The End of World Order and American Foreign Policy

Contributed by:
Steve
This booklet reflects the reality that this is a moment of real change in the world, coupled with an intellectual foment about how to understand it and what to do about it. This Council on Foreign Relations Special Report makes an important, rigorous, and considered a contribution to this emerging and critical debate.
1. Council Special Report No. 86
May 2020
The End of World
Order and American
Foreign Policy
Robert D. Blackwill and Thomas Wright
2. Council Special Report No. 86
May 2020
The End of
World Order
and American
Foreign Policy
Robert D. Blackwill and Thomas Wright
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4. iv Foreword
vii Acknowledgments
1 Introduction
4 World Order Before COVID-19
8 The End of World Order
13 The Road Forward
15 Recommendations
24 Conclusion
26 Endnotes
33 About the Author
Contents iii
5. FOREWORD
World order is a fundamental concept of international relations. At its
core, world order is a description and a measure of the world’s condi-
tion at a particular moment or over a specified period of time. It tends
to reflect the degree to which there are widely accepted rules as to how
international relations ought to be carried out and the degree to which
there is a balance of power to buttress those rules so that those who
disagree with them are not tempted to violate them or are likely to fail if
in fact they do. Any measure of order necessarily includes elements of
both order and disorder and the balance between them.
Until recently, articles and books explicitly examining world order
have been few in number, principally because for the past seventy-five
years world order was clearly defined. During the Cold War, the order
was bipolar, split between American- and Soviet-led camps. A balance
of power, bolstered by nuclear deterrence, kept the central peace, and
shared understandings (mostly implicit) of the legitimate aims of for-
eign policy circumscribed the behavior of both superpowers. Follow-
ing the Cold War’s end and the Soviet Union’s collapse some three
decades ago, a U.S.-led world order prevailed, underpinned by Amer-
ican absolute economic and military strengths and relative advantage
over others. Now, however, against the backdrop of a retrenching
United States, a rising China, a resentful and assertive Russia, a nuclear
North Korea, and an ambitious Iran, not to mention a number of seri-
ous global challenges, much of what had been assumed can no longer be
taken for granted. Both the balance of power and the consensus at the
heart of world orders has faded.
At this moment of uncertainty and potential transition, accelerated
by the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, Robert D. Blackwill, the Henry
A. Kissinger senior fellow for U.S. foreign policy here at the Council
iv Foreword
6. on Foreign Relations, and Thomas Wright, the director of the Center
on the United States and Europe and a senior fellow at the Brookings
Institution, present this new Council Special Report, The End of World
Order and American Foreign Policy. The report is both analytical and
prescriptive. As regards the former, the authors note that along with
U.S.-Soviet competition and the Cold War, the COVID-19 pandemic
represents the most serious challenge to the U.S.-led international
order. They call this “a moment of radical international uncertainty”
that “occurs at a troubling time geopolitically, including the withdrawal
of the United States from global leadership.”
Blackwill and Wright present the case that the old order has given
way to multiple orders, which in effect is disorder. “The world has moved
away from a Kissingerian standard of world order, in which nations
work within the same set of constraints and aspire to meet the same set
of rules, toward a model where many countries choose their own paths
to order, without much reference to the views of others.” More specif-
ically, the two argue the pandemic has undermined order by straining
governments, dividing societies, exacerbating societal inequalities,
heightening tensions between the United States and China, and demon-
strating the vast gap between global problems and the world’s ability to
address them through existing international institutions.
The authors go on to provide recommendations that would allow
the United States to “preserve its national interests and its own notion
of international order.” First, they argue that American foreign policy
must begin at home, and the United States needs to focus on improv-
ing domestic governance and its economic competitiveness so that the
country regains the will and the capacity to play an active role abroad.
They then call for the United States to invest in its relations with
Foreword v
7. Canada and Mexico, develop a more collaborative approach to allies,
increase partnership with Europe, upgrade relations with India, invest
in international institutions, seek a way to resume engagement with
Russia, and focus less on the Middle East and more on Asia. More than
anything else, the approach to order advocated here places managing
inevitable and growing competition with China at the heart of Ameri-
can diplomacy and its search for order in the world.
I expect what is written in the report about order may be too narrow
or too traditional for some readers. This is to be expected. Such debate
reflects the reality that this is a moment of real change in the world, cou-
pled with intellectual foment about how to understand it and what to
do about it. This Council on Foreign Relations Special Report makes
an important, rigorous, and considered contribution to this emerging
and critical debate.
Richard N. Haass
President
Council on Foreign Relations
May 2020
vi Foreword
8. This Council Special Report greatly benefited from the dozens of spe-
cific suggestions and valuable improvements by Hal Brands, Tarun
Chhabra, Francis J. Gavin, Lyndsay Howard, William Inboden, Bruce
Jones, Shankar Menon, Lord Charles Powell, Ed Rogers, Dennis Ross,
Gary Roughead, Shyam Saran, Jake Sullivan, Stephen M. Walt, Philip
Zelikow, and Robert Zoellick. We took many of their suggested fixes
but, as they will see, not all. We also thank the speakers and members
of the CFR World Order Study Group for their insights during our
sessions over the past eight months. To pay attention to smart people
always makes one smarter, or, as George Shultz once observed, “Lis-
tening is an underrated way of acquiring knowledge.” We also thank
Council on Foreign Relations (CFR) President Richard N. Haass for
his review and comments. We appreciate the work of Patricia Dorff and
the CFR Publications team for their editorial contributions. Our spe-
cial thanks to Daniel Clay for his extensive work on this report.
The analysis and conclusions herein are the authors’ responsibility
Robert D. Blackwill and Thomas Wright
Acknowledgments vii
9.
10. Along with U.S.-Soviet competition during the Cold War, COVID-
19 is one of the two greatest tests of the U.S.-led international order
since its founding over seven decades ago.1 Nothing else since that time
approaches the societal, political, and economic effects of the virus on
populations around the world. Not the dozens of violent conflicts that
erupted in the international system since 1945. Not the many regional
and global economic downturns over the years that reduced the quality
of life of ordinary citizens. Not the international effects of the “Time
of Troubles” in the United States, from the assassinations, urban riots,
and mass demonstrations of 1968, to the presidential resignation in
1974. Not even the two million people who died of smallpox in 1967 in a
far less connected world.
At the time of writing, millions are infected globally with millions
more likely to come, and hundreds of thousands are dead.2 Entire pop-
ulations remain indoors. The International Monetary Fund (IMF)
quarterly report World Economic Outlook labeled the crisis the Great
Lockdown and estimated a reduction in global growth of 3 percent,
which makes it the most severe recession since the Great Depression
and far worse than the 2008 global financial crisis.3 Accumulated
losses in 2020 and 2021 could reach $9 trillion, which is more than the
German and Japanese economies combined. During this crisis, two
billion people could fall into abject poverty, half of all jobs in Africa
could be lost, oil exports in the Middle East could drop by $250 bil-
lion, more than ninety countries could receive aid from the IMF, the
number of unemployed people in the United States is over 38.6 million,
and the European Union (EU) forecasts the deepest economic reces-
sion in its history with EU economies to shrink by 7.4 percent this year.4
Even as the world goes back to work, any reopening will be partial,
Introduction 1
11. with large sectors of society in many nations staying closed. There is
a near-consensus among health experts that the crisis will last in one
form or another for well over a year, and perhaps longer. The economic
and societal consequences will prevail much longer. There will be no
V-shaped economic rebound.5
This is a moment of radical international uncertainty. Despite many
commentaries to the contrary, it is difficult to predict what the long-
term impact of the COVID-19 crisis will be on the quest for world
order.6 The last major pandemic, in 1918–19, is not generally judged to
have had a major effect on the 1920s and 1930s, but that is likely because
it happened in a world already fragmented by World War I.7 By contrast,
although this crisis occurs at a troubling time geopolitically, including
the withdrawal of the United States from global leadership, until the
pandemic it was a period of interdependence and prosperity for many
countries. This plague puts immense strain on individual governments,
divides societies, and exacerbates societal inequalities. It encourages
leaders to act unilaterally and nationally, rather than in concert. It
demonstrates the weaknesses of most international organizations. It
exacerbates tensions between the United States and China.8 It prompts
the United States’ adversaries to try to take advantage of Washington’s
tardy and confused reaction to the epidemic.
The crisis poses enveloping international questions. When will
the global economy recover? Can Washington and Beijing avoid per-
manent confrontation with potential catastrophic consequences?9
Will China advance its national interests at the expense of the United
States? Will the U.S. alliance system continue to erode? Will the crisis
empower or undermine nationalists and populists? Will the European
Union undertake sufficient economic reform that it can retain the alle-
giance of countries such as Italy by showing that it will be there for all of
its member states in a crisis? What will happen in the developing world,
where governments have limited health-care capacity and minimal
ability to enforce social distancing? Will medical shortcomings trigger
mass migration? Will mass digital surveillance become more attractive
if it offers an alternative to economic shutdown? These matters are of
enormous import, but they are impossible to answer with any confi-
dence at this stage.
