n°31: A BRIC in the World: Emerging Powers, Europe, and the Coming Order, Thomas Renard, Oct. 2009.
résumé: Executive summary
The world is changing. It is becoming increasingly multipolar with the emergence of China, India, Brazil, and with the resurgence of Russia – forming the so-called BRIC. The world is also becoming increasingly interdependent, not only economically as recently illustrated with the US financial crisis turning into a global economic crisis, but also regarding the threats and challenges our societies face, such as climate change. This multipolarity in the age of interdependence, or interpolarity as Giovanni Grevi names it, will most likely shape the 21st century.
The American unipolar moment has ended. Yet, it seems too early nonetheless to evoke true multipolarity. Indeed, the US remains the dominant power, or the “lonely superpower”, and is likely to maintain its status for years and probably decades to come. America’s decline is not an illusion, but it must be understood in relative terms. US global influence is fading because it contrasts with the rise of the ‘rest’, i.e. the empowerment of other actors at the local, regional and global level.
There is a great uncertainty as regards to who will emerge as a major power and when the US dominance will become definite history. In fact, it is very likely that only few a countries will emerge as central hubs of the system in the 21st century, creating a sort of asymmetrical multipolarity with a distinction between dominant or central powers, major powers, regional powers and local powers.
Based on the analysis of several indicators, this paper refines the “BRIC dream” into a more realistic BR–I–C scenario in which China appears to be the real story and the only emerging power that can challenge the US in the coming years. India will follow the path of China but its emergence will be slower and in all less impressive. Brazil and Russia are probably the least emergent among the emerging powers, but this is not to say that they are not emerging.
What place will be left for the EU in this coming interpolar order? According to most indicators, Europe has the appearance of a global power. However, there is a natural reluctance to join the words ‘Europe’ and ‘global power’ together. Indeed, the EU is not a power in the classical sense of the term for the very good reason that it is not a state in the classical sense of the term either. But if global power is defined as the capacity to have an influence at the global level, then the EU has certainly some global power, for it is a leading voice in many important affairs, such as the fight against climate change. To become a true global power or even a great power, i.e. a major pole in the coming order, the EU will need a more coherent approach and a more integrated strategy.
This will require EU member states to increasingly speak with one voice in foreign policy. On a global scale, all European countries are now small states. They are less and less capable of defending their vital interests on their own against rising powers and are even less capable of achieving major ambitions. Nevertheless, when the capabilities of the 27 member states are joined together, the EU becomes a significant power. There is a strong case for the EU to act together in foreign policy: Divided we fail, united we prevail.
The EU will also need to develop its relations with the emerging poles of the coming order through the use of strategic partnerships. A truly strategic use of the strategic partnerships, i.e. in function of EU foreign policy, must start from a thorough assessment of EU interests in the various regions of the globe and a clearer definition of its objectives towards them. In practice, two types of partners may eventually emerge: those with which the EU establishes cooperation in a comprehensive range of areas – probably at least Russia, China and India, if they would be inclined to such cooperation that is, and of course the US; and those with whom cooperation focuses on a more limited range of issues or regions. In order to promote European unity, strategic partnerships should establish the EU as the unique interlocutor on a series of key issues, hence limiting the margin of manoeuvre of individual Member States.
For the EU to remain relevant in the 21st century, it will need to promote effective multilateralism at the global and EU levels, to seal real strategic partnerships, and to develop its leadership capacity in order a) to influence the global agenda, and b) to take the lead in issues of particular importance to the EU. Leadership and effective multilateralism are complementary and mutually reinforcing. They are Europe’s best option to enter interpolarity as a global power. The EU will not rule the 21st century, but it can still become a major pole, and it must certainly avoid to be ruled out. Thomas Renard Research Fellow - Security & Global Governance Programme.
n°30: RFID: New killer application in the ICT world, New big brother, or both?, Franklin Dehousse and Tania Zgajewski, June 2009.
résumé: RFID (“Radio-Frequency Identification”) is a new telecommunications service
that has received a lot of attention in the last years, due to its growing use1.
Though it is based on a rather old technology (the Radar), a progressive rise in
quality and decrease in price seem to have opened a lot of new opportunities. It
has been estimated that this market could reach the world value of 30 billion
euro in 2015. In 2007, its value was already estimated at 5 billion dollars.
Worldwide sales of RFID tags reached approximately 2.16 billion in 2008, a
substantial increase from the year before. In 2015, some estimate that 400 billion
could be sold. According to the European Commission, in 2007, tags sold
were used in smart cards and payment key fobs (36%), smart tickets/bank notes/
secure documents (14%), cases or crates of consumer retail goods (13%), retail
apparel (5%), animals (5%), and books (4%).
