Is the United States a Failing State? A
Failed State?
By Richard Falk
July 24, 2020 "Information
Clearing House" -
To ask whether the
United States, the world’s dominant military power, is
‘a failing state’ should cause worldwide anxiety. Such a
state, analogous to a wounded animal, is a global menace
of unprecedented proportions in the nuclear age. Its
political leadership is exhibiting a reckless tendency
of combining incompetence with extremism. It is also
crucial to ascertain at what point a failing state
should be written off as ‘a failed state’ for which
there is no longer a clear path to redemption. The
November elections in the United States will send a
strong signal as to whether the United States is failing
or has failed.
Even raising these
issues suggests how far the United States has fallen
during the Trump years, despite already being in sharp
decline internationally ever since the Vietnam War, and
continuing, despite a few redemptive moves (now
renounced), during the Obama presidency. The responses
of the Trump presidency to the two great crises of 2020
were helpful in solidifying the image of the world’s #1
state as truly failing, and not just sour grapes taking
the form of an expression of partisan frustration with
an appalling leadership. It was appalling because it was
affirming the most regressive features of the American
past while unconvincingly claiming credit for the stock
market rise and low unemployment. The COVID-19 pandemic
and Black Lives Matter campaign against systemic racism
gave Trump the opportunity to exhibit his lethally
systemic incompetence as a crisis manager producing
thousands of deaths among his own countrymen. He also
seized the occasion to show the world his seemingly
genuine racist solidarity with the Confederate spirit of
the American South that tried to split the country and
preserve its barbaric slave economy and supportive
culture in the American Civil War 150 years ago, and has
been a sore loser ever since.
With these
clarifying developments, it no longer captures the full
reality of this downward trend to be with content by
calling attention to America’s ‘imperial decline.’ In
the present setting, it seems more relevant to insist on
describing America as ‘a failing state,’ and try to
understand what that means for the country and the
world.
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To make the
contention more precise, it is instructive to realize
that the United States is not only a failing state, but
the first instance ever of a failing global
state, which takes due account of its multi-dimensional
hegemonic status as concretized by the planetary
projection of its military might to air, land, and sea,
to space and cyber space, as well as by its influence on
the operation of the world economy and the character of
popular culture whether expressed by music or cuisine.
There are several
measures of a failing state that cast light on the
American reality:
—functional
failures: inability to respond adequately to
challenges threatening the security of the society and
its population against threats posed by internal and
external hostile political actors, as well as by
ecological instabilities, by widespread extreme poverty
and hunger, and by a deficient health and disaster
response system;
—normative
failures: refusal to abide by systemic rules
internationally as embedded in international law and the
UN Charter, claiming impunity and acting on the basis of
double standards to carry out its geopolitical
encroachments on the wellbeing of others and its
disregard of ecological dangers; patterns of normative
failures include endorsements of policies and practices
giving rise to genocide and ecocide, constituting the
most basic violations of international criminal law and
the sovereign rights of foreign countries; the wrongs
are too numerous to delimit, including severe and
systemic denials of human rights in domestic governance;
economic and social structures that inevitably generate
acute socio-economic inequalities on the basis of class,
race, and gender.
Some additional
considerations accentuate the failing state reality of
the U.S. due to the extensive extraterritorial
dimensions that accompany the process of becoming ‘a
failing global state.’ This new type of transnational
political creature should be categorized as the first
historical example of a ‘geopolitical superpower.’ Such
a political actor is neither separate from nor entirely
subject to the state-centric system of world order that
evolved from the Peace of Westphalia in 1648, and became
universalized in the decades following World War II.
Although lacking a true antecedent, the role of European
‘great powers’ or ‘colonial empires’ give clues as to
the evaluation of the U.S. as a global state or
geopolitical superpower;
—effectiveness:
the loss of effectiveness by a failing state is
disclosed by its inability to maintain and exert control
over challenges to its supremacy. Such an assessment if
vindicated by failed military operations
(regime-changing interventions) and the inability to
learn from and overcome past mistakes, disclosures of
vulnerability to homeland security (9/11 attacks) and
overly costly and destructive responses (9/12 launching
of ‘war on terror’; declining respect and trust by
secondary political actors, including close allies, in
the context of global policy forming arenas, including
the United Nations; as a further reflection of this
failing dynamic of lost control is the pattern of
withdrawal from arenas that can no longer be controlled
(Human Rights Council, WHO) and the rejection of
agreements that appear beneficial to the world as a
whole (Paris Climate Change Agreement and Iran Nuclear
Program Agreement-JCPOA;
—legitimacy:
the legitimacy of a global state, which by its nature
potentially compromises the political sovereignty and
independence of all other states, reflects above all
else, on its usefulness as a source of problem-solving
authority, especially in war/peace and global economic
recession settings; the degree of legitimacy also
depends on perceptions by political elites and public
opinion that the assertions of global leadership are in
general beneficial for the system as a whole, and as
particularly helpful to states that are vulnerable due
to acute security and development challenges; in this
regard, the U.S. enjoyed a high degree of legitimacy
after the end of World War II, as a source of security,
and even guidance, for many governments in most regions
of the world throughout the Cold War, and was also
appreciated as the architect of a rule-governed liberal
economic order operating with the framework of the
Bretton Woods institutions charged with avoiding
recurrences of the Great Depression that undermined
stability and economic wellbeing during the 1930s,
developments that then contributed to the rise of
fascism and the outbreak of a systemic war costing
upwards of 50 million lives. The American leadership
role was also prominent in achieving global public order
in such settings as the management of the oceans,
avoiding conflict in Antarctica and Outer Space,
establishing international human rights standards, and
promoting liberal internationalism as a way to enhance
global cooperative approaches to shared problems.
