The global power shift | Paddy Ashdown | TEDxBrussels
-
0:09 - 0:13I was walking through St Pancras station
on my way here, -
0:13 - 0:15and a little man came up to me and said,
-
0:15 - 0:18"Here, didn't you used to be
Paddy Ashdown?" -
0:18 - 0:20(Laughter)
-
0:20 - 0:21So, I said that I thought I had been,
-
0:21 - 0:24but the fact that Walter has invited me
here today -
0:24 - 0:26seems to indicate that I still am.
-
0:26 - 0:28And that's jolly reassuring,
especially for me. -
0:28 - 0:31Well, now for something
completely different. -
0:31 - 0:34There will be some poetry,
one of my passions -
0:34 - 0:38by the way, this thing says 8.41,
shouldn't it say something else? -
0:40 - 0:42I was told I had 18 minutes.
-
0:42 - 0:44It will go on. Allright.
Thank God for that. -
0:44 - 0:46Otherwise, you'd have a real problem.
-
0:47 - 0:50There will be some poetry
and some history, -
0:50 - 0:53and I shall unveil for you,
mostly tounge in cheek, -
0:53 - 0:57Ashdown's third law for the modern age.
-
0:58 - 1:01The poetry - and I don't suppose
there's anybody here -
1:01 - 1:04that's not an Anglo -
-
1:04 - 1:06[in French] well, whose mother tongue
is not English? -
1:08 - 1:12There's a poem written by
a very famous English poet -
1:12 - 1:13at the end of the 19th century.
-
1:13 - 1:16It was said to echo in Churchill's brain
-
1:16 - 1:18in the 1930s.
-
1:18 - 1:20And the poem goes:
-
1:20 - 1:22"On the idle hill of summer,
-
1:22 - 1:25lazy with the flow of streams,
-
1:25 - 1:27hark I hear a distant drummer,
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1:27 - 1:29drumming like a sound in dreams,
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1:29 - 1:32far and near and low and louder
on the roads of earth go by, -
1:32 - 1:35dear to friend and food to powder,
-
1:35 - 1:37soldiers marching,
-
1:37 - 1:38soon to die."
-
1:38 - 1:40Those who are interested in poetry,
-
1:40 - 1:44the poem is "A Shropshire Lad"
written by A.E. Housman. -
1:44 - 1:46But what Housman understood,
-
1:46 - 1:49and you hear it in the symphonies
of Nielsen too, -
1:49 - 1:53was that the long, hot, silvan summers
-
1:54 - 1:56of stability of the 19th century
-
1:56 - 1:57were coming to a close,
-
1:57 - 1:59and that we were about to move
-
1:59 - 2:01into one of those terrifying
periods of history -
2:01 - 2:03when power changes.
-
2:04 - 2:06And these are always periods,
ladies and gentlemen, -
2:06 - 2:09accompanied by turbulence,
-
2:09 - 2:11and all too often by blood.
-
2:11 - 2:12And my message for you
-
2:12 - 2:15is that I believe
we are condemned, if you like, -
2:15 - 2:17to live at just one of those
moments in history -
2:17 - 2:19when the gimbals upon which
-
2:19 - 2:23the established order of power
is beginning to change -
2:23 - 2:25and the new look of the world,
-
2:25 - 2:27the new powers that exist in the world,
-
2:27 - 2:29are beginning to take form.
-
2:29 - 2:32And these are - and we see it
very clearly today - -
2:32 - 2:36nearly always highly turbulent
times, highly difficult times, -
2:36 - 2:38and all too often very bloody times.
-
2:38 - 2:40By the way, it happens
about once every century. -
2:40 - 2:43You might argue that the last time
it happened - -
2:43 - 2:46and that's what Housman felt coming
and what Churchill felt too - -
2:46 - 2:49was that when power passed
from the old nations, -
2:49 - 2:50the old powers of Europe,
-
2:50 - 2:53across the Atlantic
to the new emerging power -
2:53 - 2:54of the United States of America -
-
2:54 - 2:56the beginning of the American century.
-
2:57 - 2:59And of course, into the vacuum
-
2:59 - 3:02where the too-old European
powers used to be -
3:02 - 3:04were played the two bloody catastrophes
-
3:04 - 3:06of the last century -
-
3:06 - 3:09the one in the first part
and the one in the second part: -
3:09 - 3:10the two great World Wars.
