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It's Time to End Our Cynical Policy of International Disruption
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Mainstream American political leaders regularly argue that the United States adheres to, defends and promotes a “rules-based international order.” What’s that? It’s rarely defined.

The best summary I’ve been able to find was articulated by John Ikenberry of Princeton University, introduced by the Financial Times in 2023 as “an influential scholar whose former pupils populate the American government.”

“I think the rules-based order has a history that predates the U.S. and even predates 1945 and the great order-building efforts after World War II,” Ikenberry said.

He continues: “But if you were to try to identify what open rules-based order is, it’s a set of commitments by states to operate according to principles, rules and institutions that provide governance that is not simply dictated by who is most powerful. So it’s a set of environmental conditions for doing business — contracts, multilateral institutions — and it comes in many layers. At the deepest level it’s really the system of sovereignty. It’s the belief that the world has a kind of foundation built around self-determined states that respect each other. On top of that, you have these layers of treaties and institutions, culminating really in the United Nations system, building rules and principles around aspirations for the inclusion of all peoples and societies. Everybody gets a seat at the table that has a membership based on statehood. And then on top of that, even more work-oriented rules and institutions that came out of World War II that are based on problem-solving, regulating interdependence: the (International Monetary Fund), the World Bank, the (World Health Organization).”

If this is the rules-based international order, the U.S. is working overtime to undermine it.

At the core of an arrangement in which “self-determined states … respect each other” is formal diplomatic recognition. Countries open embassies and consulates on one another’s territory, exchange ambassadors and issue tourist and work visas so their citizens can visit one another. Most essentially, they acknowledge each other’s territorial integrity, right to exist and right to govern their populations as each sees fit.

At present, the U.S. neither maintains nor seeks diplomatic relations with North Korea, Syria, Iran or Afghanistan. As the more powerful potential partner, the bulk of the blame and responsibility for the lack of ties lies with the U.S. Beginning in the 1950s, for example, the U.S. unilaterally imposed crippling economic sanctions against North Korea for having committed the sin of not losing the Korean War. U.S. sanctions against Iran date to the 1979 Islamic Revolution that overthrew the American-backed dictator, Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi. After negotiating its withdrawal from Afghanistan with the Taliban, the U.S. closed its massive embassy in Kabul, ending consular services. (The U.S. also does not have formal diplomatic relations with isolationist Bhutan, but ties are friendly.)

The U.S. seems to view the establishment of diplomatic relations as a reward for good behavior. In fact, their purpose is to maintain means of communications to resolve conflicts and keep one another informed as needed. If the U.S. wanted diplomatic relations with the aforementioned countries, it could have them.

For “everybody (to get) a seat at the table that has a membership based on statehood,” the goal is a world in which every person on the planet has citizenship of an internationally recognized nation-state. However, millions of people live in places that, as far as the U.N. and other international governing bodies are concerned, might as well as not exist, like Kashmir, Palestine, Taiwan and post-Soviet frozen-conflict zones like Abkhazia, South Ossetia and the Transnistria. Along with stateless people like the Roma in Europe, the Gaalje’el of Kenya and Burkino Fasans living in Cote d’Ivoire, the U.N. estimates that 4.4 million people on the planet don’t have a legal home and live in diplomatic purgatory.

The U.S.’s geopolitical policy of regional disruption — divide and conquer, or at least divide and keep weak — helps maintain this state of affairs. The U.S. maintains favorable economic and political ties to smaller nation-states that feel threatened by their larger neighbors all over the world, especially outside Europe. Though the U.S. does not recognize Taiwan as a sovereign entity and officially maintains that it belongs to China, America sends billions of dollars of year in cash and weapons to Taiwan to try to keep China off balance. U.S. military aid props up the government of Ukraine, which stripped many residents of the eastern, ethnic-Russian Donbas of citizenship, rendering them stateless until Russia annexed the region following the start of the war in 2022.

It goes without saying that the U.S. does not respect the sovereignty of other countries. It invaded Afghanistan in 2001, Iraq in 2003, Haiti in 2004, Libya in 2011, Syria and Yemen in 2014 … the list goes on. None of these interventions was justified or legally approved by Congress.

Further to the U.S.’s bullying other countries, it routinely weaponizes “institutions that came out of World War II that are based on problem-solving, regulating interdependence: the IMF, the World Bank, the WHO.” In 2014, for example, then-President Barack Obama ejected Russia from the G8 group of the world’s biggest economies — now it’s the G7 — to punish Russia for its annexation of Crimea, despite reports by international observers and Western pollsters that the Crimean plebiscite vote was free and fair. The IMF kicked out Russia from consultation meetings after the 2022 Russo-Ukrainian war began, but those talks are now set to resume. And Russia was banned from the 2024 Paris Olympics. These sanctions all stemmed from Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. If invading another country is just cause for trying to turn a country into a pariah, however, what could be more ridiculous than the effort being led by the U.S. — which has invaded 10 countries, most of them distant from its own borders, over the last 20 years.

ORDER IT NOW

Mahatma Gandhi, asked what he thought of Western civilization, supposedly replied: “I think it would be a good idea.” A rules-based international order? It would be a good idea — if there were some way for the U.S. to stop trying to kill it in its crib.

