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A Hundred Little Napoleons Is Anyone in Charge in Today's Nonpolar World?

Part 2: 'The International Order Is Robust'

Despite the grave crisis over Georgia, and the seriousness of the whole range of new challenges, world order seems to have survived -- at least for the present. The weakening of US standing in the world since 2003 has not, or at least not yet, changed the basic facts about the order in which we live. International collaboration today is at a remarkably high level by almost any measure: the range of subject-areas covered, the adoption of international standards in a wide range of technical matters, the movements of goods and people, and the extent to which collaboration involves societies as a whole and not just their foreign ministries. Furthermore, other specific facts and trends suggest that the international order is robust:

• We are still in an era in which international wars are fewer and less destructive than in previous centuries. There has been no big change in the historic post-1945 trend;

• Participation in the international order on a cooperative basis remains an attractive option for many states -- as Libya's decision in late 2003 to come in from the cold may suggest;

• The United Nations and its charter remain, battered but unbowed, as the nearest thing we have to a global international constitution; and the United Nations is busy addressing international security issues, evidenced by the high number of peacekeeping operations that continue to be established;

• There has been significant development of regional organizations, and ad hoc regional diplomatic processes have been vital in addressing particular problems, such as the North Korea nuclear weapons issue;

• NATO -- despite numerous predictions of its demise and the inherent difficulties of its roles in Afghanistan and Georgia -- remains an important institution;

• The European Union has been astonishingly successful in some key respects. It has helped to reduce the risk of war from the very states that provided the tinder for the start of two world wars;

• Some stalemated problems, such as those relating to the border between Russia and China, have moved toward resolution. China has reached agreements with all the successor states of the Soviet Union on its borders, including Russia itself.

Developments such as these suggest that the international order is not exactly fragile. Indeed, it is robust. This is partly because of the sheer strength, depth, and "stickiness" of habits of cooperation. It is also because the most obvious ideological challenges to the international order -- whether they be terrorist movements, or that very small group of states that appear to reject many of the values on which the contemporary international is based -- have remarkably little purchase outside their own notably narrow constituencies. They simply are not as serious as the German, Italian, and Japanese revisionism of 1930-45, nor do they have the broad appeal that international communism could command at various times in the years between 1917 and 1989. The absence of major ideological challenge helps to explain how, up to now, the international order has been able to survive despite the degree of incapacitation that the United States has suffered.

The proposition that certain powers "take the lead" in maintaining international order is of very long standing. It is how the role of great powers (also sometimes called the "great responsibles") was conceived in the 18th and 19th centuries. However, by its very nature this proposition about great powers has always been open to challenge. Among its many difficulties has been the question -- alive today in relation to the United States -- as to whether those states that conceive of themselves as maintainers of order are at the same time bound by the normal rules of international law that they seek to impose on others. Today the term "great power," but not the reality of it, is out of fashion. Hence, in the wars in the former Yugoslavia, the meetings of major powers to take forward possible solutions for the countries concerned was called the "contact group" -- great powers disguised as social workers.

"Taking the lead" can easily imply taking the military lead. While such military leadership is often necessary (as it was in the 1991 Gulf War and in the 1999 Kosovo intervention), it can also lead directly into quagmires, as today in Iraq. Leadership, if it is to result in other states following, needs to be combined with wisdom, judiciousness, restraint, and respect -- qualities not always evident in UK and US policies in recent years.

The particular choice of methods, military and otherwise, by which order is secured needs to be addressed head-on. The use of military force is a grave if sometimes necessary step. In many cases, though certainly not in all, other methods may be more effective. One of these is the process that might be called "induction." The term encompasses both bringing about a change by proximity (as in magnetic induction), and preparing the country concerned for membership (as in induction to a club or organization). Induction has played a crucial part in the unification of Europe. Yet military leadership and induction are not simple alternatives: each has its function, and Europe is weaker at the first of them.

