But What About Serbia?

by Joshua Foust on 8/12/2008 · 11 comments

Thomas Barnett has quite a history to overcome when analyzing political events. In his books, which advocate unending war against the poor, he has written off the non-military angles of the wars the U.S. fights as “they just need more diplomacy,” while claiming that Iraq would have been a raging success if President Bush had just been more charming so we could have had 40,000 troops from Russia, China, and India… each. And that simply having more international, non-Muslim troops would have somehow avoided the insurgency (Afghanistan rarely if ever makes it into his lengthier expositions, as he relies on brief quips on his blog to substitute for serious thinking about why an actually international occupational war of connection, or whatever it is he calls those things, is currently failing). Barnett has seriously advocated the forcible annexation of post-Castro Cuba as well, and sees little moral issue with states aggressively expanding their territory.

But Barnett’s sins go much deeper. In Blueprint for Action, which contains a rather disquieting section in which he fantasizes about which countries to invade and occupy first, he highlights the Balkans as the model by which the International community should intervene in civil wars and “fix” countries. He envisions the UNSC acting as a kind of grand jury, the U.S. as executioner, and a magical international force composed mostly of Europeans then moves in for the really difficult nation-building and counterinsurgency work that inevitably follows. The former leaders of said “fixed” country then face war criminal charges at the Hague.

Of course this didn’t really work out too well in Serbia… or anywhere else, for that matter. The actual war criminals roamed free for years, some as much as a decade or more, before being caught. And the politics of the Hague make it unlikely any will ever face actual justice for their crimes. While it is nice to see Sarajevo is no longer the hellhole it was in 1993, the Balkans could hardly be called “settled.” Nearly a decade after the NATO-led war there, and even after its halfway-recognized independence, Kosovo still has tens of thousands of foreign troops stationed there to enforce a peace and prevent Serbia from regaining its lost territory. Near the border areas, U.S. government employees are still required to travel in armored convoys thanks to a constant stream of violent activities. It is still not a region that can be called a success, just a mild failure with the potential to erupt into enormous bloodshed at a moment’s notice (such as the violent riots in Belgrade after Kosovo declared its independence).

Which brings us to Barnett’s take on Georgia. While he does us the courtesy of NOT quoting “Back in the U.S.S.R.” like every other blogger whose use of “Georgia on My Mind” and variations result in me instantly refusing to read another damned word they write, Barnett can’t really bring himself to mention his previous advocacy of either nationalist expansionism or armed intervention in civil wars.

You have to suspect that Russia’s strong response to Georgia’s bold effort to subdue South Ossetia militarily is designed to signal something profound to the West on this overall score.

In effect, Russia has largely acquiesced to all sorts of Western “encroachment” (from their perspective, and let’s be honest, that’s basically what it is in terms of economic, political and security integration of former satellites and republics) since the end of the Cold War, but now with Moscow feeling a serious resurgence, we’re getting into different territory in our relationship–meaning Russia will push back…

But clearly Russia’s transgressing the advanced-country norms, not even bothering to make an international case here (which we always do before invading anybody). This is more like Britain and Argentina going at it over the Falklands: outsiders look at it in amazement, wondering what all the fuss is about, while the participants fight over the “olive tree” grove like divorced parents squabbling over a child’s custody (i.e., we simply don’t “get” the history–which is long and ugly). We don’t expect either a Britain or Argentina to behave like that, so the U.S. tries to smooth things over…

Being in the Core doesn’t mean never going to war, especially against Gap nations. Indeed, my whole point in making the original delineation was to point out that while intra-Core war becomes an increasingly distant possibility, wars inside the Gap by Core nations will be anything but. Just look at our record since the end of the Cold War.

The notion of the Core doesn’t presuppose that only America will have permission to do this sort of thing unilaterally. In fact, in both my books, I cited the danger of other Core powers starting to replicate our example if we weren’t careful about embedding our own interventions within an acceptable A-to-Z rule set that the Core as a whole could sign up for, meaning we’d eventually see other Core great powers launching their own efforts inside the Gap–according to their own rules and agendas. To some extent, Russia’s kinetic version is as challenging as China’s non-kinetic version–say–in Africa.

