Publications /
Opinion

Back
A New World Order in the Making
Authors
December 22, 2023

“As the world continues to fracture into different blocs, a new world order is in the making,” observes ambassador Len Ishmael, Senior Fellow of the Policy Center for the New South, in her Policy Paper ‘The New South in a Multipolar World; Multi-Alignment or Fence Sitting?’ (October 23, 2023). The major economies of the G7 remain at the helm, but “whereas the G7 share of global GDP was two thirds in 1990, today it is closer to one-third. In the meantime, the countries of the New South are adding more muscle to the G20, and an array of non-western groupings [is] forging a new identity: The New South. Will that be a moment or a momentum?” she asks.

“Time will tell,” is her answer. But, she says, “it is hard to dismiss the sense that change in the international structure is happening, greater multipolarity crafted by middle powers is evident, and The New South is very much part of this new chapter.” Dr. Ishmael, author of many books, including on the EU-African relationship, confirms that “the renewed interest of all major powers in securing support and partnerships with countries of the Global South is shown by the spate of recent African engagements with world leaders, including those of the U.S., Russia, China, and the EU, the invitation to Brazil, India, Turkey, South Africa, and Saudi Arabia to attend the G7 Copenhagen summit (June 2023) as observers, recent comments by U.S. President Biden indicating an openness to discuss UN Security Council reform, G20 enlargement to include the [African Union], and the flurry of shuttle diplomacy by Western powers to Africa, Latin America, the Caribbean, and Asia.” This, writes ambassador Ishmael, “carries a significance which transcends the Ukrainian conflict.”

The writing on the wall leaves no doubt: “The West seeks to shore up supplies of critical raw materials (CRM) in the race with China in the transition to green energy, high tech, and artificial intelligence. But these encounters are also designed to woo countries away from China and Russia during this period of heightened tensions.”

The BRICS—Brazil, Russia, India, China, and South Africa—does not claim to be a competitor to the G7 or G20, but when the original founders announced they would be willing to enlarge their group, announcing new members at their meeting in South Africa on August 24, 2023, more than 40 nations showed an interest, and 22 asked officially to join BRICS. For Navdeep Suri, Distinguished Fellow of the Observer Research Foundation in India (Global Memo, August 31, 2023) this is “clearly a symptom of a deeper malaise.” The West’s “proclivity to display unilateral finance sanctions, abuse international payments mechanisms, renege on climate finance commitments, accord scant respect for food security and health imperatives of the Global South during the pandemic are only some of the elements responsible for the growing disenchantment with the prevailing international system.”

In her paper, Dr Ishmael wrote “the West is slowly facing the reality that Western interests are no longer de facto those of the rest of the world, and that the risk of losing global power and influence is real. Recent moves by Saudi Arabia to keep oil prices high ... by continuing to reduce supplies in tandem with Russia, underscores this reality, showing the determination even by a long-term Western ally to champion its own financial interests over those of traditional allies. Like South Africa, India, and many others, Saudi Arabia is unabashedly multi-aligned in pursuit of its domestic interests.”

A Critical Moment

When the BRICS named in August its new members—an almost bankrupt Argentina, oil-rich powers Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, the rather isolated Iran, impoverished Ethiopia, and economically stressed Egypt—‘Global Perspectives’ (August 31, 2023) published by the Council of Councils, which gathers opinion from global experts on major international developments, asked in a headline: “Seeking an Alternate World Order?” The fifteenth BRICS Summit, suggests Navdeep Suri, “has sent a strong signal that the post-World War II order should accept the multipolar reality and change with the time”.

The recent rupee-designated oil transaction between India and the UAE is not merely a swipe at the petrodollar arrangement which has prevailed since 1973, argues Suri, “but it is also a signal that the world’s major commodity exporters and importers can try to reduce their dependence on the dollar.” If not a new world order, suggests Suri, the BRICS expansion is “certainly an attempt at an alternative world order, one with a more sympathetic for the developing many versus the developed few.”

“A critical moment in the creation of a new world order may have just occurred,” writes Steven Gruzd, head of the African Governance and Diplomacy Program, South African Institute of International Affairs, in a paper edited for ‘Global Memo’. “After horse trading and arm twisting, the BRICS is now the BRICS plus six and the new members will add their voices to advocating for a more equitable global governance system, reforming the UN Security Council, and increasing influence for the Global South.”

“In addition the steady stream of summits involving countries of the Global South,” observed Dr Ishmael in her Policy Paper, BRICS, the G20, the Association of Southeast Asian Nations, the Shanghai Cooperation Organization, and the recently concluded two day G77+China South Summit, held in Cuba, “also point to a growing multipolarity, and diffusion of world power and a coming together of the Global South around an agenda of core interests notwithstanding their differences. There is a growing realization that the increasing weight of these countries can no longer be ignored.”

