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dalcindo

07/26/10 7:03 AM

#341 RE: 3xBuBu #340

LOL. We ARE at war; been in it for 1300+ years.

Read this if you have time (from "THE NATURE OF CIVILIZATIONS" below.

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The Clash of Civilizations? - Samuel P. Huntington

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The Clash of Civilizations:

The Debate

Second Edition

Copyright © 2010 by the Council on Foreign Relations

All rights reserved

Printed in the United States of America


THE CLASH OF CIVILIZATIONS: THE DEBATE


This publication may not be reproduced, in whole or in part, without

written permission from the publishers. For information, write to Foreign Affairs,

Licensing Department, 58 East 68th Street, New York, NY 10065

To clear rights for distribution in an academic setting,

please visit the Copyright Clearance Center at Copyright.com

Visit ForeignAffairs.com for exclusive Web features.

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Contents


Foreword by James F. Hoge, Jr. iv

The Clash of Civilizations? 1

Samuel P. Huntington (Summer 1993)

The Summoning 33

Fouad Ajami (September/October 1993)

The Dangers of Decadence 45

Kishore Mahbubani (September/October 1993)

The Case for Optimism 52

Robert L. Bartley (September/October 1993)

Civilization Grafting 58

Liu Binyan (September/October 1993)

The Modernizing Imperative 62

Jeane J. Kirkpatrick (September/October 1993)

Do Civilizations Hold? 67

Albert L. Weeks (September/October 1993)

The West Is the Best 70

Gerard Piel (September/October 1993)

If Not Civilizations, What? 72

Samuel P. Huntington (November/December 1993)

Clash of Globalizations 86

Stanley Hoffmann (July/August 2002)

Us and Them: The Enduring Power

of Ethnic Nationalism 100

Jerry Z. Muller (March/April 2008)

The Clash of Emotions 120

Dominique Moïsi (January/February 2007)

[iv]

Foreword by

James F. Hoge, Jr.

When the Cold War suddenly ended at the beginning of the

1990s, two critical questions preoccupied international affairs

experts: What would be the nature of world politics and the

source of conflict in this new world? The most notable analysis

was conceived by renowned Harvard professor Samuel P.

Huntington.


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In “The Clash of Civilizations?” published by Foreign Affairs

in 1993, Huntington argued that ideological and economic

factors would no longer be the fundamental source of conflict.

Instead, the great divisions among peoples and nations

would be cultural. Thus the principal conflicts of global politics

would occur between nations and groups of civilizations

that are “differentiated from each other by history, language,

culture, tradition and, most important, religion.” Since “civilization

identity” will be increasingly important, Huntington

predicted that “the world will be shaped in large measure by

the interactions among seven or eight major civilizations. These

include Western, Confucian, Japanese, Islamic, Hindu, Slavic-

Orthodox, Latin American and possibly African.”

Huntington’s striking thesis that the clash of civilizations

would dominate global politics was showcased in media

around the world and prompted voluminous favorable and critical

commentary. To this day, his essay is the most requested

reprint from Foreign Affairs. Because of the sustained high

interest, Foreign Affairs published a reader consisting of “The

Clash of Civilizations?,” commentary from seven well-known

experts, and a response from Huntington. Among the commentators’

observations were these: conflicts are most likely to

break out between nations and groups within a civilization;

the enduring nature of citizenship is national; civilizations are

Foreword

the clash of civilizations: the debate [v]

absorptive sponges rather than clashing billiard balls; fears of

fundamentalist movements are exaggerated and the tenacity of

modernity and secularism within civilizations are underestimated;

and contrary to realist predictions, most states are not

perpetually at war with each other. In response, Huntington

documented contemporary examples of the forces that make

for clashes between civilizations and argued that they “can be

contained only if they are recognized.” Whether one subscribes

to Huntington’s overall thesis, there has been ample evidence in

the seventeen years since his landmark essay to support many

of his insights.

Foreign Affairs is pleased to present this second edition, in

both print and digital format, which features those aforementioned

essays as well as three more recent ones.

the clash of civilizations: the debate [1]

The Clash of Civilizations?

Samuel P. Huntington

SUMMER 1993



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THE NEXT PATTERN OF CONFLICT

World politics is entering a new phase, and intellectuals have

not hesitated to proliferate visions of what it will be—the end

of history, the return of traditional rivalries between nation

states, and the decline of the nation state from the conflicting

pulls of tribalism and globalism, among others. Each of

these visions catches aspects of the emerging reality. Yet they all

miss a crucial, indeed a central, aspect of what global politics is

likely to be in the coming years.

It is my hypothesis that the fundamental source of conflict

in this new world will not be primarily ideological or primarily

economic. The great divisions among humankind and the

dominating source of conflict will be cultural. Nation states

will remain the most powerful actors in world affairs, but the

principal conflicts of global politics will occur between nations

and groups of different civilizations. The clash of civilizations

will dominate global politics. The fault lines between civilizations

will be the battle lines of the future.

Conflict between civilizations will be the latest phase in the

SAMUEL P. HUNTINGTON is the Eaton Professor of the Science of Government

and Director of the John M. Olin Institute for Strategic Studies at

Harvard University. This article is the product of the Olin Institute’s project

on “The Changing Security Environment and American National Interests.”

The Clash of Civilizations?

[2] foreign affairs

evolution of conflict in the modern world. For a century and

a half after the emergence of the modern international system

with the Peace of Westphalia, the conflicts of the Western world

were largely among princes—emperors, absolute monarchs and

constitutional monarchs attempting to expand their bureaucracies,

their armies, their mercantilist economic strength and,

most important, the territory they ruled. In the process they

created nation states, and beginning with the French Revolution

the principal lines of conflict were between nations rather

than princes. In 1793, as R. R. Palmer put it, “The wars of kings

were over; the wars of peoples had begun.” This nineteenthcentury

pattern lasted until the end of World War I. Then, as

a result of the Russian Revolution and the reaction against it,

the conflict of nations yielded to the conflict of ideologies, first

among communism, fascism-Nazism and liberal democracy,

and then between communism and liberal democracy. During

the Cold War, this latter conflict became embodied in the

struggle between the two superpowers, neither of which was a

nation state in the classical European sense and each of which

defined its identity in terms of its ideology.

These conflicts between princes, nation states and ideologies

were primarily conflicts within Western civilization, “Western

civil wars,” as William Lind has labeled them. This was as true

of the Cold War as it was of the world wars and the earlier wars

of the seventeenth, eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. With

the end of the Cold War, international politics moves out of

its Western phase, and its centerpiece becomes the interaction

between the West and non-Western civilizations and among

non-Western civilizations. In the politics of civilizations, the

peoples and governments of non-Western civilizations no longer

remain the objects of history as targets of Western colonialism

but join the West as movers and shapers of history.

Samuel P. Huntington

the clash of civilizations: the debate [3]



THE NATURE OF CIVILIZATIONS

During the Cold War the world was divided into the First, Second

and Third Worlds. Those divisions are no longer relevant.

It is far more meaningful now to group countries not in terms

of their political or economic systems or in terms of their level

of economic development but rather in terms of their culture

and civilization.

What do we mean when we talk of a civilization? A civilization

is a cultural entity. Villages, regions, ethnic groups,

nationalities, religious groups, all have distinct cultures at

different levels of cultural heterogeneity. The culture of a village

in southern Italy may be different from that of a village

in northern Italy, but both will share in a common Italian

culture that distinguishes them from German villages. European

communities, in turn, will share cultural features that

distinguish them from Arab or Chinese communities. Arabs,

Chinese and Westerners, however, are not part of any broader

cultural entity. They constitute civilizations. A civilization is

thus the highest cultural grouping of people and the broadest

level of cultural identity people have short of that which

distinguishes humans from other species. It is defined both

by common objective elements, such as language, history, religion,

customs, institutions, and by the subjective self-identification

of people. People have levels of identity: a resident of

Rome may define himself with varying degrees of intensity as

a Roman, an Italian, a Catholic, a Christian, a European, a

Westerner. The civilization to which he belongs is the broadest

level of identification with which he intensely identifies.

People can and do redefine their identities and, as a result, the

composition and boundaries of civilizations change.

Civilizations may involve a large number of people, as with

China (“a civilization pretending to be a state,” as Lucian Pye

The Clash of Civilizations?

[4] foreign affairs

put it), or a very small number of people, such as the Anglophone

Caribbean. A civilization may include several nation

states, as is the case with Western, Latin American and Arab

civilizations, or only one, as is the case with Japanese civilization.

Civilizations obviously blend and overlap, and may

include subcivilizations. Western civilization has two major

variants, European and North American, and Islam has its

Arab, Turkic and Malay subdivisions. Civilizations are nonetheless

meaningful entities, and while the lines between them

are seldom sharp, they are real. Civilizations are dynamic; they

rise and fall; they divide and merge. And, as any student of history

knows, civilizations disappear and are buried in the sands

of time.

Westerners tend to think of nation states as the principal

actors in global affairs. They have been that, however, for only

a few centuries. The broader reaches of human history have

been the history of civilizations. In A Study of History, Arnold

Toynbee identified 21 major civilizations; only six of them exist

in the contemporary world.

WHY CIVILIZATIONS WILL CLASH

Civilization identity will be increasingly important in the

future, and the world will be shaped in large measure by the

interactions among seven or eight major civilizations. These

include Western, Confucian, Japanese, Islamic, Hindu, Slavic-

Orthodox, Latin American and possibly African civilization.

The most important conflicts of the future will occur along

the cultural fault lines separating these civilizations from one

another.

Why will this be the case?

First, differences among civilizations are not only real; they

are basic. Civilizations are differentiated from each other by history,

language, culture, tradition and, most important, religion.

Samuel P. Huntington

the clash of civilizations: the debate [5]

The people of different civilizations have different views on the

relations between God and man, the individual and the group,

the citizen and the state, parents and children, husband and

wife, as well as differing views of the relative importance of

rights and responsibilities, liberty and authority, equality and

hierarchy. These differences are the product of centuries. They

will not soon disappear. They are far more fundamental than

differences among political ideologies and political regimes.

Differences do not necessarily mean conflict, and conflict does

not necessarily mean violence. Over the centuries, however,

differences among civilizations have generated the most prolonged

and the most violent conflicts.

Second, the world is becoming a smaller place. The interactions

between peoples of different civilizations are increasing;

these increasing interactions intensify civilization consciousness

and awareness of differences between civilizations and commonalities

within civilizations. North African immigration to

France generates hostility among Frenchmen and at the same

time increased receptivity to immigration by “good” European

Catholic Poles. Americans react far more negatively to Japanese

investment than to larger investments from Canada and European

countries. Similarly, as Donald Horowitz has pointed out,

“An Ibo may be . . . an Owerri Ibo or an Onitsha Ibo in what

was the Eastern region of Nigeria. In Lagos, he is simply an

Ibo. In London, he is a Nigerian. In New York, he is an African.”

The interactions among peoples of different civilizations

enhance the civilization-consciousness of people that, in turn,

invigorates differences and animosities stretching or thought to

stretch back deep into history.

Third, the processes of economic modernization and social

change throughout the world are separating people from longstanding

local identities. They also weaken the nation state as

a source of identity. In much of the world religion has moved

in to fill this gap, often in the form of movements that are

The Clash of Civilizations?

[6] foreign affairs

labeled “fundamentalist.” Such movements are found in Western

Christianity, Judaism, Buddhism, and Hinduism, as well

as in Islam. In most countries and most religions the people

active in fundamentalist movements are young, college-educated,

middle-class technicians, professionals and business persons.

The “unsecularization of the world,” George Weigel has

remarked, “is one of the dominant social facts of life in the

late twentieth century.” The revival of religion, “la revanche

de Dieu,” as Gilles Kepel labeled it, provides a basis for identity

and commitment that transcends national boundaries and

unites civilizations.

Fourth, the growth of civilization-consciousness is enhanced

by the dual role of the West. On the one hand, the West is at

a peak of power. At the same time, however, and perhaps as a

result, a return to the roots phenomenon is occurring among

non-Western civilizations. Increasingly one hears references to

trends toward a turning inward and “Asianization” in Japan,

the end of the Nehru legacy and the “Hinduization” of India,

the failure of Western ideas of socialism and nationalism and

hence “re-Islamization” of the Middle East, and now a debate

over Westernization versus Russianization in Boris Yeltsin’s

country. A West at the peak of its power confronts non-Wests

that increasingly have the desire, the will and the resources to

shape the world in non-Western ways.

In the past, the elites of non-Western societies were usually the

people who were most involved with the West, had been educated

at Oxford, the Sorbonne or Sandhurst, and had absorbed

Western attitudes and values. At the same time, the populace

in non-Western countries often remained deeply imbued with

the indigenous culture. Now, however, these relationships are

being reversed. A de-Westernization and indigenization of

elites is occurring in many non-Western countries at the same

time that Western, usually American, cultures, styles, and habits

become more popular among the mass of the people.

Samuel P. Huntington

the clash of civilizations: the debate [7]

Fifth, cultural characteristics and differences are less mutable

and hence less easily compromised and resolved than political

and economic ones. In the former Soviet Union, communists

can become democrats, the rich can become poor and the poor

rich, but Russians cannot become Estonians and Azeris cannot

become Armenians. In class and ideological conflicts, the

key question was “Which side are you on?” and people could

and did choose sides and change sides. In conflicts between

civilizations, the question is “What are you?” That is a given

that cannot be changed. And as we know, from Bosnia to the

Caucasus to the Sudan, the wrong answer to that question can

mean a bullet in the head. Even more than ethnicity, religion

discriminates sharply and exclusively among people. A person

can be half-French and half-Arab and simultaneously even a

citizen of two countries. It is more difficult to be half-Catholic

and half-Muslim.

Finally, economic regionalism is increasing. The proportions

of total trade that were intraregional rose between 1980 and

1989 from 51 percent to 59 percent in Europe, 33 percent to 37

percent in East Asia, and 32 percent to 36 percent in North

America. The importance of regional economic blocs is likely

to continue to increase in the future. On the one hand, successful

economic regionalism will reinforce civilization-consciousness.

On the other hand, economic regionalism may succeed

only when it is rooted in a common civilization. The European

Community rests on the shared foundation of European culture

and Western Christianity. The success of the North American

Free Trade Area depends on the convergence now underway of

Mexican, Canadian and American cultures. Japan, in contrast,

faces difficulties in creating a comparable economic entity in

East Asia because Japan is a society and civilization unique to

itself. However strong the trade and investment links Japan

may develop with other East Asian countries, its cultural differences

with those countries inhibit and perhaps preclude its

The Clash of Civilizations?

[8] foreign affairs

promoting regional economic integration like that in Europe

and North America.

Common culture, in contrast, is clearly facilitating the rapid

expansion of the economic relations between the People’s

Republic of China and Hong Kong, Taiwan, Singapore and the

overseas Chinese communities in other Asian countries. With

the Cold War over, cultural commonalities increasingly overcome

ideological differences, and mainland China and Taiwan

move closer together. If cultural commonality is a prerequisite

for economic integration, the principal East Asian economic

bloc of the future is likely to be centered on China. This bloc is,

in fact, already coming into existence. As Murray Weidenbaum

has observed,

Despite the current Japanese dominance of the region, the Chinese-based economy

of Asia is rapidly emerging as a new epicenter for industry, commerce and

finance. This strategic area contains substantial amounts of technology and

manufacturing capability (Taiwan), outstanding entrepreneurial, marketing and

services acumen (Hong Kong), a fine communications network (Singapore), a

tremendous pool of financial capital (all three), and very large endowments of

land, resources and labor (mainland China). . . . From Guangzhou to Singapore,

from Kuala Lumpur to Manila, this influential network—often based on extensions

of the traditional clans—has been described as the backbone of the East

Asian economy.1

Culture and religion also form the basis of the Economic

Cooperation Organization, which brings together ten non-

Arab Muslim countries: Iran, Pakistan, Turkey, Azerbaijan,

Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Turkmenistan, Tadjikistan, Uzbekistan

and Afghanistan. One impetus to the revival and expansion

of this organization, founded originally in the 1960s by

Turkey, Pakistan and Iran, is the realization by the leaders of

several of these countries that they had no chance of admission

to the European Community. Similarly, Caricom, the Central

1Murray Weidenbaum, Greater China: The Next Economic Superpower?, St.

Louis: Washington University Center for the Study of American Business,

Contemporary Issues, Series 57, February 1993, pp. 2–3.

Samuel P. Huntington

the clash of civilizations: the debate [9]

American Common Market and Mercosur rest on common

cultural foundations. Efforts to build a broader Caribbean-

Central American economic entity bridging the Anglo-Latin

divide, however, have to date failed.

As people define their identity in ethnic and religious terms,

they are likely to see an “us” versus “them” relation existing

between themselves and people of different ethnicity or religion.

The end of ideologically defined states in Eastern Europe

and the former Soviet Union permits traditional ethnic identities

and animosities to come to the fore. Differences in culture

and religion create differences over policy issues, ranging from

human rights to immigration to trade and commerce to the

environment. Geographical propinquity gives rise to conflicting

territorial claims from Bosnia to Mindanao. Most important,

the efforts of the West to promote its values of democracy and

liberalism as universal values, to maintain its military predominance

and to advance its economic interests engender countering

responses from other civilizations. Decreasingly able to mobilize

support and form coalitions on the basis of ideology, governments

and groups will increasingly attempt to mobilize support

by appealing to common religion and civilization identity.

The clash of civilizations thus occurs at two levels. At the

microlevel, adjacent groups along the fault lines between civilizations

struggle, often violently, over the control of territory

and each other. At the macro-level, states from different civilizations

compete for relative military and economic power,

struggle over the control of international institutions and third

parties, and competitively promote their particular political

and religious values.

THE FAULT LINES BETWEEN CIVILIZATIONS

The fault lines between civilizations are replacing the political

and ideological boundaries of the Cold War as the flash

The Clash of Civilizations?

[10] foreign affairs

points for crisis and bloodshed. The Cold War began when

the Iron Curtain divided Europe politically and ideologically.

The Cold War ended with the end of the Iron Curtain. As

the ideological division of Europe has disappeared, the cultural

division of Europe between Western Christianity, on the

one hand, and Orthodox Christianity and Islam, on the other,

has reemerged. The most significant dividing line in Europe,

as William Wallace has suggested, may well be the eastern

boundary of Western Christianity in the year 1500. This line

runs along what are now the boundaries between Finland and

Russia and between the Baltic states and Russia, cuts through

Belarus and Ukraine separating the more Catholic western

Ukraine from Orthodox eastern Ukraine, swings westward

separating Transylvania from the rest of Romania, and then

goes through Yugoslavia almost exactly along the line now

separating Croatia and Slovenia from the rest of Yugoslavia.

In the Balkans this line, of course, coincides with the historic

boundary between the Hapsburg and Ottoman empires. The

peoples to the north and west of this line are Protestant or

Catholic; they shared the common experiences of European

history—feudalism, the Renaissance, the Reformation, the

Enlightenment, the French Revolution, the Industrial Revolution;

they are generally economically better off than the

peoples to the east; and they may now look forward to increasing

involvement in a common European economy and to the

consolidation of democratic political systems. The peoples to

the east and south of this line are Orthodox or Muslim; they

historically belonged to the Ottoman or Tsarist empires and

were only lightly touched by the shaping events in the rest of

Europe; they are generally less advanced economically; they

seem much less likely to develop stable democratic political

systems. The Velvet Curtain of culture has replaced the Iron

Curtain of ideology as the most significant dividing line in

Europe. As the events in Yugoslavia show, it is not only a line

Samuel P. Huntington

the clash of civilizations: the debate [11]

of difference; it is also at times a line of bloody conflict.

Conflict along the fault line between Western and Islamic

civilizations has been going on for 1,300 years. After the founding

of Islam, the Arab and Moorish surge west and north only

ended at Tours in 732. From the eleventh to the thirteenth

century the Crusaders attempted with temporary success to

bring Christianity and Christian rule to the Holy Land. From

the fourteenth to the seventeenth century, the Ottoman Turks

reversed the balance, extended their sway over the Middle East

and the Balkans, captured Constantinople, and twice laid

siege to Vienna. In the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries

as Ottoman power declined Britain, France, and Italy

established Western control over most of North Africa and the

Middle East.

After World War II, the West, in turn, began to retreat;

the colonial empires disappeared; first Arab nationalism and

then Islamic fundamentalism manifested themselves; the West

became heavily dependent on the Persian Gulf countries for

its energy; the oil-rich Muslim countries became money-rich

and, when they wished to, weapons-rich. Several wars occurred

between Arabs and Israel (created by the West). France fought a

bloody and ruthless war in Algeria for most of the 1950s; British

and French forces invaded Egypt in 1956; American forces went

into Lebanon in 1958; subsequently American forces returned

to Lebanon, attacked Libya, and engaged in various military

encounters with Iran; Arab and Islamic terrorists, supported

by at least three Middle Eastern governments, employed the

weapon of the weak and bombed Western planes and installations

and seized Western hostages. This warfare between Arabs

and the West culminated in 1990, when the United States sent

a massive army to the Persian Gulf to defend some Arab countries

against aggression by another. In its aftermath NATO

planning is increasingly directed to potential threats and instability

along its “southern tier.”

The Clash of Civilizations?

[12] foreign affairs

This centuries-old military interaction between the West and

Islam is unlikely to decline. It could become more virulent.

The Gulf War left some Arabs feeling proud that Saddam Hussein

had attacked Israel and stood up to the West. It also left

many feeling humiliated and resentful of the West’s military

presence in the Persian Gulf, the West’s overwhelming military

dominance, and their apparent inability to shape their own

destiny. Many Arab countries, in addition to the oil exporters,

are reaching levels of economic and social development

where autocratic forms of government become inappropriate

and efforts to introduce democracy become stronger. Some

openings in Arab political systems have already occurred. The

principal beneficiaries of these openings have been Islamist

movements. In the Arab world, in short, Western democracy

strengthens anti-Western political forces. This may be a passing

phenomenon, but it surely complicates relations between

Islamic countries and the West.

Those relations are also complicated by demography. The

spectacular population growth in Arab countries, particularly

in North Africa, has led to increased migration to Western

Europe. The movement within Western Europe toward minimizing

internal boundaries has sharpened political sensitivities

with respect to this development. In Italy, France and Germany,

racism is increasingly open, and political reactions and

violence against Arab and Turkish migrants have become more

intense and more widespread since 1990.

On both sides the interaction between Islam and the West is

seen as a clash of civilizations. The West’s “next confrontation,”

observes M. J. Akbar, an Indian Muslim author, “is definitely

going to come from the Muslim world. It is in the sweep of the

Islamic nations from the Maghreb to Pakistan that the struggle

for a new world order will begin.” Bernard Lewis comes to a

similar conclusion:

Samuel P. Huntington

the clash of civilizations: the debate [13]

We are facing a mood and a movement far transcending the level of issues and

policies and the governments that pursue them. This is no less than a clash of

civilizations—the perhaps irrational but surely historic reaction of an ancient

rival against our Judeo-Christian heritage, our secular present, and the worldwide

expansion of both.2

Historically, the other great antagonistic interaction of Arab

Islamic civilization has been with the pagan, animist, and now

increasingly Christian black peoples to the south. In the past,

this antagonism was epitomized in the image of Arab slave

dealers and black slaves. It has been reflected in the on-going

civil war in the Sudan between Arabs and blacks, the fighting

in Chad between Libyan-supported insurgents and the government,

the tensions between Orthodox Christians and Muslims

in the Horn of Africa, and the political conflicts, recurring riots

and communal violence between Muslims and Christians in

Nigeria. The modernization of Africa and the spread of Christianity

are likely to enhance the probability of violence along this

fault line. Symptomatic of the intensification of this conflict

was the Pope John Paul II’s speech in Khartoum in February

1993 attacking the actions of the Sudan’s Islamist government

against the Christian minority there.

