The
Age of fuzzy bifurcation:
Lessons
from the pandemic and the Ukraine War
PDF Version
By: Prof. Richard Higgott, Prof. Simon Reich
First published:
September 12th 2022
Global Policy Journal
Abstract
Academics,
decision-makers, and policy makers have suggested that COVID and the war in
Ukraine represent an ‘inflection point’. The consequence will be ‘the end of globalisation’, ‘a bipolar Cold War 2.0’ and a return to
Containment. In reality, the emerging world order is
much messier. The logics of geoeconomics and geopolitics, largely aligned
during the Cold War, are now in tension, ruptured by decades of globalisation, America’s decline, and China’s ascent.
Consequently, US security allies now often wrestle with the fact that their
economic ties link them to US rivals, notably China, or adversaries, like
Russia. The pandemic and war have wrought geopolitical and economic
adjustments, but any resemblance to Cold War blocs is superficial. What is
consolidating is an era best described as fuzzy bifurcation. Unlike the Cold
War, alliances will be tenuous across policy domains. With this greater
latitude, even small and medium-sized states may band-wagon on security but
will balance, hedge and even pursue strategic autonomy
in others. Terms like ‘allies’, ‘competitors’, ‘rivals’, and even ‘adversaries’
become contingent on the policy issue. It is a world that American and Chinese
policy makers will find challenging, indeed frustrating, because of the
inconstancy of allied behaviour.
Policy Implications
·
We describe and discuss the current
development of the global system which we characterise
as fuzzy bifurcation, where the patterns of globalisation
and new security requirements are in tension, unlike during the Cold War when
they were largely complementary.
·
We address the fact that policy domains
are now discreet, with allied relations, unlike during the Cold War, only
extending within each domain.
·
In this new strategic context, terms
like ‘allies’, ‘competitors’ ‘rivals’, and even ‘adversaries’ become contingent
on the specific policy issue.
·
Globalisation
will not ‘end’. Rather states and the private sector will adapt as its
tentacles are rerouted.
·
China and the US will remain the
dominant powers. But managing allies will be circumscribed by the enhanced, if
still limited, autonomy enjoyed by smaller states. It is a world that policy
makers will find challenging, indeed frustrating.
·
Russia may become more dependent on
China but will adapt and endure.
·
Europeans may bandwagon on the US for security
but will adopt markedly different strategies over other policy issues.
1. INTRODUCTION:
CONVERGENCE OR DIVERGENCE IN TWO WORLD ORDERS?
The
logics of economics and politics aligned during the Cold War. Together they
created two self-contained spheres. The Western economic sphere consisted of
North America, Europe, Japan, South Korea, Australia, and a group of
post-colonial states who nonetheless remained dependent on foreign direct
investment, trade and the monopoly transportation
links of the former colonial power. American dominance was predicated on three
pillars: multinational corporations, nuclear capacity
and the role of the dollar (Gilpin, 1987). America’s imperialist designs found
parallels in Russia’s dominance of the Soviet Union and the Warsaw bloc
(Anderson, 2015). Non-aligned states – notably the Group of 77 at the UN
General Assembly – wistfully advocated the creation of a New International
Economic Order (Cox, 1979).
The
logic of geopolitics followed the same parameters as the geoeconomic. European
states sheltered under the American nuclear umbrella. Soviet dominance was
evident in its invasions of Hungary and Czechoslovakia. Although China’s fraying
alliance with the Soviet Union fractured after Richard Nixon’s successful
Sino–American rapprochement in the early 1970s, the term ‘spheres of influence’
accurately reflected the twin, compatible logics of economics and geopolitics.
Those spheres may not have been hermetically sealed. Yet there were few grey
zones. But that was then.
Contemporarily,
allusions of a return to a Cold War have been plentiful in the aftermath of the
pandemic and now the Ukraine war. It has reinforced a perception of history repeating
itself. Augmented by the language of decoupling and resilience, states seek a
more bounded capitalism (US Senate on Foreign Relations, 2021). The pandemic
exposed longstanding vulnerabilities in global supply chains for essential
elements like PPE equipment (Reich & Dombrowski, 2021). Vulnerabilities now
extend to computer chips and the supply of natural resources and staples
(James, 2022). Niall Ferguson and other pundits refer to ‘Cold War 2’, albeit
with a focus on China and not Russia as the West’s primary adversary
(Goldstein, 2021; Naqvi, 2022). The implication is that we have reached an
‘inflection point’ (Heusgen, 2022).
This
vision assumes that the processes of globalisation of
the last thirty years – of economic liberalisation
and political democratisation – is ending (Posen,
2022). BlackRock CEO Larry Fink, invoking Cold War imagery, suggested the
Ukraine war presages globalisation’s retreat (The
Financial Times, 24 March 2022). More subtly, Dani Rodrik ponders whether ‘hyperglobalization’ may be over (quoted in Wong, 2022).
Others have suggested the world is splitting in two (Schuman, 2022). Many
believe global supply chains are unravelling and the sanctions regime initiated
against Russia is a prelude to wider constraints on the movement of goods and
capital (Sonnenfeld et al., 2022). This gloomy scenario was even captured at
the 2022 Davos conference where its traditional discourse of ‘one world globalisation’ was jettisoned in favour
of a discourse on the geo-politics of division (Leonard, 2022).
