|
February 1994
The Coming Anarchy
How scarcity, crime, overpopulation, tribalism, and disease are rapidly destroying the social fabric of our planet
by Robert D. Kaplan
The Minister's eyes were like egg yolks, an aftereffect of some of the many
illnesses, malaria especially, endemic in his country. There was also an
irrefutable sadness in his eyes. He spoke in a slow and creaking voice, the
voice of hope about to expire. Flame trees, coconut palms, and a ballpoint-blue
Atlantic composed the background. None of it seemed beautiful, though. "In
forty-five years I have never seen things so bad. We did not manage ourselves
well after the British departed. But what we have now is something worse--the
revenge of the poor, of the social failures, of the people least able to bring
up children in a modern society." Then he referred to the recent coup in the
West African country Sierra Leone. "The boys who took power in Sierra Leone
come from houses like this." The Minister jabbed his finger at a corrugated
metal shack teeming with children. "In three months these boys confiscated all
the official Mercedes, Volvos, and BMWs and willfully wrecked them on the
road." The Minister mentioned one of the coup's leaders, Solomon Anthony Joseph
Musa, who shot the people who had paid for his schooling, "in order to erase
the humiliation and mitigate the power his middle-class sponsors held over
him."
Tyranny is nothing new in Sierra Leone or in the rest of West Africa. But it is
now part and parcel of an increasing lawlessness that is far more significant
than any coup, rebel incursion, or episodic experiment in democracy. Crime was
what my friend--a top-ranking African official whose life would be threatened
were I to identify him more precisely--really wanted to talk about. Crime is
what makes West Africa a natural point of departure for my report on what the
political character of our planet is likely to be in the twenty-first
century.
The cities of West Africa at night are some of the unsafest places in the
world. Streets are unlit; the police often lack gasoline for their vehicles;
armed burglars, carjackers, and muggers proliferate. "The government in Sierra
Leone has no writ after dark," says a foreign resident, shrugging. When I was
in the capital, Freetown, last September, eight men armed with AK-47s broke
into the house of an American man. They tied him up and stole everything of
value. Forget Miami: direct flights between the United States and the Murtala
Muhammed Airport, in neighboring Nigeria's largest city, Lagos, have been
suspended by order of the U.S. Secretary of Transportation because of
ineffective security at the terminal and its environs. A State Department
report cited the airport for "extortion by law-enforcement and immigration
officials." This is one of the few times that the U.S. government has embargoed
a foreign airport for reasons that are linked purely to crime. In Abidjan,
effectively the capital of the Cote d'Ivoire, or Ivory Coast, restaurants have
stick- and gun-wielding guards who walk you the fifteen feet or so between your
car and the entrance, giving you an eerie taste of what American cities might
be like in the future. An Italian ambassador was killed by gunfire when robbers
invaded an Abidjan restaurant. The family of the Nigerian ambassador was tied
up and robbed at gunpoint in the ambassador's residence. After university
students in the Ivory Coast caught bandits who had been plaguing their dorms,
they executed them by hanging tires around their necks and setting the tires on
fire. In one instance Ivorian policemen stood by and watched the "necklacings,"
afraid to intervene. Each time I went to the Abidjan bus terminal, groups of
young men with restless, scanning eyes surrounded my taxi, putting their hands
all over the windows, demanding "tips" for carrying my luggage even though I
had only a rucksack. In cities in six West African countries I saw similar
young men everywhere--hordes of them. They were like loose molecules in a very
unstable social fluid, a fluid that was clearly on the verge of igniting.
"You see," my friend the Minister told me, "in the villages of Africa it is
perfectly natural to feed at any table and lodge in any hut. But in the cities
this communal existence no longer holds. You must pay for lodging and be
invited for food. When young men find out that their relations cannot put them
up, they become lost. They join other migrants and slip gradually into the
criminal process."
"In the poor quarters of Arab North Africa," he continued, "there is much less
crime, because Islam provides a social anchor: of education and indoctrination.
Here in West Africa we have a lot of superficial Islam and superficial
Christianity. Western religion is undermined by animist beliefs not suitable to
a moral society, because they are based on irrational spirit power. Here
spirits are used to wreak vengeance by one person against another, or one group
against another." Many of the atrocities in the Liberian civil war have been
tied to belief in juju spirits, and the BBC has reported, in its magazine Focus
on Africa, that in the civil fighting in adjacent Sierra Leone, rebels were
said to have "a young woman with them who would go to the front naked, always
walking backwards and looking in a mirror to see where she was going. This made
her invisible, so that she could cross to the army's positions and there bury
charms . . . to improve the rebels' chances of success."
Finally my friend the Minister mentioned polygamy. Designed for a pastoral way
of life, polygamy continues to thrive in sub-Saharan Africa even though it is
increasingly uncommon in Arab North Africa. Most youths I met on the road in
West Africa told me that they were from "extended" families, with a mother in
one place and a father in another. Translated to an urban environment, loose
family structures are largely responsible for the world's highest birth rates
and the explosion of the HIV virus on the continent. Like the communalism and
animism, they provide a weak shield against the corrosive social effects of
life in cities. In those cities African culture is being redefined while
desertification and deforestation--also tied to overpopulation--drive more and
more African peasants out of the countryside.
A Premonition of the Future
West Africa is becoming the symbol of worldwide demographic, environmental, and
societal stress, in which criminal anarchy emerges as the real "strategic"
danger. Disease, overpopulation, unprovoked crime, scarcity of resources,
refugee migrations, the increasing erosion of nation-states and international
borders, and the empowerment of private armies, security firms, and
international drug cartels are now most tellingly demonstrated through a West
African prism. West Africa provides an appropriate introduction to the issues,
often extremely unpleasant to discuss, that will soon confront our
civilization. To remap the political earth the way it will be a few decades
hence--as I intend to do in this article--I find I must begin with West
Africa.
There is no other place on the planet where political maps are so
deceptive--where, in fact, they tell such lies--as in West Africa. Start with
Sierra Leone. According to the map, it is a nation-state of defined borders,
with a government in control of its territory. In truth the Sierra Leonian
government, run by a twenty-seven-year-old army captain, Valentine Strasser,
controls Freetown by day and by day also controls part of the rural interior.
In the government's territory the national army is an unruly rabble threatening
drivers and passengers at most checkpoints. In the other part of the country
units of two separate armies from the war in Liberia have taken up residence,
as has an army of Sierra Leonian rebels. The government force fighting the
rebels is full of renegade commanders who have aligned themselves with
disaffected village chiefs. A pre-modern formlessness governs the battlefield,
evoking the wars in medieval Europe prior to the 1648 Peace of Westphalia,
which ushered in the era of organized nation-states.
As a consequence, roughly 400,000 Sierra Leonians are internally displaced,
280,000 more have fled to neighboring Guinea, and another 100,000 have fled to
Liberia, even as 400,000 Liberians have fled to Sierra Leone. The third largest
city in Sierra Leone, Gondama, is a displaced-persons camp. With an additional
600,000 Liberians in Guinea and 250,000 in the Ivory Coast, the borders
dividing these four countries have become largely meaningless. Even in quiet
zones none of the governments except the Ivory Coast's maintains the schools,
bridges, roads, and police forces in a manner necessary for functional
sovereignty. The Koranko ethnic group in northeastern Sierra Leone does all its
trading in Guinea. Sierra Leonian diamonds are more likely to be sold in
Liberia than in Freetown. In the eastern provinces of Sierra Leone you can buy
Liberian beer but not the local brand.
In Sierra Leone, as in Guinea, as in the Ivory Coast, as in Ghana, most of the
primary rain forest and the secondary bush is being destroyed at an alarming
rate. I saw convoys of trucks bearing majestic hardwood trunks to coastal
ports. When Sierra Leone achieved its independence, in 1961, as much as 60
percent of the country was primary rain forest. Now six percent is. In the
Ivory Coast the proportion has fallen from 38 percent to eight percent. The
deforestation has led to soil erosion, which has led to more flooding and more
mosquitoes. Virtually everyone in the West African interior has some form of
malaria.
Sierra Leone is a microcosm of what is occurring, albeit in a more tempered and
gradual manner, throughout West Africa and much of the underdeveloped world:
the withering away of central governments, the rise of tribal and regional
domains, the unchecked spread of disease, and the growing pervasiveness of war.
West Africa is reverting to the Africa of the Victorian atlas. It consists now
of a series of coastal trading posts, such as Freetown and Conakry, and an
interior that, owing to violence, volatility, and disease, is again becoming,
as Graham Greene once observed, "blank" and "unexplored." However, whereas
Greene's vision implies a certain romance, as in the somnolent and charmingly
seedy Freetown of his celebrated novel The Heart of the Matter, it is Thomas
Malthus, the philosopher of demographic doomsday, who is now the prophet of
West Africa's future. And West Africa's future, eventually, will also be that
of most of the rest of the world.
Consider "Chicago." I refer not to Chicago, Illinois, but to a slum district of
Abidjan, which the young toughs in the area have named after the American city.
