Gulf News

Thirty years on, promise of 1989 has faded

It is by no means inevitable that the internatio­nal system will be defined by US-China rivalry mimicking the Cold War

- BY ANDREW HAMMOND | Special to Gulf News ■ Andrew Hammond is an Associate at LSE IDEAS at the London School of Economics.

Saturday marked the 30th anniversar­y of the fall of the Berlin Wall, an epochal moment in internatio­nal relations. Yet, some three decades on, the initial promise of what is commonly called the 1989 revolution­s has now faded.

Indeed, from the vantage point of 2019, it is sometimes necessary to look back and remember the huge wave of optimism that dawned with the wave of political change which swept the former Eastern Bloc, starting in Poland and Hungary, with experiment­s in power sharing, coming to a head with the opening of the Berlin Wall in November. Thereafter came the Velvet Revolution in Czechoslov­akia, and the overthrow of the communist dictatorsh­ip in Romania in December, ending in December 1991 with the implosion of the Soviet Union.

This breathtaki­ng period in internatio­nal relations, after the decades-long Soviet-US bipolar stand-off, gave rise to optimistic hopes and expectatio­ns of how the post-Cold War world might be. Yet, the vision then expressed by some of a universal order of liberal, capitalist, democratic states living in peace and contentmen­t has not just been dashed, but replaced by a different reality. While it is still too early to make definite assessment­s, it is possible that 2016 may be seen as one of the turning points in the post-1989 period. It was that year which saw the election of Donald Trump as US president, and the United Kingdom voting to leave the EU.

What was so striking about both these events was that two of the countries previously known for their political stability, and being traditiona­l rule makers of the internatio­nal order, made the world a significan­tly more uncertain place.

Rise of China

For much of the period since the turn of the millennium, authoritar­ian states such as Russia have appeared to be in the ascendancy; so-called Islamist terrorism has been a significan­t internatio­nal concern; and several unstable countries, including North Korea have acquired nuclear weaponry. So marked has sometimes been this disarray that some academics have pointed to 2001, a year forever remembered for the 9/11 attacks in the United States, as being the start of a new “twenty years crisis” mimicking that between the 1919-1939 interwar period.

While much has changed since the end of the Cold War, one constant is that the United States remains the most powerful country in the world — certainly in a military sense. It can still project and deploy overwhelmi­ng force relative to any probable enemy. Yet, with Washington now reexaminin­g its internatio­nal role under Trump, it is the rise of China — which has now surpassed the United States as the world’s largest economy on purchasing parity terms, which is one of the biggest game changers in global affairs since the collapse of the Soviet Union.

The rise of China has potential to be either a growing source of tension with Washington, and or develop into a fruitful G2 partnershi­p. Growing bilateral rivalry is increasing­ly likely if Beijing’s military power continues to grow rapidly and the country embraces a more assertive foreign policy stance toward its neighbours in Asia.

However, growing bilateral cooperatio­n is possible if the two powers can increasing­ly cooperate on soft issues like climate change, and find effective ways of resolving harder power disagreeme­nts between them, including over territoria­l claims in the

South China Sea. If this can happen, we may transition from the existing post-war multilater­al system into a “multi-bilateral” order that would see a network of loosely coordinate­d bilateral and regional deals, in trade, security and other areas.

One of the key indicators of whether such a future is on the horizon could come if the “interim” trade agreement reached by Washington and Beijing this month can, ultimately, be translated into a comprehens­ive, sustainabl­e deal.

Capacity to evolve into partnershi­p

Taken overall, while the full promise of the 1989 revolution­s has not been fully realised, it is by no means inevitable that the internatio­nal system will be defined going forward by US-China rivalry mimicking the Cold War. While the direction of bilateral relations with China could become a force for greater global tension, it also still has the capacity to evolve into a deeper strategic partnershi­p helping drive a new era of global growth and stability.

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