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Freedom of the Border. Paul SchefferЧитать онлайн книгу.

Freedom of the Border - Paul Scheffer


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Walls are intended to block human traffic, whereas borders are intended to regulate it. In the public mind the two are frequently confused, because nowadays the concept of a border immediately evokes the image of a fence or a wall. The recognition of borders is in fact the best remedy for the epidemic of walls, Debray argues. In his view, the fences going up all over Europe are a result of the lack of an external border.

      The best example is presented by the Helsinki accords of 1975, which determined the borders in Europe and so enabled the start of a relaxation of tensions between East and West. Precisely because countries relinquished claims to the territories of other countries, it proved possible to increase the space for human rights in the East. There is a direct connection between the Helsinki accords and the fall of the Berlin Wall fourteen years later. Those who recognize that mutual respect for borders helps to preserve peace will be freed to some extent from liberal embarrassment about borders.

      In 2005, dissident turned president Václav Havel said that the stabilization of the borders of the new Russia would be a major contribution to new relationships in Europe. The ‘grey zone’ of countries between the European Union and the Russian Federation in particular necessitates unambiguous agreements. ‘Russia does not really know where it begins and where it ends’, Havel said.13 He also said that the recognition of borders contributes to peaceful and productive relationships in a part of Europe that has continually seen borders move or disappear. There is currently no prospect of such recognition; in Ukraine and Georgia, and in Crimea, we have seen violence in recent years.

      There was an expectation that after 1989 democracy would increasingly become a generally accepted norm. The reality turned out very differently and the ideal of an open society has not been accepted everywhere by any means. After years in which democracy was on the rise, autocratic regimes in Russia, China, Turkey and elsewhere are gaining ground. In the European Union democracies can open their borders to each other, but in an illiberal world they need to defend their shared outer borders.

      Political scientist John Mearsheimer writes that since the collapse of the Soviet Union the behaviour of the great powers has not changed fundamentally. ‘In fact, all of the major states around the globe still care deeply about the balance of power and are destined to compete for power among themselves for the foreseeable future.’14 The desire to change the balance of power in their own favour still determines the behaviour of the world’s major powers. They deeply distrust each other and never exclude the possibility of using violence if circumstances favour it.

      This supposedly realistic approach is at odds with liberal ways of addressing international politics. According to liberal teachings, inspired by Kant, it makes an important difference whether or not countries are organized democratically. But, Mearsheimer counters, even if we endorse the theory of democratic peace, it remains ‘unlikely that all the great powers in the system will become democratic and stay that way over the long term. It would only take a non-democratic China or Russia to keep power politics in play, and both of those states are likely to be non-democratic for at least part of the twenty-first century’.16

      It’s hard to argue with that assessment. To the East Europe comes up against rising nationalism in Russia and China, to the South escalating civil war in the Arab nations and to the West declining American power. Joschka Fischer, former German foreign minister, had an apt description of the current era. He looked above all at the declining influence of America, which had for decades guaranteed the security of Europe. ‘The chaotic consequences of the gradual disintegration of the Pax Americana are becoming increasingly clear’, he wrote.17

      We must bring the liberal and realist schools of thought about world politics together so that they can hone each other. In today’s world we clearly see both traditional power politics and the quest for lasting peace. The expanded European Union, where conflicts are fought out over the conference table, is the best example of pacification of ancient enmities. Twenty-seven countries are now engaged in efforts to establish ‘eternal peace’, a project without precedent.

      The question is, how can the European Union promote this culture outside its own borders? Are the compromises laboriously arrived at daily in the corridors of Brussels a match for the brutality of international politics beyond its periphery? While geopolitics in relationships within the Union has largely been tamed, the confrontation between countries of the Union and the rest of the world is as much a matter of power politics as ever.

      There are two images of Europe. Some see it as a fortress that has sealed itself off, while to others it is a continent with fairly porous borders. I think the latter image comes closer to the truth, since measures taken so far to guard the frontier are inadequate. In the view of many of its citizens, this devalues the meaning of the European Union. A community cannot survive without borders and it therefore needs to guard them. How that is to be done, how far Europe needs to go in its efforts to police its borders, is an open question to which I shall return. The provisional conclusion is clear: if the call for protection is not taken seriously, the Union will lose its legitimacy.

      We often hear people expressing concern about the borders of freedom. Here I want to lay the emphasis on the freedom of the border. In order to develop freedom to the full, liberal societies need to defend themselves against illiberal attitudes, both in domestic politics and in foreign policy. These are considerations that contribute to a re-evaluation of borders in a time of globalization.

      Contemporary philosophers – such as Sloterdijk, Bauman and Debray – investigate in ways of their own a world in which openness and identity are increasingly in opposition. We need to learn


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