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"The dominance of a single great power," wrote American scholar Robert Keohane in his widely acclaimed book After Hegemony, "may contribute to order in world politics, in particular circumstances, but it is not a sufficient condition and there is little reason to believe that it is necessary."1This proposition has never been put to a greater test as it is now. Since the election of Donald J. Trump as U.S. president in November 2016 there has been a vast outpouring of anxiety over the future of the liberal world order.2But the myths, limitations, and decline of this order have been anticipated and forewarned for some time, even though its proponents have not acknowledged it.
The "first myth" about the U.S.-led liberal hegemonic order, as I have written elsewhere, is "how far it extended for much of its history, especially during the Cold War period." I pointed out that "the Soviet bloc, China, India, Indonesia, and a good part of the 'third world' were outside of it . . . . Despite the exalted claims about its power, legitimacy, and public goods functions, that order was little more than the US-UK-West Europe-Australasian configuration."3Noting that the liberal order was hardly benign for many countries in the developing world, I argued that it should be seen as a limited international order, rather than an inclusive global order.
Joseph S. Nye, one of the staunchest champions of the liberal order, made a similar point when he wrote in the January/February 2017 issue of Foreign Affairs that the liberal order "was largely limited to a group of like-minded states centered on the Atlantic littoral" and "did not include many large countries such as China, India, and the Soviet bloc states, and . . . did not always have benign effects on nonmembers."4The liberal order did expand and strengthen with the economic reforms in China and India, and with the end of the cold war. And while the champions of that order celebrated its expansion, they still generally assumed that the main challenge to it would come from the rising powers, led by China. Their assumptions notwithstanding, precisely at a time when many of these powers today are not doing all that...





