Date: Jun 5, 2013
Source: The Daily Star
 
In one crisis after another, American leadership has been absent
By Joschka Fischer 

Madeleine Albright, the former U.S. secretary of state, once described the United States as the “indispensable nation.” Current developments around the world are proving her right. But the proof has been almost entirely negative: Today, America’s importance has become apparent from the absence of U.S. leadership in one crisis after another – an absence that is most immediately obvious in Syria.
 
In fact, a post-American world is taking shape right before our eyes, and it is characterized not by a new international order, but by political ambiguity, instability and even chaos. This is unfortunate, and could turn out to be so dangerous that even die-hard anti-Americans end up longing for what was once called the American century and the U.S. role as a global force for order.
 
Both subjectively and objectively, the United States is no longer willing or able to play that role. There have been many causes for this: a decade of war in the greater Middle East, with its enormous cost in “blood and treasure”; the global financial and economic crisis; high public debt; reorientation toward internal problems; and a new focus on Pacific affairs. Add to this America’s relative decline in view of China’s ascendance and that of other large emerging countries.
 
I am relatively certain that the United States will successfully manage its reorientation and realignment, but the relative weight and reach of its power will nonetheless decline in the new world of the 21st century, as other countries grow in strength and catch up. Certainly, America’s global role will not be called into question. China will be busy addressing its own internal contradictions for a long time yet. Nor are India or Russia likely to pose a serious challenge to America. And Europe’s din of conflicting voices appears to preclude it from claiming the American mantle.
 
But, while none of these powers represents a serious alternative to America’s global role, the United States will no longer be able to act unilaterally, as it did after the end of the Cold War, and it will be weakened substantially. This change has become particularly obvious in the Middle East and in the Asia-Pacific region.
 
In the Middle East, the regional order created by the colonial powers, France and Britain, following World War I, was maintained throughout the years of the Cold War and the brief era of unilateral U.S. domination that followed; the convulsions of recent years, however, could well bring about its end. The colonial borders are being called into question, and what will become of Syria, Lebanon, Iraq and Jordan is difficult to forecast. The potential for regional disintegration and reconstitution – a process that can unleash untold violence, as is the case in Syria– is greater than ever.
 
Moreover, while there is no new regional hegemon to follow America, there are numerous contenders for the role. But none – Iran, Turkey and Saudi Arabia being the most prominent – is strong enough to decide matters in its own favor. Given the lack of a new force for order in the region in the foreseeable future, and the old one’s unwillingness to act, the danger of long-lasting violent confrontation is growing.
 
Even if America once again pursued military intervention in the region, its power would no longer be sufficient to enforce its will. Indeed, it is precisely because the U.S., after more than a decade of war, understands this only too well that any American administration will think twice before intervening militarily in the Middle East again.
 
Things look different in Asia, where the United States not only remains present, but has increased its commitments. In East and South Asia, nuclear powers (China, Russia, India, Pakistan and North Korea) or near-nuclear powers (Japan and South Korea) are all entangled in dangerous web of strategic rivalries. Add to this a regular dose of irrationality from North Korea.
 
While the American presence in the region has so far prevented its numerous conflicts and rivalries from intensifying, sources of uncertainty are multiplying. Will China be wise enough to seek reconciliation and partnerships with its neighbors, both large and small, rather than aiming for regional domination? What will become of the Korean peninsula? And what implications does Japan’s nationalist turn – and its risky economic policy – hold for the region? Can India and China stem the deterioration in their bilateral relations? Is state failure looming in Pakistan?
 
Imagine this situation without America’s military and political strength. The region would be dramatically more dangerous. At the same time, America’s straitened resources mean that its new global role will require more careful consideration of national interests in setting priorities. Clearly, the Asia-Pacific region takes precedence in U.S. calculations.
 
This new, more focused and limited American role thus raises the following question for America’s European partners: Can they afford the luxury of being unable to defend themselves without U.S. help?
 
Certainly, America’s guarantee of its NATO allies’ security will not become worthless, but it will become far more difficult to redeem in full. And, if a post-American world entails greater risk of chaos and its consequences than hope for a new, stable order – a risk that affects Europe in particular – then perhaps Europe should reverse course on its apparent determination to dismantle itself.
 
Joschka Fischer, Germany’s foreign minister and vice chancellor from 1998 to 2005, was a leader in the German Green Party for almost 20 years. THE DAILY STAR publishes this commentary in collaboration with Project Syndicate-Institute for Human Sciences © (www.project-syndicate.org).