| WORLD
POLICY JOURNAL
CODA:
Volume XV, No 4, WINTER 1998/99
The Balance
of Power
James Chace
Having nothing
to win and much to lose, America has become an essentially conservative,
and therefore peace-loving, nation; it is strong enough to discourage
aggression in others but vulnerable enough not to practice aggression
itself; and dreading above all things the domination of the world
by a single militarist power, it identifies itself with the encouragement
of liberal institutions.
With apologies
to Harold Nicolson, I have paraphrased the previous paragraph from
his classic study of diplomacy, The Congress of Vienna, substituting
America for Britain. In an age when "globalization" is used in every
other article dealing with international affairs, there is a tendency
to forget or ignore certain verities of foreign policy. First of
all, the nation-state has not been superseded by "globalization":
an American company, no matter how global its reach, is still an
American company, dependent on American power if trouble abroad
threatens its operations. The conduct of foreign policy, from a
realist perspective, must still rest on an America active in working
for global, and, when appropriate, regional balances of power.
There is no
evidence that an interdependent world points the way to a more peaceful
world or eliminates the exercise of power politics. Prosperity among
nations does not breed contentment or end conflict. No nations were
more "globalized" than were the nations of Europe prior to the First
World War, yet the causes of that war were largely rooted in misperceptions,
misunderstandings, and the false calculations of power. In The Federalist,
Alexander Hamilton inveighed against those who believed that "the
spirit of commerce has a tendency to soften the manners of men,
and to extinguish the inflammable which have so often kindled into
wars."
To urge the
United States to play a central role in seeking a balance of power
among nationsóeither globally or regionallyóis simply to recognize
that the international system has never given way to an effective
world government, as Woodrow Wilson hoped, nor to an enduring imperium,
as Augustus Caesar might have imagined. As the key player in seeking
and maintaining such balancesóin East Asia, for exampleóAmerica
can demonstrate that even while it must play a military role in
the region, it has no desire to try to impose or perpetrate its
hegemony in the region. Still, it is in the nature of things that
great powers resent any nation that tries to exert hegemony over
others. Former cabinet secretary James Schlesinger warned in 1997
of "the historic tendency" of the great powers "to cut a leader
down to size."
But it would
go against the American grain to practice balance of power politics
with little or no reference to moral content. In a famous speech
of the nineteenth-century British prime minister, Lord Palmerston,
the realist credo found its most eloquent spokesman: "We have no
eternal allies and we have no perpetual enemies. Our interests are
eternal and perpetual, and those interests it is our duty to follow."
But later in that same speech, Palmerston went on to explain that
the policy of Britain was also "to be the champion of justice and
right: pursuing that course with moderation and prudence, not becoming
the Quixote of the world, but giving her moral sanction and support
wherever she thinks justice is, and whenever she thinks that wrong
has been done."
Palmerston's
advice could well serve an American president at the turn of the
twentieth century. A balance of power policy need not imply a post-Bismarckian
drive for power for its own sake. It does not deny a globalized
economy, but recognizes the persistence of the nation-state whose
primary purpose is to provide for the well-being of its citizens.
Or to put it differently, the search for a new way to construct
a more humane as well as more prosperous society at home and abroadóthe
aspiration of Franklin Roosevelt in 1945, the "third way" of Bill
Clinton and Tony Blairódoes not preclude the quest for a balance
of power among nations. To think otherwise would be to ignore Harold
Nicolson's conclusion as he contemplated the achievements of those
statesmen who gathered at Vienna almost two centuries ago to devise
a system that brought absolute peace to the European great powers
for almost four decades, and relative peace for a hundred years.
"It is thus a mistake," Nicolson writes, "to regard the balance
of power as some iniquitous plotting force; it was rather an achievement
of such a distribution of strength as would render aggression by
any single country a policy of the greatest uncertainty and danger."
James Chace
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