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Vartan Oskanian: The World Votes With America

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  • Vartan Oskanian: The World Votes With America

    THE WORLD VOTES WITH AMERICA
    By Vartan Oskanian

    www.civilitasfoundation.org
    September 25, 2008

    Americans shouldn't be surprised that those of us in Europe and beyond
    are as interested in the outcome of the US presidential elections
    as they are. While only 20 percent of US news program content is
    devoted to foreign events, the majority of major international press
    outlets begin with news about the US. This contrast will most probably
    be apparent during the upcoming debates between Barack Obama and
    John McCain. Unfortunately, we fear that foreign policy issues will
    receive superficial treatment at worst, and at best, simply reactive,
    familiar responses in line with the short-sighted policies of the
    last eight years.

    Americans might be surprised that this time around the world thinks
    it is not the best commander-in-chief they should be electing, but
    the best diplomat-in-chief. Americans need not assume that every
    administration will find war inevitable. It is not who will make the
    best war that they should be worried about, but who will make the
    best peace.

    This is the appropriate standard to be hanging on the person who is
    to lead the world's most interconnected and influential country. In
    other words, this American election is and should be about foreign
    policy. And even if it is true that Americans vote their pockets in
    presidential elections, their pockets, too, are directly dependent
    on foreign policy.

    Every American president from Woodrow Wilson to George W. Bush
    has invoked national security as the reason to engage in military
    conflict. But because national security is indivisible, straightforward
    physical security is inevitably joined to economic security.

    In this age of globalization, economic security is more a function
    of foreign policy than traditional fiscal and monetary policy. If
    anyone doubted the truth of that, just think of the Iraq war, oil
    price volatility, sovereign funds, the outflow of US jobs and the
    inflow of migration. These are just a few intertwined challenges that
    affect the individual American's incomes even more than they engage
    Washington think tanks.

    Only an effective, credible foreign policy will ensure America's
    physical and economic security. That effectiveness depends on a strong
    economy and a just and enlightened foreign policy. The dilemma of the
    next American president will be to tackle in a balanced way both of
    the elements in what has become a vicious circle: For the US to be
    effective abroad, the American economy must be strong, but to have
    a strong economy, foreign policy must be sound. It must be part of
    the change that American presidential candidates are promising and
    the change they must deliver.

    That which has transpired during these last months proves that the
    world is not the same. First, there were the alarming events here in
    the Caucasus. Then, a financial crisis farther-reaching than before,
    hurricanes more frequent than ever before, a US-Russia schism wider
    than before, and the dangers of weapons proliferation like none before.

    Unfortunately, the institutions charged with resolving these
    crises are themselves at least partially responsible for them. An
    unsupported Kyoto protocol, an unwise NATO expansion, a politicized
    UN, a traditionalist IMF and World Bank with a failed Doha Round -
    these are all indications that the way the planet is being governed
    is wrong and post-World War II institutions must be re-examined and
    remade. Since the US was founder, co-founder or godfather to most if
    not all those institutions, the US has a huge role in the rethinking
    that must take place. And without its active participation, that
    rethinking cannot take place.

    The new American president's first and greatest challenge will be to
    put in place a new, sound, credible foreign policy, a policy that
    recognizes the need to form a new world order, with new inclusive
    and nondiscriminatory international institutions that promote a
    common peace and shared prosperity, not continue to fight old wars,
    on old battlegrounds.

    In the past 400 years from the Peace of Westphalia, to the Concert
    of Europe, World War I, World War II, the world has gone through
    at least four, perhaps five significant transformations. After each
    major war and conflict, a new system emerged, new mechanisms and new
    institutions were created to regulate state relationships. The end of
    the Cold War was the exception. The very institutions that contributed
    to the defeat of the USSR remained the main pillars of the so-called
    new world order. That was tolerated at the time of the collapse, when
    Russia and China were weak. Today's Russia and China are not. Insisting
    that those same institutions, particularly those dealing with security,
    operate the way they used to is neither realistic nor sustainable.

    The Cold War - longer than the others, with more money spent, with a
    great many casualties through proxy wars, and with nuclear weaponry in
    place - was a serious war. But because it ended without a shot being
    fired, we have been more complacent, less careful, less thoughtful,
    less clever - less strategic and farsighted - about the critical
    post-war period.

    We have left the dangerous post-conflict process to evolve on its
    own. That has meant almost by-default an expansion of a security
    alliance which was born to contain an assertive, expansionist,
    aggressive empire which no longer exists. Today there are voices
    that call for band-aid solutions - leagues of democracies that would
    arbitrarily freeze labels onto today's friends and allies and exclude
    dissenting voices. These reactionary proposals are not solutions,
    but untenable formulas for a future that is only imagined in terms
    of a divided past.

    The world community requires and deserves better. And the world
    community wants to be involved in the creation of a better world order.

    In some ways, this is a repeat of a play that takes place every 100
    years. A century ago, after the first European flare-up of the 20th
    century, it was the Europeans who wanted to continue to shape the
    world in its old form, and it was the Americans who pioneered their
    own, new vision of old geopolitical relationships of power.

    America's strength and influence stretched throughout the century that
    has been called the American Century. From the League of Nations to
    the Helsinki Final Act, American idealism and future vision shaped
    the world.

    Today's America remains strong and influential. But because it is
    not dominant, is has not found its own new comfortable role, nor
    allowed others - also strong, with their own imagined new world -
    to express theirs.

    So now, it is America's turn to be attentive to what Europe is
    saying and recognize that cosmetic refurbishing existing structures
    is insufficient. It is time, with America's indispensable leadership,
    to define a new order for an interdependent world.

    This then is an appeal to the American people. Make foreign policy
    a priority - for your sake and ours.

    Vartan Oskanian was foreign minister of Armenia from 1998 to April
    2008. He is the founder of the Civilitas Foundation in Yerevan,
    which addresses foreign policy, democracy and development issues in
    the Caucasus.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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