On the northern border of Islam, conflict has increasingly

erupted between Orthodox and Muslim peoples, including

the carnage of Bosnia and Sarajevo, the simmering violence

between Serb and Albanian, the tenuous relations between

Bulgarians and their Turkish minority, the violence between

Ossetians and Ingush, the unremitting slaughter of each other

by Armenians and Azeris, the tense relations between Russians

and Muslims in Central Asia, and the deployment of Russian

troops to protect Russian interests in the Caucasus and Central

Asia. Religion reinforces the revival of ethnic identities and

2Bernard Lewis, “The Roots of Muslim Rage,” The Atlantic Monthly, vol.

266, September 1990, p. 60; Time, June 15, 1992, pp. 24–28.

The Clash of Civilizations?

[14] foreign affairs

restimulates Russian fears about the security of their southern

borders. This concern is well captured by Archie Roosevelt:

Much of Russian history concerns the struggle between the Slavs and the Turkic

peoples on their borders, which dates back to the foundation of the Russian state

more than a thousand years ago. In the Slavs’ millennium-long confrontation

with their eastern neighbors lies the key to an understanding not only of Russian

history, but Russian character. To understand Russian realities today one has to

have a concept of the great Turkic ethnic group that has preoccupied Russians

through the centuries.3

The conflict of civilizations is deeply rooted elsewhere in Asia.

The historic clash between Muslim and Hindu in the subcontinent

manifests itself now not only in the rivalry between Pakistan

and India but also in intensifying religious strife within

India between increasingly militant Hindu groups and India’s

substantial Muslim minority. The destruction of the Ayodhya

mosque in December 1992 brought to the fore the issue of

whether India will remain a secular democratic state or become

a Hindu one. In East Asia, China has outstanding territorial

disputes with most of its neighbors. It has pursued a ruthless

policy toward the Buddhist people of Tibet, and it is pursuing

an increasingly ruthless policy toward its Turkic-Muslim

minority. With the Cold War over, the underlying differences

between China and the United States have reasserted themselves

in areas such as human rights, trade and weapons proliferation.

These differences are unlikely to moderate. A “new

cold war,” Deng Xaioping reportedly asserted in 1991, is under

way between China and America.

The same phrase has been applied to the increasingly difficult

relations between Japan and the United States. Here cultural

difference exacerbates economic conflict. People on each

side allege racism on the other, but at least on the American

side the antipathies are not racial but cultural. The basic values,

3Archie Roosevelt, For Lust of Knowing, Boston: Little, Brown, 1988, pp.

332–333.

Samuel P. Huntington

the clash of civilizations: the debate [15]

attitudes, behavioral patterns of the two societies could hardly

be more different. The economic issues between the United

States and Europe are no less serious than those between the

United States and Japan, but they do not have the same political

salience and emotional intensity because the differences

between American culture and European culture are so much

less than those between American civilization and Japanese

civilization.

The interactions between civilizations vary greatly in the

extent to which they are likely to be characterized by violence.

Economic competition clearly predominates between

the American and European subcivilizations of the West and

between both of them and Japan. On the Eurasian continent,

however, the proliferation of ethnic conflict, epitomized at the

extreme in “ethnic cleansing,” has not been totally random.

It has been most frequent and most violent between groups

belonging to different civilizations. In Eurasia the great historic

fault lines between civilizations are once more aflame. This is

particularly true along the boundaries of the crescent-shaped

Islamic bloc of nations from the bulge of Africa to central Asia.

Violence also occurs between Muslims, on the one hand, and

Orthodox Serbs in the Balkans, Jews in Israel, Hindus in India,

Buddhists in Burma and Catholics in the Philippines. Islam

has bloody borders.

CIVILIZATION RALLYING:

THE KIN-COUNTRY SYNDROME

Groups or states belonging to one civilization that become

involved in war with people from a different civilization naturally

try to rally support from other members of their own

civilization. As the post–Cold War world evolves, civilization

commonality, what H. D. S. Greenway has termed the

“kin-country” syndrome, is replacing political ideology and

The Clash of Civilizations?

[16] foreign affairs

traditional balance of power considerations as the principal

basis for cooperation and coalitions. It can be seen gradually

emerging in the post–Cold War conflicts in the Persian Gulf,

the Caucasus and Bosnia. None of these was a full-scale war

between civilizations, but each involved some elements of civilizational

rallying, which seemed to become more important

as the conflict continued and which may provide a foretaste of

the future.

First, in the Gulf War one Arab state invaded another and

then fought a coalition of Arab, Western and other states.

While only a few Muslim governments overtly supported Saddam

Hussein, many Arab elites privately cheered him on, and

he was highly popular among large sections of the Arab publics.

Islamic fundamentalist movements universally supported Iraq

rather than the Western-backed governments of Kuwait and

Saudi Arabia. Forswearing Arab nationalism, Saddam Hussein

explicitly invoked an Islamic appeal. He and his supporters

attempted to define the war as a war between civilizations. “It is

not the world against Iraq,” as Safar Al-Hawali, dean of Islamic

Studies at the Umm Al-Qura University in Mecca, put it in a

widely circulated tape. “It is the West against Islam.” Ignoring

the rivalry between Iran and Iraq, the chief Iranian religious

leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, called for a holy war against

the West: “The struggle against American aggression, greed,

plans and policies will be counted as a jihad, and anybody who

is killed on that path is a martyr.” “This is a war,” King Hussein

of Jordan argued, “against all Arabs and all Muslims and not

against Iraq alone.”

The rallying of substantial sections of Arab elites and publics

behind Saddam Hussein caused those Arab governments

in the anti-Iraq coalition to moderate their activities and temper

their public statements. Arab governments opposed or distanced

themselves from subsequent Western efforts to apply

pressure on Iraq, including enforcement of a no-fly zone in the

Samuel P. Huntington

the clash of civilizations: the debate [17]

summer of 1992 and the bombing of Iraq in January 1993. The

Western-Soviet-Turkish-Arab anti-Iraq coalition of 1990 had by

1993 become a coalition of almost only the West and Kuwait

against Iraq.

Muslims contrasted Western actions against Iraq with the

West’s failure to protect Bosnians against Serbs and to impose

sanctions on Israel for violating UN resolutions. The West,

they alleged, was using a double standard. A world of clashing

civilizations, however, is inevitably a world of double standards:

people apply one standard to their kin-countries and a different

standard to others.

Second, the kin-country syndrome also appeared in conflicts

in the former Soviet Union. Armenian military successes in

1992 and 1993 stimulated Turkey to become increasingly supportive

of its religious, ethnic and linguistic brethren in Azerbaijan.

“We have a Turkish nation feeling the same sentiments

as the Azerbaijanis,” said one Turkish official in 1992. “We are

under pressure. Our newspapers are full of the photos of atrocities

and are asking us if we are still serious about pursuing our

neutral policy. Maybe we should show Armenia that there’s

a big Turkey in the region.” President Turgut Özal agreed,

remarking that Turkey should at least “scare the Armenians a

little bit.” Turkey, Özal threatened again in 1993, would “show

its fangs.” Turkish Air Force jets flew reconnaissance flights

along the Armenian border; Turkey suspended food shipments

and air flights to Armenia; and Turkey and Iran announced

they would not accept dismemberment of Azerbaijan. In the

last years of its existence, the Soviet government supported

Azerbaijan because its government was dominated by former

communists. With the end of the Soviet Union, however, political

considerations gave way to religious ones. Russian troops

fought on the side of the Armenians, and Azerbaijan accused

the “Russian government of turning 180 degrees” toward support

for Christian Armenia.

The Clash of Civilizations?

[18] foreign affairs

Third, with respect to the fighting in the former Yugoslavia,

Western publics manifested sympathy and support for the

Bosnian Muslims and the horrors they suffered at the hands

of the Serbs. Relatively little concern was expressed, however,

over Croatian attacks on Muslims and participation in the

dismemberment of Bosnia-Herzegovina. In the early stages of

the Yugoslav breakup, Germany, in an unusual display of diplomatic

initiative and muscle, induced the other 11 members

of the European Community to follow its lead in recognizing

Slovenia and Croatia. As a result of the pope’s determination

to provide strong backing to the two Catholic countries,

the Vatican extended recognition even before the Community

did. The United States followed the European lead. Thus

the leading actors in Western civilization rallied behind their

coreligionists. Subsequently Croatia was reported to be receiving

substantial quantities of arms from Central European and

other Western countries. Boris Yeltsin’s government, on the

other hand, attempted to pursue a middle course that would

be sympathetic to the Orthodox Serbs but not alienate Russia

from the West. Russian conservative and nationalist groups,

however, including many legislators, attacked the government

for not being more forthcoming in its support for the Serbs.

By early 1993 several hundred Russians apparently were serving

with the Serbian forces, and reports circulated of Russian arms

being supplied to Serbia.

Islamic governments and groups, on the other hand, castigated

the West for not coming to the defense of the Bosnians.

Iranian leaders urged Muslims from all countries to provide help

to Bosnia; in violation of the UN arms embargo, Iran supplied

weapons and men for the Bosnians; Iranian-supported Lebanese

groups sent guerrillas to train and organize the Bosnian forces.

In 1993 up to 4,000 Muslims from over two dozen Islamic

countries were reported to be fighting in Bosnia. The governments

of Saudi Arabia and other countries felt under increasing

Samuel P. Huntington

the clash of civilizations: the debate [19]

pressure from fundamentalist groups in their own societies to

provide more vigorous support for the Bosnians. By the end of

1992, Saudi Arabia had reportedly supplied substantial funding

for weapons and supplies for the Bosnians, which significantly

increased their military capabilities vis-à-vis the Serbs.

In the 1930s the Spanish Civil War provoked intervention

from countries that politically were fascist, communist and

democratic. In the 1990s the Yugoslav conflict is provoking

intervention from countries that are Muslim, Orthodox and

Western Christian. The parallel has not gone unnoticed. “The

war in Bosnia-Herzegovina has become the emotional equivalent

of the fight against fascism in the Spanish Civil War,” one

Saudi editor observed. “Those who died there are regarded as

martyrs who tried to save their fellow Muslims.”

Conflicts and violence will also occur between states and

groups within the same civilization. Such conflicts, however,

are likely to be less intense and less likely to expand than conflicts

between civilizations. Common membership in a civilization

reduces the probability of violence in situations where

it might otherwise occur. In 1991 and 1992 many people were

alarmed by the possibility of violent conflict between Russia

and Ukraine over territory, particularly Crimea, the Black

Sea fleet, nuclear weapons and economic issues. If civilization

is what counts, however, the likelihood of violence between

Ukrainians and Russians should be low. They are two Slavic,

primarily Orthodox peoples who have had close relationships

with each other for centuries. As of early 1993, despite all the

reasons for conflict, the leaders of the two countries were effectively

negotiating and defusing the issues between the two

countries. While there has been serious fighting between Muslims

and Christians elsewhere in the former Soviet Union and

much tension and some fighting between Western and Orthodox

Christians in the Baltic states, there has been virtually no

violence between Russians and Ukrainians.

The Clash of Civilizations?

[20] foreign affairs

Civilization rallying to date has been limited, but it has

been growing, and it clearly has the potential to spread much

further. As the conflicts in the Persian Gulf, the Caucasus

and Bosnia continued, the positions of nations and the

cleavages between them increasingly were along civilizational

lines. Populist politicians, religious leaders and the media have

found it a potent means of arousing mass support and of pressuring

hesitant governments. In the coming years, the local

conflicts most likely to escalate into major wars will be those,

as in Bosnia and the Caucasus, along the fault lines between

civilizations. The next world war, if there is one, will be a war

between civilizations.

THE WEST VERSUS THE REST

The west is now at an extraordinary peak of power in relation

to other civilizations. Its superpower opponent has disappeared

from the map. Military conflict among Western states

is unthinkable, and Western military power is unrivaled. Apart

from Japan, the West faces no economic challenge. It dominates

international political and security institutions and with Japan

international economic institutions. Global political and security

issues are effectively settled by a directorate of the United

States, Britain and France, world economic issues by a directorate

of the United States, Germany and Japan, all of which

maintain extraordinarily close relations with each other to the

exclusion of lesser and largely non-Western countries. Decisions

made at the UN Security Council or in the International

Monetary Fund that reflect the interests of the West are presented

to the world as reflecting the desires of the world community.

The very phrase “the world community” has become

the euphemistic collective noun (replacing “the Free World”)

to give global legitimacy to actions reflecting the interests of

Samuel P. Huntington

the clash of civilizations: the debate [21]

the United States and other Western powers.4 Through the

IMF and other international economic institutions, the West

promotes its economic interests and imposes on other nations

the economic policies it thinks appropriate. In any poll of non-

Western peoples, the IMF undoubtedly would win the support

of finance ministers and a few others, but get an overwhelmingly

unfavorable rating from just about everyone else, who

would agree with Georgy Arbatov’s characterization of IMF

officials as “neo-Bolsheviks who love expropriating other people’s

money, imposing undemocratic and alien rules of economic

and political conduct and stifling economic freedom.”

Western domination of the UN Security Council and its

decisions, tempered only by occasional abstention by China,

produced UN legitimation of the West’s use of force to drive

Iraq out of Kuwait and its elimination of Iraq’s sophisticated

weapons and capacity to produce such weapons. It also produced

the quite unprecedented action by the United States,

Britain and France in getting the Security Council to demand

that Libya hand over the Pan Am 103 bombing suspects and

then to impose sanctions when Libya refused. After defeating

the largest Arab army, the West did not hesitate to throw

its weight around in the Arab world. The West in effect is

using international institutions, military power and economic

resources to run the world in ways that will maintain Western

predominance, protect Western interests and promote Western

political and economic values.

That at least is the way in which non-Westerners see the new

4Almost invariably Western leaders claim they are acting on behalf of

“the world community.” One minor lapse occurred during the run-up to the

Gulf War. In an interview on “Good Morning America,” Dec. 21, 1990, British

Prime Minister John Major referred to the actions “the West” was taking

against Saddam Hussein. He quickly corrected himself and subsequently

referred to “the world community.” He was, however, right when he erred.

The Clash of Civilizations?

[22] foreign affairs

world, and there is a significant element of truth in their view.

Differences in power and struggles for military, economic and

institutional power are thus one source of conflict between

the West and other civilizations. Differences in culture, that

is basic values and beliefs, are a second source of conflict. V. S.

Naipaul has argued that Western civilization is the “universal

civilization” that “fits all men.” At a superficial level much of

Western culture has indeed permeated the rest of the world. At

a more basic level, however, Western concepts differ fundamentally

from those prevalent in other civilizations. Western ideas

of individualism, liberalism, constitutionalism, human rights,

equality, liberty, the rule of law, democracy, free markets, the

separation of church and state, often have little resonance in

Islamic, Confucian, Japanese, Hindu, Buddhist or Orthodox

cultures. Western efforts to propagate such ideas produce

instead a reaction against “human rights imperialism” and a

reaffirmation of indigenous values, as can be seen in the support

for religious fundamentalism by the younger generation

in non-Western cultures. The very notion that there could be a

“universal civilization” is a Western idea, directly at odds with

the particularism of most Asian societies and their emphasis on

what distinguishes one people from another. Indeed, the author

of a review of 100 comparative studies of values in different societies

concluded that “the values that are most important in the

West are least important worldwide.”5 In the political realm, of

course, these differences are most manifest in the efforts of the

United States and other Western powers to induce other peoples

to adopt Western ideas concerning democracy and human

rights. Modern democratic government originated in the West.

When it has developed in non-Western societies it has usually

5Harry C. Triandis, The New York Times, Dec. 25, 1990, p. 41, and “Cross-

Cultural Studies of Individualism and Collectivism,” Nebraska Symposium

on Motivation, vol. 37, 1989, pp. 41–133.

Samuel P. Huntington

the clash of civilizations: the debate [23]

been the product of Western colonialism or imposition.

The central axis of world politics in the future is likely to

be, in Kishore Mahbubani’s phrase, the conflict between “the

West and the Rest” and the responses of non-Western civilizations

to Western power and values.6 Those responses generally

take one or a combination of three forms. At one extreme,

non-Western states can, like Burma and North Korea, attempt

to pursue a course of isolation, to insulate their societies from

penetration or “corruption” by the West, and, in effect, to opt

out of participation in the Western-dominated global community.

The costs of this course, however, are high, and few states

have pursued it exclusively. A second alternative, the equivalent

of “band-wagoning” in international relations theory, is to

attempt to join the West and accept its values and institutions.

The third alternative is to attempt to “balance” the West by

developing economic and military power and cooperating with

other non-Western societies against the West, while preserving

indigenous values and institutions; in short, to modernize but

not to Westernize.

THE TORN COUNTRIES

In the future, as people differentiate themselves by civilization,

countries with large numbers of peoples of different civilizations,

such as the Soviet Union and Yugoslavia, are candidates

for dismemberment. Some other countries have a fair degree of

cultural homogeneity but are divided over whether their society

belongs to one civilization or another. These are torn countries.

Their leaders typically wish to pursue a bandwagoning strategy

and to make their countries members of the West, but the history,

culture and traditions of their countries are non-Western.

6Kishore Mahbubani, “The West and the Rest,” The National Interest,

Summer 1992, pp. 3–13.

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[24] foreign affairs

The most obvious and prototypical torn country is Turkey.

The late twentieth-century leaders of Turkey have followed in

the Attatürk tradition and defined Turkey as a modern, secular,

Western nation state. They allied Turkey with the West

in NATO and in the Gulf War; they applied for membership

in the European Community. At the same time, however, elements

in Turkish society have supported an Islamic revival and

have argued that Turkey is basically a Middle Eastern Muslim

society. In addition, while the elite of Turkey has defined Turkey

as a Western society, the elite of the West refuses to accept

Turkey as such. Turkey will not become a member of the European

Community, and the real reason, as President Özal said,

“is that we are Muslim and they are Christian and they don’t

say that.” Having rejected Mecca, and then being rejected by

Brussels, where does Turkey look? Tashkent may be the answer.

The end of the Soviet Union gives Turkey the opportunity to

become the leader of a revived Turkic civilization involving

seven countries from the borders of Greece to those of China.

Encouraged by the West, Turkey is making strenuous efforts to

carve out this new identity for itself.

During the past decade Mexico has assumed a position

somewhat similar to that of Turkey. Just as Turkey abandoned

its historic opposition to Europe and attempted to join Europe,

Mexico has stopped defining itself by its opposition to the United

States and is instead attempting to imitate the United States

and to join it in the North American Free Trade Area. Mexican

leaders are engaged in the great task of redefining Mexican identity

and have introduced fundamental economic reforms that

eventually will lead to fundamental political change. In 1991 a

top adviser to President Carlos Salinas de Gortari described at

length to me all the changes the Salinas government was making.

When he finished, I remarked: “That’s most impressive. It

seems to me that basically you want to change Mexico from a

Latin American country into a North American country.” He

Samuel P. Huntington

the clash of civilizations: the debate [25]

looked at me with surprise and exclaimed: “Exactly! That’s precisely

what we are trying to do, but of course we could never say

so publicly.” As his remark indicates, in Mexico as in Turkey,

significant elements in society resist the redefinition of their

country’s identity. In Turkey, European-oriented leaders have

to make gestures to Islam (Özal’s pilgrimage to Mecca); so also

Mexico’s North American-oriented leaders have to make gestures

to those who hold Mexico to be a Latin American country

(Salinas’ Ibero-American Guadalajara summit).

Historically Turkey has been the most profoundly torn country.

For the United States, Mexico is the most immediate torn

country. Globally the most important torn country is Russia.

The question of whether Russia is part of the West or the leader

of a distinct Slavic-Orthodox civilization has been a recurring

one in Russian history. That issue was obscured by the communist

victory in Russia, which imported a Western ideology,

adapted it to Russian conditions and then challenged the West

in the name of that ideology. The dominance of communism

shut off the historic debate over Westernization versus Russification.

With communism discredited Russians once again face

that question.

President Yeltsin is adopting Western principles and goals

and seeking to make Russia a “normal” country and a part of

the West. Yet both the Russian elite and the Russian public are

divided on this issue. Among the more moderate dissenters,

Sergei Stankevich argues that Russia should reject the “Atlanticist”

course, which would lead it “to become European, to

become a part of the world economy in rapid and organized

fashion, to become the eighth member of the Seven, and to put

particular emphasis on Germany and the United States as the

two dominant members of the Atlantic alliance.” While also

rejecting an exclusively Eurasian policy, Stankevich nonetheless

argues that Russia should give priority to the protection of

Russians in other countries, emphasize its Turkic and Muslim

The Clash of Civilizations?

[26] foreign affairs

connections, and promote “an appreciable redistribution of our

resources, our options, our ties, and our interests in favor of

Asia, of the eastern direction.” People of this persuasion criticize

Yeltsin for subordinating Russia’s interests to those of the

West, for reducing Russian military strength, for failing to support

traditional friends such as Serbia, and for pushing economic

and political reform in ways injurious to the Russian

people. Indicative of this trend is the new popularity of the

ideas of Petr Savitsky, who in the 1920s argued that Russia was

a unique Eurasian civilization.7 More extreme dissidents voice

much more blatantly nationalist, anti-Western and anti-Semitic

views, and urge Russia to redevelop its military strength and

to establish closer ties with China and Muslim countries. The

people of Russia are as divided as the elite. An opinion survey

in European Russia in the spring of 1992 revealed that 40 percent

of the public had positive attitudes toward the West and

36 percent had negative attitudes. As it has been for much of its

history, Russia in the early 1990s is truly a torn country.

To redefine its civilization identity, a torn country must meet

three requirements. First, its political and economic elite has

to be generally supportive of and enthusiastic about this move.

Second, its public has to be willing to acquiesce in the redefinition.

Third, the dominant groups in the recipient civilization

have to be willing to embrace the convert. All three requirements

in large part exist with respect to Mexico. The first two

in large part exist with respect to Turkey. It is not clear that

any of them exist with respect to Russia’s joining the West.

The conflict between liberal democracy and Marxism-Leninism

was between ideologies which, despite their major differences,

ostensibly shared ultimate goals of freedom, equality

7Sergei Stankevich, “Russia in Search of Itself,” The National Interest, Summer

1992, pp. 47–51; Daniel Schneider, “A Russian Movement Rejects Western

Tilt,” Christian Science Monitor, Feb. 5, 1993, pp. 5–7.

Samuel P. Huntington

the clash of civilizations: the debate [27]

and prosperity. A traditional, authoritarian, nationalist Russia

could have quite different goals. A Western democrat could

carry on an intellectual debate with a Soviet Marxist. It would

be virtually impossible for him to do that with a Russian traditionalist.

If, as the Russians stop behaving like Marxists, they

reject liberal democracy and begin behaving like Russians but

not like Westerners, the relations between Russia and the West

could again become distant and conflictual.8

THE CONFUCIAN-ISLAMIC CONNECTION

The obstacles to non-Western countries joining the West vary

considerably. They are least for Latin American and East European

countries. They are greater for the Orthodox countries

of the former Soviet Union. They are still greater for Muslim,

Confucian, Hindu and Buddhist societies. Japan has established

a unique position for itself as an associate member of

the West: it is in the West in some respects but clearly not of

the West in important dimensions. Those countries that for

reason of culture and power do not wish to, or cannot, join

the West compete with the West by developing their own economic,

military and political power. They do this by promoting

their internal development and by cooperating with other non-

Western countries. The most prominent form of this cooperation

is the Confucian-Islamic connection that has emerged to

challenge Western interests, values and power.

8Owen Harries has pointed out that Australia is trying (unwisely in his

view) to become a torn country in reverse. Although it has been a full member

not only of the West but also of the ABCA military and intelligence core

of the West, its current leaders are in effect proposing that it defect from the

West, redefine itself as an Asian country and cultivate close ties with its neighbors.

Australia’s future, they argue, is with the dynamic economies of East

Asia. But, as I have suggested, close economic cooperation normally requires a

common cultural base. In addition, none of the three conditions necessary for

a torn country to join another civilization is likely to exist in Australia’s case.

The Clash of Civilizations?

