Template for Peace is
Inclusion
Paul Keating,
Prime Minister of Australia, 1991 to 1996
Speech delivered to the Melbourne
Writers' Festival
23 August 2008
"In a Western and
elitist way, we have viewed China's right to its
Olympic Games, to its 'coming out', its moment of
glory, with condescension and concessional tolerance.
The Western critic feeling the epicentre of the world
changing but not at all liking it, seeks to put down
these vast societies on the basis that their political
and value systems don't match up to theirs... The
Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty entered by compliant
States in 1970 is on the verge of collapse.The Treaty
represents perhaps the most egregious example of
international double dealing of any international
regime...The plain fact is, there can be no
non-proliferation without de-proliferation"
Comment by tamilnation.org
Mr. Keating's speech is essential reading
for those concerned with international relations in the
age of empire (and all of us are concerned in one way
or another - 'Just
because you don't take an interest in politics doesn't
mean politics won't take an interest in
you.'- Pericles, 430
BC). In some
ways Mr.Keating's speech may rank with US President
Eisenhower's farewell speech on the US industrial
military complex in 1961. That both Keating and
Eisenhower should have awaited their retirement before
saying that which they did say may not be without
significance, but that should not take way from the
significance of what they said. Mr.Keating is right to
point out -
"A new international order based
on truth and justice founded in the recognition of
the rights of each of us to live out our lives in
peace and harmony, can I believe, provide the only
plausible long term template. The old order of
victorious powers, of a compromised UN, a moribund G8
with major powers hanging on to weapons of mass
destruction, is a remnant of the violent twentieth
century... It cannot provide the basis for an
equitable and effective system of world governance.
Just as world community concern has been ahead of the
political system on issues such as global warming, so
too world community concern needs to galvanise
international action to find a new template for a
lasting peace. One embracing all the major powers and
regions."
Said
that, Mr.Keating's conclusion that the template for
peace is inclusion would have been more rounded if he
had abandoned what may be regarded as a top-down
'statist approach' of 'embracing all the major
powers and regions'. His analysis would have been more complete
if he had at the sametime
addressed the need to pay greater attention to the
aspirations of the Fourth World of nations without
states and to the words, for instance, of
Bernard Q. Nietschmann as long ago as
1985 -
"Increasingly, the
Fourth World is emerging as a new force in
international politics because in the common defense
of their nations, many indigenous peoples do not
accept being mere subjects of international law and
state sovereignty and trusteeship bureaucracies.
Instead, they are organizing and exerting their own
participation and policies as sovereign peoples and
nations."
Peace is unlikely to
come with a resolute denial of the right of self
determination to peoples who, in the name of democracy,
are ruled by alien ethnic majorities within state
boundaries bequeathed by their erstwhile colonial
rulers. The exchange of one colonialism for another is
no recipe for peace. 'A new international order based
on truth and justice' will need to recognise that
peace will come only with the recognition that self
determination is not a de stabilising force - that it
is, on the contrary, a stabilising force. 'A new
international order based on truth and justice' will
need to recognise that in the end, self determination
and democracy go hand in hand. To fail to do so is to
deny both truth and justice.
" Self determination
and democracy go hand in hand. If democracy means the
rule of the people, by the people, for the people,
then the principle of self determination secures that
no one people may rule another - and herein lies its enduring appeal... And
we may need to attend more carefully to the words of
of Yelena Bonner (widow of Andrei Sakharov) that
'the inviolability of a country's borders against
invasion from the outside must be clearly separated
from the right to statehood of any people within a
state's borders.' " Nadesan Satyendra in the Fourth World - Nations
without a State
"...Let us accept
the fact that states have lifecycles similar to those
of human beings who created them. The lifecycle of a
state might last for many generations, but hardly any
Member State of the United Nations has existed within
its present borders for longer than five generations.
The attempt to freeze human evolution has in the past
been a futile undertaking and has probably brought
about more violence than if such a process had been
controlled peacefully...Restrictions on
self-determination threaten not only democracy itself
but the state which seeks its legitimation in
democracy" Self
Determination & the Future of Democracy -
Prince Hans-Adam II of
Liechtenstein, 2001
A prestigious American think tank told us
recently that 66% of humanity lives in high income or
high growth countries; up from 25% thirty years ago. A
very powerful statistic.