The objective of this report is not to predict the long-term conse-
quences of the present crisis (as the American philosopher Yogi Berra
stressed, “It’s tough to make predictions, especially about the future”).
Rather, it is to place this plague in global context. After the Cold War,
many observers believed the world’s largest powers were converging on
2 The End of World Order and American Foreign Policy
12. a single model of international order—a globalized version of the order
the United States had led since the late 1940s. Before Washington’s two
long wars in the greater Middle East, the rise of China, and the revival
of Russia, the 1990s in general was a rare historical decade of a mostly
stable, mostly harmonious, and mostly peaceful world order—one that
was imperfect and incomplete, but still stood apart from the normal
anarchic state of international politics.10
This world order period weakened after 9/11 and ended over the
past decade, driven by a combination of great power ambition, Amer-
ican withdrawal, and transformational changes that left many nations
unmoored from old certainties, “no longer at ease here, in the old dis-
pensation.”11 This report portrays the international situation before the
coronavirus struck, posits its current effects on world order, and pre-
scribes what the United States should do about it.
Introduction 3
13. WORLD ORDER
BEFORE COVID-19
To understand the world today, one must first understand the world that
came before. We began this project in the fall of 2019 precisely because
the world order seemed so troubled. Indeed, for at least six years, since
Russia’s annexation of Crimea, analysts wrote about the collapse of
international order, a tendency that was reinforced by the proliferation
of failed states and refugee crises in the Middle East, Brexit, the election
of President Donald J. Trump and other populists, the rise of Chinese
power and consequent increased rivalry between Washington and Bei-
jing, and a worsening climate.12 As Robert Kagan put it, the jungle was
growing back.13
And yet, that the international system is beset by problems and that
those difficulties are getting worse is not in itself proof that world order
is falling apart. Until COVID-19, global economic growth was strong
while poverty continued to decline. The major powers were not on the
brink of conflict. With the exception of the Middle East, most of the
world’s regions were stable. Significant technological breakthroughs
improved the lives of billions.14 So a more fundamental question should
be asked: How should world order be defined?
It is helpful to make an initial distinction between international
order and world order. International order usually refers to an order led
by a specific country, often referring to empire, even though the order
in question is not always embraced by all of the world’s major powers.
The world has had Roman, Byzantine, Mongol, Chinese, French, Brit-
ish, Russian, German, and Japanese orders. In recent decades, interna-
tional order has become synonymous with the post–World War II order
led by the United States—thus Americans, many Europeans, Japanese,
Australians, and others believe that the international order includes
military alliances, such as the North Atlantic Treaty Organization
4 The End of World Order and American Foreign Policy
14. (NATO) and bilateral security treaties, and the Group of Seven, even
though Russia and China are excluded from all three.
World order, which rarely occurs in history, specifically refers to a
shared understanding among the major powers to limit the potential
for serious confrontation, including among competitors and adver-
saries. This report focuses on world order—how much agreement
there is between the great powers, particularly those that see them-
selves as rivals.
In A World Restored, Henry Kissinger writes that order and stability
result not from a desire to pursue peace or justice, but from a “generally
accepted legitimacy” and are “based on an equilibrium of forces.” Legit-
imacy, he says, “means no more than an international agreement about
the nature of workable arrangements and about the permissible aims
and methods of foreign policy.” “It implies,” he concludes, “the accep-
tance of the framework of the international order by all major powers,
at least to the extent that no state is so dissatisfied that, like Germany
after the Treaty of Versailles, it expresses its dissatisfaction in a revo-
lutionary foreign policy.”15 Kissinger returns to this theme in his 2014
book World Order, which he defines as “the concept held by a region
or civilization about the nature of just arrangements and the distribu-
tion of power thought to be applicable to the entire world.” World order
rests, he writes, on two components: “a set of commonly accepted rules
that define the limits of permissable action and a balance of power that
enforces restraint where rules break down.”16
The Concert of Europe manifested this as a loose set of constraints
that moved the major powers beyond a traditional balance of power—
no major power would act unilaterally to acquire territory, none would
interfere in the domestic governance of others, and none would be
World Order Before COVID-19 5
15. humiliated or isolated. The concert was not an agreement of equals.
Serving the interests of Great Britain and Russia above all others, it was
the mechanism by which the other European powers acquiesced to and
sought to influence British and Russian bipolarity.17
These mutual constraints gradually fell away in the last quarter of
the nineteenth century. They were replaced by a crude balance of power
system in Europe that was disrupted and then remade by Chancellor
Otto von Bismarck, was weakened with the rise of German imperial-
ism, and collapsed in the years leading up to World War I.18 An attempt
to restore some semblance of world order through the League of
Nations failed, and Germany’s revolutionary foreign policies of the
1930s and 1940s shattered any prospect of mutual constraint or coop-
eration among major countries. In the early decades of the Cold War,
Americans did not believe in world order as Kissinger defines it. There
was, at best, a Western order locked in a bipolar struggle with the Soviet
Union. And yet, that bipolar system became a world order of sorts, if
that can be understood to mean the gradual acceptance by both super-
powers of each other’s spheres of influence, their joint opposition to
the spread of nuclear weapons, and their desire, especially after 1962,
to avert nuclear war.
During his years in office, Kissinger above all else sought to apply
his concept and objectives of world order to the relationship between
the United States and the Soviet Union and to prepare for the emer-
gence of China as an eventual world power. John Ikenberry, a pro-
fessor at Princeton University and one of the world’s leading liberal
theorists of order, argued in the 1990s and 2000s that there is a dis-
tinctly liberal logic to order in the post–Cold War period and that the
constraints and understandings between the major powers became
formalized and institutionalized.19
Beginning in the early 1990s, the Cold War order was reconstituted
into an aspiring global commonwealth that enlarged NATO and trans-
formed the United Nations, the IMF and the World Bank, the World
Trade Organization (WTO), and the EU. The debates on the health
of world order usually hinge on whether the United States, China,
Russia, or other powers infringe these global rules. They sometimes
do—the United States in Kosovo in 1999 and Iraq in 2003; Russia in
Georgia in 2008, Ukraine in 2014, and Syria in 2015; and China in the
South China Sea and through repeated geoeconomic coercion. Schol-
ars argue about whether these episodes are equivalent or different and
how much they represent a general erosion of world order. Experts also
focus on whether international institutions, which frequently serve as a
6 The End of World Order and American Foreign Policy
16. proxy for states, can solve or at least manage the wide array of regional
and global problems. The answer is usually no, which contributes to
endemic pessimism about the current state of world order.
But this assessment of world order may set the bar too high. It is a
standard created in the unique moment after the Cold War to describe
a world in which the great power rivalry that prevailed for centuries
had seemed to evaporate, in which Russia and China were too weak
to challenge the United States’ international preferences. That uni-
polar period, if it ever existed, is over.20 The question is whether the
major powers can agree on the fundamental constraints required to
establish and sustain a stable world order, or, if such a world order is
not possible, they can find another way toward a stable and acceptable
geopolitical equilibrium.
World Order Before COVID-19 7
17. THE END OF
WORLD ORDER
Two developments over the past decade ended the post–Cold War
world order. The first was a series of decisions by major powers to
diverge from the shared understanding of limitations and enforcement
that prevailed in the 1990s. The second is profound transformative
changes in world affairs—technical, economic, and environmental—
that give rise to issues not addressed by post–Cold War world order.
DIVERGENCE
For a decade and a half after the Cold War, the major non-allied
powers largely acquiesced to the U.S.-led international order. China
and Russia chose not to balance against the United States, partly
because it was too far ahead in raw power (what was called unipo-
larity) and perhaps because they were not yet sufficiently dissatisfied
with the status quo.21 China largely operated within the parameters of
the order, and many Americans believed or at least hoped that China
would become a responsible stakeholder in it. Russia was more dis-
satisfied, but there were promising signs—Russian President Dimitri
Medvedev spoke the language of economic reform while Washington
and Moscow talked of partnership.22 Brazil and India seemed to be
dynamic and multilateralist rising powers that could responsibly add
to the foundation of 1990s world order.23
Sadly, this century has sharply departed from those U.S.-generated
norms.24 On governance questions, Brazil, Russia, India, China, and
South Africa (BRICS) have all regressed.25 Some observers believe
that China has moved toward a totalitarian dictatorship, with President
Xi Jinping in power for life as the regime perfects the tools of repres-
sion and control with new technologies.26 Others label the Chinese
8 The End of World Order and American Foreign Policy
18. government as authoritarian. Russian President Vladimir Putin moved
Russia in a similar direction, while India’s and Brazil’s democracies
eroded through the decisions of Prime Minister Narendra Modi and
President Jair Bolsonaro.