So is he saying using his annoying and over-simplified rip-off of Emmanuel Wallerstein’s World System Theory, that Georgia is a “gap” state, and Russia is a “core” state, so this is kind of expected? According to his ever-changing definition of “core,” which is surely a mark of theoretical rigor, Barnett now defines core as “states the core will never go to war with…” which of course would include Georgia, since they’d never fight any other core state, either. Which means the entire concept is crap.

Indeed, Barnett’s line of thinking is patently foolish, almost as foolish as pretending Russia is even near the same league as the other G8 countries. Moreover, like all of Barnett’s other writings, he is paternistically contemptuous of every other state’s right to think for itself, reducing the entire planet to dumb monkeys who can only copy what the United States does according to the United States’ rules.

Lastly, what serious military or strategic thinker, who routinely brags of his experience at the Center for Naval Analysis and how Sam Huntington once said something nice to him, would contend Russia is a rising power? With the exception of oil prices, Russia has nothing to offer the world—it doesn’t make anything, it can’t produce much of value, its population is growing progressively older and sicker at an increasingly rate, and its political system is really collapsing if Putin can contract it in so short a time. Russia is a dying power, and like most dying powers it is lashing out in fury at its loss of prestige and power.

Really, don’t read Thomas Barnett for insight into Georgia. His verifiably useless theories don’t apply here, and he offers no insight into the countries themselves, their histories, or likely after-action policies. And that applies to pretty much everything he’s ever written.

This post was written by...

– author of 1771 posts on Registan.net.

Joshua Foust is a Fellow at the American Security Project and the author of Afghanistan Journal: Selections from Registan.net. His research focuses primarily on Central and South Asia. Joshua is a correspondent for The Atlantic and a columnist for PBS Need to Know. Joshua appears regularly on the BBC World News, Aljazeera, and international public radio. Joshua is also a regular contributor to Foreign Policy’s AfPak Channel, and his writing has appeared in the New York Times, Reuters, and the Christian Science Monitor. Follow him on twitter: @joshuafoust

{ 11 comments }

Robert August 12, 2008 at 1:19 am

So… am I to take it you don’t think much of Thomas Barnett?
:)

Reply

Péter August 12, 2008 at 6:08 am

So which countries are the gap countries?
Isn’t it obvious?
The FAILED states! Those without GOOD governance! All of them!
Joking aside, I remember reading somewhere that “a failed state is like pornography, you recognise it when you see it” – I made a point of not remembering the name of the person who wrote that.

Reply

Joshua Foust August 12, 2008 at 7:20 am

Péter, I want to blame my inability to make a “state porn” joke on my current lack of caffeine, but I’m afraid caffeine isn’t the problem.

Reply

david August 12, 2008 at 8:13 am

I think what Georgia really missed out on is Thomas Barnett’s brilliant innovation, which he calls ‘Development-in-a-Box’ (there should be a little TM here obviously because its a completely original idea that lots of people might want to rip off). You may think that its a joke, but it appears he is completely serious about it, which presumably means somebody in the Pentagon is even now planning to drop this box on some poor benighted not-yet-invaded GAP country very soon.

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Josh SN August 12, 2008 at 12:38 pm

I think Thomas PM Barnett is what moderate John Birchers always hoped would happen to this country.

Was the Cold War a victory of Democratic ideals over Totalitarianism? Was the Cold War (heresy alert!) partially a function that, divided in “half,” the West had the larger half, and unless seriously less efficient, was always going to come out on top?

To a certain set/sect, the answer to these questions is definitely “No.”

The Cold War was the triumph of the market over central planning, of Capitalism over Communism.

Russia is “core,” not because they have any respectable form of government, but because they trade, they are integrated into the world market system.

I have to admit having put down the Pentagon’s New Map halfway through, since it was so boring and predictable and, I admit, depressing (Funds Over Freedom!), so, if he gets to the importance of liberty, independence and justice in the second half, I owe him an apology.

For at least one reading, the second half of John Birch was Salesmanship. Capitalism was the only way, of course, but Salesmanship was the critical art, and, to top it off, an American original. And Barnett is, if nothing else, a Salesman.

