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Highbrow Tribalism
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In American foreign-policy
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circles, everyone is waiting for the next X. "X" was the byline on the famous
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1947 essay in Foreign Affairs , actually written by George Kennan, that
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analyzed Soviet communism and laid out the post-World War II policy of
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"containment." Where is a comparably compelling vision of the post-Cold War
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world, a new lodestar for American foreign policy? Who is the next George
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Kennan? Harvard political scientist Samuel Huntington has a suggestion: How
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about him?
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Huntington's The Clash of
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Civilizations and the Remaking of World Order is now hitting the
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bookstores. The jacket copy says that the germ of the book--Huntington's 1993
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Foreign Affairs essay "The Clash of Civilizations?"--drew more
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discussion than any Foreign Affairs piece since Kennan's (at least,
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"according to the editors of that distinguished journal"). Blurbs from
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Brzenzinski (effusive) and Kissinger (guarded) reinforce the air of
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eminence.
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Huntington's book is devoted to a currently ubiquitous theme: tribalism. In
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politics, the tribal theme shows up in the rhetoric of Pat Buchanan, Vladimir
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Zhirinovsky, Jean-Marie Le Pen, and so on. In the intellectual world, the
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tribal theme shows up in treatises about the importance of the sentiments
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aroused by such men. Now that the bipolar order of the Cold War is gone, we're
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told, the primal bonds of ethnicity, language, and religion will be a
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central--if not the central--organizing principle in world affairs. Huntington
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carries this idea to new heights of theoretical elaboration. Surely tribalism
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has never sounded so cerebral. But it's one thing to analyze a phenomenon and
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another thing to encourage it. Huntington crosses the line so easily as to make
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you wonder: How different, really, are the lowbrow and highbrow expressions of
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the vogue for tribalism?
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Huntington's 1993 essay was, by design, a downer. The end
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of the Cold War had inspired such upbeat visions as the inexorable triumph of
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liberal democracy (Francis Fukuyama's The End of History ) and the "New
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World Order" (global peace mediated by the United Nations). Huntington insisted
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we recork the champagne. The world would remain strife-torn, he said, only now
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the main actors would be not ideological blocs or nation-states or superpowers,
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but distinct "civilizations"--Western, Islamic, Confucian, Japanese,
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Slavic-Orthodox, Latin American, Hindu, and African. (In the book, he adds a
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ninth civilization, Buddhist.) "Civilizations are the ultimate human tribes,
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and the clash of civilizations is tribal conflict on a global scale," he writes
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in the book. Relations between nations from different civilizations will be
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"almost never close" and "often hostile"--"trust and friendship will be rare."
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Wars will tend to break out along civilizational "fault lines" and will tend to
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expand along the same lines.
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How should we respond to this
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tribalism? Tribally. The very "survival of the West" depends on Westerners
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"uniting to renew and preserve" their civilization "against challenges from
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non-Western societies." Thus, Australia should abandon efforts to mesh with its
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local Asian milieu and instead should join NAFTA. The United States should
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de-emphasize engagement with Asia and turn back toward Europe.
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How exactly Huntington's
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diagnosis (perilously deep fault lines) leads to his prescription (further
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deepen the fault lines) is a puzzle to which we'll return. But first, a word
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about the diagnosis. Does his notion of "civilizations" as tribes writ large
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make sense?
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Back in
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1993, most commentators said no, and this book is unlikely to change their
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minds. For example, Huntington has renamed "Confucian" civilization "Sinic,"
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but that doesn't tidy up the concept. South Korea, North Korea, Taiwan, China,
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Singapore, and Vietnam are very motley and definitely not a crew. In fact, the
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thriving capitalist democracies of South Korea and Taiwan seem to blatantly
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violate Huntington's logic, showing how fast cultures can switch orientations
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from one "civilization" to another. Yet Huntington not only sees hidden
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coherence in the Sinic bloc; he sees the bloc as part of an even larger
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threat--the "Confucian-Islamic connection." This consists of China and North
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Korea "cooperating" with Pakistan, Iran, Iraq, Syria, Libya, and Algeria to
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thwart the West on such issues as arms proliferation. But the grab bag of
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national policies that supposedly add up to this grand transnational
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"connection" doesn't even include most Sinic or most Islamic states. If we
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wanted to use one variable to predict whether a nation is involved in
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Huntingon's Sinic-Islamic "connection," we'd be better off knowing whether it's
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one of the four remaining Communist dictatorships than knowing whether it's one
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of the five Sinic nations (50 percent predictive power vs. 40 percent).
