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"But
this time it's different!!!" Any time you hear that from a financial analyst,
you should run. Or better still, take the other side of his trade! If you're
numerically oriented, you know that patterns tend to revert to the mean. If
you're historically oriented, you know that the more things change, the more
they remain the same. Can companies really make money selling a product for
less than it costs to make - even in volume? Ask Buffett why he sat out the
tech boom....
Today I'm passing along a piece from George Friedman, Chief Intelligence Officer
at Stratfor. He makes the absolutely compelling argument that issues of war
and peace follow these same guidelines. There are ebbs and flows, but war between
countries is an inevitable part of history, and it's driven by simple geography.
The recent war between Russia and Georgia was precisely such a "reversion to
the mean," double-entendre fully intended.
Navigating financial markets requires an understanding of the geopolitical
issues - the war & peace - that drive them. What does this war mean for
Russian gas supplies to Europe? What does this war mean for the future of the
BTC pipeline? Does this war make Iranian inclusion in global markets more or
less likely? Is Russia just "vertically integrating" its control of energy
flows with less-than-subtle tools?
You may have seen Stratfor quotations recently in the New York Times, Bloomberg,
and Barron's. But personally I need more than just snippets. Quite simply,
George's team is the best out there, and I encourage you to take
advantage of the special offer that George makes available for my readers. The
old Cold War is heating up, and this is no time to be without intelligence
on what's coming next and analysis of what it means.
Read the analysis below and get a solid reminder that it's not different this
time - or any other.
John Mauldin, Editor
Outside the Box

The Real World Order
By George Friedman
On Sept. 11, 1990, U.S. President George H. W. Bush addressed Congress. He
spoke in the wake of the end of Communism in Eastern Europe, the weakening
of the Soviet Union, and the invasion of Kuwait by Saddam Hussein. He argued
that a New World Order was emerging: "A hundred generations have searched
for this elusive path to peace, while a thousand wars raged across the span
of human endeavor, and today that new world is struggling to be born. A world
quite different from the one we've known. A world where the rule of law supplants
the rule of the jungle. A world in which nations recognize the shared responsibility
for freedom and justice. A world where the strong respect the rights of the
weak."
After every major, systemic war, there is the hope that this will be the war
to end all wars. The idea driving it is simple. Wars are usually won by grand
coalitions. The idea is that the coalition that won the war by working together
will continue to work together to make the peace. Indeed, the idea is that
the defeated will join the coalition and work with them to ensure the peace.
This was the dream behind the Congress of Vienna, the League of Nations, the
United Nations and, after the Cold War, NATO. The idea was that there would
be no major issues that couldn't be handled by the victors, now joined with
the defeated. That was the idea that drove George H. W. Bush as the Cold War
was coming to its end.
Those with the dream are always disappointed. The victorious coalition breaks
apart. The defeated refuse to play the role assigned to them. New powers emerge
that were not part of the coalition. Anyone may have ideals and visions. The
reality of the world order is that there are profound divergences of interest
in a world where distrust is a natural and reasonable response to reality.
In the end, ideals and visions vanish in a new round of geopolitical conflict.
The post-Cold War world, the New World Order, ended with authority on Aug.
8, 2008, when Russia
and Georgia went to war. Certainly, this war was not in itself of major
significance, and a very good case can be made that the
New World Order actually started coming apart on Sept. 11, 2001. But it
was on Aug. 8 that a nation-state, Russia, attacked another nation-state, Georgia,
out of fear of the intentions of a third nation-state, the United States. This
causes us to begin thinking about the Real World Order.
The global system is suffering from two
imbalances. First, one nation-state, the United States, remains overwhelmingly
powerful, and no combination of powers are in a position to control its behavior.
We are aware of all the economic problems besetting the United States, but
the reality is that the American economy is larger than the next three economies
combined (Japan, Germany and China). The
U.S. military controls all the world's oceans and effectively
dominates space. Because of these factors, the United States remains
politically powerful - not liked and perhaps not admired, but enormously
powerful.