-
3:10 - 3:13Mao Zedong used to refer to them
as the European civil wars, -
3:13 - 3:16and it's probably a more
accurate way of describing them. -
3:16 - 3:17Well, ladies and gentlemen,
-
3:17 - 3:19we live at one of those times.
-
3:19 - 3:22But for us, I want to talk
about three factors today. -
3:22 - 3:25And the first of these,
the first two of these, -
3:25 - 3:27is about a shift in power.
-
3:28 - 3:31And the second is about some new
dimension which I want to refer to, -
3:31 - 3:34which has never quite happened
in the way it's happening now. -
3:34 - 3:38But let's talk about the shifts of power
that are occurring to the world. -
3:38 - 3:39And what is happening today
-
3:39 - 3:41is, in one sense, frightening
-
3:41 - 3:43because it's never happened before.
-
3:43 - 3:45We have seen lateral shifts of power -
-
3:45 - 3:48the power of Greece passed to Rome
-
3:48 - 3:51and the power shifts that occurred
-
3:51 - 3:54during the European civilizations -
-
3:56 - 3:58but we are seeing something
slightly different. -
3:58 - 4:00For power is not just moving laterally
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4:00 - 4:01from nation to nation.
-
4:02 - 4:03It's also moving vertically.
-
4:03 - 4:06What's happening today
is that the power that was encased, -
4:06 - 4:09held to accountability,
held to the rule of law, -
4:09 - 4:12within the institution of the nation state
-
4:12 - 4:15has now migrated in very large
measure onto the global stage. -
4:16 - 4:18The globalization of power -
-
4:18 - 4:20we talk about the globalization
of markets, -
4:20 - 4:23but actually it's the globalization
of real power. -
4:24 - 4:26And where, at the nation state level
-
4:26 - 4:28that power is held to accountability
-
4:28 - 4:29subject to the rule of law,
-
4:29 - 4:32on the international stage it is not.
-
4:32 - 4:36The international and the global stage
where power now resides: -
4:36 - 4:39the power of the Internet, the power
of the satellite broadcasters, -
4:39 - 4:42the power of the money changers -
-
4:42 - 4:44this vast money-go-round
-
4:44 - 4:48that circulates now 32 times
the amount of money necessary -
4:48 - 4:51for the trade it's supposed
to be there to finance - -
4:51 - 4:53the money changers, if you like,
-
4:53 - 4:55the financial speculators
-
4:55 - 4:58that have brought us all
to our knees quite recently, -
4:58 - 5:00the power of the multinational
corporations -
5:00 - 5:02now developing budgets
-
5:02 - 5:04often bigger than medium-sized countries.
-
5:05 - 5:07These live in a global space
-
5:07 - 5:09which is largely unregulated,
-
5:09 - 5:12not subject to the rule of law,
-
5:12 - 5:14and in which people may act
free of constraint. -
5:14 - 5:17Now that suits the powerful
-
5:17 - 5:18up to a moment.
-
5:18 - 5:22It's always suitable for those
who have the most power -
5:22 - 5:24to operate in spaces without constraint,
-
5:24 - 5:27but the lesson of history
is that, sooner or later, -
5:28 - 5:30unregulated space -
-
5:30 - 5:32space not subject to the rule of law -
-
5:32 - 5:35becomes populated, not just
by the things you wanted - -
5:35 - 5:37international trade, the Internet, etc. -
-
5:37 - 5:39but also by the things you don't want -
-
5:39 - 5:42international criminality,
international terrorism. -
5:42 - 5:44The revelation of 9/11
-
5:44 - 5:47is that even if you
are the most powerful nation on Earth, -
5:49 - 5:51nevertheless,
-
5:51 - 5:54those who inhabit
that space can attack you -
5:54 - 5:56even in your most iconic of cities
-
5:56 - 5:57one bright September morning.
-
5:57 - 6:00It's said that something like 60 percent
-
6:00 - 6:03of the four million dollars
that was taken to fund 9/11 -
6:03 - 6:06actually passed through the institutions
of the Twin Towers -
6:06 - 6:08which 9/11 destroyed.
