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COLUMNISTS
TODAY'S STORIES
27.08.2008
"How to Win Friends and Influence Nations"

DENVER -- I’ve just left an interesting discussion convened by the New America Foundation dedicated to national security--the theme, of course, of today’s Democratic convention messaging. The question at hand: “Can the next President make the Middle East irrelevant?” Good one. John Kerry spoke early on, and was again, in fine stride when discussing global conflicts that will face the next administration. (See Jason’s excellent profile for more details of the resurgent, brawling persona he’s adopted since 2004). TNR contributor Anne-Marie Slaughter of the Woodrow Wilson School and the Princeton Project on National Security has also given a vigorous argument for “rediscovering international law,” a project designed to--as Barack Obama is fond of saying--“improve America’s standing in the world.” Though the idea gets vigorous applause on the stump, Slaughter and others are finally putting flesh on its bones.

She begins by appreciating the climate of suspicion that greets American geopolicy in 2008, indicting the “new rules of the game” that the Bush administration projected after 9/11.  Why, other nations are asking, is Russia’s invasion of Georgia different from our invasion of Iraq without UN sanction? Another good one. Slaughter says, rightly, that “there are differences,” but notes that as a first principle, the US ought to move toward not uninterested, but disinterested (as Gordon Wood would have it) self-regard. Slaughter then lists targets for the new new rules of the game, focusing on three major issues: non-proliferation of nuclear weapons, human rights, and “nonviolent dispute resolution”--the former two about walking the proverbial walk, and the latter, fancy talk for when to go to war. Slaughter makes clear that “the US is not going to announce that we will not use force unless the UN agrees,” but says it's crucial to think about institutions as another first principle when trying to govern the world.

With a mixture of incredulousness and flat reason, Slaughter calls for more work toward “a set of norms” that can help navigate internecine and international flash points, particularly in the Middle East. “The Middle East is the least institutionalized region in the world,” she declares. Just as a matter of comparison, note that African regional blocs, from ECOWAS to NEPAS to the SADC or the AU, are extant, if weak. The Middle East, on the other hand, boasts the Arab League and the Gulf Cooperation Council, but by every measure lags behind, with no comprehensive body involving “all” the regional interests, and no way to isolate individual states or to collectively negotiate. Other developmental difficulties aside, this is an area of backwardness that nations like the US cannot afford to leave unaddressed.

Another asymmetrical point Slaughter makes (via Richard Danzig) is that "India used to be the Middle East," (when we still had an Orient); now what we call the Middle east is the Near East—though “India is still there,” she remarks wryly. The upside: The architecture of the Eurasian continent is uniquely suited to a future geopolitical harmony. “The way I look at the region,” says Slaughter, “you have an unstable region between two stable groups of democracies; there’s the EU on the one side and India on the other. Both [countries] have a huge role to play in stabilizing and strengthening the region.” She praises Nicolas Sarkozy’s work for a Mediterranean Union, calling it a project of “tremendous potential” that could pave the way for more stable networks of governing officials, connecting them, allowing them to share best practices and when necessary asserting pressures on member states. And India of course, is a bustling democracy with a huge professional class that is dispersed throughout the region, and can certainly exert influence on the subcontinent. That seems a bit farfetched--as India’s first, second and third foreign policy priorities have to do with Pakistan--but the nuclear power could certainly be an effective partner. I think here, the six-party talks in east Asia are an instructive precedent.

Finally, Slaughter broached a fascinating bit of disagreement with Kerry, who mentioned Turkey’s work in brokering relations between Syria and Israel. Kerry had asked, somewhat indignantly, “Where’s the US?” With respect to Kerry, Slaughter said essentially that it doesn’t always have to be about the United States. “It’s called strategic leadership,” she notes. “Letting other countries take the lead when it’s in their regional interest to do so.” When questioned later, she reiterated that Americans “absolutely have to support” such initiative-taking--but do not need to be the last line of defense, in the Middle East or elsewhere. That, I suppose is one definition of “irrelevant.”

--Dayo Olopade

Posted: Wednesday, August 27, 2008 3:28 PM with 4 comment(s)

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GSpinks said:

first off, dayo, you kick ass!

secondly, I have to admit to the attractiveness of a foreign policy that extracts America from the day-to-day affairs of other countries; my basic conclusion on 20th C. US F-P is that there has been too much meddling and not enough diplomacy, and the resentment at our meddling is making diplomacy all that much more difficult.