Since 1982, the world has experienced a twenty five year,
long wave of economic growth, overlaid by only two
cyclical investment recessions; 1989-1990 and 2000-2003.
This extended period of high growth and low inflation has
brought prosperity on an unprecedented scale. Growth has
risen the world over in a long linear trajectory.
This period of macroeconomic consensus and stability has
been called 'the great moderation'. A moderation in all
the factors that go to the production of goods and
services and their overall management in conducive
monetary and fiscal frameworks.
And coinciding with this long period of growth and
stability was the strategic epiphany at the end of the
1980s; the end of the Cold War: the bipolar rivalry that
characterised and threatened the peace of the world in
the second half of the twentieth century. A bipolarity,
that nonetheless, evaporated in an instant. What replaced
it was the unipolar moment of the West, with the American
eagle perched victorious on its mountain lair.
That victory, by some coincidence, also came with the
full onset of globalisation. The opening of borders to
goods and flows of funds with its concomitant
intensification of trade and financial interdependence.
As it turned out: a globalisation of economic growth
annealed by a globalisation of peace. The first of a kind
since that which followed the Napoleonic Wars.
The key question now and the central one of this address
is, can that two thirds of humanity, in those high income
and high growth countries, assimilate that growth and
prosperity, or will the condition itself corrode or
hollow humanity out, slaking us of those earnest values
and high convictions that have stood by us down through
time.
Perhaps, more than that, will the seduction of secularity
and self absorption lure us into a bubble of spiritless
contentment, sustained only the inability of others to
organise themselves effectively to disrupt or appropriate
it?
Is it a case, as Pope Benedict recently remarked, that
the Western world is a world 'weary of its own culture',
a world 'weary of greed, exploitation and division, of
the tedium of false idols and the pain of false
promises'? That is, a world without a guiding light; one
without absolute truths by which to navigate.
John Stuart Mill made much the same point, seeing the
great struggle of life as being between creativity and
the 'despotism of custom' or perhaps, we could say,
between originality and tradition, of authenticity trying
to breach those tedious moulds of contemporary culture,
replete with their false idols and chimeras of an
idealised happiness.
Benedict told us in Sydney that 'life is a search for the
true, the good and the beautiful' and we know that
whenever those objectives become subordinated, we become
lost, in a morass of preferences and experiences
uninformed by truth or ethics. Experiences, he went on to
say, which detached from what is good or true, 'lead to
moral and intellectual confusion and ultimately to
despair'.
Are we capable - those of us in that opportune two thirds
of humanity - of forging a second Enlightenment? One not
solely dependent on science but one leavened by
understanding and virtue, making the most of science. One
which goes to the profound and innate dignity of every
human life, transcending the old barriers of ethnicity
and creed, and of course, geography.
In a world shrunk by transport and communications,
vulnerable to shifts in climate and natural disasters and
subject of devastating weapons and armouries, can a
higher framework of co-existence obtain other than one
governed by self interest or nationalism or indeed by a
misplaced sense of superiority?
Benedict also told us in Sydney that the State cannot be
'the source of truth and morality'. That that source can
only be a set of truths and values which devolve to what
it means to be human, one to each other, society to
society, state to state. In Benedict's terms, one of
God's creatures.
We are currently living through one of those rare yet
transforming events in history, a shift in the power in
the world from West to East. For five hundred years
Europe dominated the world, now for all its wealth and
population it is drifting into relative decline.
Will our understanding of this transformation and our
acceptance of its equity for the greater reaches of
mankind, lead us to a position of general preparedness of
its inevitability, or will we cavil at it in much the
same way as Europe resisted the rise of Bismarck's
creation at the end of the nineteenth century?
We can see with this
the twenty ninth Olympiad, the questioning of China and
the resentment at its pretensions about being one of us.
Even, becoming one of us! The Western liberal press
featured, generally in critical terms, the world-long
torch relay, juxtaposing all that it represents and is
good about it, with what it sees as China's democratic
defects, viewing it almost exclusively through the prism
of Tibet. Saying, almost, that the aspirations of this
massive nation, a quarter of humanity, a legatee of a
century of misery, dragging itself from poverty, is
somehow of questionable legitimacy, because its current
government's attitude to political freedoms and in
specific instances, human rights, are not up to scratch.