The second imbalance is within the United States itself. Its ground forces
and the bulk of its logistical capability are committed to the Middle East,
particularly Iraq and Afghanistan. The United States also is threatening on
occasion to go to war with Iran, which would tie down most of its air power,
and it is facing a
destabilizing Pakistan. Therefore, there is this paradox: The United States
is so powerful that, in the long run, it has created an imbalance in the global
system. In the short run, however, it is so off balance that it has few, if
any, military resources to deal with challenges elsewhere. That means that
the United State s remains the dominant power in the long run but it cannot
exercise that power in the short run. This creates a window of opportunity
for other countries to act.
The
outcome of the Iraq war can be seen emerging. The United States has succeeded
in creating the foundations for a political settlement among the main Iraqi
factions that will create a relatively stable government. In that sense,
U.S. policy has succeeded. But the problem the United States has is the length
of time it took to achieve this success. Had it occurred in 2003, the United
States would not suffer its current imbalance. But this is 2008, more than
five years after the invasion. The United States never expected a war of
this duration, nor did it plan for it. In order to fight the war, it had
to inject a major portion of its ground fighting capability into it. The
length of the war was the problem. U.S. ground forces are either in Iraq,
recovering from a tour or preparing for a deployment. What strategic reserves
are available are tasked into Afghanistan. Little
is left over.
As Iraq pulled in the bulk of available forces, the United States did not
shift its foreign policy elsewhere. For example, it remained committed to the
expansion of democracy in the former Soviet Union and the
expansion of NATO, to include Ukraine and Georgia. From the fall of the
former Soviet Union, the United States saw itself as having a dominant role
in reshaping post-Soviet social and political orders, including influencing
the emergence of democratic institutions and free markets. The United States
saw this almost in the same light as it saw the democratization of Germany
and Japan after World War II. Having defeated the Soviet Union, it now fell
to the United States to reshape the societies of the successor states.
Through the 1990s, the successor states, particularly
Russia, were inert. Undergoing painful internal upheaval - which foreigners
saw as reform but which many Russians viewed as a foreign-inspired national
catastrophe - Russia could not resist American and European involvement in
regional and internal affairs. From the American point of view, the reshaping
of the region - from the
Kosovo war to the expansion of NATO to the deployment of U.S. Air Force
bases to Central Asia - was simply a logical expansion of the collapse of
the Soviet Union. It was a benign attempt to stabilize the region, enhance
its prosperity and security and integrate it into the global system.
As Russia regained
its balance from the chaos of the 1990s, it began to see the American
and European presence in a less benign light. It was not clear to the Russians
that the United States was trying to stabilize the region. Rather, it appeared
to the Russians that the United States was trying to take advantage of Russian
weakness to impose a new politico-military reality in which Russia was to
be surrounded with nations controlled by the United States and its military
system, NATO. In spite of the promise made by Bill Clinton that NATO would
not expand into the former Soviet Union, the three Baltic states were admitted.
The promise was not addressed. NATO was expanded because it could and Russia
could do nothing about it.
From the Russian point of view, the
strategic break point was Ukraine. When the Orange Revolution came to
Ukraine, the American and European impression was that this was a spontaneous
democratic rising. The Russian perception was that it was a
well-financed CIA operation to foment an anti-Russian and pro-American
uprising in Ukraine. When the United States quickly began discussing the
inclusion of Ukraine in NATO, the Russians came to the conclusion that the
United States intended to surround and crush the Russian Federation. In their
view, if
NATO expanded into Ukraine, the Western military alliance would place
Russia in a strategically untenable position. Russia would be indefensible.
The American response was that it had no intention of threatening Russia.
The Russian question was returned: Then why are you trying to take control
of Ukraine? What other purpose would you have? The United States dismissed
these Russian concerns as absurd. The Russians, not regarding them as absurd
at all, began planning on the assumption of a hostile United States.
If the United States had intended to break the Russian Federation once and
for all, the time for that was in the 1990s, before Yeltsin was replaced by
Putin and before 9/11. There was, however, no clear policy on this, because
the United States felt it had all the time in the world. Superficially this
was true, but only superficially. First, the United States did not understand
that the Yeltsin years were a temporary aberration and that a new government
intending to stabilize Russia was inevitable. If
not Putin, it would have been someone else. Second, the United States did
not appreciate that it did not control the international agenda. Sept. 11,
2001, took away American options in the former Soviet Union. No only did it
need Russian help in Afghanistan, but it was going to spend the next decade
tied up in the Middle East. The United States had lost its room for maneuver
and therefore had run out of time.
