In a moment where the forces of dictatorship and tyranny seem to be pushing back against democracy, the common thread that has successfully aligned nations such as Iran, Russia, Venezuela, China, and Sudan have been the supply and demand of energy. While it is encouraging that the relationships forged seem to be more based on Machiavellian pragmatism then aligned ideologies or long term goals, problematic occurrences and diplomatic realignment have debilitated the West\u2019s efforts to act against undemocratic forces. Increasingly, the ability to act as a geopolitical actor has been taken away from the United States and the UN as powers forge alliances with lesser but energy rich nations, specifically China and Russia with Iran and China with Sudan. Ultimately, the resources are finite and so is the tolerance that the rest of the world should and will have for these deleterious and reciprocally empowering relationships among undemocratic forces.<\/p>\n
In third world countries, the production of black gold often hinders successful economic and political growth<\/a>. For these nations domestically, the nature of the wealth that oil typically creates is concentrated in a few hands that often ascend to political power because of their access to resources. In economically stagnant and wartorn nations like Chad or Sudan, it means the ability to act opressively domestically without fearing recourse from the West out of fear of oil production. In developing nations such as Iran and Saudi Arabia, this means a stratified society that is secured by security apparatuses, oppression, and consolidated power. In more developed nations like Russia, it means high-level corruption and the use of oil as a political tool against regional rivals<\/a>.<\/p>\n
The primary player in the energy market after the United States has been China, whose soaring economy has created a huge international increase in demand for energy. As the BBC states<\/a>, “From zero 15 years ago, China last year became the world’s number two oil importer… China has, we are told, been running around the world signing oil deals with everyone from Iran, to Sudan to Angola. In the race to secure future oil resources China is prepared to deal with even the dodgiest regimes, and pay the highest prices.” The Washington Post recently editorialized in ‘Responsible China? Darfur exposes Chinese hypocrisy.’<\/a>, about the dynamics of China as a world player and China as an energy consumer, with the latter emerging as the more important need:<\/p>\n
Further, a recent Times interview with Prime Minister Wang<\/a> of the PRC exposed China’s continued backtracking regarding decisive multilateral action against Iran’s nuclear program:<\/p>\n
At the Brookings Institute, Erica Downs<\/a> describes the tenuous situation that Sino-American relations are heading towards:<\/p>\n
The shift has occurred while the United States and NATO have been involved in Iraq and Afghanistan respectively that created a vacuum of power and the ability to enforce international law. This has given Russia<\/a> and China more latitude to act brazenly with foreign policy in a reemergence of the Iron Curtain<\/a>. Dictatorships in countries such as Belarus and Venezuela have seen little external pressure as they cozy up to oil powers and disregard the warnings from the West. While this has not created an international crisis, the ability for tyranny to thrive because of economic necessity is troubling. Indeed, the future for democracy cannot be borne or ignored from the desires of the free but from the commitment of the free, diplomatically and economically.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"