Ted Rall (Twitter: @tedrall), the political cartoonist, columnist and graphic novelist, co-hosts the left-vs-right DMZ America podcast with fellow cartoonist Scott Stantis.

 
• Category: Foreign Policy • Tags: American Military, Russia, United Nations 
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  1. meamjojo says:

    Here’s a summary from chatGPT:

    Q. What is the “rules-based international order”?

    A. The “rules-based international order” refers to a framework of international relations that is governed by established rules, norms, and agreements rather than the unilateral actions of individual states. This concept emphasizes the importance of multilateralism, diplomacy, and the adherence to international laws and treaties.

    Key features of this order include:

    1. **International Institutions**: Organizations like the United Nations, World Trade Organization, and International Monetary Fund play a central role in facilitating cooperation and enforcing rules.

    2. **Legal Frameworks**: Treaties and international laws guide state behavior, addressing issues like human rights, trade, and conflict resolution.

    3. **Collective Security**: Mechanisms that promote peace and stability, often through alliances or peacekeeping missions.

    4. **Conflict Resolution**: Emphasis on negotiation and dialogue to resolve disputes, rather than military action.

    5. **Norms and Standards**: Shared values and expectations about state behavior, including respect for sovereignty and human rights.

    The rules-based international order has been championed primarily by Western countries since World War II, but it faces challenges from rising powers and various geopolitical tensions, leading to debates about its effectiveness and future.

    • Replies: @arbeit macht frei
  2. The Rules Based Order can best be understood in terms of the Smoot Hawley Tariff. Historians like to call it a failure, but it was not. Immediately following the passage of the Tariff, US manufacturing improved dramatically because it was protected from the “Race to the bottom” in price driven by foreign competition. Who was hurt (1) foreign manufacturing, and (2) banks who financed trade. Banks are indifferent to where their customers live and how many American jobs those customers provide. After WWII we vowed no more tariffs and instead made the American economy an open market for foreign predation, so long as people took care of the banks. The US uses the banks to punish other nations who do not comply with US demands–which in turn always benefit the banks. The Rules Based Order is about given the bankers and other finance bros all of the money and control.

    • Replies: @nokangaroos
  3. @Harry Huntington

    Smoot-Hawley cast the Great Depression in concrete – the (((banks))) put the
    screws on the Entente who in turn put the screws on the Germans, forcing them
    to export at any cost to themselves which in turn laid waste to Perfidious
    manufacturing which in turn froze up everything in the US (that was, mind you,
    at a time of an actual gold standard).
    Things have gotten worse – tariffs will make US farmers and arms manufacturers
    die like flies as well as send you into runaway inflation as you can no longer export it;
    the Chinese will lose exactly one beat but not that shit-eating grin 😬

    • Replies: @Harry Huntington
  4. @nokangaroos

    Typical lie to support the continued hollowing out of US manufacturing. First, we simply should ban food exports. That would bid down prices. Second, if we make tariffs high enough, it will price out foreign good entirely. That will compel domestic manufacturing. Third, we should impose capital controls in two parts (a) requiring US citizens to repatriate all overseas capital and (b) prohibiting all US capital exports.

    In the end, we need to rethink US banking and end most of it. Also end private equity. Let small and enterprising borrow from the Fed, not private financing. Let the Fed make loans directly to all business for all capital needs and end al private profit from finance. Let the profit come from manufacturing, not the financing.

    China recently imposed salary limits in finance jobs. It wants its best and brightest in science and engineering. We should learn from China.

  5. @Harry Huntington

    Now we´re talking 😁
    – Brexit was driven by the City´s desire to become Europe´s money laundering
    Hong Kong, and the rest be damned; and you see where it has landed them.
    The US is still a continent, and the mere suggestion would be laughed off the stage;
    however the parallels are unavoidable:
    – The (((Donors))) do not like capital controls meaning they won´t even hatch
    let alone fly.
    – Foreign adventures will become unsustainable which in turn means an end to
    money printing which in turn means you have to work for what you consume
    (now go and sell that to the jogger) which in turn will mean quite a blow to
    standard of living, for an undisclosed time …
    to a degree all that is inevitable, tariffs will only be a bump (the direction
    depending on finer detail).

  6. @Harry Huntington

    Also end private equity.

    Excuse me Mr. Huntington, Larry Fink is on line one.

  7. @meamjojo

    more rules for thee but not for me, right jew boy?

  8. Thrallman says:

    the Crimean plebiscite vote was free and fair

    The Confederate secession was free and fair.
    The will of the people is irrelevant. What matters is who wins the war. This should be obvious.

  9. Here’s the best summary of the “rules-based international order” I’ve been able to find

    The rules in the “rules based world order” are very clear, in fact there is only one:

    1. On the chessboard of the world, one special piece — the jews — moves to any square, at any time, on anyone’s turn, attacks anyone, and cannot be attacked.

    And from there, of course, it can freely maneuver its golems, slaves, ass-lickers, apologists, and armies of criminals, liars and torturers (such as the western “leaders”, the media, and banking).

    Whether the jews actually have a mangled dick or follow any religion has no bearing on anything. If that detail bothers someone, just replace ‘jew’ with “the people hiding behind the label ‘jew’ ”

  10. To the various countries invaded one might add the illegal bombing of Serbia in 1999. Serbia had neither attacked or threatened America or any of its allies.

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