Can we do without a global bully? Economists are pragmatic people and would rather have a hegemon guarding the trade routes. My favourite author is Deepak Lal, who, in his tract In Defence of Empires (The AEI Press 2004), says: “Empires, through their pax, provide the most basic of public of goods — order — maintaining order in social life. There are three basic values of all social life which any international order should seek to protect: first, that life is secured against violence leading to death or bodily harm; second, that promises once made are kept; and third, that the possession of things will remain stable to some degree and will not be subject to challenges that are constant and without limit”.
America today is the hegemon but it was its president, Woodrow Wilson, who led the widespread American assault against empires. The thing about hegemons is that they are hated by those who live under their tutelage. But those who hate them are inferior in civilisation and, if they succeed in pulling down the empire, end up giving us a worse world to live in.
The Roman Empire flourished for 2,000 years and regulated the world. It was remarkably tolerant of the people it ruled. It was destroyed by the savage tribes of Germany and by Christianity. The caesar in Byzantium who turned Christian made it a religious state, a clear sign of decline and fall. The people who suffered were Christians — Monophysites, Nestorians, etc— and the empire was scattered.
The Ottomans had their empire for nearly 600 years. Lesser Slav people like the Serbs hated them. In 1999, the Serbs were punished by hegemon America for the genocide of Muslims. Old empires lasted long because humanity evolved slowly, but when it came to the British Empire, it lasted only 200 years. America shared a bipolar world with the Soviet Union for 70 years. It is falling apart in the year 2011, the hegemon with the shortest span of life.
Empires give intellectual lead and bestow civilisation. The Romans bequeathed political concepts that work for us even today. The American empire will take a long time fading because of its leadership in technology and knowledge. Those who hate it include even some European states, a natural hatred of coercion. The Visigoth equivalent, however, is the Islamic world where education is the lowest in the world; and blind rage ends up making Muslims kill fellow-Muslims.
Amy Chua in her book Day of Empire: How Hyperpowers Rise to Global Dominance and Why They Fall (Anchor Books, 2007) says: “Tolerance was indispensable to the achievement of hegemony. Just as strikingly, the decline of empire has repeatedly coincided with intolerance, xenophobia, and calls for racial, religious, or ethnic purity. But here’s the catch: it was also tolerance that sowed the seeds of decline”.
Hegemon dies of tolerance but leaves behind its imprint. The British Empire has forever differentiated the Pakistanis, Bangladeshis and Indians from Muslims in the rest of the Islamic world. In Egypt, when you ask a pro-democracy ‘revolutionary’ if he will allow three fundamental elements in his democracy: 1) separation of religion from state, 2) equal rights of women and 3) protection of the minorities, he unhesitatingly says no. In Pakistan, at least a British-influenced Jinnah favoured all three conditions.
Published in The Express Tribune, August 7th, 2011.
COMMENTS (30)
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Some civilizations are superior to others, hence imperialism. Right. Who needs Orientalism from the West when you can make it at home for cheaper?
@MH:
Being gay in deviant behavior. Nothing bigotry about it. What Ashok says is shared by majority of people all over the world. He is only voicing concerns that America is going down the moral drain, by championing wrong causes.
I have no problem when people indulge in deviant behavior inside the four walls, between consenting adults. But, when they want societal recognition and approval for such deviant behavior, then it's really a cause for worry.
How about answering the question that is the title of your piece.
@Tanoli: By saying that Jinnah was hoodwinked by corgresswalas and did their bidding amounts to cast aspersions as regards his insight, intellegence and calibre
I may not see eye to eye with you instantly, but it got me thinking, perhaps it is true.
@Hassan
some serious thinking indeed. Many nations show resilence once they are behind wall and no way to go but forward. But there is one more way to go, that is alongside wall which is funamentalist way. I wish Pakistan does not take this route.
@Tanoli: Web master, or whatever your name is, can I please ask AGAIN that you at least SPELL_CHECK the "comments" you receive?