-
6:08 - 6:11You see, our enemies
also use this space - -
6:11 - 6:14the space of mass travel, the Internet,
satellite broadcasters - -
6:14 - 6:17to be able to get around their poison,
-
6:17 - 6:20which is about destroying
our systems and our ways. -
6:20 - 6:21Sooner or later,
-
6:21 - 6:23sooner or later,
-
6:23 - 6:25the rule of history
-
6:25 - 6:27is that where power goes
-
6:27 - 6:30governance must follow.
-
6:30 - 6:33And if it is therefore
the case, as I believe it is, -
6:33 - 6:35that one of the phenomenon of our time
-
6:35 - 6:37is the globalization of power,
-
6:37 - 6:40then it follows
that one of the challenges of our time -
6:40 - 6:42is to bring governance
to the global space. -
6:42 - 6:45And I believe that the decades
ahead of us now -
6:45 - 6:49will be to a greater
or lesser extent turbulent -
6:50 - 6:53the more or less we are able
to achieve that aim: -
6:53 - 6:55to bring governance to the global space.
-
6:55 - 6:57Now notice, I'm not talking
about government. -
6:57 - 6:58I'm not talking about setting up
-
6:58 - 7:01some global democratic institution.
-
7:01 - 7:04My own view, by the way,
ladies and gentlemen, -
7:04 - 7:06is that this is unlikely to be done
-
7:06 - 7:08by spawning more U.N. institutions.
-
7:08 - 7:11If we didn't have the U.N.,
we'd have to invent it. -
7:11 - 7:12The world needs an international forum.
-
7:12 - 7:16It needs a means by which you can
legitimize international action. -
7:16 - 7:18But when it comes to governance
of the global space, -
7:18 - 7:20my guess is this won't happen
-
7:20 - 7:23through the creation of more U.N.
institutions. -
7:23 - 7:26It will actually happen
by the powerful coming together -
7:26 - 7:28and making treaty-based systems,
-
7:28 - 7:30treaty-based agreements,
-
7:30 - 7:31to govern that global space.
-
7:31 - 7:35And if you look, you can see them
happening, already beginning to emerge. -
7:35 - 7:38The World Trade Organization:
treaty-based organization, -
7:38 - 7:39entirely treaty-based,
-
7:39 - 7:43and yet, powerful enough to hold
even the most powerful, the United States, -
7:43 - 7:44to account if necessary.
-
7:45 - 7:47Kyoto: the beginnings
of struggling to create -
7:47 - 7:49a treaty-based organization.
-
7:49 - 7:50The G20:
-
7:50 - 7:53we know now that we have
to put together an institution -
7:53 - 7:55which is capable of bringing governance
-
7:55 - 7:58to that financial space
for financial speculation. -
7:58 - 8:01And that's what the G20 is,
a treaty-based institution. -
8:02 - 8:03Now there's a problem there,
-
8:03 - 8:05and we'll come back to it in a minute,
-
8:05 - 8:08which is that if you bring
the most powerful together -
8:08 - 8:10to make the rules
in treaty-based institutions, -
8:10 - 8:13to fill that governance space,
-
8:14 - 8:16then what happens to the weak
who are left out? -
8:16 - 8:18And that's a big problem,
-
8:18 - 8:20and we'll return to it in just a second.
-
8:20 - 8:22So there's my first message,
-
8:22 - 8:25that if you are to pass
through these turbulent times -
8:26 - 8:28more or less turbulently,
-
8:28 - 8:30then our success in doing that
-
8:30 - 8:32will in large measure
depend on our capacity -
8:32 - 8:34to bring sensible governance
-
8:34 - 8:36to the global space.
-
8:36 - 8:39And watch that beginning to happen.
-
8:39 - 8:40My second point is,
-
8:40 - 8:43and I know I don't have to talk
to an audience like this -
8:43 - 8:45about such a thing,
-
8:45 - 8:48but power is not just shifting vertically,
-
8:48 - 8:50it's also shifting horizontally.
