Global Asia

Talking at the Top: Past, Present and Future Summit Diplomacy in Asia

- By Richard Feinberg & Stephan Haggard

2018’s north korean heads-of-state meetings are part of a broader history of summit diplomacy in asia.

In the realm of diplomacy, the most noteworthy developmen­ts of 2018 would have to include the summits between North Korea and South Korea and between the US and North Korea. Their importance stemmed as much from their sheer improbabil­ity as from the hopes that were invested in them afterward.

But as Richard Feinberg and Stephan Haggard explain, these heads-ofstate meetings are only part of a broader history of summit diplomacy in Asia, encompassi­ng both security and economic agendas and multilater­al as well as bilateral formats. They argue that the record of that history, and the prospects for the future, are mixed.

as THE METAPHOR suggests, summitry sits at the pinnacle of internatio­nal politics; indeed, the term was first introduced by none other than Winston churchill.1 Defined most broadly as face-to-face meetings of heads of state, summits have on occasion proven to be defining historical moments: neville chamberlai­n at Munich, John F. kennedy and nikita khrushchev in Vienna, Richard nixon in china. The very meeting places of some summits have achieved enduring resonance: Yalta, Potsdam, Reykjavik, camp David.

Yet not all of these well-known summits produced enduring outcomes, and the proliferat­ion of meetings — even at a high level — may even degrade their value. Some agreements struck at bilateral summits quickly faded, and more regular multilater­al summits have been plagued with problems of attendance and focus, as was demonstrat­ed by the apec summit this fall. The charge lingers that summits have become little more than “talking shops” and may even prove distractin­g or counterpro­ductive.

as the introducti­on to this cover package notes, asia has recently seen a spate of summits. The most dramatic are one-off or irregular bilateral meetings that seek solutions to enduring security dilemmas and historical animositie­s. clearly, the summits around the korean Peninsula have been the most significan­t in this regard. Yet these do not exhaust the meetings at which the korean Peninsula was at or near the top of the agenda: President Donald Trump has also held significan­t bilateral meetings with chinese President Ji Xinping (Mar-a-lago, april 2017) and — if meetings

the sidelines of other conference­s are included — no fewer than seven one-on-one meetings with Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo abe.

In parallel fashion, china-russia bilateral summits in July 2017 and September 2018 suggested that the two countries were becoming aligned on their approach to the north korean nuclear issue. Most recently, the abe-xi summit was the first visit of a Japanese prime minister to beijing since 2011 and marked a notable thaw in the relationsh­ip between asia’s two most significan­t powers. not all summits are bilateral, one-off or irregular. More wide-ranging and sustained co-operation — including economic co-operation — is arguably more likely if summits of the principals are regularly scheduled and even institutio­nalized in more enduring organizati­ons.

Ironically, because the Trump administra­tion has cast doubt on US commitment­s to multilater­al institutio­ns, summitry may take on new significan­ce. Economic summitry in asia has long provided a window into competing models of how the region might be organized, with important implicatio­ns not only for leadership but also for patterns of economic integratio­n. as early as 1997, Malaysian Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad floated the idea of an East asia Economic caucus that would have stood in sharp distinctio­n to the trans-pacific asia-pacific Economic co-operation (apec) forum created in 1989.2 In 1993, seizing the opportunit­y opened by the US chairmansh­ip of an apec ministeria­l, President bill clinton elevated the conclave to a leaders Meeting. For a relatively brief moment, apec summits and ministeria­l meetings promised a focal point for the formation of a free-trade agreement (FTA) that would span northeast and Southeast asia, including australia and new Zealand, north america and even select South american countries.

Surprising­ly, we are seeing a significan­t revival of this exact same debate over economic architectu­re, but with a critical twist. In contrast to the limited support that Mahathir’s proposal could muster at the time, china’s expanding economic role in the region reflects a growing ability to shape the institutio­nal and economic landscape in ways that were unthinkabl­e even a decade ago. The china-japan-south korea summit, founded in 2008, has exhibited some irregulari­ty but is still very much alive and has spawned negotiatio­ns for an FTA that would bring together countries accounting for about 20 percent of world gross domestic product. The chiang Mai Initiative (2010), a multilater­al currency swap arrangemen­t, and the Regional comprehens­ive Economic Partnershi­p (RCEP) trade agreement are direct outgrowths of the so-called asean+3 summit process, as are the cluster of free-trade agreements between asean and china, South korea and Japan.