("Washington" is another poor section of Abidjan.) Although Sierra Leone is
widely regarded as beyond salvage, the Ivory Coast has been considered an
African success story, and Abidjan has been called "the Paris of West Africa."
Success, however, was built on two artificial factors: the high price of cocoa,
of which the Ivory Coast is the world's leading producer, and the talents of a
French expatriate community, whose members have helped run the government and
the private sector. The expanding cocoa economy made the Ivory Coast a magnet
for migrant workers from all over West Africa: between a third and a half of
the country's population is now non-Ivorian, and the figure could be as high as
75 percent in Abidjan. During the 1980s cocoa prices fell and the French began
to leave. The skyscrapers of the Paris of West Africa are a facade. Perhaps 15
percent of Abidjan's population of three million people live in shantytowns
like Chicago and Washington, and the vast majority live in places that are not
much better. Not all of these places appear on any of the readily available
maps. This is another indication of how political maps are the products of
tired conventional wisdom and, in the Ivory Coast's case, of an elite that will
ultimately be forced to relinquish power.
Chicago, like more and more of Abidjan, is a slum in the bush: a checkerwork of
corrugated zinc roofs and walls made of cardboard and black plastic wrap. It is
located in a gully teeming with coconut palms and oil palms, and is ravaged by
flooding. Few residents have easy access to electricity, a sewage system, or a
clean water supply. The crumbly red laterite earth crawls with foot-long
lizards both inside and outside the shacks. Children defecate in a stream
filled with garbage and pigs, droning with malarial mosquitoes. In this stream
women do the washing. Young unemployed men spend their time drinking beer, palm
wine, and gin while gambling on pinball games constructed out of rotting wood
and rusty nails. These are the same youths who rob houses in more prosperous
Ivorian neighborhoods at night. One man I met, Damba Tesele, came to Chicago
from Burkina Faso in 1963. A cook by profession, he has four wives and
thirty-two children, not one of whom has made it to high school. He has seen
his shanty community destroyed by municipal authorities seven times since
coming to the area. Each time he and his neighbors rebuild. Chicago is the
latest incarnation.
Fifty-five percent of the Ivory Coast's population is urban, and the proportion
is expected to reach 62 percent by 2000. The yearly net population growth is
3.6 percent. This means that the Ivory Coast's 13.5 million people will become
39 million by 2025, when much of the population will consist of urbanized
peasants like those of Chicago. But don't count on the Ivory Coast's still
existing then. Chicago, which is more indicative of Africa's and the Third
World's demographic present--and even more of the future--than any idyllic
junglescape of women balancing earthen jugs on their heads, illustrates why the
Ivory Coast, once a model of Third World success, is becoming a case study in
Third World catastrophe.
President Felix Houphouet-Boigny, who died last December at the age of about
ninety, left behind a weak cluster of political parties and a leaden
bureaucracy that discourages foreign investment. Because the military is small
and the non-Ivorian population large, there is neither an obvious force to
maintain order nor a sense of nationhood that would lessen the need for such
enforcement. The economy has been shrinking since the mid-1980s. Though the
French are working assiduously to preserve stability, the Ivory Coast faces a
possibility worse than a coup: an anarchic implosion of criminal violence--an
urbanized version of what has already happened in Somalia. Or it may become an
African Yugoslavia, but one without mini-states to replace the whole.
Because the demographic reality of West Africa is a countryside draining into
dense slums by the coast, ultimately the region's rulers will come to reflect
the values of these shanty-towns. There are signs of this already in Sierra
Leone--and in Togo, where the dictator Etienne Eyadema, in power since 1967,
was nearly toppled in 1991, not by democrats but by thousands of youths whom
the London-based magazine West Africa described as "Soweto-like stone-throwing
adolescents." Their behavior may herald a regime more brutal than Eyadema's
repressive one.
The fragility of these West African "countries" impressed itself on me when I
took a series of bush taxis along the Gulf of Guinea, from the Togolese capital
of Lome, across Ghana, to Abidjan. The 400-mile journey required two full days
of driving, because of stops at two border crossings and an additional eleven
customs stations, at each of which my fellow passengers had their bags
searched. I had to change money twice and repeatedly fill in
currency-declaration forms. I had to bribe a Togolese immigration official with
the equivalent of eighteen dollars before he would agree to put an exit stamp
on my passport. Nevertheless, smuggling across these borders is rampant. The
London Observer has reported that in 1992 the equivalent of $856 million left
West Africa for Europe in the form of "hot cash" assumed to be laundered drug
money. International cartels have discovered the utility of weak, financially
strapped West African regimes.
The more fictitious the actual sovereignty, the more severe border authorities
seem to be in trying to prove otherwise. Getting visas for these states can be
as hard as crossing their borders. The Washington embassies of Sierra Leone and
Guinea--the two poorest nations on earth, according to a 1993 United Nations
report on "human development"--asked for letters from my bank (in lieu of
prepaid round-trip tickets) and also personal references, in order to prove
that I had sufficient means to sustain myself during my visits. I was reminded
of my visa and currency hassles while traveling to the communist states of
Eastern Europe, particularly East Germany and Czechoslovakia, before those
states collapsed.
Ali A. Mazrui, the director of the Institute of Global Cultural Studies at the
State University of New York at Binghamton, predicts that West Africa--indeed,
the whole continent--is on the verge of large-scale border upheaval. Mazrui
writes, "In the 21st century France will be withdrawing from West Africa as she
gets increasingly involved in the affairs [of Europe]. France's West African
sphere of influence will be filled by Nigeria--a more natural hegemonic power.
. . . It will be under those circumstances that Nigeria's own boundaries are
likely to expand to incorporate the Republic of Niger (the Hausa link), the
Republic of Benin (the Yoruba link) and conceivably Cameroon."
The future could be more tumultuous, and bloodier, than Mazrui dares to say.
France will withdraw from former colonies like Benin, Togo, Niger, and the
Ivory Coast, where it has been propping up local currencies. It will do so not
only because its attention will be diverted to new challenges in Europe and
Russia but also because younger French officials lack the older generation's
emotional ties to the ex-colonies. However, even as Nigeria attempts to expand,
it, too, is likely to split into several pieces. The State Department's Bureau
of Intelligence and Research recently made the following points in an analysis
of Nigeria: "Prospects for a transition to civilian rule and democratization
are slim. . . . The repressive apparatus of the state security service . . .
will be difficult for any future civilian government to control. . . . The
country is becoming increasingly ungovernable. . . . Ethnic and regional splits
are deepening, a situation made worse by an increase in the number of states
from 19 to 30 and a doubling in the number of local governing authorities;
religious cleavages are more serious; Muslim fundamentalism and evangelical
Christian militancy are on the rise; and northern Muslim anxiety over southern
[Christian] control of the economy is intense . . . the will to keep Nigeria
together is now very weak."
Given that oil-rich Nigeria is a bellwether for the region--its population of
roughly 90 million equals the populations of all the other West African states
combined--it is apparent that Africa faces cataclysms that could make the
Ethiopian and Somalian famines pale in comparison. This is especially so
because Nigeria's population, including that of its largest city, Lagos, whose
crime, pollution, and overcrowding make it the cliche par excellence of Third
World urban dysfunction, is set to double during the next twenty-five years,
while the country continues to deplete its natural resources.
Part of West Africa's quandary is that although its population belts are
horizontal, with habitation densities increasing as one travels south away from
the Sahara and toward the tropical abundance of the Atlantic littoral, the
borders erected by European colonialists are vertical, and therefore at
cross-purposes with demography and topography. Satellite photos depict the same
reality I experienced in the bush taxi: the Lome-Abidjan coastal
corridor--indeed, the entire stretch of coast from Abidjan eastward to
Lagos--is one burgeoning megalopolis that by any rational economic and
geographical standard should constitute a single sovereignty, rather than the
five (the Ivory Coast, Ghana, Togo, Benin, and Nigeria) into which it is
currently divided.
As many internal African borders begin to crumble, a more impenetrable boundary
is being erected that threatens to isolate the continent as a whole: the wall
of disease. Merely to visit West Africa in some degree of safety, I spent about
$500 for a hepatitis B vaccination series and other disease prophylaxis. Africa
may today be more dangerous in this regard than it was in 1862, before
antibiotics, when the explorer Sir Richard Francis Burton described the health
situation on the continent as "deadly, a Golgotha, a Jehannum." Of the
approximately 12 million people worldwide whose blood is HIV-positive, 8
million are in Africa. In the capital of the Ivory Coast, whose modern road
system only helps to spread the disease, 10 percent of the population is
HIV-positive. And war and refugee movements help the virus break through to
more-remote areas of Africa. Alan Greenberg, M.D., a representative of the
Centers for Disease Control in Abidjan, explains that in Africa the HIV virus
and tuberculosis are now "fast-forwarding each other." Of the approximately
4,000 newly diagnosed tuberculosis patients in Abidjan, 45 percent were also
found to be HIV-positive. As African birth rates soar and slums proliferate,
some experts worry that viral mutations and hybridizations might, just
conceivably, result in a form of the AIDS virus that is easier to catch than
the present strain.
