Monday, September 13, 2021

Whatever happened to "Speak softly, and carry a big stick"?


Twenty years after the dreadful event of 9/11, the US has pulled out of Afghanistan. They went in, with a coalition of allies, on October 7th, 2001. They were after Osama Bin Laden, and al-Qaeda, who were enjoying the protection of the Taliban, then governing Afghanistan, and who refused US requests to extradite him.[1]

            President George Bush had declared “a war on terror” and had admonished the world’s nations that “you are either for us or against us”. When it came to Pakistan, strong words were allegedly spoken, with a threat to bomb Pakistan “back to the stone age”.[2] He had also spoken of the way in which the US would hunt down the terrorists, and pursue them relentlessly and unforgivingly. So when the US troops were recently subjected to a terrorist attack by a suicide bomber, when thirteen American service personnel along with dozens of Afghans, desperately besieging the airport in the hopes of escaping the country, history was repeating itself. President Joe Biden appeared on TV and spoke directly to the perpetrators: “We will not forget, we will not forgive. We will hunt you down, and make you pay.”

            I understand that this rhetoric is for domestic consumption as much as anything else. Americans’ sense of outrage must be addressed and assuaged. But it also signals a sense of déjà vu, and whether the US is going to learn anything from history. So what happened to “Speak softly, and carry a big stick”? Wikipedia describes this quotation of President Theodore Roosevelt’s[3], as describing his style of foreign policy (which Wikipedia describes as “big stick ideology, or diplomacy, or policy) that Roosevelt described as “the exercise of intelligent forethought and of decisive action sufficiently in advance of any likely crisis”.

            The US, especially since the Second World War, and particularly in the last decades of the twentieth, and the two decades of this century, has most certainly carried a big stick. Whether is still is given to “speaking softly” may be open to debate. I have to say that Biden’s words, quoted above, while directed at a domestic audience, nevertheless inevitably resound around the world, and may fall on others’ ears differently from the way US citizens hear them. As for Roosevelt’s desire for “the exercise of intelligent forethought”, I shall have more to say on that below.

            Wikipedia outlines “big stick diplomacy” as having five components. They are: (1) having serious military capability that would force an adversary to pay close attention; (2) to act justly towards other nations, or as Roosevelt put it in his speech: “in other words, that it is necessary to be respectful toward all people and scrupulously to refrain from wronging them, while at the same time keeping ourselves in condition to prevent wrong being done to us.”[4] (3) Never to bluff; (4) to strike only when prepared to strike hard; and (5) willingness to allow the adversary to save face in defeat. “The idea is negotiating peacefully but also having strength in case things go wrong.”[5]

            Let’s consider the lessons that the US has, or hasn’t learned, using Roosevelt’s description of “big stick diplomacy” and its components as a template. First of all, what about “the exercise of intelligent forethought”? Roger Cohen, in a piece entitled “Delusion in a faraway land”, writes this:

“But America-in-Afghanistan amount to a chronicle of errors and misjudgements that pose fundamental questions for US policymakers. From the moment the United States decided to go to war in Iraq in 2003 on the basis of flawed intelligence–opening a second front and diverting attention and resources from Afghanistan–a sense that the Afghan conflict was a directionless secondary undertaking grew. Defeating terrorism morphed perilously into nation building…

The reckoning of this American failure seems certain to be painful. The inclination to build in the American image–rather than adapt to simpler, less ambitions (sic) Afghan needs and capacities–seems to carry a wider lesson for the United States in the world in the 21st century.

Munter, the former ambassador to Pakistan, led the first Provincial Reconstruction Team in Mosul, Iraq, in 2006. He recalled arriving there and finding “there was no plan whatsoever”… “The Mosul experience”, he added, “seemed like a miniature version of what happened on a much grander scale in Afghanistan”.[6]

And on the recent US withdrawal from Afghanistan, Cohen acknowledges that President Trump had bequeathed a “difficult legacy” to President Biden. Nevertheless, Biden’s “administration had options short of its accelerated withdrawal.”

