The Global Power Shift



Paddy Ashdown, British politician and diplomat, claims that we are living in a moment in history where power is changing in ways it never has before.

He states that this trend started when power passed from the old nations, the old powers of Europe, across the Atlantic to the new emerging power of the United States of America -- the beginning of the American century. Of course, into this vacuum left by the old European powers’ war games came the two bloody catastrophes of the last century -- the two great World Wars.
The shifts of power that are now occurring to the world are frightening, because this has never happened before. We have seen lateral shifts of power -- the power of Greece passing on to Rome and the power shifts that occurred during the European civilizations -- but we are seeing something slightly different. Power is not just moving laterally from nation to nation, but is also moving vertically.
Civilizations started gathering around seas -- with the first ones around the Mediterranean, the more recent ones around the Atlantic. It seems that we're now seeing a fundamental shift of power, broadly speaking, away from nations gathered around the Atlantic seaboard to the nations gathered around the Pacific rim. It has begun with economic power - the way it has always begun. We are already beginning to see the development of foreign policies, the augmentation of military budgets occurring in the other growing powers in the world. This is not just a shift from the West to the East; this is something different. 

Up until now, the United States has been the dominant feature of our world. They will remain to be the world’s most powerful but in an increasingly multi-polar world. We already begin to see the alternative centers of power building up -- in China, of course. But China's ascent to greatness is not going to be smooth. It's going to be quite grumpy as China begins to democratize her unwieldy society after liberalizing her economy.

We are now reaching the end of 400 years when Western power was enough. Many people say that the Chinese will never get themselves involved in peace-making, multilateral peace-making around the world. But they are already involved. How many Chinese troops are serving under the blue beret, serving under the blue flag, serving under the U.N. command in the world today? 3,700. How many Americans? 11?. In fact, there are more Filipinos at any one time in the U.N. command. What is the largest naval contingent tackling the issue of Somali pirates? The Chinese naval contingent of course! They are a mercantilist nation. They want to keep all sea lanes open, including the West Philippine Sea leading to the Malacca Straits. Increasingly, we are going to have to do business with people with whom we do not share values, but with whom, for the moment, we share common interests. It's a whole new different way of looking at the world that is now emerging.

There's another factor that is totally different. Today in our modern world, because of the Internet, because of Facebook, Twitter and other social media, everything is connected to everything. We are now interdependent. We are now interlocked, as nations, as individuals, in a way which has never been the case before. The interrelationship of nations has always existed. Diplomacy is about managing the interrelationship of nations. But now we are intimately locked together. You get swine flu in Mexico which is going to be a problem for Charles de Gaulle Airport 24 hours later. Lehman Brothers goes down the drain and the whole lot collapses. When there are fires in the steppes of Russia, it causes food riots in Africa. 

We are all now deeply, deeply, deeply interconnected. And what that means is the idea of a nation acting alone, not connected with others, not working with others is no longer a viable proposition. Because the actions of a nation state are neither confined to it, nor is it sufficient for the nation state itself to control its own territory, because the effects outside the nation state are now beginning to affect what happens inside them.

In olden times wars were small. At that time, the defense of a country was about one thing and one thing only: how strong was our army, how strong was our air force, and how strong was our navy and how strong our allies were. That was when the enemy was outside the walls. Now the enemy is inside the walls. Now if I want to talk about the defense of my country, I have to speak to the Minister of Health because pandemic disease is a threat to my security, I have to speak to the Minister of Agriculture because food security is a threat to my security, I have to speak to the Minister of Industry because the fragility of our hi-tech infrastructure is now a point of attack for our enemies -- as we see from cyber warfare -- I have to speak to the Minister of Home Affairs because one who has entered my country, who lives in that terraced house in that inner city has a direct affect on what happens in my country -- as the New Yorkers saw in the 9/11 bombings. It's no longer the case that the security of a country is simply a matter for its soldiers and its ministry of defense. It's its capacity to lock together its institutions.


This tells us something very important. It tells us that, in fact, our governments, vertically constructed, built on the economic model of the Industrial Revolution -- vertical hierarchy, specialization of tasks, command structures -- have got the wrong structures completely. Those in business know that the paradigm structure of our time is the network. It's your capacity to network that matters, both within your governments and externally.
In this modern age, where everything is connected to everything, the most important thing about what you can do is what you can do with others. The most important bit about your structure -- whether you're a government, whether you're an army regiment, whether you're a business -- is your docking points, your interconnectors, your capacity to network with others. That is understood in industry; not in governments.

Finally, we should realize that we are now locked together in a way that has never been quite the same before. Suddenly and for the very first time, collective defense is no longer enough. It used to be the case that if my tribe was more powerful than their tribe, I was safe; if my country was more powerful than their country, I was safe; my alliance, like NATO, was more powerful than their alliance, I was safe. It is no longer the case. The advent of the interconnectedness and of the weapons of mass destruction means that, increasingly, I share a destiny with my enemy.

One of the great barriers to peace in the Middle East is that both sides, both Israel and the Palestinians, do not understand that they do share a collective destiny. So suddenly, what has been the proposition of visionaries and poets down the ages becomes something we have to seriously face as a matter of public policy.

But who is the enemy? It’s a brand new ball game. Look up beyond our mortal selves.

Based on Paddy Ashdown’s fearless forecast at Ted Talk

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