Back in September, I said I wished the Obama administration wasn't required by law to submit a formal statement of its “National Security Strategy.” I said this in part because I think such efforts are mostly a waste of time, but also because I thought it might be better not to be too explicit about the adjustments forced upon Obama by the Bush administration’s errors and the 2008 recession. So I suggested that they try to make the report as boring as possible.

The new National Security Strategy was released yesterday, and the usual parsing of its prose is now underway. (You can find other reactions here, and here, and an inteview with the report's primary author, Ben Rhodes, here.) I doubt Rhodes and his colleagues were trying to take my advice, but they have succeeded in producing a document that could make even the most dedicated foreign policy wonk’s eyes glaze over. I haven’t done a word count compared to the Clinton or Bush versions, but I’d bet this one is substantially longer. It’s certainly duller. None of the earlier reports deserved prizes for clarity, consistency, or rhetorical achievement, but the new version manages to make the drama of world politics positively enervating. Given my earlier recommendation, I guess congratulations are in order.

So having struggled through it, what are my first impressions? Let me start by saying that it's hard for me not to like a report whose first page says "to succeed, we must face the world as it is." It then goes on to say that "we need to be clear-eyed about the strengths and shortcomings of international institutions that were developed to deal with the challenges of an earlier time." I read that and almost thought that somebody had screwed up and let a realist into the drafting room. 

But I kept reading, and soon realized that this was not the case. Although the report reflects certain broad realities, it ignores plenty of others. It offers the usual bromides about NATO’s position as the “cornerstone” of U.S. engagement, for example, but takes no notice of the economic difficulties that will inevitably reduce Europe’s ability to be a substantial partner. It talks about the continued "pursuit" of Middle East peace, but is silent on what the administration has learned after eighteen months of trying. It offers a predictably upbeat view of our strategy in Central Asia without acknowledging the possibility that our efforts won’t succeed. Needless to say, that is not quite "facing the world as it is."

The main novelty in the report is its attempt to acknowledge the limits of American power while continuing to extol the virtues of U.S. primacy and global leadership. The report warns against the dangers of over-commitment and repeatedly emphasizes the need to preserve U.S. economic strength (“the foundation of American leadership”). It calls for more active cooperation with key allies and greater recognition of the ways that power is diffusing in the international system. Its focus is on the future, and it treats a number of contemporary problems as short-to-medium-term distractions that need to dealt with so that we can turn our attention to weightier and longer-term issues.

Unfortunately, this mostly sensible perspective is belied by some of the specifics. With the partial exception of Iraq, it is hard to identify any area of the world or any particular issue-area where the Obama administration intends to do less, or where it stands a good chance of getting others to do much more. On the contrary, in addition to maintaining our traditional alliances, building partnerships with new emerging powers, and continuing to "disrupt, dismantle and defeat al Qaeda," we are also going to create a new nuclear security regime, defeat the Taliban and build an effective government in Afghanistan, and keep the pressure on states that are defying the "international consensus" like Iran and North Korea. Our efforts in Iraq won’t really end either: combat troops may be out of Iraq by the end of 2011 but "U.S. civilian engagement will deepen and broaden" and we "will continue to retain a robust civilian presence commensurate with our strategic interests in the country and the region." (Translation: we’ll be meddling in Iraq for a long time to come, and it won’t be cheap).

But wait, there’s more! The United States is going to be “unwavering” in our pursuit of peace between Israel and its neighbors (never mind that we’ve done nothing but waver since the Cairo speech a year ago). We’re going to deny al Qaeda “safe havens” anywhere, address threats to cyberspace, achieve balanced and sustainable economic growth at home, and “accelerate sustainable development” abroad via increased and better-designed foreign assistance. We’re also going to reform existing international institutions, prepare for global pandemics, strengthen global norms against corruption, prevent genocide, reinforce international legal norms, and keep all our existing alliances intact. (I could go on, but you get the idea).

You might think this could get expensive, but don’t worry, because the report also promises that it will spend taxpayers’ dollars wisely and “put the United States back on a sustainable fiscal path.” But how can you maintain the same level of international activity and at the same time balance the budget, rebuild eroding national infrastructure, improve education, stimulate scientific and technological innovation, and foster robust economic growth? Simple answer: you can’t. 

