Can a country so bitterly divided be an effective global leader. Its system is seen to have failed. It is perceived as at war with itself . … America’s international reputation has tumbled mightily.
The events on Capitol Hill last week have met with outrage both because they happened and because Trump provoked them.
There has been hype- much from those who have sustained Trump these past four years -about invasion of the “hallowed halls”, an attack on “democracy itself,” sedition, insurrection and treason.
Well, yes, OK. But we could see the intrusion –or something like it -coming. Trump and his like had incited the mob for months and the Democrats had warned of it
Moreover political violence is not new in America. Witness Kent State and other episodes during the Vietnam War, the brutality of the civil rights years and ongoing manifestations of racial hatred since- including last year. Remember the murders of the Kennedys and Martin Luther King. And guns.
The real importance of the Capitol events is that they bring home with shattering clarity two things.
First, the events underline very visibly that the schism in the American polity is the most serious since the Civil War.
Moreover, while the Republicans are diminished and Lincoln’s “better angels” may once again be in the ascendant, some polls suggest that as many 35% of the American electorate believe that the election was rigged. This is hardly a recipe for national reconciliation.
The ongoing schism establishes beyond doubt that Biden’s almost desperate priorities must be internal. And that is without Covid 19. Almost 4000 Americans –the highest daily figure yet-died from it the day the Capitol was trashed.
The schism raises the question of whether a country so bitterly divided can be an effective global leader. Its system is seen to have failed. It is perceived as at war with itself .
This observation leads to the second point. America’s international reputation has tumbled mightily.
Defining reputation in international politics has become an industry. However at its simplest, reputation relies heavily on soft power as defined by its main theorist. Professor Joseph Nye. The latter who postulated a generation ago that soft power derives from a nation’s culture (in the broad sense) its political values and its foreign policies (aspects of which are reliability and trust)
When Nye developed his theories, they carried significant weight. United States soft power played a major part in the demise of the Soviet Union and contributed to American unipolar authority, an authority which lasted for more than a decade.
However American reputational strength was eroded by some of its reactions to 9/11 particularly Iraq, by its management of the GFC , and by perceptions of weakness in dealings with Russia( in the Ukraine and the Middle East), and with China (in the South China Sea .)
By about 2015 the brave new world that had been attracted to the American democratic brand had become less enthusiastic. Some NATO allies, such as Poland or Turkey , moved in undemocratic directions. Democratic values were under threat in India. Western aspirations for greater democracy in Southeast Asia had -with the exception of Indonesia- not been fulfilled.
All this happened as the rise of China recreated a bipolar world.
With these two strikes against him, Biden can still be assured that on his main external challenge, China, there is a large measure of bipartisan political alignment in the United States.
However both on China and other international issues, Biden will still have to face up to the international perception that the United States is a lesser country than when he was Vice President.
In the pre and post 9/11 periods, NATO countries, albeit with differences on Iraq, tended to toe the American line . After four years of Trump, they are less inclined to do so.
This tendency was apparent when the EU, with Germany and France as prime movers, recently concluding an economic agreement with China, despite cautions from Biden’s nominee for Secretary of State, Tony Blinken.
And in seeking to strengthen ties with India and Southeast Asia , the United States will have to show a balance between pursuit of its strategic interests and an insistence on adherence by its partners to its governance and Human Rights norms . What right, many will think, has the United States to tell us how to behave?
Vice President elect Harris has already indicated discomfort with Prime Minister Modi’s discriminatory policies against Muslims in India. The actions of governments in Thailand and the Philippines in coming months are likely to invite scrutiny.
The America of two decades ago could ensure that its strategic and value related interests could be pursued in unison. This administration will not have the same advantage.
At his inauguration Biden may well wish to echo the words of President Ford ‘s inaugural speech after Watergate that “our long national nightmare is over.“ Such optimism would be excessive . Biden was always going to have a hard row to hoe. The events in the Capitol have made it harder.
John McCarthy AO FAIIA is Vice Chancellor’s Fellow at Melbourne University, a senior adviser to Asialink, and a former ambassador and high commissioner to the United States and numerous Asian countries.
Comments
12 responses to “Trump, the Capitol and the erosion of reputation”
“Because half a dozen grasshoppers under a fern make the field ring with
their importunate chink, whilst thousands of great cattle, reposed
beneath the shadow of the British oak, chew the cud and are silent, pray
do not imagine that those who make the noise are the only inhabitants
of the field.”
―Edmund Burke
The Harris administration offers some hope. She may have to sack half her cabinet….
Like Obama, you mean?
He was actually the great white hope (that is, the white fellas behind his election). He did everything the white boys from Deep State asked for. 26,000 bombs rained on the Middle East and Afghanistan, and thousands of drone attacks on tribal gatherings and weddings in the mountains of Pashtun land straddling the border with Pakistan. Allowed Hillary Clinton to attack Gaddafi’s Libya (“We came, we saw, and he died!”). He is arguably a war criminal.
Obama approved $1 trillion for the update of thermo-nuclear missiles. But he did less for black people compared even to Donald Trump because it was politically not so convenient.
Also gave his banker sponsors and Wall Street $ trillions in the 2009 financial rescue, instead of the poor folks who lost their houses. He could have approved Medicare for all but did not do so because of powerful vested interests. The best thing was that white Europeans were so enamoured for his US exceptionalism that they even gave him the Nobel Peace Prize!
The same forces that put Obama up there are exactly the same ones who decided on the Harris ticket. I have seen some of Kamala Harris’ record as attorney general of California. It will be a very great surprise, nay, a real shock if a future Harris administration is not as abject a failure as Obama was, for the millions of Americans who were hoping for something better. Especially their black folks.
O’Bomba was CIA. His legal knowledge could be measured in a thimble. Harris may or may not be as hooked into the system as was he.
As I say, hope …
I note that our acting prime minister Michael McCormack has claimed that the Capitol attack was ‘unfortunate’ but condemns Twitter’s “censorship” of Trump.
Rest assured Australia, we are in great hands (not).
https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/2021/jan/11/australias-acting-pm-says-capitol-attack-unfortunate-and-condemns-twitter-censorship-of-trump
“America’s international reputation has tumbled mightily.”
Really? What planet do you live on?
What we are seeing now is the reality of the Good Ol’ US of A, where the monster of white racism and privilege has finally turned on the plutocrats who have been feeding and goading it all these years. So the world has finally seen the US for what it is, a country that thinks it’s perfectly OK to disrupt the democratic process ad lib, as it has done hundreds of times since 1945. Have you forgotten Salvador Allende? The planes that bombed his presidential palace were American, the bullets that cut him in half were American, the plans were hatched by the US.
He who lives by the sword shall die by the sword.
Oh, and there’s none so blind as those who will not see.
It’s all very well for P & I authors and readers to express these views regularly, the opposition needs to start speaking out as the government never will.
The Federal opposition? Where? How?
Well said John. Spot on. The hard task is to get Morrison and the LNP to see it.
How different is it here when Palmer can spend millions upon millions of dollars trumpeting (relevant here) absolute lies in every media format during a process that is supposed to be fundamental to “Democracy” and not be challenged.
the schism in the American polity is the most serious since the Civil War?
Not so. The schism (and accompanying violence) were much, much worse from 1967-74. Much worse.
What is worse today is that America has lost seven wars and, in so doing, lost credibility and drained its treasury while China has succeeded in every way that the US has failed. We are watching a self-inflicted eclipse.
Pride comes before a fall.