-
8:50 - 8:53You might argue that the story,
the history of civilizations, -
8:53 - 8:56has been civilizations
gathered around seas - -
8:56 - 8:59with the first ones
around the Mediterranean, -
8:59 - 9:03the more recent ones in the ascendents
of Western power around the Atlantic. -
9:04 - 9:05Well it seems to me
-
9:05 - 9:08that we're now seeing a fundamental
shift of power, broadly speaking, -
9:08 - 9:11away from nations gathered
around the Atlantic [seaboard] -
9:11 - 9:13to the nations gathered
around the Pacific rim. -
9:13 - 9:15Now that begins with economic power,
-
9:15 - 9:17but that's the way it always begins.
-
9:17 - 9:20You already begin to see
the development of foreign policies, -
9:20 - 9:22the augmentation of military budgets
-
9:22 - 9:25occurring in the other
growing powers in the world. -
9:25 - 9:26I think actually
-
9:26 - 9:29this is not so much a shift
from the West to the East; -
9:30 - 9:31something different is happening.
-
9:31 - 9:33My guess is, for what it's worth,
-
9:33 - 9:35is that the United States will remain
-
9:35 - 9:37the most powerful nation on Earth
-
9:37 - 9:40for the next 10 years, 15,
-
9:40 - 9:43but the context
in which she holds her power -
9:43 - 9:46has now radically altered;
it has radically changed. -
9:46 - 9:48We are coming out of 50 years,
-
9:48 - 9:50most unusual years, of history
-
9:50 - 9:53in which we have had
a totally mono-polar world, -
9:54 - 9:55in which every compass needle
-
9:56 - 9:57for or against
-
9:57 - 10:00has to be referenced by its
position to Washington - -
10:00 - 10:03a world bestrode by a single colossus.
-
10:04 - 10:06But that's not a usual case in history.
-
10:06 - 10:08In fact, what's now emerging
-
10:08 - 10:10is the much more normal case of history.
-
10:10 - 10:12You're beginning to see the emergence
-
10:12 - 10:14of a multi-polar world.
-
10:14 - 10:15Up until now,
-
10:15 - 10:19the United States has been the dominant
feature of our world. -
10:19 - 10:21They will remain the most powerful nation,
-
10:21 - 10:23but they will be the most powerful nation
-
10:23 - 10:25in an increasingly multi-polar world.
-
10:25 - 10:28And you begin to see the alternative
centers of power building up - -
10:28 - 10:29in China, of course,
-
10:29 - 10:33though my own guess is that China's ascent
to greatness is not smooth. -
10:33 - 10:35It's going to be quite grumpy
-
10:35 - 10:37as China begins to democratize her society
-
10:37 - 10:39after liberalizing her economy.
-
10:39 - 10:42But that's a subject
of a different discussion. -
10:42 - 10:44You see India, you see Brazil.
-
10:44 - 10:45You see increasingly
-
10:45 - 10:49that the world now looks
actually, for us Europeans, -
10:49 - 10:52much more like Europe in the 19th century.
-
10:52 - 10:54Europe in the 19th century:
-
10:54 - 10:57a great British foreign
secretary, Lord Canning, -
10:57 - 10:59used to describe it as
the "European concert of powers." -
10:59 - 11:01There was a balance, a five-sided balance.
-
11:01 - 11:03Britain always played to the balance.
-
11:03 - 11:06If Paris got together with Berlin,
-
11:06 - 11:09Britain got together with Vienna
and Rome to provide a counterbalance. -
11:09 - 11:10Now notice,
-
11:10 - 11:14in a period which is dominated
by a mono-polar world, -
11:14 - 11:15you have fixed alliances -
-
11:15 - 11:17NATO, the Warsaw Pact.
-
11:17 - 11:19A fixed polarity of power
-
11:19 - 11:21means fixed alliances.
-
11:21 - 11:23But a multiple polarity of power
-
11:23 - 11:25means shifting and changing alliances.
-
11:25 - 11:27And that's the world we're coming into,
-
11:27 - 11:29in which we will increasingly see
-
11:29 - 11:31that our alliances are not fixed.
-
11:32 - 11:34Canning, the great British
foreign secretary once said, -
11:34 - 11:36"Britain has a common interest,
-
11:36 - 11:37but no common allies."