Much hype has surrounded RFID during the last years. One describes ill patients
who would be automatically treated in the hospitals or at home through body
sensors, immigrants who could be tracked anytime anywhere on the map, refrigerators
which would select outdated food or compose propositions of menus
according to their content, prisoners under permanent radio control through
chips borne or injected under their skin, cars which will pay fees and find their
way in the traffic alone, food whose origin will be permanently controllable.
Sometimes, however, the deployment of RFID has not brought the anticipated
benefits. It has also brought protests in some parts of the public.
The rise of RFID systems provokes a lot of interrogations. They encompass
among others health protection, privacy, standards’ compatibility, and the
development of a new Internet system. RFID thus leads to a broader reflection
about the Internet of the future. Furthermore, RFID appears at the vanguard of
a much broader and deeper change of the Internet, though not fully clear until
now, which is described as “the Internet of things” (IoT). In such a context,
many colliding interests must be taken into consideration. In 2006, the European
Commission thus launched a consultation process on this topic, which
produced various reactions. In 2007, it presented a communication.
The present report aims at describing the main stakes of this technology in
Europe3. It will describe the nature of RFID (§ 1), the numerous new uses of the
technology (§ 2), the main problems it generates (§ 3) and the present regulatory
framework in the European Union applying to RFID (§ 4).
n°29: End-State Afghanistan, Jo Coelmont (ed.), March 2009.
résumé: The international intervention in Afghanistan was a reaction to the terrorist
attacks on New York and Washington of 11 September 2009. At the time, the
intervention could count on broad political support and the understanding of a
large share of public opinion, also because of the UN mandate. Very quickly,
remarkable results were obtained: ousting the Taliban from power, closing the
terrorist training camps, undermining al-Qaeda as an organization and suppressing
insurgent activities in large parts of Afghan territory. After a while a
security situation was achieved which allowed for reconstruction in regions
which had known nothing but war for thirty years. Significant political, economic
and social progress was achieved in a relatively short term.
Seven years later the optimist discourse has lost all credibility. The security situation
is constantly degrading, not just in Afghanistan, but far into Pakistan as
well, while tensions are mounting in the broad region. It has become clear to
everyone that now, more than ever, a new approach, a different strategy is
needed – muddling through is not an option. Nor is a hasty retreat: too many
parameters have changed for the negative to allow that.
Yet, defeatism, as it emerged a few years ago with regard to Iraq, is not now
called for either. Paradoxically the current situation, bad though it may be, also
contains the roots of a renewed and improved approach, thanks to a number of
external developments. First of all the new US administration has opted for a
new foreign policy, for which Afghanistan, and Pakistan and India, are clear
priorities, while it also envisages a new policy vis-à-vis Iran. The situation in
Iraq has seen major developments. In Afghanistan itself elections are planned
later this year. The changed political and economic conditions in Pakistan lead
to a change in policy towards Afghanistan and India alike. The interests of the
three countries, relations between which historically have been marked by high
tensions, are now converging. These developments have engendered more attention
for the crisis by the EU, where the conviction is growing that “flanking
measures” alone are no longer sufficient. The global economic and financial
crisis has necessitated a reinforced dialogue between all global actors, including
China. Thus, a new approach is not just vital – it is achievable.
There is no lack of publications about Afghanistan, addressing such issues as the
fragmented efforts of the international community, the shortage of military
means, the unintentional but very negative side effects of military operations,
the inefficiency of the donor community and of NGOs, the relative weakness of
the Karzai government, wide-spread corruption and drug trade, the lack of
involvement of Afghan local authorities and traditional and religious elites,
spill-over towards Pakistan, the absence of economic perspective in the region…
The question is whether this bottom-up approach, addressing the many dimensions
of indeed very complicated crisis management, is sufficient to engender
change in the current situation and eventually come to a successful solution.
That immediately leads to another question: what is success? Which are the
strategic objectives? Is there consensus about them in the international community,
in consultation with Afghanistan? What is the position of Pakistan and
India? A limited number of official publications do address these more strategiclevel
issues. Such analysis always starts from a specific national perspective,
which has its own logic and which emphasises the national contribution, while
other actors are expected to fill the perceived gaps. All too often confusion is
created – willingly or unwillingly – between strategic objectives and the means
required to achieve them, which produces confusion at the political level and
generates false hope among the local population. This probably explains why a
sincere assessment of the indeed ambiguous, but at the same time ambitious
objectives versus the required means is rarely if ever made.
This is not without consequences on the ground. An international community
which may rejoice in the active contribution of a panoply of actors with a wide
range of instruments, is unable to achieve unity of effort. The perceived capability
gaps are not being filled, while the lack of efficiency and efficacy of existing
means leads to a demand for “more”. In the meantime the security situation is
degrading and the effect of some of the earlier efforts destroyed. Increasing
political tension between the international community and the Afghan authorities
is the result, while because of spill-over effects Pakistan and India are
becoming involved and, finally, tensions within the international community are
rising as well, even between countries that jointly participate in operations or
projects.
