Parag Khanna maps the future of countries

652,479 views ・ 2009-09-28

TED


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

00:12
Do we live in a borderless world?
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Before you answer that, have a look at this map.
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Contemporary political map shows
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that we have over 200 countries in the world today.
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That's probably more than at any time in centuries.
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Now, many of you will object.
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For you this would be a more appropriate map.
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You could call it TEDistan.
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In TEDistan, there are no borders,
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just connected spaces and unconnected spaces.
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Most of you probably reside in one of the 40 dots
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on this screen, of the many more
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that represent 90 percent of the world economy.
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But let's talk about the 90 percent of the world population
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that will never leave the place in which they were born.
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For them, nations, countries, boundaries, borders still matter a great deal,
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and often violently.
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01:02
Now here at TED, we're solving some of the great
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riddles of science and mysteries of the universe.
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Well here is a fundamental problem we have not solved:
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our basic political geography.
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How do we distribute ourselves around the world?
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Now this is important, because border conflicts
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justify so much of the world's military-industrial complex.
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Border conflicts can derail
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so much of the progress that we hope to achieve here.
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So I think we need a deeper understanding
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of how people, money, power,
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religion, culture, technology
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interact to change the map of the world.
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And we can try to anticipate those changes,
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and shape them in a more constructive direction.
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So we're going to look at some maps of the past,
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the present and some maps you haven't seen
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in order to get a sense of where things are going.
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Let's start with the world of 1945.
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1945 there were just 100 countries in the world.
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After World War II, Europe was devastated,
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but still held large overseas colonies:
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French West Africa, British East Africa, South Asia, and so forth.
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02:03
Then over the late '40s,
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'50s, '60s, '70s and '80s,
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waves of decolonization took place.
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02:09
Over 50 new countries were born.
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02:11
You can see that Africa has been fragmented.
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India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, South East Asian nations created.
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Then came the end of the Cold War.
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The end of the Cold War and the disintegration of the Soviet Union.
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You had the creation of new states in Eastern Europe,
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02:27
the former Yugoslav republics and the Balkans,
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and the 'stans of central Asia.
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Today we have 200 countries in the world.
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The entire planet is covered
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by sovereign, independent nation-states.
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02:40
Does that mean that someone's gain has to be someone else's loss?
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Let's zoom in on one of the most strategic areas of the world,
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Eastern Eurasia.
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As you can see on this map,
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Russia is still the largest country in the world.
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And as you know, China is the most populous.
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And they share a lengthy land border.
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What you don't see on this map
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is that most of Russia's 150 million people
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are concentrated in its western provinces
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and areas that are close to Europe.
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And only 30 million people are in its eastern areas.
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In fact, the World Bank predicts
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that Russia's population is declining
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towards about 120 million people
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03:18
And there is another thing that you don't see on this map.
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Stalin, Khrushchev and other Soviet leaders
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forced Russians out to the far east
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to be in gulags, labor camps,
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nuclear cities, whatever the case was.
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But as oil prices rose,
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Russian governments have invested in infrastructure
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to unite the country, east and west.
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But nothing has more perversely impacted
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Russia's demographic distribution,
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because the people in the east, who never wanted to be there anyway,
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have gotten on those trains and roads
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and gone back to the west.
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As a result, in the Russian far east today,
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which is twice the size of India,
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you have exactly six million Russians.
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So let's get a sense of what is happening in this part of the world.
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We can start with Mongolia, or as some call it, Mine-golia.
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Why do they call it that?
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Because in Mine-golia, Chinese firms operate
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and own most of the mines -- copper, zinc, gold --
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and they truck the resources south and east into mainland China.
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China isn't conquering Mongolia.
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It's buying it.
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Colonies were once conquered. Today countries are bought.
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So let's apply this principle to Siberia.
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Siberia most of you probably think of
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as a cold, desolate, unlivable place.
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But in fact, with global warming and rising temperatures,
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all of a sudden you have vast wheat fields
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and agribusiness, and grain being produced in Siberia.
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But who is it going to feed?
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Well, just on the other side of the Amo River,
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in the Heilongjiang and Harbin provinces of China,
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you have over 100 million people.
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That's larger than the entire population of Russia.
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Every single year, for at least a decade or more,
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[60,000] of them have been voting with their feet,
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crossing, moving north and inhabiting this desolate terrain.