And now we come to the key point. In spite of diminishing military options
outside of the Middle East, the United States did not modify its policy in
the former Soviet Union. It continued to aggressively attempt to influence
countries in the region, and it became particularly committed to integrating
Ukraine and Georgia into NATO, in spite of the fact that both were of overwhelming
strategic interest to the Russians. Ukraine
dominated Russia's southwestern flank, without any natural boundaries protecting
them. Georgia
was seen as a constant irritant in Chechnya as well as a barrier to Russian
interests in the Caucasus.
Moving rapidly to consolidate U.S. control over these and other countries
in the former Soviet Union made strategic sense. Russia was weak, divided and
poorly governed. It could make no response. Continuing this policy in the 2000s,
when the Russians were getting stronger, more united and better governed and
while U.S. forces were no longer available, made much less sense. The United
States continued to irritate the Russians without having, in the short run,
the forces needed to act decisively.
The American calculation was that the Russian government would not confront
American interests in the region. The
Russian calculation was that it could not wait to confront these interests
because the United States was concluding the Iraq war and would return to its
pre-eminent position in a few short years. Therefore, it made no sense for
Russia to wait and it made every sense for Russia to act as quickly as possible.
The Russians were partly influenced in their timing by the success of the
American surge in Iraq. If the United States continued its policy and had force
to back it up, the Russians would lose their window
of opportunity. Moreover, the Russians had an additional lever for use
on the Americans: Iran.
The United States had been playing a complex game with Iran for years, threatening
to attack while trying to negotiate. The Americans needed the Russians. Sanctions
against Iran would have no meaning if the Russians did not participate, and
the United States did not want Russia selling advance air defense systems to
Iran. (Such systems, which American analysts had warned were quite capable,
were not present in Syria on Sept. 6, 2007, when the Israelis struck a nuclear
facility there.) As the United States re-evaluates the Russian military, it
does not want to be surprised by Russian technology. Therefore, the more aggressive
the United States becomes toward Russia, the greater the difficulties it will
have in Iran. This further encouraged the Russians to act sooner
rather than later.
The Russians have now proven two things. First, contrary to the reality of
the 1990s, they can execute a competent military operation. Second, contrary
to regional perception, the
United States cannot intervene. The Russian message was directed against
Ukraine most of all, but the Baltics, Central Asia and Belarus are
all listening. The Russians will not act precipitously. They expect all
of these countries to adjust their foreign policies away from the United States
and toward Russia. They are looking to see if the lesson is absorbed. At first,
there will be mighty speeches and resistance. But the reality on the ground
is the reality on the ground.
We would expect the Russians to get traction. But if they don't, the Russians
are aware that they are, in the long run, much weaker than the Americans, and
that they will retain their regional position of strength only while the United
States is off balance in Iraq. If the lesson isn't absorbed, the Russians are
capable of more direct action, and they will not let this chance slip away.
This is their chance to redefine their sphere of influence. They will not get
another.
The
other country that is watching and thinking is Iran. Iran had accepted
the idea that it had lost the chance to dominate Iraq. It had also accepted
the idea that it would have to bargain away its nuclear capability or lose
it. The Iranians are now wondering if this is still true and are undoubtedly
pinging the Russians about the situation. Meanwhile, the Russians are waiting
for the Americans to calm down and get serious. If the Americans plan to
take meaningful action against them, they will respond in Iran. But the
Americans have no meaningful actions they can take; they need to get
out of Iraq and they need help against Iran. The quid pro quo here is obvious.
The United States acquiesces to Russian actions (which it can't do anything
about), while the Russians cooperate with the United States against Iran
getting nuclear weapons (something Russia does not want to see).
One of the interesting concepts of the New World Order was that all serious
countries would want to participate in it and that the only threat would come
from rogue states and nonstate actors such as North Korea and al Qaeda. Serious
analysts argued that conflict between nation-states would not be important
in the 21st century. There will certainly be rogue states and nonstate actors,
but the 21st century will be no different than any other century. On Aug. 8,
the Russians invited us all to the Real World Order.
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