America Can’t Be Trusted Anymore
It's hard to be powerful when nobody believes a word you say.
By Stephen M. Walt
It's hard to be powerful when nobody believes a word you say.
By Stephen M. Walt
April 20, 2018 "Information
Clearing House" - One of
the most overused cliches in contemporary U.S. diplomacy is Ronald Reagan’s
invocation of a Russian proverb: “Trust
but Verify.” Originally used in the context of the Cold War, it
conveyed that Washington should be willing to reach agreements with its
adversaries but only if it could be sure the other side would live up to its
commitments. It was a nice way to indicate both flexibility and toughness,
which is of course why people refer to it whenever the United States
is contemplating new negotiations with one of its adversaries.
Implicit in Reagan’s dictum is the idea that Americans
are honest, plain-speaking truth-tellers who can be counted upon to keep their
word and fulfill their promises. America’s opponents, by contrast, are a
slippery bunch of deceptive charlatans who will exploit any loophole and seize
any opportunity to hoodwink the country. Accordingly, U.S. negotiators must
insist on all sorts of intrusive measures — such as the extraordinarily
stringent inspection regime incorporated into the Joint
Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) with Iran — to make sure they can verify
what others are really up to. Reagan’s proverb notwithstanding, the importance
the United States attaches to verification is really a reminder that there is
damn little trust involved.
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Lately, however, I’ve been wondering whether this
wariness has things backward. Is the real problem that Washington can’t trust
others, or rather that other states can’t trust it? Even before Deceitful
Donald showed up, the United States had amassed a pretty good record of
reneging on promises and commitments. At a minimum, Washington cannot claim any
particular virtue or trustworthiness in its dealings with others. In the
unipolar era, in fact, the United States repeatedly did things it had promised
not to do.
To be sure, this is how one expects great powers to
behave, especially when important matters are at stake. The Athenians famously
told the Melians that “the strong do what they can and the weak suffer what
they must,” and that logic did not escape U.S. leaders throughout the country’s
history. Think about all the treaties U.S. officials signed with various Native American tribes and subsequently broke, modified, or reneged upon
as the nation expanded steadily across North America. Or consider the Nixon
shocks of 1971, when the United States unilaterally ended
convertibility of the dollar into gold, in effect dismantling the Bretton Woods
economic order it had helped create. President Richard Nixon also slapped a 10
percent surcharge on imports to make sure the U.S. economy didn’t suffer as the
dollar rose in value.
Or consider some more recent events. As more and more documents come to light, it has
become clear that U.S. officials convinced their Soviet counterparts to permit
German reunification by promising that NATO would not expand further. Secretary
of State James Baker told Mikhail Gorbachev that NATO would not go “1 inch eastward” and Gorbachev received
similar assurances from a host of other Western officials as well. President
Bill Clinton’s administration blithely ignored these assurances, however, in
its overzealous rush to create what it thought would be a “zone of peace” well
to the east. As a number of observers warned at the time, this decision
poisoned relations with Moscow and was the first step leading back to the level
of confrontation we are dealing with today. That blunder was compounded by the
George W. Bush administration’s decision to abandon the Anti-Ballistic Missile
Treaty in 2002. While technically not a breach of trust (i.e., the treaty
permitted either party to leave if it wished, provided it gave adequate
notice), it was still a clear signal that the United States didn’t care about
preserving good relations with Moscow and was not going to take Russian
sensitivities into account.
Similarly, America’s handling of the 1994 Agreed
Framework with North Korea does not inspire confidence in its trustworthiness
either. There is no question that North Korea violated the agreement by
secretly working on an alternative enrichment path, but the United States never lived up to its commitments either. In
particular, it failed to lift economic sanctions as promised, and the
light-water power reactors it had pledged to provide were delayed for years and
ultimately never arrived. As Stephen Bosworth, the veteran U.S. diplomat who
headed the multinational effort to implement the agreement, later put it, “The Agreed Framework was a political
orphan within two weeks after its signature.”
And then there’s the checkered history of U.S. policy
toward Libya. Building on a successful multilateral sanctions program, the Bush
administration successfully convinced Libyan leader Muammar al-Qaddafi to let
American inspectors enter the country, dismantle his entire weapons of mass
destruction program, and cart it away. To get the agreement, however, Bush promised Qaddafi that the United States would
not attempt to overthrow his regime. It was a clear quid pro quo: Qaddafi gave
up his weapons programs, and the United States promised not to do to him what
it did to Saddam Hussein. But then a few years later, President Barack Obama’s
administration ignored that earlier pledge and collaborated in Qaddafi’s
overthrow.
