Battling for independence: Small states stake their claim
Source: EurAsia Daily / Nerinaazad.net
By James M. Dorsey
The Gulf crisis that pits a United Arab Emirates-Saudi-led
alliance against Qatar has emerged about more than a regional spat. It is part
of a global battle whose outcome will determine the ability of small states to
chart their own course in the shadow of a regional behemoth whether that is
Saudi Arabia in the Middle East or China in Asia. It also has parallels with
efforts by peoples like the Catalans in Spain, the Kurds in Iraq or Ambazonians
in Cameroon to secede and form independent small states of their own that is
likely to mushroom with Kurds in Syria and others likely to put forward similar
demands.
The battle for the ability to make independent choices is
easier for existing small states like Qatar, the UAE and Singapore that are
fending off varying degrees of political and economic pressure from Big
Brothers. Groups like the Catalans and the Iraqi Kurds grapple with a more
fundamental obstacle: resistance by nation states like Spain and Iraq to cede
economically valuable territory and an international community whose Pavlov
reflex is to oppose secession.
Political scientists Alberto Alesino
and Enrico Spolaore argued in a book published more than a decade ago, The
Size of Nations, that both large and small states have to make cost/benefit
trade-offs that determine their ability to provide populations with public
goods and services and carve out their place in an international order. The
integrity of larger states like Iraq and Spain whose size means that their
populations are more heterogeneous is called into question by groups who feel
that the state does not serve their interests and needs. Small states are
either more homogenous or like Singapore find it easier to cater to different
segments of a heterogeneous population but need to manoeuvre more nimbly
internationally to ensure their independence.
The struggle of smaller states to escape the yoke of a
regional behemoth and various groups to carve out small states of their own may
have gained pace because of a realization that the benefits of being big have
decreased and an expectation articulated by political scientists Sverrir Steinsson and Baldur Thorallsson that big states
will grow increasingly smaller. “Thankfully for small states, it has never been
as easy being small as it is in the current international system with its
unprecedented degree of peace, economic openness and institutionalization,”
Steinsson and Thorallsson said in a recent study entitled The Small-State
Survival Guide to Foreign Policy Success.
The Gulf crisis fits the mould of smaller states seeking to
carve out their place in the regional and international order, but also breaks
it. At stake in the Gulf is more than just the ability of small states to chart
their own course. No doubt, that is one aspect of Qatar’s refusal to bow to
demands by the UAE-Saudi-led alliance that it radically alter its foreign and
security policies that embraces political change for others and align them with
those of others in the region.
Yet, the root of the dispute goes beyond that. The Gulf
crisis is a clash of diametrically opposed strategies for the survival of
autocratic rule fought in ways that threaten independence of choice of others
as well as regional stability. It is a battle between two small states with
massive war chests garnered from energy exports that have megalomaniac
ambitions to shape a swath of land that stretches from North and East Africa
into Asia in their own mould. To achieve their goals the UAE and Qatar act not
as small states but as big powers, using the kind of tools big powers use:
financial muscle, support of opposition forces to stimulate or engineer regime
change, foreign military bases, military coups, covert wars, and cyberwar. Buried
in their megalomania is a naïve belief that the consequences of their actions
will not come to haunt them.
As a result, the parameters of debate sparked by the Gulf
crisis about the place of small states in the international order is different
when it comes to the ambitions of Qatar and the UAE as opposed to countries
like Singapore who rely more on soft power, opt to fly more under the radar,
and stick more to strategies generally associated with small state efforts to
ensure their independence of choice.
What Singapore, Qatar and the UAE have in common however, is
that their quest to jealously guard their ability to chart their own course is
driven by fear. Singapore’s fear, unlike that of Qatar and the UAE that face
very different demographic challenges involving citizenries that account for
only a small percentage of the population, is grounded in race riots
surrounding its birth, the perception of living in a volatile neighbourhood,
and concern resulting from the fallout of convoluted transitions that have
wracked the Middle East and North Africa and fuelled religiously-inspired
militancy.
While all three states are in some ways corporations,
Singapore in contrast to Qatar and the UAE, has institutionalized its system of
government to a far greater degree than the Gulf states in terms of institutions,
the rule of law, and checks and balances irrespective of its warts. Qatar has
so far ignored the opportunity offered it by the wave of unprecedented
nationalism unleashed by the Gulf crisis as Qataris rallied around the ruling
Al Thani family that accounts for 20 percent of the citizenry in a nation of
300,000 nationals. As a result, debate in Singapore focuses on survival as an
independent state rather than survival of a ruling family. In Singapore, the
debate about what it can and should do to stand up for its interests is public;
in Qatar and the UAE far more repressive restrictions on freedom of expression
stymie debate or drive it into clandestinity.