• Russia in 2014 illegally annexed Crimea, the first such act in Europe
since World War II and a flagrant violation of the norm against territo-
rial conquest.
• Brazil and India abstained in the vote to condemn Moscow’s action at
the UN Security Council.
• China over the past decade engaged in a project of land reclamation in
the South China Sea in violation of international law to advance its ter-
ritorial claims and gain control of vital sea lanes.27
• China became much more activist, assertive, and strategic in multilateral
organizations to dilute criticism of its human rights record and to weaken
international norms of human rights, transparency, and accountability.28
• China used its geoeconomic leverage to coerce other countries into
adopting Chinese technology (Huawei’s 5G wireless network equip-
ment) and to remain silent about its human rights abuses (including the
largest internment of an ethnic or religious minority since World War II),
repressive internal affairs, and increasingly aggressive foreign policies.29
• China chose to operate outside the framework of the international eco-
nomic order, largely ignoring World Bank and even Asian Infrastructure
The End of World Order 9
19. Investment Bank standards in its Belt and Road Initiative, which has
grown to an estimated $1 trillion.30
• Russia cooperated with the Syrian regime to inflict mass atrocities on
Syrian civilians, a dramatic departure from its general support or acqui-
escence in UN actions to prevent such human catastrophes in the post–
Cold War period.31
• Russia in an unprecedented act interfered in the 2016 U.S. presidential
election on behalf of Donald Trump and has continued massive interfer-
ence in U.S. social media since.32 In the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic,
China has begun to adopt more assertive disinformation operations.33
• Several U.S. allies also diverged from world order. Hungary’s democ-
racy has withered under the rule of Prime Minister Viktor Orban.
Turkey has become an authoritarian state. Saudi Arabia’s crown prince
ended decades of cautious foreign policies largely deferential to U.S.
preferences in favor of a violent alternative and humanitarian catastro-
phe in Yemen.34
These actions are major departures from the shared understandings
of the 1990s, and the return of great power rivalry shattered hopes in
that multilateral order.35 China and Russia in particular defend a West-
phalian and nineteenth-century model of order organized around bal-
ance of power, national sovereignty, and spheres of influence.36 They
oppose the U.S. model of humanitarian intervention, democracy pro-
motion, strengthened alliances, and opposition to spheres of influ-
ence. Meanwhile, the United States distances itself from its own world
order traditions. President Trump questions the value of U.S. alli-
ances, imposes trade tariffs on friend and foe alike, abandons support
for human rights and democracy overseas, and pulled out of the Joint
Comprehensive Plan of Action (the Iran nuclear deal), the Trans-Pacific
Partnership (TPP), the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty, and
the Paris climate change accord.37 This approach could be reversed in
the U.S. presidential election in November, but the United States cur-
rently contests its own liberal order. This did not start with Trump. The
invasion of Iraq and the overly generous admission of China into the
WTO were also serious mistakes that undermined the integrity of the
liberal order—the first immediately and the second gradually.
The shifting preferences of the great powers have not been the only
factor contributing to the demise of world order.
10 The End of World Order and American Foreign Policy
20. A TRANSITIONAL MOMENT
Almost every generation since World War II believed it was living in
a period of radical change: the atomic threat of the 1950s, the leftist
revolutionary thrusts of the 1960s and early 1970s, the microchip and
information technology advances of the 1980s, globalization and the
end of the Soviet Empire of the 1990s, and the rise of China, social
media, and mass terrorism of the 2000s. However, except in the case
of the end of the Soviet Union and the liberation of Eastern Europe,
the fundamentals of international power, behavior, and influence have
remained relatively constant. This time, there are reasons to believe that
the dramatic changes underway in today’s societies are ushering in a
profoundly different era. New technologies in artificial intelligence and
biological science as well as the internet and social media are changing
how people work and consume information. These changes challenge
some of the very structures of our society that have been in place since
the late nineteenth century.
This upheaval was already well underway before COVID-19. The
means of production, the delivery of services, the nature of educa-
tion, the rules and practices of international trade, the threats to
public order, the character of energy and environmental issues, and
the entire meaning of balance of power were all already undergoing
deep change. Traumas often catalyze, even accelerate, trends, and so it
is with COVID-19. As this crisis evolves, it changes societies at micro
and macro levels in ways most individuals cannot understand, much
less shape. Layer on top of this the pressing international challenges—
how to integrate these new technologies and mitigate their negative
effects; how to deal with transnational dangers such as pandemic dis-
ease, terrorism, and the spread of nuclear weapons; how to reduce
the long-term threat of climate change; how to ensure that the global
economy produces more benefits and equities than vulnerabilities to
the middle classes; and how to respond to the rise of China without
destabilizing confrontation.
What does all of this add up to? The world order of the 1990s and
early 2000s was rooted in U.S.-led postwar preferences, objectives,
and strategies, which were adjusted and further globalized by their suc-
cessors. To the extent that the major powers agreed on the constraints,
limits, and enforcement mechanisms, the world order protected that
international system. But now supporters of the old order, including
many Americans, should grapple with the implications of shifting bal-
ances of power and the transformation of societies.
The End of World Order 11
21. It is not so much that the major powers seek to directly overturn the
old order; it is that in many respects the new world and the old rules
are in parallel universes. For example, the Belt and Road Initiative does
not seek to overturn the World Bank; it simply operates alongside it. As
political scientists Alexander Cooley and Daniel Nexon note, “Regimes
from around the world are unlikely, for better or for worse, to simply
accept the kind of liberal ordering that the United States promoted in
the 1990s and 2000s.”38
The world has moved away from a standard of world order in which
nations work within the same set of constraints and aspire to meet the
same set of rules toward a model in which many countries choose their
own paths to order, without much reference to the views of others, both
near and far. This heterogeneity is not so much a rush to excellence as
the projection of the domestic characteristics of the major powers into
the international arena. Thus, the corruption, lack of accountability,
and absence of freedom in autocratic countries is their version of order.
Unbound from alliances and institutions, the vagaries of American
domestic politics manifest themselves in unilateralist approaches to
order. An application of Kissinger’s model of world order is nowhere
to be seen.
12 The End of World Order and American Foreign Policy
22. THE ROAD FORWARD
The fundamental strategic problem the United States faces with
respect to world order is how it should respond to the breakdown in
agreed arrangements between the major powers. The United States has
a choice. Should it try to reconstitute a world order whereby it forges
an understanding with Europe, Japan, India, China, and Russia on the
limits of acceptable behavior and how to enforce them, or should it con-
centrate on improving its own ordering options in accordance with its
values regardless of whether China, Russia, or others go along? The
answer rests on which course of action best protects and advances U.S.
vital national interests.
We define the country’s vital interests as follows:39
• Prevent the use and reduce the threat of nuclear, biological, and chem-
ical weapons and catastrophic conventional terrorist attacks or cyber-
attacks against the United States, its military forces abroad, or its allies.
• Prevent the spread of nuclear weapons, secure nuclear weapons and
materials, and reduce further proliferation of intermediate- and long-
range delivery systems for nuclear weapons.
• Maintain a global and regional balance of power that promotes peace,
stability, and freedom through domestic U.S. robustness, U.S. interna-
tional power and influence, and the strength of U.S. alliance systems,
with increased contributions from allies and partners.
• Prevent the emergence of hostile major powers or failed states on U.S.
borders.
The Road Forward 13
23. • Ensure the viability and stability of major global systems (trade, finan-
cial markets, energy supplies, cyberspace, the environment, and free-
dom of the seas).
On the face of it, the answer would seem obvious: the United States
should try to reconstitute a shared strategic understanding between the
major powers based on these national interests—a classic world order
bargain, if you will. But such a pathway is problematic. Although it may
seem strategically sensible and prudent to many observers, for others the
gap between the United States and China is too large to bridge, and a com-
promise could undermine Washington’s regional alliances. Moreover,
there is for the foreseeable future no appetite in Washington on either side
of the aisle, or in Beijing, for such a comprehensive effort. The U.S. exec-
utive branch and Congress are focused on drawing up bills of indictment
against China (many justified), with no prescriptive suggestion except for
public coercion that diplomacy, difficult as it may be, could ease the bilat-
eral tension. Opinion polls show that the American people favor alliances,
free trade, and a foreign policy that includes support for human rights,
democracy, and the rule of law.40 With U.S. treatment of China a major
issue in the 2020 presidential campaign, it is difficult to imagine a national
consensus on any dramatic change of course that accommodates to some
degree China’s preferences regarding world order.
For its part, China seeks to comprehensively undermine U.S. alliances
and to eventually replace the United States as both the most important
power in Asia and the world’s technological leader. Beijing is making
progress in that long-term effort, as its coercive power grows and Wash-
ington falters internationally. Whatever the objective reality, Beijing’s
behavior suggests it could well believe it is playing a winning hand.
