HRH Prince Turki Al Faisal, Chairman of the Board, King Faisal Centre for Research and Islamic Studies, said that great transformations throughout history carry with them risks and opportunities for individuals, states, societies, and the international community at large.
“Anarchy and a vacuum are the most dangerous threats facing our world. Great wars were the natural consequence of such situations and failures to address challenges that were facing humanity. Our world is fracturing before our eyes. However, only through international wisdom, cooperation and leadership, will the world deal with the immense challenges facing us at this juncture to avoid the inevitable disasters. I hope this will be the case,” he said as he addressed the 43rd edition of “Intelligence on the World, Europe, and Italy” at the Ambrosetti Villa d’Este Forum in Cernobbio, Como.
“Wherever we look today on the map of the globe we find that there is a crisis in every corner and without a clear horizon for real solutions.
In the Far East, the world is on the brink of a major crisis that could become a global one if not peacefully resolved. The North Korean nuclear crisis and the threat of confrontation with the United States is not a danger looming exclusively over the Far East but the entire world. Peace and security that allowed Japan, South Korea, Taiwan, even China and the rest of Asia to thrive economically during the last six decades are threatened, and as a result the world economy will suffer most.
Not far from this crisis is the border crisis in the Himalayas, which recently put nuclear India and Nuclear China armies in a state of readiness for military confrontation on the question of disputed borders between the Kingdom of Bhutan and China. This reminds the world of the outstanding danger of border disputes between India and China that led to the Sino-Indian War in 1962. Fortunately, both countries have drawn back from confrontations, but until when?
Adding to these crises in the Far East is the question of China-US relations, which no one can imagine how it will be in the future, not because of the differences over issues such as North Korea’s nuclear program, China's maritime expansion, or the Taiwan question; but over managing such relations to avoid what the American political scientist Graham Allison calls “The Thucydides Trap”. Drawing on the conclusion of the Greek historian that and I quote: “It was the rise of Athens, and the fear that this inspired in Sparta, that made war inevitable.” Therefore, the pattern of history since the Peloponnesian War (431–404 BC) of the inevitability of war when a rising power challenges a dominant one, Allison found that twelve past cases out of sixteen since then ended in war. In his latest book titled: Destined for War: Can America and China Escape Thucydides’s Trap? Allison is not ruling out this inevitability if the United States and China continue managing their relation the way they were doing in the last few decades. This would be the most devastating to the entire world.
“The situation in south and west Asia is not much better. The relations between rising nuclear India with its ultra-nationalist drive and nuclear Pakistan are an explosive issue. The two countries have not, after four wars between them, solved the issue of Kashmir peacefully or to deal effectively with ramifications of their wars. And each of them remains suspicious of the other. This situation carries with it the danger of exploding at any time if not tackled seriously by both parties and the concerned powers.
Peace in Afghanistan is still far-fetched. Conflicts and wars that are unremitting since the Soviet invasion in 1979 are persistent with no solution in sight. President Trump in his latest speech on Afghanistan promised to continue the war in this conflict-cursed country but without providing a vision for pacifying it. Threatening Pakistan and inviting India to do more, are not a prescription for peace in Afghanistan. Leadership in this respect requires more than a surge in the military and alienation of Pakistan.
In West Asia, or the Middle East, the situation is beyond grasping. Continued internal wars in Iraq, Syria, and Yemen are threating their existence as nation-states; rising non-state actors in some states, like Hezbollah in Lebanon; growing terrorist threats, polarization of societies, aggressive regional behaviour by regional states, like Iran. Foreign interventions as manifested by Russian and Iranian intervention in Syria; diplomatic crisis in the Gulf between Qatar and its sisters: Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, the United Arab Emirates and Egypt, that threatens the unity and survival of the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) as a unifying regional organization. Adding to these issues, the protracted Israeli-Palestinian conflict complicates the picture. The continuation of this conflict will always be a source of destabilization to the region, and a source of breeding for radicalism and terrorism.
“In North Africa, the situation is not different from the situation in the rest of the Middle East. Anarchism is the order of the day in Libya. Terrorism is destabilizing Egypt, Libya, and the rest of the Maghreb region. The spill over of this instability is affecting the rest of Africa with terrorism, and Europe with a deluge of refugees.
Europe, which was seen as the cradle of stability on the world stage is not immune, too. Terrorism is hitting in many European cities; polarization of societies is evident with rising dangerous trends: ultra-right, Islamophobia, anti- foreigners, anti-immigration; questioning the future of the EU and the future of NATO; the future of relations with Russia and Turkey, the challenges of the Ukrainian crisis, and Brexit.
In the United States, a world leader, and where everyone in our world looks at for sense of direction. Uncertainty is troubling.
“I could have stated more issues and cases to illustrate the state of our world, like the Venezuelan crisis in Latin America, however, what is presented shows that our world is in trouble. In our linked, globalized world, each issue or case could become the global one that threatens all and endangers all human achievement in all fields since World War II, including globalization itself.
On many occasions, I have stated that all the issues mentioned here are geopolitical risks and they are symptoms of deep structural problems in the international order, caused by the failure of our world community to live up to the principles of good world governance as set in the charter of the UN seventy years ago. The international order envisaged by the victors of World War II to preserve “peace and security of the world” is now in crisis and failing to respond to the crises and risks facing humanity.
Our interdependent and globalised world is not the world of 1945 but is still managed by the mentality of 1945 and the Cold War. International order needs restructuring to be fair, inclusive, and reflective of international reality, where power, in all its aspects, is shared by many power centres. Therefore, without such restructuring, geopolitical risks will continue to rise and threaten world peace and security. As we see in the Syrian crisis, the failure of the international community and specially the failure of the two great powers, USA and Russia, to address this issue from the beginning according to the principles of the UN charter, is leading to the present diplomatic and rhetorical confrontations, which threaten world peace and security.
“The world does not need a world war to have a new world order to prove that world orders in history are by-products of major wars. Reforming the existing order requires new thinking by all UN member states, including the five permanent veto members. The world is aware of the unfairness of this order and sees it as an out-dated structure and not being able to tackle the issues of the day. Nor can it preserve peace and security in the world and meet the pressing challenges and threats facing humanity. The return to the pattern of power politics in managing world affairs is not a solution. World leaders need to come to their senses and look at the big picture of the world and its future. If the world cannot yet agree on a definition of terrorism, how are we going to effectively deal with it?
“In this respect Europe, the victim of historical changes in previous world orders can take this responsibility of convincing countries of the world of such a need before it is too late. Saudi Arabia, my country, will be in the forefront in supporting such a role.
After World War I, German Chancellor Theobald von Bethmann Hollweg was asked how his choices, and those of other European statesmen, led to the most devastating war. His answer was, “Ah, if we only knew”. Nowadays we know the risks, so let us pray that we have learned the lessons of history and are moving toward restructuring our stagnant world order
Source: BNA
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