-
11:37 - 11:39And we will see increasingly
-
11:40 - 11:41that even we in the West
-
11:41 - 11:43will reach out, have to reach out,
-
11:43 - 11:46beyond the cozy circle
of the Atlantic powers -
11:46 - 11:47to make alliances with others
-
11:48 - 11:50if we want to get things
done in the world. -
11:50 - 11:52Note, that when we went into Libya,
-
11:52 - 11:55it was not good enough for the West
to do it alone; -
11:55 - 11:56we had to bring others in.
-
11:56 - 11:59We had to bring, in this case,
the Arab League in. -
11:59 - 12:02My guess is Iraq and Afghanistan
are the last times -
12:02 - 12:05when the West has tried
to do it themselves, -
12:05 - 12:06and we haven't succeeded.
-
12:06 - 12:08My guess
-
12:08 - 12:11is that we're reaching the beginning
of the end of 400 years - -
12:12 - 12:14I say 400 years because it's the end
of the Ottoman Empire - -
12:14 - 12:16of the hegemony of Western power,
-
12:16 - 12:20Western institutions and Western values.
-
12:20 - 12:23You know, up until now,
if the West got its act together, -
12:23 - 12:25it could propose and dispose
-
12:25 - 12:27in every corner of the world.
-
12:28 - 12:29But that's no longer true.
-
12:30 - 12:31Take the last financial crisis
-
12:32 - 12:33after the Second World War.
-
12:34 - 12:35The West got together -
-
12:35 - 12:38the Bretton Woods Institution,
World Bank, International Monetary Fund - -
12:38 - 12:40the problem solved.
-
12:40 - 12:42Now we have to call in others.
-
12:42 - 12:44Now we have to create the G20.
-
12:44 - 12:46Now we have to reach
beyond the cozy circle -
12:47 - 12:48of our Western friends.
-
12:48 - 12:50Let me make a prediction for you,
-
12:50 - 12:53which is probably even more startling.
-
12:53 - 12:56I suspect we are now reaching the end
-
12:56 - 12:58of 400 years
-
12:58 - 13:00when Western power was enough.
-
13:00 - 13:02People say to me, "The Chinese, of course,
-
13:03 - 13:04they'll never get themselves involved
-
13:04 - 13:07in peace-making, multilateral
peace-making around the world." -
13:07 - 13:08Oh yes? Why not?
-
13:08 - 13:10How many Chinese troops
-
13:10 - 13:13are serving under the blue beret,
serving under the blue flag, -
13:13 - 13:15serving under the U.N.
command in the world today? -
13:15 - 13:163,700.
-
13:16 - 13:19How many Americans? 11.
-
13:19 - 13:21What is the largest naval contingent
-
13:21 - 13:24tackling the issue of Somali pirates?
-
13:24 - 13:26The Chinese naval contingent.
-
13:26 - 13:28Of course they are,
they are a mercantilist nation. -
13:28 - 13:30They want to keep the sea lanes open.
-
13:30 - 13:33Increasingly, we are going
to have to do business -
13:33 - 13:36with people with whom
we do not share values, -
13:36 - 13:39but with whom, for the moment,
we share common interests. -
13:39 - 13:41It's a whole new different way
-
13:41 - 13:44of looking at the world
that is now emerging. -
13:44 - 13:46And here's the third factor,
-
13:46 - 13:49which is totally different.
-
13:49 - 13:51Today in our modern world,
-
13:51 - 13:52because of the Internet,
-
13:52 - 13:56because of the kinds of things
people have been talking about here, -
13:56 - 13:58everything is connected to everything.
-
14:00 - 14:02We are now interdependent.
-
14:02 - 14:04We are now interlocked,
-
14:04 - 14:06as nations, as individuals,
-
14:06 - 14:08in a way which has never
been the case before, -
14:08 - 14:10never been the case before.
-
14:11 - 14:13The interrelationship of nations,
-
14:13 - 14:15well it's always existed.
-
14:15 - 14:18Diplomacy is about managing
the interrelationship of nations. -
14:18 - 14:20But now we are intimately locked together.
-
14:20 - 14:22You get swine flu in Mexico,
-
14:22 - 14:24it's a problem
for Charles de Gaulle Airport -
14:24 - 14:2624 hours later.