Accompanying
this view of a global order composed of spheres is the claim that the strategy
of containment should be resurrected (Daalder, 2022; Larson, 2021). This
implicitly assumes that declining American power will lead to a multipolar
structure. Proponents of this view focus on the emergence of new powers such as
India (Borrell, 2021), other BRICS, and the EU’s claims to the viability of
strategic autonomy (Borrell & Breton, 2020). Analysts believe that the
growth of German defence expenditure and a greater
focus on pan-EU military operational integration through vehicles such as the
Permanent Structured Cooperation (PESCO) will facilitate that process.1 Russia
in this formulation will remain a pole. The war may have exposed its
demographic, economic and logistical frailties, but it remains a nuclear power,
a major energy producer and source of staples for nonwestern customers. Many
states remain willing to side with Russia against the West. China will not want
to upset Russia by trying to establish a bilateral condominium with the USA.
(Stent, 2022). Multipolarity will therefore prevail.
The
weakness of this argument is that multipolar nodes (like India) are still in
the process of developing. Others, like Russia and the EU, have their own
limitations. In contrast, America’s, and China’s capabilities – from the
military to the diplomatic and economic – are unrivaled. China’s position will
likely continue to strengthen. Its share of the global economy grew from 6.9
per cent to 16.8 per cent between 2000 and 2018 as the G8’s combined share
declined from 47 per cent to 34.7 per cent. Given its population size, even
productivity at half that of the US would mean China’s economy will be larger
than the US and the EU combined by 2050 (Lin, 2022).
This
evidence prompts critics of multipolarity to identify a return to a bipolar
world where Europe, at best, plays a supporting role to the United States.
Equally, weakened rather than strengthened by its foolish military adventurism,
Russia will be forced to play the same role for China. The EU, Russia, India,
and Japan may have major populations, economic weight
or military capability. But none have all three. Only the USA and China possess
all these attributes (Hass, 2022). By implication, a structural realist logic
of bipolarity should prevail (Waltz, 1979).
The
temptation to announce a profound, irreversible shift in the world order, be it
a return to bipolarity or multipolarity, is therefore tempting. It is the
stock-in-trade of the ‘courageous’ or ‘heroic’ observer of international
relations. Yet in reality, few single events – world
wars being the exception – have effects on the global system that Francis
Fukuyama (1992) attributed to the end of the Cold War, let alone a war in
Ukraine.
Our
aim here is to caution against these grand generalisations.
We challenge both the bipolar and multipolar positions. We do not accept that
the logic of economics simply follows that of geopolitics, as both positions
largely assume. For sure, events occasion change in practices and thinking. But
ideas, structures, and processes rarely all become redundant overnight or,
indeed, at one and the same time. Humans remain as mobile as they have in
recent decades, as does trade and finance. Circumstances may influence the
level or direction of these flows without changing the systemic pattern. The
tentacles of globalisation will adapt, not retreat.
China and the USA may seek to create strongly complementary economic and
political spheres. But they will fail, as largely will their efforts to create
consistent all-embracing alliance structures. Instead, alliances will largely operate
in terms of a particular policy issue. States will hedge between the USA and
China when it suits their interests. We therefore use this article to
disentangle the two logics of economics and geopolitics, seeing them more as
countervailing logics that generate a complex system best described as fuzzy
bifurcation.
The
essentials of fuzzy bifurcation reflect in part what Amitav Acharya (2017,
2018) has nicely described as the emergence of a multiplex world. In this
multiplex world, fuzziness reflects a plethora of indistinct lines that
contrast with the relative clarity of the Cold War. It is bifurcated because
the global system is indeed offered contrasting choices by two states with a
preponderance of material resources aiming to expand their influence. Fuzziness
is so titled because it is characterised by three
major features. First, a hybridity of actors, strategies and behaviour governed by normative interests such as nativism,
populism and identitarianism. This is distinct from
the collective universal and cosmopolitan values normally associated with norm
construction that have been embedded in the International Liberal Order. It
explains the lack of traction of Biden’s appeal to a community of democracies.
Second, policy domains are porous because alliance boundaries are not
hermetically sealed. States therefore have a greater temptation to hedge
between China and the USA, or bandwagon with one of them, demonstrating a
consistency in terms of their interests but not in terms of their loyalty to
either power. The world is bifurcating, but not bipolar. Finally, and largely
consequentially, while the US (and now China) are growing materially stronger
in absolute terms, their influence over smaller states is becoming more
constrained and conditional. Their immense power does not axiomatically
translate into influence over the policy choices of other states. Actors’
autonomy increases as they are released from the shackles of Cold War alliance
structures (or US hegemony). Even the closest of allies are generally
unreliable across policy domains, often drawn by ambivalent or competing
security and economic interests, as Turkey’s membership of NATO but continued
dalliance with Vladimir Putin repeatedly demonstrates.
These
three characteristics are symptomatic of a post-Cold War tension between the
logics of politics and economics. In contrast to the realist assumption of
either bipolarity or multipolarity, politics (and security concerns) dominate
under certain conditions, but economic concerns do so under others. Which is
more important and when is not as easy to determine as the scholars of
geo-politics and strategy on the one hand, and geo-economics and finance on the
other, would have us believe.2
The
consequences of fuzzy bifurcation are the subject of the paper. It is divided
into six sections. The following section examines the resilience of the logic
of international economics driving globalisation.
Section 3 evaluates the logic underpinning the recent resurgence of
geopolitics. Section 4 juxtaposes these two logics to show how the symbiosis
that infused their relationship during the Cold War no longer exists in the
unfolding fuzzy bifurcation process. This, we argue, makes the prospect of a
new ‘Cold War 2.0’ unlikely. We show how the rise of geo-politics is indeed
changing the strategies of states towards globalisation
without ending it. Section 5 explains why this is the case. As a more accurate
way of depicting unfolding global processes – rather than a return to Cold War
disciplines – we further discuss the features of fuzzy bifurcation. In Section
6 we consider how it will affect the two major players – the USA and China – as
well as Europe’s options in the context of these fuzzy great power relations,
before concluding with reflections on its future.
