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Home » Israel, Russia, China, Iran: The World in Conflict: Walter Russell Mead (Transcript)

Israel, Russia, China, Iran: The World in Conflict: Walter Russell Mead (Transcript)

Transcript of Dr Jordan B Peterson and Walter Russell Mead’s discussion titled ‘Israel, Russia, China, Iran: The World in Conflict’

Listen to the MP3 Audio here:

TRANSCRIPT:

DR JORDAN PETERSON: Hello everyone. I met Mr. Walter Russell Mead at a dinner party in Washington. He’s a prolific author and a columnist for the Wall Street Journal, a very astute commentator on foreign affairs. I’m talking to him today about, well about the situation, the international situation in the world as experienced by the United States and its Western allies, let’s say.

We’re going to talk about Russia and China and Iran and Israel and Palestine, all the, what would you call it, predictable villains. And so Mr. Walter Russell Mead is a writer, professor and academic focusing his efforts, as I said, on international policy and foreign affairs. He is the James Clark Chase Professor of Foreign Affairs and Humanities at Bard College and taught US foreign policy at Yale.

Mead has worked as a columnist for publications such as the Wall Street Journal and was editor-at-large for the American Interest. His books include Mortal Splendor; Special Providence; Power, Terror, Peace and War; God and Gold; and most recently, 2022, The Ark of a Covenant.

So Mr. Mead, you’ve spent an awful lot of time thinking about foreign policy in very many different aspects, not concentrating necessarily on any particular part of the world but taking as much as it’s possible a relatively global view. And so maybe we could start our discussion by having you summarize what you think are the most important — what are the most important issues that confronted the United States and the Western world more generally on the foreign relations front in 2022? And maybe we can also talk about what you see happening in 2023 as we move forward. What’s currently besetting us in the West on the foreign policy front?

WALTER RUSSELL MEAD: Well, this is a really difficult time. It’s important that maybe to help people get what’s happening in the world is to realize sort of what the basic framework of world politics is. And that is that beginning about 300 years ago, the British began to build this sort of global commercial order where there’s trade, there’s commerce and the British also were concerned for creating balance of power in Europe and developing their power globally so that this commercial maritime system would develop.

The Americans more or less inherited or some would say took over that system at the end of World War II. And this liberal international maritime commercial system of trade, of power, of political relationships, is the dominant reality in world politics. And the world is more or less divided between countries that are fairly happy with this system and would like to see it continue, countries who have some grievances would like the system adjusted but are basically willing to work within that system, and then countries who want to bring the whole thing down.

And today the leading countries that are that are in that are China, Russia and Iran along with certain smaller hangers on like Venezuela, Cuba, Nicaragua, and a few others. And we’ve seen since –you know, at the end of the Cold War 1990, it looked as if this Anglo American system would last forever. People talked about the end of history, but partly because countries like China have developed and become more powerful, but maybe more fundamentally because the Americans and our close allies have not done a very good job of understanding how to build and nurture and maintain the system. We’ve seen gradually a kind of a crisis of opposition approaching.

And 2022, between the Russian invasion of Ukraine, China’s continued sort of menacing of Taiwan, and Iran’s progress refusal to rejoin the JCPOA, it’s deepening alliance with Russia. We’ve seen this alliance of revisionist powers assemble themselves for a real challenge to this international system.

DR JORDAN PETERSON: Well, so let’s maybe we could walk through each of those countries in turn. I mean, the first reaction I have to what you said is that say what you might about the Anglo American sphere of influence. It’s by no means self evident that either China, Russia, or Iran stand out as shining moral lights to emulate as an alternative. I mean, China is a desperately terrible totalitarian communist state. Iran is basically a Islamofascist regime. And while Russia seems to be the outlier to some degree, but you know, because at least nominally, it could be allied with the West, but it certainly proved extremely problematic in new ways since the end of the Cold War.

So, I mean, on what grounds can countries like China and Iran, for example, offer anything even remotely like an alternative to the sphere of Anglo American domination? Let’s start with China.

WALTER RUSSELL MEAD: Right? Well, you know, China offers — what China offers countries or at least did offer because its offering has gotten less attractive with between the mounting totalitarianism, the economic trouble that they’re in, and the reaction to COVID, they were saying, look, you don’t have to buy the Western package in order to become rich and powerful. And furthermore, they were saying to somebody like the ruler of a country like Zimbabwe or other countries, we’ll give you money, we’ll give you tech, we won’t ask you any questions about how much money your brother-in-law is making out of the deal. No pesky auditors. We will, you know, we’re not like the Anglo Americans, we won’t try to make you behave. We’ll let you do is it will empower you to do exactly as you like.

Now, that is not a positive agenda for an alternative world order. But it is an offer that a lot of governments or a lot of powerful individuals might find attractive.

DR JORDAN PETERSON: Yeah, powerful and corrupt individuals. I mean, it’s for — Okay, so let’s take that apart a little bit.