I’m not saying, not even for a second, that Barnett is a Bircher. I’m saying that type loves his stuff, and considers it “thought-provoking.”

The above critique complete ignores the Russian press, which Barnett also ignores. I have often thought that one of the problems with Congress and the President is they often come across U.S. propaganda… and believe it, rather than being firmly tethered to reality. You’ve probably seen public officials cite the press as proof of something.

Let’s say we keep Gitmo, but replace all the soldiers with civilians, but keep some armed guards on the wall and let in a few tourists. For a week, with almost no casualties, there are shots fired between Cubans and the Wallwatchers. Then Cuban launches an invasion, firing rockets which hit the U.S. civilians. It isn’t U.S. territory. Cuba has never recognized Gitmo as U.S. territory. Should America ignore it? What about if, all-day every-day, CNN, Fox and MSNBC run stories about how this is an attempt by the Cubans to exterminate the Americans in Gitmo. They want the territory _and_ to kill all the people.

I, for one, have been troubled trying to come up with a perfect example, and this one obviously is imperfect, but that’s what the Russians see on their TVs. They think it is outrageous we’d even _consider_ stepping in on the side of the exterminators, regularly called “fascist” by interviewed Ossetians. They think it is inconceivable that Russia wouldn’t go in to help its fellow countrymen.

Oh, I suppose there is some vestigal knee-jerk Russophobia in the JBS, too.

Reply

Josh SN August 12, 2008 at 12:45 pm

I think Thomas PM Barnett is what moderate John Birchers always hoped would happen to this country.

Was the Cold War a victory of Democratic ideals over Totalitarianism? Was the Cold War (heresy alert!) partially a function that, given the globe was divided in “half,” the West had the larger, richer half, and was always more likely to come out on top?

To a certain set(sect?), the answer to these questions is definitely “No.”

The Cold War was the triumph of the free market over central planning, of Capitalism over Communism.

Russia is “core,” not because they have any respectable form of government, but because they trade, they are integrated into the world market system.

I have to admit having put down the Pentagon’s New Map halfway through, since it was so boring and predictable and, I admit, depressing, so, if he gets to the importance of liberty, independence and justice in the second half, I owe him an apology. Other than that, he seemed to be a proponent of more gangsterism for capitalism.

The second half of the John Birch ideal, I hear, was Salesmanship. Capitalism was the only way, of course, but Salesmanship was the critical art, and, to top it off, an American original. And Barnett is, if nothing else, a Salesman.

I’m not saying, not even for a second, that Barnett is a Bircher. I’m saying a Bircher would love his stuff and consider it “thought-provoking.”

Oh, I suppose there is some vestigal knee-jerk Russophobia in the JBS, too

The above critique complete ignores the Russian press, which Barnett also ignores. I have often thought that one of the problems with Congress and the President is they often come across U.S. propaganda in the newspaper and they believe it. I’d prefer they were more firmly tethered to reality. You’ve probably seen public officials cite the press as proof of something.

Semi-strained parallel: Let’s say we keep Gitmo, but replace all the soldiers with civilians, but keep some armed guards on the wall and let in a few tourists. For a week, with almost no casualties, there are shots fired between Cubans and the wall Guards. Then Cuba launches an invasion, firing rockets which hit the U.S. civilians and destroy lots of the infrastructure. It isn’t U.S. territory. Cuba has never recognized Gitmo as U.S. territory. Should America ignore it? What about if, all-day every-day, CNN, Fox and MSNBC run stories about how this is an attempt by the Cubans to exterminate the Americans in Gitmo. They want the territory _and_ to kill all the people.

In covering S. Ossetia the Western press has pretty much the same death toll figures as they have in Russia. In Russia, however, it is always pointed out that the entire civilian death toll is because of Georgian bullets and Georgian rockets.

I, for one, have been troubled trying to come up with a perfect example, and this Gitmo one obviously is imperfect, but that’s what the Russians see on their TVs. They think it is outrageous we’d even _consider_ stepping in on the side of the exterminators. They think it is inconceivable that Russia might not go in to help its fellow countrymen.
.