It is malaria that is most responsible for the disease wall that threatens to
separate Africa and other parts of the Third World from more-developed regions
of the planet in the twenty-first century. Carried by mosquitoes, malaria,
unlike AIDS, is easy to catch. Most people in sub-Saharan Africa have recurring
bouts of the disease throughout their entire lives, and it is mutating into
increasingly deadly forms. "The great gift of Malaria is utter apathy," wrote
Sir Richard Burton, accurately portraying the situation in much of the Third
World today. Visitors to malaria-afflicted parts of the planet are protected by
a new drug, mefloquine, a side effect of which is vivid, even violent, dreams.
But a strain of cerebral malaria resistant to mefloquine is now on the
offensive. Consequently, defending oneself against malaria in Africa is
becoming more and more like defending oneself against violent crime. You engage
in "behavior modification": not going out at dusk, wearing mosquito repellent
all the time.
And the cities keep growing. I got a general sense of the future while driving
from the airport to downtown Conakry, the capital of Guinea. The
forty-five-minute journey in heavy traffic was through one never-ending
shantytown: a nightmarish Dickensian spectacle to which Dickens himself would
never have given credence. The corrugated metal shacks and scabrous walls were
coated with black slime. Stores were built out of rusted shipping containers,
junked cars, and jumbles of wire mesh. The streets were one long puddle of
floating garbage. Mosquitoes and flies were everywhere. Children, many of whom
had protruding bellies, seemed as numerous as ants. When the tide went out,
dead rats and the skeletons of cars were exposed on the mucky beach. In
twenty-eight years Guinea's population will double if growth goes on at current
rates. Hardwood logging continues at a madcap speed, and people flee the
Guinean countryside for Conakry. It seemed to me that here, as elsewhere in
Africa and the Third World, man is challenging nature far beyond its limits,
and nature is now beginning to take its revenge.
Africa may be as relevant to the future character of world politics as the
Balkans were a hundred years ago, prior to the two Balkan wars and the First
World War. Then the threat was the collapse of empires and the birth of nations
based solely on tribe. Now the threat is more elemental: nature unchecked.
Africa's immediate future could be very bad. The coming upheaval, in which
foreign embassies are shut down, states collapse, and contact with the outside
world takes place through dangerous, disease-ridden coastal trading posts, will
loom large in the century we are entering. (Nine of twenty-one U.S. foreign-aid
missions to be closed over the next three years are in Africa--a prologue to a
consolidation of U.S. embassies themselves.) Precisely because much of Africa
is set to go over the edge at a time when the Cold War has ended, when
environmental and demographic stress in other parts of the globe is becoming
critical, and when the post-First World War system of nation-states--not just
in the Balkans but perhaps also in the Middle East--is about to be toppled,
Africa suggests what war, borders, and ethnic politics will be like a few
decades hence.
To understand the events of the next fifty years, then, one must understand
environmental scarcity, cultural and racial clash, geographic destiny, and the
transformation of war. The order in which I have named these is not accidental.
Each concept except the first relies partly on the one or ones before it,
meaning that the last two--new approaches to mapmaking and to warfare--are the
most important. They are also the least understood. I will now look at each
idea, drawing upon the work of specialists and also my own travel experiences
in various parts of the globe besides Africa, in order to fill in the blanks of
a new political atlas.
The Environment as a Hostile Power
For a while the media will continue to ascribe riots and other violent
upheavals abroad mainly to ethnic and religious conflict. But as these
conflicts multiply, it will become apparent that something else is afoot,
making more and more places like Nigeria, India, and Brazil ungovernable.
Mention "the environment" or "diminishing natural resources" in foreign-policy
circles and you meet a brick wall of skepticism or boredom. To conservatives
especially, the very terms seem flaky. Public-policy foundations have
contributed to the lack of interest, by funding narrowly focused environmental
studies replete with technical jargon which foreign-affairs experts just let
pile up on their desks.
It is time to understand "the environment" for what it is: the
national-security issue of the early twenty-first century. The political and
strategic impact of surging populations, spreading disease, deforestation and
soil erosion, water depletion, air pollution, and, possibly, rising sea levels
in critical, overcrowded regions like the Nile Delta and
Bangladesh--developments that will prompt mass migrations and, in turn, incite
group conflicts--will be the core foreign-policy challenge from which most
others will ultimately emanate, arousing the public and uniting assorted
interests left over from the Cold War. In the twenty-first century water will
be in dangerously short supply in such diverse locales as Saudi Arabia, Central
Asia, and the southwestern United States. A war could erupt between Egypt and
Ethiopia over Nile River water. Even in Europe tensions have arisen between
Hungary and Slovakia over the damming of the Danube, a classic case of how
environmental disputes fuse with ethnic and historical ones. The political
scientist and erstwhile Clinton adviser Michael Mandelbaum has said, "We have a
foreign policy today in the shape of a doughnut--lots of peripheral interests
but nothing at the center." The environment, I will argue, is part of a
terrifying array of problems that will define a new threat to our security,
filling the hole in Mandelbaum's doughnut and allowing a post- Cold War foreign
policy to emerge inexorably by need rather than by design.
Our Cold War foreign policy truly began with George F. Kennan's famous article,
signed "X," published in Foreign Affairs in July of 1947, in which Kennan
argued for a "firm and vigilant containment" of a Soviet Union that was
imperially, rather than ideologically, motivated. It may be that our post-Cold
War foreign policy will one day be seen to have had its beginnings in an even
bolder and more detailed piece of written analysis: one that appeared in the
journal International Security. The article, published in the fall of 1991 by
Thomas Fraser Homer-Dixon, who is the head of the Peace and Conflict Studies
Program at the University of Toronto, was titled "On the Threshold:
Environmental Changes as Causes of Acute Conflict." Homer-Dixon has, more
successfully than other analysts, integrated two hitherto separate
fields--military-conflict studies and the study of the physical environment.
In Homer-Dixon's view, future wars and civil violence will often arise from
scarcities of resources such as water, cropland, forests, and fish. Just as
there will be environmentally driven wars and refugee flows, there will be
environmentally induced praetorian regimes--or, as he puts it, "hard regimes."
Countries with the highest probability of acquiring hard regimes, according to
Homer-Dixon, are those that are threatened by a declining resource base yet
also have "a history of state [read 'military'] strength." Candidates include
Indonesia, Brazil, and, of course, Nigeria. Though each of these nations has
exhibited democratizing tendencies of late, Homer-Dixon argues that such
tendencies are likely to be superficial "epiphenomena" having nothing to do
with long-term processes that include soaring populations and shrinking raw
materials. Democracy is problematic; scarcity is more certain.
Indeed, the Saddam Husseins of the future will have more, not fewer,
opportunities. In addition to engendering tribal strife, scarcer resources will
place a great strain on many peoples who never had much of a democratic or
institutional tradition to begin with. Over the next fifty years the earth's
population will soar from 5.5 billion to more than nine billion. Though
optimists have hopes for new resource technologies and free-market development
in the global village, they fail to note that, as the National Academy of
Sciences has pointed out, 95 percent of the population increase will be in the
poorest regions of the world, where governments now--just look at Africa--show
little ability to function, let alone to implement even marginal improvements.
Homer-Dixon writes, ominously, "Neo-Malthusians may underestimate human
adaptability in today's environmental-social system, but as time passes their
analysis may become ever more compelling."
While a minority of the human population will be, as Francis Fukuyama would put
it, sufficiently sheltered so as to enter a "post-historical" realm, living in
cities and suburbs in which the environment has been mastered and ethnic
animosities have been quelled by bourgeois prosperity, an increasingly large
number of people will be stuck in history, living in shantytowns where attempts
to rise above poverty, cultural dysfunction, and ethnic strife will be doomed
by a lack of water to drink, soil to till, and space to survive in. In the
developing world environmental stress will present people with a choice that is
increasingly among totalitarianism (as in Iraq), fascist-tending mini-states
(as in Serb-held Bosnia), and road-warrior cultures (as in Somalia).
Homer-Dixon concludes that "as environmental degradation proceeds, the size of
the potential social disruption will increase."
Tad Homer-Dixon is an unlikely Jeremiah. Today a boyish thirty-seven, he grew
up amid the sylvan majesty of Vancouver Island, attending private day schools.
His speech is calm, perfectly even, and crisply enunciated. There is nothing in
his background or manner that would indicate a bent toward pessimism. A
Canadian Anglican who spends his summers canoeing on the lakes of northern
Ontario, and who talks about the benign mountains, black bears, and Douglas
firs of his youth, he is the opposite of the intellectually severe
neoconservative, the kind at home with conflict scenarios. Nor is he an
environmentalist who opposes development. "My father was a logger who thought
about ecologically safe forestry before others," he says. "He logged, planted,
logged, and planted. He got out of the business just as the issue was being
polarized by environmentalists. They hate changed ecosystems. But human beings,
just by carrying seeds around, change the natural world." As an only child
whose playground was a virtually untouched wilderness and seacoast, Homer-Dixon
has a familiarity with the natural world that permits him to see a reality that
most policy analysts--children of suburbia and city streets--are blind to.