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They set up their own bazaars and medical clinics.
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They've taken over the timber industry
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and been shipping the lumber east, back into China.
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Again, like Mongolia,
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China isn't conquering Russia. It's just leasing it.
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That's what I call globalization Chinese style.
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Now maybe this is what the map of the region
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might look like in 10 to 20 years.
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But hold on. This map is 700 years old.
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This is the map of the Yuan Dynasty,
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led by Kublai Khan, the grandson of Genghis Khan.
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So history doesn't necessarily repeat itself,
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but it does rhyme.
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This is just to give you a taste of what's happening in this part of the world.
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Again, globalization Chinese style.
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Because globalization opens up all kinds of ways for us to
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undermine and change the way we think about political geography.
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So, the history of East Asia in fact,
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people don't think about nations and borders.
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They think more in terms of empires and hierarchies,
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usually Chinese or Japanese.
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Well it's China's turn again.
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So let's look at how China is re-establishing
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that hierarchy in the far East.
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It starts with the global hubs.
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Remember the 40 dots on the nighttime map
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that show the hubs of the global economy?
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East Asia today has more of those global hubs
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than any other region in the world.
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Tokyo, Seoul, Beijing, Shanghai,
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Hong Kong, Singapore and Sidney.
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These are the filters and funnels of global capital.
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Trillions of dollars a year are being brought into the region,
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so much of it being invested into China.
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Then there is trade.
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These vectors and arrows represent ever stronger
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trade relationships that China has
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with every country in the region.
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Specifically, it targets Japan
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and Korea and Australia,
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countries that are strong allies of the United States.
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Australia, for example, is heavily dependent
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on exporting iron ore and natural gas to China.
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For poorer countries, China reduces tariffs
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so that Laos and Cambodia can sell their goods more cheaply
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and become dependent on exporting to China as well.
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And now many of you have been reading in the news
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how people are looking to China
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to lead the rebound, the economic rebound, not just in Asia, but potentially for the world.
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The Asian free trade zone, almost free trade zone, that's emerging
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now has a greater trade volume than trade across the Pacific.
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So China is becoming the anchor of the economy in the region.
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Another pillar of this strategy is diplomacy.
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China has signed military agreements with many countries in the region.
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It has become the hub of diplomatic institutions
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such as the East Asian Community.
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Some of these organizations don't even have
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the United States as a member.
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There is a treaty of nonaggression between countries,
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such that if there were a conflict between China and the United States,
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most countries vow to just sit it out,
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including American allies like Korea and Australia.
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Another pillar of the strategy,
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like Russia, is demographic.
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China exports business people, nannies, students,
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teachers to teach Chinese around the region,
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to intermarry and to occupy ever greater
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commanding heights of the economies.
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Already ethnic Chinese people
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in Malaysia, Thailand and Indonesia
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are the real key factors and drivers
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in the economies there.
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Chinese pride is resurgent in the region
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as a result.
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Singapore, for example, used to ban Chinese language education.
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Now it encourages it.
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If you add it all up what do you get?
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Well, if you remember before World War II,
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Japan had a vision
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for a greater Japanese co-prosperity sphere.
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What's emerging today is what you might call
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a greater Chinese co-prosperity sphere.
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So no matter what the lines on the map tell you
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in terms of nations and borders,
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what you really have emerging in the far east
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are national cultures,
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but in a much more fluid, imperial zone.
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All of this is happening without firing a shot.
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That's most certainly not the case in the Middle East
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where countries are still very uncomfortable
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in the borders left behind by European colonialists.
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So what can we do to think about borders differently in this part of the world?
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What lines on the map should we focus on?
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What I want to present to you is what I call
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state building, day by day.
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Let's start with Iraq.
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Six years after the U.S. invasion of Iraq,
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the country still exists more on a map than it does in reality.
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Oil used to be one of the forces holding Iraq together;
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now it is the most significant cause of the country's disintegration.
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The reason is Kurdistan.
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The Kurds for 3,000 years
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have been waging a struggle for independence,
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and now is their chance to finally have it.
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These are pipeline routes, which emerge from Kurdistan,
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which is an oil-rich region.
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And today, if you go to Kurdistan,
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you'll see that Kurdish Peshmerga guerillas
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are squaring off against the Sunni Iraqi army.
