The World ‘Hanging by a Thread’: Stories to Follow in 2022
By Ramzy Baroud
Though 2021 is now behind us, there are many issues from the previous year that will linger for a bit, or much longer, and will certainly dominate much of the news in 2022 as well. These are but only a few of these issues.
NATO-Russian Brinkmanship
Fed up with NATO expansion and growing ambitions in the Black Sea region, Moscow has decided to challenge the US-led Western alliance in an area of crucial geopolitical importance to Russia.
Ukraine’s quest for NATO membership, especially following the Crimea conflict in 2014, proved to be a red line for Russia. Starting in late 2021, the US and its European allies began accusing Russia of amassing its forces at the Ukrainian border, suggesting that outright military invasion will soon follow. Russia denied such accusations, insisting that a military solution to the crisis can be avoided if Russia’s geopolitical interests are respected.
Some analysts argue that Russia is seeking to “coerce the west to start the new Yalta talks,” a reference to a US, UK and Russia summit at the conclusion of World War II. If Russia achieves its objectives, NATO will no longer be able to exploit Russia’s faultlines throughout its Western borders.
While NATO members, especially the US, want to send a strong message to Russia, but China as well, that the defeat in Afghanistan will not affect their global prestige or tarnish their power, Russia is assured that it has enough political, economic, military and strategic cards that it would allow it to eventually prevail.
China’s Unhindered Rise
Another global tussle is also underway. For years, the US unleashed an open global war to slow down China’s rise as a global economic power. While the ‘Trade War’, instigated by the Donald Trump administration against China, starting in 2019, delivered lukewarm results, China’s ability to withstand pressures, control with mathematical precision the spread, within China, of the Covid-19 pandemic, and continue to fuel the global economy has proved that Beijing is not easy prey.
The perfect example of the above assertion is the anticipated re-rise of the Chinese tech giant Huawei. The war on Huawei served as a microcosm of the larger war on China. British writer Tom Fowdy described this war as “blocking exports to (Huawei), isolating it from global chipmakers, forcing allies to ban its participation in their 5G networks, imposing criminal charges against it and kidnapping one of its senior executives”.
All of that, however, is failing, according to Fowdy. 2022 is the year in which Huawei is expected to wage massive global investments that will allow it to overcome many of these obstacles and become self-sustaining in terms of the technologies required to fuel its operations worldwide.
Aside from Huawei, China plans to escalate its response to American pressures by expanding its manufacturing platforms, creating new markets and fortifying its alliances, especially that with Moscow. A Chinese-Russian alliance is particularly important for Beijing as both countries are experiencing strong US-Western pushback.
2022 is likely to be the year in which Russia and China, in the words of Beijing’s Ambassador to Moscow, Zhang Hanhui, stage a “response to such overt (US) hegemony and power politics”, where both “continue to deepen back-to-back strategic cooperation.”
The World ‘Hanging by a Thread’
But there are other conflicts that exist beyond politics and economy. There is also the war unleashed on our planet by those who favor profits over the welfare of future generations. While the Glasgow Climate Pact COP26 began in Scotland in November with lofty promises, it concluded with political compromises that hardly live up to the fact that, per the words of UN Secretary-General António Guterres, “we are still knocking on the door of climate catastrophe”.
True, 2022 will be a year in which many tragedies will be attributed to climate change. However, it will also be a year in which millions of people around the world will continue to push for a collective, nonpolitical response to the ‘climate catastrophe’. While Planet Earth is “hanging by a thread” – according to Guterres – political compromises that favor the rich become the obstacle, not the solution. Only a global movement of well-integrated civil societies worldwide can compel politicians to heed the wishes of the people.
Refugees, Democracy and Human Rights
The adverse effects of climate change can be felt in myriad ways that go beyond the immediate damage inflicted by erratic weather conditions. War, revolutions, endemic socio-economic inequalities, mass migration and refugee crises are only a few examples of how climate change has destabilized many parts of the world and wrought pain and suffering to numerous communities around the world.
The issue of migration and refugees will continue to pose a threat to global stability in 2022, since none of the issues that forced millions of people to leave their homes in search of safer and better lives have been addressed at their roots. Instead of contending with the roots of the problem – climate change, military interventions, inequality, etc. – quite often the hapless refugees find themselves accused and demonized as agents of instability in Western societies.
This, in turn, has served as a political and, at times, moral justification for the rise of far-right political movements in Europe and elsewhere, which are spreading falsehoods, championing racism and undermining whatever semblance of democracy that exists in their countries.
2022 must not be allowed to be another year of doom and gloom. It can also be a year of hope and promise. But that is only possible if we play our role as active citizens to bring about the coveted change that we would like to see in the world. Happy 2022!
– Ramzy Baroud is a journalist and the Editor of The Palestine Chronicle. He is the author of six books. His forthcoming book, co-edited with Ilan Pappé, is “Our Vision for Liberation: Engaged Palestinian Leaders and Intellectuals Speak out”. Dr. Baroud is a Non-resident Senior Research Fellow at the Center for Islam and Global Affairs (CIGA). His website is www.ramzybaroud.net
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