-
14:26 - 14:28Lehman Brothers goes down,
the whole lot collapses. -
14:28 - 14:31There are fires in the steppes of Russia,
-
14:32 - 14:34food riots in Africa.
-
14:34 - 14:38We are all now deeply, deeply,
deeply interconnected. -
14:38 - 14:41And what that means
-
14:41 - 14:44is the idea of a nation state
acting alone, -
14:45 - 14:47not connected with others,
-
14:47 - 14:49not working with others,
-
14:49 - 14:51is no longer a viable proposition.
-
14:51 - 14:53Because the actions of a nation state
-
14:53 - 14:55are neither confined to itself,
-
14:56 - 14:58nor is it sufficient
for the nation state itself -
14:58 - 15:00to control its own territory,
-
15:00 - 15:03because the effects
outside the nation state -
15:03 - 15:06are now beginning to affect
what happens inside them. -
15:06 - 15:07I was a young soldier
-
15:07 - 15:11in the last of the small
empire wars of Britain. -
15:12 - 15:14At that time, the defense of my country
-
15:14 - 15:17was about one thing and one thing only:
-
15:17 - 15:19how strong was our army,
how strong was our air force, -
15:19 - 15:22how strong was our navy
and how strong were our allies. -
15:22 - 15:24That was when the enemy
was outside the walls. -
15:24 - 15:27Now the enemy is inside the walls.
-
15:27 - 15:29Now if I want to talk
about the defense of my country, -
15:29 - 15:31I have to speak to the Minister of Health
-
15:31 - 15:34because pandemic disease
is a threat to my security, -
15:34 - 15:36I have to speak to the Minister
of Agriculture -
15:36 - 15:39because food security
is a threat to my security, -
15:39 - 15:42I have to speak
to the Minister of Industry -
15:42 - 15:45because the fragility
of our hi-tech infrastructure -
15:45 - 15:47is now a point of attack
for our enemies - -
15:48 - 15:49as we see from cyber warfare -
-
15:50 - 15:52I have to speak
to the Minister of Home Affairs -
15:52 - 15:54because who has entered my country,
-
15:54 - 15:57who lives in that terraced
house in that inner city -
15:57 - 16:00has a direct effect
on what happens in my country - -
16:00 - 16:03as we in London saw in the 7/7 bombings.
-
16:03 - 16:06It's no longer the case
that the security of a country -
16:06 - 16:09is simply a matter for its soldiers
and its ministry of defense. -
16:09 - 16:12It's its capacity to lock
together its institutions. -
16:12 - 16:15And this tells you
something very important. -
16:15 - 16:17It tells you that, in fact,
-
16:17 - 16:20our governments, vertically constructed,
-
16:20 - 16:23constructed on the economic model
of the Industrial Revolution - -
16:23 - 16:25vertical hierarchy,
specialization of tasks, -
16:26 - 16:27command structures -
-
16:27 - 16:29have got the wrong structures completely.
-
16:29 - 16:30You in business know
-
16:30 - 16:34that the paradigm structure
of our time, ladies and gentlemen, -
16:34 - 16:35is the network.
-
16:35 - 16:37It's your capacity
to network that matters, -
16:37 - 16:40both within your governments
and externally. -
16:40 - 16:42So here is Ashdown's third law.
-
16:42 - 16:45By the way, don't ask me
about Ashdown's first and second law -
16:45 - 16:47because I haven't invented those yet;
-
16:47 - 16:50it always sounds better
if there's a third law, doesn't it? -
16:50 - 16:52Ashdown's third law
is that in the modern age, -
16:52 - 16:54where everything
is connected to everything, -
16:54 - 16:57the most important thing
about what you can do -
16:57 - 16:59is what you can do with others.
-
16:59 - 17:01The most important bit
about your structure - -
17:01 - 17:04whether you're a government,
whether you're an army regiment, -
17:04 - 17:06whether you're a business -
-
17:06 - 17:08is your docking points,
your inter-connectors, -
17:08 - 17:10your capacity to network with others.
-
17:10 - 17:11You understand that in industry;
-
17:12 - 17:13governments don't.
-
17:14 - 17:16But now one final thing.
