Abstract:
The last 10 years have brought unexpected shifts in global power relationships
as traditionally powerful states have lost legitimacy and ceded authority to
new players. The power of the United States and United Kingdom (UK) seems
to be in decline since having defied the United Nations by attacking Iraq without
UN approval. The United States and UK lost the respect of other states and
the moral authority to lead. On the other hand, France, in upholding the ideals
of the UN, has gained global influence. Some African countries, like South Africa
and Kenya, also benefited from insisting on respect for the UN. South African
leader Nelson Mandel's authoritative voice was able to erode the U.S.-UK military
arguments because he derived power from his ethical and moral standing,
rather than from military prominence. His criticism encouraged people across the
globe to openly oppose the Anglo-American invasion of Iraq. After Mandela criticized
countries whose leaders disappointingly "just keep quiet when the U.S.
wants to sideline the UN," French, German, and even Russian opposition to the
Bush-Blair designs on Iraq became more apparent.1
When the United States and the UK decided to invade Iraq without convincing
reasons for doing so, many countries were opposed to the action, but
some were afraid to speak out.' Among the countries whose leaders wanted to
keep quiet was Japan, at a time when the Japanese people wished their government
would be as defiant as the governments of France and Germany. France and
Germany refused to go along with the United States and the UK because their
concerns about morality, ethics, and reputation dictated otherwise. The French
in particular appeared to enjoy defying the Anglo-American effort to manipulate
the UN to legitimize their attack on Iraq. France resented playing second fiddle
to the United States and the UK. The Iraq issue offered France a chance to overshadow both the British and the Americans in terms of influence and credibility
and to offer itself as an alternative-around which other countries could rally to the Anglo-American hegemony. The conflict over Iraq was the latest
issue in the contest for global influence. The feud had intensified after the Cold War,
with the French resenting an imposition of an American hegemony detrimental to
French interests. "The U.S.," President Jacques Chirac asserted in 1998, "has the
pretension to want to direct everything, it wants to rule the whole world."' In attempting to impose its New World Order, the United States was stealing French clients and promoting self-determination and democratization in the French sphere of
influence, thus undermining French interests. France then tried to retaliate by infiltrating the U.S. sphere of influence through the organization of Euro-Latin American conferences.4 By opposing American saber-rattling over Iraq, France emerged as a reasonable leader ready to use its veto power to save the UN from committing a moral blunder.
Description:
An Article by Macharia Munene, School of Humanities & Social Sciences, USIU in The Fletcher Forum of World Affairs