This vicious circle must be broken. This Egmont Paper does not have the ambition
to propose a fully-fledged strategy, nor to elaborate concrete actions, but
aims to return to the core of crisis management in Afghanistan and stimulate a
broad debate about a grand strategy. In a first part, it will analyze which were
the strategic objectives at the start of the intervention and which steps have
subsequently been taken by the international community that led to the situation
we know today. In a second part, some recent ideas about key objectives
and desired strategic outcomes will be assessed, to conclude finally with a
number of recommendations to the international community, the UN, NATO,
the EU, and their Member States, including Belgium.
Like other Egmont Papers in this series, this publication is the product of an
informal group of experts from academic, diplomatic and military circles,
including, among others, Prof. Dr. Sven Biscop, Egmont, Alex Bracke, Ir. MA,
Prof. Dr. Rik Coolsaet, Ghent University, Alexander Mattelaer, VUB, Jacques
Rosiers, EAAB, Prof. Dr. Tanguy Struye, UCL, Ambassador Baron (Franciskus)
van Daele, and Col. Patrick Wouters. My sincere gratitude to all members of the
working group for their contribution; I of course assume responsibility for the
text.
n°28: Atlantic loyalty, European Autonomy. Belgium and the Atlantic Alliance 1949-2009, Rik Coolsaet, March 2009.
résumé: Myths colour the past and Belgium’s history in NATO is no exception.
Contrary to what is often thought, the Cold War did not start when the Second
World War ended. The war coalition against Nazi Germany was to hold out
for several more years and give rise to a number of international initiatives,
which all the allies would endorse, with the establishment of the United
Nations at the top of the list. Only in 1947 did the war coalition turn into
confrontation and a cold war. Misperceptions, incompatible security designs
and ensuing diverging interests between the United States and the Soviet Union
had reinforced each other and finally transformed the former allies, both of
whom had been crucial in the defeat of Nazi Germany, into new geopolitical
adversaries.
In those first post-war years Belgium emerged as a convinced supporter of
Western European defence arrangements under British leadership. Only in
1947 did Belgium gradually discover a privileged partner in the United States,
though initially only at the economic and financial level. It would take till the
summer of 1948 before Belgian diplomacy shelved its post-war project for
European defence and signed up to an Atlantic alliance.
In the decades that followed, Belgium proved itself a loyal NATO partner.
Nevertheless, the good relations between Brussels and Washington did not
prevent profound crises disturbing the calm now and then. Moreover, unlike
some other member states, Belgium was to make its own original contribution
to détente between East and West.
The fall of the Berlin Wall, in 1989, and the implosion of the Soviet Union, in
1991, brought an end to the Cold War and to the bipolar world order. This led
to a debate about new European defence architecture in all the NATO countries,
including Belgium, now the continent was no longer divided between
East and West. In Belgium the debate was settled fairly quickly when the body
politic, across party borders, returned to the original European defence option
Paul-Henri Spaak had championed from 1945 to 1948. Combining European
primacy and autonomy in the field of defence with Atlantic loyalty became a
balancing act that turned out not always to be easy.
n°27: Europe: A time for strategy, Sven Biscop, Jolyon Howorth and Bastian Giegerich, Jan. 2009.
résumé: The idea to review the 2003 European Security Strategy (ESS), put forward
notably by French President Nicolas Sarkozy and Swedish Foreign Minister Carl
Bildt, did not meet with universal enthusiasm. While not everybody was convinced
that the ESS was already in need of updating, some also feared that too
divisive debates would be provoked, particularly on Russia, and that the EU
would end up with a worse rather than a better document. Hence the somewhat
cautiously expressed – and grammatically slightly awkward – mandate given to
High Representative Javier Solana by the December 2007 European Council:
“to examine the implementation of the Strategy with a view to proposing elements
on how to improve the implementation and, as appropriate, elements to
complement it”.
Just like in 2003, when the draft of the original ESS was discussed, the EU Institute
for Security Studies organized a series of seminars, in Rome, Natolin, Helsinki
and Paris, in June-October 2008, to debate the implementation of the ESS
with academics and policy-makers. All three of us were involved in one or more
of these seminars, and in Helsinki we constituted one of the panels, chaired by
Daniel Keohane of the EUISS. Our thanks go to the EUISS for inviting us to
participate in this exciting exercise.
The debate was concluded by the adoption of a Report on the Implementation
of the European Security Strategy – Providing Security in a Changing World by
the December 2008 European Council,1 which decided to leave the text of the
ESS itself untouched. The Report “does not replace the ESS, but reinforces it”
and the ESS remains in force.
