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Thank you. Thank you for that wonderful
introduction and particularly for mentioning my sons. If anyone ever leaves
that out I always make sure that my audiences know that that is probably the
achievement I’m proudest of and certainly the thing that keeps me working
the hardest. So, it’s a pleasure to be here. I have to say that I arrived
at about 6:00 p.m. and called my husband who is also traveling and he said,
“Remind me where you are again,” and I said, “I’m in the Beverly Hills
Hotel. I’m about to give a speech to the World Affairs Council,” and he
said, “Ah. Hardship duty.” So, it’s a particular pleasure to be in Los
Angeles and to be in this beautiful place and have the chance to talk to you
about important current issues.
I should admit at the outset that even I, as I
walk through airports, and I’ve been doing a lot of that these days, you
walk past these displays of what seem like scores of books that have just
come out. We have Richard Clarke’s book on terrorism, Against All
Enemies. Of course, now there’s Bob Woodward’s book that has just come
out on the origins of the war in Iraq. There are various other books.
Karen Hughes has her new book out. It really seems like any one who is
writing about international relations waited to release their book till some
five months before the election, which just happens to be when I chose to
release my book. I have to say if you’re looking for immediate thrilling
reading I myself have bought a number of these other books and they’re very,
very good.
I hope after the current flurry dies down and
we all have even more questions about America’s role in the world, the
changing nature of the world we find ourselves in, and the world that our
children are going to grow up in, that my book at least provides some of the
answers. What I hope to do tonight is to give you a very basic argument
about what government networks are, where you can find them and then just
talk about how we can use them to help address a couple of the most pressing
problems that the United States finds itself in, from fighting terrorism to
nation-building, a job we might not like but we are certainly stuck with,
not only in Iraq but also in Afghanistan.
So my starting proposition is that we live in
a networked world. This is not hard, I think, certainly for audiences like
yourself to understand. If you just think about, on the corporate side, the
Star Alliance if you’ve been traveling recently, or any number of corporate
networks. Indeed, when I first became Dean a lot of people sent me books
about CEO transitions. I have to tell you they were useless in terms of
actually giving me advice on managing anything because CEOs can fire
people. Academic deans can’t fire anyone. That’s the definition of being
an academic dean – you have a lot of people working for you who have
lifetime tenure and you have to beg and plead with them to get them to do
what you want. But what I did learn from these books was the shift from
hierarchy to network, and that in a global environment, an environment of
rapid change, the best way to be organized is through a network rather than
a top-down command-and-control organization.
In the nongovernmental world, human rights
activists, environmental activists, and the anti-globalization activists --
those are all networks of nongovernmental organizations. They are able to
expand their power and their influence by expanding their reach across
borders. Local environmental organization networks can have its counterparts
as far away as Brazil or China or South Africa. So we have networks of
corporations, we have networks of nongovernmental organizations and, as Noël
mentioned in her introduction, of course, we have networks of criminals.
And it’s not just terrorists. People who study organized crime know well
that criminal networks have gone global. If you talk about arms trafficking,
trafficking in drugs, trafficking in women and children or more generally in
migrants, money laundering, international piracy – all of these are crimes
now committed by global networks of criminals.
Now, all of that I didn’t discover. It’s been
out there in the literature in these various areas. You can read all sorts
of things about global civil society and the networks of civic groups that
make up global civil society and again on the corporate side or the criminal
side it’s well known. What I have identified and what I think has been
missing from this picture has been the existence of government networks –
networks of national government officials. So the people who are regulating
our securities markets, the central bankers, the insurance supervisors, the
anti-trust officials, the environmental officials, the judges, and to a
lesser extent, legislators, are all networking with their counterparts
abroad to be able to do their jobs. It’s not all that surprising because,
if you’re out there regulating corporations and the corporations are
operating as global networks, you’re not going to be able to actually
implement whatever regulations you’re trying to implement. If you’re an
anti-trust regulator and you’re trying to block a merger, or if you’re a
securities regulator and you’re trying to chase down securities fraud,
you’re going to have to reach out to your counterparts to be able to follow
the entities that you regulate. The same thing obviously with criminals.