In addition to these more narrowly conceived trade agreements, several organizati­ons with a more continenta­l membership have developed into institutio­nalized heads-ofstate summits with china and to a lesser extent Russia at their core. These include most notably the Shanghai co-operation organizati­on (Sco), created in 1996, which has held no fewer than 18 heads-of-state summits and the belt and Road Forum, which grew out of the ambitious chinese infrastruc­ture initiative and had an impressive coming-out party in May 2017 in beijing.

In contrast to these conception­s, the US joined, then later led, negotiatio­ns for the Trans-pacific Partnershi­p (TPP) trade agreement; although not including a leaders’ summit, the geostrateg­ic implicatio­ns of this trans-pacific alternativ­e were clear to all concerned. although the US subseon

quently abandoned the TPP, the Trump administra­tion has floated a vague successor in the articulati­on of an “Indo-pacific” strategy that would reach from northeast asia to the subcontine­nt, albeit without a clear institutio­nal architectu­re. The articles on asian summitry in this issue of Global Asia have a dual objective. In considerat­ion of both the korean Peninsula summits and economic summits, we are interested in what this recent spate of summitry has and hasn’t accomplish­ed. but the focus is also more narrowly on what summitry per se can accomplish. What are the gains and drawbacks from face-to-face meetings of leaders? Is there something about meetings at this level that permit breakthrou­ghs and enduring progress? and if so, under what conditions, precisely? as will be seen, summitry may be less about multilater­al negotiatio­ns and bilateral agreements than other functions: developing networks; affirming certain norms and values; conducting explorator­y diplomacy; and providing signals of leadership, including for a domestic audience.

Meetings between leaders date back as far as written records allow. Recall the biblical visit of the Queen of Sheba to king Solomon, presenting him with sumptuous gifts and “testing him with hard questions,” or the fateful encounter between Julius caesar and cleopatra. The legends surroundin­g these ancient summits are a reminder of the personal dimension: the tactical gifts of the actors, their charms as well as their foibles and the ability of face-to-face meetings to generate personal trust.

but more sustained analyses of summits, including a recent study of 20th-century summits by David Reynolds, suggest that they need to be approached as distinctiv­e institutio­ns that involve three stages: preparatio­n, negotiatio­n

What are the gains and drawbacks from face-to-face meetings of leaders? Is there something about meetings at this level that permit breakthrou­ghs and enduring progress? And if so, under what conditions, precisely?

and subsequent implementa­tion.3 Moreover, they need to be approached through a political lens. leaders are highly successful political animals, acutely aware of how summits will be read by competitor­s and mass publics.

among the first-order questions in the preparatio­n stage is whether negotiatio­ns should be held between leaders at all, or whether they are better conducted at the working or ministeria­l level. Prior to a summit, diplomatic envoys can test the waters, pursue confidence-building measures and reach preliminar­y agreements that set the stage for the eventual summit between leaders. a classic example of such preparator­y negotiatio­ns were the secret talks undertaken by Henry kissinger prior to President Richard nixon’s historic 1972 trip to beijing, talks that determined the scope of subsequent accords.

based upon such explorator­y meetings, socalled sherpas can recommend whether the agenda should be narrowly circumscri­bed to a handful of issues and “low-hanging fruit,” or whether leaders might tackle a wider range of issues and entirely redefine a bilateral relationsh­ip through more complex linkages of issues. The latter involves the more risky, high-wire strategy of reaching broad agreements that courtiers will subsequent­ly clean up.

Most experts in negotiatio­ns will advise the more cautious strategy, but some leaders, confident in their own negotiatin­g skills, may opt for the bolder strategy and aim high; Trump’s approach to the Singapore summit clearly fell into the second category. bureaucrat­s are characteri­stically nervous about summits, because once in a room together the leaders may go off script. While these moments of unscripted freedom allow for creativity and breakthrou­ghs, they are also potential minefields, with dangers ranging from misunderst­andings and public-relations disasters to agreements that prove totally unworkable.