The question now is: will actionable conclusions be drawn from the Report in
order to effectively improve implementation of the ESS? For even if one agrees
with the decision not to revise the ESS itself, problems of implementation there
undoubtedly are. If the process ends here, most observers will rightfully be disappointed.
This Egmont Paper summarizes what we see as urgent priorities for
the EU to address in order to fulfil its inevitable ambition of being a global
strategic actor.
n°26: De la maîtrise des armements à la non-prolifération: les nouveaux défis de la sécurité coopérative, Pierre-Etienne Champenois, Nov. 2008.
résumé: La Maîtrise des armements est un processus d’interaction entre des pays sur
les questions relatives à la limitation, la réduction, la non-prolifération et la
production des armements, ainsi qu’au déploiement et à l’emploi des forces
armées.
La Maîtrise des armements et les matières qui lui sont associées comme les mesures
de confiance et de sécurité (CSBM) ont constitué, certainement depuis le
rapport Harmel2, un élément indissociable de la stratégie de sécurité de
l’Alliance atlantique. Le but était de maintenir, par le biais d’accords vérifiables
et effectifs, le degré de stabilité et de prévisibilité le plus haut au niveau de forces
le plus bas compatible avec le maintien d’une capacité de dissuasion effective et
crédible. L’approche, en soi, reste conceptuellement valable et politiquement
utile mais sous cette réserve, et elle est notable, que le contexte de sécurité a
profondément changé: le pacte de Varsovie a disparu, la Russie n’est plus l’URSS
d’hier et en outre l’Alliance elle-même s’interroge sur la nouvelle nature de sa
mission qui, à l’évidence, ne se résume plus à dissuader la défunte URSS de lancer
une attaque-surprise.
Les défis sécuritaires du XXIe siècle ne sont plus ceux de la fin du XXe siècle.
L’équilibre aujourd’hui ne se mesure plus à l’aune d’une relation de bloc à bloc
mais en fonction d’une relation multiple et globale entre un nombre croissant
d’acteurs qui peuvent être des États ou des entités non étatiques. La marche vers
la multipolarité, quel que soit le contenu précis que l’on veuille donner à cette
notion en pleine évolution, bouleverse les anciens schémas ou les rend inopérants.
La notion de dissuasion est devenue floue dès lors qu’elle perdait ses références
Est/Ouest et qu’elle ne s’appliquait plus dans un cadre symétrique ou
bipolaire. La notion de coalition prend le pas sur celle d’alliance, laquelle
devient elle-même relative faute de casus foederis3 clairement défini. La mondialisation
a eu aussi comme effet de rendre la menace plus diffuse et de la délocaliser.
Elle est devenue civile autant que militaire. Elle s’est en quelque sorte démilitarisée.
La définition de l’armement ou de ce qui pourrait constituer une arme
ne correspond plus à des paramètres proprement militaires. Le résultat de tout
cela est que, dans le monde d’aujourd’hui, les questions de non-prolifération
nucléaire, et à vrai dire de la lutte contre toutes formes de prolifération, ont fini
par transcender les considérations de désarmement au sens classique du terme.
La Maîtrise des armements est un processus d’interaction entre des pays sur
les questions relatives à la limitation, la réduction, la non-prolifération et la
production des armements, ainsi qu’au déploiement et à l’emploi des forces
armées.
2. Rapport sur les Tâches futures de l’Alliance Atlantique – 1966.
3. Une attaque de l’URSS contre le territoire de l’Alliance constituait clairement le déclencheur de
l’Article 5 du Traité de Washington. Mais l’URSS n’existe plus. Qu’en est-il aujourd’hui par rapport
à une menace aussi globale qu’indéterminée?
Ce profond changement du contexte mondial entraine une inévitable remise en
question non seulement du rôle de la force armée et des alliances dans les relations
internationales mais aussi, par voie de conséquence, de la maitrise des
armements et du désarmement en tant qu’instruments diplomatiques.
Ce travail comprend quatre parties. La première s’efforce d’analyser le nouveau
contexte de sécurité en Europe (1). La seconde aborde ce qu’il reste d’un acquis
de trente ans de maitrise d’armement entre l’Est et l’Ouest (2). La troisième
envisage ce que pourrait être l’apport de cet instrument à la stabilité dans un
environnement mondial dans lequel les adversaires d’hier sont devenus des partenaires
(3). Sur cette base, la dernière partie tire quelques conclusions sur la
nature du désarmement, les vertus du pragmatisme et de l’approche coopérative
dans le nouveau contexte (4).
n°25: Regional integration and security in Central Africa - Assessment and perspectives 10 years after the revival, Angela Meyer, Dec. 2008.
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