But wait, there’s more! The multinational operation
against Qaddafi was authorized by U.N. Security Council Resolution 1973, and
Russia agreed to abstain on the resolution because its stated purpose was
preventing Qaddafi from attacking civilians in Benghazi, not toppling the
regime. However, as Stephen R. Weissman has shown in an important article, regime change was on U.S.
officials’ minds from the get-go, and they soon blew right past the terms of
the resolution. As former Secretary of Defense Robert Gates later recalled,
“The Russians felt they had been played for suckers on Libya. They felt there
had been a bait and switch.” And they were right. So, if you’re ever wondering
why Russian President Vladimir Putin has repeatedly blocked Security Council
action over the disaster in Syria, there’s at least part of your answer.
Needless to say, the lessons of Libya have not been
lost on other countries. North Korean media have repeatedly invoked this example to justify the country’s
nuclear weapons program and to warn against ever trusting assurances from the
United States. And it doesn’t take a genius to figure out why. If you were Kim
Jong Un, would you rather pin your survival on a nuclear deterrent of your own
or promises from the United States?
Which brings us to Donald Trump. The world is now
dealing with a U.S. president who appears to have no firm convictions or
beliefs, the attention span of a hummingbird, and who apparently makes
important national security decisions on the basis of whatever fairytale he
just saw on Fox & Friends. As near as one can tell, he never saw a
treaty or agreement signed by his predecessor that he liked, even though he has
trouble explaining what’s wrong with any of them. He just likes to talk about
“tearing them up” no matter what the consequences may be.
Trump is also a serial fabulist who lies with facility
and frequency yet has yet to pay any political penalty for his disinterest in
truth. Determined to outdo his predecessor in every way, Trump uttered six
times as many falsehoods in his first 10 months as president
as Obama did in his entire two terms. Add to that the frenetic pace of turnover within the White
House and the cabinet, and you have an environment where no policy utterance
can be expected to have a shelf life greater than a week or two.
Under these conditions, why would any sensible
government take America’s word for anything? Why would any halfway smart
adversary make substantial concessions to the United States in exchange for
U.S. promises, assurances, or pledges? Why offer up a quid in exchange
for its pro quo? Based on its recent track record, and the character of
the current U.S. president, no adversary would concede a thing unless it were
100 percent certain the United States would deliver as promised. “Trust but
Verify” indeed.
Given this situation, how long will it be before those
with whom the United States is negotiating start demanding intrusive
verification procedures or other guarantees designed to ensure that America
doesn’t sign a deal and then tear it up a year later or demand that it be
renegotiated? How long before other important states decide they cannot base
their foreign-policy decisions on expectations or assurances from the United
States because Washington simply cannot be trusted to do what it says it will?
There are already worrisome signs of precisely this
sort of trend. According to the Pew Research Center, the number of people who
trust U.S. leadership has dropped from an average of 64 percent at the
end of the Obama administration to roughly 22 percent during Trump’s first year
in office. Even more remarkably, a larger percent of people around the world
have confidence that Chinese President Xi Jinping and Putin will “do the
right thing in world affairs” than the current U.S. president. When you’re
trailing those two ruthless operators, it’s time to start asking why nobody
trusts you.
To be sure, this is not to say that nobody trusts
anyone from the United States anymore. U.S. business leaders continue to strike
mutually beneficial deals with foreign counterparts; the beleaguered and
understaffed diplomatic service continues to forge cooperative arrangements all
over the world; U.S. intelligence agencies continue to collaborate with foreign
countries under the protective umbrella of mutual confidence; and countless
military-to-military engagements take place every day on a basis of mutual
respect and regard. Indeed, given the time, money, attention, and lives that
the United States has expended to reassure others about its credibility, it
would be odd if other states had no confidence in Washington at all. It would
be a vast overstatement, therefore, to conclude that past U.S. opportunism or
the unreliable character of Trump had led others to conclude that the United
States as a whole was totally unreliable.
Nonetheless, acquiring a reputation for being
untrustworthy is costly. When trust disappears, reaching cooperative agreements
inevitably requires more intrusive and formal stipulations and arrangements
(like the JCPOA or most multilateral trade agreements) in an effort to cover
every possible contingency and to make it easier to detect violations (and thus
to deter cheating). A lack of trust also encourages states to make worst-case
assumptions about what others will do and to prepare for those contingencies.
The United States has troops in South Korea because it doesn’t trust the North,
and North Korea went to enormous lengths to build a nuclear bomb because it
doesn’t trust the United States.
And that’s why I’m not expecting a major breakthrough
when Trump and Kim get together (assuming they do). Neither side is going to
make significant concessions for the simple reason that they don’t want to be
played for a sucker. We might get some sort of symbolic agreement (such as a
temporary suspension of missile tests while broader talks on denuclearization
continue ad infinitum), but I can’t imagine Kim will do anything that
might put his own survival at risk should “perfidious
America” change its mind.
Stephen M. Walt is the Robert and Renée Belfer
professor of international relations at Harvard University.
This article was originally published by "FP
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