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But what are they guarding?
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Is it really a border on the map?
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No. It's the pipelines.
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If the Kurds can control their pipelines, they can set the terms
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of their own statehood.
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Now should we be upset about this, about the potential disintegration of Iraq?
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I don't believe we should.
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Iraq will still be the second largest oil producer in the world,
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behind Saudi Arabia.
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And we'll have a chance to solve a 3,000 year old dispute.
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Now remember Kurdistan is landlocked.
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It has no choice but to behave.
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In order to profit from its oil
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it has to export it through Turkey or Syria,
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and other countries, and Iraq itself.
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And therefore it has to have amicable relations with them.
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Now lets look at a perennial conflict in the region.
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That is, of course, in Palestine.
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Palestine is something of a cartographic anomaly
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because it's two parts Palestinian, one part Israel.
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30 years of rose garden diplomacy
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have not delivered us peace in this conflict.
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What might? I believe that what might
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solve the problem is infrastructure.
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Today donors are spending billions of dollars on this.
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These two arrows are an arc,
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an arc of commuter railroads and other infrastructure
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that link the West Bank and Gaza.
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If Gaza can have a functioning port
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and be linked to the West Bank, you can have a viable Palestinian state,
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Palestinian economy.
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That, I believe, is going to bring peace to this particular conflict.
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The lesson from Kurdistan and from Palestine
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is that independence alone, without infrastructure,
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is futile.
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Now what might this entire region look like
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if in fact we focus on other lines on the map besides borders,
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when the insecurities might abate?
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The last time that was the case was actually
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a century ago, during the Ottoman Empire.
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This is the Hejaz Railway.
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The Hejaz Railway ran from Istanbul to Medina via Damascus.
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It even had an offshoot running to Haifa
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in what is today Israel, on the Mediterranean Sea.
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But today the Hejaz Railway lies in tatters, ruins.
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If we were to focus on reconstructing these curvy lines on the map,
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infrastructure, that cross the straight lines, the borders,
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I believe the Middle East would be a far more peaceful region.
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Now let's look at another part of the world,
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the former Soviet Republics of Central Asia, the 'stans.
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These countries' borders originate from Stalin's decrees.
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He purposely did not want these countries to make sense.
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He wanted ethnicities to mingle
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in ways that would allow him to divide and rule.
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Fortunately for them, most of their oil and gas resources
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were discovered after the Soviet Union collapsed.
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Now I know some of you may be thinking, "Oil, oil, oil.
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Why is it all he's talking about is oil?"
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Well, there is a big difference in the way we used to talk about oil
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and the way we're talking about it now.
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Before it was, how do we control their oil?
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Now it's their oil for their own purposes.
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And I assure you it's every bit as important to them
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as it might have been to colonizers and imperialists.
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Here are just some of the pipeline projections
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and possibilities and scenarios
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and routes that are being mapped out for the next several decades.
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A great deal of them.
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For a number of countries in this part of the world,
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having pipelines is the ticket to becoming part of the global economy
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and for having some meaning
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besides the borders that they are not loyal to themselves.
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Just take Azerbaijan.
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Azerbaijan was a forgotten corner of the Caucuses,
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but now with the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan pipeline into Turkey,
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it has rebranded itself as the frontier of the west.
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Then there is Turkmenistan, which most people think of
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as a frozen basket case.
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But now it's contributing gas across the Caspian Sea
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to provide for Europe,
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and even a potentially Turkmen-
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Afghan-Pakistan-India pipeline as well.
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Then there is Kazakhstan, which didn't even have a name before.
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It was more considered South Siberia during the Soviet Union.
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Today most people recognize Kazakhstan
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as an emerging geopolitical player. Why?
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Because it has shrewdly designed pipelines to flow across the Caspian,
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north through Russia, and even east to China.
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More pipelines means more silk roads, instead of the Great Game.
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The Great Game connotes dominance of one over the other.
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Silk road connotes independence and mutual trust.
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The more pipelines we have, the more silk roads we'll have,
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and the less of a dominant Great Game competition
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we'll have in the 21st century.
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Now let's look at the only part of the world that really has brought down its borders,
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and how that has enhanced its strength.
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And that is, of course, Europe.