“The thing that is appalling is that the administration had no plan,” said Stephen Heintz, the head of a foundation that has been working on Afghanistan since 2011. “There was scarcely any consultation with Nato and little with the Afghan Government. It’s a failure of intelligence, of planning, of logistics, and in the end a political failure, because whatever it is, it’s Biden’s.”[7]

Lack of forethought, intelligent or not, seems to be a common theme in much commentary on US engagement in foreign countries’ affairs; not to speak of the inclination to invade and to imagine that “American values” and “democracy” can be easily transported into these places. Shuja Nawaz, in an unpublished opinion piece entitled “Pakistan’s existential threat”, writes, for instance, “As for Afghanistan, it is now quite clear that the United States went in without a comprehensive plan for winning the war beyond the military ouster of the Taliban.”[8]

Allied with this lack of foresight, is a kind of hubris and an ignorance of mores and customs in other parts of the world, and the expectation that “American values” and “freedom and democracy” à la US style is what is good and wanted by the rest of the world. This, admittedly, is a generalisation; and is often a product of political rhetoric by American political leaders. There are plenty of analysts in the US, diplomats, bureaucrats, “think-tank” members and commentators who understand the complexities of the world, and the realities of cultural and national specificities. Nonetheless, the rhetoric is often what seems to fuel initial decisions and actions.

In addressing another issue, I should like to adapt Roosevelt’s third component to “big stick diplomacy”: Never bluff. In its place, I think a better strategy is: do not be hypocritical over the adherence to espoused values and “democratic” ideals. Let’s leave aside discussion of the many times the US has supported, and upheld, dictatorial, totalitarian, or corrupt regimes around the world.[9] Nor shall we consider the US’s own lapses in maintaining or upholding values it espouses: the torture of “waterboarding”, excesses at Abu Ghraib, or holding persons (some innocent) for years at Guantanamo Bay without charge or trial.

When the US Government negotiated the Doha agreement with the Taliban last year, “[t]he clauses of the accord acquiesced to every major Taliban demand and gave the Afghan Government nothing”.  The Times of London article in which this statement appears goes on:

Civil liberties, human and women’s rights? These are passionate aspirations for the millions of educated Afghans who have a vision of modernity beyond the limitations of conflict and fundamentalism. Yet no word of rights, liberty or even democracy is mentioned in the Doha accord, let alone stipulated as a prerequisite of any ultimate peace settlement.[10]

This makes a mockery of Western, especially US, calls for the Taliban to adhere to respect for human rights and women’s rights now that the coalition forces have departed Afghanistan, and have allowed the Taliban to reassert their authority. As Cohen quotes an Afghan entrepreneur, Saad Mohseni as saying: “The Afghans have been pushed under the bus in the most unfair and irresponsible way.”[11] Speaking of the fact that the Taliban pose the most immediate threat to Afghans, “particularly Afghan women, rather than to the United States”, Cohen quotes Stephen Heintz again: “This is a devastating blow to American credibility that calls into question how sincere we are when we say we believe in human rights and women.”[12]

            A further issue is the fact that often the governments that the US was supporting were riddled with corruption, and the abuse of power. A retired major in the NZ Army, who served in Afghanistan, “blames poor governance for the relative lack of opposition to Taliban” advances. “When [locals] aren’t receiving the benefits of any sort of good governance, when a new crowd comes in, there’s no will from the people to fight them.”[13] The Economist makes a similar point, if with a different context in mind: “In Somalia, where British and Turkish troops have been training the security forces, getting them to fight in not only a question of their technical abilities. It is a matter of building up local institutions worth fighting for.”[14] And Shuja Nawaz quotes General David Petraeus as saying, “You cannot shoot your way out of an insurgency. You have to recognize that the military-civil equation is 20 per cent military and 80 per cent civil and political.”[15]

            Unfortunately, a comment made in defence of President Biden’s withdrawal, only serves to underline the importance of attending not only to military, but also civil and political issues. “‘Twenty years was a long time to give Afghan leaders to plant the seed of civil society, and instead they planted only the seeds of corruption and incompetence,’ Representative for Massachusetts Jake Auchincloss, a former Marine who served in Afghanistan, told The New York Times.”[16] I have read elsewhere that many Afghans preferred the relative efficiency, and lack of corruption of the Taliban to that of the legitimate Afghan authorities, despite not liking their ideology. A correspondent for The Times of London interviewing Ahmad Shah Massoud, the “Lion of Panjshir”, before his death in 2000, quotes him as saying, in a reflective mood, “I regret that when I had Kabul I could not do better for the people…And I regret that the system they lived under was so corrupt.”[17] It is, perhaps, worth remembering that the success of the Taliban in surviving, and eventually gaining power again, is built upon the corrupt regimes of a number of Afghan war lords in various provinces. If there is any consolation in the rise of the Taliban, it is that once in power they will need to retain the support of the people. And Islamist militants around the world have not had a good track record of managing power, nor of avoiding popular dissatisfaction with their rule.[18]