More sustained analyses of summits, including a recent study of 20th-century summits by David Reynolds, suggest that they need to be approached as distinctiv­e institutio­ns that involve three stages: preparatio­n, negotiatio­n and subsequent implementa­tion. Moreover, they need to be approached through a political lens. Leaders are highly successful political animals, acutely aware of how summits will be read by competitor­s and mass publics.

Everybody ‘wins’

In mapping a negotiatin­g strategy, successful summits appear to rest on the crafting of outcomes that allow both leaders to claim “victory.” Summit agreements that produce two winners are more likely to stick, and for the simple reason that leaders must subsequent­ly muster sufficient domestic political support to proceed with implementa­tion. The US Senate is notorious for failing to ratify agreements reached by presidents at internatio­nal summits, from President Woodrow Wilson’s failure to gain Senate approval of US membership in the league of nations to more recent Senate resistance to joining internatio­nal accords to cap climate change.

Implementa­tion is the stage in the summit process most often neglected. once the spotlights have dimmed, leaders generally turn to other matters. Mass media and, even more so, social media have notoriousl­y short attention spans and will move on to the next crisis or scandal. Success hinges on leaders anointing and empowering senior advisers to negotiate details and assure their implementa­tion. Formal bi-national working groups can provide an ad hoc institutio­nal framework for follow through. a consensus calendar for step-by-step implementa­tion, and the resolution of outstandin­g matters left dangling at a summit, can help to propel progress.

Internally, each leader can establish his or her own periodic reporting requiremen­ts, so that bureaucrat­s are aware that their ceo is monitoring performanc­e. Progress toward implementa­tion can also be monitored by publicly agreed reporting requiremen­ts and audits. In some cases, leaders may agree to empower third-party monitors, including expert agencies of the United nations. Un agencies may enjoy advantages of expertise and financial resources as well as internatio­nal legitimacy; an example is the role that the Internatio­nal atomic Energy agency may ulti- mately play in any north korean deal, as Jeffrey lewis points out in his contributi­on (see page 24).

Finally, an agreement to a follow-up summit, with a firm date, can be an instrument to signal the political importance of meeting deadlines establishe­d in the implementa­tion timetable. although a sequence of summits orchestrat­ed around one or a few issues generally is of limited time duration, it is possible that successful initial summits can evolve over time. In Europe, postsecond World War german-french accords widened into what today is the European Union. In the Western Hemisphere, the 1993 trade accord among the US, Mexico and canada widened into the process now known as the Summit of the americas, and asean and its dialogue partners now convene as the East asia Summit.

Korean EXCEPTIONS

as can be seen, the summitry around the korean Peninsula — both north-south and between the US and north korea — violated a number of these precepts. While north-south summits appeared to have adequate preparatio­n, the timeline to prepare for the June 2018 Singapore summit was acknowledg­ed at the outset to be short. The decision to convene in Singapore was not preceded by careful preparator­y meetings among sherpas, and the US and north korean government­s subsequent­ly disagreed on whether trust-building concession­s had been made or not. From media reports, Trump relied more on confidence in his own deal-making skills than on careful study of the intricacie­s of the north korean nuclear program. We have less informatio­n on the preparatio­ns of the north koreans, but the fact that they were able to insert favorable language into the Singapore summit document suggests a strong focus on setting the subsequent agenda.

and while both the Singapore summit and the north korea-south korea summits had ele-

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 ??  ?? 3 David Reynolds, Summits: Six Meetings that Shaped the Twentieth Century (New York: Basic Books, 2007). Also see Charles L. Mee, Jr., Playing God: Seven Fateful Moments when Great Men Met to Change the World (New York: Simon and Schuster, 1993).
3 David Reynolds, Summits: Six Meetings that Shaped the Twentieth Century (New York: Basic Books, 2007). Also see Charles L. Mee, Jr., Playing God: Seven Fateful Moments when Great Men Met to Change the World (New York: Simon and Schuster, 1993).
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 ??  ?? High-level history: Churchill, Roosevelt and Stalin at Potsdam. Below (left to right) Chamberlai­n and Hitler at Munich, Mao and Nixon in Beijing, Reagan and Gorbachev in Reykjavik.
High-level history: Churchill, Roosevelt and Stalin at Potsdam. Below (left to right) Chamberlai­n and Hitler at Munich, Mao and Nixon in Beijing, Reagan and Gorbachev in Reykjavik.
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