"We need to bring nature back in," he argues. "We have to stop separating
politics from the physical world--the climate, public health, and the
environment." Quoting Daniel Deudney, another pioneering expert on the security
aspects of the environment, Homer-Dixon says that "for too long we've been
prisoners of 'social-social' theory, which assumes there are only social causes
for social and political changes, rather than natural causes, too. This
social-social mentality emerged with the Industrial Revolution, which separated
us from nature. But nature is coming back with a vengeance, tied to population
growth. It will have incredible security implications.
"Think of a stretch limo in the potholed streets of New York City, where
homeless beggars live. Inside the limo are the air-conditioned post-industrial
regions of North America, Europe, the emerging Pacific Rim, and a few other
isolated places, with their trade summitry and computer-information highways.
Outside is the rest of mankind, going in a completely different direction."
We are entering a bifurcated world. Part of the globe is inhabited by Hegel's
and Fukuyama's Last Man, healthy, well fed, and pampered by technology. The
other, larger, part is inhabited by Hobbes's First Man, condemned to a life
that is "poor, nasty, brutish, and short." Although both parts will be
threatened by environmental stress, the Last Man will be able to master it; the
First Man will not.
The Last Man will adjust to the loss of underground water tables in the western
United States. He will build dikes to save Cape Hatteras and the Chesapeake
beaches from rising sea levels, even as the Maldive Islands, off the coast of
India, sink into oblivion, and the shorelines of Egypt, Bangladesh, and
Southeast Asia recede, driving tens of millions of people inland where there is
no room for them, and thus sharpening ethnic divisions.
Homer-Dixon points to a world map of soil degradation in his Toronto office.
"The darker the map color, the worse the degradation," he explains. The West
African coast, the Middle East, the Indian subcontinent, China, and Central
America have the darkest shades, signifying all manner of degradation, related
to winds, chemicals, and water problems. "The worst degradation is generally
where the population is highest. The population is generally highest where the
soil is the best. So we're degrading earth's best soil."
China, in Homer-Dixon's view, is the quintessential example of environmental
degradation. Its current economic "success" masks deeper problems. "China's
fourteen percent growth rate does not mean it's going to be a world power. It
means that coastal China, where the economic growth is taking place, is joining
the rest of the Pacific Rim. The disparity with inland China is intensifying."
Referring to the environmental research of his colleague, the Czech-born
ecologist Vaclav Smil, Homer-Dixon explains how the per capita availability of
arable land in interior China has rapidly declined at the same time that the
quality of that land has been destroyed by deforestation, loss of topsoil, and
salinization. He mentions the loss and contamination of water supplies, the
exhaustion of wells, the plugging of irrigation systems and reservoirs with
eroded silt, and a population of 1.54 billion by the year 2025: it is a
misconception that China has gotten its population under control. Large-scale
population movements are under way, from inland China to coastal China and from
villages to cities, leading to a crime surge like the one in Africa and to
growing regional disparities and conflicts in a land with a strong tradition of
warlordism and a weak tradition of central government--again as in Africa. "We
will probably see the center challenged and fractured, and China will not
remain the same on the map," Homer-Dixon says.
Environmental scarcity will inflame existing hatreds and affect power
relationships, at which we now look.
Skinhead Cossacks, Juju Warriors
In the summer, 1993, issue of Foreign Affairs, Samuel P. Huntington, of
Harvard's Olin Institute for Strategic Studies, published a thought-provoking
article called "The Clash of Civilizations?" The world, he argues, has been
moving during the course of this century from nation-state conflict to
ideological conflict to, finally, cultural conflict. I would add that as
refugee flows increase and as peasants continue migrating to cities around the
world--turning them into sprawling villages--national borders will mean less,
even as more power will fall into the hands of less educated, less
sophisticated groups. In the eyes of these uneducated but newly empowered
millions, the real borders are the most tangible and intractable ones: those of
culture and tribe. Huntington writes, "First, differences among civilizations
are not only real; they are basic," involving, among other things, history,
language, and religion. "Second . . . interactions between peoples of different
civilizations are increasing; these increasing interactions intensify
civilization consciousness." Economic modernization is not necessarily a
panacea, since it fuels individual and group ambitions while weakening
traditional loyalties to the state. It is worth noting, for example, that it is
precisely the wealthiest and fastest-developing city in India, Bombay, that has
seen the worst intercommunal violence between Hindus and Muslims. Consider that
Indian cities, like African and Chinese ones, are ecological time bombs--Delhi
and Calcutta, and also Beijing, suffer the worst air quality of any cities in
the world--and it is apparent how surging populations, environmental
degradation, and ethnic conflict are deeply related.
Huntington points to interlocking conflicts among Hindu, Muslim, Slavic
Orthodox, Western, Japanese, Confucian, Latin American, and possibly African
civilizations: for instance, Hindus clashing with Muslims in India, Turkic
Muslims clashing with Slavic Orthodox Russians in Central Asian cities, the
West clashing with Asia. (Even in the United States, African-Americans find
themselves besieged by an influx of competing Latinos.) Whatever the laws,
refugees find a way to crash official borders, bringing their passions with
them, meaning that Europe and the United States will be weakened by cultural
disputes.
Because Huntington's brush is broad, his specifics are vulnerable to attack. In
a rebuttal of Huntington's argument the Johns Hopkins professor Fouad Ajami, a
Lebanese-born Shi'ite who certainly knows the world beyond suburbia, writes in
the September-October, 1993, issue of Foreign Affairs, "The world of Islam
divides and subdivides. The battle lines in the Caucasus . . . are not
coextensive with civilizational fault lines. The lines follow the interests of
states. Where Huntington sees a civilizational duel between Armenia and
Azerbaijan, the Iranian state has cast religious zeal . . . to the wind . . .
in that battle the Iranians have tilted toward Christian Armenia."
True, Huntington's hypothesized war between Islam and Orthodox Christianity is
not borne out by the alliance network in the Caucasus. But that is only because
he has misidentified which cultural war is occurring there. A recent visit to
Azerbaijan made clear to me that Azeri Turks, the world's most secular Shi'ite
Muslims, see their cultural identity in terms not of religion but of their
Turkic race. The Armenians, likewise, fight the Azeris not because the latter
are Muslims but because they are Turks, related to the same Turks who massacred
Armenians in 1915. Turkic culture (secular and based on languages employing a
Latin script) is battling Iranian culture (religiously militant as defined by
Tehran, and wedded to an Arabic script) across the whole swath of Central Asia
and the Caucasus. The Armenians are, therefore, natural allies of their fellow
Indo-Europeans the Iranians.
Huntington is correct that the Caucasus is a flashpoint of cultural and racial
war. But, as Ajami observes, Huntington's plate tectonics are too simple. Two
months of recent travel throughout Turkey revealed to me that although the
Turks are developing a deep distrust, bordering on hatred, of fellow-Muslim
Iran, they are also, especially in the shantytowns that are coming to dominate
Turkish public opinion, revising their group identity, increasingly seeing
themselves as Muslims being deserted by a West that does little to help
besieged Muslims in Bosnia and that attacks Turkish Muslims in the streets of
Germany.
In other words, the Balkans, a powder keg for nation-state war at the beginning
of the twentieth century, could be a powder keg for cultural war at the turn of
the twenty-first: between Orthodox Christianity (represented by the Serbs and a
classic Byzantine configuration of Greeks, Russians, and Romanians) and the
House of Islam. Yet in the Caucasus that House of Islam is falling into a clash
between Turkic and Iranian civilizations. Ajami asserts that this very
subdivision, not to mention all the divisions within the Arab world, indicates
that the West, including the United States, is not threatened by Huntington's
scenario. As the Gulf War demonstrated, the West has proved capable of playing
one part of the House of Islam against another.
True. However, whether he is aware of it or not, Ajami is describing a world
even more dangerous than the one Huntington envisions, especially when one
takes into account Homer-Dixon's research on environmental scarcity. Outside
the stretch limo would be a rundown, crowded planet of skinhead Cossacks and
juju warriors, influenced by the worst refuse of Western pop culture and
ancient tribal hatreds, and battling over scraps of overused earth in guerrilla
conflicts that ripple across continents and intersect in no discernible
pattern--meaning there's no easy-to-define threat. Kennan's world of one
adversary seems as distant as the world of Herodotus.
Most people believe that the political earth since 1989 has undergone immense
change. But it is minor compared with what is yet to come. The breaking apart
and remaking of the atlas is only now beginning. The crack-up of the Soviet
empire and the coming end of Arab-Israeli military confrontation are merely
prologues to the really big changes that lie ahead. Michael Vlahos, a
long-range thinker for the U.S. Navy, warns, "We are not in charge of the
environment and the world is not following us. It is going in many directions.
Do not assume that democratic capitalism is the last word in human social
evolution."
