Given the centrality of oil not only to current geo-politics but also to
the politics of global warming, it is interesting to recall that the G7 is
a by-product of the 1973 oil crisis. Almost 35 years later, the now-G8
— Russia was formally admitted in 1998 — is again facing a crisis of
global energy policies brought about by the increased public pressure
for action to reduce carbon gas emissions, the looming fact of peak oil
and, not least, the G8´s incapacity over the past three decades to think
beyond their own interests. But in 2007, the situation is very different
from the unglobalised´ world of 1973 (although with some surprising
similarities) and the G8 is not the only game in town.
Economically the G8 countries are still very significant: although they
represent under 14 % of the world population, they account for nearly
two-thirds of the world's economic output measured by gross
domestic product. In fact, Russia is the only G8 country not in the
World Bank´s 2006 listing of the top ten economies, coming in at
number 14. Significantly, the Peoples Republic of China and Brazil
are in the top ten (numbers 4 and 10 respectively), and even India at
number 12 outranks Russia.
{{{THE G8 IN CRISIS}}}
Politically, however, many of the G8 members are in some form of
crisis, transition or stasis. In the US, Bush is facing the last 18 months
of his presidency having lost control of both the Senate and the House
of Representatives. Although the administration´s provocation of Iran
is clearly a exercise in bravado designed to deter attention from the
debacle in Iraq, it is a high risk strategy given the extreme volatility of
the Middle East (one of the similarities with 1973) and the massive
domestic opposition to the US´ continuing military presence in Iraq
(another similarity to 1973 when the US´s war on Vietnam was
becoming increasingly untenable, both politically and militarily). As
one commentator remarked, this administration has "lost forever the
capacity to set the terms of political debate"- and Bush´s colleagues in
the G8 know it.
Britain´s Tony Blair is also at the end of his prime ministership,
although when that might be is another matter. Having secured an
inglorious place in history for promoting and participating in the
invasion of Iraq, Blair is now trying to rewrite his legacy by setting in
place the UK´s disengagement from Iraq and taking on climate
change with the same quasi-religious zeal that he applied to his moral
mission in Iraq. This G8 - almost certainly his last -- offers Blair one
last chance to be the visionary statesman that he imagines himself to
be.
In Germany, Angela Merkel is struggling with a cumbersome "grand
coalition" of Christian Democrats and Social Democrats so weighed
down with compromises that it is virtually unable to move, let alone
take the lead on any issues. And in France and Italy, presidential
elections and volatile coalitions have disabled these governments
while everyone waits to see which way the electorates blow. The
more general problem, though, for the European members of the G8 is
the palpable anti-US sentiment and the unabated public opposition to
the invasion of Iraq - vindicated with every news report from
Baghdad -- which means that governments must tread carefully in
their relations with Washington: being pro-Bush is definitely not a
vote winner these days.
President Vladimir Putin - secure in the knowledge that he controls
about as much oil and gas as anyone could need -- is making up for
Russia´s humiliation in the 1990s by aggressively re-negotiating
relations with the West, most significantly with the US, while shoring
up connections and influence in the East, and keeping everyone else
on a short leash at home. On recent form, Putin is giving even the G8
a bad name. Japan and Canada - the other two members of the G8 -
are irrelevant in this discussion.
All this adds up to a crisis for the G8 and its capacity to convey a
convincing message of leadership, control, unity and vision. The US -
the "natural leader" of the G8 - has lost its legitimacy (not least
because it acts as the "G1" even in the G8) and there is no other
country either with the credentials or (probably) the interest to "step
up to the plate". Yet as the G8´s power declines, other alliances and
groupings based on geography or mutual interests are emerging. Some
of these groupings may pose a challenge to the G8´s hegemony as the
most significant "G" while others -- such as the Bolivarian
Alternative for the Americas (ALBA) - are experimenting with new
governance frameworks that may offer alternatives to the traditional
elite politics.