[28] foreign affairs

Almost without exception, Western countries are reducing

their military power; under Yeltsins leadership so also is Russia.

China, North Korea and several Middle Eastern states,

however, are significantly expanding their military capabilities.

They are doing this by the import of arms from Western and

non-Western sources and by the development of indigenous

arms industries. One result is the emergence of what Charles

Krauthammer has called “Weapon States,” and the Weapon

States are not Western states. Another result is the redefinition

of arms control, which is a Western concept and a Western

goal. During the Cold War the primary purpose of arms

control was to establish a stable military balance between the

United States and its allies and the Soviet Union and its allies.

In the post–Cold War world the primary objective of arms control

is to prevent the development by non-Western societies of

military capabilities that could threaten Western interests. The

West attempts to do this through international agreements,

economic pressure and controls on the transfer of arms and

weapons technologies.

The conflict between the West and the Confucian-Islamic

states focuses largely, although not exclusively, on nuclear,

chemical and biological weapons, ballistic missiles and other

sophisticated means for delivering them, and the guidance,

intelligence and other electronic capabilities for achieving that

goal. The West promotes nonproliferation as a universal norm

and nonproliferation treaties and inspections as means of realizing

that norm. It also threatens a variety of sanctions against

those who promote the spread of sophisticated weapons and

proposes some benefits for those who do not. The attention

of the West focuses, naturally, on nations that are actually or

potentially hostile to the West.

The non-Western nations, on the other hand, assert their

right to acquire and to deploy whatever weapons they think

necessary for their security. They also have absorbed, to the full,

Samuel P. Huntington

the clash of civilizations: the debate [29]

the truth of the response of the Indian defense minister when

asked what lesson he learned from the Gulf War: “Don’t fight

the United States unless you have nuclear weapons.” Nuclear

weapons, chemical weapons and missiles are viewed, probably

erroneously, as the potential equalizer of superior Western

conventional power. China, of course, already has nuclear

weapons; Pakistan and India have the capability to deploy

them. North Korea, Iran, Iraq, Libya and Algeria appear to be

attempting to acquire them. A top Iranian official has declared

that all Muslim states should acquire nuclear weapons, and in

1988 the president of Iran reportedly issued a directive calling

for development of “offensive and defensive chemical, biological

and radiological weapons.”

Centrally important to the development of counter-West

military capabilities is the sustained expansion of Chinas military

power and its means to create military power. Buoyed by

spectacular economic development, China is rapidly increasing

its military spending and vigorously moving forward with

the modernization of its armed forces. It is purchasing weapons

from the former Soviet states; it is developing long-range

missiles; in 1992 it tested a one-megaton nuclear device. It is

developing power-projection capabilities, acquiring aerial refueling

technology, and trying to purchase an aircraft carrier. Its

military buildup and assertion of sovereignty over the South

China Sea are provoking a multilateral regional arms race in

East Asia. China is also a major exporter of arms and weapons

technology. It has exported materials to Libya and Iraq that

could be used to manufacture nuclear weapons and nerve gas.

It has helped Algeria build a reactor suitable for nuclear weapons

research and production. China has sold to Iran nuclear

technology that American officials believe could only be used

to create weapons and apparently has shipped components of

300-mile-range missiles to Pakistan. North Korea has had a

nuclear weapons program under way for some while and has

The Clash of Civilizations?

[30] foreign affairs

sold advanced missiles and missile technology to Syria and

Iran. The flow of weapons and weapons technology is generally

from East Asia to the Middle East. There is, however, some

movement in the reverse direction; China has received Stinger

missiles from Pakistan.

A Confucian-Islamic military connection has thus come

into being, designed to promote acquisition by its members of

the weapons and weapons technologies needed to counter the

military power of the West. It may or may not last. At present,

however, it is, as Dave McCurdy has said, “a renegades’ mutual

support pact, run by the proliferators and their backers.” A new

form of arms competition is thus occurring between Islamic-

Confucian states and the West. In an old-fashioned arms race,

each side developed its own arms to balance or to achieve superiority

against the other side. In this new form of arms competition,

one side is developing its arms and the other side is

attempting not to balance but to limit and prevent that arms

build-up while at the same time reducing its own military

capabilities.

IMPLICATIONS FOR THE WEST

This article does not argue that civilization identities will replace

all other identities, that nation states will disappear, that each

civilization will become a single coherent political entity, that

groups within a civilization will not conflict with and even fight

each other. This paper does set forth the hypotheses that differences

between civilizations are real and important; civilizationconsciousness

is increasing; conflict between civilizations will

supplant ideological and other forms of conflict as the dominant

global form of conflict; international relations, historically

a game played out within Western civilization, will increasingly

be de-Westernized and become a game in which non-Western

civilizations are actors and not simply objects; successful

Samuel P. Huntington

the clash of civilizations: the debate [31]

political, security and economic international institutions are

more likely to develop within civilizations than across civilizations;

conflicts between groups in different civilizations will

be more frequent, more sustained and more violent than conflicts

between groups in the same civilization; violent conflicts

between groups in different civilizations are the most likely and

most dangerous source of escalation that could lead to global

wars; the paramount axis of world politics will be the relations

between “the West and the Rest”; the elites in some torn non-

Western countries will try to make their countries part of the

West, but in most cases face major obstacles to accomplishing

this; a central focus of conflict for the immediate future will be

between the West and several Islamic-Confucian states.

This is not to advocate the desirability of conflicts between

civilizations. It is to set forth descriptive hypotheses as to what

the future May be like. If these are plausible hypotheses, however,

it is necessary to consider their implications for Western

policy. These implications should be divided between shortterm

advantage and long-term accommodation. In the short

term it is clearly in the interest of the West to promote greater

cooperation and unity within its own civilization, particularly

between its European and North American components;

to incorporate into the West societies in Eastern Europe and

Latin America whose cultures are close to those of the West;

to promote and maintain cooperative relations with Russia

and Japan; to prevent escalation of local inter-civilization conflicts

into major inter-civilization wars; to limit the expansion

of the military strength of Confucian and Islamic states; to

moderate the reduction of Western military capabilities and

maintain military superiority in East and Southwest Asia; to

exploit differences and conflicts among Confucian and Islamic

states; to support in other civilizations groups sympathetic to

Western values and interests; to strengthen international institutions

that reflect and legitimate Western interests and values

The Clash of Civilizations?

[32] foreign affairs

and to promote the involvement of non-Western states in those

institutions.

In the longer term other measures would be called for. Western

civilization is both Western and modern. Non-Western civilizations

have attempted to become modern without becoming

Western. To date only Japan has fully succeeded in this quest.

Non-Western civilizations will continue to attempt to acquire

the wealth, technology, skills, machines and weapons that are

part of being modern. They will also attempt to reconcile this

modernity with their traditional culture and values. Their economic

and military strength relative to the West will increase.

Hence the West will increasingly have to accommodate these

non-Western modern civilizations whose power approaches

that of the West but whose values and interests differ significantly

from those of the West. This will require the West to

maintain the economic and military power necessary to protect

its interests in relation to these civilizations. It will also,

however, require the West to develop a more profound understanding

of the basic religious and philosophical assumptions

underlying other civilizations and the ways in which people in

those civilizations see their interests. It will require an effort to

identify elements of commonality between Western and other

civilizations. For the relevant future, there will be no universal

civilization, but instead a world of different civilizations, each

of which will have to learn to coexist with the others.

the clash of civilizations: the debate [33]

The Summoning

“But They Said, We Will Not Hearken.”

Jeremiah 6: 17

Fouad Ajami

SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER 1993

In Joseph Conrad’s Youth, a novella published at the turn of

the century, Marlowe, the narrator, remembers when he first

encountered “the East”:

And then, before I could open my lips, the East spoke to me, but it was in a

Western voice. A torrent of words was poured into the enigmatical, the fateful

silence; outlandish, angry words mixed with words and even whole sentences of

good English, less strange but even more surprising. The voice swore and cursed

violently; it riddled the solemn peace of the bay by a volley of abuse. It began by

calling me Pig, and from that went crescendo into unmentionable adjectives—in

English.

The young Marlowe knew that even the most remote civilization

had been made and remade by the West, and taught new

ways.

Not so Samuel P. Huntington. In a curious essay, “The Clash of

Civilizations,” Huntington has found his civilizations whole and

intact, watertight under an eternal sky. Buried alive, as it were,

during the years of the Cold War, these civilizations (Islamic,

Slavic-Orthodox, Western, Confucian, Japanese, Hindu, etc.)

rose as soon as the stone was rolled off, dusted themselves off,

FOUAD AJAMI is Majid Khadduri Professor of Middle Eastern Studies at

the School of Advanced International Studies, The Johns Hopkins University

The Summoning

[34] foreign affairs

and proceeded to claim the loyalty of their adherents. For this

student of history and culture, civilizations have always seemed

messy creatures. Furrows run across whole civilizations, across

individuals themselves—that was modernity’s verdict. But

Huntington looks past all that. The crooked and meandering

alleyways of the world are straightened out. With a sharp pencil

and a steady hand Huntington marks out where one civilization

ends and the wilderness of “the other” begins.

More surprising still is Huntington’s attitude toward states,

and their place in his scheme of things. From one of the most

influential and brilliant students of the state and its national

interest there now comes an essay that misses the slyness of

states, the unsentimental and cold-blooded nature of so much

of what they do as they pick their way through chaos. Despite

the obligatory passage that states will remain “the most powerful

actors in world affairs,” states are written off, their place

given over to clashing civilizations. In Huntington’s words,

“The next world war, if there is one, will be a war between

civilizations.”

THE POWER OF MODERNITY

Huntington’s meditation is occasioned by his concern about

the state of the West, its power and the terms of its engagement

with “the rest.”1 “He who gives, dominates,” the great historian

Fernand Braudel observed of the traffic of civilizations. In

making itself over the centuries, the West helped make the others

as well. We have come to the end of this trail, Huntington

is sure. He is impressed by the “de-Westernization” of societies,

1The West itself is unexamined in Huntington’s essay. No fissures run

through it. No multiculturalists are heard from. It is orderly within its ramparts.

What doubts Huntington has about the will within the walls, he has

kept within himself. He has assumed that his call to unity will be answered,

for outside flutter the banners of the Saracens and the Confucians.

Fouad Ajami

the clash of civilizations: the debate [35]

their “indigenization” and apparent willingness to go their own

way. In his view of things such phenomena as the “Hinduization”

of India and Islamic fundamentalism are ascendant. To

these detours into “tradition” Huntington has assigned great

force and power.

But Huntington is wrong. He has underestimated the tenacity

of modernity and secularism in places that acquired these

ways against great odds, always perilously close to the abyss,

the darkness never far. India will not become a Hindu state.

The inheritance of Indian secularism will hold. The vast middle

class will defend it, keep the order intact to maintain India’s—

and its own—place in the modern world of nations. There exists

in that anarchic polity an instinctive dread of playing with fires

that might consume it. Hindu chauvinism may coarsen the

public life of the country, but the state and the middle class that

sustains it know that a detour into religious fanaticism is a fling

with ruin. A resourceful middle class partakes of global culture

and norms. A century has passed since the Indian bourgeoisie,

through its political vehicle the Indian National Congress, set

out to claim for itself and India a place among nations. Out

of that long struggle to overturn British rule and the parallel

struggle against “communalism,” the advocates of the national

idea built a large and durable state. They will not cede all this

for a political kingdom of Hindu purity.

We have been hearing from the traditionalists, but we should

not exaggerate their power, for traditions are often most insistent

and loud when they rupture, when people no longer really

believe and when age-old customs lose their ability to keep

men and women at home. The phenomenon we have dubbed

as Islamic fundamentalism is less a sign of resurgence than of

panic and bewilderment and guilt that the border with “the

other” has been crossed. Those young urban poor, half-educated

in the cities of the Arab world, and their Sorbonne-educated

lay preachers, can they be evidence of a genuine return to

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[36] foreign affairs

tradition? They crash Europe’s and America’s gates in search of

liberty and work, and they rail against the sins of the West. It is

easy to understand Huntington’s frustration with this kind of

complexity, with the strange mixture of attraction and repulsion

that the West breeds, and his need to simplify matters, to

mark out the borders of civilizations.

Tradition-mongering is no proof, though, that these civilizations

outside the West are intact, or that their thrashing about

is an indication of their vitality, or that they present a conventional

threat of arms. Even so thorough and far-reaching an

attack against Western hegemony as Iran’s theocratic revolution

could yet fail to wean that society from the culture of the

West. That country’s cruel revolution was born of the realization

of the “armed Imam” that his people were being seduced

by America’s ways. The gates had been thrown wide open in

the 1970s, and the high walls Ayatollah Khomeini built around

his polity were a response to that cultural seduction. Swamped,

Iran was “rescued” by men claiming authenticity as their banner.

One extreme led to another.

“We prayed for the rain of mercy and received floods,” was

the way Mehdi Bazargan, the decent modernist who was Khomeini’s

first prime minister, put it. But the millennium has

been brought down to earth, and the dream of a pan-Islamic

revolt in Iran’s image has vanished into the wind. The terror

and the shabbiness have caught up with the utopia. Sudan

could emulate the Iranian “revolutionary example.” But this

will only mean the further pauperization and ruin of a desperate

land. There is no rehabilitation of the Iranian example.

A battle rages in Algeria, a society of the Mediterranean, close

to Europe—a wine-producing country for that matter—and

in Egypt between the secular powers that be and an Islamic

alternative. But we should not rush to print with obituaries

of these states. In Algeria the nomenklatura of the National

Liberation Front failed and triggered a revolt of the young,

Fouad Ajami

the clash of civilizations: the debate [37]

the underclass and the excluded. The revolt raised an Islamic

banner. Caught between a regime they despised and a reign of

virtue they feared, the professionals and the women and the

modernists of the middle class threw their support to the forces

of “order.” They hailed the army’s crackdown on the Islamicists;

they allowed the interruption of a democratic process sure

to bring the Islamicists to power; they accepted the “liberties”

protected by the repression, the devil you know rather than the

one you don’t.

The Algerian themes repeat in the Egyptian case, although

Egypt’s dilemma over its Islamicist opposition is not as acute.

The Islamicists continue to hound the state, but they cannot

bring it down. There is no likelihood that the Egyptian state—

now riddled with enough complacency and corruption to try

the celebrated patience and good humor of the Egyptians—

will go under. This is an old and skeptical country. It knows

better than to trust its fate to enforcers of radical religious

dogma. These are not deep and secure structures of order that

the national middle classes have put in place. But they will not

be blown away overnight.

Nor will Turkey lose its way, turn its back on Europe and

chase after some imperial temptation in the scorched domains

of Central Asia. Huntington sells that country’s modernity

and secularism short when he writes that the Turks—rejecting

Mecca and rejected by Brussels—are likely to head to Tashkent

in search of a Pan-Turkic role. There is no journey to that

imperial past. Ataturk severed that link with fury, pointed his

country westward, embraced the civilization of Europe and did

it without qualms or second thoughts. It is on Frankfurt and

Bonn—and Washington—not on Baku and Tashkent that the

attention of the Turks is fixed. The inheritors of Ataturk’s legacy

are too shrewd to go chasing after imperial glory, gathering

about them the scattered domains of the Turkish peoples. After

their European possessions were lost, the Turks clung to Thrace

The Summoning

[38] foreign affairs

and to all that this link to Europe represents.

Huntington would have nations battle for civilizational ties

and fidelities when they would rather scramble for their market

shares, learn how to compete in a merciless world economy,

provide jobs, move out of poverty. For their part, the “management

gurus” and those who believe that the interests have

vanquished the passions in today’s world tell us that men want

Sony, not soil.2 There is a good deal of truth in what they say,

a terrible exhaustion with utopias, a reluctance to set out on

expeditions of principle or belief. It is hard to think of Russia,

ravaged as it is by inflation, taking up the grand cause of a “second

Byzantium,” the bearer of the orthodox-Slavic torch.

And where is the Confucian world Huntington speaks of?

In the busy and booming lands of the Pacific Rim, so much

of politics and ideology has been sublimated into finance that

the nations of East Asia have turned into veritable workshops.

The civilization of Cathay is dead; the Indonesian archipelago

is deaf to the call of the religious radicals in Tehran as it tries to

catch up with Malaysia and Singapore. A different wind blows

in the lands of the Pacific. In that world economics, not politics,

is in command. The world is far less antiseptic than Lee

Kuan Yew, the sage of Singapore, would want it to be. A nemesis

could lie in wait for all the prosperity that the 1980s brought

to the Pacific. But the lands of the Pacific Rim—protected, to

be sure, by an American security umbrella—are not ready for a

great falling out among the nations. And were troubles to visit

that world they would erupt within its boundaries, not across

civilizational lines.

The things and ways that the West took to “the rest”—those

whole sentences of good English that Marlowe heard a century

ago—have become the ways of the world. The secular idea, the

2Kenichi Ohmae, “Global Consumers Want Sony, Not Soil,” New Perspectives

Quarterly, Fall 1991.

Fouad Ajami

the clash of civilizations: the debate [39]

state system and the balance of power, pop culture jumping

tariff walls and barriers, the state as an instrument of welfare,

all these have been internalized in the remotest places. We have

stirred up the very storms into which we now ride.

THE WEAKNESS OF TRADITION

Nations “cheat”: they juggle identities and interests. Their ways

meander. One would think that the traffic of arms from North

Korea and China to Libya and Iran and Syria shows this—that

states will consort with any civilization, however alien, as long

as the price is right and the goods are ready. Huntington turns

this routine act of selfishness into a sinister “Confucian-Islamic

connection.” There are better explanations: the commerce of

renegades, plain piracy, an “underground economy” that picks

up the slack left by the great arms suppliers (the United States,

Russia, Britain and France).

Contrast the way Huntington sees things with Braudel’s

depiction of the traffic between Christendom and Islam across

the Mediterranean in the sixteenth century—and this was in

a religious age, after the fall of Constantinople to the Turks

and of Granada to the Spanish: “Men passed to and fro, indifferent

to frontiers, states and creeds. They were more aware of

the necessities for shipping and trade, the hazards of war and

piracy, the opportunities for complicity or betrayal provided by

circumstances.”3

Those kinds of “complicities” and ambiguities are missing

in Huntington’s analysis. Civilizations are crammed into the

nooks and crannies—and checkpoints—of the Balkans. Huntington

goes where only the brave would venture, into that belt

of mixed populations stretching from the Adriatic to the Baltic.

3Ferdinand Braudel, The Mediterranean and the Mediterranean World in the

Age of Philip II, Vol. II, New York: Harper & Row, 1976, p. 759.

The Summoning

[40] foreign affairs

Countless nationalisms make their home there, all aggrieved,

all possessed of memories of a fabled past and equally ready

for the demagogues vowing to straighten a messy map. In the

thicket of these pan-movements he finds the line that marked

“the eastern boundary of Western Christianity in the year

1500.” The scramble for turf between Croatian nationalism

and its Serbian counterpart, their “joint venture” in carving up

Bosnia, are made into a fight of the inheritors of Rome, Byzantium

and Islam.

But why should we fall for this kind of determinism? “An

outsider who travels the highway between Zagreb and Belgrade

is struck not by the decisive historical fault line which

falls across the lush Slavonian plain but by the opposite. Serbs

and Croats speak the same language, give or take a few hundred

words, have shared the same village way of life for centuries.”

4 The cruel genius of Slobodan Milosevic and Franjo

Tudjman, men on horseback familiar in lands and situations

of distress, was to make their bids for power into grand civilizational

undertakings—the ramparts of the Enlightenment

defended against Islam or, in Tudjman’s case, against the heirs

of the Slavic-Orthodox faith. Differences had to be magnified.

Once Tito, an equal opportunity oppressor, had passed from

the scene, the balancing act among the nationalities was bound

to come apart. Serbia had had a measure of hegemony in the

old system. But of the world that loomed over the horizon—

privatization and economic reform—the Serbs were less confident.

The citizens of Sarajevo and the Croats and the Slovenes

had a head start on the rural Serbs. And so the Serbs hacked at

the new order of things with desperate abandon.

Some Muslim volunteers came to Bosnia, driven by faith

and zeal. Huntington sees in these few stragglers the sweeping

4Michael Ignatieff, “The Balkan Tragedy,” New York Review of Books, May

13, 1993.

Fouad Ajami

the clash of civilizations: the debate [41]

power of “civilizational rallying,” proof of the hold of what he

calls the “kin-country syndrome.” This is delusion. No Muslim

cavalry was ever going to ride to the rescue. The Iranians may

have railed about holy warfare, but the Chetniks went on with

their work. The work of order and mercy would have had to be

done by the United States if the cruel utopia of the Serbs was to

be contested.

It should have taken no powers of prophecy to foretell where

the fight in the Balkans would end. The abandonment of Bosnia

was of a piece with the ways of the world. No one wanted

to die for Srebrenica. The Europeans averted their gaze, as has

been their habit. The Americans hesitated for a moment as the

urge to stay out of the Balkans did battle with the scenes of

horror. Then “prudence” won out. Milosevic and Tudjman may

need civilizational legends, but there is no need to invest their

projects of conquest with this kind of meaning.

In his urge to find that relentless war across Islam’s “bloody

borders,” Huntington buys Saddam Hussein’s interpretation of

the Gulf War. It was, for Saddam and Huntington, a civilizational

battle. But the Gulf War’s verdict was entirely different.

For if there was a campaign that laid bare the interests of states,

the lengths to which they will go to restore a tolerable balance

of power in a place that matters, this was it. A local despot had

risen close to the wealth of the Persian Gulf, and a Great Power

from afar had come to the rescue. The posse assembled by the

Americans had Saudi, Turkish, Egyptian, Syrian, French, British

and other riders.

True enough, when Saddam Hussein’s dream of hegemony

was shattered, the avowed secularist who had devastated the

ulama, the men of religion in his country, fell back on Ayatollah

Khomeini’s language of fire and brimstone and borrowed

the symbolism and battle cry of his old Iranian nemesis. But

few, if any, were fooled by this sudden conversion to the faith.

They knew the predator for what he was: he had a Christian

The Summoning

[42] foreign affairs

foreign minister (Tariq Aziz); he had warred against the Iranian

revolution for nearly a decade and had prided himself on

the secularism of his regime. Prudent men of the social and

political order, the ulama got out of the way and gave their state

the room it needed to check the predator at the Saudi/Kuwaiti

border.5 They knew this was one of those moments when purity

bows to necessity. Ten days after Saddam swept into Kuwait,

Saudi Arabia’s most authoritative religious body, the Council of

Higher Ulama, issued a fatwa, or a ruling opinion, supporting

the presence of Arab and Islamic and “other friendly forces.”

All means of defense, the ulama ruled, were legitimate to guarantee

the people “the safety of their religion, their wealth, and

their honor and their blood, to protect what they enjoy of safety

and stability.” At some remove, in Egypt, that country’s leading

religious figure, the Shaykh of Al Ashar, Shaykh Jadd al Haqq,

denounced Saddam as a tyrant and brushed aside his Islamic

pretensions as a cover for tyranny.

Nor can the chief Iranian religious leader Ayatollah Ali

Khamenei’s rhetoric against the Americans during the Gulf

War be taken as evidence of Iran’s disposition toward that campaign.

Crafty men, Iran’s rulers sat out that war. They stood to

emerge as the principal beneficiaries of Iraq’s defeat. The American-

led campaign against Iraq held out the promise of tilting

the regional balance in their favor. No tears were shed in Iran

for what befell Saddam Hussein’s regime.

It is the mixed gift of living in hard places that men and

women know how to distinguish between what they hear

and what there is: no illusions were thus entertained in vast

stretches of the Arab Muslim world about Saddam, or about

5Huntington quotes one Safar al Hawali, a religious radical at Umm al

Qura University in Mecca, to the effect that the campaign against Iraq was

another Western campaign against Islam. But this can’t do as evidence. Safar

al Hawali was a crank. Among the ulama class and the religious scholars in

Saudi Arabia he was, for all practical purposes, a loner.

