Sunday, May 15, 2011

The Cairo connection

TOP ARTICLE


Many people wonder if the crisis in Egypt, leading to Hosni Mubarak's resignation on February 11, might spur similar popular upheaval for regime change in Asia. Asia has no shortage of potential candidates, including the biggest of them all: China. Then there are also Vietnam,
Burma and North Korea.

In East Asia, one finds many recent assertions of 'people's power' that one saw in the streets of Cairo: the
Philippines in 1986 and 2001 when surging crowds ousted presidents Marcos and Estrada respectively, and Thailand in 2008, when protests ended the remnant of the Thaksin Shinawatra regime. But the situation in Asia is quite different. Asia has already seen more transitions to democracy than the Middle East. Although many Asian countries are not paragons of liberal democracy, outright dictatorships in the region have fallen in number relative to the past and to democratic or semi-democratic governments.

At 30 years, the Mubarak regime held power far longer than any regime in Asia under the same leader. The leader's persona matters, as change of the top leader may mitigate popular anger even if the regime remains in place.
China and Vietnam have replaced their top leadership before they became lightning rods for popular anger. Indonesia's Suharto might have averted catastrophe for himself and his nation by following a similar path before it was too late, as Malaysia's Mahathir did a few years later. In Singapore, the ruling People's Action Party regularly replenishes its top leader, even Lee Kuan Yew, despite his high popularity.

Another obvious difference is that authoritarian governments in Asia, with the exception of Burma and North Korea, enjoy an impressive economic record. Although claims that authoritarianism promotes economic growth are highly spurious, there is less doubt that growth prolongs authoritarian rule. And economic downturns can bring about regime change, as happened to Indonesia's Suharto.

Egypt's economic performance under Mubarak has been highly uneven, compounded by corruption and rising inequities.
Egypt demonstrates what democratic transition scholars have called democratisation's "snowballing effect". After being ignited by the Ben Ali regime's fall in Tunisia, unrest in Egypt threatens to spread to other countries. Jordan and the Gulf states, Saudi Arabia included, are understandably nervous. But such snowballing has rarely happened in Asia. A few years ago, democratic change in Indonesia spurred 'reformasi' in Malaysia. But its effect was limited.

Until his unceremonious exit, Mubarak was a model US ally. He played closely by the script written in Washington, maintaining peace with
Israel, and fighting the war on terror, in return for $1.5 billion in annual US aid, much of it to support the military. Yet, the Obama administration, after an initial moment of confusion - perhaps underestimating the force of popular sentiment in Cairo - moved quickly and decisively to distance itself from Mubarak as protests mounted. In the end, it chose to side with the protesters. One lesson that America's Asian allies might draw is what it means to be a close US ally. This could be a real worry for pro-US authoritarian regimes in Asia: when the chips are down, they might be abandoned despite a record of steadfast loyalty.

Perhaps they need not worry too much. The Obama administration's response to Egypt does not have anything that might remotely suggest that the US will adopt a more vigorous policy of democracy promotion in Asia. The Economist magazine asks whether events in Egypt and the Arab world might vindicate George W Bush's policy of seeking regime change in
Iraq and promoting democracy in the Middle East. The answer has to be a clear no. Bush wanted to impose regime change from above, the Egyptian case is regime change from below. Bush's real motive was not democracy but revenge.

The crisis in Egypt is also a reminder of the debate over the impact of democratisation for conflict and violence. By Asian standards, the revolution in Egypt has been relatively peaceful thus far. According to
Amnesty International, perhaps 1,000 people died in the Tiananmen Square protests in 1989 in Beijing (the Chinese Red Cross estimates double that figure). Indonesia's democratic transition might have claimed 19,000 lives in various forms of violence, including communal strife, and secessionist conflicts in East Timor and Aceh.

The issue is not just what Egypt means for East Asia, but also what
East Asia means for Egypt. In South Korea and Indonesia, Asia does seem to provide models for Egypt to achieve stability through the democratic path. Indonesia is a more relevant model. Like Egypt, it is a large Muslim nation and home to extremist groups like Jemaah Islamiyah that is more shadowy and violent than Egypt's Muslim Brotherhood. While South Korea's democratic transition came with robust economic growth, Indonesia's took place on the throes of a severe economic downturn. The accompanying malaise of impoverishment, corruption and lack of accountability is similar to Egypt's predicament.

A major difference is that the Egyptian military is far more entrenched in special privileges - fostered by US aid - than its Indonesian counterpart in Suharto's heydays. But it is possible to imagine an Indonesian-style democratisation in Egypt that progressively reduces the military's role and encourages multiparty electoral democracy.

The writer is professor of international relations,
American University, Washington DC.