-
17:16 - 17:19If it is the case, ladies
and gentlemen - and it is - -
17:19 - 17:20that we are now locked together
-
17:20 - 17:23in a way that has never
been quite the same before, -
17:23 - 17:26then it's also the case that we share
a destiny with each other. -
17:27 - 17:30Suddenly and for the very first time,
-
17:30 - 17:33collective defense, the thing
that has dominated us -
17:33 - 17:35as the concept of securing our nations,
-
17:36 - 17:37is no longer enough.
-
17:37 - 17:38It used to be the case
-
17:38 - 17:41that if my tribe was more powerful
than their tribe, I was safe; -
17:41 - 17:44if my country was more powerful
than their country, I was safe; -
17:44 - 17:48my alliance, like NATO, was more powerful
than their alliance, I was safe. -
17:48 - 17:49It is no longer the case.
-
17:49 - 17:52The advent of the interconnectedness
-
17:52 - 17:54and of the weapons of mass destruction
-
17:54 - 17:56means that, increasingly,
-
17:56 - 17:58I share a destiny with my enemy.
-
17:58 - 17:59When I was a diplomat
-
17:59 - 18:02negotiating the disarmament
treaties with the Soviet Union -
18:03 - 18:05in Geneva in the 1970s,
-
18:05 - 18:07we succeeded because we understood
-
18:07 - 18:09we shared a destiny with them.
-
18:09 - 18:12Collective security is not enough.
-
18:12 - 18:14Peace has come to Northern Ireland
-
18:14 - 18:17because both sides realized
that the zero-sum game couldn't work. -
18:17 - 18:20They shared a destiny with their enemies.
-
18:20 - 18:22One of the great barriers
to peace in the Middle East -
18:22 - 18:25is that both sides, both Israel
and, I think, the Palestinians, -
18:25 - 18:27do not understand
-
18:27 - 18:29that they share a collective destiny.
-
18:30 - 18:32And so suddenly, ladies and gentlemen,
-
18:32 - 18:33what has been the proposition
-
18:33 - 18:36of visionaries and poets down the ages
-
18:37 - 18:39becomes something we have
to take seriously -
18:39 - 18:41as a matter of public policy.
-
18:41 - 18:44I started with a poem, I'll end with one.
-
18:44 - 18:47The great poem of John Donne's.
-
18:47 - 18:50"Send not for whom the bell tolls."
-
18:51 - 18:53The poem is called "No Man is an Island."
-
18:53 - 18:55And it goes:
-
18:55 - 18:58"Every man's death affected me,
-
18:58 - 19:00for I am involved in mankind,
-
19:00 - 19:02send not to ask
-
19:02 - 19:04for whom the bell tolls,
-
19:04 - 19:06it tolls for thee."
-
19:06 - 19:09For John Donne,
a recommendation of morality. -
19:10 - 19:11For us, I think,
-
19:12 - 19:14part of the equation for our survival.
-
19:14 - 19:16Thank you very much.
-
19:16 - 19:18(Applause)
- Title:
- The global power shift | Paddy Ashdown | TEDxBrussels
- Description:
-
Paddy Ashdown claims that we are living in a moment in history where power is changing in ways it never has before. In a spellbinding talk he outlines the three major global shifts that he sees coming.
- Video Language:
- English
- Team:
closed TED
- Project:
- TEDxTalks
- Duration:
- 19:25
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Ivana Korom edited English subtitles for The global power shift | Paddy Ashdown | TEDxBrussels | |
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Ivana Korom edited English subtitles for The global power shift | Paddy Ashdown | TEDxBrussels | |
![]() |
Ivana Korom edited English subtitles for The global power shift | Paddy Ashdown | TEDxBrussels | |
![]() |
Ivana Korom approved English subtitles for The global power shift | Paddy Ashdown | TEDxBrussels | |
![]() |
Ivana Korom accepted English subtitles for The global power shift | Paddy Ashdown | TEDxBrussels | |
![]() |
Ivana Korom edited English subtitles for The global power shift | Paddy Ashdown | TEDxBrussels | |
![]() |
Ivana Korom edited English subtitles for The global power shift | Paddy Ashdown | TEDxBrussels | |
![]() |
Ivana Korom edited English subtitles for The global power shift | Paddy Ashdown | TEDxBrussels |