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- <text id=92TT1646>
- <title>
- July 20, 1992: America Abroad
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1992
- July 20, 1992 Olympic Special
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- AMERICA ABROAD, Page 70
- The Birth of the Global Nation
- </hdr><body>
- <p>By Strobe Talbott
- </p>
- <p> The human drama, whether played out in history books or
- headlines, is often not just a confusing spectacle but a
- spectacle about confusion. The big question these days is, Which
- political forces will prevail, those stitching nations together
- or those tearing them apart?
- </p>
- <p> Here is one optimist's reason for believing unity will
- prevail over disunity, integration over disintegration. In fact,
- I'll bet that within the next hundred years (I'm giving the
- world time for setbacks and myself time to be out of the betting
- game, just in case I lose this one), nationhood as we know it
- will be obsolete; all states will recognize a single, global
- authority. A phrase briefly fashionable in the mid-20th century
- -- "citizen of the world" -- will have assumed real meaning by
- the end of the 21st.
- </p>
- <p> All countries are basically social arrangements,
- accommodations to changing circumstances. No matter how
- permanent and even sacred they may seem at any one time, in fact
- they are all artificial and temporary. Through the ages, there
- has been an overall trend toward larger units claiming
- sovereignty and, paradoxically, a gradual diminution of how much
- true sovereignty any one country actually has.
- </p>
- <p> The forerunner of the nation was a prehistoric band
- clustered around a fire beside a river in a valley. Its members
- had a language, a set of supernatural beliefs and a repertoire
- of legends about their ancestors. Eventually they forged
- primitive weapons and set off over the mountain, mumbling
- phrases that could be loosely translated as having something to
- do with "vital national interests" and "manifest destiny." When
- they reached the next valley, they massacred and enslaved some
- weaker band of people they found clustered around some smaller
- fire and thus became the world's first imperialists.
- </p>
- <p> Empires were a powerful force for obliterating natural and
- demographic barriers and forging connections among far-flung
- parts of the world. The British left their system of civil
- service in India, Kenya and Guyana, while the Spaniards,
- Portuguese and French spread Roman Catholicism to almost every
- continent.
- </p>
- <p> Empire eventually yielded to the nation-state, made up
- primarily of a single tribe. China, France, Germany and Japan
- are surviving examples. Yet each of them too is the consequence
- of a centuries-long process of accretion. It took the shedding
- of much blood in many valleys for Normandy, Brittany and Gascony
- to become part of France.
- </p>
- <p> Today fewer than 10% of the 186 countries on earth are
- ethnically homogeneous. The rest are multinational states. Most
- of them have pushed their boundaries outward, often until they
- reached the sea. That's how California became part of the U.S.
- and the Kamchatka Peninsula part of Russia.
- </p>
- <p> The main goal driving the process of political expansion
- and consolidation was conquest. The big absorbed the small, the
- strong the weak. National might made international right. Such a
- world was in a more or less constant state of war.
- </p>
- <p> From time to time the best minds wondered whether this
- wasn't a hell of a way to run a planet; perhaps national
- sovereignty wasn't such a great idea after all. Dante in the
- 14th century, Erasmus in the 16th and Grotius in the 17th all
- envisioned international law as a means of overcoming the
- natural tendency of states to settle their differences by force.
- </p>
- <p> In the 18th century the Enlightenment -- represented by
- Rousseau in France, Hume in Scotland, Kant in Germany, Paine and
- Jefferson in the U.S. -- gave rise to the idea that all human
- beings are born equal and should, as citizens, enjoy certain
- basic liberties and rights, including that of choosing their
- leaders. Once there was a universal ideology to govern the
- conduct of nations toward their own people, it was more
- reasonable to imagine a compact governing nations' behavior
- toward one another. In 1795 Kant advocated a "peaceful league
- of democracies."
- </p>
- <p> But it has taken the events in our own wondrous and
- terrible century to clinch the case for world government. With
- the advent of electricity, radio and air travel, the planet has
- become smaller than ever, its commercial life freer, its nations
- more interdependent and its conflicts bloodier. The price of
- settling international disputes by force was rapidly becoming
- too high for the victors, not to mention the vanquished. That
- conclusion should have been clear enough at the battle of the
- Somme in 1916; by the destruction of Hiroshima in 1945, it was
- unavoidable.
- </p>
- <p> Once again great minds thought alike: Einstein, Gandhi,
- Toynbee and Camus all favored giving primacy to interests higher
- than those of the nation. So, finally, did many statesmen. Each
- world war inspired the creation of an international
- organization, the League of Nations in the 1920s and the United
- Nations in the '40s.
- </p>
- <p> The plot thickened with the heavy-breathing arrival on the
- scene of a new species of ideology -- expansionist
- totalitarianism -- as perpetrated by the Nazis and the Soviets.
- It threatened the very idea of democracy and divided the world.
- The advocacy of any kind of world government became highly
- suspect. By 1950 "one-worlder" was a term of derision for those
- suspected of being woolly-headed naifs, if not
- crypto-communists.