The “Most Important Relationship” in the World? Forget It

Amitav Acharya

Published in:
The Jakarta Globe, January 25, 2011
East Asia Forum, January 25, 2011
The Mark, January 25, 2011
Times of India (Crest Edition): February 5, 2011



 
No one should be disappointed by the outcome of the US-China summit in Washington on 19th January, because nothing much was expected from it. For Hu, it was a ‘legacy’ visit, his swansong as the head of the world’s most populous and potentially most powerful nation before stepping down as the leader of the Communist Party of China in 2012. The Obama White House obliged by allowing him to make the first state visit to the White House by a Chinese leader since Jiang Jemin in 1997.

This too is not surprising. During the past year China’s image and soft power has taken a battering, especially in the Asia Pacific, where it rekindled mistrust by asserting claims over South China Sea, refusing to condemn North Korea for its aggressive tactics towards the South and restricting exports of rare earth elements. The US has gained considerable mileage out of these Chinese missteps, despite the Chinese snub to Obama at the Copenhagen climate talks in December 2009, and Beijing’s harsh condemnation of the $6.4 billion US arms sale to Taiwan and the Dalai Lama visit to the White House. As fears of China are rekindled in Asia by Beijing’s own assertiveness, there is a new recognition of America’s role there as the provider of security. The Obama administration could thus afford to look generous and reward China for taking some conciliatory steps in the months leading to the Hu visit- like letting its currency appreciate a bit, and allowing a visit to China by Defense Secretary Robert Gates.


But for those who see the US and China as leaders of the 21st century global order, the summit holds an important lesson: while the unipolar moment international relations is over, it will not be replaced by a China-US duopoly, at least an effective one, that addresses the global challenges of our time.

No one can deny the power shift, although the US President did try. At their joint press conference, Obama told the visitor (and more to the American people perhaps): “we have to remind ourselves is that the United States’ economy is still three times larger than China’s despite having one-quarter of the population.” But just over a decade ago, in 2001, the US economy was more than 7 times larger than China’s.

To be sure, the US-China relationship is often touted as the most important relationship for the future of the world. But the Hu visit made two things very clear. First, America’s domestic politics would prevent the two sides from developing the trust needed for effective cooperation. Second, issues in the bilateral relationship take priority over tending to the problems of the world at large.

Even as the White House prepared to welcome Hu at the White House, across the Mall the Congress fumed by holding a hearing on human rights in China, blaming it for the largest number of political prisoners in the world (allegedly ‘millions’). The newly anointed speaker of the House of Representatives, John Boehner, refused the invitation to the White House dinner. And in an (unintended) show of bipartisanship that has all but vanished these days, Senate Majority leader Harry Reid called Hu a ‘dictator’ from his native Nevada.

The thrust of the entire visit has been on bilateral issues, America’s trade deficit, China’s currency manipulations and of course, China’s abysmal human rights record. Hu seemed more conciliatory than usual on human rights, keeping in mind his visit to Congress later (today). After initially avoiding a question on the subject (by citing a translation glitch) at his joint press conference with Obama, Hu replied to a follow-up that “China is always committed to the protection and promotion of human rights”, citing the “enormous progress, recognized widely in the world” it has made over the issue. But he also asked “to take into account the different and national circumstances when it comes to the universal value of human rights.”  The joint statement noted “significant differences” over the issue, especially the Chinese insistence that “there should be no interference in any country's internal affairs.”

East Asia Forum

Over global governance issues, Hu mentioned at the Press conference China’s support for the G20 to play “a bigger role in international economic and financial affairs,” and to “work with the United States and other countries to effectively address global challenges” such as climate change and terrorism.

By all indications, the United States is coming to terms with the end of its G-1 world, although it is still impolite to mention the ‘D” word (decline) in Washington. While Secretary of State Hillary Clinton did talk about “the new American moment” in international affairs, it was a call for sharing the burden with others, including emerging powers (China being one but not the only one) of them. It also called for working through global and regional institutions to advance American interests.

When the United States replaced Britain as the global hegemon after the end of World War II, it was not shy of accepting international obligations and making sacrifices. Why is not China following the US path to global leadership, albeit a shared on with the US?

When the US under the Bush administration was riding high in the unipolar moment, China was [secretly) thrilled to be counted as the main challenger to US dominance. Many Chinese still do, but being a challenger is not the same as being a leader.

Some blame it on Deng Xiaoping, China’s late paramount leader, who is supposed to have warned against China becoming a leader in the world. But this is an urban myth. Deng was more nuanced and qualified, and China today is far more powerful than during Deng’s time. The Chinese are scared of global leadership because they it see it as a ploy to force them into prematurely accepting responsibilities that will undercut their ‘peaceful rise’. And the Chinese have dismissed the idea of a joint leadership with the United States, not because they do not relish the status that comes with it, but because it calls for sacrifices that they are unwilling to make, like accepting significant binding cuts in their carbon emissions.

If the burden of domestic politics and bilateral mistrust limits the ability of the United States and China to jointly manage global issues, it leaves room for others, India, Europe, Canada and other G-20 nations, to step in and have their say.  For them, this may be the good news from the US-China Summit.

(The author is Professor of International Relations at American University, Washington, D.C. and a Senior fellow of the Asia Pacific Foundation of Canada)