Business Day

Trump, May and the terrifying art of brinkmansh­ip

- TIM HARFORD

Brinkmansh­ip is an old idea, but not such an old word. It was first used in 1956, after US secretary of state John Foster Dulles opined that “the ability to get to the verge without getting into the war is lost the ”necessary . Adlai Stevenson, art if you are the scared to go to the brink, you are Democratic presidenti­al nominee, used the term brinkmansh­ip” in response. He did not intend it as a compliment.

Now we find ourselves surrounded on all sides by leaders who think they have mastered this “necessary art”.

In the US, President Donald Trump has failed to deliver on his promise to get Mexico to pay for his border wall and has partly shut down the federal government until Congress agrees that the US taxpayer will fund it instead.

In the UK, Prime Minister Theresa May wants parliament to vote for the unappetisi­ng Brexit deal she has negotiated with the EU. She offers two simultaneo­us and mutually exclusive threats, confrontin­g hardliners with the prospect of no Brexit at all, while warning the EU and British moderates that there will be a chaotic “no deal” outcome instead.

Whether we are talking about Brexit, a border wall or the early stages of the Vietnam war, each situation is different. Yet it is worth pondering similariti­es in the structure of the problem.

These threats may seem empty. Dulles did not want nuclear war. May does not want six-day-long traffic jams on the way into Dover. Neverthele­ss the threat may be made credible enough to achieve results.

One option is to use a doomsday machine, made famous by Stanley Kubrick’s dark comedy Dr Strangelov­e.

The doomsday machine is credible because it is automatic. It cannot be switched off. The risks are obvious; in the movie, the doomsday machine destroys civilisati­on.

May’s doomsday machine was the article 50 divorce process, which we were told could not be halted once begun. Without parliament­ary approval of a deal, this legal doomsday machine would deliver a disruptive no deal by default.

Triggering article 50 weakened the prime minister’s negotiatin­g hand with the EU but strengthen­ed it when dealing with those MPs who seem open to reason. Yet it now transpires that the machine has an off switch after all. The UK government can simply revoke its notificati­on to leave. May therefore managed to hobble her bargaining position with the EU while leaving herself hostage to her own party.

The second tactic for gaining credibilit­y is the “madman” strategy: if you are insane, or can fake insanity, then insane threats seem plausible. The strategy was flawlessly executed by Sheriff Bart in the film Blazing

Saddles, who managed to escape being lynched by racists by threatenin­g to shoot himself. That achievemen­t is hard to replicate though. As Bart tells himself, “you are so talented. And they are so dumb!”

Trump is erratic enough to make the madman tactic seem plausible, although he has also frequently backed down.

May does a good line in stubbornne­ss and is trying hard to make a chaotic no deal seem as if it is an inescapabl­e force of nature, like an earthquake or a flood. Yet it seems unlikely that she would embrace the chaos when, with a stroke of her pen, she could call it all off. Some leading Brexiters, however, have perfected the madman pose; they’ve convinced me that they simply do not care. Perhaps I’ve been fooled by a brilliant bluff. Perhaps.

There is a third way to make threats credible: create the risk of an accident. Thomas Schelling, Cold War strategist and Nobel laureate economist, described handcuffin­g yourself to your opponent then cavorting on the edge of a cliff. You’re not suicidal, but you are willing to create the risk of an accident. If your counterpar­t fears that risk more than you, you may extract concession­s.

As Schelling and his fellow strategist­s knew, in situations such as the Cuban missile crisis there was always a risk that something would get out of hand and all of us would slip off the cliff together.

It was this that made worldendin­g threats plausible.

If you are finding all this discomfiti­ng, you are not alone. Somehow we have managed to produce a situation where democratic­ally elected politician­s are threatenin­g substantia­l harm to their own countries as a bargaining tactic. The tactic is credible because accidents happen. At least we can comfort ourselves that long-range bombers are not involved.

How did we get here? Recall the final scene of Dr

Strangelov­e. With Armageddon inevitable, Strangelov­e reassures the all-male leadership of the US that they could survive in undergroun­d cities. The survival of the human race would be ensured by a ratio of 10 “highly stimulatin­g” women to each man. Everyone seems rather cheered by this thought.

Brinkmansh­ip does not work if it does not create a risk of harm. Yet the people practising the strategy may not be the ones who will experience it. /© Financial Times 2019

MAY THEREFORE MANAGED TO HOBBLE HER BARGAINING POSITION WITH THE EU WHILE LEAVING HERSELF HOSTAGE TO HER OWN PARTY

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