In any case, both nations at present are fully committed to their core
convictions of how best to conduct their societies and governance, pro-
mote their national interests, and organize the international system. It
is difficult to imagine either side offering major compromises on any of
these fundamentals anytime soon.
The unfortunate condition of world order does not mean an end to
order, or to narrow U.S.-China cooperation. The United States should
ensure that the order it offers is as attractive to other nations as possi-
ble and is competitive with the alternatives offered by China or others.
Washington should reinvigorate the ambition and scope of its great
power diplomacy, using opportunities presented by a more multipolar
world. This will require major changes to U.S. foreign policy as it has
been practiced since the Cold War.
14 The End of World Order and American Foreign Policy
24. The United States finds itself in a world where there is little prospect
that the major powers will converge on a single model of world order—
with a shared understanding of constraints, limits, and the means of
enforcement—as it has hoped for much of the past thirty years. It is
also unlikely, though not impossible, that the international system will
return to an informal construct of world order of the sort Europe prac-
ticed from 1815 to 1848. Rather, as in the Bismarck period, Americans
should expect China, Russia, and several others to pursue their own
ordering strategies, both in their regions and on global issues. Some
grand bargains in world order could be struck in the distant future,
but they appear remote now. The question is: What can and should the
United States do to preserve its national interests and its own notion of
international order in this uncertain environment?
The United States should not go back to the concept of the liberal
international order (LIO).41 The LIO is a relatively recent invention
and is analytically distinct from its antecedents in the Atlantic Charter
through to the creation of NATO. The term did not exist during the
Cold War—when “the Free World” or “the West” was used to describe
the U.S.-led bloc of nations—and was coined by political scientists in
the 1990s. The substance of the LIO is admirable and worth preserv-
ing, but it also has several downsides. It reduces U.S. foreign policy to
an abstract set of principles that are often violated. There is little sign
that it resonates with the public, meaning it can be easily cast aside. The
LIO also has embedded within it universal aspirations that have been
dashed because of shifts in Chinese and Russian intentions as well as
those of middle powers such as Brazil and Turkey.
Only an international order based on the enduring values of free-
dom and liberty can gain the sustained support of Congress and the
Recommendations 15
25. American people, but sadly John Winthrop’s shining “City Upon a
Hill” is currently dark. The United States should rebuild the core coali-
tion of like-minded liberal democratic states as it did in the late 1940s,
though with somewhat less military emphasis, and increase that part-
nership’s resilience to solve the new challenges that free societies face.
However, there would be at least one significant difference to the early
days of the Cold War before détente: recognizing interdependence, this
bloc should seriously engage its rivals and competitors, particularly on
shared challenges such as climate change, nuclear proliferation, pan-
demics, international terrorism, genocide, and the global economy.
Specifically, we recommend the following:
CREATE A PERSUASIVE MODEL OF COMPETENT
U.S. GOVERNANCE, WHICH WILL IN TURN REINFORCE
AMERICA’S INTERNATIONAL LEADERSHIP
The COVID-19 crisis has laid bare a governance gap between the United
States and other democracies. Whereas Germany, New Zealand, South
Korea, Taiwan, and others have been able to mobilize the state to con-
duct massive testing, the United States has fallen far behind. Its failings
are not just on public health. It is gaining a reputation as a dysfunctional
superpower—one unable to pass budgets, manage its debt, ratify trea-
ties, or carry out a coherent and consistent foreign policy. This dysfunc-
tion saps the will of the American public to play a leadership role in the
world and reduces the legitimacy of American power overseas. More-
over, continued dysfunction will put the United States at a distinct stra-
tegic disadvantage vis-à-vis China. Initial domestic steps toward more
competent democratic governance include investing more in education,
fixing a broken immigration system, rooting out corruption, providing
a role for the state in developing and deploying advanced technologies
such as 5G, and predictably and adequately resourcing the federal gov-
ernment. Most of these are not new problems, but they are now more
urgent than in recent memory. If these weaknesses in the quality of U.S.
governance are not successfully addressed, Washington’s capacity to
influence other nations will continue to erode.
REANIMATE AMERICAN DIPLOMACY
BY WIELDING LEVERAGE MORE EFFECTIVELY
U.S. global leadership is crucial to international peace and stability. For
the past twenty years, the United States has failed to blend leverage and
16 The End of World Order and American Foreign Policy
26. diplomacy in pursuit of its geopolitical goals. On some occasions, the
United States acquired massive leverage but failed to convert it into a
diplomatic victory (such as in 2003, when the threat of the use of force
compelled Saddam Hussein to let inspectors back into Iraq). On other
occasions, the United States engaged in intensive diplomacy but with-
out any real leverage (as in the 2014–15 effort to bring about Israeli-
Palestinian peace). There have been some exceptions—the negotiation
of the 2015 Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) with Iran—
but the United States should reach beyond sanctions and find new ways
of using its national power to create diplomatic opportunities. For
instance, the United States should make military assistance to Saudi
Arabia more contingent on Saudi behavior. It should, working with its
allies, rejoin the JCPOA and open up a bilateral diplomatic dialogue with
Iran. It should join the European Union to put pressure on Hungary to
reverse its slide toward authoritarianism. It should use the threat of addi-
tional sanctions against North Korea to work with China to kick-start
a genuine diplomatic process to limit Pyongyang’s nuclear program. It
should use the space and friction generated by a multipolar world to its
advantage—for instance, rather than trying to outbid Beijing on global
development projects, Washington could support the legitimate desire
of people around the world for accountability and good governance to
push back against Beijing’s corrupt economic practices. And it should
exploit the possibility to de-escalate some conflicts as their parties focus
on the domestic consequences of the coronavirus crisis.
REVITALIZE NORTH AMERICAN COLLABORATION
The United States should invigorate its relations with Canada and
Mexico, building on the strength of three continent-spanning democra-
cies with five hundred million people, favorable demographics, and vast
energy resources to its economic and security advantage on the global
stage. As supply chains shift from China, the United States and these
neighbors should amplify the recent U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement,
invest in North American infrastructure, and promote an expanded
role for North American multilateral banks to increase the flow of trade
on the continent. Washington should coordinate with these neigh-
bors on shared plans for organizations such as a restructured TPP, the
Group of Twenty, and the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation forum.
On the security front, the United States and Canada should work on a
joint strategy for the Arctic—the great power threat that comes clos-
est to American borders. To address immigration—among the most
Recommendations 17
27. volatile issues in U.S. domestic politics—as well as organized crime and
narcotics, this trilateral group should take cooperative action, includ-
ing to bolster the rule of law and development in Mexico and make it
easier for companies to hire professionals and low-skill seasonal work-
ers from any of the three countries.42 There is, of course, no guarantee
that such an approach would be accepted in Mexico City, but, as hockey
legend Wayne Gretzky said, “You miss 100 percent of the shots you
don’t take.”
FUNDAMENTALLY REFORM THE WAY THE UNITED STATES
DEALS WITH ITS TREATY ALLIES AND PARTNERS
No longer can Washington rely on its global and regional dominance to
usually get its way. No longer can the United States routinely ignore the
views of important like-minded states and still achieve policy success.
No longer can the United States sometimes avoid substantial compro-
mise if it wishes to bring others along with its diplomatic preferences.
It is difficult to exaggerate the fundamental U.S. change of mind and
practice that will be required to implement this revolutionary approach
toward its allies and partners. Washington should on occasion accept
“no” or “do it another way” as an answer from allies, difficult as that can
be. For example, the United States should welcome the EU’s initiative
to deepen its defense cooperation; recognize that NATO enlargement
to Georgia and Ukraine will not happen in the next four years, while
keeping the door open for Sweden and Finland to join immediately
should they wish to do so; and listen sympathetically to allied strate-
gies regarding relations with Iran. The United States has an enormous
advantage with the added capacities of its alliances, but one that Trump
persistently undermines. It is unclear how long it will take the next pres-
ident to reestablish trust among U.S. allies, but progress is unlikely to
be rapid.43
INCREASE AMBITIONS WITH EUROPE
The United States and its European allies should be more ambitious
and proactive if liberalism is to be a competitive force in world affairs.
Over the past seventy years, the transatlantic alliance has been dogged
by squabbles over level of defense spending, and now it is extremely
unlikely that most European nations will ever make the 2 percent of
gross domestic product (GDP) target.44 The Transatlantic Trade and
Investment Partnership was meant to provide a positive vision for the
18 The End of World Order and American Foreign Policy
28. relationship, but it only ever offered a small increase in GDP (0.5 of 1
percent for the EU and 0.4 of 1 percent for the United States).45 To be
relevant, the alliance should address big issues that directly affect peo-
ple’s lives—agreed rules on data and the regulation of big technology,
formal cooperation on developing and deploying new technologies
such as 5G and artificial intelligence, and a common approach to the
economic and political challenge from China. There are still questions
around whether NATO’s European member states and the EU have the
will and ability to defend themselves from hard power threats. Shaping
the international order on these issues is overwhelmingly in their vital
interests, however, and they have the capacity to play this role.
