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Tags: world | global | american | story | countries | international | decline

Retrenching on Global Influence Won't Make America Great

Retrenching on Global Influence Won't Make America Great
Israeli-American Nobel Prize winner for economics Daniel Kahneman, gives his acceptance speech on Sunday, June 17, 2012, in Kiel during the presentation of the 2012 World Economic Award. (Philipp Guelland/AP)

By    |   Friday, 29 December 2017 12:52 AM EST

Daniel Kahneman, who won a Nobel Prize in economics for reshaping our understanding of human motivation, once said: "No one ever made a decision because of a number. They need a story." That's as true for nations as for individuals. Countries have always oriented themselves within a larger international story. But what is today's global story?

For decades, the great overarching narrative was the Cold War. Almost every nation acted or reacted in the context of that ideological, political and military struggle. Then came 1989 and the collapse of communism. For the next 20 years or so, the opening up of the world — globalization — became the dominant thread, as countries jostled to become hot new markets and Western democratic capitalism seemed inevitable, undergirded by American power and prestige. 9/11 dealt a sharp blow to this benign narrative and, for a while, Islamic terror seemed to be steering the course of history. But terrorism has proved too weak and limited a force to be the big global story.

So what is it now? I would argue that the largest trend today is the decline of American influence. Not the decline of American power — the country remains economically and militarily in a league of its own — but a decline of its desire and capacity to use that power to shape the world. The current administration seems intent on dismantling America's great achievements — as it is doing with the World Trade Organization — or to simply be uninterested in setting the global agenda. Donald Trump will be the first president in nearly a century to end his first year in office without having held a state dinner for a foreign head of state.
And this erosion of America's global leadership is already causing other countries to adjust.

Earlier this month, German Foreign Minister Sigmar Gabriel declared that "the most important changes affecting our Western world and, indeed, the world as a whole" stem from "the United States' current withdrawal under Trump from its role as a reliable guarantor of Western-influenced multilateralism." That shift, he noted, "is accelerating the transformation of the global order . . . and the risk of trade wars, arms races and armed conflicts is increasing."

For Europe, Gabriel argued, the situation is almost existential. Since the end of World War II, he said, "Europe had been an American project in the United States' clearly understood interests. However, the current U.S. administration now perceives Europe in a very distanced way, regarding previous partners as competitors and sometimes even as at the very least economic opponents." He urged Europe to take its fate into its own hands and decouple itself from American foreign policy.

Consider also the speech in June by Canada's foreign minister, Chrystia Freeland, in which she thanked the United States for its seven-decade-long stewardship of the international system and strongly implied that, under the Trump administration, American leadership of that system had reached its end.

Meanwhile, Chinese President Xi Jinping gave a speech to the 19th Communist Party Congress in October that reflected his own recognition of these new realities. "China's international standing has risen as never before," he noted, and the nation is "blazing a new trail for other developing countries to achieve modernization." Xi announced "a new era … that sees China moving closer to center stage and making greater contributions to mankind." In previous speeches, he suggested boldly that China would become the new guarantor of the global trading order.

This, then, is the global story of our times. The creator, upholder and enforcer of the existing international system is withdrawing into self-centered isolation. The other great supporter and advocate of the open, rule-based world, Europe, has not been able to act assertively on the world stage with any clear vision or purpose and remains obsessed with the fate of its own continental project. Filling the power vacuum, a host of smaller, illiberal powers — Turkey, Russia, Iran, Saudi Arabia — are surging forward in their respective regions. But only China truly has the wherewithal and strategic prowess to potentially shape the next chapter of the story of our age.

A decade ago, I described a "post-American world," brought on not by the decline of America, but by the "rise of the rest." That world is indeed coming to fruition because other countries are prospering, but the changes are being dramatically accelerated by the Trump administration's foolish and self-defeating decision to abdicate America's global influence — something that has taken more than 70 years to build. As the president might tweet, "Sad!"


Fareed Zakaria hosts CNN's "Fareed Zakaria GPS," and makes regular appearances on shows such as ABC's "This Week" and NBC's "Meet The Press." He has been an editor at large Time magazine since 2010, and spent 10 years overseeing Newsweek's foreign editions. He is a Washington Post (and internationally syndicated) columnist. He is author of "The Post-American World." For more of Fareed Zakaria's reports, Go Here Now.

© Washington Post Writers Group.


FareedZakaria
Daniel Kahneman, who won a Nobel Prize in economics for reshaping our understanding of human motivation, once said: "No one ever made a decision because of a number. They need a story." That's as true for nations as for individuals.
world, global, american, story, countries, international, decline, power, foreign
821
2017-52-29
Friday, 29 December 2017 12:52 AM
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