You’re not going to be able to apprehend criminals who are operating in a
global network if you can’t network with your fellow justice ministers or
police investigators or, if we’re talking abut terrorists, intelligence
operatives or border patrol officials. You need to have a network capacity
as well.
If you look you’ll see that. in fact, we have
these networks -- certainly of regulators of all kinds, some of them even
have their own organizations. A little less well known have been judicial
networks. I started working on this subject in 1994 and then there were a
few judges who were talking to each other. Post-Cold War, there were judges
who were going into Eastern Europe to try to help judges in new democracies
and they were starting to exchange opinions and to cite each other. Ten
years later there are judges writing about participating in a global human
rights-style dialogue. So the Supreme Court of Canada, the judges on the
Canadian courts, cite judges on the South African Court, the Indian Court,
the German Court, the European Court of Justice, our own Supreme Court has
summits with the European Court of Justice, with the French Constitutional
Court, with the German Constitutional Court, the Indian Court. At the level
of much more ordinary business litigation, like bankruptcy litigation, you
have judges who actually negotiate with one another to figure out how
they’re going to resolve a global bankruptcy. There’s a famous case with a
British judge and an Israeli judge and an American judge, they drafted up an
order and protocol for how to resolve this case. Now in the world of
international relations that I studied, only diplomats drafted orders and
protocol, this was not something that judges did. Judges were domestic, but
they are, operating in a global economy so they’re not working as well. And
then legislators. Newt Gingrich actually created the 21st
century legislators’ network. Now that one didn’t really take off after he
left office, but some of what he started to create has stuck. We have a
network between our Congress and the Russian Duma on arms control issues
that has been quite effective, and there are networks of legislators on
environmental issues and on human rights issues and there’s beginning to be
one on trade issues and I think we need much more on trade issues.
So part of what I’m asking people to see is to
recognize that we have a world in which many, many different actors operate
through networks and that our government also operates through networks.
We’re not just represented by the State Department and by our formal
ambassadors, but almost every major official in Washington has some
international part of his or her job. That’s the way they are effectively
carrying out their national responsibilities and, to some extent, global
responsibilities.
So if you accept my picture that we have a
world of government networks, then the question is, well, so what? That’s
nice. And now we know that all Washington agencies and judges and
legislators are networking, what can we do with that?
What’s most important about seeing these
networks is understanding how we can use them to essentially get global
governing power without global government. We know we need global capacity
– we have environmental problems, we have terrorism, we have threats of
epidemics, and I don’t just mean AIDS – I mean Avian flu. The flu epidemic
of 1918 killed millions of people so you can only imagine what that might be
today. We have a global economy, we need to regulate capital flows, and we
need the capacity to do at the global level what our government does at the
national level or at the state level. But we don’t want world government.
Or at least I don’t, and I think it’s a fair statement that for most of the
people in the world the thought of world government does not make them
overjoyed. Frankly, even if you wanted it, it’s almost impossible to imagine
how we’d get there. So we have this problem. We need the capacity but we
don’t want to actually create a centralized authority that would sit in some
global capital, kind of a global Brussels if you think about it that way, to
exercise government power, and I’m arguing that these networks, these
networks of the same people we elect or appoint can essentially perform the
same functions and they can give us that global governance capacity without,
as I said, the form of world government.
Let me get a little more specific. I would say
there are three enormous problems – there are at least three – there are
about fifteen but let’s stick with three -- that we face, and when I say
“we” I’m thinking about the American government. First, of course, fighting
the war on terrorism and how actually to combat an enemy that is clearly
operating globally and in a network. What that means is you can chop off
part of that network and it will just reappear elsewhere. So that’s the
first problem.
The second is state building and although Iraq
is most immediately on the agenda it’s not the only case. Afghanistan is
still very fragile, and when you hear from President Karzai next month you
will hear. He’s a wonderful speaker, he’s doing the very best he can but
he’s holding on in the center of his country where large parts of
Afghanistan are still far from any government -- much less good government.