STRENGTHEN RELATIONS WITH INDIA
India, the world’s largest democracy, promises to be a crucial U.S. part-
ner. New Delhi is convinced that China seeks to replace the United States
as the primary power in Asia, that this would be exceedingly bad for
India, and that only a strong partnership with the United States can pre-
vent it.46 Washington and New Delhi should remember that their chief
objective is not consensus on trade or Iran but contending with a rising
China. The United States should take care regarding its demands on
Indian foreign policy, when vital U.S. national interests are not at stake,
when those demands undermine balancing China, and when they relate
to peripheral differences in the bilateral relationship. India should accel-
erate defense cooperation with the United States and pursue reforms
that allow more U.S. access to the Indian economy. Progress toward bal-
ancing China will be worth disagreements on other issues.
ADVANCE INTERNATIONAL COOPERATION
ON COVID-19 TREATMENTS AND VACCINES
Political philosopher John Rawls wrote about a veil of ignorance
whereby a person should design how the world should work without
knowing their station within it—whether they would be born poor or
wealthy, male or female, white or black. Today, in the early stages of the
COVID-19 crisis, no one knows which country or actor will develop a
vaccine or treatments first. It could be the United States, but it could
also be a military-linked laboratory in China or somewhere else entirely.
Now is the time for the United States and all other nations to agree,
under this veil of ignorance, how a vaccine and treatments should be
distributed and managed once they are developed.47 It would be a fitting
Recommendations 19
29. and practical way to advance international cooperation in response
to the worst global crisis since World War II. This agreement would
require China to be substantially more transparent than it was in the
early weeks of the coronavirus crisis.
INVEST IN INTERNATIONAL INSTITUTIONS
Democratic administrations tend to work within international institu-
tions as they are or to push for reforms to bring in rising powers. Some
Republican administrations, particularly the Trump administration, are
more likely to disengage from these institutions or to withdraw funding
if they do not get their way. Both approaches are inadequate. China has
been particularly active in multilateral organizations. Its influence in the
World Health Organization (WHO) during the coronavirus crisis has
caused an international scandal, and Beijing now heads up four of fifteen
UN agencies—the International Civil Aviation Organization, the Inter-
national Telecommunication Union, the Food and Agriculture Orga-
nization, and the Industrial Development Organization.48 The answer
to this challenge is for the United States to fully engage in and come up
with a modernized vision of multilateral organizations. For example, the
United States should work with democracies and other interested par-
ties to address the imbalances in favor of China at the WTO, consider
the concept of a “climate club” that would mandate a different incentive
structure for nations to reduce greenhouse gases, and take a leading role
to reform the WHO.49
COMPARTMENTALIZE TRANSNATIONAL CHALLENGES
SUCH AS CLIMATE CHANGE, PANDEMICS,
AND INTERNATIONAL TERRORISM
The United States and China share certain interests in combating cli-
mate change and pandemic disease. These shared interests are jeopar-
dized by the geopolitical competition between the two. For instance,
the rivalry currently makes the prospect of cooperation on COVID-
19 remote. However, rivals should be capable of cooperation on such
matters. During the Cold War, the United States and the Soviet Union
cooperated on managing their own nuclear weapons, the nuclear non-
proliferation treaty, a vaccine to eliminate smallpox, fisheries, and free-
dom of the seas. To replicate that cooperation, the United States and
China should compartmentalize these shared problems so that they
are hermetically sealed from the overall relationship. Each side should
20 The End of World Order and American Foreign Policy
30. make it clear to their publics that they will cooperate on climate, pan-
demics, nuclear proliferation, cyberspace, and the global economy,
even as they compete ferociously in other domains. This will be exceed-
ingly difficult to accomplish, but it should be the objective. If compart-
mentalizing proves impossible and the United States and China cannot
work together on shared challenges, Washington should mitigate the
risks of inaction by doing what it can with its allies and partners. For
example, if China refuses to fully cooperate on pandemics, the United
States should work with Australia, Japan, South Korea, Taiwan, the
European Union, and others to share information, coordinate policies,
and pool resources.
STOP DETERIORATION IN THE BALANCE
OF POWER WITH CHINA
For an intensified high-level bilateral dialogue between Washington
and Beijing to be fruitful, the United States should first clearly estab-
lish that it is enhancing its military, diplomatic, and economic power
projection into Asia; increasing interaction with allies, partners, and
friends; and helping build up its allies’ diplomatic, economic, and mili-
tary strength. This would mean, inter alia, that the United States should
stop beating up on its Asian allies. Successful diplomacy depends on
deployable assets, and Washington needs to increase its assets. Nothing
less will convince Beijing—which pursues classic realist policies based
on the balance of power—that it has reasons, based on its national
interests, to negotiate seriously with the United States. This will take
some time, for Beijing will wait to see whether Washington becomes
distracted and diverts its attention to other, lesser issues in the daily
headlines, as is its wont.50
COMPETE WITH CHINA
Even if the United States stops the deterioration of the balance of
power, Washington and Beijing are destined to be strategic competitors
for the foreseeable future. The question is what type of competition
there will be. There can be no early return to a convergence strategy
in the belief that the Chinese Communist Party regime will become a
responsible stakeholder in the U.S. order. Xi has been clear that Beijing
has its own vision of global order that he refers to as “a community of
common destiny,” which is more ominous than the previous formula-
tion of “a harmonious world.”51 The Trump administration’s approach
Recommendations 21
31. is not a sustainable option either. The United States currently appears
to be headed for a full-throated permanent confrontation with China,
with little diplomacy, constraints, limits, or prospects of cooperation.
The volatile piece of the relationship at present is not security compe-
tition, which has been relatively stable and predictable. The problem
concerns the vulnerabilities created by interdependence including the
timing, shape, and substance of the next U.S.-China trade agreement.
The United States should devise a strategy toward China that defines
the scale and shape of engagement. Fully coordinated with allies, this
needs to be carefully designed and pay particular attention to trade
and finance, including joining a reconstituted TPP, international insti-
tutions and frameworks, technology transfer, defense, cyber, critical
infrastructure such as communications and energy, and development
and investment controls. Without such intense collaboration, it seems
unlikely that the United States can successfully and peacefully compete
with China, which is likely to be a preeminent U.S. strategic challenger
for many decades. Inherent U.S. pessimism about this competition is
misplaced. With the proper policies, the United States and its allies can
successfully compete with China while avoiding combustible competi-
tion and defending alliance national interests and values.
REDUCE ENGAGEMENT IN THE MIDDLE EAST
The COVID-19 crisis ought to mark the end of the post-9/11 era.52 The
United States has overly invested in the greater Middle East, and Wash-
ington should stop trying to fix the most dysfunctional and self-destruc-
tive region on earth. It is time to withdraw U.S. combat troops from
Afghanistan in the next year without requiring agreement with the Tal-
iban; recognize that the possibility of a two-state solution to the Isra-
el-Palestine issue is more remote by the day; end support for the Saudi
war in Yemen; revive and update the JCPOA to prevent Tehran from
acquiring nuclear weapons; be clear that, although the United States
hopes Iran becomes a democracy, that is a decision for the Iranian
people, and the United States should not be actively trying to bring this
about; and downgrade U.S. relations with its Arab partners, to focus on
matters of mutual interest rather than offering general support for their
domestic and international objectives. While continuing its enduring
commitment to Israel’s safety and security, the United States should
redirect its resources from the Middle East to matters that are far more
relevant to its national interests today and in the future. It should deal
with the rise of Chinese power, deepen its relationships with allies in
22 The End of World Order and American Foreign Policy
32. Asia and Europe, seek major advances in new technologies, and tackle
transnational threats such as climate change and pandemics. This shift
should be done gradually, in concert with European allies, to avoid a
vacuum in the region; indeed, the EU should assume more of the
burden in attempting to shape the Middle East, which so affects its vital
national interests. This will be a heavy lift.
CONDITION ENGAGEMENT WITH RUSSIA
U.S. relations with Russia are at a post–Cold War low. There is virtually
no diplomacy between Washington and Moscow. Russia’s interference
in the U.S. election of 2016, its aggressive acts in the Middle East since
2015, and its continuing aggression in Ukraine make meaningful coop-
eration currently improbable. If Russia interferes in the 2020 U.S. elec-
tion, the next administration should impose additional and significant
costs on Putin’s regime and inform Moscow that this will be the case.
