Shaping a 21st-century world order: The nation-state vs the civilizational state
By James M. Dorsey
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US President Joe Biden positions the Ukraine war as a
battle between autocracy and democracy. That reduces what is at stake in the
war. The stakes constitute a fundamental building block of a new 21st-century
world order: the nature of the state.
Russia's invasion of Ukraine represents the sharp end of the rise
of a critical mass of world leaders who think in civilizational rather than
national terms. They imagine the ideational and/or physical boundaries of their
countries as defined by history, ethnicity, culture, and/or religion rather
than international law.
Often that assertion involves denial of the existence of the
other and authoritarian or autocratic rule.
As a result, Russian President Vladimir Putin is in good company
when he justifies his invasion of Ukraine by asserting that Russians and
Ukrainians are one people. In other words, Ukrainians as a nation do not exist.
Neither do the Taiwanese or maritime rights of other littoral
states in the South China Sea in the mind of Chinese President Xi Jinping. Or
Palestinians in the vision of Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu's
coalition partners.
Superiority and exceptionalism are guiding principles for men
like Turkey's Recep Tayyip Erdogan, India's Narendra Modi, Hungary's Victor
Orban, and Mr. Netanyahu.
In 2018, the Knesset, the Israeli parliament, adopted a
controversial basic law defining Israel as the nation-state of the Jewish
people.
“Contrary to Israel’s Declaration of Independence, the
nation-state law was seen as enshrining
Jewish superiority and Arab inferiority, as bolstering Israel’s Jewish
character at the expense of its democratic character, ” said journalist
Carolina Landsmann.
Israeli religious Zionist writer Ehud Neor argued that “Israel is
not a nation-state in Western terms. It's a fulfilment of Biblical prophecy
that Jewish people were always meant to be in the Holy Land and to follow the
Holy Torah, and by doing so, they would be a light unto the world. There is a
global mission to Judaism.”
Similarly, Mr. Erdogan describes Turkey as "dünyanın
vicdanı,” the world's
conscience, a notion that frames his projection of international
cooperation and development assistance.
“Turkey is presented as a generous patriarch following in the
steps of (a particularly benevolent reading of) the Ottoman empire, taking care
of those in need—including, importantly, those who have allegedly been
forgotten by others. In explicit contrast to Western practices described as
self-serving, Turkish altruism comes with the
civilizational frame of Muslim charity and solidarity reminiscent of Ottoman
grandeur,” said scholars Sebastian Haug and Supriya Roychoudhury.
In an academic comparison, Mr. Haug and Ms. Roychoudhury compare Mr.
Erdogan’s notion of Turkish exceptionalism with Mr. Modi’s concept of ‘Vishwaguru.'
The concept builds on the philosophy of 19th-century Hindu leader
Swami Vivekananda.
“His rendition of Hinduism, like Gandhian Hindu syncretic
thought, ostensibly espouses tolerance and pluralism. With this and similar
framings, the adoption of an allegedly Gandhi-inspired syncretic Hindu
discourse enables Modi to distance himself politically from the secularist
civilizational discourse of (Indian nationalist leader Jawaharlal) Nehru,” the
two scholars said.
“At the same time, though, Modi's civilizational discourse, with
its indisputable belief in the superiority of Hinduism, has begun to underpin
official rhetoric in international forums,” they added.
In a rewrite of history, Mr. Putin, in a 5,000-word
article published less than a year before the February 2022 invasion of
Ukraine, portrayed the former Soviet republic as an anti-Russian creation that
grounded its legitimacy in erasing "everything that united us" and
projecting "the period when Ukraine was part of the Russian Empire and the
Soviet Union as an occupation."
In doing so, Mr. Putin created the justification civilisationalist
leaders often apply to either expand or replace the notion of a nation-state defined
by hard borders anchored in international law with a more fluid concept of a
state with external boundaries demarcated by history, ethnicity, culture,
and/or religion, and internal boundaries that differentiate its superior or
exceptional civilization from the other.
Civilisationalism serves multiple purposes. Asserting alleged
civilizational rights and fending off existential threats help justify authoritarian
and autocratic rule.
Dubbed Xivilisation by the
Global Times, a flagship newspaper of the Chinese Communist Party, Mr. Xi has
redefined civilisation to incorporate autocracy.
In March, Mr. Xi unveiled his Global
Civilisation Initiative at a Beijing conference of 500 political
parties from 150 countries.
Taking a stab at the Western promotion of democracy and human
rights, the initiative suggests that civilisations can live in harmony if they
refrain from projecting their values globally.
“In other words, quipped The Economist, “the West
should learn to live with Chinese communism. It may be based on Marxism,
a Western theory, but it is also the fruit of China’s ancient culture.”
Mr. Xi launched his initiative days before Mr. Biden co-hosted a
virtual Summit for
Democracy.
The assertion by a critical mass of world leaders of notions of a
civilisational state contrasts starkly with the promotion by Nahdlatul Ulama,
the world’s Indonesia-based largest and most moderate Muslim civil society
movement, of the nation-state as the replacement
in Islamic law of the civilisationalist concept of a caliphate, a unitary
state, for the global Muslim community.
Drawing conclusions from their comparison of Mr. Erdogan’s Turkey
and Mr. Modi’s India, Mr. Haug and Ms. Roychoudhury concluded that
civilisationalist claims serve “two distinct but interrelated political
projects: attempts to overcome international marginalization and efforts to
reinforce authoritarian rule domestically.”
Like Mr. Biden, Mr. Xi and other civilisationalist leaders are
battling for the high ground in a struggle to shape the future world order and
its underlying philosophy.
Mr. Biden's autocracy vs. democracy paradigm is part of that
struggle. But so is the question of whether governance systems are purely
political or civilizational. Countering that assertion could prove far more
decisive.
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Dr. James M. Dorsey is an award-winning journalist
and scholar, an Adjunct Senior Fellow at Nanyang Technological University’s S.
Rajaratnam School of International Studies, and the author of the syndicated
column and podcast, The Turbulent World with James M. Dorsey.
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