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I could , as others have, about the
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civilizational paradigm's lack of analytical elegance. But that's not what
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really bothers me. Though ancestral cultures aren't the mystical epoxy that
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Huntington imagines, language, religion, and other aspects of cultural heritage
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do matter a lot in the post-Cold War world. The "civilizations" part of
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Huntington's thesis is less troubling than the "clash" part. Why is it an
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inherent property of intercivilizational relations that they be "usually cool"
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and "often hostile"? Why, for example, must Western relations with a Sinic bloc
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be typically tense? Obviously, current Western-Chinese relations are
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pretty tense. But why can't this change with, say, a new, more cosmopolitan,
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regime in China, or firmer and more consistent diplomatic signals from
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Washington?
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It isn't enough to say, as
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Huntington does, that Sinic civilization lacks the West's bent for democracy.
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The cliché that democracy hobbles the conduct of a coherent foreign policy is
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true. If Chinese leaders are freed from the burden of domestic pandering, they
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should be able to calmly find their zones of common interest with the West and
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cut the appropriate deals. So why does Huntington think we can't do business
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with these people? Are only Westerners capable of perceiving their rational
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self-interest and acting on it? Are only Westerners reliable negotiators?
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Sometimes
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Huntington seems to think so. After criticizing naive American attempts at
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"constructive engagement" and "dialogue" across the Pacific, he writes, "To the
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Asians, American concessions are not to be reciprocated, they are to be
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exploited." Ah, yes, those wily Asians. Pat Buchanan couldn't have said it
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better. (Here, again, Huntington conflates with other explanatory
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variables.)
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Huntington--like Buchanan--claims not to be a cultural
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supremacist: He is defending the integrity of all cultures, theirs and ours.
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Indeed, he sounds almost like a lefty relativist when he says we must accept
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"global multiculturality" and discard the "linear" view of history, which sees
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Western values as the inexorable fate of humankind. But of course, that's just
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another way of saying that liberal democracy--a value Huntington surely ranks
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above the alternatives morally--may never fit some peoples as naturally as it
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fits us. In this light the meaning of his call to "maintain the
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multicivilizational character of global politics" seems clear: separate but
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equal. You let one alien nation move into your trade bloc, and pretty soon the
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whole neighborhood goes downhill. (And already, Huntington worries, the West is
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suffering "decline" and "decay.")
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The Barbarians, in short, are
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at the gate--and conspiring against us. The future, Huntington says, may boil
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down to "the West against the rest." Raise the drawbridges!
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And yet,
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toward the end of this book, just when I was about to file Huntington in the
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"Pat Buchanan" section of my brain, he underwent a miraculous transformation.
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Up until this point he has been ignoring or downplaying the interdependence
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among modern nations. He doesn't seem to think the Chinese reliance on Western
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markets, say, or Hong Kong's thirst for Western capital, can help keep
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trans-Pacific relations smooth. And God knows he doesn't waste time talking
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about environmental problems soluble only by international cooperation. On the
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contrary, hovering like white noise throughout his 1993 essay, and through much
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of this book, is the that international relations are typically zero-sum, so
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that "natural conflicts of interest" dominate world affairs.
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But then, in the book's final few pages,
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Huntington does his sudden turnaround and finally sees what he missed in 1993:
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It is in the interests of civilizations not just to "coexist" but to actively
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cooperate. We live in a world not just of "transnational corporations" but of
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"transnational mafias and drug cartels," problems that nations can solve only
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by acting in concert. In the book's final paragraph he repeats that, "in the
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clash of civilizations, Europe and America will hang together or hang
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separately," but he adds that in "the greater clash," the "global" clash
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between chaos and order, "the world's great civilizations ... will also hang
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together or hang separately." Huntington, who set out in 1993 to debunk the New
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World Order, is suddenly talking like Boutros Boutros-Ghali!
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On behalf of one-worlders
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everywhere, I celebrate Huntington's Road to Damascus experience and officially
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disassociate him from Pat Buchanan. But before we teach him the secret New
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World Order handshake, we'd like him to resolve some paradoxes in his thinking.
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In particular: the tension between his prescriptions of (a) the West turning
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inward for its own salvation; and (b) the world's different tribes cooperating
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for global salvation. Clearly, the first can complicate the second. If, for
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example, America focuses on nourishing its European kinship and is wary of
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joining Pacific regional organizations, then building a bridge to Asia will be
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tricky.
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One can imagine another book
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that would synthesize and elaborate the of this one. For example, Huntington
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suggests putting an Islamic nation on the U.N. Security Council--an interesting
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idea, and proof that thinking "civilizationally," or at least culturally, has
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its uses. But the growing academic fad of thinking in primarily, almost
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obsessively, tribal terms is another matter. In addition to being analytically
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sloppy, it can become a self-fulfilling prophecy. Huntington notes, as evidence
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of tribalism, that foreign investment in America encounters more hostility when
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it's Japanese than when it's Canadian. Regrettably, this is true. But one
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reason it's true is because Huntington and other tribalism aficionados spend so
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much time talking about people from other "civilizations," as if they lived on
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another planet. Turns out they don't.
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