Andreas Broeckmann on Fri, 11 Mar 2022 09:10:10 +0100 (CET)


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Re: <nettime> The War to come ...



Folks,

I want to add two thoughts to this discussion. They both concern the terminology of the "spheres of influence" and "imperialism".

I'm not a political scientist and presume that there are elaborate debates about this elsewhere. What I notice in the current discussions is that this narrative is frequently used to either justify, or explain, the Russian military attack on Ukraine. (One tendency seems to be to call the US "imperialist", whereas Russia appears to have understandable security concerns, or is provoked to be worried about its security.)

I don't believe that such "spheres" (or empires) exist 'per se'; they exist as powerful constructs, they are part of elaborate trade, financial and military dependencies, but this "imperiological" narrative, so long as it focuses on a supposed main imperial actor, cannot really account for the aspect that some actors (in our case e.g. the formerly socialist countries of central Europe) might actively choose, if not desire the participation in such a set of relations (for reasons of security, prosperity, freedom of travel and work for its citizens, etc.).

The impression that Prem's analysis might be marred by the conceptual limitations of "imperiology" is underscored by the fact that his examples (anecdotal, but no doubt valid examples) relate only to the US. The stories about Syria, Iraq, Afghanistan or Latin America would become more complicated and perhaps inconsistent if they took the perspectives of Turkey, France, Germany, Poland or Latvia into account. All of these are NATO countries, but it is not easy to simply address them as "the West". - I raise this point, because the discussion we are having here is not only one on mechanics of geopolitics, but also on morals, and in such a discussion it is important to keep the differences within such sets of relations in mind.

My second point is that the imperiological narrative is itself a weapon in this war (and other wars), in that it implies the claim for concerns (or interests) that transgress national borders, and that therefore have to be "dealt with" outside a country's own territory. The important point is that as a general principle, the imperiological narrative _legitates_ such actions (we are currently talking about the Russian military attack on Ukraine, but this of course concerns all sorts of other such "transgressions" that have been mentioned; a German version of this was defence minister Peter Struck's claim in 2002 that "German security is also being defended at the Hindukush").

I'm 'realist' enough to know that a potential threat by a neighbouring or more distant country (or a non-state agent like IS or Al Qaida) can be actual, or that it can really be felt - and thus become a reason for action.

However, I also believe that it might be a step forward to work on the delegitimation of the imperiological narrative by changing the perspective, away from the apparent 'imperial' actors (like Russia, or the US), and towards the interests and fears of the non-imperial actors (like, in the current case, Ukraine, Latvia, Hungary, Moldova, and others). [Perhaps it is the same conceptual gesture that feminisms make to reddress gendered power relations?] What if the "empire" or "sphere of influence" was a figment that, more than anybody, serves the 'imperial' actors who therefore try to uphold this narrative?

We have already heard here that it appears difficult to reconcile the imperiological narrative with the legitimacy of the interest of "minor" countries. What if the minoritarian perspective became the basis of the mechanisms of legitimation in international relations? (If you now say, "naa, impossible, get real", then you should consider that your imperiological realism might in fact be part of the problem.)

Another advantage of such a move might be that we would, just perhaps, be spared some of the senseless comparisons (also imperiological at heart) that weigh one bombed city against another, and one occupied country against another. All of these brutalities and destructions are reprensible, and their comparison does not reduce anybody's burden - existential or moral - that they bring.

Regards,
-a


Am 10.03.22 um 15:43 schrieb Prem Chandavarkar:
Hi Brian,
Good to hear from you and to be in an exchange of thoughts with you once again.

My thoughts:

Let me start with your question on NATO’s eastward expansion. Yes - on principle, one cannot deny the freedom of the Eastern European states to choose their alliances. But the consequences must be dispassionately assessed. Security could be on offer from an alliance toward the West, but security concerns from Russia, as the military power to the East, must be factored in the equation, particularly from the possibility of their destabilising security. This was foreseen in the cable sent by William Burns in 2008 which I cited in my previous email, where he predicted that NATO expansion into Ukraine could provoke a military invasion by Russia, even though such an invasion may not be Russia’s first choice. So what is the net balance of security that is on offer in such a situation? One must factor that NATO is an institution that is primary to allowing the US to keep Europe within its sphere of influence, the eastward expansion appears to spring from a blind belief that Pax Americana is the inherent history of the world to come, and it is necessary to account for the reaction that may be provoked from a military power that has historically been viewed with hostility by the Pax Americana project.
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