            There is no doubt that Afghanistan presents a complex, and intractable problem for Western engagement with it (as are many other, if not all, situations of conflict and power-struggle). There are so many competing agendas and interests; and not simply within the country, but around it (the role of Pakistan in the last twenty year history of Afghanistan could be the topic of another piece). As far as US engagement with Afghanistan is concerned, the world is now a different place from what it was in 2001. The role of China, and its interests in the region, not to speak of its growing economic and political influence, is a factor. As an aside, if any nation has learned the value of “speaking softly” it is China: but it has its own “big stick” in the economic hegemony it has built, and is building up. What lies ahead for US diplomacy in the world is yet to be determined. The one thing that seems certain is that the appetite for wielding a “big stick” is currently on the wane. There is not much desire for it amongst the domestic population. When I was growing up in Pakistan, it seems to me, the “soft speaking” approach of building up the infrastructure of that country, of providing economic and technical assistance was much more to the fore. While analysis of the effectiveness of that approach is yet to determine its gains (I heard once that many times the amount of aid had gone into Pakistan as had been poured into Europe under the Marshall Plan, and to what end?), it may be time again to pivot towards a fresh approach to foreign policy and practice.



[1] “Briefing, Gobal Jihadism”, The Economist, August 28th, 2021, 13. New Zealand followed shortly thereafter, with troops later committed to the Bamiyan Province for reconstruction work (see Clare De Lore, “A war for good?”, New Zealand Listener, August 7, 2021, 36).

[2] President Musharraf alleged this was said by Richard Armitage, Assistant Secretary of State in Bush’s administration, but it was denied by Armitage; see https://www.nbcnews.com/id/wbna14943975

[3] The quotation is of a West African proverb, which in full is: “Speak softly and carry a big stick: you will go far.” See https://www.britannica.com/event/Big-Stick-policy.

[4] See again https://www.britannica.com/event/Big-Stick-policy; Roosevelt was here referring to speaking softly as an adjunct to strong military action, or “the big stick” approach.

[5] See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Big_Stick_ideology.

[6] Roger Cohen, “Delusion in a faraway land”, Weekend Herald, Saturday, August 21, 2021, A16,17 (emphasis mine).

[7] Cohen, “Delusion in a faraway land”, A16 (again emphasis mine).

[8] Shuja Nawaz, “Pakistan’s existential threat”, unpublished piece received by email; quotation on second page. Though this piece was written in 2010, and largely about the effects of the insurgency on, and in, Pakistan, it retains its relevance.

[9] I refer anyone interested in following up this aspect to two books with surprisingly similar titles, both by American authors: William Blum, Rogue State: A Guide to the World’s Only Superpower. London: Zed Books, 2nd, updated edition, 2002; and Clyde Prestowitz, Rogue Nation: American Unilateralism and the Failure of Good Intentions. New York: Basic Books, 2003.

[10] Review article, “The Enduring Fight for Freedom”, Weekend Herald, Saturday, May 9, 2020, A19 (an article originally appearing in The Times of London).

[11] Cohen, “Delusion in a faraway land”, A16.

[12] Cohen, “Delusion in a faraway land”, A17.

[13] Kurt Bayer, “The Ones We Left Behind”, Weekend Herald, Saturday, July 31, 2021, A13.

[14] “Briefing: Global Jihadism”, The Economist, August 28th, 2021, 16.

[15] Shuja Nawaz, “Pakistan’s existential threat”, unpublished paper, 2-3.

[16] Rogen Cohen, “Delusion in a faraway land”, A16.

[17] Review article, “The Enduring Fight for Freedom”, A20.

[18] See here the article, “Briefing: Global Jihadism”, The Economist, August 28th, 2021, 16.