A general interest in cooperation is not enough: International order also requires a willingness to act, at least in those crises that threaten the basis of the order. The current order is more clearly decentralized than in the first years after the end of the Cold War, and it is characterized by variable geometry. Different countries -- and organizations -- assume roles of special importance in particular crises. At its best, this situation could be seen as the "anarchical society" in action, maintaining order through the common will of states, especially major states. At its worst, this is a situation full of danger. It presents opportunities for conflict, for some governments to gang up with each other against the interests of their peoples, for great powers to act by proxy, and for regional hegemons to emerge without fear of being challenged militarily by another major power -- clearly Russia's intention in Georgia. In addition, there are obvious risks of ineffective management of power leading to renewed calls for outside involvement in regional conflicts.

An international order that can be characterized as nonpolar might easily be interpreted as presenting a special opportunity for international organizations. Such organizations, regional and global, do play a key role in security as well as other matters, but they do not, and are not likely to, exercise a monopoly in the sense of taking decision-making and action away from the state and to a supranational level.

Europe exemplifies the continued significance of regional bodies in the security field -- and the difficulty of agreeing on their precise roles. The Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe has experienced difficulties throughout the post-Cold War era, not least because it cannot paper over all the cracks that exist between its remarkably large number of member states. The European Union, despite making significant advances in the fields of security, peacekeeping and peacebuilding -- especially in the Balkans and in Africa -- still has difficulty securing agreement on the use of force and providing an intervention capability relevant to current needs. NATO was unceremoniously brushed aside by the United States when it offered help in the aftermath of 9/11, and although it is now deeply involved in Afghanistan, the circumstances there are not of the kind one would choose if one wanted to prove the superior virtues of regional organizations as instruments for imposing order.

Despite these problems and many predictions to the contrary, throughout the post-Cold War era NATO has continued not just to exist, but to be the principal framework for joint European action in the military sphere, including in the Balkans, Afghanistan, and elsewhere. There is not a single European country in which there has been a well-supported and effective demand for a retreat to unilateralism in security policy.

A main weakness in the European debate about international order since 2003 is the tendency of some Europeans to blandly assert the virtues of multilateral over unilateral approaches. Interpreting issues thus is a nice way of implying European superiority over the United States, but there are circumstances in which, if there is to be effective international action, it needs to be unilateral -- at least in the sense that it is not authorized by the UN Security Council. Over 60 years of experience in the United Nations has taught us that, despite the considerable merits of the organization, it cannot solve all problems.

Any attempt to capture the essence of the contemporary international system needs to encompass a clear and realistic view of both the strengths and the weaknesses of the United Nations. Different understandings of the United Nations' actual and potential roles formed a fateful background to the European–US divide over Iraq in 2003, and are not yet resolved. A degree of common understanding could be based on recognition of four key points. First, the United Nations has been, and remains, an important framework within which states can act collectively, including in the security sphere. Second, the United Nations does not at present constitute anything approaching a complete system of collective security. Indeed, to present it in that light may damage the United Nations by placing a greater weight of expectation on the organization than it can possibly bear. In particular, it cannot possibly play a central role in a crisis, such as that over Georgia, in which one of the five veto-wielding powers is directly involved. Third, the experience of the United Nations in the past six decades confirms that there remains a need for certain states to take the lead if the United Nations is to act effectively. This has especially been the case so far as the use of force has been concerned. And last, the United Nations exists, and will continue to exist, in parallel with the evolving system of sovereign states and with other dynamic developments in international society. It is one element in international order, but not the sole basis of that order.

In short, the emergence of a nonpolar order forces us to confront what has always been a central truth of international relations: in different regions and crises, different states and combinations of states take the lead. "Variable geometry" is the rule. Russia's action in Georgia illustrates how open to abuse, and how dangerous, such a situation can be. Variable geometry, as distinct from simple polarity, may be as much a part of the problem of world order as it is of the solution, but it is likely to endure.

Adam Roberts was Montague Burton professor of international relations at Oxford University. His books include "The United Nations Security Council and War: The Evolution of Thought and Practice since 1945."

To read the footnotes and sources related to this article, please visit the Web site of our partner Internationale Politik Global Edition.

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