STRATFOR founder: 'Prepare for war'
Business Insider,
7 March, 2016
Interstate warfare is a thankfully unusual occurrence in the present day.
State-assisted
nonstate groups frequently fight governments, a scenario currently
unfolding in Syria, Eastern Ukraine, and a host of other places.
But
you’d have to go back to the US-led invasion of Saddam Hussein’s
Iraq in 2003, or the Eritrea-Ethiopia
conflict of the late 1990sfor
an example of two nations fighting a full-scale ground war against
one another.
The
two world wars were catastrophic proof of the inherent instability of
an international system that allowed for frequent interstate
conflicts and that considered warfare to be a legitimate foreign
policy option, rather than an absolute last resort.
Since
World War II, many of the world’s political and legal systems have
been built around preventing states from going to war with one
another — with a fairly impressive record of success.
But
could that ever change? Last month, Business Insider sat
down with George Friedman,
the founder
of Geopolitical Futures.
Friedman is also the author of “The
Next 100 Years”
and founder of STRATFOR, the influential geopolitical forecasting
firm.
He
warned that destructive interstate warfare has been a recurring
characteristic of global politics and he said it could make a
comeback.
Friedman
noted that there have been earlier periods in which international
observers have been deluded into believing nations would no longer go
to war.
“From
1815 to 1871 there was not an interstate war of any substance in
Europe,” said Friedman. “Then came World War I, a biggie.”
Friedman
warned that in the modern era, every period of peace has been a
built-up towards a violent reckoning. “There has never been a
century that has not had a systemic war — a systemic war, meaning
when the entire system convulses,” Friedman continued, citing
the Seven
Years War,
the Napoleonic Wars, and the world wars. “Do you want to bet this
will be the only century that doesn’t have one? I’ll take that
bet.”
Carl
Court/Getty ImagesA
symbol of things to come?Historical re-enactors take part in the
second part of a large scale re-enactment of the battle of Waterloo,
to mark it’s bicentenary on June 20, 2015 in Waterloo, Belgium.
Friedman’s
analysis assumes that any international system, whether it’s
the alliance
of conservative forces in Europe that
kept the peace after the Napoleonic Wars or the US-led post-Cold War
order, has inherently fatal weaknesses. In his mind, the current
international system contains the seeds of its own destruction.
At the very least, the current world order still allows for crises that the system itself is incapable of solving.
At the very least, the current world order still allows for crises that the system itself is incapable of solving.
Friedman
thinks that the decline of certain global powers could create just
such a crisis.
“When
you have the countries like Germany, China, and Russia decline, and
be replaced by others, that’s when systemic wars start,” Friedman
explains. “That’s when it gets dangerous, because they haven’t
yet reached a balance. So Germany united in 1871 and all hell broke
loose. Japan rose in the early 20th century, and then you had chaos.
So we’re looking at a systemic shift. Be ready for war.”
Here’s
Friedman’s entire answer when asked about the possibility of a
return of interstate warfare, edited for length and clarity:
BI:
In this day and age it’s relatively unusual for nations to go to
war against one another. Do you see that changing? Do you see
interstate warfare making a comeback?
GF: From
1815 to 1871 there was not an interstate war of any substance in
Europe. Then came World War I, a biggie.
I’ll
give you another statistic. There has never been a century that has
not had a systemic war — a systemic war, meaning when the entire
system convulses. From the Seven Years’ War in Europe to the
Napoleonic Wars of the 19th century to the World Wars, every century
has one.
Do
you want to bet this will be the only century that doesn’t have
one? I’ll take that bet …
When
you have the countries like Germany, China, and Russia decline, and
be replaced by others, that’s when systemic wars start. That’s
when it gets dangerous, because they haven’t yet reached a balance.
So Germany united in 1871 and all hell broke loose. Japan rose in the
early 20th century, and then you had chaos. So we’re looking at a
systemic shift. Be ready for war.
BI:
Any predictions on where it could be?
GF: Well
the most likely emerging countries are Japan, Turkey, and Poland. So
I would say Eastern Europe, the Middle East and a maritime war by
Japan with the United States enjoying its own pleasures.
But
every time new powers emerge they have to find their balance. New
powers are emerging, old powers are declining. It’s not that
process that’s dangerous, it’s the emerging position that’s
dangerous.
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