{{{NEW POLES OF POWER}}}
Today´s global system is characterised by fragmentation and
competing polarities. This is evident in the weakening and even
paralysis of international institutions and forums, such as the United
Nations, the IMF and the WTO, and in the rise of contesting
economic, political and cultural powers, such as China, Islam and the
indigenous movements of Latin America, to take three very different
examples.
The most significant "new" actor on the international stage is China.
For more than a decade China´s growing economic power has been a
matter of interest (and often concern) for the whole world, yet until
recently China´s engagement with the global system was principally
economic. However, in the past few years China has assumed a more
visible profile internationally, especially in its diplomatic relations
with Africa and Latin America and in its presence in international
organizations. For example, China now takes a more "activist" role in
the Security Council and a Chinese was recently elected to head the
World Health Organisation. Even outside the multilateral framework,
China is leading on sensitive political issues such as North Korea.
Obliquely, China is throwing out a challenge to the US by displaying
a deftness in foreign relations which serves only to highlight the US´s
clumsiness.
Despite its importance, China is not a member of the G8. Indeed, the
first "high level" contact between China and the G8 was only in 2003
in Evian and there are no signs that it will be invited in as a full
member soon. This is a "slight" which has stirred national pride, or at
least that of one editorialist at the Peoples Daily, who wrote in the
lead-up to the G8 summit in Gleneagles, "Although China is not a
member of the G8, this country... is changing the world economic
order; without China's participation, discussions on the world
economy would be devoid of any significance."
Leaving aside the hubris, in reality China does not need the G8 as
much as the G8 needs China. Although being part of the inner circle
would (to some) signify China´s "arrival" on the world stage,
politically there is little to be gained by China surrendering its
freedom of movement - especially on sensitive issues such as
exchange rates or carbon emissions - for the dubious distinction of
being in the company of Bush and Blair.
Instead, the G8 "dialogues" with China alongside India, Brazil, South
Africa and Mexico as the "P5" ("p" is for political). This group is a
mix of real power (China, India and Brazil) and loyal, strategically
located friends (South Africa and Mexico). The "P3" of China, Brazil
and India is the one that could - in the future - challenge the G8 as
the most influential group. Even on current figures, the P3 represents
40 % of the global population and almost 10 % of global GDP - and
rising!
Already, China, Brazil and India are working together, especially in
the WTO as leaders of the G20 where they are proving to be a
significant obstacle to EU-US bilateralism. Although the G20
purportedly represents the interests of more than twenty developing
countries, the reality is that Brazil and India are mainly negotiating
their own interests using the "South" mandate as a legitimising
platform. China maintains a low profile, but will no doubt emerge as
a tough negotiator in the WTO when the need arises. Brazil, India and
China are also working outside the multilateral framework to
strengthen trade and investment relations with each other and with
other countries and regions of the South, mainly to source raw
materials and energy required for industrialization and to open
markets for their exports. Underlying the economic interests is a
political agenda: as the US becomes weaker there is much more room
to manoeuver in the global system: countries like Brazil are able to
escape the heel of US domination and China is able to assert its power
with little risk of being challenged by the US (not least because of
their mutual economic interests). India is perhaps the most ambiguous
of the three, but seems particularly adept at maintaining good
relations with everyone at the same time, being not only one of the
US´ best friends in the region, but also having close diplomatic (and
military) relations with Russia and China.
In addition to its diplomatic and economic offensive in Africa and
Latin America, China is trying to secure its regional influence and
security through the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation (SCO), a
grouping that brings together China, Russia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan,
Tajikistan and Uzbekistan and with the possible membership of India,
Iran, Pakistan, and Mongolia in the near future. The main purpose of
the SCO - called by some commentators the "NATO of the East" - is
to counter US influence in Central Asia, but given the massive oil and
gas supplies in the region, energy security is the driving force behind
the alliance.
In 2005 Russia, China and India held their first "trilateral" meeting in
Vladivostok. In February this year, foreign ministers from the three
countries met again in Delhi, India, and issued a communiqu? in
which they noted, "cooperation rather than confrontation should
govern to global affairs." They also agreed that the UN is an
important platform for multi-polarization and world peace, which de-
coded means that they will work inside the UN when it suits them and
they will work outside the UN to create new poles of power. President
Putin put the point more plainly, saying that the US needs to "take
account of new centers of powers like China, India and Russia."