Ignoring the massive leaps in progress, of income growth,
of shelter, of the alleviation of poverty, of dwindling
infant mortality, of education, of, by any measure, the
much better life now being experienced by the great
majority of Chinese.
In a Western and elitist way, we have viewed China's
right to its Olympic Games, to its 'coming out', its
moment of glory, with condescension and concessional
tolerance.
The Western critic feeling the epicentre of the world
changing but not at all liking it, seeks to put down
these vast societies on the basis that their political
and value systems don't match up to theirs.
Henry Kissinger made the point recently, when he said 'we
cannot do in China in the twenty first century, what
others thought to do in the nineteenth - prescribe their
institutions for them and seek to organise Asia'. And he
went on to pose the question; do we split the world into
a union of democracies and non-democracies, or must there
be another approach key to regional and historic
circumstance?
How workable would the world be if it was divided into
democracies and non-democracies, along a demarcation line
set up by self-approving, Jeffersonian-style
liberals?
There is a view that should China become a democracy, a
real one, many tensions in the global system would go;
that democracies find peace with other democracies; that
the former political-military state first turns itself
into a trading state and as wealth and opportunity rise,
so too do democratic values.
But what we must remember is that even if all the states
of the world became democratic, the structure of the
international system would remain anarchic.
India and Pakistan are democracies but this fact has not
lowered tensions between them. Democratic Germany took on
the rest of democratic Europe in 1914. Some would say
that Wilhemine Germany was not a pristine democracy but
can we divine our way to peace in the international
system by a beauty contest as to whose democratic fabric
is finest or better than another.
The propagation of democracy is a fraught business but
with the end of the Cold War, the liberal
interventionists got right into their stride and, Iraq
was one of the outcomes.
RH Tawney, the British historian and sociologist, once
remarked that war is either a crusade or a crime. Woe
betide the rest of us if the crusaders enjoy an open writ
to underwrite military adventurism in the name of
democracy in states which have not even developed organic
domestic political structures to take it, much less grow
it. Perhaps we should also consider John Stuart Mill's
preference for progress before liberty. Or liberty at
least in tandem with progress.
The fact is that for the first time in human history, we
now live in a global system. Aviation and
telecommunications have underwritten a connectedness
which past generations could only have dreamt of.
Television news and the digital age mark the events of
day to day life in real time. No longer do we concentrate
our affairs in our own parts of the world, rather we
calibrate all we do against the rest of the world as a
whole. Our mindset is now global.
From here on, we have to synchronise whatever we do
within an overarching global strategy. A strategy which
has to have as its basis the progress of human existence
and not simply the propagation of democracy.
And it is not as if we have been denied a new canvas to
paint out a better picture.
For the first time since before the First World War, the
dissolution of the Soviet Union opened the potential for
a new era of peace and cooperation.
Russia, humiliated but intact, let the bits fall away
from its former Union of Soviet States. Wise men like
George Herbert Bush, Helmut Kohl, Brent Scowcroft and
James Baker saw to it that the bits came away other than
in an outburst of triumphalism: that the bits were
strategically parked in the quietest and least
celebratory way to underwrite an orderly transition from
Gorbachev to Yeltsin. And an orderly transition to the
independent functioning of those Warsaw Treaty states
outside Russia itself. Gorbachev even agreed to a
reunited Germany within NATO, after twenty six million of
his countrymen and women had died releasing the grip of
Nazism on their homeland.
George Herbert Bush talked about a New World Order then
lost to Bill Clinton. And what happened then? Well,
nothing happened then! The Americans cried victory and
walked off the field.
The greatest challenge we face, whether for managing
incidents or easing the new economic tectonic plates into
place, will be to construct a truly representative
structure of world governance which reflects global
realities but which is also equitable and fair.
For two Clinton presidential terms and two George W Bush
terms, the world has been left without such a structure.
Certainly one able to accommodate Russia and the great
states like China and India.
Instead President Clinton and President George W Bush
left us with the template of 1947; the template cut by
the victorious powers of World War Two, the one where
Germany and Japan were left on the outside, and still are
sixty years later, and in which China and India are
tolerated and palely humoured.
