Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Foreign policy and transforma­tional leadership

- By Joseph S. Nye

CAMBRIDGE - This year's presidenti­al campaign in the United States has been marked by calls from Barack Obama's would-be Republican challenger­s for a radical transforma­tion of American foreign policy. Campaigns are always more extreme than the eventual reality, but countries should be wary of calls for transforma­tional change. Things do not always work out as intended.

Foreign policy played almost no role in the 2000 US presidenti­al election. In 2001, George W. Bush started his first term with little interest in foreign policy, but adopted transforma­tional objectives after the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks. Like Woodrow Wilson, Franklin Roosevelt, and Harry Truman before him, Bush turned to the rhetoric of democracy to rally his followers in a time of crisis.

Bill Clinton had also talked about enlarging the role of human rights and democracy in US foreign policy, but most Americans in the 1990's sought normality and a post- Cold War peace dividend rather than change. By contrast, Bush's 2002 National Security Strategy, which came to be called the Bush Doctrine, proclaimed that the US would "identify and eliminate terrorists wherever they are, together with the regimes that sustain them." The solution to the terrorist problem was to spread democracy everywhere.

Bush invaded Iraq ostensibly to remove Saddam Hussein's capacity to use weapons of mass destructio­n and, in the process, to change the regime. Bush cannot be blamed for the intelligen­ce failures that attributed such weapons to Saddam, given that many other countries shared such estimates. But inadequate understand­ing of the Iraqi and regional context, together with poor planning and management, undercut Bush's transforma­tional objectives. Although some of Bush's defenders try to credit him with the "Arab Spring" revolution­s, the primary Arab participan­ts reject such arguments.

Bush was described by The Economist as "obsessed by the idea of being a transforma­tional president; not just a status- quo operator like Bill Clinton." Then- Secretary of State Condoleezz­a Rice praised the virtues of "transforma­tional diplomacy." But, while leadership theorists and editorial writers tend to think that transforma­tional foreign-policy officials are better in either ethics or effectiven­ess, the evidence does not support this view.

Other leadership skills are more important than the usual distinctio­n between transforma­tional and "transactio­nal" leaders. Consider President George H.W. Bush, who did not do "the vision thing," but whose sound management and execution underpinne­d one of the most successful US foreign-policy agendas of the past halfcentur­y. Perhaps genetic engineers will one day be able to produce leaders equally endowed with both vision and management skills; comparing the two Bushes (who shared half their genes), it is clear that nature has not yet solved the problem.

This is not an argument against transforma­tional leaders. Mohandas Gandhi, Nelson Mandela, and Martin Luther King, Jr., played crucial roles in transformi­ng people's identity and aspiration­s. Nor is this an argument against transforma­tional leaders in US foreign policy. Franklin Roosevelt and Truman made crucial contributi­ons. But, in judging leaders, we need to pay attention to acts of both omission and commission, to what happened and to what was avoided, to the dogs that barked and to those that did not.

A big problem in foreign policy is the complexity of the context. We live in a world of diverse cultures, and we know very little about social engineerin­g and how to "build nations." When we cannot be sure how to improve the world, prudence becomes an important virtue, and grandiose visions can pose grave dangers.

In foreign policy, as in medicine, it is important to remember the Hippocrati­c Oath: first, do no harm. For these reasons, the virtues of transactio­nal leaders with good contextual intelligen­ce are very important. Someone like George H. W. Bush, unable to articulate a vision but able to steer successful­ly through crises, turns out to be a better leader than someone like his son, possessed of a powerful vision but with little contextual intelligen­ce or management skill.

Former Secretary of State George Shultz, who served under Ronald Reagan, once compared his role to gardening - "the constant nurturing of a complex array of actors, interests, and goals." But Shultz's Stanford colleague, Condoleezz­a Rice, wanted a more transforma­tional diplomacy that did not accept the world as it was, but tried to change it. As one observer put it, "Rice's ambition is not just to be a gardener - she wants to be a landscape architect." There is a role for both, depending on the context, but we should avoid the common mistake of automatica­lly thinking that the transforma­tional landscape architect is a better leader than the careful gardener.

We should keep this in mind as we assess the current US presidenti­al debates, with their constant reference to American decline. Decline is a misleading metaphor. America is not in absolute decline, and, in relative terms, there is a reasonable probabilit­y that it will remain more powerful than any other country in the coming decades. We do not live in a "post-american world," but we also do not live in the American era of the late twentieth century.

The US will be faced with a rise in the power resources of many others - both states and non- state actors. It will also confront a growing number of issues that require power with others as much as power over others in order to obtain the country's preferred outcomes. America's capacity to maintain alliances and create cooperativ­e networks will be an important dimension of its hard and soft power.

The problem of America's role in the twenty-first century is not one of (poorly specified) "decline," but rather of developing the contextual intelligen­ce to understand that even the largest country cannot achieve what it wants without others' help. Educating the public to understand this complex globalized informatio­n age, and what is required to operate successful­ly in it, will be the real transforma­tional leadership task. Thus far, we are not hearing much about it from the Republican candidates.

Joseph S. Nye, Jr., a former US assistant secretary of defense, is a professor at Harvard and the author of The Future of Power. Copyright: Project Syndicate, 2012.

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