The regiments of black SUVS and the delighted faces of shopkeepers on Madison and Park avenues in Manhattan this week contrasted sharply with what International Crisis Group’s Richard Gowan characterized as “the real sense of worry and gloom that is quite prevalent in Turtle Bay at the moment,” Turtle Bay being the Upper East Side neighborhood where the UN has its headquarters. The annual UN General Assembly meeting is the only must-do on the global diplomatic calendar, and it was supplemented this year by Climate Week. (There were said to be over 1,000 meet-and-greet events just around Climate Week, with champagne, smoked salmon and a heavy carbon footprint: a harvest of good business for NYC caterers.) The massive attendance in itself suggested a felt need for global, and even globalist, political conversations. Nonetheless, news events and the varied and numerous meetings SIG participated in during the week supported the view of Secretary-General Antonio Guterres that multilateralism in its post-1945 forms is in an accelerating crisis with no clear routes forward.
Familiar items on the UN agenda remained unchanged. Israel and the United States, Hamas and Hezbollah, and other regional actors continued to enact their policies without important reference to the United Nations, including the US-backed ceasefire proposal of June. Ukraine’s defense of its territory against Russian arms continued much as it has been, with a slow extension of the battle into Russian territory, Russian pushback, and no near prospect of victory or diplomatic resolution for either side. Guterres’s dire warnings about the climate crisis were generally thought to be hyperbolic. The desperate situation in Sudan was much discussed but there was very little sense that the available multilateral mechanisms were going to be able to advance peace.
President Biden’s farewell speech received polite but modest attention. Vladimir Putin, of course, did not attend, nor did Xi Jinping. (They sent their foreign ministers. Xi had already met with Guterres in Beijing earlier in the month.) The domestic political vulnerabilities of Keir Starmer and Emmanuel Macron tempered enthusiasm for their own speeches, which were in any case unremarkable. Such was the UNGA-week presence of the veto-wielding Permanent Five (P5) of the Security Council, the only members of the council with serious power and the generators of any successful council resolutions. France called, as it has before, for Security Council reforms to re-legitimize the council politically by broadening its membership beyond domination by the victors of World War II and modifying its rules. Any momentum for such reform remains doubtful.
What was happening beyond the Upper East Side frame of UNGA was more significant. On the weekend prior, President Biden focused on the Quad meeting — India, Australia, Japan and the US — at his home in Delaware. This type of security-driven minilateralism has only grown in importance during the Biden presidency. It is not necessarily to the administration’s taste, and in 2021 Biden had committed, as Obama had 12 years before, to a revival of multilateral engagement, including at the UN. But the significance and productivity of the four-nation grouping did form a contrast to those of the General Assembly with its 193 member states.
On the economic front, the dominant theme of the week was protectionism. It is telling that Keir Starmer positioned his announcement of Britain’s return to internationalism in terms of British “self-interest.” Donald Trump and Kamala Harris both ignored the internationalist week with calls for “a new American industrialism” (Trump on Wednesday) followeed by Harris’s promise on Thursday of $100 billion in new government spending aimed at the same goal by different means. Meanwhile China put forward massive new government plans to stimulate production and consumption in its own economy. In such ways the retreat by major powers from open global markets continued even in this week of internationalism.
Fascinatingly, though, the odd nation out during the week was the United Arab Emirates. On one hand, the UAE has come under growing criticism for its backing of one side in the Sudanese civil war. On the other hand, the UAE’s unusual political creativity and energy made it an outsized player in the Climate Week events and in UNGA side meetings. The UAE has become, in a short time, a significant player in the ongoing refurbishment of internationalism, while hardly big enough (except in its budget and ambitions) to begin to qualify as a “middling power.” Among other things, the UAE’s talent for navigating a middle way between the US and China (part of a trend sometimes called “active non-alignment”) was on display, as was that government’s commitment to fielding senior women ministers in international fora.
The prospect of Persian Gulf emirates as pioneers of a future-oriented multilateralism does not seem obvious. Multilateralism since 1919, if not 1815, has been Western-based both conceptually and in operational terms. A revival of that model seemed no more likely in New York this week than it has for the past decade or more. There are several reasons for this, but fundamentally, peoples and nations of the world increasingly want to chart their own paths, and increasingly simply do not agree on philosophies, policies and actions. The operational norms governing issues from aircraft movement to satellite positioning remain, but the development of new norms has stalled.
This has a number of implications for investors. One is that UN-based multilateral initiatives in areas like climate change and artificial intelligence are not likely to shape the sociopolitical or investment landscape in the near future. Another is that the momentum for open markets will probably come as much from the middling and less-than-middling powers seeking recognition and economic advantage as it will from the greater ones, a reversal of the pattern that held into the Obama administration. With each party fundamentally pursuing its own interests, the need for multilateralism grows but the means for its achievement shrink. Finding investment opportunities then depends less on identifying global patterns than on following the more difficult strategy of betting dynamically on different horses.