Why do I have to read some comment three times before I can begin to understand the content?!
I have absolutely NO reasons to hope that you will take my protest seriously.
Off course there is life after and beyond US. And that's China.
@Noor Nabi
Good point.Actualy Auragzeb undone what Akbar did.
@Wasil Arain
Exactly my take.
Mr jinnah was a secular leader believe in one united india they were nehru and others who made him to comsider for seprate country even Mr jaswanth singh mention it his book and gor despel from party.
@ kailash islam spread it by sufis of india like nizaudin aulya of delhi chisti of ajmer baba faridudin of saiwal and many more and peoples of india got light of islam even these peoples are the reason for sikh of punjab reigen also believe an one god.
Jinah might have articulated sepparation of religion and state, but he did created a country based on a distinct religious identity. Actions speak louder than words and as such what is concluded can not be substantiated.
@ Hasan i pray and i hope if amer aid complettely stoped because it is not benifiting common men of the country. they stop this money today instead of tommarow.
A great piece by Khaled Ahmed, lucid, thought-provoking and dispassionate. It may not be very popular or politically correct but it is definitely realistic and disingenuous. A pure delight to read.
somebody said moguls tolerated other religions. Well some were but mostly were brutal and intolerant because of which there r hundreds of millions of Muslims in South Asia today who were actually hindus(just race no religion) were forced to embrace Islam
Dear,M.H.Very well put,that is precisely,my attitude,and I try to adhere,occaasionaly I will respond to guys like you or Asan Abidi,because you have insight and have something profound to say,In fact we must not delude ourself that our sometime, our thought are,valid and seem to hit the bulls eye,but if our thoughts of any values,and may in long run influence some changes,but it is a ,long shot,at best.Yet,we must strive,do to be honest as to our own soul.I'm very much believe in that,concept of the "Enlightened one",charity begins with us,first,we have to be the change we want in the soceity.
@Ashok: Nature did not create any country, system or religion. Nature has in fact created those peoples natural desires in terms of attraction. You're not speaking from the perspective of a level-headed realist with profound insight. You're just another bigot. That's not even an insult. You basically reflect the concept in every aspect. It's a shame that one aspect is a habit of being so self-righteous that nobody wants to engage in any discussion or debate with them as well from knowing it will get them nowhere. People won't judge your views too openly out of just not wanting to bother with someone who thinks that way and from your high horse you'll translate the meaning of that silence into viewing what it means falsely. You take the lack of it as meaning they don't disagree when in actuality it's the opposite and they just don't want to subject themselves to the headache and you're all the same.
Empires always leave something good behind - because they have assimilated the things which make them look civilised. Beneath the surface is nothing but greed, exploitation, hatred and insane ambition. The empire has to look benevolent - not be considered a bunch of barbarians running a territory. Empires do not collapse, they simply cease to be relevant what is worse every one wants to become an emperor - to that end they will sabotage the very foundations on which the empire was built on. Use the empires resources to fight wars which bankrupt them in the long run. All empires are accidents of history. No one sets out to build an empire, it happens when there are weaknesses other kingdoms and other empires. The opportunity to exploit those weaknesses arises, that is when a new empire come into existence.
A valuable piece for reading
a good one.
Is there life in Pakistan after US withdrawal? This is a more important question, and the answer is a resounding NO.
I will explain why. All these years, we have been building our swanky towers and wide roads with US money. We have got blind to the fact that our development, our roads, our buildings, our mobile phone network all have come from our donors and not built by a nation with a strong economy. All these do not reflect the reality that the economy is actually on ventilator these days.
The US billions will dry up soon and we are going to have serious problems, meeting our infrastructure needs. Population is burgeoning, and already we face electricity shortage and on top of it, we have existentialist threats, with one insurgency getting stronger and possibility of more such autonomy-demanding troubles from other places like Sindh.