Before addressing the questions of maps and of warfare, I want to take a closer
look at the interaction of religion, culture, demographic shifts, and the
distribution of natural resources in a specific area of the world: the Middle
East.
The Past Is Dead
Built on steep, muddy hills, the shantytowns of Ankara, the Turkish capital,
exude visual drama. Altindag, or "Golden Mountain," is a pyramid of dreams,
fashioned from cinder blocks and corrugated iron, rising as though each shack
were built on top of another, all reaching awkwardly and painfully toward
heaven--the heaven of wealthier Turks who live elsewhere in the city. Nowhere
else on the planet have I found such a poignant architectural symbol of man's
striving, with gaps in house walls plugged with rusted cans, and leeks and
onions growing on verandas assembled from planks of rotting wood. For reasons
that I will explain, the Turkish shacktown is a psychological universe away
from the African one.
To see the twenty-first century truly, one's eyes must learn a different set of
aesthetics. One must reject the overly stylized images of travel magazines,
with their inviting photographs of exotic villages and glamorous downtowns.
There are far too many millions whose dreams are more vulgar, more real--whose
raw energies and desires will overwhelm the visions of the elites, remaking the
future into something frighteningly new. But in Turkey I learned that
shantytowns are not all bad.
Slum quarters in Abidjan terrify and repel the outsider. In Turkey it is the
opposite. The closer I got to Golden Mountain the better it looked, and the
safer I felt. I had $1,500 worth of Turkish lira in one pocket and $1,000 in
traveler's checks in the other, yet I felt no fear. Golden Mountain was a real
neighborhood. The inside of one house told the story: The architectural bedlam
of cinder block and sheet metal and cardboard walls was deceiving. Inside was a
home--order, that is, bespeaking dignity. I saw a working refrigerator, a
television, a wall cabinet with a few books and lots of family pictures, a few
plants by a window, and a stove. Though the streets become rivers of mud when
it rains, the floors inside this house were spotless.
Other houses were like this too. Schoolchildren ran along with briefcases
strapped to their backs, trucks delivered cooking gas, a few men sat inside a
cafe sipping tea. One man sipped beer. Alcohol is easy to obtain in Turkey, a
secular state where 99 percent of the population is Muslim. Yet there is little
problem of alcoholism. Crime against persons is infinitesimal. Poverty and
illiteracy are watered-down versions of what obtains in Algeria and Egypt (to
say nothing of West Africa), making it that much harder for religious
extremists to gain a foothold.
My point in bringing up a rather wholesome, crime-free slum is this: its
existence demonstrates how formidable is the fabric of which Turkish Muslim
culture is made. A culture this strong has the potential to dominate the Middle
East once again. Slums are litmus tests for innate cultural strengths and
weaknesses. Those peoples whose cultures can harbor extensive slum life without
decomposing will be, relatively speaking, the future's winners. Those whose
cultures cannot will be the future's victims. Slums--in the sociological
sense--do not exist in Turkish cities. The mortar between people and family
groups is stronger here than in Africa. Resurgent Islam and Turkic cultural
identity have produced a civilization with natural muscle tone. Turks,
history's perennial nomads, take disruption in stride.
The future of the Middle East is quietly being written inside the heads of
Golden Mountain's inhabitants. Think of an Ottoman military encampment on the
eve of the destruction of Greek Constantinople in 1453. That is Golden
Mountain. "We brought the village here. But in the village we worked harder--in
the field, all day. So we couldn't fast during [the holy month of] Ramadan.
Here we fast. Here we are more religious." Aishe Tanrikulu, along with half a
dozen other women, was stuffing rice into vine leaves from a crude plastic
bowl. She asked me to join her under the shade of a piece of sheet metal. Each
of these women had her hair covered by a kerchief. In the city they were
encountering television for the first time. "We are traditional, religious
people. The programs offend us," Aishe said. Another woman complained about the
schools. Though her children had educational options unavailable in the
village, they had to compete with wealthier, secular Turks. "The kids from rich
families with connections--they get all the places." More opportunities, more
tensions, in other words.
My guidebook to Golden Mountain was an untypical one: Tales From the Garbage
Hills, a brutally realistic novel by a Turkish writer, Latife Tekin, about life
in the shantytowns, which in Turkey are called gecekondus ("built in a night").
"He listened to the earth and wept unceasingly for water, for work and for the
cure of the illnesses spread by the garbage and the factory waste," Tekin
writes. In the most revealing passage of Tales From the Garbage Hills the
squatters are told "about a certain 'Ottoman Empire' . . . that where they now
lived there had once been an empire of this name." This history "confounded"
the squatters. It was the first they had heard of it. Though one of them knew
"that his grandfather and his dog died fighting the Greeks," nationalism and an
encompassing sense of Turkish history are the province of the Turkish middle
and upper classes, and of foreigners like me who feel required to have a notion
of "Turkey."
But what did the Golden Mountain squatters know about the armies of Turkish
migrants that had come before their own--namely, Seljuks and Ottomans? For
these recently urbanized peasants, and their counterparts in Africa, the Arab
world, India, and so many other places, the world is new, to adapt V. S.
Naipaul's phrase. As Naipaul wrote of urban refugees in India: A Wounded
Civilization, "They saw themselves at the beginning of things: unaccommodated
men making a claim on their land for the first time, and out of chaos evolving
their own philosophy of community and self-help. For them the past was dead;
they had left it behind in the villages."
Everywhere in the developing world at the turn of the twenty-first century
these new men and women, rushing into the cities, are remaking civilizations
and redefining their identities in terms of religion and tribal ethnicity which
do not coincide with the borders of existing states.
In Turkey several things are happening at once. In 1980, 44 percent of Turks
lived in cities; in 1990 it was 61 percent. By the year 2000 the figure is
expected to be 67 percent. Villages are emptying out as concentric rings of
gecekondu developments grow around Turkish cities. This is the real political
and demographic revolution in Turkey and elsewhere, and foreign correspondents
usually don't write about it.
Whereas rural poverty is age-old and almost a "normal" part of the social
fabric, urban poverty is socially destabilizing. As Iran has shown, Islamic
extremism is the psychological defense mechanism of many urbanized peasants
threatened with the loss of traditions in pseudo-modern cities where their
values are under attack, where basic services like water and electricity are
unavailable, and where they are assaulted by a physically unhealthy
environment. The American ethnologist and orientalist Carleton Stevens Coon
wrote in 1951 that Islam "has made possible the optimum survival and happiness
of millions of human beings in an increasingly impoverished environment over a
fourteen-hundred-year period." Beyond its stark, clearly articulated message,
Islam's very militancy makes it attractive to the downtrodden. It is the one
religion that is prepared to fight. A political era driven by environmental
stress, increased cultural sensitivity, unregulated urbanization, and refugee
migrations is an era divinely created for the spread and intensification of
Islam, already the world's fastest-growing religion. (Though Islam is spreading
in West Africa, it is being hobbled by syncretization with animism: this makes
new converts less apt to become anti-Western extremists, but it also makes for
a weakened version of the faith, which is less effective as an antidote to
crime.)
In Turkey, however, Islam is painfully and awkwardly forging a consensus with
modernization, a trend that is less apparent in the Arab and Persian worlds
(and virtually invisible in Africa). In Iran the oil boom--because it put
development and urbanization on a fast track, making the culture shock more
intense--fueled the 1978 Islamic Revolution. But Turkey, unlike Iran and the
Arab world, has little oil. Therefore its development and urbanization have
been more gradual. Islamists have been integrated into the parliamentary system
for decades. The tensions I noticed in Golden Mountain are natural, creative
ones: the kind immigrants face the world over. While the world has focused on
religious perversity in Algeria, a nation rich in natural gas, and in Egypt,
parts of whose capital city, Cairo, evince worse crowding than I have seen even
in Calcutta, Turkey has been living through the Muslim equivalent of the
Protestant Reformation.
Resource distribution is strengthening Turks in another way vis-a-vis Arabs and
Persians. Turks may have little oil, but their Anatolian heartland has lots of
water--the most important fluid of the twenty-first century. Turkey's Southeast
Anatolia Project, involving twenty-two major dams and irrigation systems, is
impounding the waters of the Tigris and Euphrates rivers. Much of the water
that Arabs and perhaps Israelis will need to drink in the future is controlled
by Turks. The project's centerpiece is the mile-wide, sixteen-story Ataturk
Dam, upon which are emblazoned the words of modern Turkey's founder: "Ne Mutlu
Turkum Diyene" ("Lucky is the one who is a Turk").
Unlike Egypt's Aswan High Dam, on the Nile, and Syria's Revolution Dam, on the
Euphrates, both of which were built largely by Russians, the Ataturk Dam is a
predominantly Turkish affair, with Turkish engineers and companies in charge.
On a recent visit my eyes took in the immaculate offices and their gardens, the
high-voltage electric grids and phone switching stations, the dizzying sweep of
giant humming transformers, the poured-concrete spillways, and the prim
unfolding suburbia, complete with schools, for dam employees. The emerging
power of the Turks was palpable.
