ـ |
ـ |
|
|
|||||||||||||||
عودة
القوى العظمى الاستبدادية بقلم:
آزار جات ريال
كلير بوليتيكس - 25/6/2007 ان الحركة الليبرالية
الديمقراطية العالمية تواجه
تحديان مهمان وهما : التطرف
الإسلامي
وهو أقل التحديين خطراً, و
الثاني هو ظهور قوى عظمى غير
ديمقراطية وهم خصوم الغرب
القديمون في الحرب الباردة؛
الصين وروسيا THE
END OF THE END OF HISTORY June
25, 2007 The
Return of Authoritarian Great Powers Today's
global liberal democratic order faces two challenges.
The first is radical Islam -- and it is the lesser of
the two challenges. Although the proponents of radical
Islam find liberal democracy repugnant, and the movement
is often described as the new fascist threat, the
societies from which it arises are generally poor and
stagnant. They represent no viable alternative to
modernity and pose no significant military threat to the
developed world. It is mainly the potential use of
weapons of mass destruction -- particularly by nonstate
actors -- that makes militant Islam a menace. The
second, and more significant, challenge emanates from
the rise of nondemocratic great powers: the West's old
Cold War rivals Capitalism's
ascendancy appears to be deeply entrenched, but the
current predominance of democracy could be far less
secure. Capitalism has expanded relentlessly since early
modernity, its lower-priced goods and superior economic
power eroding and transforming all other socioeconomic
regimes, a process most memorably described by Karl Marx
in The Communist Manifesto. Contrary to Marx's
expectations, capitalism had the same effect on
communism, eventually "burying" it without the
proverbial shot being fired. The triumph of the market,
precipitating and reinforced by the
industrial-technological revolution, led to the rise of
the middle class, intensive urbanization, the spread of
education, the emergence of mass society, and ever
greater affluence. In the post-Cold War era (just as in
the nineteenth century and the 1950s and 1960s), it is
widely believed that liberal democracy naturally emerged
from these developments, a view famously espoused by
Francis Fukuyama. Today, more than half of the world's
states have elected governments, and close to half have
sufficiently entrenched liberal rights to be considered
fully free. But
the reasons for the triumph of democracy, especially
over its nondemocratic capitalist rivals of the two
world wars, CHRONICLE
OF A DEFEAT NOT FORETOLD The
liberal democratic camp defeated its authoritarian,
fascist, and communist rivals alike in all of the three
major great-power struggles of the twentieth century --
the two world wars and the Cold War. In trying to
determine exactly what accounted for this decisive
outcome, it is tempting to trace it to the special
traits and intrinsic advantages of liberal democracy. One
possible advantage is democracies' international
conduct. Perhaps they more than compensate for carrying
a lighter stick abroad with a greater ability to elicit
international cooperation through the bonds and
discipline of the global market system. This explanation
is probably correct for the Cold War, when a greatly
expanded global economy was dominated by the democratic
powers, but it does not apply to the two world wars. Nor
is it true that liberal democracies succeed because they
always cling together. Again, this was true, at least as
a contributing factor, during the Cold War, when the
democratic capitalist camp kept its unity, whereas
growing antagonism between the Nor
did the totalitarian capitalist regimes lose World War
II because their democratic opponents held a moral high
ground that inspired greater exertion from their people,
as the historian Richard Overy and others have claimed.
During the 1930s and early 1940s, fascism and Nazism
were exciting new ideologies that generated massive
popular enthusiasm, whereas democracy stood on the
ideological defensive, appearing old and dispirited. If
anything, the fascist regimes proved more inspiring in
wartime than their democratic adversaries, and the
battlefield performance of their militaries is widely
judged to have been superior. Liberal
democracy's supposedly inherent economic advantage is
also far less clear than is often assumed. All of the
belligerents in the twentieth century's great struggles
proved highly effective in producing for war. During
World War I, semiautocratic Only
during the Cold War did the Soviet command economy
exhibit deepening structural weaknesses -- weaknesses
that were directly responsible for the There
is no reason, however, to suppose that the totalitarian
capitalist regimes of Nazi Germany and imperial So
why did the democracies win the great struggles of the
twentieth century? The reasons are different for each
type of adversary. They defeated their nondemocratic
capitalist adversaries, Germany and Japan, in war
because Germany and Japan were medium-sized countries
with limited resource bases and they came up against the
far superior -- but hardly preordained -- economic and
military coalition of the democratic powers and Russia
or the Soviet Union. The defeat of communism, however,
had much more to do with structural factors. The
capitalist camp -- which after 1945 expanded to include
most of the developed world -- possessed much greater
economic power than the communist bloc, and the inherent
inefficiency of the communist economies prevented them
from fully exploiting their vast resources and catching
up to the West. Together, the AMERICAN
EXCEPTION The
most decisive element of contingency was the Throughout
the twentieth century, the THE
NEW SECOND WORLD But
the audit of war is, of course, not the only one that
societies -- democratic and nondemocratic -- undergo.
One must ask how the totalitarian capitalist powers
would have developed had they not been defeated by war.
Would they, with time and further development, have shed
their former identity and embraced liberal democracy, as
the former communist regimes of eastern Europe
eventually did? Was the capitalist industrial state of
imperial Studies
that cover this period show that democracies generally
outdo other systems economically. Authoritarian
capitalist regimes are at least as successful -- if not
more so -- in the early stages of development, but they
tend to democratize after crossing a certain threshold
of economic and social development. This seems to have
been a recurring pattern in Because
the totalitarian capitalist great powers, The
question is made relevant by the recent emergence of
nondemocratic giants, above all formerly communist and
booming authoritarian capitalist It
is widely contended that economic and social development
create pressures for democratization that an
authoritarian state structure cannot contain. There is
also the view that "closed societies" may be
able to excel in mass manufacturing but not in the
advanced stages of the information economy. The jury on
these issues is still out, because the data set is
incomplete. Imperial and Nazi Germany stood at the
forefront of the advanced scientific and manufacturing
economies of their times, but some would argue that
their success no longer applies because the information
economy is much more diversified. Nondemocratic Even
in its current bastions in the West, the liberal
political and economic consensus is vulnerable to
unforeseen developments, such as a crushing economic
crisis that could disrupt the global trading system or a
resurgence of ethnic strife in a MAKING
THE WORLD SAFE FOR DEMOCRACY Although
the rise of authoritarian capitalist great powers would
not necessarily lead to a nondemocratic hegemony or a
war, it might imply that the near-total dominance of
liberal democracy since the So
does the greater power potential of authoritarian
capitalism mean that the transformation of the former
communist great powers may ultimately prove to have been
a negative development for global democracy? It is too
early to tell. Economically, the liberalization of the
former communist countries has given the global economy
a tremendous boost, and there may be more in store. But
the possibility of a move toward protectionism by them
in the future also needs to be taken into account -- and
assiduously avoided. It was, after all, the prospect of
growing protectionism in the world economy at the turn
of the twentieth century and the protectionist bent of
the 1930s that helped radicalize the nondemocratic
capitalist powers of the time and precipitate both world
wars. On
the positive side for the democracies, the collapse of
the But
the most important factor remains the Azar
Gat is Ezer Weizman Professor of National Security at http://www.realclearpolitics.com/articles/2007/06/the_return_of_authoritarian_gr.html ----------------- نشرنا
لهذه المقالات لا يعني أنها
تعبر عن وجهة نظر المركز كلياً
أو جزئياً
|
ـ |
ـ |
من حق الزائر الكريم أن ينقل وأن ينشر كل ما يعجبه من موقعنا . معزواً إلينا ، أو غير معزو .ـ |