In short, despite the nods to greater balance in our foreign policy and the need to restore fiscal solvency, the report continues to reflect the “pay any price and bear any burden” mind-set that is characteristic of American liberal internationalism. Not surprisingly, it  defines an acceptable “international order” as one where the United States “underwrites” global security and where existing institutions and policies reflect U.S. values and conform to U.S. interests. In fact, despite its rhetorical concessions to the diffusion of power and the need to adapt to new realities, the report declares that one of our key national interests is “an international order advanced by U.S. leadership that promotes peace, security, and opportunity through strong cooperation to meet global challenges” (my emphasis). Or as Secretary of State Clinton put it on Thursday, “the simple fact is that no global problem can be solved without us.” (Take that, President Lula and Prime Minster Erdogan!).

According to the report, the international order we seek will be a “rules-based international system that can advance our own interests by serving mutual interests.” Right, except that the United States will reserve the right to ignore the rules when it suits us. Meanwhile, “adversarial states” (i.e., those who don’t follow our rules) will face a choice: “abide by international norms and achieve the political and economic benefits that come with greater integration with the international community; or refuse to accept this pathway, and bear the consequences of that decision, including greater isolation.” This is no different than Bush’s belief that “you’re either with us, or against us," but it is a lot more long-winded.

As a loyal American, I can understand (and maybe even support) this aspiration, and it’s easy to understand why U.S. presidents speak in such terms. But there are two obvious problems with this conception of international order. First, the report is saying that Washington will continue to define the set of rules and standards by which international behavior will be judged, and if other states don’t accept it, they will face the consequences. In the meantime, however, the United States will continue to violate other states’ sovereignty by sending in Special Forces (with or without permission), or by conducting drone strikes at suspected terrorists (ditto), and woe betide anybody who tries to do the same thing to us.  

This view assumes that having the United States "underwrite" global security is always beneficial, both to the United States but also to others. I think there are circumstances where this has been true (e.g., the United States has helped prevent security competition among the major powers in Europe and Asia for decades), but there are also plenty of places (e.g., the Middle East and Central Asia) where the United States interferences has been much more problematic. Yet the report never tries to distinguish between the areas and activities where the U.S. role is likely to be positive, and those areas or activities where American "engagement" is more likely to make things worse.

Second, the report assumes that other states are going to accept a “rules-based” order that is largely made-in-America. Maybe so, but the track record in recent years isn’t encouraging. The United States is still the world’s most powerful country, but we don’t have anywhere near the clout we had at the end of World War II, when many key global institutions were created. As I noted a few weeks ago, existing global institutions aren’t performing very well these days, mostly because there are a larger number of consequential actors and many of them have different interests than we do. The NSS report devotes some lip-service paragraphs to the diffusion of power and the need to recognize “emerging centers of influence,” but the administration’s recent back-of-the-hand response to Turkey and Brazil’s effort to broker a nuclear deal with Iran suggests that Washington still thinks these “emerging centers” should mostly mind their own business.

One final note: like most such documents (and virtually all presidential speeches), the report is written in a relentlessly exhortative tone. The phrase “we must” and words like “need” or "require” are dotted like flyspecks throughout the prose, along with the repeated declaration that “we will.” The reader is battered relentlessly by phrases like “we must build a stronger foundation for American leadership,” or “we must continue to adapt and rebalance our instruments of statecraft,” normally accompanied by the solemn declaration that we will most definitely do what is necessary to meet those requirements.

Words like these imply urgent necessity: We must do X, Y or Z or something awful will happen. But any sensible person knows that many of these so-called requirements are not essential; they are simply desirable goals that it would be good if we could achieve. But I’d bet that if we re-read this document in five or ten years, we’d discover that a lot of those “musts” and “needs” were never achieved. Not because Obama & Co. didn't try, but rather because some of them were too hard, or misconceived, or because other goals ultimately took priority. But what does it say about our political process if our leaders keep making lots of lofty promises that we ought to know that they won’t keep?