Erduhan Bayindir, the site manager at the dam, told me that "while oil can be
shipped abroad to enrich only elites, water has to be spread more evenly within
the society. . . . It is true, we can stop the flow of water into Syria and
Iraq for up to eight months without the same water overflowing our dams, in
order to regulate their political behavior."
Power is certainly moving north in the Middle East, from the oil fields of
Dhahran, on the Persian Gulf, to the water plain of Harran, in southern
Anatolia--near the site of the Ataturk Dam. But will the nation-state of
Turkey, as presently constituted, be the inheritor of this wealth?
I very much doubt it.
The Lies of Mapmakers
Whereas West Africa represents the least stable part of political reality
outside Homer-Dixon's stretch limo, Turkey, an organic outgrowth of two Turkish
empires that ruled Anatolia for 850 years, has been among the most stable.
Turkey's borders were established not by colonial powers but in a war of
independence, in the early 1920s. Kemal Ataturk provided Turkey with a secular
nation-building myth that most Arab and African states, burdened by
artificially drawn borders, lack. That lack will leave many Arab states
defenseless against a wave of Islam that will eat away at their legitimacy and
frontiers in coming years. Yet even as regards Turkey, maps deceive.
It is not only African shantytowns that don't appear on urban maps. Many
shantytowns in Turkey and elsewhere are also missing--as are the considerable
territories controlled by guerrilla armies and urban mafias. Traveling with
Eritrean guerrillas in what, according to the map, was northern Ethiopia,
traveling in "northern Iraq" with Kurdish guerrillas, and staying in a hotel in
the Caucasus controlled by a local mafia--to say nothing of my experiences in
West Africa--led me to develop a healthy skepticism toward maps, which, I began
to realize, create a conceptual barrier that prevents us from comprehending the
political crack-up just beginning to occur worldwide.
Consider the map of the world, with its 190 or so countries, each signified by
a bold and uniform color: this map, with which all of us have grown up, is
generally an invention of modernism, specifically of European colonialism.
Modernism, in the sense of which I speak, began with the rise of nation-states
in Europe and was confirmed by the death of feudalism at the end of the Thirty
Years' War--an event that was interposed between the Renaissance and the
Enlightenment, which together gave birth to modern science. People were
suddenly flush with an enthusiasm to categorize, to define. The map, based on
scientific techniques of measurement, offered a way to classify new national
organisms, making a jigsaw puzzle of neat pieces without transition zones
between them. Frontier is itself a modern concept that didn't exist in the
feudal mind. And as European nations carved out far-flung domains at the same
time that print technology was making the reproduction of maps cheaper,
cartography came into its own as a way of creating facts by ordering the way we
look at the world.
In his book Imagined Communities: Reflections on the Origin and Spread of
Nationalism, Benedict Anderson, of Cornell University, demonstrates that the
map enabled colonialists to think about their holdings in terms of a
"totalizing classificatory grid. . . . It was bounded, determinate, and
therefore--in principle--countable." To the colonialist, country maps were the
equivalent of an accountant's ledger books. Maps, Anderson explains, "shaped
the grammar" that would make possible such questionable concepts as Iraq,
Indonesia, Sierra Leone, and Nigeria. The state, recall, is a purely Western
notion, one that until the twentieth century applied to countries covering only
three percent of the earth's land area. Nor is the evidence compelling that the
state, as a governing ideal, can be successfully transported to areas outside
the industrialized world. Even the United States of America, in the words of
one of our best living poets, Gary Snyder, consists of "arbitrary and
inaccurate impositions on what is really here."
Yet this inflexible, artificial reality staggers on, not only in the United
Nations but in various geographic and travel publications (themselves
by-products of an age of elite touring which colonialism made possible) that
still report on and photograph the world according to "country." Newspapers,
this magazine, and this writer are not innocent of the tendency.
According to the map, the great hydropower complex emblemized by the Ataturk
Dam is situated in Turkey. Forget the map. This southeastern region of Turkey
is populated almost completely by Kurds. About half of the world's 20 million
Kurds live in "Turkey." The Kurds are predominant in an ellipse of territory
that overlaps not only with Turkey but also with Iraq, Iran, Syria, and the
former Soviet Union. The Western-enforced Kurdish enclave in northern Iraq, a
consequence of the 1991 Gulf War, has already exposed the fictitious nature of
that supposed nation-state.
On a recent visit to the Turkish-Iranian border, it occurred to me what a risky
idea the nation-state is. Here I was on the legal fault line between two
clashing civilizations, Turkic and Iranian. Yet the reality was more subtle: as
in West Africa, the border was porous and smuggling abounded, but here the
people doing the smuggling, on both sides of the border, were Kurds. In such a
moonscape, over which peoples have migrated and settled in patterns that
obliterate borders, the end of the Cold War will bring on a cruel process of
natural selection among existing states. No longer will these states be so
firmly propped up by the West or the Soviet Union. Because the Kurds overlap
with nearly everybody in the Middle East, on account of their being cheated out
of a state in the post-First World War peace treaties, they are emerging, in
effect, as the natural selector--the ultimate reality check. They have
destabilized Iraq and may continue to disrupt states that do not offer them
adequate breathing space, while strengthening states that do.
Because the Turks, owing to their water resources, their growing economy, and
the social cohesion evinced by the most crime-free slums I have encountered,
are on the verge of big-power status, and because the 10 million Kurds within
Turkey threaten that status, the outcome of the Turkish-Kurdish dispute will be
more critical to the future of the Middle East than the eventual outcome of the
recent Israeli-Palestinian agreement.
America's fascination with the Israeli-Palestinian issue, coupled with its lack
of interest in the Turkish-Kurdish one, is a function of its own domestic and
ethnic obsessions, not of the cartographic reality that is about to transform
the Middle East. The diplomatic process involving Israelis and Palestinians
will, I believe, have little effect on the early- and mid-twenty-first-century
map of the region. Israel, with a 6.6 percent economic growth rate based
increasingly on high-tech exports, is about to enter Homer-Dixon's stretch
limo, fortified by a well-defined political community that is an organic
outgrowth of history and ethnicity. Like prosperous and peaceful Japan on the
one hand, and war-torn and poverty-wracked Armenia on the other, Israel is a
classic national-ethnic organism. Much of the Arab world, however, will undergo
alteration, as Islam spreads across artificial frontiers, fueled by mass
migrations into the cities and a soaring birth rate of more than 3.2 percent.
Seventy percent of the Arab population has been born since 1970--youths with
little historical memory of anticolonial independence struggles, postcolonial
attempts at nation-building, or any of the Arab-Israeli wars. The most distant
recollection of these youths will be the West's humiliation of colonially
invented Iraq in 1991. Today seventeen out of twenty-two Arab states have a
declining gross national product; in the next twenty years, at current growth
rates, the population of many Arab countries will double. These states, like
most African ones, will be ungovernable through conventional secular
ideologies. The Middle East analyst Christine M. Helms explains, "Declaring
Arab nationalism "bankrupt," the political "disinherited" are not rationalizing
the failure of Arabism . . . or reformulating it. Alternative solutions are not
contemplated. They have simply opted for the political paradigm at the other
end of the political spectrum with which they are familiar--Islam."
Like the borders of West Africa, the colonial borders of Syria, Iraq, Jordan,
Algeria, and other Arab states are often contrary to cultural and political
reality. As state control mechanisms wither in the face of environmental and
demographic stress, "hard" Islamic city-states or shantytown-states are likely
to emerge. The fiction that the impoverished city of Algiers, on the
Mediterranean, controls Tamanrasset, deep in the Algerian Sahara, cannot obtain
forever. Whatever the outcome of the peace process, Israel is destined to be a
Jewish ethnic fortress amid a vast and volatile realm of Islam. In that realm,
the violent youth culture of the Gaza shantytowns may be indicative of the
coming era.
The destiny of Turks and Kurds is far less certain, but far more relevant to
the kind of map that will explain our future world. The Kurds suggest a
geographic reality that cannot be shown in two-dimensional space. The issue in
Turkey is not simply a matter of giving autonomy or even independence to Kurds
in the southeast. This isn't the Balkans or the Caucasus, where regions are
merely subdividing into smaller units, Abkhazia breaking off from Georgia, and
so on. Federalism is not the answer. Kurds are found everywhere in Turkey,
including the shanty districts of Istanbul and Ankara. Turkey's problem is that
its Anatolian land mass is the home of two cultures and languages, Turkish and
Kurdish. Identity in Turkey, as in India, Africa, and elsewhere, is more
complex and subtle than conventional cartography can display.
A New Kind of War
To appreciate fully the political and cartographic implications of
postmodernism--an epoch of themeless juxtapositions, in which the
classificatory grid of nation-states is going to be replaced by a jagged-glass
pattern of city-states, shanty-states, nebulous and anarchic regionalisms--it
is necessary to consider, finally, the whole question of war.