Sixteen critical years have already been lost. And it is
not as if we are dealing with a world where things are
the same now as they were sixteen years ago. The world is
dynamic: sixteen years ago China was not a world power;
today it is. Sixteen years ago, Russia was collapsing;
today it is growing and strongly.
We are now sitting through, witnessing, the eclipse of
American power. Yet for those sixteen critical years, two
American Presidents did nothing to better shape the
institutions of world governance. To shape it for the
day, for that moment in history when the United States
becomes another power amongst equals; or near equals.
And there has been no help from the old powers; Tony
Blair's Britain and Jacque Chirac's France. After all,
they had box seats to the event, courtesy of being on top
in 1947. But Blair's contribution was not anything new or
free-thinking, rather he thought being an American
acolyte was all that was required. Chirac was simply
incapable of adding any strategic value to the
equation.
The fact is we are again heading towards a bipolar world.
Not one shaped by a balance of terror like the old one,
but certainly not a multipolar one. In fact, one heavily
influenced by two countries; the United States and
China.
This will face us up to a number of major decisions and
soon.
For a start, will we regard China as a force for
stability and good, a partner in the world, or will we
continue to treat China as an upstart economic adversary
to be strategically watched?
Some will say, but what about Europe? Don't forget
Europe; Europe is a pole. I do not think it is.
Europe, in settlement of its twentieth century conflicts,
has opted for a cooperative regionalism where the
prerogatives of each of the former sovereign states have
been blended or subsumed to a homogenous whole. But a
whole lacking that most crucial of all strategic
ingredients - the political ability to conscript and
direct a population; to respond militarily and do it
decisively. To do it in its own terms and the terms of
its population. In the long history of Europe this
homogenisation is actually a welcome change but the
challenge for Europe is to extend that supranationalism
to others.
States like China and Russia still enjoy a power of
galvanic action, politically and strategically, of the
kind Europe had and used in the nineteenth and twentieth
centuries. There may come a time when the young people of
these countries refuse to be conscripted for military
service by their respective polities. But that time is
not now.
As Chinese military power grows in lockstep with its
economy, it is reasonable to assume that the only other
major economic and strategic force on the landscape will
be the United States. Just the two of them.
But let us not leave out the Russians.
Russia's economy, while growing in strength from the
burned out wreck it was in 1990, will not be in the
league of that of the United States or of China. But
Russia will still be wealthy; wealthy enough to continue
to field its massive arsenal of nuclear weapons. So
whether you attribute to Russia full 'pole' status or
not, you can certainly attribute to it huge strategic
standing.
It is more the pity then, that following that unexpected
epiphany in 1989, the Clinton Administration rashly
decided to ring-fence Russia by inviting the former
Warsaw Treaty states of Poland, Hungary and the Czech
Republic to join NATO.
By doing so, the United States failed to learn one of the
lessons of history; that the victor should be magnanimous
with the vanquished. In this case, the victor and its
agent, NATO, gave those former Soviet Bloc countries an
invitation to actually jump camp. And in doing so,
strategically occupying the territory that formerly
belonged to the Soviet Union which came within the
control of Russia.
At some time the United States will be obliged to treat
Russia as a great sovereign power replete with a range of
national interests of the kind other major powers
possess.
In the meantime, the great risk of this sort of
adventurism is that with NATO's border now right up to
the western Ukraine, the Russians will take the less
costly military option of counter-weighing NATO's power
by keeping their nuclear arsenal on full operational
alert.
This posture automatically carries with it the
possibility of a Russian nuclear attack by mistake. The
years of Russia's economic poverty, certainly since the
collapse of its economy in the first half of the 1990s,
has meant the Russians have allowed their surveillance
and early warning systems to ossify. To compensate, they
are keeping their nuclear arsenal on full operational
alert. No need to stand by if you are not, in fact,
standing by.
This leaves the rest of the world relying more on
Generals, battlefield commanders, and intelligence
assessors to restrain a nuclear response than it does the
Russian President or his government. This means that
while the Cold War is over, the risk of a mistaken
pre-emptory response has increased.