2. THE LOGIC OF
ECONOMICS AND THE CONTINUITY OF GLOBALISATION
As
Adam Tooze (2022a) has suggested, continuity is
strongly embedded in the current logic of economics. The Hayekian neoliberal
version that dominated much of the post-Cold War era, reinforced after the
financial crisis of 2007–09, has not been derailed. Indeed, globalisation’s
processes, systems of innovation, sourcing and production have remained
globally embedded. Nativism and populist politics in Europe and the United
States, fuelled by globalisation’s
unequal distribution of benefits, has promoted hostility to its central tenets.
But as a market-based system of global exchange, it resiliently adapts when necessary, continually serving the interests of
the most powerful economic actors. Despite Donald Trump’s protectionist trade
measures, many retained by Joe Biden, American high-tech and financial services
remain reliant on the global trading system.
The
same is true for China, a growth-oriented economy with primary exports markets
in Europe and the United States. In addition, many other states (across, for
example, East and South Asia) have enjoyed both unprecedented development and
growth through greater integration into the global economy. Indeed, critically,
the same logic even applies to Russia’s failing oligarchical economy. As has
long been the case, it must export its fossil fuels and wheat to pay for its
military and suppress or bribe its citizenry (for a discussion see Friedman,
2006). This same economic logic has even led western allies, like Saudi Arabia,
to resist geopolitical pressure to no more than nominally increase oil
production despite Biden’s pleading, aware that European customers have few
alternative options. Oil and gas prices soared – and, with them inflation in
the West – as the economic logic of globalisation has
continued to play out.
This
power of the market is nowhere more apparent than in the US–China economic
relationship, the largest bilateral one in the world despite the Trump
administration’s tariffs. In 2020, $559.2 billion in total (two-way) goods were
traded; trade in services with China (exports and imports) totaled an estimated
$56.0 billion; China was America’s third largest goods export market (after
Canada and Mexico) and its largest supplier of goods imports. US foreign direct
investment in China totaled $124 billion, while China’s in the US was $38
billion (USTR, n.d.). While both the Biden administration and the Chinese
government have embarked on accelerating decoupling, this is unlikely to
dramatically change the economic relationship (see Bateman, 2022). With a few
exceptions, American firms, are reluctant de-couplers (McMorrow, 2021).
In
2020, China also overtook the US as the EU’s largest partner, with trade worth
$709bn. This reflected a trend dating back to 2011, with European-China exports
and imports growing largely uninterrupted (Eurostat, 2022). By the end of 2019,
EU direct investment in China totalled €362 billion
and Chinese investment in the EU €255 billion. Again, efforts at de-coupling and
sanctions will not significantly alter the dynamic nature of the relationship.
In sum, the West and China’s economies are so inextricably integrated that
processes of de-coupling would be complex and extremely painful in terms of
product shortages, increased inflation and lost
revenue.
Russia
further illustrates globalisation’s enduring
processes. The focus has been on how the sanction regime will affect Russia’s
resource-based economy, with aggregate revenues constituting 45 per cent of
Russia’s federal budget (IEA, 2022). The early evidence is that it will be
severe, at least in the short term (Sonnenfeld et al., 2022). But Russia will
nonetheless remain part of the economic global system, as its exports turn to
Asia and possibly Africa through those very market structures that globalisation has created. Meanwhile, European
diversification away from Russian oil and gas will remain slow and problematic
(S&P Global, 2022). Indeed, some of the short-term effects of the war have
proved beneficial to Russia as prices and revenues increased through the summer
of 2022 and the threat of winter shortages loomed. (Nanji,
2022). Regardless of Europe’s publicly declared intension to ban Russian gas
and coal, it continues to pay massive sums to Russia (Tooze,
2022b). Yes, the EU and USA have tightened sanctions, but loopholes abound.
Countries who are nonparticipants in the sanction regime have signaled a
willingness to buy more Russian fossil fuels, and the rouble
quickly recovered the 40 per cent loss in value suffered at the outset of the
invasion of Ukraine, reaching a seven-year high by the start of summer 2022
(Hirsch P., 2022 and Karaian, 2022). Technical
factors, rather than economic health, may explain the rouble’s
rise. But the logic of natural resource dependency is evident. Russian gas
exported to Poland in 2021 represented 45 per cent of Poland’s consumption but
only 1 per cent of Russia gas production, demonstrating the asymmetric nature
of European gas dependence, the embedded character of globalisation
and the capacity of Russia to absorb losses in the European market until it
finds other customers. This last factor is key. Putin’s public support and the
willingness of Russians to sacrifice is finite. But the critical question is
whether both will last until Russia reorients to a new customer base. Gas and
oil are fungible but not as easy to sell when existing pipelines become
redundant.
Beyond
these largely bilaterally-specific examples, there are
three broader reasons for assuming that the core logic and operational form of globalisation will endure. First, any decline in
cross-border goods trade relative to global GDP long pre-dates the current
shocks and has largely been adjusted for. This should come as no surprise. The
efficiency gains in manufacturing as a result of the technologically-advanced
goods now traded internationally have grown significantly. Furthermore, China’s
domestic consumption has increased dramatically, as has its trade in services,
FDI and especially data flows as a result of the vast
expansion of digital networks (see Lamy & Suzuki, 2022). While the globally
integrative dynamics of digitalisation are as capable
of generating negative consequences as positive ones, their ubiquity – both
within and across borders – suggests their unwinding will be even more
difficult than dismantling supply chains. (Coyer & Higgott,
2020).
