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Searching
for a new world order in Davos
IOL | Jan. 24, 2008
Davos, Switzerland
- The spectacular rise of China and India coupled with a decline in
US influence has prompted heated debate in Davos this year over
possible scenarios for a new world order.
While the United States remains the undisputed military superpower,
experts participating in the annual gathering of the world's
political and business elite have highlighted its waning ability to
set the global agenda on its own.
And with the UN Security Council struggling to provide a consensus
on just about any major issue, the question of what nation, group of
nations or international institution could command a leading role on
the future world stage was floated to a widely varying response.
The only real point
of agreement was that the current fluidity in the balance of world
power carries a serious threat of instability and conflict, as well
as concerns over how to build an effective international response to
extreme abuses of power such as acts of genocide or ethnic
cleansing.
"We don't live in a multi-polar world, we live in a non-polar
world," said John Chipman, director general of the London-based
International Institute for Strategic Studies.
While the United
States is clearly too strong to stay on the sidelines of world
affairs, Chipman argued that it was also "too weak" to implement an
agenda without wide international support.
Full article
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