Fouad Ajami

the clash of civilizations: the debate [43]

the campaign to thwart him for that matter. The fight in the

gulf was seen for what it was: a bid for primacy met by an imperial

expedition that laid it to waste. A circle was closed in the

gulf: where once the order in the region “east of Suez” had been

the work of the British, it was now provided by Pax Americana.

The new power standing sentry in the gulf belonged to the

civilization of the West, as did the prior one. But the American

presence had the anxious consent of the Arab lands of the Persian

Gulf. The stranger coming in to check the kinsmen.

The world of Islam divides and subdivides. The battle lines in

the Caucasus, too, are not coextensive with civilizational fault

lines. The lines follow the interests of states. Where Huntington

sees a civilizational duel between Armenia and Azerbaijan,

the Iranian state has cast religious zeal and fidelity to the wind.

Indeed, in that battle the Iranians have tilted toward Christian

Armenia.

THE WRIT OF STATES

We have been delivered into a new world, to be sure. But it is

not a world where the writ of civilizations runs. Civilizations

and civilizational fidelities remain. There is to them an astonishing

measure of permanence. But let us be clear: civilizations

do not control states, states control civilizations. States avert

their gaze from blood ties when they need to; they see brotherhood

and faith and kin when it is in their interest to do so.

We remain in a world of self-help. The solitude of states continues;

the disorder in the contemporary world has rendered

that solitude more pronounced. No way has yet been found to

reconcile France to Pax Americana’s hegemony, or to convince

it to trust its security or cede its judgment to the preeminent

Western power. And no Azeri has come up with a way the

lands of Islam could be rallied to the fight over Nagorno Karabakh.

The sky has not fallen in Kuala Lumpur or in Tunis over

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[44] foreign affairs

the setbacks of Azerbaijan in its fight with Armenia.

The lesson bequeathed us by Thucydides in his celebrated

dialogue between the Melians and the Athenians remains. The

Melians, it will be recalled, were a colony of the Lacedaemonians.

Besieged by Athens, they held out and were sure that the

Lacedaemonians were “bound, if only for very shame, to come

to the aid of their kindred.” The Melians never wavered in their

confidence in their “civilizational” allies: “Our common blood

insures our fidelity.”6 We know what became of the Melians.

Their allies did not turn up, their island was sacked, their world

laid to waste.

6Thucydides, The Peloponnesian War, New York: The Modern American

Library, 1951, pp. 334–335.

the clash of civilizations: the debate [45]

The Dangers of Decadence

What the Rest Can Teach the West

Kishore Mahbubani

SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER 1993

In key Western capitals there is a deep sense of unease about

the future. The confidence that the West would remain a dominant

force in the 21st century, as it has for the past four or five

centuries, is giving way to a sense of foreboding that forces like

the emergence of fundamentalist Islam, the rise of East Asia

and the collapse of Russia and Eastern Europe could pose real

threats to the West. A siege mentality is developing. Within

these troubled walls, Samuel P. Huntington’s essay “The Clash

of Civilizations?” is bound to resonate. It will therefore come

as a great surprise to many Westerners to learn that the rest

of the world fears the West even more than the West fears it,

especially the threat posed by a wounded West.

Huntington is right: power is shifting among civilizations.

But when the tectonic plates of world history move in a dramatic

fashion, as they do now, perceptions of these changes

depend on where one stands. The key purpose of this essay is to

sensitize Western audiences to the perceptions of the rest of the

world.

KISHORE MAHBUBANI, Deputy Secretary of Foreign Affairs and Dean

of the Civil Service College, Singapore, last served overseas as Singapore’s

Permanent Representative to the United Nations (1984–89). These are his personal

views.

The Dangers of Decadence

[46] foreign affairs

The retreat of the West is not universally welcomed. There

is still no substitute for Western leadership, especially American

leadership. Sudden withdrawals of American support from

Middle Eastern or Pacific allies, albeit unlikely, could trigger

massive changes that no one would relish. Western retreat

could be as damaging as Western domination.

By any historical standard, the recent epoch of Western

domination, especially under American leadership, has been

remarkably benign. One dreads to think what the world would

have looked like if either Nazi Germany or Stalinist Russia had

triumphed in what have been called the “Western civil wars”

of the twentieth century. Paradoxically, the benign nature of

Western domination may be the source of many problems.

Today most Western policymakers, who are children of this

era, cannot conceive of the possibility that their own words and

deeds could lead to evil, not good. The Western media aggravate

this genuine blindness. Most Western journalists travel

overseas with Western assumptions. They cannot understand

how the West could be seen as anything but benevolent. CNN

is not the solution. The same visual images transmitted simultaneously

into living rooms across the globe can trigger opposing

perceptions. Western living rooms applaud when cruise

missiles strike Baghdad. Most living outside see that the West

will deliver swift retribution to nonwhite Iraqis or Somalis but

not to white Serbians, a dangerous signal by any standard.

THE ASIAN HORDES

Huntington discusses the challenge posed by Islamic and Confucian

civilizations. Since the bombing of the World Trade

Center, Americans have begun to absorb European paranoia

about Islam, perceived as a force of darkness hovering over a

virtuous Christian civilization. It is ironic that the West should

increasingly fear Islam when daily the Muslims are reminded

Kishore Mahbubani

the clash of civilizations: the debate [47]

of their own weakness. “Islam has bloody borders,” Huntington

says. But in all conflicts between Muslims and pro-Western

forces, the Muslims are losing, and losing badly, whether

they be Azeris, Palestinians, Iraqis, Iranians or Bosnian Muslims.

With so much disunity, the Islamic world is not about to

coalesce into a single force;

Oddly, for all this paranoia, the West seems to be almost

deliberately pursuing a course designed to aggravate the Islamic

world. The West protests the reversal of democracy in Myanmar,

Peru or Nigeria, but not in Algeria. These double standards

hurt. Bosnia has wreaked incalculable damage. The

dramatic passivity of powerful European nations as genocide

is committed on their doorstep has torn away the thin veil

of moral authority that the West had spun around itself as a

legacy of its recent benign era. Few can believe that the West

would have remained equally passive if Muslim artillery shells

had been raining down on Christian populations in Sarajevo or

Srebrenica.

Western behavior toward China has been equally puzzling.

In the 1970s, the West developed a love affair with a China

ruled by a regime that had committed gross atrocities during

the Great Leap Forward and the Cultural Revolution. But

when Mao Zedong’s disastrous rule was followed by a far more

benign Deng Xiaoping era, the West punished China for what

by its historical standards was a minor crackdown: the Tiananmen

incident.

Unfortunately, Tiananmen has become a contemporary

Western legend, created by live telecasts of the crackdown. Beijing

erred badly in its excessive use of firearms but it did not

err in its decision to crack down. Failure to quash the student

rebellion could have led to political disintegration and chaos, a

perennial Chinese nightmare. Western policymakers concede

this in private. They are also aware of the dishonesty of some

Western journalists: dining with student dissidents and even

The Dangers of Decadence

[48] foreign affairs

egging them on before reporting on their purported “hunger

strike.” No major Western journal has exposed such dishonesty

or developed the political courage to say that China had virtually

no choice in Tiananmen. Instead sanctions were imposed,

threatening China’s modernization. Asians see that Western

public opinion—deified in Western democracy—can produce

irrational consequences. They watch with trepidation as Western

policies on China lurch to and fro, threatening the otherwise

smooth progress of East Asia.

Few in the West are aware that the West is responsible for

aggravating turbulence among the more than two billion people

living in Islamic and Chinese civilizations. Instead, conjuring

up images of the two Asian hordes that Western minds fear

most—two forces that invaded Europe, the Muslims and the

Mongols—Huntington posits a Confucian-Islamic connection

against the West. American arms sales to Saudi Arabia do not

suggest a natural Christian-Islamic connection. Neither should

Chinese arms sales to Iran. Both are opportunistic moves,

based not on natural empathy or civilizational alliances. The

real tragedy of suggesting a Confucian-Islamic connection is

that it obscures the fundamentally different nature of the challenge

posed by these forces. The Islamic world will have great

difficulty modernizing. Until then its turbulence will spill over

into the West. East Asia, including China, is poised to achieve

parity with the West. The simple truth is that East and Southeast

Asia feel more comfortable with the West.

This failure to develop a viable strategy to deal with Islam or

China reveals a fatal flaw in the West: an inability to come to

terms with the shifts in the relative weights of civilizations that

Huntington well documents. Two key sentences in Huntington’s

essay, when put side by side, illustrate the nature of the

problem: first, “In the politics of civilizations, the peoples and

governments of non-Western civilization no longer remain the

objects of history as targets of Western colonization but join the

Kishore Mahbubani

the clash of civilizations: the debate [49]

West as movers and shapers of history,” and second, “The West

in effect is using international institutions, military power and

economic resources to run the world in ways that will maintain

Western predominance, protect Western interests and promote

Western political and economic values.” This combination is a

prescription for disaster.

Simple arithmetic demonstrates Western folly. The West has

800 million people; the rest make up almost 4.7 billion. In the

national arena, no Western society would accept a situation

where 15 percent of its population legislated for the remaining

85 percent. But this is what the West is trying to do globally.

Tragically, the West is turning its back on the Third World

just when it can finally help the West out of its economic doldrums.

The developing world’s dollar output increased in 1992

more than that of North America, the European Community

and Japan put together. Two-thirds of the increase in U.S.

exports has gone to the developing world. Instead of encouraging

this global momentum by completing the Uruguay Round,

the West is doing the opposite. It is trying to create barriers,

not remove them. French Prime Minister Edouard Balladur

tried to justify this move by saying bluntly in Washington that

the “question now is how to organize to protect ourselves from

countries whose different values enable them to undercut us.”

THE WEST’S OWN UNDOING

Huntington fails to ask one obvious question: If other civilizations

have been around for centuries, why are they posing a

challenge only now? A sincere attempt to answer this question

reveals a fatal flaw that has recently developed in the Western

mind: an inability to conceive that the West may have developed

structural weaknesses in its core value systems and institutions.

This flaw explains, in part, the recent rush to embrace

the assumption that history has ended with the triumph of

The Dangers of Decadence

[50] foreign affairs

the Western ideal: individual freedom and democracy would

always guarantee that Western civilization would stay ahead of

the pack.

Only hubris can explain why so many Western societies are

trying to defy the economic laws of gravity. Budgetary discipline

is disappearing. Expensive social programs and porkbarrel

projects multiply with little heed to costs. The West’s

low savings and investment rates lead to declining competitiveness

vis-à-vis East Asia. The work ethic is eroding, while

politicians delude workers into believing that they can retain

high wages despite becoming internationally uncompetitive.

Leadership is lacking. Any politician who states hard truths is

immediately voted out. Americans freely admit that many of

their economic problems arise from the inherent gridlock of

American democracy. While the rest of the world is puzzled by

these fiscal follies, American politicians and journalists travel

around the world preaching the virtues of democracy. It makes

for a curious sight.

The same hero-worship is given to the idea of individual

freedom. Much good has come from this idea. Slavery ended.

Universal franchise followed. But freedom does not only solve

problems; it can also cause them. The United States has undertaken

a massive social experiment, tearing down social institution

after social institution that restrained the individual. The

results have been disastrous. Since 1960 the U.S. population

has increased 41 percent while violent crime has risen by 560

percent, single-mother births by 419 percent, divorce rates by

300 percent and the percentage of children living in single-parent

homes by 300 percent. This is massive social decay. Many

a society shudders at the prospects of this happening on its

shores. But instead of traveling overseas with humility, Americans

confidently preach the virtues of unfettered individual

freedom, blithely ignoring the visible social consequences.

The West is still the repository of the greatest assets and

Kishore Mahbubani

the clash of civilizations: the debate [51]

achievements of human civilization. Many Western values

explain the spectacular advance of mankind: the belief in scientific

inquiry, the search for rational solutions and the willingness

to challenge assumptions. But a belief that a society

is practicing these values can lead to a unique blindness: the

inability to realize that some of the values that come with this

package may be harmful. Western values do not form a seamless

web. Some are good. Some are bad. But one has to stand

outside the West to see this clearly, and to see how the West is

bringing about its relative decline by its own hand. Huntington,

too, is blind to this.

[52] foreign affairs

The Case for Optimism

The West Should Believe in Itself

Robert L. Bartley

SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER 1993

On November 9, 1989, our era ended. The breaching of the

Berlin Wall sounded the end of not merely the Cold War, but

an epoch of global conflict that started with the assassination

of Archduke Francis Ferdinand on June 28, 1914. Now, with

the twentieth century truncated, we are straining to discern the

shape of the 21st.

We should remember that while there is of course always

conflict and strife, not all centuries are as bloody as ours has

been. The assassination in Sarajevo shattered an extraordinary

period of economic, artistic and moral advance. It was a period

when serious thinkers could imagine world economic unity

bringing an end to wars. The conventional wisdom, as Keynes

would later write, considered peace and prosperity “as normal,

certain, and permanent, except in the direction of further

improvement, and any deviation from [this course] as aberrant,

scandalous, and avoidable.”

If with benefit of hindsight this optimism seems wildly naïve,

what will future generations make of the crabbed pessimism

of today’s conventional wisdom? Exhausted and jaded by our

labors and trials, we now probe the dawning era for evidence

ROBERT L. BARTLEY is Editor of The Wall Street Journal.

Robert L. Bartley

the clash of civilizations: the debate [53]

not of relief but of new and even more ghastly horrors ahead.

In particular, we have lost confidence in our own ability to

shape the new era, and instead keep conjuring up inexorable

historical and moral forces. Our public discourse is filled with

guilt-ridden talk of global warming, the extinction of various

species and Western decline.

Even so hardheaded a thinker as Samuel P. Huntington has

concluded, “A West at the peak of its power confronts non-Wests

that increasingly have the desire, the will and the resources to

shape the world in non-Western ways.” The conflicts of the

future will be between “the West and the rest,” the West and

the Muslims, the West and an Islamic-Confucian alliance,

or the West and a collection of other civilizations, including

Hindu, Japanese, Latin American and Slavic-Orthodox.

This “clash of civilizations” does not sound like a pleasant

21st century. The conflicts will not be over resources, where it

is always possible to split the difference, but over fundamental

and often irreconcilable values. And in this competition the

United States and the West will inevitably be on the defensive,

since “the values that are most important in the West are the

least important worldwide.”

Well, perhaps. But is it really clear that the greatest potential

for conflict lies between civilizations instead of within them?

Despite the economic miracle of China’s Guangdong province,

are we really confident that the Confucians have mastered the

trick of governing a billion people in one political entity? Do

the women of Iran really long for the chador, or is it just possible

the people of “the rest” will ultimately be attracted to the

values of the West?

Undeniably there is an upsurge of interest in cultural, ethnic

and religious values, notably but not solely in Islamic fundamentalism.

But at the same time there are powerful forces

toward world integration. Instant communications now span

the globe. We watch in real time the drama of Tiananmen

The Case for Optimism

[54] foreign affairs

Square and Sarajevo (if not yet Lhasa or Dushanbe). Financial

markets on a 24-hour schedule link the world’s economies.

Western, which is to say American, popular culture for better

or worse spans the globe as well. The new Japanese crown princess

was educated at Harvard, and the latest sumo sensation

is known as Akebone, but played basketball as Chad Rowen.

The world’s language is English. Even the standard-bearers of

“the rest”were largely educated in the West. Boatloads of immigrants,

perhaps the true hallmark of the 21st century, land on

the beaches of New York’s Long Island.

This environment is not a happy one for governments of traditional

nation states. In 1982 François Mitterrand found how

markets limit national economic policy. A national currency—

which is to say an independent monetary policy—is possible

at sustainable cost only for the United States, and even then

within limits, as the Carter administration found in 1979. In

Western Europe and the Western hemisphere, the demands of

national security have ebbed with the Cold War. Transnational

companies and regional development leave the nation-state

searching for a mission, as Kenichi Ohmae has detailed. Robert

Reich asks what makes an “American” corporation. Walter

Wriston writes of “The Twilight of Sovereignty.”

These difficulties confront all governments, but they are doubly

acute for authoritarians, who depend on isolation to dominate

their people. Democracy, the quintessentially Western

form of government, spread with amazing speed throughout

Latin America and the former communist bloc and into Africa

and Asia. In 1993 Freedom House reports 75 free nations, up

from 55 a decade earlier, with only 31 percent of the world’s

population, and most of that in China, living under repressive

regimes, down from 44 percent ten years ago. The combination

of instant information, economic interdependence and the

appeal of individual freedom is not a force to be taken lightly.

Robert L. Bartley

the clash of civilizations: the debate [55]

After all, it has just toppled the most powerful totalitarian

empire history has known.

It is precisely the onslaught of this world civilization, of

course, that provokes such reactions as Islamic fundamentalism.

The mullahs profess to reject the decadent West, but

their underlying quarrel is with modernity. Perhaps they have

the “will and resources” to construct an alternative, and perhaps

so does the geriatric regime in Beijing. But they face a

deep dilemma indeed, for Western civilization and its political

appendages of democracy and personal freedom are profoundly

linked with the capitalist formula that is the formula for economic

development.

THE POWER OF PROSPERITY

If you list the Freedom House rankings by per-capita annual

income, you find that above figures equivalent to about $5,500,

nearly all nations are democratic. The exceptions are the medieval

oil sheikhdoms and a few Asian tigers such as Singapore.

Even among the latter, development is leading to pressures for

more freedom. Under Roh Tae Woo South Korea has deserted

to full democracy. Nor should the implosion of the Liberal

Democratic Party in Japan be comforting to advocates of some

“consensual”model of democracy. Singapore’s Lee Kuan Yew

may be right to consider himself a philosopher king, but since

Plato the species has been endangered and unreliable.

Perhaps Western values are an artifact of an exogenous civilization,

but there is a powerful argument that they are an

artifact of economic development itself. Development creates a

middle class that wants a say in its own future, that cares about

the progress and freedom of its sons and daughters. Since economic

progress depends principally on this same group, with

its drive for education and creative abilities, this desire can be

The Case for Optimism

[56] foreign affairs

suppressed only at the expense of development.

In the early stages of development, as for example in Guangdong,

the ruling elites may be able to forge an accommodation

with the middle class, particularly if local military authorities

are dealt into the action. But if the Chinese accommodation

survives, it will be the first one. The attempt to incorporate

the six million Hong Kong Chinese, with their increasingly

evident expectation of self-rule, will be particularly disruptive.

The lesson of other successfully developing nations is that continued

progress depends on a gradual accommodation with

democracy. And history teaches another profoundly optimistic

lesson: as Huntington himself has been known to observe,

democracies almost never go to war with each other.

The dominant flow of historical forces in the 21st century

could well be this: economic development leads to demands

for democracy and individual (or familial) autonomy; instant

worldwide communications reduces the power of oppressive

governments; the spread of democratic states diminishes the

potential for conflict. The optimists of 1910, in other words,

may turn out to have been merely premature.

STAYING THE COURSE

This future is of course no sure thing. Perhaps Huntington’s

forces of disintegration will in the end prevail, but that is no

sure thing either. The West, above all the United States, and

above even that the elites who read this journal, have the capacity

to influence which of these futures is more likely. If the fears

prevail, it will be in no small part because they lacked the will

and wit to bring the hopes to reality.

The American foreign policy elite is in a sense the victim

of its own success. Much to its own surprise, it won the Cold

War. The classic containment policy outlined in George Kennan’s

“X” article and Paul Nitze’s NSC-68 worked precisely as

Robert L. Bartley

the clash of civilizations: the debate [57]

advertised, albeit after 40 years rather than the 10 to 15 Kennan

predicted. But after its success, this compass is no longer

relevant; as we enter the 21st century, our policy debate is adrift

without a vision.

Some observations above hint at one such vision: if democracies

do not fight each other, their spread not only fulfills our

ideals but also promotes our security interests. The era of peace

before 1914 was forged by the Royal Navy, the pound sterling

and free trade. The essence of the task for the new era is to

strike a balance between realpolitik and moralism.

Traditional diplomacy centers on relations among sovereign

nation states, the internal character of which is irrelevant. In

an information age, dominated by people-to-people contacts,

policy should and will edge cautiously toward the moralistic,

Wilsonian pole. Cautiously because as always this carries a risk

of mindlessness. We cannot ignore military power; nothing

could do more to give us freedom of action in the 21st century

than a ballistic missile defense, whether or not you call it Star

Wars. And while we need a human rights policy, applying it

merely because we have access and leverage risks undermining,

say, Egypt and Turkey, the bulwarks against an Islamic fundamentalism

more detrimental to freedom and less susceptible to

Western influence.

It will be a difficult balance to strike The case for optimism

is admittedly not easy to sustain. Plumbing the temper of our

elites and the state of debate, it is easier to give credence to

Huntington’s fears. But then, during the Hungarian revolution

or Vietnam or the Pershing missile crisis, who would have

thought that the West would stay the course it set out in NSC-

68? It did, and to do so again it needs only to believe in itself.

[58] foreign affairs

Civilization Grafting

No Culture Is an Island

Liu Binyan

SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER 1993

The end of the Cold War has indeed brought about a new phase

in world politics, yet its impact is not unidirectional. The tense

confrontation between the two armed camps has disappeared

and in this sense ideological conflict seems to have come to

an end, for the moment. But conflicts of economic and political

interests are becoming more and more common among the

major nations of the world, and more and more tense. Neither

civilization nor culture has become the “fundamental source of

conflict in this new world.”

The new world is beginning to resemble the one in which I

grew up in the 1930s. Of course, tremendous changes have taken

place; nonetheless there are increasing similarities. Western

capitalism has changed greatly, but the current global recession

is in many ways similar to the Great Depression. The Soviet

Union and Nazi Germany may no longer exist, but the economic,

social and political factors that led to their emergence

still do—economic dislocation, xenophobia and populism.

The Cold War has ended, but hot wars rage in more than

thirty countries and regions. The wave of immigrants from

LIU BINYAN, one of China’s leading dissidents, is Director of the Princeton

China Initiative, Princeton, New Jersey. His most recent book is A Higher

Kind of Loyalty: A Memoir.

Liu Binyan

the clash of civilizations: the debate [59]

poor territories to rich countries and the influx of people from

rural areas to cities have reached an unprecedented scale, forming

what the UN Population Fund has called the “current crisis

of mankind.” We can hardly say these phenomena result from

conflict between different civilizations.

CHINA’S ERRANT EXPERIMENT

For most countries the task is not to demarcate civilizations but

to mix and meld them. In the former colonial countries, the

problems of poverty and starvation have never been solved by

their own civilizations or by the interaction of their indigenous

civilization with Western civilization. But this search for a successful

formula for economic well-being and political freedom

continues.

Look at China. The Chinese people eagerly embraced Communism

in the pursuit of economic development and political

dignity. The bankruptcy of Maoism and socialism occurred a

dozen years before the collapse of the former Soviet Union. It

was not the result of the end of the Cold War, but the disaster

brought about by Maoist ideology. The reason for this shift

again comes from the strong desire of the people to get rid of

poverty and to gain freedom. For China this is the third time

people have tried to graft Western civilization onto traditional

civilization—in the first half of the twentieth century and in

the 1980s, with capitalism; from the late 1940s to the 1970s,

with Marxism-Leninism.

Now, though Confucianism is gradually coming back to

China, it cannot be compared to the increasingly forceful

influence of Western culture on the Chinese people in the last

twenty years. The Chinese people are a practical sort; they

have always been concerned about their material well-being.

In addition, the last forty years have left them wary of intangible

philosophies, gods and ideals. Nowhere in China is there

Civilization Grafting

[60] foreign affairs

a group or political faction that could be likened to the extreme

nationalists of Russia or Europe.

Nor can we expect any civilizational unity that will bring

the Confucian world together. In the past forty years, the split

of mainland China with Taiwan was of course due to political

and ideological differences. After the end of the Cold War the

Confucianist culture common to the Chinese from both sides

of the Taiwan Strait will not overcome the differences in political

systems, ideology and economic development.