Second,
international supply chains – despite pressures for de-coupling – are often
becoming more specialised and difficult to unpick.
American legislation to enhance domestic production, events in Taiwan and
Chinese efforts to cultivate its own indigenous production capacity have drawn
attention to these difficulties. High-value, hard-to-produce specialist chips
are not easily pulled out of supply chains and their production continues to be
concentrated in R&D hubs (Beattie, 2022a). As things stand, supply chains
are finding it difficult to meet US and European demand in the current
inflationary context. For example, new EU investment in chip production through
the European Chips Act, the benefits of which will not materialise
until 2030, could be too little in terms of high-quality and too late in terms
of supply chain management in a world where the most sophisticated chips cannot
simply be replicated and fabricated (European Commission, 2022; Baraniuk, 2022). More generally, the value of goods traded
has bounced back strongly since the onset of COVID.
Third,
it is not easy to force states or companies to choose between America’s and
China’s competing visions of the global economy. Both present pros and cons on
issues such as access to capital, market structure and technology. Cold War
corporations may have been multinational. But today they are truly global, and
economic imperatives tends to trump ideology in corporate decision making. (see Doremus et al., 1999).
The
effects of the war on supplies and prices will of course continue to be
significant. All countries, not just Russia, will pay considerable adjustment
costs. But the immediate effects do not justify the assertion that globalisation will end. The longer-term trends have nothing
to do with either COVID or Ukraine. The patterns of economic globalisation will adapt and endure, albeit – like gas
pipelines – the routes of trade and investment flows may at times be forced to
change.
3. THE LOGIC OF
GEOPOLITICS AND EVOLVING ALLIANCE STRUCTURES
The
logic of a return to bipolarity has been widely advanced in the last decade and
not purely confined to American analysts, even if most vocally propagated by
them (quintessentially see Mearsheimer, 2010; Friedberg, 2018). Dating from the
Obama administration’s decision to reorient American forces towards Asia,
Russia’s revanchism was seen as a secondary threat to that of China. This was
further articulated by the Trump administration’s characterisation
of China and Russia in its 2017 National Security Strategy (The White House,
2017) and consolidated in the Biden administration’s 2021 Interim National
Security Strategy Guidance (The White House, 2021) with the latter’s focus on
the Indo-Pacific. But the American obsession with China extends beyond formal documents
into the think tanks of the Washington Beltway and academia (Ikenberry et al., 2022), both realms where consensus is
rare. The disagreement amongst them is how to address this growing bipolarity,
not whether it exists (see Blinken, 2022).
Essentially,
what we might call the ‘bipolarists’ are divided into
two groups with distinct, but compatible, perspectives. The first is a more
liberal Bidenesque position. It depicts a battle
between democracy and autocracy, albeit one that conveniently ignores two
facts: that some NATO members do not operate democratically (Hungary, Poland and Turkey); and some democratic states (India) are
unwilling to unequivocally position themselves as US allies, illustrated by the
refusal of many democracies to support transatlantic condemnation of Russia at
the United Nations nor participate in the imposition of sanctions (including
Brazil and Mexico). Nonetheless, Biden’s rhetoric of democracy has found
currency among the EU leadership team of Ursula Von der Leyen (Von der Leyen,
2022).
The
second position is populated by those American realists who eschew concerns
about human rights, focusing instead on American and Chinese material
capabilities and how they relate to emergent strategic threats and
opportunities (see Kupchan, 2022). They prioritise the security and military dimensions of the
international order engendered by the war in Ukraine (cf. Walt, 2022). Among
those relating the Ukraine war to bipolarity includes the ‘Westsplainers’
who blame its cause on the West’s encroachment onto the Russian sphere of
influence (for a discussion see Smoleński & Dutkiewicz, 2022) with Mearsheimer (2022) providing the
prime example. The consistency with which they focus on traditional realist
features – armaments, demographics, geography or the
national security aspects of natural resources – is striking. It is a
perspective reputedly shared by Putin himself (Cocco
& Ivanova, 2022).
Yet
this analysis largely ignores key economic factors beyond the commonplace
realist geo-political and security metrics of size of the economy, capacity to
produce the technologies capable of building military capacity or the domestic
ability to foster economic resilience. Bi-polarists
invariably understate the integrative economic logic of globalisation
(Kotkin, 2022). That might have been a justifiable
position during the Cold War, when the political blocs were also largely
economically insulated. But it is less so now. Andrew Bacevich, head of the
Washington-based Quincy Institute, with no sense of irony or self-reflection
about his own lack of understanding of the geo-economic dimension of the war,
excoriated Nobel Laureate Paul Krugman for his lack of credentials as a
strategist when Krugman (an ignorant economist) had the temerity to extol the
virtues of Biden’s Ukraine response. (Bacevich, 2022).
The
concept of grand strategy – recognised alternatively
as a state’s principles, plans or behaviour (Silove, 2017) – takes on new and intriguing dimensions in a
fuzzy world. Realists have consistently asserted that only great powers have
the sufficient resources to formulate and implement a grand strategy (Krasner,
2010). Murray (2011, pp. 1–2) asserts that ‘Grand Strategy is a matter
involving great states and great states alone’ and ‘no small states … possess
the possibility of crafting a grand strategy’. This is in part because realists
and liberals debate whether the purpose of American
grand strategising is to ‘control’ or ‘shape’ the
international system (see inter alia, Brooks et al., 2012/13, Ikenberry, 2011, Jervis et al., 2018; Posen, 2014). Small
and medium-sized powers, and other major actors such as the European Union, are by definition, excluded from consideration as possible
grand strategisers.