And then states like Sudan, failed states anywhere in the world, where there
isn’t sufficient government authority to establish basic order, that is a
problem. It’s a problem because terrorists can move in but it’s also a
problem because that’s a government that doesn’t have the ability to
maintain basic health, to control the environment, to do a lot of things
that we need governments to do worldwide because if they fail it affects
us. So weak or failed states is, I think, the second biggest problem we
face.
Finally, and I’ve only come to say this
recently – anti-Americanism is itself a huge problem for the United States.
We are finding it very difficult to get our allies to work with us because
their governments cannot say to their people that they are standing up with
the Americans because their people, I’m including Japanese, South Koreans,
Germans, even Poles, and I was just in Warsaw, and my friends who are over
there used the terms “hatred”, are so aroused against us, that their
governments can’t help us. We can’t increasingly do what we want to do.
It’s going to become more difficult to travel or to invest. We have to
restore America’s image in the world.
So take those three examples of problems and
let me give you some idea of how networks can help us solve them. I will say
this is not the silver bullet, and it’s not the only thing that we need in
the world, we still need international institutions like the United Nations.
Even with networks, this is a long, slow process.
Let’s start with terrorism. We need to
mobilize international cooperation on just about every level of government.
We need to be able to cut off the financing, to identify individual
terrorists, to apprehend them, to bring them to justice -- and that means
actually a trial, it doesn’t mean simply holding them somewhere. We need to
be able to provide more sources of economic opportunity in many of the
countries where there is support for terrorism. To do all that we have to
mobilize international cooperation and we just can’t do it alone. In many
ways, we’re as weak as the weakest country out there.
Now suppose the president had said after 9/11,
“You know in 1945 we fought World War II, we recognized we were in a new
world, we had to create new institutions to face the threats that we found
ourselves facing from 1945 to 1950 as the Soviet Union became more and more
of a threat. We created a new set of institutions; they were designed to
mobilize international cooperation to make sure that our allies were with
us. Now we find ourselves, September 12, 2001, in another new world and
we’re going to create another set of institutions, but they’re going to be
very different institutions. They’re going to be fast and flexible.
They’re going to have varied membership. They’re not all going to have 191
nations. Depending on the problem, we will have various nations working with
us, the global justice network, or the global financial network, or the
global intelligence network.
We have a global competition network. That’s
something the Bush administration has created with anti-trust regulators,
but in fighting terrorism monopoly is not the problem. We need to get a set
of institutions that we can actually make individual government officials
members of, we can support them, we can train them, we can socialize them
and we can cooperate with those officials on the ground, the people who are
in charge of finding financing and finding individuals themselves. So these
networks are a way of giving us much greater reach for all the countries we
need to reach – Yemen, Pakistan, all the European countries, Indonesia,
Asian countries. We could use them for lots of other purposes for
mobilizing international cooperation, but I would start with terrorism.
Second, state building. Imagine if after the
fighting -- the fighting hasn’t stopped in Iraq but the immediate military
action stopped or slowed a year ago this month -- had said it’s not the
coalition’s responsibility to rebuild Iraq. Indeed, it’s not even the UN’s
responsibility to rebuild Iraq. It is the responsibility of all governments
around the world who have an interest in a stable well-governed Iraq, not
necessarily through democracy, I’m not sure that that’s the first place you
necessarily need to go, but certainly rights regarding a decent stable
government.
Well, believe it or not, there’s a global
utilities network and the utilities regulators who are part of that network
would have been very helpful in rebuilding Iraq’s infrastructure. That’s
their job. That’s what they do worldwide. They meet every year, they
exchange information, and they offer each other technical training and
assistance. They could have done a lot in Iraq. And then we send in the
economic regulators to help the Iraqi economy get back on its feet. And for
trying Saddam Hussein and other war criminals and getting fair and
independent courts functioning we’d send in networks of judges, they exist,
they have organizations, this is their job, they have organizations. For
rebuilding an Iraqi parliament, we send in networks of legislators. Again,
they exist, they spend their time offering assistance to countries that need
that assistance and also cooperating with one another and strengthening one
another. When one of their members is under attack it’s helpful to know that
they have international support.