Similarly, Qatar and the UAE project themselves as regional
and global hubs that are building cutting-edge, 21st century
knowledge societies on top of tribally-based autocracies in which education, in
contrast to Singapore, is designed to ensure that citizens have marketable
skills and can interact globally rather than develop the skills of critical
thinking that could result in criticism of their regimes. While there is no
public debate in either Gulf state about governance, Singapore’s transition
away from the Lee family’s dominance and to a post-Lee generation is one that
is cushioned by discussion and expression of aspirations.
Both Qatar and the UAE have glimmering and bold skylines
that rival that of Singapore. But beyond the trappings of modernity, neither
are states that empower their citizens. The limitations of modernity are
evident. Criticism after Qatar won the 2022 World Cup hosting rights of its
controversial labour regime that governs the lives of migrant workers, a
majority of the country’s population, did not resonate among Qataris, largely because
of the country’s demographic deficit. In fact, Qataris protested in 2009, when some
households hired Saudis as maids, yet never raised their voice about the
widespread abuse of Asian maids. Saudi unlike Asian maids were too close to
home. If Saudis could be reduced to the status of a maid, so could one day Qataris
pampered by a cradle-to-grave welfare state.
Qatar and the UAE share building blocks of soft power
creation and the manufacturing of national identity some of which are also
employed by Singapore. They include foreign military bases; world class
airlines that service global hubs; museums that both attract tourism and
manufacture a national heritage; high profile investments in blue chips, real
estate and the arts, sports and the ambition of becoming centres of excellence
in multiple fields.
While political Islam plays a less important role in
Singapore’s management of its heterogeneity, Qatar and the UAE have adopted
radically different approaches even though both have developed societies in which
religious scholars have relatively little say and Islamic mores and norms are
relatively liberally interpreted. This, however, is where the communalities in
their survival strategies stop. Whereas Qatar embraced support of political
Islam, the UAE has opted to suppress it. Nonetheless, both states project their
approach as part of their effort to garner soft power.
As a result, the UAE has backed regime change in a number of
countries, including Egypt and reportedly Turkey; supported anti-Islamist, anti-
government rebels in Libya; joined Saudi Arabia’s ill-fated military
intervention in Yemen; and in the latest episode of its campaign, driven
imposition of a diplomatic and economic boycott of Qatar.
In contrast to the UAE, Qatar has sought to position itself
as the regional go-to go-between and mediator by maintaining relations not only
with states but also a scala of Islamist, militant and rebel groups across the
Middle East and northern Africa. It moreover embraced the 2011 popular Arab
revolts and supported Islamist forces, with the Muslim Brotherhood in the lead,
that emerged as the most organized political force from the
uprisings. Qatar’s support for the Brotherhood amounted to aligning itself
with forces that were challenging Gulf regimes and that the UAE alongside Saudi
Arabia was seeking to suppress. Qatar did so in the naive belief that it could
encourage transition everywhere else without the waves of change washing up on
its own shores.
What puts the Gulf crisis in a bracket of its own in the
discussion about the place of small states in the international pecking order
is the fact underlying the crisis are issues that go far beyond the debate. One
root cause of the crisis is Qatar and the UAE’s radically different definitions
of terrorism that is enabled by the international community’s inability to
agree on what does and does not constitute terrorism and anchor that agreement
in international law. The failure to do so fuels differences in perceptions of
national security threats, undermines governments’ ability to effectively
combat political violence, and allows them to shy away from advancing greater
accountability and transparency, and ensuring protection of basic human rights.
As a result, the Gulf crisis has a pot blaming the kettle
quality. It pits autocracies against one another. None of the protagonists
advocates a more liberal system of government for its own people. Their
differences are rooted in their histories of independence and concepts of
national security that are defined by geography and differing threat
perceptions.
Qatar, the UAE and Singapore are all unique in their own
ways. In many ways, they don’t fit the mould of the world’s average small
state. Yet, they all offer lessons for other small states or territories aspiring
to join the international community as independent countries. Singapore, unlike
Qatar and the UAE has established itself as a model of good governance and of a
small state that turned the liability of having no resources but its human
capital into an asset. The UAE has so far succeeded in positioning itself as
the small state most capable of punching above its weight. Qatar has become the
example of a small state capable of resisting heavy external pressure. Ultimately,
however, Singapore may prove to have a more sustainable survival strategy by
grounding it in institutions, performance and human capital rather than the
wielding of financial muscle in an effort to shape the world around it in its
own mould.
Dr. James M. Dorsey is a senior fellow at the S.
Rajaratnam School of International Studies, co-director of the University of
Würzburg’s Institute for Fan Culture, and co-host of the New Books in
Middle Eastern Studies podcast. James is the author of The Turbulent World
of Middle East Soccer blog, a book with
the same title as well as Comparative Political Transitions
between Southeast Asia and the Middle East and North Africa, co-authored with Dr.
Teresita Cruz-Del Rosario and Shifting
Sands, Essays on Sports and Politics in the Middle East and North Africa
Comments
Post a Comment