Deng Xiaoping’s experiment is to try to weld Western capitalism

with Marxism-Leninism and even aspects of Confucianism.

Thus while liberalizing the economy, the Chinese

communist regime also points to the consumerism and hedonism

of Western civilization in an effort to resist the influences

of democracy and freedom. At the same time, it borrows from

Confucianist thought—obedience to superiors, etc.—which is

useful in stabilizing communist rule. It also attempts to use

Chinese nationalist sentiments in place of a bankrupt ideology,

seeking to postpone its inevitable collapse.

There are many historical and current examples of rulers who

have a greater interest in maintaining or developing some kind

of traditional order rather than in accommodating the struggles

and changing interests of ordinary people. In the mid-1930s,

Chang Kai-shek launched a national campaign advocating

Confucianism—called “The Movement of New Life”—when

China’s population was victimized by famine, civil war and

Japanese aggression. The movement aimed to distract people

from their real interests and ended in complete failure. Since

the 1980s China’s new rulers began a campaign similar to the

KMT’s—“The Movement for Higher Spiritual Civilization”—

which advocated love for the country and the party, and behaving

civilly toward others. But the actual aim of the campaign

was to replace the bankrupt ideology and to distract the public

from its interest in democracy and freedom, and to blunt

Liu Binyan

the clash of civilizations: the debate [61]

the cultural and moral impact of the West. Understandably, it

failed. Even the terminology of a “spiritual civilization” became

the target of irony and ridicule among the Chinese.

What will emerge in China is a mixture of these many forces,

but it will not be the kind of mixture that this regime wants.

It will not mix economic freedom with political unfreedom.

Communism and capitalism are so completely different that

no one will be fooled for long that they can be joined. In the

end there will be a Chinese path, but it will be a different path

to freedom, a different path to democracy. The Chinese people

do not speak in Western phrases and political philosophies, but

they know what kind of political and economic system best

serves their own welfare.

TAKING THE BEST FROM EACH

It is ironic that Samuel P. Huntington sees a resurgent Confucianism

at the very time when spiritual deterioration and moral

degradation are eroding China’s cultural foundation. Fortyseven

years of communist rule have destroyed religion, education,

the rule of law, and morality. Today this dehumanization

caused by the despotism, absolute poverty and asceticism of the

Mao era is evidenced in the rampant lust for power, money and

carnal pleasures among many Chinese.

Coping with this moral and spiritual vacuum is a problem

not just for China but for all civilizations. Will the 21st century

be an era when, through interaction and consensus, civilizations

can merge, thus helping peoples to break old cycles of dehumanization?

Getting rid of poverty and slavery is the least of China’s

problems. The more difficult task is the process of men’s self-salvation,

that is, transforming underlings and cowed peoples into

human beings. Enriching the human spirit is indeed the longer

and harder task. It will require using the best of all civilizations,

not emphasizing the differences between them.

[62] foreign affairs

The Modernizing

Imperative

Tradition and Change

Jeane J. Kirkpatrick

SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER 1993

I approach the work of Samuel P. Huntington with keen interest

and high expectations. Like most political scientists, I have

learned much from his writings. Now in his article “The Clash

of Civilizations?” he once again raises new questions.

In his essay, Huntington asserts that civilizations are real

and important and predicts that “conflict between civilizations

will supplant ideological and other forms of conflict as

the dominant global form of conflict.” He further argues that

institutions for cooperation will be more likely to develop

within civilizations, and conflicts will most often arise between

groups in different civilizations. These strike me as interesting

but dubious propositions.

Huntington’s classification of contemporary civilizations is

questionable. He identifies “seven or eight major civilizations”in

the contemporary world: Western (which includes both European

and North American variants), Confucian, Japanese,

Islamic, Hindu, Slavic-Orthodox, Latin American “and

JEANE J. KIRKPATRICK is Leavey Professor of Government at Georgetown

University and Senior Fellow at the American Enterprise Institute.

Jeane J. Kirkpatrick

the clash of civilizations: the debate [63]

possibly African.”

This is a strange list.

If civilization is defined by common objective elements such

as language, history, religion, customs and institutions and, subjectively,

by identification, and if it is the broadest collectivity

with which persons intensely identify, why distinguish “Latin

American” from “Western”civilization? Like North America,

Latin America is a continent settled by Europeans who brought

with them European languages and a European version of

Judeo-Christian religion, law, literature and gender roles. The

Indian component in Latin American culture is more important

in some countries (Mexico, Guatemala, Ecuador and Peru) than

in North America. But the African influence is more important

in the United States than in all but a few Latin American countries

(Brazil, Belize and Cuba). Both North and South America

are “Western” European with an admixture of other elements.

And what is Russia if not “Western”? The East/West designations

of the Cold War made sense in a European context,

but in a global context Slavic/Orthodox people are Europeans

who share in Western culture. Orthodox theology and liturgy,

Leninism and Tolstoy are expressions of Western culture.

It is also not clear that over the centuries differences between

civilizations have led to the longest and most violent conflicts.

At least in the twentieth century, the most violent conflicts have

occurred within civilizations: Stalin’s purges, Pol Pot’s genocide,

the Nazi holocaust and World War II. It could be argued

that the war between the United States and Japan involved a

clash of civilizations, but those differences had little role in that

war. The Allied and Axis sides included both Asian and European

members.

The liberation of Kuwait was no more a clash between civilizations

than World War II or the Korean or Vietnamese wars.

Like Korea and Vietnam, the Persian Gulf War pitted one non-

Western Muslim government against another. Once aggression

The Modernizing Imperative

[64] foreign affairs

had occurred, the United States and other Western governments

became involved for geopolitical reasons that transcended cultural

differences. Saddam Hussein would like the world to

believe otherwise.

After the United States mobilized an international coalition

against Iraq, Saddam Hussein, until then the leader of a revolutionary

secular regime, took to public prayers and appeals for

solidarity to the Muslim world. Certain militant, anti-Western

Islamic fundamentalists, Huntington reminds us, responded

with assertions that it was a war of “the West against Islam.”

But few believed it. More governments of predominantly Muslim

societies rallied to support Kuwait than to “save” Iraq.

In Bosnia, the efforts of Radovan Karadzic and other Serbian

extremists to paint themselves as bulwarks against Islam

are no more persuasive, although the passivity of the European

Community, the United States, NATO and the United

Nations in the face of Serbia’s brutal aggression against Bosnia

has finally stimulated some tangible Islamic solidarity. But

most governments of predominantly Muslim states have been

reluctant to treat the Bosnian conflict as a religious war. The

Bosnian government itself has resisted any temptation to present

its problem as Islam versus the Judeo-Christian world. The

fact that Serbian forces began their offensive against Croatia

and Slovenia should settle the question of Serbian motives and

goals, which are territorial aggrandizement, not holy war.

Indubitably, important social, cultural and political differences

exist between Muslim and Judeo-Christian civilizations.

But the most important and explosive differences involving

Muslims are found within the Muslim world—between

persons, parties and governments who are reasonably moderate,

nonexpansionist and nonviolent and those who are antimodern

and anti-Western, extremely intolerant, expansionist

and violent. The first target of Islamic fundamentalists is not

another civilization, but their own governments. “Please do not

Jeane J. Kirkpatrick

the clash of civilizations: the debate [65]

call them Muslim fundamentalists,”a deeply religious Muslim

friend said to me. “They do not represent a more fundamental

version of the Muslim religion. They are simply Muslims who

are also violent political extremists.”

Elsewhere as well, the conflict between fanaticism and constitutionalism,

between totalitarian ambition and the rule of

law, exists within civilizations in a clearer, purer form than

between them. In Asia the most intense conflict may turn out

to be between different versions of being Chinese or Indian.

Without a doubt, civilizations are important. By eroding

the strength of local and national cultures and identifications,

modernization enhances the importance of larger units of identification

such as civilizations. Huntington is also surely right

that global communication and stepped-up migration exacerbate

conflict by bringing diametrically opposed values and

life-styles into direct contact with one another. Immigration

brings exotic practices into schools, neighborhoods and other

institutions of daily life and challenges the cosmopolitanism

of Western societies. Religious tolerance in the abstract is one

thing; veiled girls in French schoolrooms are quite another.

Such challenges are not welcome anywhere.

But Huntington, who has contributed so much to our understanding

of modernization and political change, also knows the

ways that modernization changes people, societies and politics.

He knows the many ways that modernization equals Westernization—

broadly conceived—and that it can produce backlash

and bitter hostility. But he also knows how powerful is the

momentum of modern, Western ways of science, technology,

democracy and free markets. He knows that the great question

for non-Western societies is whether they can be modern without

being Western. He believes Japan has succeeded. Maybe.

He is probably right that most societies will simultaneously

seek the benefits of modernization and of traditional relations.

To the extent that they and we are successful in preserving our

The Modernizing Imperative

[66] foreign affairs

traditions while accepting the endless changes of modernization,

our differences from one another will be preserved, and

the need for not just a pluralistic society but a pluralistic world

will grow ever more acute.

the clash of civilizations: the debate [67]

Do Civilizations Hold?

Albert L. Weeks

SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER 1993

Samuel P. Huntington has resurrected an old controversy in

the study of international affairs: the relationship between

“microcosmic” and “macrocosmic” processes. Partisans of the

former single out the nation state as the basic unit, or determining

factor, in the yin and yang of world politics. The “macros,”

on the other hand, view world affairs on the lofty level of

the civilizations to which nation states belong and by which

their behavior is allegedly largely determined.

To one degree or another, much of the latter school’s thinking,

although they may be loath to admit it, derives from Oswald

Spengler, Arnold Toynbee, Quincy Wright, F. N. Parkinson

and others. In contrast, scholars such as Hans J. Morgenthau,

John H. Herz and Raymond Aron have tended to hew to the

“micro” school.

Both schools began debating the issue vigorously back in the

1950s. That Huntington is resurrecting the controversy 40 years

later is symptomatic of the failure of globalism—specifically

the idea of establishing a “new world order”—to take root and

of the failure to make sense of contradictory trends and events.

His aim is to find new, easily classified determinants of contemporary

quasi-chaotic international behavior and thus to get

a handle on the international kaleidoscope.

ALBERT L. WEEKS is Professor Emeritus of International Relations at New

York University.

Do Civilizations Hold?

[68] foreign affairs

His methodology is not new. In arguing the macro case in

the 1940s, Toynbee distinguished what he called primary, secondary

and tertiary civilizations by the time of their appearance

in history, contending that their attributes continued to

influence contemporary events. Wright, likewise applying a

historical method, classified civilizations as “bellicose” (including

Syrian, Japanese and Mexican), “moderately bellicose”

(Germanic, Western, Russian, Scandinavian, etc.) and “most

peaceful” (such as Irish, Indian and Chinese). Like Toynbee

and now Huntington, he attributed contemporary significance

to these factors. Huntington’s classification, while different in

several respects from those of his illustrious predecessors, also

identifies determinants on a grand scale by “civilizations.”

His endeavor, however, has its own fault lines. The lines are

the borders encompassing each distinct nation state and mercilessly

chopping the alleged civilizations into pieces. With the

cultural and religious glue of these “civilizations” thin and

cracked, with the nation state’s political regime providing the

principal bonds, crisscross fracturing and cancellation of Huntington’s

own macro-scale, somewhat anachronistic fault lines

are inevitable.

The world remains fractured along political and possibly geopolitical

lines; cultural and historical determinants are a great

deal less vital and virulent. Politics, regimes and ideologies are

culturally, historically and “civilizationally” determined to an

extent. But it is willful, day-to-day, crisis-to-crisis, war-to-war

political decision-making by nation-state units that remains

the single most identifiable determinant of events in the international

arena. How else can we explain repeated nation-state

“defections” from their collective “civilizations”? As Huntington

himself points out, in the Persian Gulf War “one Arab state

invaded another and then fought a coalition of Arab, Western

and other states.”

Raymond Aron described at length the primacy of a nation

Albert L. Weeks

the clash of civilizations: the debate [69]

state’s political integrity and independence, its inviolable territoriality

and sovereign impermeability. He observed that “men

have believed that the fate of cultures was at stake on the battlefields

at the same time as the fate of provinces.” But, he added,

the fact remains that sovereign states “are engaged in a competition

for power [and] conquests . . . . In our times the major

phenomenon [on the international scene] is the heterogeneity

of state units [not] supranational aggregations.”

[70] foreign affairs

The West Is Best

Gerard Piel

SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER 1993

We must be in terror of the civilizations conjured by Samuel P.

Huntington for the same reason that Nils Bohr admonished us

to fear ghosts: We see them, and we know they are not there!

We have another reason to be in terror of them. Without

boundaries, interiors or exteriors, continuity or coherent entity,

any of the Huntington civilizations can be summoned in a

moment to ratify whatever action the West and its remaining

superpower deem rightful. Now they fit the Eric Ericsson definition

of the pseudo-species, outside the law.

In the end, “the West and the Rest” offers a more useful analysis.

We can recognize these ghostly civilizations as the developing

countries and the countries in transition.

They all aspire to the Western model. They are still engaged

in conquest of the material world. As they proceed with their

industrialization, they progressively embrace the “Western

ideas,” in Huntington’s litany, “of individualism, liberalism,

constitutionalism, human rights, equality, liberty, the rule of

law, democracy, free markets . . . .”

At the primary level it is a function of lengthening life expectancy;

people in those countries are beginning to live long

enough to discover they have rights and to assert them. Mass

education, which comes with Westernizing industrialization,

GERARD PIEL is Chairman Emeritus of Scientific American, Inc.

Gerard Piel

the clash of civilizations: the debate [71]

makes its contribution as well. Tiananmen Square in Beijing

and the massing of the people at the parliament building in

Moscow stand as rites in a passage.

How long the process will take depends on how the West

responds to the needs and the disorder that beset the emerging

and developing nations—in fear or in rational quest of the

common future. The question is: Do Western ideas have more

substance than those pseudo-civilizations?

[72] foreign affairs

Response

If Not Civilizations,

What?

Paradigms of the Post-Cold War World

Samuel P. Huntington

NOVEMBER/DECEMBER 1993

When people think seriously, they think abstractly; they conjure

up simplified pictures of reality called concepts, theories,

models, paradigms. Without such intellectual constructs, there

is, William James said, only “a bloomin’ buzzin’ confusion.”

Intellectual and scientific advance, as Thomas Kuhn showed

in his classic The Structure of Scientific Revolutions, consists of

the displacement of one paradigm, which has become increasingly

incapable of explaining new or newly discovered facts, by

a new paradigm that accounts for those facts in a more satisfactory

fashion. “To be accepted as a paradigm,” Kuhn wrote, “a

theory must seem better than its competitors, but it need not,

SAMUEL P. HUNTINGTON is the Eaton Professor of the Science of Government

and Director of the John M. Olin Institute for Strategic Studies at

Harvard University. His article “The Clash of Civilizations?” appeared in the

Summer 1993 issue of Foreign Affairs, and several responses to it were published

in the September/October 1993 issue.

Samuel P. Huntington

the clash of civilizations: the debate [73]

and in fact never does, explain all the facts with which it can

be confronted.”

For 40 years students and practitioners of international relations

thought and acted in terms of a highly simplified but very

useful picture of world affairs, the Cold War paradigm. The

world was divided between one group of relatively wealthy and

mostly democratic societies, led by the United States, engaged

in a pervasive ideological, political, economic, and, at times,

military conflict with another group of somewhat poorer, communist

societies led by the Soviet Union. Much of this conflict

occurred in the Third World outside of these two camps, composed

of countries which often were poor, lacked political stability,

were recently independent and claimed to be nonaligned.

The Cold War paradigm could not account for everything that

went on in world politics. There were many anomalies, to use

Kuhn’s term, and at times the paradigm blinded scholars and

statesmen to major developments, such as the Sino-Soviet split.

Yet as a simple model of global politics, it accounted for more

important phenomena than any of its rivals; it was an indispensable

starting point for thinking about international affairs;

it came to be almost universally accepted; and it shaped thinking

about world politics for two generations.

The dramatic events of the past five years have made that

paradigm intellectual history. There is clearly a need for a new

model that will help us to order and to understand central

developments in world politics. What is the best simple map of

the post-Cold War world?

A MAP OF THE NEW WORLD

“The Clash of Civilizations?” is an effort to lay out elements

of a post-Cold War paradigm. As with any paradigm, there is

much the civilization paradigm does not account for, and critics

will have no trouble citing events—even important events

If Not Civilizations, What?

[74] foreign affairs

like Iraq’s invasion of Kuwait—that it does not explain and

would not have predicted (although it would have predicted

the evaporation of the anti-Iraq coalition after March 1991).

Yet, as Kuhn demonstrates, anomalous events do not falsify

a paradigm. A paradigm is disproved only by the creation of

an alternative paradigm that accounts for more crucial facts in

equally simple or simpler terms (that is, at a comparable level

of intellectual abstraction; a more complex theory can always

account for more things than a more parsimonious theory).

The debates the civilizational paradigm has generated around

the world show that, in some measure, it strikes home; it either

accords with reality as people see it or it comes close enough so

that people who do not accept it have to attack it.

What groupings of countries will be most important in

world affairs and most relevant to understanding and making

sense of global politics? Countries no longer belong to the Free

World, the communist bloc, or the Third World. Simple twoway

divisions of countries into rich and poor or democratic and

nondemocratic may help some but not all that much. Global

politics are now too complex to be stuffed into two pigeonholes.

For reasons outlined in the original article, civilizations are the

natural successors to the three worlds of the Cold War. At the

macro level world politics are likely to involve conflicts and

shifting power balances of states from different civilizations,

and at the micro level the most violent, prolonged and dangerous

(because of the possibility of escalation) conflicts are likely

to be between states and groups from different civilizations.

As the article pointed out, this civilization paradigm accounts

for many important developments in international affairs in

recent years, including the breakup of the Soviet Union and

Yugoslavia, the wars going on in their former territories, the

rise of religious fundamentalism throughout the world, the

struggles within Russia, Turkey and Mexico over their identity,

the intensity of the trade conflicts between the United States

Samuel P. Huntington

the clash of civilizations: the debate [75]

and Japan, the resistance of Islamic states to Western pressure

on Iraq and Libya, the efforts of Islamic and Confucian states

to acquire nuclear weapons and the means to deliver them,

China’s continuing role as an “outsider” great power, the consolidation

of new democratic regimes in some countries and

not in others, and the escalating arms race in East Asia.

In the few months since the article was written, the following

events have occurred that also fit the civilizational paradigm

and might have been predicted from it:

—the continuation and intensification of the fighting among

Croats, Muslims and Serbs in the former Yugoslavia;

—the failure of the West to provide meaningful support to

the Bosnian Muslims or to denounce Croat atrocities in the

same way Serb atrocities were denounced;

—Russia’s unwillingness to join other UN Security Council

members in getting the Serbs in Croatia to make peace with the

Croatian government, and the offer of Iran and other Muslim

nations to provide 18,000 troops to protect Bosnian Muslims;

—the intensification of the war between Armenians and

Azeris, Turkish and Iranian demands that the Armenians

surrender their conquests, the deployment of Turkish troops

to and Iranian troops across the Azerbaijan border, and Russia’s

warning that the Iranian action contributes to “escalation

of the conflict” and “pushes it to dangerous limits of

internationalization”;

—the continued fighting in central Asia between Russian

troops and Mujaheddin guerrillas;

—the confrontation at the Vienna Human Rights Conference

between the West, led by U.S. Secretary of State Warren

Christopher, denouncing “cultural relativism,” and a

coalition of Islamic and Confucian states rejecting “Western

universalism”;

—the refocusing in parallel fashion of Russian and NATO

military planners on “the threat from the South”;

If Not Civilizations, What?

[76] foreign affairs

—the voting, apparently almost entirely along civilizational

lines, that gave the 2000 Olympics to Sydney rather than

Beijing;

—the sale of missile components from China to Pakistan,

the resulting imposition of U.S. sanctions against China, and

the confrontation between China and the United States over

the alleged shipment of nuclear technology to Iran;

—China’s breaking the moratorium and testing a nuclear

weapon, despite vigorous U.S. protests, and North Korea’s

refusal to participate further in talks on its own nuclear weapons

program;

—the revelation that the U.S. State Department was following

a “dual containment” policy directed at both Iran and Iraq;

—the announcement by the U.S. Defense Department of a

new strategy of preparing for two “major regional conflicts,”

one against North Korea, the other against Iran or Iraq;

—the call by Iran’s president for alliances with China and

India so that “we can have the last word on international

events”;

—new German legislation drastically curtailing the admission

of refugees;

—the agreement between Russian President Boris Yeltsin

and Ukrainian President Leonid Kravchuk on the disposition

of the Black Sea fleet and other issues;

—U.S. bombing of Baghdad, its virtually unanimous support

by Western governments, and its condemnation by almost

all Muslim governments as another example of the West’s

“double standard”;

—the United States listing Sudan as a terrorist state and the

indictment of Sheik Omar Abdel Rahman and his followers for

conspiring “to levy a war of urban terrorism against the United

States”;

—the improved prospects for the eventual admission of

Poland, Hungary, the Czech Republic and Slovakia into NATO.

Samuel P. Huntington

the clash of civilizations: the debate [77]

Does a “clash of civilizations” perspective account for everything

of significance in world affairs during these past few

months? Of course not. It could be argued, for instance, that

the agreement between the Palestine Liberation Organization

and the Israeli government on the Gaza Strip and Jericho is a

dramatic anomaly to the civilizational paradigm, and in some

sense it is. Such an event, however, does not invalidate a civilizational

approach: it is historically significant precisely because

it is between groups from two different civilizations who have

been fighting each other for over four decades. Truces and

limited agreements are as much a part of the clashes between

civilizations as Soviet- American arms control agreements were

part of the Cold War; and while the conflict between Jew and

Arab may be circumscribed, it still continues.

Inter-civilizational issues are increasingly replacing intersuperpower

issues as the top items on the international agenda.

These issues include arms proliferation (particularly of weapons

of mass destruction and the means of delivering them), human

rights, and immigration. On these three issues, the West is on

one side and most of the other major civilizations are on the

other. President Clinton at the United Nations urges intensified

efforts to curb nuclear and other unconventional weapons;

Islamic and Confucian states plunge ahead in their efforts

to acquire them; Russia practices ambivalence. The extent

to which countries observe human rights corresponds overwhelmingly

with divisions among civilizations: the West and

Japan are highly protective of human rights; Latin America,

India, Russia, and parts of Africa protect some human rights;

China, many other Asian countries, and most Muslim societies

are least protective of human rights. Rising immigration

from non- Western sources is provoking rising concern in both

Europe and America. Other European countries in addition

to Germany are tightening their restrictions at the same time

that the barriers to movement of people within the European

If Not Civilizations, What?

[78] foreign affairs

Community are rapidly disappearing. In the United States,

massive waves of new immigrants are generating support for

new controls, despite the fact that most studies show immigrants

to be making a net positive contribution to the American

economy.

AMERICA UNDONE?

One function of a paradigm is to highlight what is important

(e.g., the potential for escalation in clashes between groups

from different civilizations); another is to place familiar phenomena

in a new perspective. In this respect, the civilizational

paradigm may have implications for the United States.1 Countries

like the Soviet Union and Yugoslavia that bestride civilizational

fault lines tend to come apart. The unity of the United

States has historically rested on the twin bedrocks of European

culture and political democracy. These have been essentials of

America to which generations of immigrants have assimilated.

The essence of the American creed has been equal rights for

the individual, and historically immigrant and outcast groups

have invoked and thereby reinvigorated the principles of the

creed in their struggles for equal treatment in American society.

The most notable and successful effort was the civil rights

movement led by Martin Luther King, Jr., in the 1950s and

1960s. Subsequently, however, the demand shifted from equal

rights for individuals to special rights (affirmative action and

similar measures) for blacks and other groups. Such claims run

directly counter to the underlying principles that have been

the basis of American political unity; they reject the idea of a

“color-blind” society of equal individuals and instead promote

a “color-conscious” society with government-sanctioned privileges

for some groups. In a parallel movement, intellectuals and

1See, for instance, the map in Die Welt, June 16, 1993, p. 3.