- </p>
- <p> At the same time, however, Stalin's conquest of Eastern
- Europe spurred the Western democracies to form NATO, history's
- most ambitious, enduring and successful exercise in collective
- security. The U.S. and the Soviet Union also scared each other
- into negotiating nuclear-arms-control treaties that set in place
- two vital principles: adversary states have a mutual interest
- in eliminating the danger of strategic surprise, and each
- legitimately has a say in the composition of the other's arsenal
- of last resort. The result was further dilution of national
- sovereignty and a useful precedent for the management of
- relations between nuclear-armed rivals in the future.
- </p>
- <p> The cold war also saw the European Community pioneer the
- kind of regional cohesion that may pave the way for globalism.
- Meanwhile, the free world formed multilateral financial
- institutions that depend on member states' willingness to give
- up a degree of sovereignty. The International Monetary Fund can
- virtually dictate fiscal policies, even including how much tax
- a government should levy on its citizens. The General Agreement
- on Tariffs and Trade regulates how much duty a nation can charge
- on imports. These organizations can be seen as the
- protoministries of trade, finance and development for a united
- world.
- </p>
- <p> The internal affairs of a nation used to be off limits to
- the world community. Now the principle of "humanitarian
- intervention" is gaining acceptance. A turning point came in
- April 1991, shortly after Saddam Hussein's withdrawal from
- Kuwait, when the U.N. Security Council authorized allied troops
- to assist starving Kurds in northern Iraq.
- </p>
- <p> Globalization has also contributed to the spread of
- terrorism, drug trafficking, AIDS and environmental degradation.
- But because those threats are more than any one nation can cope
- with on its own, they constitute an incentive for international
- cooperation.
- </p>
- <p> However limited its accomplishments, last month's Earth
- Summit in Rio signified the participants' acceptance of what
- Maurice Strong, the main impresario of the event, called "the
- transcending sovereignty of nature": since the by-products of
- industrial civilization cross borders, so must the authority to
- deal with them.
- </p>
- <p> Collective action on a global scale will be easier to
- achieve in a world already knit together by cables and airwaves.
- The fax machine had much to do with the downfall of tyrants in
- Eastern Europe. Two years ago, I was assigned an interpreter in
- Estonia who spoke with a slight Southern accent because she had
- learned her English watching Dallas, courtesy of TV signals
- beamed over the border from neighboring Finland. The Cosby Show,
- aired on South African television, has no doubt helped erode
- apartheid.
- </p>
- <p> This ideological and cultural blending strikes some
- observers as too much of a good thing. Writing in the Atlantic,
- Rutgers political scientist Benjamin Barber laments what he
- calls "McWorld." He also identifies the countertrend, the
- re-emergence of nationalism in its ugliest, most divisive and
- violent form.
- </p>
- <p> Yet Azerbaijan, Moldova and Czechoslovakia were part of
- the world's last, now deceased empire. Their breakup may turn
- out to be the old business of history, not the wave of the
- future. National self-assertiveness in the West can be mighty
- ugly, especially in its more extreme Irish and Basque versions.
- But when Scots, Quebecois, Catalans and Bretons talk
- separatism, they are, in the main, actually renegotiating their
- ties to London, Ottawa, Madrid and Paris.
- </p>
- <p> They are the disputatious representatives of a larger,
- basically positive phenomenon: a devolution of power not only
- upward toward supranational bodies and outward toward
- commonwealths and common markets but also downward toward freer,
- more autonomous units of administration that permit distinct
- societies to preserve their cultural identities and govern
- themselves as much as possible. That American buzz word
- empowerment -- and the European one, subsidiarity -- is being
- defined locally, regionally and globally all at the same time.
- </p>
- <p> Humanity has discovered, through much trial and horrendous
- error, that differences need not divide. Switzerland is made up
- of four nationalities crammed into an area considerably smaller
- than what used to be Yugoslavia. The air in the Alps is no more
- conducive to comity than the air in the Balkans. Switzerland has
- thrived, while Yugoslavia has failed because of what Kant
- realized 200 years ago: to be in peaceful league with one
- another, people -- and peoples -- must have the benefits of
- democracy.
- </p>
- <p> The best mechanism for democracy, whether at the level of
- the multinational state or that of the planet as a whole, is
- not an all-powerful Leviathan or centralized superstate, but a
- federation, a union of separate states that allocate certain
- powers to a central government while retaining many others for
- themselves.
- </p>
- <p> Federalism has already proved the most successful of all
- political experiments, and organizations like the World
- Federalist Association have for decades advocated it as the
- basis for global government. Federalism is largely an American
- invention. For all its troubles, including its own serious bout
- of secessionism 130 years ago and the persistence of various
- forms of tribalism today, the U.S. is still the best example of
- a multinational federal state. If that model does indeed work
- globally, it would be the logical extension of the Founding
- Fathers' wisdom, therefore a special source of pride for a world
- government's American constituents.
- </p>
- <p> As for humanity as a whole, if federally united, we won't
- really be so very far from those much earlier ancestors, the
- ones huddled around that primeval fire beside the river; it's
- just that by then the whole world will be our valley.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
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