As suggested, the
United States as a failing state has been graphically
revealed as such by its response to the COVID-19
pandemic: refusal to heed early warnings; unacceptable
shortages of equipment for health personnel and
insufficient hospital capacity; premature economic
openings of restaurants, bars, stores; contradictory
standards of guidance from health experts and from
political leaders, including falsehoods and fake news
embraced by the American president in the midst of the
health emergency. Beyond this, Trump adopted an
inappropriate nationalist and commodifying approach to
the search for a vaccine capable of conferring immunity
from the disease, while at the same time immobilizing
the UN, and especially the WHO, as an indispensable
venue for dealing with epidemics of global scope,
including its role in dispensing vital assistance to the
most disadvantaged countries. These failings have
shockingly resulted in the United States recording more
infected persons than any country in the world, as well
as having the highest incidence of fatalities
attributable to the disease.
In contrast, has
been the responses of several far less developed and
affluent countries that effectively contained the
disease without incurring much loss of life or severe
economic damage by way of lost jobs and diminished
economic performance. Judged from the perspective of
health such societies are success stories, and
instructively, their ideological identity spans the
political spectrum, including state socialist Vietnam to
market-driven countries such as Singapore, South Korea,
and Taiwan. Such results parallel the finding of Deepak
Nayyar who reports in his breakthrough book, The
Asian Resurgence (2019), that the
remarkable growth experience of the 14 Asian societies
that he empirically assesses, supports the conclusion
that ideological orientation is not an economistic
indicator of success or failure. Such findings are
relevant in refuting the triumphalist claims of the West
that the Soviet collapse demonstrated the superiority of
capitalism as compared to socialism. The crucial factor
when it comes to economistic success is the skilled
management of state/society relations whether in
relation to investment of savings in prioritizing
development projects or seeking to impose a lockdown to
curtail the spread of a deadly infectious disease.
Yet, there is a
normative side of response patterns as suggested above.
China treats the desperate search for a workable vaccine
as a sharable public good, while the United States under
Trump maintains its standard transactional approach
despite issues of affordability for many countries in
the South, as well as the poor in the North. From a 21stcentury
perspective, the ethos of being all in this together is
the only foundation for grappling with the increasingly
challenging dilemmas of world order. It is a sign of a
failing state, whatever its capabilities and status, to
use its leverage to gain national and geopolitical
advantages. Along this line, as well, is the normative
disgrace of refusing to suspend unilateral sanctions
imposed on countries such as Iran and Venezuala, already
stressed, for at least the duration of the pandemic in
response to widespread humanitarian appeals from civil
society actors and international institutions.
A final observation
as to whether the U.S. vector points toward a failed or
redemptive future. If Trump loses the election and gives
up the White House to his opponent the prospects for
reversing the failing trend improve, while if Trump is
reelected in November or succeeds in cancelling the
electoral outcome then the U.S, will have moved closer
to being a failed state as the citizenry would have
endorsed failure or the constitutional order shown to be
enfeebled, insufficiently resilient to reject failure.
Even if Trump is replaced and Trumpism subsides, the
momentum behind predatory capitalism and global
militarism will be difficult to curtail without a
revolutionary push that rejects the bipartisan consensus
on such matters and challenges the sufficiency of
procedural democracy centered upon the role of political
parties and elections. Only a progressive movement from
below will shatter that consensus, ending laments about
the U.S. being in transition from failing to failed.
Whether the BLM leadership of a movement alternative is
robust and comprehensive enough to end American freefall
will become clearer in coming months.
Richard
Falk is an international law and international relations
scholar who taught at Princeton University for forty
years. Since 2002 he has lived in Santa Barbara,
California, and taught at the local campus of the
University of California in Global and International
Studies and since 2005 chaired the Board of the Nuclear
Age Peace Foundation. - "Source"
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See
also
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