Yet
this claim requires further reflection on at least two scores. First, while
they may not be able to control or shape the global system (although Saudi
Arabians might contest even that claim when it comes to oil) even smaller
states can develop grand strategies designed to control or shape their neighbourhoods or even regions. There is little doubt that
North Korea shapes the geopolitics of North East Asia,
as Iran and Israel do in the Middle East. Second, the purpose of a grand
strategy may not even be designed to control or shape at all. Rather, it may be
to dynamically adapt to systemic changes, a concept (at least in principle)
considered by Ionut Popescu (2018) with his conceptualisation of an ‘emergent strategy’ dynamically
reacting to external changes.
It
is within this latter realm that the relevance of grand strategy to a fuzzy
world becomes most evident. The language of geo-politics distinguishes between
three strategies that states and an organisation like
the EU can employ when dealing with China and the United States. Bandwagoning entails consistently siding with the great
power with superior resources in a particular policy domain. Counterbalancing,
conversely, entails allying with the rising great power to avoid complete
dominance (Walt, 1987). Yet it is the third option, hedging – the cultivation
of a middle position to avoid choosing between other actors – that becomes most
relevant in a fuzzy world. As Lim & Cooper (2015, p. 698) suggest, hedging
involves ‘an alignment choice signaling an ambiguity over the extent of shared security
interests with great powers’. And Ciorciari
and Haacke (2019, p. 368) note, ‘Rather than taking
clear sides to address ascertained threats or ride the coattails of a surging
great power, many states’ behavior suggested efforts to mitigate risk in uncertain
strategic conditions. Scholars advanced the concept of hedging to fill the
gap’.
In
each case, the authors consider the context in which actors can avoid being
entrapped in a bipolar-style relationship where, effectively, they have to ally across policy domains. So, it is no surprise
that empirical studies of hedging often focus on Southeast Asia, where many
states share their largest trading relationship with China, even as they try
and shelter under the American security umbrella. However, a fuzzy world, as
opposed to a bipolar one, affords states and nonstate actors the greater
latitude to pursue grand strategies designed to adapt to China’s and the US’
demands, requests and suggestions in a way that was inconceivable during the
Cold War. This creates a situation where hedging is more accessible when, for
example, the logic of security points in one direction and the logic of
economics in another. In effect, the grand strategies of actors like the EU, as
well as small and medium-sized states becomes far more consequential, as
countries such as Turkey and Hungary, have demonstrated. Neither modern day
geopolitics nor geoeconomics resemble the alliance structure of the Cold War.
4. FUZZY BIFURCATION AS
AN UNFOLDING PROCESS
Yet
the global geopolitical system is dividing, while the global economic system is
adapting. The tentacles of the latter are deeply embedded, and many states and
corporations lack incentive to simply fall into one of two bipolar spheres.
Supply chains are highly interdependent. Americans can ban all Russian fossil
fuels because they don’t need them. Europe can sanction Russian coal because it
doesn’t need it. Starbucks can withdraw from the Russian market because, with
130 stores and 2000 employees, it is a small market and the cost of
transgressing sanctions and incurring public ire will be much greater. Even
McDonalds can bear the brunt of losing its Russian market, given that it and
Ukraine accounted for just three per cent of operating income before the war
(Koenig, 2022). Europe can even plan to ban the supply of Russian oil by the
end of 2022, although it won’t happen because Hungary and Slovakia are notably
exempt from the ban. But the same is untrue of Russian gas, where spiking
prices and European dependency are both short- and medium-term problems.
Highlighting European dependency, Russians make excuses in
order to cut supplies, toying with the Europeans over whether sanctions
will even allow them to accept back the turbine needed to fully operate Nord
Stream 1 (Chatterjee, 2022).
As
a process of fuzzy bifurcation unfolds, some states will consistently cleave to
the USA (like the UK), some to China (like Russia) because of a lack of
options. But many will hedge, interacting with both, depending on their
specific policy interests – be they trade and investment, digitalisation,
climate or energy. In contrast to the supposed
new-found unity of ‘the West’ (albeit fraying at the time of writing, even in
the USA itself (Telhami & Rouse, 2022)), no
country in Latin America, Africa or the Indo-Pacific
(apart from Australia, Japan, New Zealand, South Korea and a handful of other
countries) imposed sanctions on Russia in the opening months of the war (Oi,
2022). Interestingly, in the UN vote in March 2022 condemning Russia’s invasion
of Ukraine, 17 of the 35 countries that abstained were African (Olivier, 2022).
Also, many non-aligned countries are unlikely to support such resolutions,
given historical memories of treatment by (and a residual antipathy towards)
colonialism, and the anger enhanced by the maldistribution of covid vaccines (Dahir & Holder, 2021).
Contrary
to his strategic calculation, Vladimir Putin has – in the short-to-medium-term
at least – single-handedly revitalised NATO and the
concept of the West. But European unity will continue to be tested. Viktor Orban characterised the EU and
Ukraine’s leadership as ‘opponents’. The instrumental
nature of Turkey’s (currently on hold) opposition to Finland and Sweden’s
applications to NATO provides another example of the messier face of
multilateralism. Yet NATO – distained by Donald Trump and described as
‘brain-dead’ by Emmanuel Macron – has found new purpose. It is developing an
expanded role (feasibly) in the Arctic and (less feasibly) the Indo-Pacific.
It
is nonetheless helpful to locate the pandemic and the Ukraine war within the
increasingly fuzzy processes of the last three decades, the principal
highlights of which are not one-off events but China’s continual rise, the
USA’s loss of direction over time and the growth, and subsequent integrative
beneficial effects (as opposed to negative externalities) of globalisation and digitalisation.
