Playing old politics in the new game is dangerous
The world system has undergone a large-scale transition for the last two decades. The ultimate victory of the United States declared after the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991 lasted only for a decade. In spite of giving an effective answer to the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, the U.S. has been unable to maximize its national interests at the global scale and provide international peace and stability.
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The world system has undergone a large-scale transition for the last two decades. The ultimate victory of the United States declared after the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991 lasted only for a decade. In spite of giving an effective answer to the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, the U.S. has been unable to maximize its national interests at the global scale and provide international peace and stability.
In other words, it is unable to act as a hegemon that attains the consent of the rest of the world. Since it has lost the trust of most of the world, neither its NATO allies and the European Union member states nor its challengers in the non-Western part of the world consider the U.S. as a hegemon. However, no other global power, such as China, wants to claim global hegemony, mainly due to its high costs.
Losing its hegemonic power, the U.S. has begun to pursue an angry and aggressive policy toward the rest of the world. It has also begun to undermine the main principle of international law and the rules of international regimes. Similarly, the U.S. has not only remained indifferent to the violation of basic rules of the international system but also encouraged them to do so. For instance, it has officially recognized the Israeli state’s occupation of the Golan Heights, which belongs to Syria. Thus, it has indirectly paved the way for others to follow the same policy.
American unilateral and interventionist policies have been replicated by other global powers such as Russia. Depending on the same political perspective, the Russian Federation first invaded the Crimean Peninsula in 2014 and then the rest of Ukraine in 2022. The Western claim for “the principle of non-intervention into domestic affairs” was not convincing since they have followed similar policies in other parts of the world. For example, the U.S. could not justify its invasion of Iraq in 2003, which resulted in the loss of thousands of innocent people.
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