In short, we can mobilize the resources of
government officials all around the world who do what governments need to do
in failing states or post-conflict states. We can do it over the long term;
we can rebuild these countries and make sure that they are members or part
of something bigger, something supportive. We’ve actually seen this happen,
although in a slightly different version. If you think about it, the
European Union is largely responsible for the stable transition to democracy
of ten former Communist states. It wasn’t at all clear it was going to
happen. I remember immediately after the Cold War people going to Hungary.
There were people wandering around Budapest – my husband is half-Hungarian –
with maps of greater Hungary. The problem was that greater Hungary includes
a large chunk of Romania and the Romanians didn’t think that this was
particularly friendly. In Slovakia, there was a clear danger of some kind
of a return to dictatorship. The possibility of being a member of the
European Union and the participation of government officials from all those
countries in European government networks as part of being a candidate
member of the European Union helped stabilize those democracies, helped
ensure that their judges and their officials and their legislators were
effectively participating in a larger concept of liberal democracy.
Finally, networks are going to help
anti-Americanism. There are other ways to signal to the world that we are
aware that, in my view, we have acted both with hubris and hypocrisy. But I
would say over the longer term even if you think the immediate causes of
anti-Americanism are centered on Iraq and on other actions we’ve taken after
9/11, over the longer term we engender resentment because we’re the biggest
power in the world and because we tend to talk a lot more than we listen.
Joseph Nye, Dean of the Kennedy School, argues that one of the things we
need to do is build our “soft” power. That what we have done is to use our
soldiers and our economic power to force people to do what we want them to
do where we should be using the power of attraction, of people wanting to do
what we want them to do because they admire us, because they like our
values, because they respect the quality of our government and indeed of our
private citizens. Within government networks, when you have a group of
government officials -- and again, it can be Supreme Court justices,
legislators, regulators -- there are sites of soft power because nobody can
force anyone to do anything else in these networks.
The currency is a currency of conversation,
of exchange of information, of working together and brainstorming new
solutions to problems. It’s a lot of the power of information and the power
of personal relationships, and in those networks Americans listen. I’ve
heard our own Supreme Court justices talk about how transformative it was to
go abroad and realize that their counterparts in other countries were every
bit as smart as they were. I’m a lawyer so I can say our Supreme Court
justices think they are pretty much the cat’s meow and we as lawyers treat
them that way, but they discovered their counterparts speak multiple
languages, they know their own country’s law, they know international law,
many of them know American law as well, and it really transformed their own
view of how they do their job and what they could learn as well as teach.
That’s a good thing. We want Americans learning as well as teaching. At the
same time, of course, the vast majority of our officials are very competent,
they’re dedicated professionals, from the military throughout our
government, and they do have a lot to teach and they are very generous with
their time and with material support and that is a posture that we want to
be in with respect to the rest of the world -- helping failed states rebuild
again, not by doing it in a centralized way, but by helping every single one
of those officials, offering support over the long term, and through
personal interaction between Americans, Iraqis, Indonesians, Japanese,
people the world over.
So, in conclusion, let me say that the title
of my book is not modest -- A New World Order -- at least it’s “a”
not “the” new world order, and I was willing to call it that because I wrote
it for a decade and I thought, “Well, if you spend ten years on a book you
can afford to be maybe a little ambitious with the title.” But in 1994 when
I started writing a new world order was George Bush the first’s phrase. He
called for a new world order after the Gulf War and the new world order he
was talking about was actually an older version of the world order. It was
the 1945 version of the world order. It was a world in which the UN would
actually work, and Great Powers – the 5 permanent members – would come
together in the Security Council and make decisions about when to use force
and when to intervene for humanitarian purposes or to stop aggression. He
was basically saying “After 40 years of the Cold War, this new world order
can actually work and we’re going to make it work.” I’m talking about a
very different new world order, a new world order that is appropriate, if he
would see it, to the second President Bush rather than the first. It is a
world order appropriate for an age of globalization, for the information
age, and it is a network world order.
Thank you.
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