Russia is the only country in the world with the capacity
to massively damage the United States to the point of
seriously maiming it. And ditto for Western Europe.
Wouldn't you think that when the Russians surrendered
their empire in 1990, US policy would have been adept
enough to find an intelligent place for them in the
overall strategic fabric?
That is, to have Russia as part of an enlightened
framework of intelligent co-existence, thinking back
beyond the Cold War to when we partnered with them to
defeat Hitler. But even more than that, in people terms,
to invite their 160 million, battered by the twentieth
century, into the comity and wealth of nations.
Instead, the US conducted itself as unrivalled powers
have done throughout time; unchecked, it exploited its
position.
It has ring-fenced Russia treating it as a virtual enemy
with its west European and central European clients
egging it on.
This week the United States signed Poland up to build a
missile intercept system on Russia's border. Nominally,
the system is designed to protect Europe and the Middle
East from Iran. But even the Poles are now talking about
having it to deter Russian aggression. NATO, an
organisation rendered moribund by the collapse of the
Soviet Union, has been re-fashioned by the United States
as an organisation to extend American power and policy to
the security order of Europe.
You could be excused for thinking that when the Wall came
down the major states of Europe, Germany and France,
along with Britain, would have developed their own
security order; responding to their own national
interests and culture. Certainly with reference to the
United States but not mandated by it. But however likely
that might have been, the end result is that the key
decisions about European defence and security are made in
Washington. Hence Europe's strategic impotence.
One of the negative aspects of these developments is that
they play into the hands of Russian nationalists while
making the hand of those Russians prepared to give
liberal democratic principles a go, much weaker.
The old West then complains about Vladimir Putin being a
poorly disguised Russian autocrat and nationalist when
the West has played a large role in creating him.
All of this serves to underline the most pressing problem
of all and that is the continuing existence of nuclear
weapons. Nuclear weapon proliferation is the single, most
immediate threat hanging over the world today. The
Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty entered by compliant
States in 1970 is on the verge of collapse.The Treaty
represents perhaps the most egregious example of
international double dealing of any international regime.
In a nutshell, the nuclear weapon States signed up to the
elimination of their nuclear weapons while, in the
meantime, other signatory States undertook to forgo their
development. But now, most of the nuclear weapon States
are developing new nuclear weapons. Not only have they
not ridded themselves of their old ones, they are
actually making new ones.
Tony Blair announced the New Trident Submarine Program in
2006 while the Bush Administration has turned its hand to
new bunker busting nuclear weapons designed to attack
underground facilities. The Russians, quick on the
uptake, are also refining their arsenal.
The old nukes had the dubious advantage of existing
solely for self defence. This new variety of US weapons
is actually being designed for use; for intended wartime
deployment and operation. And ditto for the Russians.
What sort of future compliance can we expect from States
already signatories to the NPT, let alone
non-signatories, when the promoters of the Treaty reserve
the right to ignore their obligations as to elimination,
while designing and building new devices?
In that strategic quiet after the thunderclap that
ended the Cold War, as Prime Minister of Australia, a
non-weapon NPT signatory, I established the Canberra
Commission for the Elimination of Nuclear Weapons in
1995. I did it taking the opportunity of the strategic
vacuum to move weapons states down the path of
lengthening the fuse or time on their warheads while
proposing to completely dismantle and destroy weapons no
longer operationally deployed.
Robert O'Neill, the Australian professor of war and
strategic policy who was on that Commission, recently
wrote of his experience in approaching the five weapon
States upon the report's publication. He said of the
five, only the Chinese 'seemed willing to talk seriously
about the changes recommended by the Commission'. He said
the reaction of the other four weapon States - the United
States, Russia, Britain and France - was completely
defensive.
The Americans and the Russians made clear they were
prepared to talk to each other but Britain and France,
O'Neill said, saw nuclear weapons as desirable levers of
political influence, devoid of which their Governments
would forfeit leverage in Washington and Moscow and
within the corridors of NATO. The Prime Minister, John
Howard, and his foreign minister Alexander Downer, who
received the Report which I had commissioned, dropped it
like a hot cake. The foreign minister then labelled it a
stunt by the previous Government. They did not want to be
in the business of taking the issue to the United States
as I certainly would have.
