Ideology
is always inscribed in method. Therefore, our argument is that contemporary
approaches to geopolitics are trapped within a binary opposition between the form of ideology and the content of materiality. One can
repeatedly witness a dualist opposition between the form of geopolitics (the
states-system) and its contemporary socio-historical content (capitalism) in
theorising on the international. Instead, making our own ideology explicit and
drawing from Fredric
Jameson, among others, we propose a rejuvenation of historical materialist dialectics
to overcome this dualist opposition to offer fresh insights on competition and
confrontation within the present-day conditions of capital accumulation. The
reframing we propose rejects the binary dilemma of form and content.
In
one table we represent these distinctions between form and content and link
them to contending approaches to understanding contemporary geopolitics. Hence
there is a dismissal of structural realism because of its material capabilities
overemphasis on the content of the
content in the historical process. Second, social constructivists are rejected
for holding on to the dualism of form and content by emphasising the form of the content in an ideas-centred
account of history. Finally, the approach that most focuses on the production
of form, is the discursive approach to the form
of form in poststructuralism. The result is a focus on a shapeless and
contingent world of fetishised self/other differences that constructs the
modern state and geopolitics.
As an alternative, our reframing
asserts a focus on the content of the form as a historical materialist dialectical
departure point for understanding the internal relation of the geopolitics
of the states-system and global capitalism. Is there something peculiar in terms of the content of the
capital relation that means that the states-system contingently came into being
but has become the necessary form of geopolitics? How is the internal
relation of the content of form
represented most starkly in the modern condition of the geopolitics of global
capitalism? We pose these questions as a historical materialist move away from
the separation or binary dualism of form and content to appreciate their
internality, thus developing our work on internal relations as set out in an
early article in International Studies
Quarterly and then
expanded in Global
Capitalism, Global War, Global Crisis.
For us, historical materialism provides
a dialectical rudder though the binary dilemma of separating out content and
form as external relations and we deploy that dialectical rudder in a
geopolitical analysis of the war in Ukraine. In doing so, we distance ourselves
from those analyses of geopolitics that through the Ukraine War make the case
for expanding the permanent arms economy of military spending (such as Paul
Mason). Equally, we reject those arguments that hold China as offering some
form of multipolar alternative to U.S. geopolitics (such as Vijay Prasad).
Additionally, those treatments of the war in Ukraine that elevate the conflict as
foremost a war of self-determination and independence that must be supported
with militarisation are scrutinised (such as Yuliya Yurchenko).
The war in Ukraine may well be
regarded as a war of independence but it is nested within wider
inter-imperialist rivalries as well as the deep crisis in
global capitalism. The Russo-Ukrainian War has been transformed into a proxy war between
the US and its allies against Russia, fought with Ukrainian personnel on
Ukrainian soil. It would be limiting to view the conflict as a war of self-determination
given that Ukraine will most likely be treated post-conflict as another growth opportunity for transnational capital. Is not Ukraine part
of a latest ‘bomb-and-build’ strategy, akin to reconstruction in post-war Iraq?
It would not be the first time in history that after a successful struggle for
“self-determination” such concerns become pushed aside by the empire of capital.
The geopolitical significance of Ukraine, then, is that it is one of the
keystones in an arc of inter-imperialist competition that stretches across the
Eurasian landmass.
In 2010, G. John Ikenberry perhaps represented most strikingly
the liberal ideology of constructivism and its focus on what we call in Table 1
the form of the content. In an attempt to capture the discontents of the liberal international
order, Ikenberry declared:
In the decades ahead,
the United States and Europe and rising states—many of which are in Asia—will
have more reasons and not fewer reasons to cooperate in open and rule-based
ways.
His view was that the future would still belong to a liberal
international order and that ‘the violent forces that have overthrown
international orders in the past do not seem to operate today’. The
contemporary geopolitics of the Russo-Ukrainian War clearly reveals how
moribund such liberal internationalism and the ideology of an ideas-centred
conception of political economic change actually is.
In contrast, although a historical materialist dialectical
rudder does not provide finality on such issues it does offer a guiding red
thread on the primacy of the category of capitalism as a totality, rather than
separate parts, and how to internally relate the form of geopolitics (the
states-system) and its contemporary socio-historical content (global
capitalism) as moments of a whole. As a result, we argue that war in Ukraine is
an inter-imperialist conflict between the US and its Western allies against
Russia, which also needs to be understood as a warning signal against China.
Resistance against capitalism and its permanent arms economy is the only hope for a more peaceful world order. Opposition to all types of capitalist imperialism is a fundamental starting-point in this respect.
Adam David Morton is Professor of Political Economy at the University of Sydney.
Andreas Bieler is Professor of Political Economy at the University of Nottingham and Co-Director of the independent Centre for the Study of Social and Global Justice (CSSGJ).
This post was first published on the Progress in Political Economy blog, Sydney University, on 2 April 2024.
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