China’s global expansion through greater trade, and activities, such as the
Belt and Road Initiative and the creation of the Asian Infrastructure
Investment Bank, has been unprecedented, clearly enhancing its global standing.
But it has been followed by missteps in the COVID era, such as its overly
assertive ‘Wolf Warrior’ diplomacy and what now appears to be its unfortunately
timed commitment to a ‘friendship without limits’ with Russia. China cannot now
disown Russia, its ally in its contest with the US over the world order’s
governing rules. So, there are two possible readings of China’s position
regarding the war. Positively, it may benefit from Russia’s greater dependence,
as there is no other major power with which Russia can align. Negatively, a
dependent Russia, at long-term odds with its European neighbours
and the USA, will provide baggage for a China for whom Europe and America will
always be more important economic partners. Diplomatic missteps regarding the
war could prove costly over the next decade as Europe becomes less forgiving of
China’s refusal to criticise Russian behaviour or if China is found abrogating sanctions.
The
USA has its own difficulties arising from a succession of poor policy choices:
four-trillion dollars spent on war and retrenchment in Afghanistan and Iraq;
the Trumpian disdain for global institutions and traditional alliances; and
domestic political polarisation and gridlock. All
have shaken American credibility and emboldened Vladimir Putin and Jinping Xi
to believe that they had sufficient leverage to pursue more aggressive
strategies towards America’s European allies. But rather than reinventing
American foreign policy, as William Burns (2020) advocated before becoming the
CIA’s director, Joe Biden (2022) has focused on restoring US leadership of the
West. He has returned to the familiar theme of democracy promotion and, like
his predecessor Donald Trump, the restoration of an American manufacturing
capacity to offset the global supply chain problems exposed by the pandemic and
the war. Following House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s visit to Taiwan, both have been
amplified by the prospect of a Chinese blockade or invasion of Taiwan from
where, crucially for the US, so many computer chips originate (The White House,
2021).
An
inherent weakness in Biden’s approach rests on his simplistic views of
‘democracy’ and ‘autocracy’. The American version of democracy has often simply
been a euphemism for exporting an unregulated neo-liberal version of
capitalism. While countries across Africa, Asia and Latin America have
generally eschewed the American version of democracy, they have nonetheless
come to embrace globalisation as a vehicle for
dramatic aggregate, albeit unequal, growth. Globalisation
per se may be highly contested. But what is uncontested is that global poverty
rates have consistently improved under conditions of globalisation,
at least prior to the coronavirus pandemic (World Bank, 2020). Few states are
willing to cede those benefits in the name of a conflict over values. Simply
stated, Biden’s democracy agenda is not working. Even countries that are
democracies are underwhelmed by the rhetoric coming from a USA that they think
should heal itself rather than proselytise to others
(see Hirsch M., 2022).
While
the logic of Biden’s approach implies the formation of two blocs, the two sides
of the global binary nonetheless remain indefatigably tied to each other by
decades of globalisation that are not likely
reversible. The US wants to restore, or ‘re-shore’, its supply chains. Yet the
nativist Trump administration’s efforts to cajole, bribe or threaten America’s
global corporations to do so failed (Scott, 2020). There is little evidence
that the Biden administration’s new term for this form of protectionism –
‘friend-shoring’, in which the US favours allies in
supply chains – will fare any better. As a strategy, it fails to factor in the
problems of refashioning supply chains (often expensive and requiring technical
regulatory and fiscal action), the complexity of determining who are really
friends and how to choose (between) them. The fragility of relationships and
what ensures they persist is a perennial foreign policy challenge. It also too
easily assumed that the other major supply chain actors, notably China and
Europe, will acquiesce in this process (Beattie, 2022b).
Cold
War-style bipolarity is unattainable unless Americans propose to rid themselves
of most of the clothes they wear and the Apple phones they use. Comparably,
Europe would need to escape its dependence on Russian gas. It is difficult to
imagine Europeans being willing to freeze pending their governments finding
alternatives. American exports of liquified natural gas are clearly
insufficient to offset the EU’s dependence on Russia, as are new sources from
the Middle East and North Africa. As noted, sometimes states will cleave
towards the US, sometimes towards China, depending on the issue. But the overall
effect is that even the more devout allies will at times adopt ambivalent
positions, interacting with both but choosing a
strategic posture dependent on their specific policy priorities. In the
technical parlance, a mix of band-wagoning, balancing, hedging, autonomy and nonalignment will become increasingly
commonplace among non-partisan states and traditional allies. In effect, porous
holes exist between policy domains in a fuzzy bifurcated order that were absent
in a bipolar one.
5. FUZZY BIFURCATION AND
THE DISTINGUISHING FEATURES OF HYBRIDITY
So,
beyond these clashing logics, what technically distinguishes fuzzy bifurcation
from bipolarity? The answer, as noted, rests on the concept of hybridity in
three dimensions: actors, strategy and behaviour. First, reminiscent of Acharya’s ‘multiplex
world’, is a growing hybridity of actors in the international system. Hybridity
– rather than a simple focus on states and their material capabilities relating
to national security – involves a diffuse set of actors operating in multiple
global policy contexts: from states to corporations, NGOs
and foundations through to transnational criminal actors, paramilitary organisations and modern-day mercenaries. The presence,
relevance and capabilities of actors vary by context. The state may be most
pertinent in the prosecution of a European war. But a foundation (the Gates
Foundation) may have greater significance when it comes to fighting malaria in
Africa or promoting democracy (the Open Society Foundation). The role of actors
become contingent, diverse and complex in navigating
the processes of fuzzy bifurcation.