But perhaps I’m carping too much. What matters is not what the administration says in this report (which was only written because they are required to do so by law). What matters is what they actually do in foreign policy, and also what they choose not to do. So if this particular report is a bit of a snoozer and doesn't get all that much attention, maybe that's all for the best. 

Alex Wong/Getty Images

 

SURESH SHETH

8:24 PM ET

May 28, 2010

Second cold war has started

Creditor China has a upper hand against debtor US in this cold war unlike first one when US had a upper hand against Soviet Union.

US has nobody to blame but itself for the rapid rise of China to challenge US.

Afterall China was a pariah country in the world just like today’s North Korea until anti-Communist Nixon’s 1972 visit. All the West European and East Asian countries stayed away from China following the US lead until 1972 and embraced China after Nixon’s visit. While US would not give MFN status to Soviet Union (remember Jackson-Vanik amendment?) unless Russia shed Communism, it had no problem giving it to China’s Communist dictators with a capitalist mask. Trade with China expanded by leaps and bounds during 12 years of Republican rule beginning in 1981. Bush Senior had no problem sending his national security advisor to Beijing within two months after Tiananmen massacre. After campaigning against butchers of Beijing in 1992 elections, even Bill Clinton became enthusiastic supporter of trade with China once he took lessons in foreign policy from Nixon in early 1993 during a special Whitehouse-arranged meeting. US also promoted China to a super power status by accepting it as a permanent UNSC member.

Now China has US by the tail - US businesses are hooked to huge profits that cheap Chinese products generate for them as a walk through any Walmart, Sears or Home Depot filled with cheap Chinese goods attests to and US government is hooked to huge investments that Chinese government makes in US treasuries.

Nixon’s China embrace to counter Soviet Union has come back to haunt US with the rise of China to challenge US just as Reagan‘s embrace of Islamic fundamentalists to counter Soviet Union in 1980s Afghanistan came back to haunt US in the form of 9/11 attacks.

Reagan must be squirming in his grave for his Republican predecessor Nixon being responsible for the rise of dictatorial China as a threat to US after Reagan was supposed to have vanquished Soviet Union.

The West will desperately try to reverse the rise of China but will be largely unsuccessful. Little could Mao or even Deng have imagined that their followers will beat capitalists at their own game. Lenin used to say that ’capitalists will sell us the ropes with which we will hang them’. With the West selling such ropes (in the form of technology transfers), China has proved that Lenin quote quite prophetic.

Diavlogging about another Korean War By Daniel W. Drezner
South Korea does NOT want to harm its trade with China as South Korean foreign minister said publicly. China will continue to support North Korea none the less.

So the verbal chicken game that South Korea and North Korea are engaged in following the sinking of South Korean warship Cheonan, is going to die down within a week or a month and this whole crisis will look like a ‘tempest in a tea cup’ by then.

 

NTERRADAS

10:52 PM ET

May 28, 2010

A new (old) NSS for the U.S.

Excellent analysis of the document, its background, and its place in the domestic and international context. I'm not from the U.S. and I found your reflections objective, balanced and honest. Thanks and congratulations for the piece Mr. Walt! It's always a joy to read your blog. Keep up the good work!

 

KENNETH SORENSEN

8:39 AM ET

May 29, 2010

Mr. Walt deserves an advisory role in the administration

I think Mr. Walt should have an advisory role in the administration

What would one loose if his formidable analytical and processing powers was to get inside the government ? I mean, many of the current advisers look as if they are lost allready. There are so many people brought in by the current afministration, so what would it harm if Mr. Walt was included? Og course it should be a senior advisory role, as we must always be on the lookout for those political animals who would want to pacify him in a secondary position.

Wouldn't it be beneficial to have a man who again and again has shown that he can think for himself? Not only that, but his analysis is top-notch and really the best you can get in America these days. He is also very popular, not least because he speaks in a plain language;. Here his long service as an educator shines through; he actually wants people to understand- yes it is the purpose of the whole thing. And he shows on a daily basis that it is possible to talk about complex issues in every day words.

 

GUYVER

5:48 AM ET

May 30, 2010

He's more effective outside of government!

