The New Global
Context
Is the US in Decline
or an Unrivalled Global Hegemon?
A Uni-Multipolar
System?
The New Global
Context
The post-Cold War world is very
different from the bi-polar era, but there has been considerable disagreement
over the nature of the new context. Was it unipolar or multipolar in character?
Nevertheless, the post-Cold War era was distinctive in three respects:
1.
The end of the Cold War meant there were no longer military
confrontations of a system threatening kind.
2.
With the break-up of the Soviet Union, the US has been left
as the world’s only superpower.
3.
The post-Cold War world has been subject to deepening
globalization, a terms which refers to the rapid development of complex
interconnections between societies, institutions, cultures and individuals on a
world-wide basis.
The Distribution of
International Power
The historian Paul Kennedy argued
in the late 1980s that “it befell no power to retain a postion of permanent
hegemony.” He implied that the US was no exception to this historical trend and
would face increased competition from rising powers like Japan, Germany and
China in the post-Cold War era. But these challenges to US dominance have yet
to eventuate:
1.
Japan experienced a
stagnating economy during 1990s and lacks an ideological sense of mission to
become a global player.
2.
A newly united
Germany also had substantial economic problems and defined its international
role within the EU rather than outside it.
3.
China has had the
fastest growing economy in the world, but is already facing problems with rapid
modernisation, including possible political
instability.
Thus, at present, there does not
seem to be any credible challenge to the
US’s position as ‘top dog’ in the post-Cold War era. Declinists like Kennedy
seem to have overlooked the structural difference between the US and other
great powers in history. The US is a democracy and, unlike authoritarian
powers, has a built-in capacity for innovation and renewal.
A Uni-Multipolar
System?
A uni-polar international system
would have one superpower, no significant major powers, and many minor powers. As
a result, the lone superpower could effectively resolve key international
issues on its own. A multipolar system would have several major powers of
comparable strength that would have to co-operate or compete with each other to
decide important international questions. The post-Cold War international
system does not seem to fully correspond to either of these two models. A
hybrid, uni-multipolar system appears to be a more accurate conception. The
post-Cold War world has a superpower, the US, with pre-eminence in every domain
of power (economic, military, diplomatic, ideological, technological and
cultural). At the same time, the effective settlement of international issues,
like the post-war reconstruction of post-Saddam Iraq, cannot be determined by
the US alone, but requires some combination of other major powers and UN
support.