What is this ‘rules-based international order’ that Western elites keep talking about?
By: Rachel Marsden
America, and its allies, love to invoke the code words for ‘you are free to do 
as we tell you’
US President Joe Biden has beaten the drum that Americans will have to pay high 
prices for energy for “as long as it takes” to stick it to Russia in Ukraine. A 
couple of months ago, when one of Biden’s advisors, Brian Deese, was quizzed 
about the president’s response to the price hikes on CNN, he replied: “This is 
about the future of the liberal world order and we have to stand firm."
In 2016, then Vice-President Joe Biden said to Canadian Prime Minister Justin 
Trudeau during a visit to Ottawa: “The world is going to spend a lot of time 
looking to you Mr. Prime Minister as we see more and more challenges to the 
liberal international order than any time since the end of World War Two.”
French President Emmanuel Macron invoked a similar concept of fighting to 
maintain a certain “world order” during his press conference at the conclusion 
of the G7 Summit this June in Germany, when he said that the Russia-Ukraine 
conflict upsets the principles of international rules that have been established 
since 1945. Macron didn’t elaborate, but that was the year the United Nations 
was created and France was given a permanent seat on its security council 
alongside the US, Russia, the UK, and China.
Also in June, when European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen visited 
New Zealand’s Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern, both leaders issued a joint 
statement that “reaffirmed New Zealand's and the European Union's strong 
commitment to multilateralism and the rules based international order.” 
So, what exactly is this “world order”? Why can’t Western officials stop evoking 
it? And what does the conflict in Ukraine have to do with it? 
In short, it’s a vision of a world that’s Western-led with dominant classic 
Western values of economic and trade freedom serving as a foothold for spreading 
political freedom to the ultimate benefit of the average citizen. At least in 
theory.
The reality is much more complicated. All too often, the spreading of freedom 
hasn’t been free — at least for the average person. Military interventions or 
covert political interference are typically used to upend unwanted systems so 
that a compliant leadership can be installed that will primarily serve the 
economic and political interests of Western elites. The concern for the people 
and their personal economic situation generally ends there, even if they end up 
worse off than before, as is often the case.
The “world order” has also historically implied an unequal East-West bipolarity, 
with the West historically seen as dominant. 
So why are Western elites so worried about the state of all of this now? Well, 
let’s face it — the sands are shifting. And it has been a long time coming.
More people are starting to question the benefit to the average person of 
military interventions sold under the guise of spreading of freedom and 
democracy. Instead, they’re exploiting globalization and economic liberalism by 
living, working, or selling abroad. They’re doing so using the technological 
tools initially funded and created by Western governments for the purpose of 
global mercantilism and Big Brother surveillance.
With the growing independence of the average person comes an increased distaste 
for big government interference. Their independence also allows for a more 
clear-eyed view of the not-so-invisible hand of the state and the mess that it 
has made in recent years under the control of Western establishment elites who 
can seem almost comically detached from everyday priorities and realities. 
The conflict in Ukraine risks creating the ultimate nightmare for Western 
elites: an alternative group of allies over which the West has no control, but 
which has the capacity to offer citizens of the world economic opportunities 
that are competitive with what their own governments or countries are offering. 
Or as former CIA director and US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo recently told a 
Washington think-tank: “By aiding Ukraine, we undermined the creation of a 
Russian-Chinese axis bent on exerting military and economic hegemony in Europe.”
Events in Ukraine and the Western sanctions resulting from it are serving to 
catalyze the development and implementation of a parallel Eastern or 
South-Eastern offer with alternative systems and structures. The result is even 
greater freedom of choice for the average Western citizen who can even further 
lessen their reliance on their own government. Good luck trying to sell or 
leverage the conventional “us versus them” concept that underpins the old world 
order to citizens who are enjoying the benefits of access to “them”. 
As Western governments lose control, they’re cracking down on those who advocate 
in favor of greater sovereignty and independence — two concepts which the elites 
love to invoke for manipulative purposes but see almost as dirty words when 
coming from the mouths of actual people seeking to assert their own rights. The 
rise of populism is also a symptom of the problem that Western governments 
created for themselves by failing to reverse course on their own systemic 
corruption and increasingly authoritarian tendencies. 
 
Western elites are doubling down in Ukraine to save the world order that 
protects their own selfish interests, thinking that it’s the way to prevent a 
parallel option from emerging. It’s as simple as that. And they don’t care if 
it’s the average citizen who has to pay the price.
 
COPYRIGHT 2022 RACHEL MARSDEN