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任何领导人的外交政策都会考虑国内政治

(2023-07-09 08:29:11) 下一个

任何领导人在做出外交政策决定时都不会不考虑国内政治

 
Renewing American Statecraft
This commentary series from the Carnegie Endowment’s American Statecraft Program offers space for fresh ideas and alternative points of view on major questions of U.S. foreign policy.
 
AARON DAVID MILLER By APRIL 10, 2023
If location is the most important factor in shaping U.S. worldview, then the past decade’s events have strengthened—and muddled—that interplay.
 
By MATTHEW DUSS  MARCH 22, 2023
Biden has signaled he would sign the repeal of the Iraq AUMFs. The war on terror should be next.
 
By JENNIFER KAVANAGH  FEBRUARY 08, 2023
Despite Tokyo’s significant commitments to increased spending, its transition may be too slow to affect U.S. military planning or to reduce the U.S. regional defense burden.
 
By JENNIFER KAVANAGH  NOVEMBER 28, 2022
It responds to an increasingly challenging security environment not by growing the DOD’s responsibilities, but by refining and focusing its commitments.
 
亚伦·大卫·米勒 (Aaron David Miller) 2023 年 1 月 18 日 亚伦·大卫·米勒 (Aaron David Miller) 是卡内基国际和平基金会的高级研究员,主要研究美国外交政策。
 
摘要: 政治是民主的必要组成部分,但往往是不方便的部分。
 
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让我们尝试一个小实验。 询问五十位现任或前任美国外交官或外交政策学者(尤其是现实主义者),外交政策是否应该受到国内政治的重大影响。 我敢打赌大多数人不会只是说不,而是绝对不。 他们认为,国家外交政策的制定实在是太重要了,不能交给那些没有毕生致力于国际关系复杂性的实践和研究的人,尤其是政客——其中一些人是黑客或黑客。 思想家和所有这些人都成为了人质,尤其是在当今,受制于政党的基础。
 
我明白了。 但这里有一个快讯要告诉你:认为美国外交政策可以在一个与世隔绝的实验室里,由临床精确的创始人根据许多经常不方便的现实,特别是国内政治制定的期望是错误的。 政治是民主的命脉。 它们是交易中必要且不可避免的一部分,尽管有时会带来极大的不便。 原因如下。
 
我相信宇宙中存在着一种叫做国家利益的东西。 确定这一点应主要基于什么对美国国家安全和外交政策利益有利,不受国内事务和其他非外交政策优先事项的污染、束缚和玷污。 它凌驾于政治之上。 就像《星际迷航》中物质和反物质的混合一样,当政治和外交政策混合在一起时,灾难就会随之而来。 根本不应该允许它们占据宇宙中的同一空间。
 
假设你对某个问题有强烈的感受——例如以色列-巴勒斯坦和平,或美国对华政策。 你认为美国的利益正在受到损害,因为前者对以色列太过溺爱,而后者对北京采取本能的强硬立场,这似乎排挤了其他可能缓解冲突并符合美国利益的做法。 如果不是那些热衷于支持以色列和攻击中国的该死的政客,我们会过得更好,对吧?
 
更重要的是,国家利益太重要了,不能交给政客、游说者或公众——他们中没有人真正关心或了解足够的信息来做出正确的决定。
 
相反,它应该委托给国务院或前国家安全界成员,他们是外交政策专家,知道什么对美国最有利,或者委托给总统,他们应该做出艰难且希望是正确的决定。 人们期望这些决定将基于最有利于国家利益的决定,而不管国内政治、国会和公众舆论的影响如何。
 
但事情并不总是这样。 世界上没有一个领导人,无论是民主领导人还是独裁领导人,在制定外交政策时都会考虑国内政治。 领导者常常受到政治的驱动,并受到相互竞争的优先事项的限制。 如今,民主党和共和党在关键外交政策挑战方面达成了相当多的共识:我们需要对中国采取强硬态度,对伊朗采取真正强硬态度,并大力支持乌克兰对抗俄罗斯。 这些不仅仅是头条新闻,而且是可能会持续很长一段时间的趋势线。
 
当总统们面对高度两极分化、党派之争、外交政策上罕见的两党合作的美国时,他们该怎么办?
 
此外,现实是外交政策和国内政策现在比以往任何时候都更加紧密地联系在一起。 美国民主的倒退重新让人们关注关注美国制度的重要性,外交政策精英们逐渐认识到,我们经济的韧性、工业基础以及创新和竞争能力是我们海外实力的关键。 这位国家安全顾问谈到了让美国外交政策为中产阶级服务,并在确定总统乔·拜登在上任头两年使经济更具弹性的关键成就时首先列出了这一点,这绝非巧合。
 
但祝你好运,试图将所谓的国家利益与总统本人的个性、公众形象、个人世界观以及变幻莫测的事件和福尔图纳分开。 对美国有利的因素往往与对总统有利的因素混在一起,包括他自己的优先事项和倾向、相互竞争的国内政策选择、选举现实以及影响当前外交政策问题的国际限制。
 
美国的制度远非完美。 创始人担心特殊利益,而媒体、金钱和游说团体的结合对美国政治产生了腐败的影响。 但正如政治学家爱德华·科文(Edward Corwin)所观察到的那样,美国的制度,无论好坏,都在公开邀请人们进行斗争——不仅在政府的三个部门之间,而且在游说团体、公共利益团体和政府之间。
 
