Tuesday, December 16, 2014

Democracy, Legitimacy and U.S. Global Hegemony



It is an accepted convention in international relations that there is no central authority that is above sovereign states—at least formally. Hegemonic stability theory holds that a superpower state that has the capacity, will and legitimacy can and will act as the global leader for other states to follow, creating a semblance of a world government. Undoubtedly, the United States is today’s global hegemon. Although challenged, it is still the leading military, economic and ideological power. Many observers, however, argue that the hegemonic position of the United States is on a decline; focusing on both domestic and international failures of the United States while taking notice of the rise of the possible replacement in China and Russia. I argue that while U.S. hegemony is indeed on decline, it is in no way reasonably threatened to be replaced simply because no other state has risen to the occasion to legitimately challenge it and more crucially, the rest of the world has not conferred legitimacy upon any viable replacement.

Taking over from Britain after the country’s massive losses in World War II, the United States stood unchallenged as the global hegemon for decades. It had the capacity, being the largest economy in the world in terms of market exchange rates. It possessed the will, displayed through leading peace efforts, economic conventions and multilateral institutions worldwide. It controlled legitimacy, no other state in the world could be perceived as a wanted replacement for the U.S; viable, maybe, but not wanted. However, domestic and international failures is eroding its hegemonic position. The U.S. economic decline now places its economy second to China in terms of purchasing power parity. The will of the United States increasingly becomes invisible, refusing to act on major global security issues like the invasion in Ukraine. Its legitimacy as well is weakening with its failed democratization projects and the unsuccessful ‘war on terror.’

The rising global powers smell blood. Russia is increasingly pursuing more aggressive foreign policy, hoping to make its mark on global politics. China continues to grow economically and improve its military capacity. But the world has seen that Russia cannot keep up with the U.S. in economic terms with its dependence on oil; and China who can, simply is not globally aggressive in foreign policy, albeit it is regionally. However, even if these two states combine both their capacity and will, it will be very difficult to replace the U.S. as the global hegemon—their lack of legitimacy kills any Chinese or Russian hegemonic ambition.

Legitimacy is a constructed notion and the U.S. expertly crafted and marked its legitimacy in every strategic sphere possible. Culturally, American pop culture is unrivaled and has continuously depicted the U.S. as the good guy and every challenger as the bad guy. The media is critical of a U.S.-led world, but it has not done China or Russia any favours as well. In scholarship, the moral appeal of U.S. democracy and the ethical criticisms against authoritarian-like regimes of Russia and China creates the notion of the U.S. being the only moral superpower. It is the strong moral appeal of democracy that makes U.S. hegemony unthreatened; non-democratic regimes simply cannot lead an increasingly democratic world.

While Russia and China are in no doubt rising superpowers, the threat they pose to the hegemonic position of the United States is exaggerated. The U.S. is still the global leader in both economic and military terms and still has the most aggressive and wide-reach foreign policy to date. Despite being relatively outplayed from time to time, it is still the absolute standard and leader in global politics.  What locks the position of the U.S. as the global hegemon for the foreseeable future is its legitimacy. The constructed moral dimension of the legitimacy debate is the deciding factor as to why the world cannot anoint a replacement just yet. The world is coming for it, no doubt, but the U.S. is here to stay.

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