Samuel P. Huntington

the clash of civilizations: the debate [79]

politicians began to push the ideology of “multiculturalism,”

and to insist on the rewriting of American political, social, and

literary history from the viewpoint of non-European groups.

At the extreme, this movement tends to elevate obscure leaders

of minority groups to a level of importance equal to that

of the Founding Fathers. Both the demands for special group

rights and for multiculturalism encourage a clash of civilizations

within the United States and encourage what Arthur M.

Schlesinger, Jr., terms “the disuniting of America.”

The United States is becoming increasingly diverse ethnically

and racially. The Census Bureau estimates that by 2050

the American population will be 23 percent Hispanic, 16 percent

black and 10 percent Asian-American. In the past the

United States has successfully absorbed millions of immigrants

from scores of countries because they adapted to the prevailing

European culture and enthusiastically embraced the American

Creed of liberty, equality, individualism, democracy. Will

this pattern continue to prevail as 50 percent of the population

becomes Hispanic or nonwhite? Will the new immigrants be

assimilated into the hitherto dominant European culture of the

United States? If they are not, if the United States becomes truly

multicultural and pervaded with an internal clash of civilizations,

will it survive as a liberal democracy? The political identity

of the United States is rooted in the principles articulated

in its founding documents. Will the de-Westernization of the

United States, if it occurs, also mean its de-Americanization? If

it does and Americans cease to adhere to their liberal democratic

and European-rooted political ideology, the United States as we

have known it will cease to exist and will follow the other ideologically

defined superpower onto the ash heap of history.2

2For a brilliant and eloquent statement of why the future of the United

States could be problematic, see Bruce D. Porter, “Can American Democracy

Survive?,” Commentary, November 1993, pp. 37-40.

If Not Civilizations, What?

[80] foreign affairs

GOT A BETTER IDEA?

A civilizational approach explains much and orders much of

the “bloomin’ buzzin’ confusion” of the post-Cold War world,

which is why it has attracted so much attention and generated

so much debate around the world. Can any other paradigm

do better? If not civilizations, what? The responses in Foreign

Affairs to my article did not provide any compelling alternative

picture of the world. At best they suggested one pseudo-alternative

and one unreal alternative.

The pseudo-alternative is a statist paradigm that constructs

a totally irrelevant and artificial opposition between states and

civilizations: “Civilizations do not control states,” says Fouad

Ajami, “states control civilizations.” But it is meaningless to

talk about states and civilizations in terms of “control.” States,

of course, try to balance power, but if that is all they did, West

European countries would have coalesced with the Soviet

Union against the United States in the late 1940s. States respond

primarily to perceived threats, and the West European states

then saw a political and ideological threat from the East. As

my original article argued, civilizations are composed of one or

more states, and “Nation states will remain the most powerful

actors in world affairs.” Just as nation states generally belonged

to one of three worlds in the Cold War, they also belong to

civilizations. With the demise of the three worlds, nation states

increasingly define their identity and their interests in civilizational

terms, and West European peoples and states now see a

cultural threat from the South replacing the ideological threat

from the East.

We do not live in a world of countries characterized by the

“solitude of states” (to use Ajami’s phrase) with no connections

between them. Our world is one of overlapping groupings of

states brought together in varying degrees by history, culture,

religion, language, location and institutions. At the broadest

Samuel P. Huntington

the clash of civilizations: the debate [81]

level these groupings are civilizations. To deny their existence

is to deny the basic realities of human existence.

The unreal alternative is the one-world paradigm that a universal

civilization now exists or is likely to exist in the coming

years. Obviously people now have and for millennia have had

common characteristics that distinguish humans from other

species. These characteristics have always been compatible with

the existence of very different cultures. The argument that a

universal culture or civilization is now emerging takes various

forms, none of which withstands even passing scrutiny.

First, there is the argument that the collapse of Soviet communism

means the end of history and the universal victory of

liberal democracy throughout the world. This argument suffers

from the Single Alternative Fallacy. It is rooted in the Cold

War assumption that the only alternative to communism is liberal

democracy and that the demise of the first produces the

universality of the second. Obviously, however, there are many

forms of authoritarianism, nationalism, corporatism and market

communism (as in China) that are alive and well in today’s

world. More significantly, there are all the religious alternatives

that lie outside the world that is perceived in terms of secular

ideologies. In the modern world, religion is a central, perhaps

the central, force that motivates and mobilizes people. It is sheer

hubris to think that because Soviet communism has collapsed

the West has won the world for all time.

Second, there is the assumption that increased interaction—

greater communication and transportation—produces a common

culture. In some circumstances this may be the case. But

wars occur most frequently between societies with high levels

of interaction, and interaction frequently reinforces existing

identities and produces resistance, reaction and confrontation.

Third, there is the assumption that modernization and economic

development have a homogenizing effect and produce

a common modern culture closely resembling that which has

If Not Civilizations, What?

[82] foreign affairs

existed in the West in this century. Clearly, modern urban, literate,

wealthy, industrialized societies do share cultural traits

that distinguish them from backward, rural, poor, undeveloped

societies. In the contemporary world most modern societies

have been Western societies. But modernization does not

equal Westernization. Japan, Singapore and Saudi Arabia are

modern, prosperous societies but they clearly are non-Western.

The presumption of Westerners that other peoples who modernize

must become “like us” is a bit of Western arrogance that

in itself illustrates the clash of civilizations. To argue that Slovenes

and Serbs, Arabs and Jews, Hindus and Muslims, Russians

and Tajiks, Tamils and Sinhalese, Tibetans and Chinese,

Japanese and Americans all belong to a single Western-defined

universal civilization is to fly in the face of reality.

A universal civilization can only be the product of universal

power. Roman power created a near-universal civilization

within the limited confines of the ancient world. Western power

in the form of European colonialism in the nineteenth century

and American hegemony in the twentieth century extended

Western culture throughout much of the contemporary world.

European colonialism is over; American hegemony is receding.

The erosion of Western culture follows, as indigenous, historically

rooted mores, languages, beliefs and institutions reassert

themselves.

Amazingly, Ajami cites India as evidence of the sweeping

power of Western modernity. “India,” he says, “will not become

a Hindu state. The inheritance of Indian secularism will hold.”

Maybe it will, but certainly the overwhelming trend is away

from Nehru’s vision of a secular, socialist, Western, parliamentary

democracy to a society shaped by Hindu fundamentalism.

In India, Ajami goes on to say, “The vast middle class

will defend it [secularism], keep the order intact to maintain

India’s—and its own—place in the modern world of nations.”

Really? A long New York Times (September 23, 1993) story on this

Samuel P. Huntington

the clash of civilizations: the debate [83]

subject begins: “Slowly, gradually, but with the relentlessness

of floodwaters, a growing Hindu rage toward India’s Muslim

minority has been spreading among India’s solid middle class

Hindus—its merchants and accountants, its lawyers and engineers—

creating uncertainty about the future ability of adherents

of the two religions to get along.” An op-ed piece in the

Times (August 3, 1993) by an Indian journalist also highlights

the role of the middle class: “The most disturbing development

is the increasing number of senior civil servants, intellectuals,

and journalists who have begun to talk the language of Hindu

fundamentalism, protesting that religious minorities, particularly

the Muslims, have pushed them beyond the limits of

patience.” This author, Khushwant Singh, concludes sadly that

while India may retain a secular facade, India “will no longer

be the India we have known over the past 47 years” and “the

spirit within will be that of militant Hinduism.” In India, as in

other societies, fundamentalism is on the rise and is largely a

middle class phenomenon.

The decline of Western power will be followed, and is beginning

to be followed, by the retreat of Western culture. The rapidly

increasing economic power of East Asian states will, as

Kishore Mahbubani asserted, lead to increasing military power,

political influence and cultural assertiveness. A colleague of his

has elaborated this warning with respect to human rights:

[E]fforts to promote human rights in Asia must also reckon with the altered

distribution of power in the post-Cold War world. . . . Western leverage over

East and Southeast Asia has been greatly reduced. . . . There is far less scope for

conditionality and sanctions to force compliance with human rights. . . .

For the first time since the Universal Declaration [on Human Rights] was

adopted in 1948, countries not thoroughly steeped in the Judeo-Christian and

natural law traditions are in the first rank: That unprecedented situation will

define the new international politics of human rights. It will also multiply the

occasions for conflict. . . .

Economic success has engendered a greater cultural self-confidence. Whatever

their differences, East and Southeast Asian countries are increasingly conscious

of their own civilizations and tend to locate the sources of their economic success

If Not Civilizations, What?

[84] foreign affairs

in their own distinctive traditions and institutions. The self-congratulatory, simplistic,

and sanctimonious tone of much Western commentary at the end of the

Cold War and the current triumphalism of Western values grate on East and

Southeast Asians.3

Language is, of course, central to culture, and Ajami and

Robert Bartley both cite the widespread use of English as evidence

for the universality of Western culture (although Ajami’s

fictional example dates from 1900). Is, however, use of English

increasing or decreasing in relation to other languages? In

India, Africa and elsewhere, indigenous languages have been

replacing those of the colonial rulers. Even as Ajami and Bartley

were penning their comments, Newsweek ran an article

entitled “English Not Spoken Here Much Anymore” on Chinese

replacing English as the lingua franca of Hong Kong.4 In

a parallel development, Serbs now call their language Serbian,

not Serbo-Croatian, and write it in the Cyrillic script of their

Russian kinsmen, not in the Western script of their Catholic

enemies. At the same time, Azerbaijan, Turkmenistan, and

Uzbekistan have shifted from the Cyrillic script of their former

Russian masters to the Western script of their Turkish kinsmen.

On the language front, Babelization prevails over universalization

and further evidences the rise of civilization identity.

CULTURE IS TO DIE FOR

Wherever one turns, the world is at odds with itself. If differences

in civilization are not responsible for these conflicts,

3Bilahari Kausikan, “Asia’s Different Standard,” Foreign Policy, Fall 1993,

pp. 28-34. In an accompanying article Aryeh Neier excoriates “Asia’s Unacceptable

Standard,” ibid., pp. 42-51.

4In the words of one British resident: “When I arrived in Hong Kong 10

years ago, nine times out of 10, a taxi driver would understand where you

were going. Now, nine times out of 10, he doesn’t.” Occidentals rather than

natives increasingly have to be hired to fill jobs requiring knowledge of English.

Newsweek, July 19, 1993, p. 24.

Samuel P. Huntington

the clash of civilizations: the debate [85]

what is? The critics of the civilization paradigm have not produced

a better explanation for what is going on in the world.

The civilizational paradigm, in contrast, strikes a responsive

chord throughout the world. In Asia, as one U.S. ambassador

reported, it is “spreading like wildfire.” In Europe, European

Community President Jacques Delors explicitly endorsed its

argument that “future conflicts will be sparked by cultural

factors rather than economics or ideology” and warned, “The

West needs to develop a deeper understanding of the religious

and philosophical assumptions underlying other civilizations,

and the way other nations see their interests, to identify what

we have in common.” Muslims, in turn, have seen “the clash”

as providing recognition and, in some degree, legitimation for

the distinctiveness of their own civilization and its independence

from the West. That civilizations are meaningful entities

accords with the way in which people see and experience

reality.

History has not ended. The world is not one. Civilizations

unite and divide humankind. The forces making for clashes

between civilizations can be contained only if they are recognized.

In a “world of different civilizations,” as my article

concluded, each “will have to learn to coexist with the others.”

What ultimately counts for people is not political ideology

or economic interest. Faith and family, blood and belief, are

what people identify with and what they will fight and die for.

And that is why the clash of civilizations is replacing the Cold

War as the central phenomenon of global politics, and why a

civilizational paradigm provides, better than any alternative,

a useful starting point for understanding and coping with the

changes going on in the world.

[86] foreign affairs

Clash of Globalizations

Stanley Hoffmann

JULY/AUGUST 2002

A NEW PARADIGM?

What is the state of international relations today? In the 1990s,

specialists concentrated on the partial disintegration of the

global order’s traditional foundations: states. During that

decade, many countries, often those born of decolonization,

revealed themselves to be no more than pseudostates, without

solid institutions, internal cohesion, or national consciousness.

The end of communist coercion in the former Soviet Union and

in the former Yugoslavia also revealed long-hidden ethnic tensions.

Minorities that were or considered themselves oppressed

demanded independence. In Iraq, Sudan, Afghanistan, and

Haiti, rulers waged open warfare against their subjects. These

wars increased the importance of humanitarian interventions,

which came at the expense of the hallowed principles of national

sovereignty and nonintervention. Thus the dominant tension

of the decade was the clash between the fragmentation of states

(and the state system) and the progress of economic, cultural,

and political integration—in other words, globalization.

Everybody has understood the events of September 11 as the

beginning of a new era. But what does this break mean? In

the conventional approach to international relations, war took

STANLEY HOFFMANN is Buttenwieser University Professor at Harvard

University and a regular book reviewer for Foreign Affairs.

Stanley Hoffmann

the clash of civilizations: the debate [87]

place among states. But in September, poorly armed individuals

suddenly challenged, surprised, and wounded the world’s

dominant superpower. The attacks also showed that, for all

its accomplishments, globalization makes an awful form of

violence easily accessible to hopeless fanatics. Terrorism is the

bloody link between interstate relations and global society. As

countless individuals and groups are becoming global actors

along with states, insecurity and vulnerability are rising. To

assess today’s bleak state of affairs, therefore, several questions

are necessary. What concepts help explain the new global order?

What is the condition of the interstate part of international

relations? And what does the emerging global civil society contribute

to world order?

SOUND AND FURY

Two models made a great deal of noise in the 1990s. The first

one—Francis Fukuyama’s “End of History” thesis—was not

vindicated by events. To be sure, his argument predicted the

end of ideological conflicts, not history itself, and the triumph

of political and economic liberalism. That point is correct in a

narrow sense: the “secular religions” that fought each other so

bloodily in the last century are now dead. But Fukuyama failed

to note that nationalism remains very much alive. Moreover,

he ignored the explosive potential of religious wars that has

extended to a large part of the Islamic world.

Fukuyama’s academic mentor, the political scientist Samuel

Huntington, provided a few years later a gloomier account that

saw a very different world. Huntington predicted that violence

resulting from international anarchy and the absence of common

values and institutions would erupt among civilizations rather

than among states or ideologies. But Huntington’s conception

of what constitutes a civilization was hazy. He failed to take into

account sufficiently conflicts within each so-called civilization,

Clash of Globalizations

[88] foreign affairs

and he overestimated the importance of religion in the behavior

of non-Western elites, who are often secularized and Westernized.

Hence he could not clearly define the link between a civilization

and the foreign policies of its member states.

Other, less sensational models still have adherents. The “realist”

orthodoxy insists that nothing has changed in international

relations since Thucydides and Machiavelli: a state’s military

and economic power determines its fate; interdependence and

international institutions are secondary and fragile phenomena;

and states’ objectives are imposed by the threats to their

survival or security. Such is the world described by Henry Kissinger.

Unfortunately, this venerable model has trouble integrating

change, especially globalization and the rise of nonstate

actors. Moreover, it overlooks the need for international cooperation

that results from such new threats as the proliferation

of weapons of mass destruction (WMD). And it ignores what

the scholar Raymond Aron called the “germ of a universal consciousness”:

the liberal, promarket norms that developed states

have come to hold in common.

Taking Aron’s point, many scholars today interpret the world

in terms of a triumphant globalization that submerges borders

through new means of information and communication. In

this universe, a state choosing to stay closed invariably faces

decline and growing discontent among its subjects, who are

eager for material progress. But if it opens up, it must accept a

reduced role that is mainly limited to social protection, physical

protection against aggression or civil war, and maintaining

national identity. The champion of this epic without heroes is

The New York Times columnist Thomas Friedman. He contrasts

barriers with open vistas, obsolescence with modernity, state

control with free markets. He sees in globalization the light

of dawn, the “golden straitjacket” that will force contentious

publics to understand that the logic of globalization is that of

peace (since war would interrupt globalization and therefore

Stanley Hoffmann

the clash of civilizations: the debate [89]

progress) and democracy (because new technologies increase

individual autonomy and encourage initiative).

BACK TO REALITY

These models come up hard against three realities. First, rivalries

among great powers (and the capacity of smaller states to

exploit such tensions) have most certainly not disappeared. For

a while now, however, the existence of nuclear weapons has

produced a certain degree of prudence among the powers that

have them. The risk of destruction that these weapons hold

has moderated the game and turned nuclear arms into instruments

of last resort. But the game could heat up as more states

seek other WMD as a way of narrowing the gap between the

nuclear club and the other powers. The sale of such weapons

thus becomes a hugely contentious issue, and efforts to slow

down the spread of all WMD, especially to dangerous “rogue”

states, can paradoxically become new causes of violence.

Second, if wars between states are becoming less common,

wars within them are on the rise—as seen in the former Yugoslavia,

Iraq, much of Africa, and Sri Lanka. Uninvolved states

first tend to hesitate to get engaged in these complex conflicts,

but they then (sometimes) intervene to prevent these conflicts

from turning into regional catastrophes. The interveners, in

turn, seek the help of the United Nations or regional organizations

to rebuild these states, promote stability, and prevent

future fragmentation and misery.

Third, states’ foreign policies are shaped not only by realist

geopolitical factors such as economics and military power

but by domestic politics. Even in undemocratic regimes, forces

such as xenophobic passions, economic grievances, and transnational

ethnic solidarity can make policymaking far more

complex and less predictable. Many states—especially the

United States—have to grapple with the frequent interplay of

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competing government branches. And the importance of individual

leaders and their personalities is often underestimated in

the study of international affairs.

For realists, then, transnational terrorism creates a formidable

dilemma. If a state is the victim of private actors such

as terrorists, it will try to eliminate these groups by depriving

them of sanctuaries and punishing the states that harbor them.

The national interest of the attacked state will therefore require

either armed interventions against governments supporting terrorists

or a course of prudence and discreet pressure on other

governments to bring these terrorists to justice. Either option

requires a questioning of sovereignty—the holy concept of realist

theories. The classical realist universe of Hans Morgenthau

and Aron may therefore still be very much alive in a world of

states, but it has increasingly hazy contours and offers only difficult

choices when it faces the threat of terrorism.

At the same time, the real universe of globalization does not

resemble the one that Friedman celebrates. In fact, globalization

has three forms, each with its own problems. First is economic

globalization, which results from recent revolutions in

technology, information, trade, foreign investment, and international

business. The main actors are companies, investors,

banks, and private services industries, as well as states and

international organizations. This present form of capitalism,

ironically foreseen by Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels, poses a

central dilemma between efficiency and fairness. The specialization

and integration of firms make it possible to increase

aggregate wealth, but the logic of pure capitalism does not

favor social justice. Economic globalization has thus become

a formidable cause of inequality among and within states, and

the concern for global competitiveness limits the aptitude of

states and other actors to address this problem.

Next comes cultural globalization. It stems from the technological

revolution and economic globalization, which together

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foster the flow of cultural goods. Here the key choice is between

uniformization (often termed “Americanization”) and diversity.

The result is both a “disenchantment of the world” (in Max

Weber’s words) and a reaction against uniformity. The latter

takes form in a renaissance of local cultures and languages as

well as assaults against Western culture, which is denounced

as an arrogant bearer of a secular, revolutionary ideology and a

mask for U.S. hegemony.

Finally there is political globalization, a product of the other

two. It is characterized by the preponderance of the United

States and its political institutions and by a vast array of international

and regional organizations and transgovernmental

networks (specializing in areas such as policing or migration

or justice). It is also marked by private institutions that are neither

governmental nor purely national—say, Doctors Without

Borders or Amnesty International. But many of these agencies

lack democratic accountability and are weak in scope, power,

and authority. Furthermore, much uncertainty hangs over the

fate of American hegemony, which faces significant resistance

abroad and is affected by America’s own oscillation between

the temptations of domination and isolation.

The benefits of globalization are undeniable. But Friedmanlike

optimism rests on very fragile foundations. For one

thing, globalization is neither inevitable nor irresistible. Rather,

it is largely an American creation, rooted in the period after

World War II and based on U.S. economic might. By extension,

then, a deep and protracted economic crisis in the United

States could have as devastating an effect on globalization as

did the Great Depression.

Second, globalization’s reach remains limited because it

excludes many poor countries, and the states that it does transform

react in different ways. This fact stems from the diversity

of economic and social conditions at home as well as from partisan

politics. The world is far away from a perfect integration

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of markets, services, and factors of production. Sometimes the

simple existence of borders slows down and can even paralyze

this integration; at other times it gives integration the flavors

and colors of the dominant state (as in the case of the Internet).

Third, international civil society remains embryonic. Many

nongovernmental organizations reflect only a tiny segment of

the populations of their members’ states. They largely represent

only modernized countries, or those in which the weight of the

state is not too heavy. Often, NGOs have little independence

from governments.

Fourth, the individual emancipation so dear to Friedman

does not quickly succeed in democratizing regimes, as one

can see today in China. Nor does emancipation prevent public

institutions such as the International Monetary Fund, the

World Bank, or the World Trade Organization from remaining

opaque in their activities and often arbitrary and unfair in

their rulings.

Fifth, the attractive idea of improving the human condition

through the abolition of barriers is dubious. Globalization is

in fact only a sum of techniques (audio and videocassettes,

the Internet, instantaneous communications) that are at the

disposal of states or private actors. Self-interest and ideology,

not humanitarian reasons, are what drive these actors. Their

behavior is quite different from the vision of globalization as an

Enlightenment-based utopia that is simultaneously scientific,

rational, and universal. For many reasons—misery, injustice,

humiliation, attachment to traditions, aspiration to more than

just a better standard of living—this “Enlightenment” stereotype

of globalization thus provokes revolt and dissatisfaction.

Another contradiction is also at work. On the one hand, international

and transnational cooperation is necessary to ensure

that globalization will not be undermined by the inequalities

resulting from market fluctuations, weak state-sponsored protections,

and the incapacity of many states to improve their

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fates by themselves. On the other hand, cooperation presupposes

that many states and rich private players operate altruistically—

which is certainly not the essence of international

relations—or practice a remarkably generous conception of

their long-term interests. But the fact remains that most rich

states still refuse to provide sufficient development aid or to

intervene in crisis situations such as the genocide in Rwanda.

That reluctance compares poorly with the American enthusiasm

to pursue the fight against al Qaeda and the Taliban.

What is wrong here is not patriotic enthusiasm as such, but the

weakness of the humanitarian impulse when the national interest

in saving non-American victims is not self-evident.

IMAGINED COMMUNITIES

Among the many effects of globalization on international

politics, three hold particular importance. The first concerns

institutions. Contrary to realist predictions, most states are not

perpetually at war with each other. Many regions and countries

live in peace; in other cases, violence is internal rather than stateto-

state. And since no government can do everything by itself,

interstate organisms have emerged. The result, which can be

termed “global society,” seeks to reduce the potentially destructive

effects of national regulations on the forces of integration.

But it also seeks to ensure fairness in the world market and

create international regulatory regimes in such areas as trade,

communications, human rights, migration, and refugees. The

main obstacle to this effort is the reluctance of states to accept

global directives that might constrain the market or further

reduce their sovereignty. Thus the UN’s powers remain limited

and sometimes only purely theoretical. International criminal

justice is still only a spotty and contested last resort. In the

world economy—where the market, not global governance, has

been the main beneficiary of the state’s retreat—the network

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of global institutions is fragmented and incomplete. Foreign

investment remains ruled by bilateral agreements. Environmental

protection is badly ensured, and issues such as migration

and population growth are largely ignored. Institutional

networks are not powerful enough to address unfettered shortterm

capital movements, the lack of international regulation

on bankruptcy and competition, and primitive coordination

among rich countries. In turn, the global “governance” that

does exist is partial and weak at a time when economic globalization

deprives many states of independent monetary and

fiscal policies, or it obliges them to make cruel choices between

economic competitiveness and the preservation of social safety

nets. All the while, the United States displays an increasing

impatience toward institutions that weigh on American freedom

of action. Movement toward a world state looks increasingly

unlikely. The more state sovereignty crumbles under the

blows of globalization or such recent developments as humanitarian

intervention and the fight against terrorism, the more

states cling to what is left to them.

