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U.S. Intelligence Predicts Declining U.S. Global Influence


Cross-Posted from The End of the American Century

The National Intelligence Council has released its report Global Trends 2025: A Transformed World which forecasts that the relative strength of the U.S. "even in the military realm--will decline and U.S. leverage will become more constrained."

In September, a preview of this report was delivered in a speech by C. Thomas Fingar, the Chairman of the N.I.C. The full 120-page report, like Fingar's earlier remarks, sees the U.S. remaining the single most powerful global actor, but with reduced influence and leverage in the face of the growing clout of China, India, Russia and other countries.

The current report, however, is less sweeping in its assessment of U.S. decline than Fingar made earlier. In September, he spoke of U.S. leadership eroding "at an accelerating pace" in "political, economic and arguably, cultural arenas." The Global Trends report does not have such language, and focuses more on the rise of other countries than on the decline of the U.S.

The report does, however, call attention to the importance of leadership in managing this transition to a transformed world. "Leadership matters," the first-page summary says. "No trends are immutable," and "timely and well-informed intervention can decrease the likelihood and severity of negative developments and increase the likelihood of positive ones."

Wise leadership, in Washington and elsewhere, is crucial because the scale of global changes are immense. "The international system...will be almost unrecognizable by 2025 owing to the rise of emerging powers, a globalizing economy, and historic transfer of relative wealth and economic power from West to East, and the growing influence of nonstate actors." Indeed, this transfer of global wealth and economic power from West to East "is without precedent in modern history."

The report forecasts a more diffuse distribution of global power, the transformation of current international organizations (like the U.N.), the growing influence of nonstate actors (especially NGOs--non governmental organizations), and "a more complex international system."

In this system, the U.S. will be a "less dominant power" with "less room for the US to call the shots without the support of strong partnerships." Even in the military realm, changes in science and technology and the rise of non-state actors "will construct US freedom of action."

These arguments are similar to those I raise in the last chapter of my book The End of the American Century, entitled "America and the World After the American Century." A key difference between my book and Global Trends is that most of my book is about trends that have already occurred. Only my last chapter projects into the future, as the NIC report does. In my view, the decline of the U.S. is a fait accompli. As I write on page 1 of my book:

"In the past decade, and particularly since September 11, every aspect of this American predominance has begun to wane. The U.S. economy is riddled with debt [this was written well before the current financial collapse] and unsustainable obligations--by both governments and households--presaging at least long-term economic decline if not general collapse. The educational system, once considered the world's best, now ranks near the bottom among developed countries, and a sizable portion of U.S. citizens is now functionally illiterate. American corporations, once models of dynamism, innovation and efficiency, are hampered by bureaucracy, corruption, and bloated executive payrolls, and few are generating either innovation or growth. Even science is marginalized and beleaguered under the gun of politics qnd religion. While American consumer goods and popular culture remain fashionable in much of the world, there is at the same time increasing resistance in many countries to the erosion of national culture and traditions in the face of U.S.-led globalization."
So a good deal of the decline of U.S. global influence is due to changes within the U.S.--changes that have been accelerating for the last two decades. These internal developments are as much responsible for "global trends" as are the dynamic changes elsewhere in the world.

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What's your take on this current economic crisis forcing the U.S. to a kind of latter-day "back to normalcy" moment? I mean... almost 20 years after the end of the Cold War, why do we maintain these wildly expensive military bases all over the world? We have thrown away our infrastructure on the altar of a global empire that's now, simply, too expensive to maintain. Our bridges, roads and water pipes (!) corrode away while our platinum legions keep a watch on the Rhine. Insane! Now... to restore our ability to simply maintain ourselves, we'll have to borrow even more money! Even a 21st-century WPA can't shovel fire roads on an empty stomach.

How much would we lose by returning to a pre-1940 model, in which we didn't gamble away our future slinging other countries against the wall?


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This "imperial overstretch" is one of the themes of my book, Curt. Indeed, this is one of the reasons we are in so much difficulty now. We have neglected the homefront while chasing (mostly) phantom menaces around the globe. But I don't think we can return to pre-1940, just because the world has changed so much now. What we need is to more productively and cooperatively engage with the rest of the world, to begin addressing some of these big, global problems.

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While I cannot disagree with the majority of your assertions, I continue to wonder... who is there to lead besides us?

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I have been thinking about your question since you posted it Kurt, wondering especially about the whole concept of "leadership" in the global context. These are just preliminary thoughts, but it seems to me that the whole idea of global "leadership" has applied only to the United States since World War II. Before that time, there were always global "powers" but not really global "leaders." So if the world got along so well without a leaders for so long, can't it manage without one now? Why is a leader necessary? And given the interdependent and globalized nature of the current international environment, the U.S. and the rest of the world might be better off with a "team player" than a leader.

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The reference to the increased likelihood of international conflict over resources should remind us that it was once - certainly before and during World War 2 - widely taken for granted that there were major economic causes of war, and that economic policies and international economic institutions were important to prevent this and to increase the chances of peace. The economist Keynes, who is being revived today, certainly believed this. It may be in part because of the success of Keynes' project of post-war prosperity and therefore peace that we have largely lost sight of this - until now. Anyone wanting to think about the economic causes of war and (international and domestic) economic policies for encouraging peace might like to start by reading a book called "John Maynard Keynes and International Relations - Economic Paths to War and Peace", by Donald Markwell. It's especially interesting on free trade and peace - which is really important today.

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An interesting thought, Tanya. I would add another example: the European Union. The intellectual founders of the original Common Market (Monnet and Schuman) believed that countries that trade with each other are less likely to fight each other. So setting up a free trade area between serial enemies Germany and France was seen as a way to build cooperation from the bottom up, and lessen the likelihood of yet another war. So far it has worked!

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Professor Emeritus of Political Science at Butler University. Most recent book is "The End of the American Century" (Rowman & Littlefield, 2008).

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