The world's new
powers discover the old ethnonationalisms
By Patrick J. Buchanan
After his great victory in
Desert Storm, George H.W. Bush went before the United Nations to declare
the coming of a New World Order. The Cold War was yesterday. Communism was
in its death throes. The Soviet Empire had crumbled.
The Soviet Union was
disintegrating. Francis Fukuyama was writing of The End of
History. Savants trilled about the inevitable triumph of
democratic capitalism.
Yet, in 2012, sectarianism,
tribalism and nationalism are all resurgent, reshaping a world where U.S.
power and influence are visibly receding.
Syria is sinking into a war of
all against all that may end with a breakup of the nation along
ethno-sectarian lines–Arab, Druze, Kurd, Sunni, Shia and Christian. Iraq
descends along the same path.
A U.S. war with Iran could end
with a Kurdish enclave in Iran’s northwest tied to Iraqi Kurdistan, Iran’s
Azeri north drifting toward Azerbaijan, and a Balochi enclave in the south
linked to Pakistan’s largest province, Balochistan, leaving Iran only
Persia.
The Middle and Near East seem
to be descending into a Muslim Thirty Years’ War of Sunni vs. Shia. Out of
it may come new nations whose names and borders were not written in
drawing rooms by 19th- and 20th-century European cartographers, but in
blood.