A
second contemporary contrast with the bipolar Cold War order concerns hybrid
strategies. During the Cold War alliance structures, and the strategies of
America’s and the Soviet Union’s proxies, were (more or less) coherent and
consistent. The world now looks more like a network than a chessboard
(Slaughter, 2017) – without the US being the spoke in a hub-and-spoke system of
reliable allies. For China and the USA, universalist assumptions about the rule
of law or interests of states are replaced by a need for strategic empathy in
an environment that is strategically ambiguous. In this context, selective
hedging becomes a strategic norm (Ciorciari & Haacke, 2019). Alternatively, actors may adopt wedging
strategies aimed at splitting, blocking or weakening
hostile alliances and securing a realignment, or dis-alignment, as Putin
anticipated would happen among Europeans before the outbreak of the war. Either
way, competitive geo-political practices operate in a diffuse and porous
bifurcating order, fluctuating across policy domains. In this new strategic
context, terms like ‘allies’, ‘frenemies’, ‘competitors’, ‘rivals’ and even
‘adversaries’ become contingent on the specific policy issue.
Third,
these elements are clearly reflected in hybrid behaviour
over issues like trade and security, especially in regional contexts such as
East and Southeast Asia (see Hwang & Ryou-Ellison,
2021; Jones & Jenne, 2021). The same is true of
global issues, as with climate change, where the EU sided with the US normative
agenda at COP 21 in Paris, only to cleave towards China’s agenda at COP 26 in
Glasgow. But hedging is not the only option. One consequence of this new
context is that it also enhances the possibility of a greater strategic
autonomy to which the EU aspires (Balfour, 2021), allowing it to pursue a
distinct path, for example, in the field of digitalisation,
where many of its views and practices oppose those of both the US and China.
Both
India and Israel represent examples of such ambivalence in the context of the
Ukraine war. Both favour conciliation, given that
their own economic and security interests are in tension. Israel remains
America’s closest ally in the Middle East. But it treads a fine line because of
the cooperation it requires when it comes to Russia’s role on its border with
Syria or economic relations with its new nonaligned Gulf Cooperation Council
partners. India provides a similar example of behavioural
ambiguity. It shares many interests with the USA but has long been seen as a
relatively unreliable partner (Tellis, 2022) often
focused more on wedging than hedging (Nanda, 2022). India is therefore
comfortable participating in the Quad while simultaneously eschewing the
western sanction regime and, in fact increasing fossil fuel purchase from Russia
(Schmall & Reed, 2022). As India’s Minister of
External Affairs commented when asked about his country’s rejection of the
sanction regime, ‘Europe’s problems are not India’s problems’ (Jaishankar,
2022). Other states, like Saudi Arabia (on selling oil) or Hungary (on buying
it), have and will likewise pursue strategies that serve their immediate
interests. Behaviourally, Alliance membership in one
domain is therefore no predictor of a state’s allegiance in another.
6. THE IMPLICATIONS OF
FUZZY BIFURCATION
Managing
allies in a bifurcating world thus presents challenges for the USA and China
different to those that existed for the USA and the Soviet Union in the bipolar
Cold War. Prospects for uniformity across the diplomatic, economic, military and cultural domains are now slight. The
characteristics of fuzzy bifurcation, as opposed to bipolarity or
multipolarity, determine a strategically messy world in which the notion of an
‘international order’ – certainly a liberal order built on a series of shared
norms – are but a distant memory. States are more likely to hedge in their
relationships with the two great powers than to bandwagon with either in a disciplined manner. They will look to exploit
the ambiguities that bifurcation affords. Notably, unlike in bipolarity, the
‘weak’ can afford to be opportunistic. Greece will not necessarily be forced to
choose between a security alliance with the USA and economic linkages with
China. Adept smaller states may find their way through this process because the
porous nature of bifurcation mitigates against having to choose a side.
The
question of which of the big two – China and the United States – will fare
better in a given context is open to debate. Both the
unintended consequences of its stringent domestic pandemic lockdowns of 2020–22
and the Ukraine war undoubtedly represent a setback for China. Its longer-term
push for an alternative vision of international order (Higgott,
2021), captured in its Global Security Initiative (GSI) to counter American
‘hegemonism’ and ‘block-building’, will clearly be tested by its ‘friendship
without limits’ with Russia. Hence, while its rhetorical support – saying
little other than blaming the West – has been strong, its non-provision of
military aid and its non-transgression of the sanction regime are telling of
its desire not to alienate key elements of international opinion beyond a
largely non-aligned Global South.
Beijing
surely calculates the implications of strategic hedging for its economic
relationship with Europe, given its trade with the EU dwarfs that with Russia.
If the EU was willing to abandon the EU–China Comprehensive Agreement on
Investment (CAI) over human rights, then the predicament presented for China by
its association with Russia looms all the greater. More positively for China,
Russia’s greater dependency on it presages easier fossil fuel access in the
future. China’s leadership will also have learnt lessons about military
strategy and how to build a greater degree of domestic resilience through
improved technological and material self-sufficiency, should the West react
with sanctions to any further coercive measures it might take against Taiwan
(Corbett et al., 2022).
The
international standing of the USA on the other hand, however temporarily, has
been enhanced by its response to the Russian invasion. Its principal European
and Asian allies have band-wagoned rather than hedged. The prospect of closer
China–Russia relations has had the effect of moving major Asian players, notably
South Korea and Japan, into closer alignment with the US than at any time in
the last decade. While American support of Ukraine has not eradicated the
negative views of the Afghanistan withdrawal or the AUKUS agreement, it has
certainly gone some way towards mitigating them. Certainly, Russia’s behaviour in Ukraine has reminded non-great powers,
particularly Europeans, of the ruthlessness of major authoritarian states.
