Mourning a phantom: the cherished “rules-based order” never existed
Helen Thompson
A truth-teller after all?
© PHOTOFUSION/SHUTTERSTOCK
Angela Merkel and Emmanuel Macron may not agree on the future of the EU, but they are of one mind in understanding its origins. Both believe it was founded as part of a precious liberal, rulesbased international order—that Europe must now rally to defend. In a joint press conference with Canada’s Liberal premier Justin Trudeau last year, Macron declared that “the rules-based international order is being challenged not by the usual suspects, but by its main architect and guarantor: the US.” He vowed to fight its unchecked “hegemony,” which would spell “the end of the rule of law.” This argument, that we are witnessing the death of the rules-based order, is made with increasing frequency by troubled liberals. Given the bumpy path of politics and the vulgar posturing of Donald Trump, many Prospect readers will share Macron’s panicked reading.