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The European Union began as just the coal and steel community of six countries,
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and their main purpose was really to keep the rehabilitation of Germany
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to happen in a peaceful way.
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But then eventually it grew into 12 countries,
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and those are the 12 stars on the European flag.
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The E.U. also became a currency block,
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and is now the most powerful trade block in the entire world.
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On average, the E.U. has grown by one country per year
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since the end of the Cold War.
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In fact most of that happened on just one day.
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In 2004, 15 new countries joined the E.U.
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and now you have what most people consider
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a zone of peace spanning 27 countries
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and 450 million people.
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So what is next? What is the future of the European Union?
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Well in light blue, you see the zones
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or the regions that are at least two-thirds
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or more dependent on the European Union
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for trade and investment.
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What does that tell us? Trade and investment tell us
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that Europe is putting its money where its mouth is.
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Even if these regions aren't part of the E.U.,
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they are becoming part of its sphere of influence.
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Just take the Balkans. Croatia, Serbia
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Bosnia, they're not members of the E.U. yet.
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But you can get on a German ICE train
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and make it almost to Albania.
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In Bosnia you use the Euro currency already,
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and that's the only currency they're probably ever going to have.
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So, looking at other parts of Europe's periphery, such as North Africa.
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On average, every year or two,
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a new oil or gas pipeline opens up under the Mediterranean,
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connecting North Africa to Europe.
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That not only helps Europe diminish its reliance
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on Russia for energy,
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but if you travel to North Africa today, you'll hear more and more people saying
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that they don't really think of their region as the Middle East.
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So in other words, I believe that President Sarkozy of France
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is right when he talks about a Mediterranean union.
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Now let's look at Turkey and the Caucasus.
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I mentioned Azerbaijan before.
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That corridor of Turkey and the Caucasus
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has become the conduit for 20 percent
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of Europe's energy supply.
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So does Turkey really have to be a member of the European Union?
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I don't think it does. I think it's already part of
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a Euro-Turkish superpower.
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So what's next? Where are we going to see borders change
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and new countries born?
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Well, South Central Asia, South West Asia
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is a very good place to start.
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Eight years after the U.S. invaded Afghanistan
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there is still a tremendous amount of instability.
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Pakistan and Afghanistan are still so fragile
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that neither of them have dealt constructively
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with the problem of Pashtun nationalism.
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This is the flag that flies in the minds
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of 20 million Pashtuns
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who live on both sides of the Afghan and Pakistan border.
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Let's not neglect the insurgency just to the south,
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Balochistan. Two weeks ago,
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Balochi rebels attacked a Pakistani military garrison,
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and this was the flag that they raised over it.
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The post-colonial entropy
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that is happening around the world is accelerating,
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and I expect more such changes to occur in the map
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as the states fragment.
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Of course, we can't forget Africa.
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53 countries, and by far the most number
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of suspiciously straight lines on the map.
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If we were to look at all of Africa
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we could most certainly acknowledge far more,
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tribal divisions and so forth.
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But let's just look at Sudan, the second-largest country in Africa.
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It has three ongoing civil wars,
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the genocide in Darfur, which you all know about,
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the civil war in the east of the country,
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and south Sudan.
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South Sudan is going to be having a referendum in 2011
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in which it is very likely to vote itself independence.
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Now let's go up to the Arctic Circle.
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There is a great race on for energy resources
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under the Arctic seabed.
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Who will win? Canada? Russia? The United States?
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Actually Greenland.
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Several weeks ago Greenland's [60,000] people
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voted themselves self-governance rights
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from Denmark.
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So Denmark is about to get a whole lot smaller.
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What is the lesson from all of this?
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Geopolitics is a very unsentimental discipline.
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It's constantly morphing and changing the world,
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like climate change.
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And like our relationship with the ecosystem
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we're always searching for equilibrium
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in how we divide ourselves across the planet.
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Now we fear changes on the map.
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We fear civil wars, death tolls,
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having to learn the names of new countries.
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But I believe that the inertia of the existing borders that we have today
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is far worse and far more violent.
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The question is how do we change those borders,
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and what lines do we focus on?
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I believe we focus on the lines that cross borders,
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the infrastructure lines.
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Then we'll wind up with the world we want, a borderless one.
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Thank you.
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(Applause)
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About this website

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