As the relative power of the West steadily declines, the role of liberalism in domestic and international politics recedes. After the Cold War, the “end of history” thesis was largely internalised and expressed with the assumption that the entire world would unify under liberal principles, which would be enforced under the benign leadership of the US. As the international distribution of power shifts, Western states have increasingly expressed their concerns about the decline of the so-called “liberal international order”, writes Glenn Diesen, Professor at the University of South-Eastern Norway, and participant at the 18th Annual meeting of the Valdai Discussion Club.
However, this article argues that restraining the excesses of liberalism is a positive and necessary correction as unfettered liberalism has undermined domestic and international stability. The system has not self-corrected as liberal ideology has blinded the West by the certainty of its own righteousness. We have now reached the breaking point where the current state of affairs no longer work.
Liberalism in domestic society
By placing the individual at the centre, liberalism has advanced profound ideas like democracy and human rights that all healthy societies require. Yet, liberalism flourished under the nation-state as liberalism is most successful when restrained and balanced by conservative principles. The excesses of liberalism has resulted in liberalism decoupling from the nation-state, which predictably results in fragmentation and revolutionary politics.
Plato and Socrates were critical about the durability of democracy as unfettered liberalism eventually unravels the social fabric that it relied upon. Plato and Socrates opined that democracies become freer the longer they exist, and the individual eventually liberates itself from the social group it depends on by increasingly rejecting the external authority from family, faith, society and the state. This analysis is as relevant today as the individual liberates itself from being defined by the nation, culture, Church, family, traditions and even the reality biological gender.
Economic liberalism has also become unrestrained by abandoning the “embedded liberalism” that characterized the capitalist system from 1945 to 1980, and transitioning towards the neoliberal economic. Under embedded liberalism, the political Left redistributed wealth to avoid the concentration of capital, and the political Right intervened in the market to defend traditional values and communities. President Reagan recognized the danger of subordinating culture, traditional values and Christianity market forces and cautioned against becoming “mired in the material” which would result in “coarsening of the society” and “a nation gone under”. Yet, American conservatism underwent a revolution as market efficiency became the guiding virtue, while simultaneously complaining about the decay of traditional values.
Under the neoliberal consensus committed to the sanctity of unfettered market forces, the political Left and Right are both unable to pursue their ideological commitments and instead get caught up in culture wars in which everyone loses. While neoliberal economics maximized efficiency, the subsequent intolerable social and economic costs predictably results in radical populism on both the political Right and Left to fill the vacuum.
Liberalism in international society
In the international system, liberalism has a tradition of both pacification and imperialism. Placing the individual at the centre can promote more humane concepts of security, although it can also erode state sovereignty as the fundamental principle of international law. This contradiction can be mitigated by balancing liberalism with the principle of sovereign equality.
Efforts to introduce democracy and human rights into international relations has largely failed as it becomes an instrument to assert hegemony through sovereign inequality. Moscow abstained from signing the Universal Declaration of Human Rights in 1948 due to the fear that Western powers would use human rights as a tool to interfere in Russia’s domestic affairs.
Although, Moscow signed the Helsinki Accords in 1975 as the founding document for pan-European cooperation. The Helsinki Accords were unique as they introduced “respect for human rights” as a topic of discussion in international security. However, the first article of the agreement was the principle of “sovereign equality”, which suggests that human rights would not be used to organise relations between a political subject and a political object. The Helsinki Accords subsequently inspired Mikhail Gorbachev’s concept of a “Common European Home” and deep reforms within the Soviet Union.
When the Cold War was declared to be over at the Malta Summit in 1989, there was an opportunity to further deepen the Helsinki Accords. Subsequently, the Charter of Paris for a New Europe in 1990 extended upon the Helsinki Accords, calling for a European security system with the objective of “ending of the division of Europe” based on the principle that “security of every participating state is inseparably linked to that of all the others”. In 1994, the Helsinki Accords was converted into the Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE), an inclusive security institution based on the principle of sovereign equality.
The role of democracy and human rights in international security began its decay when an inclusive security architecture was abandoned. Hegemonic ambitions were translated into the creation a Europe without Russia, which was to be organised by an expanding NATO and EU. Liberalism subsequently became a hegemonic norm. Liberalism decoupled legitimacy from legality as NATO launched an illegal “humanitarian intervention” and unilaterally changed the borders of Serbia.
After the illegal invasion of Iraq, it was argued that the US should establish an “alliance of democracies” as an alternative source of legitimacy than the UN. This idea was reconceptualised as a “Concert of Democracies” that would authorise the West to use military force when such a mandate could not be achieved at the UN. The Republican presidential candidate in 2008, Senator John McCain, similarly promised to establish a “League of Democracies” if he would win the presidential election to ensure that authoritarian states would not be able to constrain Western democracies under US leadership (Geis 2013).
More recently, these ideas have been included in the concept of a “rules-based international order” as a substitute for international law. Western powers increasingly refer to the rules-based international order instead of international law, which is part of a wider initiative of dividing the entire world along a binary divide of “democracy” versus “authoritarianism” that provides little if any heuristic value to understand the complexities of international politics. The rules-based international order does not present any specific rules, as strategic ambiguity enables a hegemony to act selectively and inconsistently. Case in point, whether the rules-based international order prioritises the principle of territorial integrity or self-determination in Kosovo and Crimea depends on interests of the West. Sovereign equality comes to an end as invasions are rebranded as “humanitarian interventions” and coups become “democratic revolutions”. By relying on legitimacy rather than law, all international disputes become a tribunal of public opinion in which state fight to control the narrative with propaganda.
Restraining liberalism
The failure to restrain the excesses of liberalism with conservative principles domestically and sovereign equality internationally result in the degeneration of liberal ideals. John Herz cautioned in 1950 that the tragedy of political idealism is that it:
“paradoxically, has its time of greatness when its ideals are unfulfilled, when it is in opposition to outdated political systems and the tide of the times swells it toward victory. It degenerates as soon as it attains its final goal; and in victory it dies”.
The current global shake-up of values and ideology will unavoidably fuel instability and conflict. Antonio Gramsci wrote in the late 1920s or early 1930s about the quandaries of a world in transition: “The crisis consists precisely in the fact that the old is dying and the new cannot be born; in this interregnum a great variety of morbid symptoms appear”.