However, if Russia is judged to have stayed out of the election, and if
there is progress on ending Russian actions against Ukraine, there could
be scope for a strategic dialogue with Russia that would explore ways of
increasing cooperation on shared interests, even as the two countries
compete vigorously in other domains. In any case, Washington should
continue its negotiations with Moscow on nuclear weapons.53
REBUILD BUT REFORM THE GLOBAL ECONOMY
There is little doubt that the world is in the early stages of a protracted
economic downturn. The only saving grace so far has been swift and
massive action by the Federal Reserve and the European Central Bank,
but tough days lie ahead. The United States should work with other
countries so that the rebuilding of national economies is consistent
with maintaining an open and mutually beneficial global economy. At
the same time, the United States should also press for reforms to reduce
the risk of future financial crises, change the international tax code
so corporations pay tax somewhere, level the economic playing field
between democracies and China’s mercantilist model, tackle structural
inequality, and ensure that free societies are collectively resilient and
not dependent on rival powers for critical technologies and supplies.
Recommendations 23
33. CONCLUSION
The most immediate task facing the United States and the world is the
COVID-19 crisis and its aftermath. The next administration’s most
important task will be to craft and shepherd a cooperative international
response on the production of a vaccine and treatments, coordinate the
rebuilding of national economies so they reinforce a mutually beneficial
global economy, assist developing countries disproportionately weak-
ened by the virus, and reform global institutions and infrastructure so
they are better positioned to deal with the next pandemic and inter-
national challenges as a whole. There is a real danger that the United
States and other nations will pursue a nationalist beggar-thy-neighbor
approach that could damage their national interests as well as global
peace and prosperity in a way that will be impossible to recover from
in the short to medium term. As a result, tackling coronavirus globally
ought to be Washington’s top foreign policy priority.
The focus of this report is to look beyond COVID-19 and to address
the troubling divergence between how the major powers conceive
of world order. The fault lines that emerged in the past decade have
now become a chasm and have stripped away any illusion that major
power convergence is possible. There is no prospect of a Kissingerian
world order in the foreseeable future. Take sovereignty as an example.
After the Cold War, many nations led by the United States agreed that
national sovereignty was contingent on a government’s operating with-
out brutality within its borders. Today, China, Russia, and others reject
this concept. With an absolutist interpretation of sovereign rights, they
publicly espouse no external interference under any circumstances.
Thus, there will be no shared international understanding of this fun-
damental principle.
24 The End of World Order and American Foreign Policy
34. The challenges the United States currently confronts are daunting,
but no more so than those faced by many earlier generations of Amer-
icans. Avoiding dangerous confrontations with rivals is possible, but
only if the United States is up to that diplomatic challenge, based on
U.S. national interests and democratic values. Through wise and steady
international leadership, Washington can also implement adroit and
consistent policies that substantially shape international order in line
with its preferences and perhaps that eventually move toward the noble
world order concept. With COVID-19, the reordering moment is here.
Conclusion 25
35. ENDNOTES
1. Lawrence Summers, “Covid-19 Looks Like a Hinge in History,” Financial Times, May
14, 2020, http://ft.com/content/de643ae8-9527-11ea-899a-f62a20d54625.
2. “Coronavirus Resource Center,” Johns Hopkins University and Medicine, accessed
May 1, 2020, http://coronavirus.jhu.edu/map.html.
3. World Economic Outlook, April 2020: The Great Lockdown (Washington, DC:
International Monetary Fund, April 2020), http://imf.org/en/Publications/WEO
/Issues/2020/04/14/weo-april-2020.
4. Maria Abi-Habib, “Millions Had Risen Out of Poverty. Coronavirus Is Pulling Them
Back.,” New York Times, April 30, 2020, http://nytimes.com/2020/04/30/world
/asia/coronavirus-poverty-unemployment.html; Emma Graham, “IMF Warns
‘Vulnerabilities High’ in the Middle East Hit With Dual Shock of Coronavirus and
Oil Plunge,” CNBC, April 15, 2020, http://cnbc.com/2020/04/15/imf-warns
-vulnerabilities-high-in-the-middle-east-hit-with-dual-shock-of-coronavirus-and-oil
-plunge.html; Tony Romm and Jeff Stein, “2.4 Million Americans Filed Jobless Claims
Last Week, Bringing Nine-Week Total to 38.6 Million,” Washington Post, May 21,
2020, http://washingtonpost.com/business/2020/05/21/unemployment-claims
-coronavirus; and Matina Stevis-Gridneff and Jack Ewing, “EU Is Facing Its Worst
Recession Ever. Watch Out, World.,” New York Times, May 6, 2020, http://nytimes
.com/2020/05/06/business/coronavirus-europe-reopening-recession.html.
5. Economists expect a prolonged recovery. See Clive Crook, “About That V-Shaped
Recovery,” Bloomberg, April 28, 2020, http://bloomberg.com/opinion/articles/2020
-04-28/v-shaped-economic-recovery-from-coronavirus-is-not-happening; Chris Giles,
“Economists Question BOE’s Overly Rosy View of V-Shaped Recovery,” Financial
Times, May 7, 2020, http://ft.com/content/4fd6f037-ac00-4cb6-9d1e-42283fc4ca31;
Andy Kessler, “What Shape Will the Rebound Take?,” Wall Street Journal, April 26,
2020, http://wsj.com/articles/what-shape-will-the-rebound-take-11587930592;
David J. Lynch, “Soaring Joblessness Could Shake U.S. Economy, Politics for Years,”
Washington Post, May 8, 2020, http://washingtonpost.com/business/2020/05/08/jobs
-coronavirus-unemployment-economy-politics; and Ann Saphir, “No ‘V’-Shape
Return From Devastating U.S. Job Loss, Fed Policymakers Say,” Reuters, May 8, 2020,
http://reuters.com/article/us-health-coronavirus-fed-daly/no-v-shape-return-from
26 Endnotes
36. -devastating-us-job-loss-fed-policymakers-say-idUSKBN22K30P. Health experts
predict the pandemic will last for at least a year. A V-shaped recovery is unrealistic
given the social and economic disruption associated with this timeline. Helen Branswell,
“Americans Are Underestimating How Long Coronavirus Disruptions Will Last,
Health Experts Say,” STAT, April 3, 2020, http://statnews.com/2020/04/03
/americans-are-underestimating-how-long-coronavirus-disruptions-will-last-health
-experts-say; Juliette Kayyem, “The Crisis Could Last 18 Months. Be Prepared.,”
Atlantic, March 21, 2020, http://theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2020/03/there-isnt
-going-be-all-clear-signal/608512; Christina Larson and Michelle R. Smith, “How
Long Will Americans Be Fighting the Coronavirus?,” Associated Press, March 19,
2020, http://apnews.com/67ac94d1cf08a84ff7c6bbeec2b167fa; Kristine A. Moore,
Marc Lipsitch, John M. Barry, and Michael T. Osterholm, “COVID-19: The CIDRAP
Viewpoint,” Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy, April 30, 2020, http://
cidrap.umn.edu/sites/default/files/public/downloads/cidrap-covid19-viewpoint-part1
_0.pdf; and Matt Stieb, “U.S. Coronavirus Plan Warns Pandemic ‘Will Last 18 Months
or Longer,’” New York Magazine, March 18, 2020, http://nymag.com/intelligencer/2020
/03/u-s-coronavirus-plan-pandemic-will-last-over-18-months.html.
6. For those less timid, see Richard Haass, “The Pandemic Will Accelerate History
Rather than Reshape It,” Foreign Affairs, April 7, 2020, http://foreignaffairs.com
/articles/united-states/2020-04-07/pandemic-will-accelerate-history-rather-reshape
-it; Joseph S. Nye Jr., “No, the Coronavirus Will Not Change the Global Order,”
Foreign Policy, April 16, 2020, http://foreignpolicy.com/2020/04/16/coronavirus
-pandemic-china-united-states-power-competition; Daniel W. Drezner, “The Most
Counterintuitive Prediction About World Politics and the Coronavirus,” Washington
Post, March 30, 2020, http://washingtonpost.com/outlook/2020/03/30/most
-counterintuitive-prediction-about-world-politics-covid-19; Kurt M. Campbell and
Rush Doshi, “The Coronavirus Could Reshape Global Order: China Is Maneuvering
for International Leadership as the United States Falters,” Foreign Affairs, March 18,
2020, http://foreignaffairs.com/articles/2020-03-18/coronavirus-could-reshape
-global-order; Michael Green and Evan S. Medeiros, “The Pandemic Won’t Make
China the World’s Leader: Few Countries Are Buying the Model or the Message From
Beijing,” Foreign Affairs, April 15, 2020, http://foreignaffairs.com/articles/united
Endnotes 27
37. -states/2020-04-15/pandemic-wont-make-china-worlds-leader; Colin H. Kahl and
Ariana Berengaut, “Aftershocks: The Coronavirus Pandemic and the New World
Disorder,” War on the Rocks, April 10, 2020, http://warontherocks.com/2020/04
/aftershocks-the-coronavirus-pandemic-and-the-new-world-disorder; Amitav
Acharya, “How Coronavirus May Reshape the World Order,” National Interest, April
18, 2020, http://nationalinterest.org/feature/how-coronavirus-may-reshape-world
-order-145972; Salvatore Babones, “Don’t Bash Globalization—It Will Rescue Our
Economies After the Pandemic,” Foreign Policy, April 25, 2020, http://foreignpolicy
.com/2020/04/25/globalization-economic-recovery-coronavirus-pandemic; Nicholas
Eberstadt, “The ‘New Normal’: Thoughts About the Shape of Things to Come in the
Post-Pandemic World,” National Bureau of Asian Research, April 18, 2020, http://
nbr.org/publication/the-new-normal-thoughts-about-the-shape-of-things-to-come-in
-the-post-pandemic-world; Neil Irwin, “It’s the End of the World Economy as We
Know It,” New York Times, April 16, 2020, http://nytimes.com/2020/04/16/upshot
/world-economy-restructuring-coronavirus.html; and Minxin Pei, “China’s Coming
Upheaval: Competition, the Coronavirus, and the Weakness of Xi Jinping,” Foreign
Affairs, May/June 2020, http://foreignaffairs.com/articles/united-states/2020-04-03
/chinas-coming-upheaval.