"Oh, what a relief to fight, to fight enemies who defend themselves, enemies
who are awake!" Andre Malraux wrote in Man's Fate. I cannot think of a more
suitable battle cry for many combatants in the early decades of the
twenty-first century. The intense savagery of the fighting in such diverse
cultural settings as Liberia, Bosnia, the Caucasus, and Sri Lanka--to say
nothing of what obtains in American inner cities--indicates something very
troubling that those of us inside the stretch limo, concerned with issues like
middle-class entitlements and the future of interactive cable television, lack
the stomach to contemplate. It is this: a large number of people on this
planet, to whom the comfort and stability of a middle-class life is utterly
unknown, find war and a barracks existence a step up rather than a step down.
"Just as it makes no sense to ask 'why people eat' or 'what they sleep for,'"
writes Martin van Creveld, a military historian at the Hebrew University in
Jerusalem, in The Transformation of War, "so fighting in many ways is not a
means but an end. Throughout history, for every person who has expressed his
horror of war there is another who found in it the most marvelous of all the
experiences that are vouchsafed to man, even to the point that he later spent a
lifetime boring his descendants by recounting his exploits." When I asked
Pentagon officials about the nature of war in the twenty-first century, the
answer I frequently got was "Read Van Creveld." The top brass are enamored of
this historian not because his writings justify their existence but, rather,
the opposite: Van Creveld warns them that huge state military machines like the
Pentagon's are dinosaurs about to go extinct, and that something far more
terrible awaits us.
The degree to which Van Creveld's Transformation of War complements
Homer-Dixon's work on the environment, Huntington's thoughts on cultural clash,
my own realizations in traveling by foot, bus, and bush taxi in more than sixty
countries, and America's sobering comeuppances in intractable-culture zones
like Haiti and Somalia is startling. The book begins by demolishing the notion
that men don't like to fight. "By compelling the senses to focus themselves on
the here and now," Van Creveld writes, war "can cause a man to take his leave
of them." As anybody who has had experience with Chetniks in Serbia,
"technicals" in Somalia, Tontons Macoutes in Haiti, or soldiers in Sierra Leone
can tell you, in places where the Western Enlightenment has not penetrated and
where there has always been mass poverty, people find liberation in violence.
In Afghanistan and elsewhere, I vicariously experienced this phenomenon:
worrying about mines and ambushes frees you from worrying about mundane details
of daily existence. If my own experience is too subjective, there is a wealth
of data showing the sheer frequency of war, especially in the developing world
since the Second World War. Physical aggression is a part of being human. Only
when people attain a certain economic, educational, and cultural standard is
this trait tranquilized. In light of the fact that 95 percent of the earth's
population growth will be in the poorest areas of the globe, the question is
not whether there will be war (there will be a lot of it) but what kind of war.
And who will fight whom?
Debunking the great military strategist Carl von Clausewitz, Van Creveld, who
may be the most original thinker on war since that early-nineteenth-century
Prussian, writes, "Clausewitz's ideas . . . were wholly rooted in the fact
that, ever since 1648, war had been waged overwhelmingly by states." But, as
Van Creveld explains, the period of nation-states and, therefore, of state
conflict is now ending, and with it the clear "threefold division into
government, army, and people" which state-directed wars enforce. Thus, to see
the future, the first step is to look back to the past immediately prior to the
birth of modernism--the wars in medieval Europe which began during the
Reformation and reached their culmination in the Thirty Years' War.
Van Creveld writes, "In all these struggles political, social, economic, and
religious motives were hopelessly entangled. Since this was an age when armies
consisted of mercenaries, all were also attended by swarms of military
entrepreneurs. . . . Many of them paid little but lip service to the
organizations for whom they had contracted to fight. Instead, they robbed the
countryside on their own behalf. . . ."
"Given such conditions, any fine distinctions . . . between armies on the one
hand and peoples on the other were bound to break down. Engulfed by war,
civilians suffered terrible atrocities."
Back then, in other words, there was no Politics as we have come to
understand the term, just as there is less and less Politics today in
Liberia, Sierra Leone, Somalia, Sri Lanka, the Balkans, and the Caucasus, among
other places.
Because, as Van Creveld notes, the radius of trust within tribal societies is
narrowed to one's immediate family and guerrilla comrades, truces arranged with
one Bosnian commander, say, may be broken immediately by another Bosnian
commander. The plethora of short-lived ceasefires in the Balkans and the
Caucasus constitute proof that we are no longer in a world where the old rules
of state warfare apply. More evidence is provided by the destruction of
medieval monuments in the Croatian port of Dubrovnik: when cultures, rather
than states, fight, then cultural and religious monuments are weapons of war,
making them fair game.
Also, war-making entities will no longer be restricted to a specific territory.
Loose and shadowy organisms such as Islamic terrorist organizations suggest why
borders will mean increasingly little and sedimentary layers of tribalistic
identity and control will mean more. "From the vantage point of the present,
there appears every prospect that religious . . . fanaticisms will play a
larger role in the motivation of armed conflict" in the West than at any time
"for the last 300 years," Van Creveld writes. This is why analysts like Michael
Vlahos are closely monitoring religious cults. Vlahos says, "An ideology that
challenges us may not take familiar form, like the old Nazis or Commies. It may
not even engage us initially in ways that fit old threat markings." Van Creveld
concludes, "Armed conflict will be waged by men on earth, not robots in space.
It will have more in common with the struggles of primitive tribes than with
large-scale conventional war." While another military historian, John Keegan,
in his new book A History of Warfare, draws a more benign portrait of primitive
man, it is important to point out that what Van Creveld really means is
re-primitivized man: warrior societies operating at a time of unprecedented
resource scarcity and planetary overcrowding.
Van Creveld's pre-Westphalian vision of worldwide low-intensity conflict is not
a superficial "back to the future" scenario. First of all, technology will be
used toward primitive ends. In Liberia the guerrilla leader Prince Johnson
didn't just cut off the ears of President Samuel Doe before Doe was tortured to
death in 1990--Johnson made a video of it, which has circulated throughout West
Africa. In December of 1992, when plotters of a failed coup against the
Strasser regime in Sierra Leone had their ears cut off at Freetown's Hamilton
Beach prior to being killed, it was seen by many to be a copycat execution.
Considering, as I've explained earlier, that the Strasser regime is not really
a government and that Sierra Leone is not really a nation-state, listen closely
to Van Creveld: "Once the legal monopoly of armed force, long claimed by the
state, is wrested out of its hands, existing distinctions between war and crime
will break down much as is already the case today in . . . Lebanon, Sri Lanka,
El Salvador, Peru, or Colombia."
If crime and war become indistinguishable, then "national defense" may in the
future be viewed as a local concept. As crime continues to grow in our cities
and the ability of state governments and criminal-justice systems to protect
their citizens diminishes, urban crime may, according to Van Creveld, "develop
into low-intensity conflict by coalescing along racial, religious, social, and
political lines." As small-scale violence multiplies at home and abroad, state
armies will continue to shrink, being gradually replaced by a booming private
security business, as in West Africa, and by urban mafias, especially in the
former communist world, who may be better equipped than municipal police forces
to grant physical protection to local inhabitants.
Future wars will be those of communal survival, aggravated or, in many cases,
caused by environmental scarcity. These wars will be subnational, meaning that
it will be hard for states and local governments to protect their own citizens
physically. This is how many states will ultimately die. As state power
fades--and with it the state's ability to help weaker groups within society,
not to mention other states--peoples and cultures around the world will be
thrown back upon their own strengths and weaknesses, with fewer equalizing
mechanisms to protect them. Whereas the distant future will probably see the
emergence of a racially hybrid, globalized man, the coming decades will see us
more aware of our differences than of our similarities. To the average person,
political values will mean less, personal security more. The belief that we are
all equal is liable to be replaced by the overriding obsession of the ancient
Greek travelers: Why the differences between peoples?
The Last Map
In Geography and the Human Spirit, Anne Buttimer, a professor at University
College, Dublin, recalls the work of an early-nineteenth-century German
geographer, Carl Ritter, whose work implied "a divine plan for humanity" based
on regionalism and a constant, living flow of forms. The map of the future, to
the extent that a map is even possible, will represent a perverse twisting of
Ritter's vision. Imagine cartography in three dimensions, as if in a hologram.
In this hologram would be the overlapping sediments of group and other
identities atop the merely two-dimensional color markings of city-states and
the remaining nations, themselves confused in places by shadowy tentacles,
hovering overhead, indicating the power of drug cartels, mafias, and private
security agencies. Instead of borders, there would be moving "centers" of
power, as in the Middle Ages. Many of these layers would be in motion.
Replacing fixed and abrupt lines on a flat space would be a shifting pattern of
buffer entities, like the Kurdish and Azeri buffer entities between Turkey and
Iran, the Turkic Uighur buffer entity between Central Asia and Inner China
(itself distinct from coastal China), and the Latino buffer entity replacing a
precise U.S.-Mexican border. To this protean cartographic hologram one must add
other factors, such as migrations of populations, explosions of birth rates,
vectors of disease. Henceforward the map of the world will never be static.