Russia is also grouped with China, Brazil and India in what is called
the "BRIC" but, as yet, there is no framework for these four countries
to dialogue, other than their common interest in guaranteeing the
secure supply of oil and gas.
{{{REGIONAL REBELS AND RESISTANCE}}}
In Latin America, individual countries and the region as a whole are
adopting a more autonomous position vis-?-vis the dominant powers.
The political landscape is a mix of overtly anti-imperialist
governments, such as Venezuela, Cuba, Bolivia and Ecuador, and
centre-left governments with a nationalist orientation such as Brazil,
Uruguay and Argentina. Pro-US and pro neo-liberal governments are
now a minority, not least because of the extraordinary rise of radical
social movements demanding a change from the devastating neo-
liberal policies of the past two decades. The elections of Lula in
Brazil, Chavez in Venezuela, Morales in Bolivia and Correa in
Ecuador (and possibly even Ortega in Nicaragua) reflect this mood for
social change.
President Hugo Chavez of Venezuela is the most outspoken critic of
the US and has used his vast and recently nationalized oil reserves to
provide subsidized fuel to poor communities in the US: a brilliant
public relations tactic to counter the anti-Chavez campaign in the US
and to highlight poverty in the North. In Ecuador and Bolivia, popular
leftist presidents have been elected with the strong support of social
movements - especially indigenous movements - and moved quickly
to nationalize gas and oil, or at least renegotiate contracts with energy
companies operating in the countries, to signal their break with the
past and assert their sovereignty.
Even beyond these three countries, which are in the vanguard of
attempting to reverse policies of trade and financial liberalization and
privatization that have impoverished the majority of their peoples,
other nations are distancing themselves from the US and challenging
the hegemony of the "Washington Consensus". Argentina, Brazil and
Bolivia have all re-paid their outstanding debts to the IMF (indeed,
Venezuela is now so flush with cash that many Latin American
leaders call Caracas instead of Washington). In the WTO, Latin
American countries are important actors in several groups opposing
the negotiating positions of the US and the EU.
Internationally, Brazil is the most important political force in Latin
America. Since the election of Luiz In?cio
Lula´ da Silva in 2003,
Brazil´s foreign policy has been deployed more overtly in the
“national” interest, for example by negotiating for Brazilian
agribusiness in the WTO and attempting to secure a seat on the UN
Security Council. Lula´s foreign policy has also been one of reaching
out to the South, not only as a political gesture but also aimed to open
markets and expand trade. Argentina is less active in the international
arena but has played an important symbolic role by emancipating
itself from the IMF and foreign creditors following the political and
financial catastrophe of 2001.
The sharpest slap in the face to the US and its economic agenda was
delivered in 2005 at Mar del Plata, when Latin American leaders
rejected the US-designed Free Trade Area of the Americas (FTAA).
This was made possible by the interplay of three different dynamics:
first, Chavez´ denunciation of neo-liberal policies and US
domination; second, Brazil´s and Argentina´s assessment that the
FTAA was not in their national interests; and third, the massive
groundswell of opposition from social movements across the region.
But this dynamic was not limited to Mar del Plata; even now, this
three-way interaction - between the radical governments, the
moderate governments and the social movements - pushes politics to
the left as even the moderate governments cannot afford to ignore
their own social movements who are inspired by the developments in
Bolivia, Ecuador and Venezuela. The political elite in Latin America
can no longer afford to ally themselves with the US or Europe: their
own social movements - who are fighting to end of 500 years of
domination - are looking to their own governments to break the
bonds with the imperialists, or themselves be broken.
ALTERNATIVE POLES
Since the burial of the FTAA, enthusiasm for trade liberalization in
Latin America has waned. However, other forms of regional
cooperation, founded on a fundamental rejection of neo-liberal
policies are being constructed.