7. See John M. Barry, The Great Influenza: The Story of the Deadliest Pandemic in History
(New York: Penguin Books, 2005); and Laura Spinney, Pale Rider: The Spanish Flu of
1918 and How It Changed the World (New York: Public Affairs, 2017).
8. Richard Haass, “A Cold War With China Would Be a Mistake,” Wall Street Journal,
May 7, 2020, http://wsj.com/articles/dont-start-a-new-cold-war-with-china
-11588860761; Javed Ali and A’ndre Gonawela, “Dueling COVID-19 Blame
Narratives Deepen US-China Rift,” Hill, April 23, 2020, http://thehill.com/opinion
/national-security/494133-dueling-covid-19-blame-narratives-deepen-us-china-rift;
Finbarr Bermingham and Cissy Zhou, “Coronavirus: China and US in ‘New Cold War’
as Relations Hit Lowest Point in ‘More Than 40 Years’, Spurred on By Pandemic,” South
China Morning Post, May 5, 2020, http://scmp.com/economy/china-economy
/article/3082968/coronavirus-china-us-new-cold-war-relations-hit-lowest-point;
Michael Crowley, Edward Wong, and Lara Jakes, “Coronavirus Drives the U.S. and
China Deeper Into Global Power Struggle,” New York Times, March 22, 2020, http://
nytimes.com/2020/03/22/us/politics/coronavirus-us-china.html; and Benjamin
Wilhelm, “The Coronavirus Pandemic Is Pushing U.S.-China Relations to New Lows,”
World Politics Review, May 6, 2020, http://worldpoliticsreview.com/trend-lines/28740
/the-coronavirus-pandemic-is-pushing-u-s-china-relations-to-new-lows.
9. We do not use the term cold war regarding U.S.-China relations because we believe
that competition is so different in character from that between the United States and
the Soviet Union.
10. This did not mean that everywhere there was peace on earth. In this decade there was
violence and upheaval in Somalia, Haiti, Rwanda, the Balkans, and the U.S. war with
Iraq. Nevertheless, none of these episodes caused a crisis between the great powers.
11. T. S. Eliot, “Journey of the Magi,” Ariel Poems (London: Faber and Faber, 2014).
12. For example, see Samuel Charap and Jeremy Shapiro, “Consequences of a New Cold
War,” Survival 57, no. 2 (April–May 2015): 37–46; Michael J. Boyle, “The Coming
Illiberal Order,” Survival 58, no. 2 (April–May 2016): 35–66; and Emile Simpson,
28 Endnotes
38. “This Is How the Liberal World Order Ends,” Foreign Policy, February 19, 2016,
http://foreignpolicy.com/2016/02/19/this-is-how-the-liberal-world-order-ends.
13. Robert Kagan, The Jungle Grows Back: America and Our Imperiled World (New York:
Knopf, 2018).
14. For an optimistic take on the state of the world, see Michael A. Cohen and Micah
Zenko, Clear and Present Safety: The World Has Never Been Better and Why That Matters
to Americans (New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2019).
15. Henry A. Kissinger, A World Restored: Metternich, Castlereagh, and the Problems of
Peace 1812–22 (Auckland, NZ: Friedland Books, 1957), 2–3. Kissinger here uses
the term international order, but his definition fits what he elsewhere describes as
“world order.”
16. Henry A. Kissinger, World Order (New York: Penguin Press, 2014), 9.
17. Paul W. Schroeder, The Transformation of European Politics 1763–1848 (New York:
Oxford University Press, 1994).
18. Henry A. Kissinger, “The White Revolutionary: Reflections on Bismarck,” Daedalus
97, no. 3 (1968): 888–924.
19. G. John Ikenberry, Liberal Leviathan: The Origins, Crisis, and Transformation of the
American World Order (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2011).
20. Unipolarity is a concept in international relations literature defined as “an anarchical
interstate system featuring a sole great power.” See Nuno P. Monteiro, Theory of
Unipolar Politics (New York: Cambridge University Press, 2014), 40. Another political
scientist, Michael Beckley, states it even more plainly: “Unipolarity is not omnipotence;
it simply means that the United States has more than twice the wealth and military
capabilities of any nation.” See Unrivaled: Why America Will Remain the World’s Sole
Superpower (Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 2018).
21. Balancing is the term of art in political science to describe how one great power seeks
to deliberately thwart another’s strategy either by building up its own military or
forging alliances. Russia, for example, opposed the U.S. invasion of Iraq but did not
arm Saddam Hussein or intervene on his behalf—things that it would do in Syria in
2015. As China rose and Russia recovered, Russia gained the capacity to balance again
and chose to exercise it. See G. John Ikenberry, ed., America Unrivaled: The Future of
the Balance of Power (Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 2002).
22. For an account of Russian foreign policy during this period, see Angela E. Stent, The
Limits of Partnership: U.S. – Russian Relations in the Twenty-First Century (Princeton, NJ:
Princeton University Press, 2015).
23. See, for instance, Jim O’Neill, The Growth Map: Economic Opportunity in the BRICs
and Beyond (New York: Penguin Press, 2011).
24. One must wonder if this weakening of U.S. norms was partly caused by a shift in
the balance of power at the expense of the United States and a period of uncertain
American foreign policy.
25. Michael J. Abramowitz, Freedom in the World 2018: Democracy in Crisis (Washington,
DC: Freedom House, 2018), http://freedomhouse.org/sites/default/files/FH_FITW
_Report_2018_Final_SinglePage.pdf.
Endnotes 29
39. 26. See Stein Ringen, The Perfect Dictatorship: China in the 21st Century (Hong Kong:
HKU Press, 2016).
27. Asia Maritime Transparency Initiative, “China Lands First Bomber on South China Sea
Island,” Center for Strategic and International Studies, May 18, 2018, http://amti.csis
.org/china-lands-first-bomber-south-china-sea-island; Richard Heydarian, “How the
Scarborough Shoal Came Back to Haunt China-Philippines Relations,” South China
Morning Post, June 23, 2018, http://scmp.com/news/china/diplomacy-defence/article
/2151923/how-scarborough-shoal-came-back-haunt-china-philippines; Lyle J. Morris,
“Time to Speak Up About the South China Sea,” RAND Corporation, March 20, 2019,
http://rand.org/blog/2019/03/time-to-speak-up-about-the-south-china-sea.html; and
Gregory Poling and Bonnie S. Glaser, “How the U.S. Can Step Up in the South China
Sea: The Right Way to Push Back Against Beijing,” Foreign Affairs, January 16, 2019,
http://foreignaffairs.com/articles/china/2019-01-16/how-us-can-step-south-china-sea.
28. Ted Piccone, China’s Long Game on Human Rights at the United Nations (Washington,
DC: Brookings Institution, September 2018), http://brookings.edu/research/chinas
-long-game-on-human-rights-at-the-united-nations.
29. For an extensive treatment of China’s use of coercive geoeconomic instruments, see
Robert D. Blackwill and Jennifer M. Harris, War by Other Means: Geoeconomics and
Statecraft (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2016).
30. Daniel R. Russel and Blake Berger, “Navigating the Belt and Road Initiative,” Asia
Society Policy Institute, June 2019, 7, http://asiasociety.org/sites/default/files/2019-06
/Navigating the Belt and Road Initiative_2.pdf.
31. Russia did block a UN Security Council resolution on Kosovo in 1999.
32. Robert S. Mueller III, Report on the Investigation Into Russian Interference in the 2016
Presidential Election (Washington, DC: U.S. Department of Justice, March 2019),
http://justice.gov/storage/report.pdf.