August 27, 2008 5:24 PM

teplukhin2you said:

"Why, other nations are asking, is Russia’s invasion of Georgia different from our invasion of Iraq without UN sanction?"

Huh? Which "nations", exactly?

Blame it on Bush, I suppose: hatred of the Iraq intervention is the only explanation for such an intelligent person making such a cretinous equation. Dayo's not alone in her ignorance of the facts of the Georgian situation, the main driver of which has been many months of Russian military provokatsiya, culminating in a trap that Saakashvili stepped into. But it's embarrassing nonetheless, and smelly, as is the bogus equivalence trope about Georgia, a free democracy invaded by a neighboring state, and Iraq, an outlaw state in violation of a UN mandated ceasefire and multiple provisions. It's BS, and Dean Slaughter knows it, even if Dayo does not.

I'll let TalkBacker Robert Powell have the last word here. As Bob eloquently put it on these boards a couple of weeks ago, it's more than absurd-- also repugnant, mendacious -- to suggest "that there is some parallel between this Russian action and that of Coalition forces in Iraq to hold the regime there accountable for decades of invasions, genocide, support for terrorism, development and use of wmd's, and the defiance of seventeen Chapter VII Resolutions including the '91 ceasefire. As far as I know, Georgia has a significantly different record. And if you think the Russians would be behaving any differently now if we had neglected to respond favorably to the entirely justified NATO applications of the ten former Warsaw Pact nations, I have a real world I'd like to introduce you to."

August 28, 2008 3:14 AM

Dayo Olopade said:

teplikhin:

Well aware. Paraphrasing on the fly Slaughter's long, more nuanced riff on other nations' perception of US imperialism does not constitute "ignorance." And oh boy are there qualifications in there--try reading the next sentence, particularly the quote from Slaughter--and then thinking about what Gordon Wood really meant.

You really ought to start your own blog or something.

August 31, 2008 11:25 AM

teplukhin2you said:

Dayo - I don't blog. I read TNR and like to see it maintain some critical rigor, plus I assume the existence of some very sharply dissenting voices on this very site--notably from Henri-Levy and Wieseltier-- implies that you welcome debate on this.

So I'll try again. Your discussion focuses on the Georgian invasion. You say Slaughter noted that certain nations equate Us/Iraq and Russia/Georgia. Now, as far as I'm aware Hamas supported Putin but I've yet to see any nation's leaders making this equation. Certainly not Japan or China or any of our European allies. Was Slaughter referring to professors? Bloggers, maybe?

Then you say "Slaughter['s] new rules of the game [focus] on three major issues: non-proliferation of nuclear weapons, human rights, and “nonviolent dispute resolution”... it's crucial to think about institutions as another first principle when trying to govern the world.... Slaughter calls for more work toward “a set of norms” that can help navigate internecine and international flash points, particularly in the Middle East. “The Middle East is the least institutionalized region in the world,” she declares."

OK, so if we keep the focus on institutions and Georgia/Russia, we see that in contrast to the middle east, Europe and North America are criss-crossed with institutions, including several which include post-Soviet Russia's participation such as the OSCE, the G-8, and even a signed nuclear non-proliferation treaty. And yet we've also just seen an act of bald-faced aggression by a major participant in those institutions, Russia, against a neighboring European state. In fact, Russia's contempt for law and for the principles underlying these institutions was underscored _after_ the invasion by its mockery of a signed cease-fire agreement and prompt dismembering of a sovereign state.

Just to rub it in, that nation's puppet leader has just enunciated five principles of its foreign policy, among which are its "respect for international law" and its belief in jealously guarding its own "privileged interests" in its "sphere."

Maybe Medvedev doesn't read enough Gordon Wood. Or perhaps I'm just naive, or deaf to nuance, but could you please explain how institutions, norms about human rights, and nuclear nonproliferation treaties would prevent such a nation from deciding it could start a war with Ukraine tomorrow?

Wouldn't it make more sense to think about the _failure of_ "institutions as another first principle when trying to govern the world", and suggest how we should behave vis-a-vis major nations who have only contempt for such institutions?

September 2, 2008 6:56 AM