This future map--in a sense, the "Last Map"--will be an ever-mutating
representation of chaos.
The Indian subcontinent offers examples of what is happening. For different
reasons, both India and Pakistan are increasingly dysfunctional. The argument
over democracy in these places is less and less relevant to the larger issue of
governability. In India's case the question arises, Is one unwieldy bureaucracy
in New Delhi the best available mechanism for promoting the lives of 866
million people of diverse languages, religions, and ethnic groups? In 1950,
when the Indian population was much less than half as large and nation-building
idealism was still strong, the argument for democracy was more impressive than
it is now. Given that in 2025 India's population could be close to 1.5 billion,
that much of its economy rests on a shrinking natural-resource base, including
dramatically declining water levels, and that communal violence and
urbanization are spiraling upward, it is difficult to imagine that the Indian
state will survive the next century. India's oft-trumpeted Green Revolution has
been achieved by overworking its croplands and depleting its watershed. Norman
Myers, a British development consultant, worries that Indians have "been
feeding themselves today by borrowing against their children's food sources."
Pakistan's problem is more basic still: like much of Africa, the country makes
no geographic or demographic sense. It was founded as a homeland for the
Muslims of the subcontinent, yet there are more subcontinental Muslims outside
Pakistan than within it. Like Yugoslavia, Pakistan is a patchwork of ethnic
groups, increasingly in violent conflict with one another. While the Western
media gushes over the fact that the country has a woman Prime Minister, Benazir
Bhutto, Karachi is becoming a subcontinental version of Lagos. In eight visits
to Pakistan, I have never gotten a sense of a cohesive national identity. With
as much as 65 percent of its land dependent on intensive irrigation, with
wide-scale deforestation, and with a yearly population growth of 2.7 percent
(which ensures that the amount of cultivated land per rural inhabitant will
plummet), Pakistan is becoming a more and more desperate place. As irrigation
in the Indus River basin intensifies to serve two growing populations,
Muslim-Hindu strife over falling water tables may be unavoidable.
"India and Pakistan will probably fall apart," Homer-Dixon predicts. "Their
secular governments have less and less legitimacy as well as less management
ability over people and resources." Rather than one bold line dividing the
subcontinent into two parts, the future will likely see a lot of thinner lines
and smaller parts, with the ethnic entities of Pakhtunistan and Punjab
gradually replacing Pakistan in the space between the Central Asian plateau and
the heart of the subcontinent.
None of this even takes into account climatic change, which, if it occurs in
the next century, will further erode the capacity of existing states to cope.
India, for instance, receives 70 percent of its precipitation from the monsoon
cycle, which planetary warming could disrupt.
Not only will the three-dimensional aspects of the Last Map be in constant
motion, but its two-dimensional base may change too. The National Academy of
Sciences reports that "as many as one billion people, or 20 per cent of the
world's population, live on lands likely to be inundated or dramatically
changed by rising waters. . . . Low-lying countries in the developing world
such as Egypt and Bangladesh, where rivers are large and the deltas extensive
and densely populated, will be hardest hit. . . . Where the rivers are dammed,
as in the case of the Nile, the effects . . . will be especially severe."
Egypt could be where climatic upheaval--to say nothing of the more immediate
threat of increasing population--will incite religious upheaval in truly
biblical fashion. Natural catastrophes, such as the October, 1992, Cairo
earthquake, in which the government failed to deliver relief aid and slum
residents were in many instances helped by their local mosques, can only
strengthen the position of Islamic factions. In a statement about greenhouse
warming which could refer to any of a variety of natural catastrophes, the
environmental expert Jessica Tuchman Matthews warns that many of us
underestimate the extent to which political systems, in affluent societies as
well as in places like Egypt, "depend on the underpinning of natural systems."
She adds, "The fact that one can move with ease from Vermont to Miami has
nothing to say about the consequences of Vermont acquiring Miami's climate."
Indeed, it is not clear that the United States will survive the next century in
exactly its present form. Because America is a multi-ethnic society, the
nation-state has always been more fragile here than it is in more homogeneous
societies like Germany and Japan. James Kurth, in an article published in The
National Interest in 1992, explains that whereas nation-state societies tend to
be built around a mass-conscription army and a standardized public school
system, "multicultural regimes" feature a high-tech, all-volunteer army (and, I
would add, private schools that teach competing values), operating in a culture
in which the international media and entertainment industry has more influence
than the "national political class." In other words, a nation-state is a place
where everyone has been educated along similar lines, where people take their
cue from national leaders, and where everyone (every male, at least) has gone
through the crucible of military service, making patriotism a simpler issue.
Writing about his immigrant family in turn-of-the-century Chicago, Saul Bellow
states, "The country took us over. It was a country then, not a collection of
'cultures.'"
During the Second World War and the decade following it, the United States
reached its apogee as a classic nation-state. During the 1960s, as is now
clear, America began a slow but unmistakable process of transformation. The
signs hardly need belaboring: racial polarity, educational dysfunction, social
fragmentation of many and various kinds. William Irwin Thompson, in Passages
About Earth: An Exploration of the New Planetary Culture, writes, "The
educational system that had worked on the Jews or the Irish could no longer
work on the blacks; and when Jewish teachers in New York tried to take black
children away from their parents exactly in the way they had been taken from
theirs, they were shocked to encounter a violent affirmation of negritude."
Issues like West Africa could yet emerge as a new kind of foreign-policy issue,
further eroding America's domestic peace. The spectacle of several West African
nations collapsing at once could reinforce the worst racial stereotypes here at
home. That is another reason why Africa matters. We must not kid ourselves: the
sensitivity factor is higher than ever. The Washington, D.C., public school
system is already experimenting with an Afrocentric curriculum. Summits between
African leaders and prominent African-Americans are becoming frequent, as are
Pollyanna-ish prognostications about multiparty elections in Africa that do not
factor in crime, surging birth rates, and resource depletion. The Congressional
Black Caucus was among those urging U.S. involvement in Somalia and in Haiti.
At the Los Angeles Times minority staffers have protested against, among other
things, what they allege to be the racist tone of the newspaper's Africa
coverage, allegations that the editor of the "World Report" section, Dan
Fisher, denies, saying essentially that Africa should be viewed through the
same rigorous analytical lens as other parts of the world.
Africa may be marginal in terms of conventional late-twentieth-century
conceptions of strategy, but in an age of cultural and racial clash, when
national defense is increasingly local, Africa's distress will exert a
destabilizing influence on the United States.
This and many other factors will make the United States less of a nation than
it is today, even as it gains territory following the peaceful dissolution of
Canada. Quebec, based on the bedrock of Roman Catholicism and Francophone
ethnicity, could yet turn out to be North America's most cohesive and
crime-free nation-state. (It may be a smaller Quebec, though, since aboriginal
peoples may lop off northern parts of the province.) "Patriotism" will become
increasingly regional as people in Alberta and Montana discover that they have
far more in common with each other than they do with Ottawa or Washington, and
Spanish-speakers in the Southwest discover a greater commonality with Mexico
City. (The Nine Nations of North America, by Joel Garreau, a book about the
continent's regionalization, is more relevant now than when it was published,
in 1981.) As Washington's influence wanes, and with it the traditional symbols
of American patriotism, North Americans will take psychological refuge in their
insulated communities and cultures.
Returning from West Africa last fall was an illuminating ordeal. After leaving
Abidjan, my Air Afrique flight landed in Dakar, Senegal, where all passengers
had to disembark in order to go through another security check, this one
demanded by U.S. authorities before they would permit the flight to set out for
New York. Once we were in New York, despite the midnight hour, immigration
officials at Kennedy Airport held up disembarkation by conducting quick
interrogations of the aircraft's passengers--this was in addition to all the
normal immigration and customs procedures. It was apparent that drug smuggling,
disease, and other factors had contributed to the toughest security procedures
I have ever encountered when returning from overseas.
Then, for the first time in over a month, I spotted businesspeople with attache
cases and laptop computers. When I had left New York for Abidjan, all the
businesspeople were boarding planes for Seoul and Tokyo, which departed from
gates near Air Afrique's. The only non-Africans off to West Africa had been
relief workers in T-shirts and khakis. Although the borders within West Africa
are increasingly unreal, those separating West Africa from the outside world
are in various ways becoming more impenetrable.
But Afrocentrists are right in one respect: we ignore this dying region at our
own risk. When the Berlin Wall was falling, in November of 1989, I happened to
be in Kosovo, covering a riot between Serbs and Albanians. The future was in
Kosovo, I told myself that night, not in Berlin. The same day that Yitzhak
Rabin and Yasser Arafat clasped hands on the White House lawn, my Air Afrique
plane was approaching Bamako, Mali, revealing corrugated-zinc shacks at the
edge of an expanding desert. The real news wasn't at the White House, I
realized. It was right below.
Copyright © 1994,The Atlantic Monthly Company. All rights
reserved.
The Atlantic Monthly; February 1994; The Coming Anarchy; Volume 273, No. 2;
pages 44-76.
|