All the more pleasing therefore, for those of us who
know that the 'have' and 'have not' policy of the NPT is
not sustainable, to see in January 2007, the former US
Secretaries of State, Henry Kissinger and George Schultz,
along with former Defence Secretary Bill Perry and
Senator Sam Nunn, publish a joint call for the
elimination of all nuclear weapons.
In October 2007, those four statesmen led a
conference at Stanford University on ways of taking their
proposal forward. Robert O'Neill believes momentum is
building; and he said 'on re-reading the Canberra
Commission's report today, I believe it makes more sense
than it did in 1996'.
The plain fact is, there can be no non-proliferation
without de-proliferation. If the weapon States are not
prepared to rid themselves of nuclear weapons, why would
other States continue to deny themselves the kind of
leverage that these weapons bring.
Look at India and Pakistan or even North Korea. None
of these States are NPT signatories, yet India by having
these weapons, is now pulling a deal from the United
States for nuclear technology. Pakistan's possession of
them saw the regime of General Musharraf treated very
favourably by the United States while North Korea
continues to be handled with kid gloves. And what a dicey
proposition Pakistan is. Another one of those trustworthy
'democracies'. Bhutto has been murdered, like her father,
while Musharraf himself is now gone. Who is to contain
and manage Pakistan's nuclear weapons for the long term
benefit of the rest of us; another flimsy coalition of
political parties; another General? It seems if you have
nuclear weapons and flaunt them, you are more likely to
be noticed and treated concessionally. North Korea is the
exemplar in this respect.
Many people will think and some will say that with
communications and the globalisation of economic wealth
being what it is, an outbreak of the major conflict seems
more and more remote. That global interdependence and the
shrinking of the world makes war a decidedly unproductive
way of resolving foreign policy differences. People
should be reminded that that was said at the time of the
last great intensification of trade between Britain,
France and Germany along with the growing US economy
before 1914.
The lesson is that when the strategic bits go wrong,
the economic bits soon follow. Certainly not the obverse:
when the trade goes well, the strategic wrinkles get
ironed out. As I remarked earlier, the structure of the
international system is anarchic. Was anarchic; remains
anarchic.
This condition cannot be remedied but structures to
mitigate its most violent manifestations can be put into
place. Against this backdrop remains the open question
about 'the West' and its fibre. The question which was
resoundingly answered by that generation who suffered the
Depression and the Second World War and who delivered us
into a new era of peace and prosperity.
Is our culture a culture made compliant by too much
coming too easily; producing a state of intellectual and
spiritual lassitude which can only be shaken by the
gravest threats; be they economic, environmental or
indeed strategic? As that pendulum swings from West to
East, are the motivations for the West's former primacy
swinging with it?
Has the bounty of science and industrialisation with
its cornucopia of production and wealth, encouraged us
too far away from simpler requirements and concern for
the needs of all?
Was the twentieth century a psychological age as Roger
Smith in his History of Human Sciences pointed out, in
which the self became privatised, while the public realm;
the realm critical to political action for the public
good, was left relatively vacant? As societies, have we
taken our eye off public affairs for way too long?
Let me return to the theme I touched at the beginning
of my remarks. Can we, all of us, assimilate; adjust
ourselves to a constancy of peace and prosperity without
lessening our regard for those enlivening impulses of
truth and goodness? The search, as Benedict said, for
what is good, beautiful and true.
A new international order based on truth and justice
founded in the recognition of the rights of each of us to
live out our lives in peace and harmony, can I believe,
provide the only plausible long term template. The old
order of victorious powers, of a compromised UN, a
moribund G8 with major powers hanging on to weapons of
mass destruction, is a remnant of the violent twentieth
century.
It cannot provide the basis for an equitable and
effective system of world governance. Just as world
community concern has been ahead of the political system
on issues such as global warming, so too world community
concern needs to galvanise international action to find a
new template for a lasting peace. One embracing all the
major powers and regions.
This can be done but it requires leadership and
imagination. It cannot be done without understanding and
virtue. The philosopher Emmanuel Kant said some day there
will be a universal peace; the only question, he said is,
will this come about by human insight or by catastrophe,
leaving no other outcome possible? Humankind demands that
that proposition be settled in the former and not the
latter.
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