Second, globalization has not profoundly challenged the

enduring national nature of citizenship. Economic life takes

place on a global scale, but human identity remains national—

hence the strong resistance to cultural homogenization. Over

the centuries, increasingly centralized states have expanded

their functions and tried to forge a sense of common identity

for their subjects. But no central power in the world can do

the same thing today, even in the European Union. There, a

single currency and advanced economic coordination have not

yet produced a unified economy or strong central institutions

endowed with legal autonomy, nor have they resulted in a sense

of postnational citizenship. The march from national identity

to one that would be both national and European has only just

begun. A world very partially unified by technology still has

no collective consciousness or collective solidarity. What states

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are unwilling to do the world market cannot do all by itself,

especially in engendering a sense of world citizenship.

Third, there is the relationship between globalization and violence.

The traditional state of war, even if it is limited in scope,

still persists. There are high risks of regional explosions in the

Middle East and in East Asia, and these could seriously affect

relations between the major powers. Because of this threat, and

because modern arms are increasingly costly, the “anarchical

society” of states lacks the resources to correct some of globalization’s

most flagrant flaws. These very costs, combined with

the classic distrust among international actors who prefer to try

to preserve their security alone or through traditional alliances,

prevent a more satisfactory institutionalization of world politics—

for example, an increase of the UN’s powers. This step

could happen if global society were provided with sufficient

forces to prevent a conflict or restore peace—but it is not.

Globalization, far from spreading peace, thus seems to foster

conflicts and resentments. The lowering of various barriers

celebrated by Friedman, especially the spread of global media,

makes it possible for the most deprived or oppressed to compare

their fate with that of the free and well-off. These dispossessed

then ask for help from others with common resentments, ethnic

origin, or religious faith. Insofar as globalization enriches

some and uproots many, those who are both poor and uprooted

may seek revenge and self-esteem in terrorism.

GLOBALIZATION AND TERROR

Terrorism is the poisoned fruit of several forces. It can be the

weapon of the weak in a classic conflict among states or within

a state, as in Kashmir or the Palestinian territories. But it can

also be seen as a product of globalization. Transnational terrorism

is made possible by the vast array of communication tools.

Islamic terrorism, for example, is not only based on support for

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the Palestinian struggle and opposition to an invasive American

presence. It is also fueled by a resistance to “unjust” economic

globalization and to a Western culture deemed threatening to

local religions and cultures.

If globalization often facilitates terrorist violence, the fight

against this war without borders is potentially disastrous for

both economic development and globalization. Antiterrorist

measures restrict mobility and financial flows, while new terrorist

attacks could lead the way for an antiglobalist reaction

comparable to the chauvinistic paroxysms of the 1930s. Global

terrorism is not the simple extension of war among states to

nonstates. It is the subversion of traditional ways of war because

it does not care about the sovereignty of either its enemies or

the allies who shelter them. It provokes its victims to take measures

that, in the name of legitimate defense, violate knowingly

the sovereignty of those states accused of encouraging terror.

(After all, it was not the Taliban’s infamous domestic violations

of human rights that led the United States into Afghanistan; it

was the Taliban’s support of Osama bin Laden.)

But all those trespasses against the sacred principles of sovereignty

do not constitute progress toward global society, which

has yet to agree on a common definition of terrorism or on a

common policy against it. Indeed, the beneficiaries of the antiterrorist

“war” have been the illiberal, poorer states that have

lost so much of their sovereignty of late. Now the crackdown

on terror allows them to tighten their controls on their own

people, products, and money. They can give themselves new

reasons to violate individual rights in the name of common

defense against insecurity—and thus stop the slow, hesitant

march toward international criminal justice.

Another main beneficiary will be the United States, the only

actor capable of carrying the war against terrorism into all corners

of the world. Despite its power, however, America cannot

fully protect itself against future terrorist acts, nor can it fully

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the clash of civilizations: the debate [97]

overcome its ambivalence toward forms of interstate cooperation

that might restrict U.S. freedom of action. Thus terrorism

is a global phenomenon that ultimately reinforces the enemy—

the state—at the same time as it tries to destroy it. The states

that are its targets have no interest in applying the laws of

war to their fight against terrorists; they have every interest in

treating terrorists as outlaws and pariahs. The champions of

globalization have sometimes glimpsed the “jungle” aspects

of economic globalization, but few observers foresaw similar

aspects in global terrorist and antiterrorist violence.

Finally, the unique position of the United States raises a serious

question over the future of world affairs. In the realm of

interstate problems, American behavior will determine whether

the nonsuperpowers and weak states will continue to look at the

United States as a friendly power (or at least a tolerable hegemon),

or whether they are provoked by Washington’s hubris

into coalescing against American preponderance. America may

be a hegemon, but combining rhetorical overkill and ill-defined

designs is full of risks. Washington has yet to understand that

nothing is more dangerous for a “hyperpower” than the temptation

of unilateralism. It may well believe that the constraints

of international agreements and organizations are not necessary,

since U.S. values and power are all that is needed for

world order. But in reality, those same international constraints

provide far better opportunities for leadership than arrogant

demonstrations of contempt for others’ views, and they offer

useful ways of restraining unilateralist behavior in other states.

A hegemon concerned with prolonging its rule should be especially

interested in using internationalist methods and institutions,

for the gain in influence far exceeds the loss in freedom

of action.

In the realm of global society, much will depend on whether

the United States will overcome its frequent indifference to

the costs that globalization imposes on poorer countries. For

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[98] foreign affairs

now, Washington is too reluctant to make resources available

for economic development, and it remains hostile to agencies

that monitor and regulate the global market. All too often,

the right-leaning tendencies of the American political system

push U.S. diplomacy toward an excessive reliance on America’s

greatest asset—military strength—as well as an excessive reliance

on market capitalism and a “sovereigntism” that offends

and alienates. That the mighty United States is so afraid of the

world’s imposing its “inferior” values on Americans is often a

source of ridicule and indignation abroad.

ODD MAN OUT

For all these tensions, it is still possible that the American war

on terrorism will be contained by prudence, and that other

governments will give priority to the many internal problems

created by interstate rivalries and the flaws of globalization.

But the world risks being squeezed between a new Scylla and

Charybdis. The Charybdis is universal intervention, unilaterally

decided by American leaders who are convinced that they

have found a global mission provided by a colossal threat. Presentable

as an epic contest between good and evil, this struggle

offers the best way of rallying the population and overcoming

domestic divisions. The Scylla is resignation to universal chaos

in the form of new attacks by future bin Ladens, fresh humanitarian

disasters, or regional wars that risk escalation. Only

through wise judgment can the path between them be charted.

We can analyze the present, but we cannot predict the future.

We live in a world where a society of uneven and often virtual

states overlaps with a global society burdened by weak public

institutions and underdeveloped civil society. A single power

dominates, but its economy could become unmanageable or

distrusted by future terrorist attacks. Thus to predict the future

confidently would be highly incautious or naive. To be sure,

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the world has survived many crises, but it has done so at a very

high price, even in times when WMD were not available.

Precisely because the future is neither decipherable nor determined,

students of international relations face two missions.

They must try to understand what goes on by taking an inventory

of current goods and disentangling the threads of present

networks. But the fear of confusing the empirical with the

normative should not prevent them from writing as political

philosophers at a time when many philosophers are extending

their conceptions of just society to international relations. How

can one make the global house more livable? The answer presupposes

a political philosophy that would be both just and

acceptable even to those whose values have other foundations.

As the late philosopher Judith Shklar did, we can take as a point

of departure and as a guiding thread the fate of the victims

of violence, oppression, and misery; as a goal, we should seek

material and moral emancipation. While taking into account

the formidable constraints of the world as it is, it is possible to

loosen them.

[100] foreign affairs

Us and Them

The Enduring Power of Ethnic Nationalism

Jerry Z. Muller

MARCH/APRIL 2008

Projecting their own experience onto the rest of the world,

Americans generally belittle the role of ethnic nationalism in

politics. After all, in the United States people of varying ethnic

origins live cheek by jowl in relative peace. Within two or three

generations of immigration, their ethnic identities are attenuated

by cultural assimilation and intermarriage. Surely, things

cannot be so different elsewhere.

Americans also find ethnonationalism discomfiting both

intellectually and morally. Social scientists go to great lengths

to demonstrate that it is a product not of nature but of culture,

often deliberately constructed. And ethicists scorn value systems

based on narrow group identities rather than cosmopolitanism.

But none of this will make ethnonationalism go away. Immigrants

to the united states usually arrive with a willingness to fit

into their new country and reshape their identities accordingly.

But for those who remain behind in lands where their ancestors

have lived for generations, if not centuries, political identities

often take ethnic form, producing competing communal

claims to political power. The creation of a peaceful regional

JERRY Z. MULLER is Professor of History at the Catholic University of

America. His most recent book is The Mind and the Market: Capitalism in

Modern European Thought.

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the clash of civilizations: the debate [101]

order of nation-states has usually been the product of a violent

process of ethnic separation. In areas where that separation has

not yet occurred, politics is apt to remain ugly.

A familiar and influential narrative of twentieth-century

European history argues that nationalism twice led to war, in

1914 and then again in 1939. Thereafter, the story goes, Europeans

concluded that nationalism was a danger and gradually

abandoned it. In the postwar decades, western Europeans

enmeshed themselves in a web of transnational institutions,

culminating in the European Union (EU). After the fall of the

Soviet empire, that transnational framework spread eastward

to encompass most of the continent. Europeans entered a postnational

era, which was not only a good thing in itself but also

a model for other regions. Nationalism, in this view, had been a

tragic detour on the road to a peaceful liberal democratic order.

This story is widely believed by educated Europeans and

even more so, perhaps, by educated Americans. Recently, for

example, in the course of arguing that Israel ought to give up

its claim to be a Jewish state and dissolve itself into some sort

of binational entity with the Palestinians, the prominent historian

Tony Judt informed the readers of The New York Review of

Books that “the problem with Israel . . . [is that] it has imported

a characteristically late-nineteenth-century separatist project

into a world that has moved on, a world of individual rights,

open frontiers, and international law. The very idea of a ‘Jewish

state’ . . . is an anachronism.”

Yet the experience of the hundreds of Africans and Asians

who perish each year trying to get into Europe by landing on

the coast of Spain or Italy reveals that Europe’s frontiers are not

so open. And a survey would show that whereas in 1900 there

were many states in Europe without a single overwhelmingly

dominant nationality, by 2007 there were only two, and one

of those, Belgium, was close to breaking up. Aside from Switzerland,

in other words—where the domestic ethnic balance

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of power is protected by strict citizenship laws—in Europe the

“separatist project” has not so much vanished as triumphed.

Far from having been superannuated in 1945, in many respects

ethnonationalism was at its apogee in the years immediately

after World War II. European stability during the Cold War

era was in fact due partly to the widespread fulfillment of the

ethnonationalist project. And since the end of the Cold War,

ethnonationalism has continued to reshape European borders.

In short, ethnonationalism has played a more profound and

lasting role in modern history than is commonly understood,

and the processes that led to the dominance of the ethnonational

state and the separation of ethnic groups in Europe are

likely to reoccur elsewhere. Increased urbanization, literacy,

and political mobilization; differences in the fertility rates and

economic performance of various ethnic groups; and immigration

will challenge the internal structure of states as well as their

borders. Whether politically correct or not, ethnonationalism

will continue to shape the world in the twenty-first century.

THE POLITICS OF IDENTITY

There are two major ways of thinking about national identity.

One is that all people who live within a country’s borders are

part of the nation, regardless of their ethnic, racial, or religious

origins. This liberal or civic nationalism is the conception with

which contemporary Americans are most likely to identify. But

the liberal view has competed with and often lost out to a different

view, that of ethnonationalism. The core of the ethnonationalist

idea is that nations are defined by a shared heritage,

which usually includes a common language, a common faith,

and a common ethnic ancestry.

The ethnonationalist view has traditionally dominated

through much of Europe and has held its own even in the

United States until recently. For substantial stretches of U.S.

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the clash of civilizations: the debate [103]

history, it was believed that only the people of English origin,

or those who were Protestant, or white, or hailed from northern

Europe were real Americans. It was only in 1965 that the reform

of U.S. immigration law abolished the system of national-origin

quotas that had been in place for several decades. This system

had excluded Asians entirely and radically restricted immigration

from southern and eastern Europe.

Ethnonationalism draws much of its emotive power from the

notion that the members of a nation are part of an extended

family, ultimately united by ties of blood. It is the subjective

belief in the reality of a common “we” that counts. The markers

that distinguish the in-group vary from case to case and time

to time, and the subjective nature of the communal boundaries

has led some to discount their practical significance. But as

Walker Connor, an astute student of nationalism, has noted,

“It is not what is, but what people believe is that has behavioral

consequences.” And the central tenets of ethnonationalist

belief are that nations exist, that each nation ought to have its

own state, and that each state should be made up of the members

of a single nation.

The conventional narrative of European history asserts

that nationalism was primarily liberal in the western part of

the continent and that it became more ethnically oriented as

one moved east. There is some truth to this, but it disguises a

good deal as well. It is more accurate to say that when modern

states began to form, political boundaries and ethnolinguistic

boundaries largely coincided in the areas along Europe’s Atlantic

coast. Liberal nationalism, that is, was most apt to emerge

in states that already possessed a high degree of ethnic homogeneity.

Long before the nineteenth century, countries such

as England, France, Portugal, Spain, and Sweden emerged as

nation-states in polities where ethnic divisions had been softened

by a long history of cultural and social homogenization.

In the center of the continent, populated by speakers of

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German and Italian, political structures were fragmented into

hundreds of small units. But in the 1860s and 1870s, this fragmentation

was resolved by the creation of Italy and Germany,

so that almost all Italians lived in the former and a majority of

Germans lived in the latter. Moving further east, the situation

changed again. As late as 1914, most of central, eastern, and

southeastern Europe was made up not of nation-states but of

empires. The Hapsburg empire comprised what are now Austria,

the Czech Republic, Hungary, and Slovakia and parts

of what are now Bosnia, Croatia, Poland, Romania, Ukraine,

and more. The Romanov empire stretched into Asia, including

what is now Russia and what are now parts of Poland,

Ukraine, and more. And the Ottoman Empire covered modern

Turkey and parts of today’s Bulgaria, Greece, Romania,

and Serbia and extended through much of the Middle East

and North Africa as well.

Each of these empires was composed of numerous ethnic

groups, but they were not multinational in the sense of granting

equal status to the many peoples that made up their populaces.

The governing monarchy and landed nobility often differed in

language and ethnic origin from the urbanized trading class,

whose members in turn usually differed in language, ethnicity,

and often religion from the peasantry. In the Hapsburg

and Romanov empires, for example, merchants were usually

Germans or Jews. In the Ottoman Empire, they were often

Armenians, Greeks, or Jews. And in each empire, the peasantry

was itself ethnically diverse.

Up through the nineteenth century, these societies were still

largely agrarian: most people lived as peasants in the countryside,

and few were literate. Political, social, and economic stratifications

usually correlated with ethnicity, and people did not

expect to change their positions in the system. Until the rise

of modern nationalism, all of this seemed quite unproblematic.

In this world, moreover, people of one religion, language,

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the clash of civilizations: the debate [105]

or culture were often dispersed across various countries and

empires. There were ethnic Germans, for example, not only

in the areas that became Germany but also scattered throughout

the Hapsburg and Romanov empires. There were Greeks

in Greece but also millions of them in the Ottoman Empire

(not to mention hundreds of thousands of Muslim Turks in

Greece). And there were Jews everywhere—but with no independent

state of their own.

THE RISE OF ETHNONATIONALISM

Today, people tend to take the nation-state for granted as the

natural form of political association and regard empires as

anomalies. But over the broad sweep of recorded history, the

opposite is closer to the truth. Most people at most times have

lived in empires, with the nation-state the exception rather

than the rule. So what triggered the change?

The rise of ethnonationalism, as the sociologist Ernest Gellner

has explained, was not some strange historical mistake; rather,

it was propelled by some of the deepest currents of modernity.

Military competition between states created a demand

for expanded state resources and hence continual economic

growth. Economic growth, in turn, depended on mass literacy

and easy communication, spurring policies to promote education

and a common language—which led directly to conflicts

over language and communal opportunities.

Modern societies are premised on the egalitarian notion that

in theory, at least, anyone can aspire to any economic position.

But in practice, everyone does not have an equal likelihood of

upward economic mobility, and not simply because individuals

have different innate capabilities. For such advances depend

in part on what economists call “cultural capital, “ the skills

and behavioral patterns that help individuals and groups succeed.

Groups with traditions of literacy and engagement in

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commerce tend to excel, for example, whereas those without

such traditions tend to lag behind.

As they moved into cities and got more education during the

nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, ethnic groups with

largely peasant backgrounds, such as the Czechs, the Poles, the

Slovaks, and the Ukrainians found that key positions in the

government and the economy were already occupied—often

by ethnic Armenians, Germans, Greeks, or Jews. Speakers of

the same language came to share a sense that they belonged

together and to define themselves in contrast to other communities.

And eventually they came to demand a nationstate

of their own, in which they would be the masters, dominating

politics, staffing the civil service, and controlling commerce.

Ethnonationalism had a psychological basis as well as an economic

one. By creating a new and direct relationship between

individuals and the government, the rise of the modern state

weakened individuals’ traditional bonds to intermediate social

units, such as the family, the clan, the guild, and the church.

And by spurring social and geographic mobility and a self-help

mentality, the rise of market-based economies did the same.

The result was an emotional vacuum that was often filled by

new forms of identification, often along ethnic lines.

Ethnonationalist ideology called for a congruence between

the state and the ethnically defined nation, with explosive

results. As Lord Acton recognized in 1862, “By making the

state and the nation commensurate with each other in theory,

[nationalism] reduces practically to a subject condition all other

nationalities that may be within the boundary. . . . According,

therefore, to the degree of humanity and civilization in that

dominant body which claims all the rights of the community,

the inferior races are exterminated, or reduced to servitude, or

outlawed, or put in a condition of dependence.” And that is just

what happened.

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THE GREAT TRANSFORMATION

Nineteenth-century liberals, like many proponents of globalization

today, believed that the spread of international commerce

would lead people to recognize the mutual benefits

that could come from peace and trade, both within polities

and between them. Socialists agreed, although they believed

that harmony would come only after the arrival of socialism.

Yet that was not the course that twentieth-century history was

destined to follow. The process of “making the state and the

nation commensurate” took a variety of forms, from voluntary

emigration (often motivated by governmental discrimination

against minority ethnicities) to forced deportation (also known

as “population transfer”) to genocide. Although the term “ethnic

cleansing” has come into English usage only recently, its

verbal correlates in Czech, French, German, and Polish go

back much further. Much of the history of twentieth-century

Europe, in fact, has been a painful, drawn-out process of ethnic

disaggregation.

Massive ethnic disaggregation began on Europe’s frontiers.

In the ethnically mixed Balkans, wars to expand the nationstates

of Bulgaria, Greece, and Serbia at the expense of the

ailing Ottoman Empire were accompanied by ferocious interethnic

violence. During the Balkan Wars of 1912-13, almost

half a million people left their traditional homelands, either

voluntarily or by force. Muslims left regions under the control

of Bulgarians, Greeks, and Serbs; Bulgarians abandoned

Greek-controlled areas of Macedonia; Greeks fled from regions

of Macedonia ceded to Bulgaria and Serbia.

World War I led to the demise of the three great turn-of-thecentury

empires, unleashing an explosion of ethnonationalism

in the process. In the Ottoman Empire, mass deportations

and murder during the war took the lives of a million members

of the local Armenian minority in an early attempt at

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ethnic cleansing, if not genocide. In 1919, the Greek government

invaded the area that would become Turkey, seeking to

carve out a “greater Greece” stretching all the way to Constantinople.

Meeting with initial success, the Greek forces looted

and burned villages in an effort to drive out the region’s ethnic

Turks. But Turkish forces eventually regrouped and pushed

the Greek army back, engaging in their own ethnic cleansing

against local Greeks along the way. Then the process of population

transfers was formalized in the 1923 Treaty of Lausanne:

all ethnic Greeks were to go to Greece, all Greek Muslims to

Turkey. In the end, Turkey expelled almost 1.5 million people,

and Greece expelled almost 400, 000.

Out of the breakup of the Hapsburg and Romanov empires

emerged a multitude of new countries. Many conceived of

themselves as ethnonational polities, in which the state existed

to protect and promote the dominant ethnic group. Yet of central

and eastern Europe’s roughly 60 million people, 25 million

continued to be part of ethnic minorities in the countries in

which they lived. In most cases, the ethnic majority did not

believe in trying to help minorities assimilate, nor were the

minorities always eager to do so themselves. Nationalist governments

openly discriminated in favor of the dominant community.

Government activities were conducted solely in the

language of the majority, and the civil service was reserved for

those who spoke it.

In much of central and eastern Europe, Jews had long played

an important role in trade and commerce. When they were

given civil rights in the late nineteenth century, they tended to

excel in professions requiring higher education, such as medicine

and law, and soon Jews or people of Jewish descent made up

almost half the doctors and lawyers in cities such as Budapest,

Vienna, and Warsaw. By the 1930s, many governments adopted

policies to try to check and reverse these advances, denying Jews

credit and limiting their access to higher education. In other

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words, the National Socialists who came to power in Germany

in 1933 and based their movement around a “Germanness” they

defined in contrast to “Jewishness” were an extreme version of

a more common ethnonationalist trend.

The politics of ethnonationalism took an even deadlier turn

during World War II. The Nazi regime tried to reorder the ethnic

map of the continent by force. Its most radical act was an

attempt to rid Europe of Jews by killing them all—an attempt

that largely succeeded. The Nazis also used ethnic German

minorities in Czechoslovakia, Poland, and elsewhere to enforce

Nazi domination, and many of the regimes allied with Germany

engaged in their own campaigns against internal ethnic

enemies. The Romanian regime, for example, murdered hundreds

of thousands of Jews on its own, without orders from Germany,

and the government of Croatia murdered not only its

Jews but hundreds of thousands of Serbs and Romany as well.

POSTWAR BUT NOT POSTNATIONAL

One might have expected that the Nazi regime’s deadly policies

and crushing defeat would mark the end of the ethnonationalist

era. But in fact they set the stage for another massive round

of ethnonational transformation. The political settlement in

central Europe after World War I had been achieved primarily

by moving borders to align them with populations. After

World War II, it was the populations that moved instead. Millions

of people were expelled from their homes and countries,

with at least the tacit support of the victorious Allies.

Winston Churchill, Franklin Roosevelt, and Joseph Stalin

all concluded that the expulsion of ethnic Germans from

non-German countries was a prerequisite to a stable postwar

order. As Churchill put it in a speech to the British parliament

in December 1944, “Expulsion is the method which, so far

as we have been able to see, will be the most satisfactory and

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lasting. There will be no mixture of populations to cause endless

trouble. . . . A clean sweep will be made. I am not alarmed

at the prospect of the disentanglement of population, nor am

I alarmed by these large transferences.”He cited the Treaty of

Lausanne as a precedent, showing how even the leaders of liberal

democracies had concluded that only radically illiberal

measures would eliminate the causes of ethnonational aspirations

and aggression.

Between 1944 and 1945, five million ethnic Germans from

the eastern parts of the German Reich fled westward to escape

the conquering Red Army, which was energetically raping

and massacring its way to Berlin. Then, between 1945 and

1947, the new postliberation regimes in Czechoslovakia, Hungary,

Poland, and Yugoslavia expelled another seven million

Germans in response to their collaboration with the Nazis.

Together, these measures constituted the largest forced population

movement in European history, with hundreds of thousands

of people dying along the way.