The Bolivarian Alternative for the Americas (ALBA) was proposed
by the government of Venezuela as a vision of political, social and
economic cooperation and integration between the countries of Latin
American according to Bolivarian - as opposed to neoliberal —
principles
These “Bolivarian” principles draw their inspiration from Simon
Bolivar, the symbol of Latin American independence: they are based
on cooperation and complementarity, national sovereignty, resource
transfer and redistribution, and support for small farmers,
cooperatives, family, and small-scale producers. For example, the first
Peoples Trade Agreement (TCP) signed between Cuba and Venezuela
in December 2004 facilitates the exchange of medical resources and
petroleum between both nations: Venezuela delivers about 96,000
barrels of low-cost oil per day from its state-owned petroleum
operations to Cuba and Cuba, in exchange, sent 20,000 state-
employed medical staff and thousands of teachers to Venezuela’s
slums.
Bolivia joined the ALBA and signed a TCP on April 29, 2006, just
only days before President Morales announced his intention to
nationalize Bolivia’s vast gas reserves. Nicaragua´s newly elected
President Daniel Ortega joined in January 2007, which included the
cancellation of a $31 million debt to Venezuela. In mid February three
Caribbean states Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, Dominica, and
Antigua and Barbuda joined and Ecuador is likely to join soon. In
addition to the exchange of oil for medical and educational
professionals, the ALBA has an ambitious programme to build
regional institutions in energy, telecommunications, transport,
infrastructure development, banking and media.
While the ALBA is the anti-thesis of the FTAA, the Washington
Consensus or economic domination by the G8, there are still
problems with its orientation, not least that it is being driven by the
personal vision of Chavez and the oil wealth of Venezuela. In so far
as the ALBA is an anti-imperialist project, it is a great success but to
the extent that it is anti-capitalist, (or, to put it another was, an
experiment in socialism for the 21st century) it is still largely oriented
towards large scale projects, industrialization and resource extraction
— such as the controversial proposal for an 8,000km pipeline to carry
gas from Venezuela, across the Amazon, to the South - albeit in an
anti-imperialist frame.
However, beyond governments, beyond summits and beyond the
international institutions, are the thousands of organizations, NGOs,
trade unions, associations and collectives that make up the
international social justice, anti-capitalist, anti-imperialist, anti-war
and anti-neoliberal movement: the “movement of movements”. More
than any government, these social forces are challenging domination
by big power and big money and, in so far as national governments
are showing a willingness to challenge the policies dictated by the G8,
the WTO, the IMF and the financial markets, it is partly because of
pressures from below. In the past ten years, the “global justice”
movement has been effective in exposing the unequal power in the
international system and the impacts of unequal economic relations,
especially in trade and debt (two areas where the G8 has been
spectacularly unsuccessful in producing lasting equitable solutions).
In future, as the “symbols” of domination - such as the G8 - lose their
power (as is already happening) it will be important for the
movements to think strategically how to work for social and
ecological justice in a far more complex and fast-changing world
where the levers of power are often in the hands of completely
unaccountable governments and corporations.
THE G8 IN DECLINE
The declining influence of the G8 is the result of four factors: First is
its own failure in the past 35 years to act for the whole planet, as
opposed to a rich minority. (For example, if the G7 had acted in the
long-term interests of humanity in 1975 when confronted with the oil
crisis - which was of course precipitated by US policies in the Middle
East — then perhaps they would not be facing the climate change
crisis of 2007, let alone the catastrophe in Iraq.) Second, the
legitimacy of the G8 is inextricably linked to the legitimacy of the
US, its founding and most powerful member. As the moral stature of
the US declines, so does that of the G8. Third is the challenge coming
from the rising power of other nations, especially China, Brazil,
Russia and India who have nothing to gain from attaching themselves
to the G8, and to the election, particularly in Latin America, of anti-
hegemonic governments. Finally, the global justice movement has
played its part in de-bunking and de-legitimising the G8 by
questioning the very idea that eight self-appointed countries can
assume to determine the fates of humanity.
Notes
(1) Financial Times, 23 February 2007
(2) Peoples Daily Online, 15 July 2005
(3) Reuters, “India, China, Russia Call for New World Order”, 14
February 2007