33. Edward Wong, Matthew Rosenberg, and Julian E. Barnes, “Chinese Agents Helped
Spread Messages That Sowed Virus Panic in U.S., Officials Say,” New York Times,
April 22, 2020, http://nytimes.com/2020/04/22/us/politics/coronavirus-china
-disinformation.html.
34. The exception to this prolonged and cautious Saudi foreign policy was its financial
support for terrorist groups in Pakistan.
35. Robert Keohane, the political scientist who founded the theory known as
institutionalism or neoliberal institutionalism, is known as a champion of international
cooperation. But it is often forgotten that in his theory he stipulated that cooperation in
institutions only really worked when the interests of the major powers were compatible
with each other. Institutions could help overcome distrust, and they could solve collective
action problems. They could not convince one power to abandon its interests if it
conflicted with another’s. Thus, they were best suited to like-minded nations.
36. Interference in U.S. domestic discourse by the two is, of course, inconsistent with a
Westphalian model.
37. Thomas Wright, “Trump’s Foreign Policy Is No Longer Unpredictable,” Foreign
Affairs, January 18, 2019, http://foreignaffairs.com/articles/world/2019-01-18
/trumps-foreign-policy-no-longer-unpredictable.
30 Endnotes
40. 38. Alexander Cooley and Daniel Nexon, Exit from Hegemony: The Unraveling of the
American Global Order (New York: Oxford University Press, 2020), 187.
39. This rigorous definition of U.S. national interests has been developed over twenty-
five years in an enduring conversation and partnership with Graham Allison. See
Graham Allison and Robert Blackwill, America’s National Interests (Washington, DC:
Commission on America’s National Interests, 2000), http://belfercenter.org/files
/amernatinter.pdf.
40. Dina Smeltz, Ivo Daalder, Karl Friedhof, Craig Kafura, and Brendan Helm, Rejecting
Retreat: Americans Support U.S. Engagement in Global Affairs (Chicago: Chicago
Council on Global Affairs, September 2019), http://thechicagocouncil.org/publication
/lcc/rejecting-retreat.
41. For the case for the liberal international order, see Ikenberry, Liberal Leviathan;
and Bruce Jones, Still Ours to Lead: America, Rising Powers, and the Tension Between
Rivalry and Restraint (Washington, DC: Brookings Institution, 2014). For the case
against, see Patrick Porter, The False Promise of Liberal Order (Medford, MA: Polity
Press, 2020); Stephen M. Walt, The Hell of Good Intentions: America’s Foreign Policy
Elite and the Decline of U.S. Primacy (New York: Farrar, Strauss and Giroux, 2018);
John J. Mearsheimer, The Great Delusion: Liberal Dreams and International Realities
(New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2018); and Barry R. Posen, Restraint: A New
Foundation for U.S. Grand Strategy (Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 2014).
42. For recommendations to this end, see Council on Foreign Relations, North America:
Time for a New Focus (New York: Council on Foreign Relations, 2014), 70–78.
43. See Robert D. Blackwill, Implementing Grand Strategy Toward China: Twenty-Two U.S.
Policy Prescriptions (New York: Council on Foreign Relations, 2020), 24, http://cdn.cfr
.org/sites/default/files/report_pdf/CSR85_Blackwill_China.pdf.
44. Oddly, some European NATO member states could make the 2 percent target this year
because of collapsing GDP, which just demonstrates the weakness of the target, but
very quickly there will be significant downward pressure on the defense budget.
45. European Commission, Trade SIA on the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership
(TTIP) Between the EU and the USA, Draft Interim Technical Report, prepared by
Ecorys, May 2016, http://trade-sia.com/ttip/wp-content/uploads/sites/6/2014/02
/TSIA-TTIP-draft-Interim-Technical-Report.pdf.
46. Regarding Indian views of the China threat, see Robert D. Blackwill and Ashley J.
Tellis, “The India Dividend: New Delhi Remains Washington’s Best Hope in Asia,”
Foreign Affairs, September/October 2019, http://foreignaffairs.com/articles/india
/2019-08-12/india-dividend.
47. Unfortunately, the Trump administration refused to join international discussions on
the coronavirus vaccine. See William Booth, Carolyn Y. Johnson, and Carol Morello,
“The World Came Together for a Virtual Vaccine Summit. The U.S. Was Conspicuously
Absent.,” Washington Post, May 4, 2020, http://washingtonpost.com/world/europe/the
-world-comes-together-for-a-virtual-vaccine-summit-the-us-is-conspicuously-absent
/2020/05/04/ac5b6754-8a5c-11ea-80df-d24b35a568ae_story.html.
48. Courtney J. Fung and Shing-Hon Lam, “China Already Leads 4 of the 15 U.N.
Specialized Agencies—and Is Aiming for a 5th,” Washington Post, March 3, 2020,
Endnotes 31
41. http://washingtonpost.com/politics/2020/03/03/china-already-leads-4-15-un
-specialized-agencies-is-aiming-5th.
49. William Nordhaus, “The Climate Club: How to Fix a Failing Global Effort,” Foreign
Affairs, May/June 2020, http://foreignaffairs.com/articles/united-states/2020-04-10
/climate-club.
50. This prescription draws on Blackwill, Implementing Grand Strategy Toward China:
Twenty-Two U.S. Policy Prescriptions, 41.
51. On this shift in China’s intentions under Xi Jinping see Daniel Tobin, How Xi Jinping’s
“New Era” Should Have Ended U.S. Debate on Beijing’s Ambitions (Washington, DC:
Center for Strategic and International Studies, 2020), http://csis.org/analysis/how-xi
-jinpings-new-era-should-have-ended-us-debate-beijings-ambitions.
52. See Martin Indyk, “The Middle East Isn’t Worth It Anymore,” Wall Street Journal,
January 17, 2020, http://wsj.com/articles/the-middle-east-isnt-worth-it-anymore
-11579277317.
53. Assuming that the Trump administration does not seek an extension, the New
Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty (START) will expire weeks after the inauguration
of the U.S. president in 2021. The new president should immediately begin talks with
Russia to extend the treaty. If Russia interferes in the U.S. presidential election and
the United States imposes new sanctions, Washington should reject any attempt by
Moscow to link a nuclear arms control agreement to a softening of U.S. sanctions.
32 Endnotes
42. ABOUT THE AUTHORS
Robert D. Blackwill is the Henry A. Kissinger senior fellow for
U.S. foreign policy at the Council on Foreign Relations. He is also the
Diller-von Furstenberg Family Foundation distinguished scholar at the
Henry A. Kissinger Center for Global Affairs at Johns Hopkins Univer-
sity’s School of Advanced International Studies. He is a former deputy
assistant to the president, deputy national security advisor for strate-
gic planning, and presidential envoy to Iraq under President George
W. Bush. He was U.S. ambassador to India from 2001 to 2003. In 2016
he became the first U.S. ambassador to India since John Kenneth Gal-
braith to receive the Padma Bhushan Award from the government of
India for distinguished service of a high order. From 1989 to 1990, he
was special assistant to President George H.W. Bush for European and
Soviet affairs, during which he was awarded the Commander’s Cross
of the Order of Merit by the Federal Republic of Germany for his con-
tribution to German unification. Earlier in his career, he was the U.S.
ambassador to conventional arms negotiations with the Warsaw Pact,
director for European affairs at the National Security Council, princi-
pal deputy assistant secretary of state for political-military affairs, and
principal deputy assistant secretary of state for European affairs. Black-
will is the author and editor of many articles and books on transatlantic
relations, Russia and the West, the greater Middle East, and Asian secu-
rity. His latest book, War by Other Means: Geoeconomics and Statecraft,
coauthored with Jennifer M. Harris, was named a best foreign policy
book of 2016 by Foreign Affairs. He is the author of the Council Spe-
cial Reports Trump’s Foreign Policies Are Better Than They Seem (April
2019) and Implementing Grand Strategy Toward China: Twenty-Two U.S.
Policy Prescriptions (January 2020).
About the Authors 33
43. Thomas Wright is the director of the Center on the United States
and Europe and a senior fellow in the Project on International Order
and Strategy at the Brookings Institution. He is also a contributing
writer for the Atlantic and a nonresident fellow at the Lowy Institute
for International Policy. He was previously executive director of studies
at the Chicago Council on Global Affairs and a lecturer at the Univer-
sity of Chicago’s Harris School of Public Policy. He is the author of All
Measures Short of War: The Contest for the 21st Century and the Future of
American Power, which was published by Yale University Press in May
2017. Wright has a doctorate from Georgetown University, a master of
philosophy from Cambridge University, and a bachelor’s and a mas-
ter’s from University College Dublin. He has also held a predoctoral
fellowship at Harvard University’s Belfer Center for Science and Inter-
national Affairs and a postdoctoral fellowship at Princeton University.
34 About the Authors