Expediently, at the very least, if third-party states have to
make choices between the great powers on various policy issues, then in a
familiar fashion, the USA, at least temporarily, may still look like the
least-intrusive, least-bad option.
7. CONCLUSION: THE
FUTURE OF FUZZY BIFURCATION
How
long will the era of fuzzy bifurcation last? The processes we have identified,
short of a war between China and the United States that neither want, will take
a long time to work their way through the global economic and security systems.
Meanwhile, traditional categories such as partner, rival, competitor, ally and adversary will continue to be contingent and
contextual. America’s major European security allies in the Ukraine war will
vary in the extent to which they cleave to the United States across other
policy domains. While the EU’s expressed preference for strategic autonomy
remains aspirational in the realm of security, it will elsewhere try to
exercise autonomy where it can, the current battle against climate change being
a notable example (Borrell, 2021; Borrell & Hoyer, 2021). Its desire for
autonomy will only increase if Donald Trump, or a similarly inclined
nationalist politician, wrestles back the American Presidency in 2024. Until
then, the likelihood is that Biden will be frustrated by what he will surely
regard as the EU’s inconstancy.
China’s
shift towards a more confrontational diplomatic posture may be unabated when it
comes to regional issues, such as the South China Sea, or Taiwan (which it
regards as a domestic issue). But it remains more comfortable than the USA with
the strategic ambiguity that fuzzy bifurcation engenders. It fits better with
China’s deliberately ambiguous approach to multilateralism and world order (Caffarena, 2022). But in a messier world, China still has to manage its problematic relationship with Russia. The
two may share a desire to contain the USA and collaborate in venues such as the
Shanghai Cooperation Organisation. But this
nevertheless will not stop either from competing for influence elsewhere, such
as in Central Asia and Africa.
Fuzzy
bifurcation gives many other states a markedly greater latitude than they
enjoyed during the Cold War, and thus a chance to implement their own
strategies. This explains why some also see a new era for India as an
independent and influential ‘swing’ power (Merchant, 2022). Turkey’s leaders
make much the same claim about their country’s future (Aktaş,
2022). Even smaller states have found that they have a greater latitude as they
navigate new terrain. Resources and material capability still count. But so too
does skill and will. A capacity for strategic empathy and strategic ambiguity –
an understanding of the thinking of others and a nuanced conception of the
likely positioning that they might adopt – will prove critical if states are to
achieve identified policy objectives. These assertions are not particularly
novel. The more thoughtful traditional ‘middle powers’ – Australia and Canada
and the Nordic countries (Cooper et al., 1993) – have long understood this
modus operandi. Newer middle powers, especially in Asia, are also learning
these lessons (Howe, 2021). Policy makers are therefore revisiting long held
assumptions about the interests of other states and their bilateral
relationships with them. Hedging is becoming endemic.
If
many authors cited in this article are correct, then some de-coupling from
global supply chains, and a more nationalist form of economy and nativist form
of politics, will continue apace. But many factors may intercede. Putin may not
survive the war, a nativist may not return to the American presidency,
President Xi may not launch an attack on Taiwan. A decade ago, few would have
bet on the UK’s exit from the EU, the election of Donald Trump, a global pandemic or a war in Europe, let alone all of them. We are
not minimising the significance of a pandemic and a
war on European soil in contending that their systemic effects may be
overstated. But they do not represent the end of globalisation
nor the re-emergence of a familiar Cold War structure.
Rather
we see a continuing period of ambiguity that will present new strategic threats
as well as opportunities. In the battle of ideas and for influence, neither the
United States nor China will record a knockout blow. The age of fuzzy
bifurcation has been in train for quite some time. The pandemic and the war
have just made it more transparent. How states deal with this represents the
major policy challenge for the big and the small alike. The US and China will
have to learn to tolerate and interact with each other not only as states but
also as ‘civilisations’ (see Coker, 2019; Higgott, 2022). Other players, notably the EU, as we have
tried to suggest, will develop a new kind of policy thinking and practice that
reflects both the constraints and opportunities presented by fuzziness.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
The authors thank
Richard Ned Lebow, Kim Nossal and Martin Rhodes for their comments on a prior
draft, as well as the invaluable suggestions of two reviewers. Simon Reich also
wishes to acknowledge the support of the Central European University where he
spent time as a visiting George Soros Chair during the research and writing of
this article.
Endnotes
1 On the EU’s intent to
build its independent weapons production capacity see European Commission
(Borrell, 2022). 2 This dichotomous mode of thinking, with but a few
exceptions, is more prevalent amongst economists than scholars of international
relations. Of exceptions see: Pisani-Ferry, 2021 and Skidelsky, 2019.
Biographies
Richard Higgott is Distinguished Professor of
Diplomacy, Brussels School of Governance at the Vrije Universiteit, Visiting
Professor of Political Science, University of Siena
and Emeritus Professor of International Political Economy at the University of
Warwick. His latest book, States, civilisations
and the reset of world order was published by
Routledge in 2021. He can be reached at richardhiggott0@gmail.com.
Simon Reich
is a Professor in the Division of Global Affairs and Department of Political
Science at Rutgers University, Newark, and a Research Associate at CERI
(Sciences Po.) in Paris. He is author, co-author, or editor of 13 books and
currently co-edits ‘The Oxford Studies in Grand Strategy’ book series (Oxford
University Press). He can be reached at reichs@rutgers.edu.