The handful of Jews who survived the war and returned to

their homes in eastern Europe met with so much anti-Semitism

that most chose to leave for good. About 220, 000 of them

made their way into the American-occupied zone of Germany,

from which most eventually went to Israel or the United States.

Jews thus essentially vanished from central and eastern Europe,

which had been the center of Jewish life since the sixteenth

century.

Millions of refugees from other ethnic groups were also

evicted from their homes and resettled after the war. This was

due partly to the fact that the borders of the Soviet Union had

moved westward, into what had once been Poland, while the

borders of Poland also moved westward, into what had once

been Germany. To make populations correspond to the new

borders, 1.5 million Poles living in areas that were now part

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of the Soviet Union were deported to Poland, and 500, 000

ethnic Ukrainians who had been living in Poland were sent to

the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic. Yet another exchange

of populations took place between Czechoslovakia and Hungary,

with Slovaks transferred out of Hungary and Magyars

sent away from Czechoslovakia. A smaller number of Magyars

also moved to Hungary from Yugoslavia, with Serbs and Croats

moving in the opposite direction.

As a result of this massive process of ethnic unmixing, the

ethnonationalist ideal was largely realized: for the most part,

each nation in Europe had its own state, and each state was

made up almost exclusively of a single ethnic nationality. During

the Cold War, the few exceptions to this rule included

Czechoslovakia, the Soviet Union, and Yugoslavia. But these

countries’ subsequent fate only demonstrated the ongoing vitality

of ethnonationalism. After the fall of communism, East and

West Germany were unified with remarkable rapidity, Czechoslovakia

split peacefully into Czech and Slovak republics, and

the Soviet Union broke apart into a variety of different national

units. Since then, ethnic Russian minorities in many of the

post-Soviet states have gradually immigrated to Russia, Magyars

in Romania have moved to Hungary, and the few remaining

ethnic Germans in Russia have largely gone to Germany. A

million people of Jewish origin from the former Soviet Union

have made their way to Israel. Yugoslavia saw the secession of

Croatia and Slovenia and then descended into ethnonational

wars over Bosnia and Kosovo.

The breakup of Yugoslavia was simply the last act of a long

play. But the plot of that play—the disaggregation of peoples

and the triumph of ethnonationalism in modern Europe—is

rarely recognized, and so a story whose significance is comparable

to the spread of democracy or capitalism remains largely

unknown and unappreciated.

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DECOLONIZATION AND AFTER

The effects of ethnonationalism, of course, have hardly been

confined to Europe. For much of the developing world, decolonization

has meant ethnic disaggregation through the exchange

or expulsion of local minorities.

The end of the British Raj in 1947 brought about the partition

of the subcontinent into India and Pakistan, along with

an orgy of violence that took hundreds of thousands of lives.

Fifteen million people became refugees, including Muslims

who went to Pakistan and Hindus who went to India. Then, in

1971, Pakistan itself, originally unified on the basis of religion,

dissolved into Urdu-speaking Pakistan and Bengali-speaking

Bangladesh.

In the former British mandate of Palestine, a Jewish state

was established in 1948 and was promptly greeted by the revolt

of the indigenous Arab community and an invasion from the

surrounding Arab states. In the war that resulted, regions that

fell under Arab control were cleansed of their Jewish populations,

and Arabs fled or were forced out of areas that came

under Jewish control. Some 750, 000 Arabs left, primarily for

the surrounding Arab countries, and the remaining 150, 000

constituted only about a sixth of the population of the new

Jewish state. In the years afterward, nationalist-inspired violence

against Jews in Arab countries propelled almost all of the

more than 500, 000 Jews there to leave their lands of origin

and immigrate to Israel. Likewise, in 1962 the end of French

control in Algeria led to the forced emigration of Algerians

of European origin (the so-called pieds-noirs), most of whom

immigrated to France. Shortly thereafter, ethnic minorities

of Asian origin were forced out of postcolonial Uganda. The

legacy of the colonial era, moreover, is hardly finished. When

the European overseas empires dissolved, they left behind a

patchwork of states whose boundaries often cut across ethnic

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patterns of settlement and whose internal populations were

ethnically mixed. It is wishful thinking to suppose that these

boundaries will be permanent. As societies in the former colonial

world modernize, becoming more urban, literate, and

politically mobilized, the forces that gave rise to ethnonationalism

and ethnic disaggregation in Europe are apt to drive

events there, too.

THE BALANCE SHEET

Analysts of ethnic disaggregation typically focus on its destructive

effects, which is understandable given the direct human

suffering it has often entailed. But such attitudes can yield a

distorted perspective by overlooking the less obvious costs and

also the important benefits that ethnic separation has brought.

Economists from Adam Smith onward, for example, have

argued that the efficiencies of competitive markets tend to

increase with the markets’ size. The dissolution of the Austro-

Hungarian Empire into smaller nation-states, each with its own

barriers to trade, was thus economically irrational and contributed

to the region’s travails in the interwar period. Much of

subsequent European history has involved attempts to overcome

this and other economic fragmentation, culminating in

the EU.

Ethnic disaggregation also seems to have deleterious effects

on cultural vitality. Precisely because most of their citizens

share a common cultural and linguistic heritage, the homogenized

states of postwar Europe have tended to be more culturally

insular than their demographically diverse predecessors.

With few Jews in Europe and few Germans in Prague, that is,

there are fewer Franz Kafkas.

Forced migrations generally penalize the expelling countries

and reward the receiving ones. Expulsion is often driven by

a majority group’s resentment of a minority group’s success,

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on the mistaken assumption that achievement is a zero-sum

game. But countries that got rid of their Armenians, Germans,

Greeks, Jews, and other successful minorities deprived themselves

of some of their most talented citizens, who simply took

their skills and knowledge elsewhere. And in many places, the

triumph of ethnonational politics has meant the victory of traditionally

rural groups over more urbanized ones, which possess

just those skills desirable in an advanced industrial economy.

But if ethnonationalism has frequently led to tension and

conflict, it has also proved to be a source of cohesion and stability.

When French textbooks began with “Our ancestors the

Gauls” or when Churchill spoke to wartime audiences of “this

island race,” they appealed to ethnonationalist sensibilities

as a source of mutual trust and sacrifice. Liberal democracy

and ethnic homogeneity are not only compatible; they can be

complementary.

One could argue that Europe has been so harmonious since

World War II not because of the failure of ethnic nationalism

but because of its success, which removed some of the greatest

sources of conflict both within and between countries. The

fact that ethnic and state boundaries now largely coincide has

meant that there are fewer disputes over borders or expatriate

communities, leading to the most stable territorial configuration

in European history.

These ethnically homogeneous polities have displayed a great

deal of internal solidarity, moreover, facilitating government

programs, including domestic transfer payments, of various

kinds. When the Swedish Social Democrats were developing

plans for Europe’s most extensive welfare state during the interwar

period, the political scientist Sheri Berman has noted, they

conceived of and sold them as the construction of a folkhemmet,

or “people’s home.”

Several decades of life in consolidated, ethnically homogeneous

states may even have worked to sap ethnonationalism’s

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own emotional power. Many Europeans are now prepared, and

even eager, to participate in transnational frameworks such as

the EU, in part because their perceived need for collective selfdetermination

has largely been satisfied.

NEW ETHNIC MIXING

Along with the process of forced ethnic disaggregation over

the last two centuries, there has also been a process of ethnic

mixing brought about by voluntary emigration. The general

pattern has been one of emigration from poor, stagnant areas

to richer and more dynamic ones.

In Europe, this has meant primarily movement west and

north, leading above all to France and the United Kingdom.

This pattern has continued into the present: as a result of recent

migration, for example, there are now half a million Poles in

Great Britain and 200, 000 in Ireland. Immigrants from one

part of Europe who have moved to another and ended up staying

there have tended to assimilate and, despite some grumbling

about a supposed invasion of “Polish plumbers, “ have

created few significant problems.

The most dramatic transformation of European ethnic

balances in recent decades has come from the immigration

of people of Asian, African, and Middle Eastern origin, and

here the results have been mixed. Some of these groups have

achieved remarkable success, such as the Indian Hindus who

have come to the United Kingdom. But in Belgium, France,

Germany, the Netherlands, Sweden, the United Kingdom,

and elsewhere, on balance the educational and economic progress

of Muslim immigrants has been more limited and their

cultural alienation greater.

How much of the problem can be traced to discrimination,

how much to the cultural patterns of the immigrants themselves,

and how much to the policies of European governments

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is difficult to determine. But a number of factors, from official

multiculturalism to generous welfare states to the ease of contact

with ethnic homelands, seem to have made it possible to

create ethnic islands where assimilation into the larger culture

and economy is limited.

As a result, some of the traditional contours of European

politics have been upended. The left, for example, has tended

to embrace immigration in the name of egalitarianism and

multiculturalism. But if there is indeed a link between ethnic

homogeneity and a population’s willingness to support generous

income-redistribution programs, the encouragement of a

more heterogeneous society may end up undermining the left’s

broader political agenda. And some of Europe’s libertarian cultural

propensities have already clashed with the cultural illiberalism

of some of the new immigrant communities.

Should Muslim immigrants not assimilate and instead

develop a strong communal identification along religious

lines, one consequence might be a resurgence of traditional

ethnonational identities in some states—or the development

of a new European identity defined partly in contradistinction

to Islam (with the widespread resistance to the extension of

full EU membership to Turkey being a possible harbinger of

such a shift).

FUTURE IMPLICATIONS

Since ethnonationalism is a direct consequence of key elements

of modernization, it is likely to gain ground in societies undergoing

such a process. It is hardly surprising, therefore, that it

remains among the most vital—and most disruptive—forces

in many parts of the contemporary world.

More or less subtle forms of ethnonationalism, for example,

are ubiquitous in immigration policy around the globe. Many

countries—including Armenia, Bulgaria, Croatia, Finland,

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the clash of civilizations: the debate [117]

Germany, Hungary, Ireland, Israel, Serbia, and Turkey—provide

automatic or rapid citizenship to the members of diasporas

of their own dominant ethnic group, if desired. Chinese immigration

law gives priority and benefits to overseas Chinese. Portugal

and Spain have immigration policies that favor applicants

from their former colonies in the New World. Still other states,

such as Japan and Slovakia, provide official forms of identification

to members of the dominant national ethnic group who

are noncitizens that permit them to live and work in the country.

Americans, accustomed by the U.S. government’s official

practices to regard differential treatment on the basis of ethnicity

to be a violation of universalist norms, often consider such

policies exceptional, if not abhorrent. Yet in a global context, it

is the insistence on universalist criteria that seems provincial.

Increasing communal consciousness and shifting ethnic balances

are bound to have a variety of consequences, both within

and between states, in the years to come. As economic globalization

brings more states into the global economy, for example,

the first fruits of that process will often fall to those ethnic

groups best positioned by history or culture to take advantage

of the new opportunities for enrichment, deepening social

cleavages rather than filling them in. Wealthier and higherachieving

regions might try to separate themselves from poorer

and lower-achieving ones, and distinctive homogeneous areas

might try to acquire sovereignty—courses of action that might

provoke violent responses from defenders of the status quo.

Of course, there are multiethnic societies in which ethnic

consciousness remains weak, and even a more strongly developed

sense of ethnicity may lead to political claims short of

sovereignty. Sometimes, demands for ethnic autonomy or selfdetermination

can be met within an existing state. The claims

of the Catalans in Spain, the Flemish in Belgium, and the

Scots in the United Kingdom have been met in this manner,

at least for now. But such arrangements remain precarious and

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are subject to recurrent renegotiation. In the developing world,

accordingly, where states are more recent creations and where

the borders often cut across ethnic boundaries, there is likely to

be further ethnic disaggregation and communal conflict. And

as scholars such as Chaim Kaufmann have noted, once ethnic

antagonism has crossed a certain threshold of violence, maintaining

the rival groups within a single polity becomes far more

difficult.

This unfortunate reality creates dilemmas for advocates of

humanitarian intervention in such conflicts, because making

and keeping peace between groups that have come to hate and

fear one another is likely to require costly ongoing military

missions rather than relatively cheap temporary ones. When

communal violence escalates to ethnic cleansing, moreover,

the return of large numbers of refugees to their place of origin

after a cease-fire has been reached is often impractical and even

undesirable, for it merely sets the stage for a further round of

conflict down the road.

Partition may thus be the most humane lasting solution to

such intense communal conflicts. It inevitably creates new

flows of refugees, but at least it deals with the problem at issue.

The challenge for the international community in such cases is

to separate communities in the most humane manner possible:

by aiding in transport, assuring citizenship rights in the new

homeland, and providing financial aid for resettlement and

economic absorption. The bill for all of this will be huge, but it

will rarely be greater than the material costs of interjecting and

maintaining a foreign military presence large enough to pacify

the rival ethnic combatants or the moral cost of doing nothing.

Contemporary social scientists who write about nationalism

tend to stress the contingent elements of group identity—

the extent to which national consciousness is culturally and

politically manufactured by ideologists and politicians. They

regularly invoke Benedict Anderson’s concept of “imagined

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communities, “ as if demonstrating that nationalism is constructed

will rob the concept of its power. It is true, of course,

that ethnonational identity is never as natural or ineluctable

as nationalists claim. Yet it would be a mistake to think that

because nationalism is partly constructed it is therefore fragile

or infinitely malleable. Ethnonationalism was not a chance

detour in European history: it corresponds to some enduring

propensities of the human spirit that are heightened by the process

of modern state creation, it is a crucial source of both solidarity

and enmity, and in one form or another, it will remain

for many generations to come. One can only profit from facing

it directly.

[120] foreign affairs

The Clash of Emotions

Fear, Humiliation, Hope,

and the New World Order

Dominique Moïsi

JANUARY/FEBRUARY 2007

Thirteen years ago, Samuel Huntington argued that a “clash of

civilizations” was about to dominate world politics, with culture,

along with national interests and political ideology, becoming

a geopolitical fault line (“The Clash of Civilizations?” Summer

1993). Events since then have proved Huntington’s vision more

right than wrong. Yet what has not been recognized sufficiently

is that today the world faces what might be called a “clash of

emotions” as well. The Western world displays a culture of fear,

the Arab and Muslim worlds are trapped in a culture of humiliation,

and much of Asia displays a culture of hope.

Instead of being united by their fears, the twin pillars of the

West, the United States and Europe, are more often divided by

them—or rather, divided by how best to confront or transcend

them. The culture of humiliation, in contrast, helps unite the

Muslim world around its most radical forces and has led to a

culture of hatred. The chief beneficiaries of the deadly encounter

between the forces of fear and the forces of humiliation are

the bystanders in the culture of hope, who have been able to

DOMINIQUE MOÏSI is a Senior Adviser at the Institut Français des Relations

Internationales (IFRI) in Paris.

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the clash of civilizations: the debate [121]

concentrate on creating a better future for themselves.

These moods, of course, are not universal within each region,

and there are some areas, such as Russia and parts of Latin

America, that seem to display all of them simultaneously. But

their dynamics and interactions will help shape the world for

years to come.

THE CULTURE OF FEAR

The United States and Europe are divided by a common culture

of fear. On both sides, one encounters, in varying degrees,

a fear of the other, a fear of the future, and a fundamental anxiety

about the loss of identity in an increasingly complex world.

In the case of Europe, there are layers of fear. There is the

fear of being invaded by the poor, primarily from the South—a

fear driven by demography and geography. Images of Africans

being killed recently as they tried to scale barbed wire to enter

a Spanish enclave in Morocco evoked images of another time

not so long ago, when East Germans were shot at as they tried

to reach freedom in the West. Back then, Germans were killed

because they wanted to escape oppression. Today, Africans are

being killed because they want to escape absolute poverty.

Europeans also fear being blown up by radical Islamists or

being demographically conquered by them as their continent

becomes a “Eurabia.” After the bombings in Madrid in 2004

and London in 2005 and the scares this past summer, Europeans

have started to face the hard reality that their homelands

are not only targets for terrorists but also bases for them.

Then there is the fear of being left behind economically. For

many Europeans, globalization has come to be equated with

destabilization and job cuts. They are haunted by the fear that

Europe will become a museum—a larger and more modern

version of Venice, a place for tourists and retirees, no longer a

center of creativity and influence.

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Finally, there is the fear of being ruled by an outside power,

even a friendly one (such as the United States) or a faceless one

(such as the European Commission).

What unites all these fears is a sense of loss of control over

one’s territory, security, and identity—in short, one’s destiny.

Such concerns contributed to the no votes of the French and

the Dutch last year on the referendum on the proposed EU

constitution. They also explain the return of strong nationalist

sentiments in many European countries—on display during

the recent World Cup tournament.

Some of the same sense of loss of control is present in the

United States. Although demographic fears are mitigated by the

largely successful integration of Hispanics (compared with the

difficulties surrounding the integration of Muslims in Europe),

they are clearly present. The quarrel over the Spanish version

of the American national anthem echoes the debate over the

wearing of headscarves and veils in Europe.

Used to rates of growth significantly higher than those in

most European countries, Americans do not fear economic

decay the way Europeans do (although they worry about outsourcing).

Yet they, too, are thinking of decline—in their bodies,

with the plague of obesity; in their budgets, with the huge

deficits; and in their spirit, with the loss of appetite for foreign

adventures and a growing questioning of national purpose.

The United States’ obsession with security after September 11

is understandable and legitimate. But what has it cost in terms

of U.S. influence and image in the world? From the difficulties

foreign travelers have entering U.S. territory to the human

rights scandals of Guantánamo Bay, terrorists have at least

in part succeeded in undermining the United States’ claims

of moral superiority and exceptionalism by prompting such

reactions.

Whereas Europeans try to protect themselves from the

world through a combination of escapism and appeasement,

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the clash of civilizations: the debate [123]

Americans try to do so by dealing with the problem at its

source abroad. But behind the Bush administration’s forceful

and optimistic rhetoric lies a somber reality, which is that

the U.S. response to the September 11 attacks has made the

United States more unpopular than ever. The U.S. intervention

in Iraq, for example, has generated more problems than it has

solved. Iraq is descending into civil war, and U.S. actions there

have tipped the balance of power within the Muslim world to

its most radical Shiite elements.

THE CULTURE OF HUMILIATION

Europeans started to reflect on their own decay after World

War I: “We civilizations now know ourselves mortal,” the

French poet and philosopher Paul Valéry wrote in 1919. The

Muslim world, meanwhile, has been obsessed with decay for

centuries. When Europe was in its Middle Ages, Islam was at

the peak of its Renaissance, but when the Western Renaissance

started, Islam began its inexorable fall. From its defeat by a

Christian fleet at the Battle of Lepanto, in 1571, to its failure to

capture Vienna in 1683, to its final disappearance after World

War I, the Ottoman Empire slowly shrank into oblivion.

The creation of the state of Israel in the midst of Arab land

could only be seen by Muslims as the ultimate proof of their

decay. For Jews, the legitimacy of Israel was manifold; it combined

the accomplishment of a religious promise, the realization

of a national destiny, and compensation by the international

community for a unique crime, the Holocaust. For Arabs, by

contrast, it was the anachronistic imposition of a Western colonial

logic at the very moment decolonization was getting under

way. In their view, crimes of the Christian West, fallen into

barbarism against the Jews, were being unfairly paid for by the

Muslim East.

The unresolved conflict between Israel and its neighbors has

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helped turn the culture of humiliation into a culture of hatred.

Over time, the conflict’s national character has shifted to its

original religious basis—a conflict between Muslims and Jews,

if not a clash between Islam and the West at large.

The combination of the deepening civil war in Iraq and the

fighting in Lebanon between Hezbollah and Israel has reinforced

a sense of outrage in many Muslims that has been fully

exploited by Iran and its allies. In a war of images and symbols,

Shiite extremists can appear to embody the spirit of resistance

to humiliation, getting stronger with each blow they endure.

Globalization, meanwhile, has contributed to the problem.

Every day, the Middle East is confronted with the contrast

between globalization’s winners, essentially the Western world

and East Asia, and those who have been left behind.

The culture of humiliation is not limited to the Middle East

but extends to the Muslim diaspora in the West as well. The

riots that took place in France during the fall of 2005, for example,

had an essentially socioeconomic origin, but they were also

a lashing out by the disaffected against a society that claims to

give them equal rights in principle but fails to do so in practice.

The gap is also, in part, the product of incompatible worldviews,

stemming from different historical eras. As societies in

Europe are becoming increasingly secular, the importance of

religion in the daily life of the Muslim world is increasing.

When Europeans look at Islam today, they are reminded of

their own zealotry and wars of religion in the sixteenth and

seventeenth centuries. This gap in mindset exists between the

United States and the Muslim world as well, but it is less profound

because the United States remains deeply religious and

has even experienced a religious revival lately. Yet fundamentalism

within Islam is unique in the sense that it is animated

by a dual sense of revenge: by the Shiite minority against the

Sunni majority and by the fundamentalists against the West

at large.

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the clash of civilizations: the debate [125]

THE CULTURE OF HOPE

As the West and the Middle East lock horns, confidence in

progress has been moving eastward. An art exhibit displayed

in 2005–6 at the Royal Academy of Arts, in London, entitled

“China: The Three Emperors, 1662–1795,” summarized new

China’s psychology. The explicit message of the exhibit, sponsored

by Beijing, was clear: China is back. The central piece

of the exhibit was a huge eighteenth-century painting, in the

Jesuit-European style, showing the envoys of the West paying

tribute to the Chinese emperor. After two centuries of relative

decline, China is progressively recovering its legitimate international

status. Its policy of concentrating on economic development

while avoiding conflict seems to be working, earning

Beijing both material benefits and international respect.

As for India, for the first time in its modern history it has

stepped onto the world stage as both an independent and an

important power. Cooperating diplomatically with the United

States and making economic deals in Europe, the emerging

Indian elites are displaying even more pride and optimism than

their Chinese counterparts. The world’s largest democracy will

soon emerge as the most populous country, and it seems to

know no limits.

Of course, Cassandras may rightly point out that strategic,

economic, social, and political difficulties abound and that the

culture of hope could easily collapse on itself like a house of

cards. Asia has yet to witness the reconciliation between former

enemies that constitutes the most remarkable achievement of

postwar western Europe. The level of animosity in China and

South Korea over Japan’s treatment of the past evokes the situation

of Europe in the 1950s. (China seems to have set double

standards in this respect, never forgetting Japan’s crimes while

never remembering its own.) North Korea is a particularly

dangerous rogue state. And arms races and nuclear proliferation

in East Asia could set the region up for a terrible conflict

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down the road.

The gap that exists in China between the dynamism of the

economy and the near incapacity or total reluctance of the present

leadership to implement the most elementary and necessary

political reforms does not bode well for the peaceful evolution

of the country. Yet despite these concerns, there is hope among

both leaders and publics across the region, and it seems likely

to last as long as growth continues.

WHAT IS TO BE DONE?

In confronting this clash of emotions, the first priority for the

West must be to recognize the nature of the threat that the

Muslim world’s culture of humiliation poses to Europe and

the United States. Denying the threat’s existence or responding

to it in the wrong way are equally dangerous choices. Neither

appeasement nor military solutions alone will suffice. The war

that is unfolding is one that the culture of humiliation cannot

win, but it is a war nonetheless and one that the West can lose

by continuing to be divided or by betraying its liberal values

and its respect for law and the individual. The challenge is not

figuring out how to play moderate Islam against the forces of

radicalism. It is figuring out how to instill a sufficient sense

of hope and progress in Muslim societies so that despair and

anger do not send the masses into the radicals’ arms.

In that regard, the Israeli-Palestinian conflict appears more

than ever as a microcosm of and possibly a precedent for what

the world is becoming. Israel is the West, surrounded by the

culture of humiliation and dreaming of escape from a dangerous

region and of reentry into a culture of hope. But it must

find a solution to the Palestinian problem first, or else the escape

will not be possible. So, too, Europe and the United States seek

to permanently banish their fears but will be able to do so only

by finding a way to help the Muslim world solve its problems.


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DAA