He can think and write unrestricted by the political constraints of government. Plus, I'm sure (or I hope) the administration is already reading this blog!

 

SUHAILI

9:08 AM ET

May 30, 2010

strongly

Agree!

 

KENNETH SORENSEN

1:18 PM ET

May 29, 2010

Look at Drezner's blog, where I ask him to resign

I just had the unfortunate luck of glancing at a cideo of his, but have to switch it off. One of the ways that ordinary folks like myself judge a man -- and may I say that we somehow expect more of a professor? -- is the way that he interacts with other people. and this particular chap just sat and starred up in the ceiling again and again, while apparently having a (sort of) conversation with a woman.

 

NICHOLAS WIBBERLEY

1:49 PM ET

May 29, 2010

Blood is the God of War's rich livery

It may no longer be possible successfully to follow a foreign policy not based on maximum flexibility. It was OK in the days when areas of the world were more static and could be seen as mechanisms that would, like a 2-stroke lawnmower, respond to tinkering or a judicious kick. Areas that were once distinctly separate are now joined in ways that would not have been conceivable 50 years ago and cannot be fully understood today because they are not static; it is not simply a question of one thing becoming another like Iraq being first an ally and next an enemy, it is rather that the whole world now functions in the spaces between identifiable moments that rush past us like scenes from a train window, and we must be open to a kind of chaos where a collateral death issuing from a drone attack in West Pakistan may become a vehicle loaded with explosives in Times Square.

In 1946, R G Collingwood wrote in “The Idea of History”:

“As the canvas upon which the historian paints his picture grows larger, the power attributed to the individual will grow less. Man finds himself no longer master of his fate in the sense that what he tries to do succeeds or fails in proportion to his own intelligence or lack of it; his fate is master of him, and the freedom of his will is shown not in controlling the outward events of his life but in controlling the inward temper in which he faces these events”.

What Collingwood perceived for the individual now, perhaps, applies to nations. Certainly China, which is no less ambitious than the US, appears to have a calmer and more reasoned response to external events. You may have seen Hillary Clinton at the Foreign Affairs Committee responding, one might think somewhat petulantly, to the Iran, Brazil, Turkey nuclear agreement when the meeting wasn’t even about Iran. She appeared very tired and it seemed a knee jerk reaction; one cannot imagine Yang Jiechi responding to anything in such a non-cerebral manner.

The use of “Democracy” and “Human Rights” to justify overseas adventures also needs to be reassessed since neither is actually what it claims to be and their mantric repetition appears increasing cynical. The soi-disant role of “World Police Force” might also be re-evaluated since only the most ruthless and inhospitable nations are subject to police operating ruthless prison systems outside all law.

The reality is that the American Empire is in decline, not the US itself which remains awesome as ever, rather the 19th century approach to those parts of the world whose resources are coveted. The US might usefully put its bludgeon under wraps and go for a bit of the bribery and calculated corruption so successful at oiling wheels elsewhere.

 

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1:13 PM ET

May 30, 2010

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ARJUNA

2:21 AM ET

June 7, 2010

Re: Snoozing through the National Security

Korea until anti-Communist Nixon’s 1972 visit. All the West European and East Asian countries stayed away from China following the US lead until 1972 and embraced China after Nixon’s visit. The use of “Democracy” and “Human Rights” to justify overseas current political news adventures also needs to be reassessed since neither is actually what it claims to be and their mantric repetition appears increasing cynical. The soi-disant role of “World Police Force” might also be re-evaluated since only the most ruthless and inhospitable nations are subject to police operating ruthless prison systems outside all law.

 

MAKATHEMA

12:26 AM ET

June 21, 2010

Snoozing through the National Security Strategy

An interesting post. As commented "So having struggled through it, what are my first impressions? Let me start by saying that it's hard for me not to like a report whose first page says "to succeed, we must face the world as it is." It then goes on to say that "we need to be clear-eyed about the world sport news today strengths and shortcomings of international institutions that were developed to deal with the challenges of an earlier time." I read that and almost thought that somebody had screwed up and let a realist into the drafting room. "

 

Stephen M. Walt is the Robert and Renée Belfer professor of international relations at Harvard University.

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