Democrats gain control of Congress in
2004, one could envision how Capitol Hill, in the form of Congressional
committees would become a forum in which the Bush Administration’s
Iraq fiasco would be investigated in the next two years and ignite
even more public pressure to reevaluate U.S. foreign policy.
Welcome to
Bobbitt's Garden.
March
18, 2006
Leon
Hadar [send him mail] is
Washington correspondent for the Business
Times of Singapore and the author of Sandstorm:
Policy Failure in the Middle East (Palgrave Macmillan). Visit
his blog.
Copyright
© 2006 Singapore Press Holdings Ltd. All rights reserved. Reprinted
with permission of the author.
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