We have no worthwhile industry to speak of. How long can we depend on t-shirt and mango exports? Our exports are mostly to US and once the US takes a strong stand against Pakistan for some reason, where will our industry go?
We are not a knowledge-centric society and our educational system - with hatred based curriculum - is nor meant to kindle curiosity and critical thinking and is not meant to nurture scientific temper. When the educational system is in shambles, then who will lead the country? From where will the thought leaders come?
The reality is that we will continue to pockets of affluence and symbols of modernity, but we will also have with large areas of little development and more deprivation, ungovernable and lawless, with religious zealots in full control. Forget equal rights, even school education will be a pipe dream for women in such places
All factors gaining momentum in the country are slowly nudging the country towards taking the path similar to that of Afghanistan.
Very good post. :)
The demise of USA is greatly exaggerrted.Yes ,USA is going through a very tough time.Some real,reality check is being being endured,some very serious rethinking is going on,to many unforseen things happened all at once,correct remedy were not taken,now some serious rethinking is going on,all across the board.The housing collepse,the reign of Greenspan,the greed in wall street,bale out,War on terror,boots in iraq and Afghanistan,major blunders.Some remedial steps are being taken,very gingerly,as about turn gives very wrong signal,if either way,President Obama is re-elected or defeated,major changes are in the wind and wings.China ecnomy is slowing down,9% growth will not sustain,India economy is already showing sign of major correction.America has no where to go,but up,if you are student of tormoil in USA for last 100 years,their track record is good after some real faltering,same thing happened in 1935/36,Veitnam,so the same thing is happening now.Some very real hurting is put on the nation,bad unemployment,loss of consumer confidence,debt crisis and real spending constaints,but this country is very large,its population to ratio of territory in its favor,still law and order good,infrastructure breaking down but not crumbled,it has no corruption on all level unlike India and China,political structure though badly bickerking yet,it is no bannana republic,finally the judisary and court functioning without hickups.You have to live here long to understand its resilence,but one thing is sure it can not conduct business as before,free lunch to foreign aid,intervention abroad willy nelly , and gun boat actions are thing of the past.If you are betting man,do not bet against uncle sam,bet in Las-Vegas for USA some more hegamony,atleast another 50 years,even more.
@Tanoli The bigotry and intolerance of Aurangzeb led to the decline of the Moghul empire. It also nurtured the seeds of Hindu-Muslim discord in the subcontinent.
Sorry missed the hegemony point. Rise and demise of hegemonic power is associated to systemic and structural changes in the world system. The readers may look at George Modelski's pioneer work on Long Cycles in world Politics or Robert Keohane, Theory of Hegemonic Stability, and AFK Organsiki, Power Transition Theory. There was a lot of good stuff that came out back in 1970s and earlier part of 1980s. Having said this, pull out from Afghanistan is not going to lead to a decline of the U.S. hegemonic position. Change in international system requires emergence of parallel power patterns. We don’t see that happening. So U.S. will remain hegemonic power for a long time to come. Some revisionists/neorealists are arguing that emergence of regional powers may lead to sharing of power with regional powers but no alternation is possible in the present power arrangements. .
Khalid Ahmed, I'm really impressed by your defense of imperialism better than imperialists them self. What do you think of slavery as an institution because it has organic links to imperial processes? You are known as a liberal, so what happens to liberal values as you define them?
Authour forgot to mention mughals they tolrated to all faith and that was a reason they last for over three centuries.
Colonial imprints on social, economic, and political thought are natural. The language of the power elite always gets recognition. Yes Jinnah did enunciate all three of them but actions speak louder than words. Had Mr. Jinnah been a secular minded westerner, he might have never asked for partition of India. I had and still have lot of respect for the gentleman but recently have gone through some revisions. Readers please note that I am hundred percent Pakistani and more secular minded than one can think, so please don’t jump to conclusions.
Fundamental elements to you.