Considering this political and economic weight, the increasing power of the Global South, a vision of an independent, democratic nation named Palestine is no longer a mirage. It could be a reality if the powers to be give peace a chance and are willing to create, but not destroy or oppress, a nation without respected borders a capital surrounded by barbed wire and mines, and which is suffering from bombs and missiles that pulverize dreams.

 

RELATED CONTENT

  • Authors
    Sabine Cessou
    April 13, 2018
    L’avenir de l’Inde a fait débat le 11 avril en présence de 110 personnes, lors des 5èmes Dialogues stratégiques, une rencontre biannuelle organisée à Paris par l’OCP Policy Center et le Centre HEC de géopolitique.  En 2050, l’Inde comptera 17 % de la population globale et aura le troisième PIB mondial. « Le ralentissement de la croissance en Chine n’occultera peut-être plus l’essor de cette grande démocratie », a noté Jacques Gravereau, président du HEC Eurasia Institute. Soulignan ...
  • Authors
    April 11, 2018
    Le récent échange entre deux institutions nationales sur la création d’emplois dans le secteur industriel pose de nouveau les questions du mode de conception et de production des statistiques mises à la disposition du public. Les informations statistiques constituent une base indispensable pour fournir au débat démocratique des références robustes. Or, le Haut-Commissariat au Plan (HCP), principal acteur du système statistique national, se trouve parfois confronté à des difficultés ...
  • Authors
    April 10, 2018
    Le lancement d’un contrat à terme pétrolier sur le Shanghai International Energy Exchange (INE) ne saurait être vu comme un évènement « technique » ou secondaire tant il préfigure ce que seront dans quelques années les marchés mondiaux de matières premières. Le Shanghai Futures Exchange (SHFE) et le Dalian Commodity Exchange (DCE) ont certes vu leurs volumes de trading augmenter considérablement sur la dernière décennie grâce à l’acier et au minerai de fer, ce qui pourrait laisser à ...
  • Authors
    Jeremy Guez
    Pascal Chaigneau
    Capitaine Marianne Peron Doise
    Rodolphe Monnet
    Philippe Tauzin
    Florent Parmentier
    April 10, 2018
    L’année 2018 peut être marquée par le signe de l’incertitude. Au niveau géopolitique, l’élection de Donald Trump a chamboulé la perception des États Unis de par le monde et remis en question l’ordre international par la renégociation des accords internationaux et par un retour vers un protectionnisme américain jugé dangereux par le partenaire historique européen. En première partie de cet ouvrage, Les auteurs s’interroge sur les paradoxes de la politique américaine et de l’impact de ...
  • Authors
    Mokhtar Ghailani
    April 9, 2018
    Fidèle à sa tradition de diffuser la connaissance et de promouvoir le débat d’idées, l’OCP Policy Center a reçu, le 5 avril 2018, le journaliste mauritanien Lemine Ould Salem, pour la présentation de son tout dernier livre intitulé « L’histoire secrète du Djihad. D’al-Qaïda à l’Etat islamique», paru en janvier dernier aux éditions Flammarion. Dans cet ouvrage, l’auteur rapporte ses entrevues avec l’une des principales figures d’Al-Qaïda, Abou Hafs en l’occurrence, « conseiller spiri ...
  • Authors
    April 6, 2018
    The young women sitting in the Olympic ice hockey stadium of Kwandong, South Korea, were dressed like a group of gorgeous stewardesses on an outing after graduating from flight school, or as if they were celebrating the survival of an emergency landing. They applauded in a very methodical fashion, a well-studied rhythm that their eternal Supreme leader Kim Jong-Un certainly did not learn at his Swiss boarding school “Liebefeld Steinhoelzi” near Bern, Switzerland. Who dares to confir ...
  • Authors
    April 5, 2018
    Sommes-nous en train d’assister à l’émergence d’une troisième génération de jihadisme au Sahel ? Après le phénomène mondialisé des années 90 né sous l’impulsion des jihadistes afghans et porté par Oussama Ben Laden et Al Qaeda, un autre courant a vu le jour ces dernières années avec l’arrivée de Daech, caractérisé par une territorialisation de la lutte et le rêve d’un califat. Ces deux mouvements se sont livrés une rude bataille en terrain sahélien, fragmenté en plusieurs structures ...
  • Authors
    April 5, 2018
    Are we witnessing a third generation of jihadism rearing its head in the Sahel? In the wake of the globalised movement of jihad in the 1990s, spearheaded by Afghan jihadists and propelled forward by Osama bin Laden and al-Qaeda, another trend has emerged in recent years with the advent of Daesh (also known as ISIS and ISIL) – a trend that is characterised by the territorialisation of the struggle and the revival of the Caliphate dream. These two movements have engaged in fierce conf ...