The following are extracts from an interesting piece written by
Gideon Rachman and published on Dec. 18 by the Financial Times (with
underlining and bracketed additions by APS): "There are some events
that change the world in an instant: the fall of the Berlin wall; the
tanks rolling into Tiananmen Square; the aeroplanes flying into the
World Trade Centre.
"So far, there have been no such defining moments in 2007...
But it makes it both trickier and more interesting to carry out my
annual end-of-year exercise - listing the five most important events of
the past 12 months... So here goes:
"January: The surge (in Iraq). It is too soon to tell
whether...President...Bush's decision to increase the number of
American troops in Iraq will go down as the moment when the US began to
turn the situation around; or just a last, failed throw of the dice. The
big questions still have to be answered. Is a civil war in the offing?
What will happen when America withdraws its extra troops?
"Even so, it is already clear that the surge was a major
event. It demonstrated that Mr. Bush had decided to reject the Baker
report, which was widely assumed to be America's exit strategy. By
the end of the year, the drop in violence in Iraq - in particular, in
Baghdad - had begun to win round some of the surge sceptics. Even the
leading Democratic candidates for the presidency are refusing to promise
that all US troops will be out of Iraq by 2013. The surge showed that
America is in Iraq for the long haul.
"February: Vladimir Putin's Munich speech. The Russian
president signalled a new mood in his country's foreign policy with
an extraordinary and angry speech, in which he accused the Americans of
'an almost uncontained hyper use of force...that is plunging the
world into an abyss of conflicts'.
"The Putin speech heralded a year in which Russia has been
increasingly assertive on everything from missile defence to Kosovo to
arms control and energy policy. A high oil price and a booming domestic
economy have boosted the government's confidence. Assertiveness
overseas has been matched by growing authoritarianism at home. Russia
thinks it is back and it wants the world to know.
"August: the credit crunch. America's housing-lending
crisis emerged during the summer and is still unfolding. It may yet turn
out to be 'just' a financial and economic problem. If that
turns out to be the case, the credit crunch would not deserve a place in
a list of the five most important geopolitical events of the year. But
American consumers' ability to keep buying has been fundamental to
the world economy in recent years.
"If the subprime problem puts a stop to that - and leads
indirectly to further falls in the value of the dollar - there will be
global political implications. Chinese-US relations will deteriorate;
the European economy will come under pressure, as will the entire global
trading system. America will find it harder to pay the bills that come
with being the world's policeman. It is worth remembering that the
backdrop to the political turmoil of the 1930s was the Wall Street crash
of 1929.
"November: PetroChina becomes the world's most valuable
company. Yes, there were plenty of reasons why this was a bit of a
mirage. Only 2.2 per cent of the company was floated on the Shanghai
Stock Exchange. The company's valuation at more than $1,000 bn -
double the value of America's ExxonMobil - certainly reflected the
bubble in Chinese stocks.
"Within a month, PetroChina had lost a third of its value
(although this still made it worth more than Exxon). Still, the fact
that the world's most highly valued company is now Chinese has an
undeniable symbolic punch. And PetroChina is no fluke. Four of the 10
most valuable firms in the world are now Chinese.
"November: President Pervez Musharraf's (Nov. 3)
mini-coup in Pakistan. If you are listing events of global significance,
why pick one country rather than another? I could make a case for the
(May) election of President Nicolas Sarkozy in France; or the (June)
resignation of Tony Blair in Britain; or the fracturing of the
Palestinian (National) Authority; or Hugo Chavez's (Dec. 2)
referendum defeat in Venezuela; or the AKP's (July 22) election
victory in Turkey, which ended that country's constitutional crisis
and entrenched civilian rule; or, indeed, for long-term trends that made
headlines - such as the rise in the oil price and the melting of the
Arctic.
"Instead, I have gone for General Musharraf's declaration
of a state of emergency (which he lifted on Dec. 15). Pakistan is the
country where all the trickiest issues in American foreign policy seem
to come together. It is US policy to promote democracy, to attack
terrorism and to crack down on nuclear proliferation. Yet in Pakistan
the US finds itself allied to a military regime, a nuclear proliferator
and an uncertain and ambiguous ally in the wars on terror and on the
Taliban in Afghanistan.
"Gen Musharraf's decision to hang on to power and lock up
the country's judges was a severe embarrassment to the West - and a
testament to just how unstable Pakistan remains. But America has stuck
with him because all the plausible alternatives seem worse.
"Is there a common theme linking these five events? Clearly.
The link is the growing strain on the world's sole superpower.
America is locked into a draining and demoralising war. Russia, an old
adversary, is becoming more assertive. China, a new rival, is on the
rise. Pakistan, a vital ally, threatens to fall apart. The US economy is
under more strain than for years...".
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