Reply

Josh SN August 12, 2008 at 12:46 pm

I think Thomas PM Barnett is what moderate John Birchers always hoped would happen to this country.

Was the Cold War a victory of Democratic ideals over Totalitarianism? Was the Cold War (heresy alert!) partially a function that, given the globe was divided in “half,” the West had the larger, richer half, and was always more likely to come out on top?

To a certain set(sect?), the answer to these questions is definitely “No.”

The Cold War was the triumph of the free market over central planning, of Capitalism over Communism.

Russia is “core,” not because they have any respectable form of government, but because they trade, they are integrated into the world market system.

I have to admit having put down the Pentagon’s New Map halfway through, since it was so boring and predictable and, I admit, depressing, so, if he gets to the importance of liberty, independence and justice in the second half, I owe him an apology. Other than that, he seemed to be a proponent of more gangsterism for capitalism.

The second half of the John Birch ideal, I hear, was Salesmanship. Capitalism was the only way, of course, but Salesmanship was the critical art, and, to top it off, an American original. And Barnett is, if nothing else, a Salesman.

I’m not saying, not even for a second, that Barnett is a Bircher. I’m saying a Bircher would love his stuff and consider it “thought-provoking.”

Oh, I suppose there is some vestigal knee-jerk Russophobia in the JBS, too

The above critique of Barnettism completely ignores the Russian press, which Barnett also ignores. I have often thought that one of the problems with Congress and the President is they often come across U.S. propaganda in the newspaper and they believe it. I’d prefer they were more firmly tethered to reality. You’ve probably seen public officials cite the press as proof of something.

Semi-strained parallel: Let’s say we keep Gitmo, but replace all the soldiers with civilians, but keep some armed guards on the wall and let in a few tourists. For a week, with almost no casualties, there are shots fired between Cubans and the wall Guards. Then Cuba launches an invasion, firing rockets which hit the U.S. civilians and destroy lots of the infrastructure. It isn’t U.S. territory. Cuba has never recognized Gitmo as U.S. territory. Should America ignore it? What about if, all-day every-day, CNN, Fox and MSNBC run stories about how this is an attempt by the Cubans to exterminate the Americans in Gitmo. They want the territory _and_ to kill all the people.

In covering S. Ossetia the Western press has pretty much the same death toll figures as they have in Russia. In Russia, however, it is always pointed out that the entire civilian death toll is because of Georgian bullets and Georgian rockets.

I, for one, have been troubled trying to come up with a perfect example, and this Gitmo one obviously is imperfect, but that’s what the Russians see on their TVs. They think it is outrageous we’d even _consider_ stepping in on the side of the exterminators. They think it is inconceivable that Russia might not go in to help its fellow countrymen.
.

Reply

Jim August 12, 2008 at 12:47 pm

I think you writing off Russia as a dying power ignores its entire history. Russia’s strength comes from its unity… whether that unity comes by the sword or through nationalism doesn’t matter.

But sure, economics do matter. Let’s pretend for a moment that no diversification is occurring in the Russian economy (which isn’t true, but for the sake of this argument it might as well be) and that Russia is fueled solely by energy sector money. So is there any indication that is going to not be a great source of revenue for them for the next quarter century? Not that I’ve seen.

A lot of military spending can happen in a quarter century. A lot of modernization of military forces, training methods, and organization can occur in that time. Russia has a history of reinventing itself, and I see no reason to not expect a similar push here.

I’m not clear on why you dismiss them so eagerly.

Reply

Josh SN August 12, 2008 at 12:48 pm

AH! So sorry. I got error messages each time I tried to submit, I assumed it wasn’t working! Please delete the first two? Thank you!

Again, so sorry.

Reply

Daniel Nexon August 12, 2008 at 8:56 pm

“So is he saying using his annoying and over-simplified rip-off of Emmanuel Wallerstein’s World System Theory”

That gave me a good chuckle.

I always pegged him as more of a rip-off of The Real World Order: Zones of Peace, Zones of Turmoil (but I don’t really remember it well enough to say that with any confidence anymore), but the economic determinism is more closely related to world-systems theory.

Reply

Curzon August 13, 2008 at 3:08 am

Very well said, sir. And, if I may say so, very well put!

Reply

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