Black swans haunt Eurasia’s Great Game
By James M. Dorsey
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The battle lines in the 21st century’s Great Game
aimed at shaping the creation of a new Eurasia-centred world, built on the
likely fusion of Europe and Asia into what former Portuguese Europe minister Bruno
Macaes calls a “supercontinent,” are all but cast in cement.
For now, the Great Game pits China together with Russia,
Turkey and Iran against the United States, India, Japan and Australia. The two
camps compete for influence, if not dominance, in a swath of land that
stretches from the China Sea to the Atlantic coast of Europe.
The flashpoints are multiple. They range from the China Sea
to Afghanistan, Pakistan, Syria, Turkey, Iran, and Central European nations and,
most recently, far beyond with Russia,
China and Turkey supporting embattled Venezuelan president Nicolas Maduro.
The rivalry resembles Risk, a popular game
of diplomacy, conflict and conquest played on a board depicting a political map
of the earth, divided into forty-two territories, which are grouped into six
continents. Multiple players commanding armies that seek to capture territories
engage in a complex dance as they strive for advantage and seek to compensate
for weaknesses. Players form opportunistic alliances that could change at any
moment. Potential black swans threaten to disrupt.
The black swans in the Great Game are multiple and far more
numerous than those developed in a just published report by the Paris-based European
Union Institute for Security Studies (EUISS). Nonetheless, the scenarios
conceptualized in the report, ‘What
If? Scanning the horizon: 12 scenarios for 2021,” are grounded in
recent trends and could prove to be game changers that radically rejigger the
Great Game’s current line-up.
The scenarios or grey swans in the report’s terminology, if
they unfold in reality, suggest that alliances in Eurasia are opportunistic and
transactional and like with Risk can turn players on their erstwhile allies as
interests diverge and re-converge. Analysis of five of the scenarios suggests
that fragility is greatest in the efforts of China, Russia, Turkey and Iran to
rebalance global power in their favour.
They suggest that strains in the United States’ relations
with Russia and Turkey are not immutable. Similarly, Russia’s effort to lock in
former Soviet republics with its Eurasian Economic Union (EEU) that groups
Russia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan Belarus, and Armenia could prove to be on shaky
ground. Russia’s alliance with Turkey and China as well as Iran even if the report
has not developed the latter possibility may be on thinner ice than meets the
eye.
The same can be said for grey swans in the United States’
ties to its long-standing allies as is played out in the report’s scenario for
a withdrawal of US troops from Europe as a result of President Donald J. Trump’s
accentuation of diverging trans-Atlantic interests.
With a multi-polar world the likely outcome of the battle
for Eurasia, the scenarios suggest that the perceived decline of the United
States, despite Mr. Trump’s unilateralism, is not irreversible. Similarly,
depending on how it plays its cards, Iran could emerge either as a winner or a
loser.
The four scenarios involve a renewed round of popular
protest in the Arab world following the reversal of successful revolts in 2011
in Egypt, Libya and Yemen and the embrace of brutal repression; political
violence in the Caucasus that pits Turkey against Russia and could threaten key
nodes along China’s Belt and Road; the dissolution of the Eurasian Economic
Union in an approaching post-Vladimir Putin era; a rejiggering of the political
map of south-eastern Europe and a strengthening
of European cohesion with the US troop withdrawal and resolution of tension
between Serbia and Kosovo.
The notion of renewed popular Arab protests, including
resistance to the influence of militias in Syria and Libya, that could rewrite
the political map of the Middle East is
hardly far-fetched with mass
anti-government demonstrations in Sudan persisting for more than a
month; riots in Tunisia, the one relatively successful 2011 revolt; protests
on the West Bank against a new social security law; and anti-government
marches in Iraq.
If anything, the revolts highlight the risks that all
players in the Great Game run by supporting autocratic regimes that have
largely failed to sustainably deliver public goods and services and/or offer
good governance and cater to the social, economic and political aspirations of
young populations.
“Pressure for change across the Arab world is likely to
continue to grow, keeping pace with the growth in populations, inequality and
social injustice,” concluded journalist Simon Tisdall on the eighth
anniversary of the uprising in Egypt that toppled president Hosni
Mubarak but was ultimately defeated by a military coup two years later.
The European Union Institute’s report imagines a massive
attack on the Baku Kars rail line, a vital node in the Belt and Road’s linking
of China to Europe that rekindles dormant local animosities as well as
competing Russian and Turkish economic and geostrategic interests, prompting
both Moscow and Ankara to lobby Washington for US support.
Similarly, a scenario envisaging Kazakhstan and Belarus
withdrawing from the Eurasian union because of its inability to live up to its
ambition of furthering regional integration sparks fears in Moscow that the demise
of the regional consortium could spark the collapse of the Collective Security
Treaty Organisation (CSTO), a military alliance that groups the five Eurasian union
members as well as Tajikistan and hosts Afghanistan and Serbia as observers.
The dissolution of the two organizations would significantly undermine Russia’s
regional standing.
Likewise, a swap of land between Serbia and Kosovo that
purifies two countries whose inter-communal relations have been poisoned by
historic prejudices and recent wars opens a Pandora’s Box across south-eastern
Europe but eases their accession to the European Union while a US troop
withdrawal would force EU members to focus on collective security.
It would only take one of these scenarios to unfold and
potentially spark a revisiting of the current line-up in the Great Game. Any
one of the scenarios is a realistic possibility.
Said European Union Institute deputy director Florence Gaub
in her introduction to the report: ”Grey Swans share with Black Swans a high
level of strategic impact, but there is more evidence to support the idea that
they are actually possible… The analogy with the 1985 film ‘Back to the Future’
is pure coincidence, of course – but just as in the film, we sometimes need to
take a trip to the future to inform our decision-making today.”
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 and a co-authored
volume, Comparative Political Transitions between Southeast Asia and
the Middle East and North Africa as well as Shifting
Sands, Essays on Sports and Politics in the Middle East and North Africa
and recently published China
and the Middle East: Venturing into the Maelstrom
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