组织、竞争并尽力而为——这就是美国方式。 但不要为此发牢骚和抱怨。 并且不要仅仅因为这样就认为你有资格在外交政策领域为所欲为。
 
听到我的一些国务院同事抱怨国会施加的限制,我感到非常恼火。 一位国务院高级官员曾愤怒地大发雷霆:国会对希诺拉的美国外交政策一无所知。 这可能是真的。 但认为国务院拥有所有答案的想法也是荒谬的。 我不希望国务院完全控制美国的外交政策,就像我不希望国会负责一样。
 
没有什么比听我的外国对话者,尤其是来自独裁国家的对话者,不断谈论我们功能失调的体系更让我感到不舒服的了。 一位非常高级的沙特官员曾经告诉我,在他看来,国会就是小议会,而比我愿意数的更多欧洲和阿拉伯外交官只是假设白宫是以色列占领的领土。 沙特领导人只希望美国的亲阿拉伯社区能够像亲以色列社区一样有影响力。
 
总统的声音是外交政策中最重要的声音,无论是作为一个实际问题,还是作为美国宪法规定的权力的结果。 此外,与国会或最高法院不同的是,总统是政府的 24/7 Energizer Bunny,不会参加和休会,但他也没有也不应该拥有自由支配的权力。 在美国的民主政体中,他领导着一个喧闹的竞争性体系,在这个体系中,各种因素相互争斗,要么表达自己的观点,要么限制他的观点。
 
卡内基的相关分析
 
新国防战略与其前任战略有微妙但重大的区别
 
政治——无论是与总统选举有关的政治,还是与其他国内优先事项有关的政治——都不是在暗室里酝酿的邪恶阴谋。 它们是国内和外交政策中自然而然、不可避免的货币。
 
聪明的总统有技巧、任性且幸运——尤其是在世界上的困难地区(如中东)——可以找到一种方法来完成任务、克服国内游说、管理国内政治并进一步推动国家发展。 对这一过程的兴趣(参见理查德·尼克松和乔治·H·W·布什)。 其他人则没有那么幸运(参见乔治·W·布什关于伊拉克的问题)。
 
但是,就像牛顿的万有引力定律一样,没有一位总统能够逃脱统治美国体系的政治规则。 国内政治就像苹果派一样古老、不可避免、美国化。 有升必有降。 有时,美国总统能做的最好的事情就是确保苹果不会砸到他的头上。
 

No Leader Makes Foreign Policy Decisions Without Considering Domestic Politics

https://carnegieendowment.org/2023/01/18/no-leader-makes-foreign-policy-decisions-without-considering-domestic-politics-pub-88820

Aaron David Miller  January 18, 2023 Aaron David Miller is a senior fellow at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, focusing on U.S. foreign policy.
 
 
Summary:  Politics are a necessary and often inconvenient part of democracy.
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Let’s try a little experiment. Ask fifty current or former U.S. diplomats or foreign policy academic types (especially realists) whether foreign policy should be influenced significantly by domestic politics. I’m betting the majority wouldn’t just say no, but hell no. They would argue that the formulation of the nation’s foreign policy is simply too important to be left in the hands of anyone who hasn’t devoted a lifetime of practice and study to the complexities of international relations, especially politicians—some of whom are hacks or ideologues and all of whom are hostage, especially these days, to a party’s base.

I get all that. But here’s a news flash for you: the expectation that U.S. foreign policy can somehow be made in an heremetically sealed lab with clinical precision founders on any number of often inconvenient realities, especially domestic politics, is false. Politics are democracy’s lifeblood. They are a necessary and inevitable, if at times hugely inconvenient, part of the deal. And here’s why. 

I believe that there exists in the universe something called the national interest. And determining it should be based primarly on what is good for American national security and foreign policy interests untainted, untethered, and unsullied by domestic matters and other non-foreign-policy priorities. It’s above politics. And like mixing matter and anti-matter in a Star Trek episode, when politics and foreign policy intermingle, disaster follows. They simply shouldn’t be allowed to occupy the same space in the universe. 

Say you feel strongly about an issue—Israeli-Palestinian peace, for example, or U.S. policy toward China. You think U.S. interests are being harmed because in the first there’s far too much coddling of Israel and on the second there’s a reflexive get-tough position toward Beijing that seems to crowd out other approaches that might just ameliorate conflict and serve U.S. interests. If it wasn’t for those damn politicians who love supporting Israel and bashing China, we’d be a whole lot better off, right?

Even more crucially, the national interest is simply too important to be left to the politicians, the lobbyists, or the public—none of whom really care enough or know enough to make the right decisions. 

Instead, it should be entrusted to the Department of State or ex-members of the national security community who are foreign policy experts and know what’s best for America, or to the president, who is supposed to make the tough and hopefully right calls. The expectation is that those decisions will be based on what’s best for the national interest, regardless of the pull of domestic politics, Congress, and public opinion. 

But it doesn’t always work that way. No leader in the world—democratic or authoritarian—makes foreign policy without taking domestic politics into account. Leaders are often driven by politics and constrained by competing priorities. And it just so happens these days that there’s a fair amount of consensus between Democrats and Republicans when it comes to key foreign policy challenges: we need to be tough on China, really tough on Iran, and very supportive of Ukraine against Russia. These aren’t headlines only but trend lines that are likely to hang around for a good long while.

What are presidents to do when they’re confronted with a highly polarized and partisan America with a rare amont of bipartisanship in foreign policy?

Then there’s the reality that foreign policy and domestic policy are now more inextricably linked than ever before. U.S. democratic backsliding has renewed focused  on the importance of tending to American institutions, and it’s dawned on the foreign policy elite that the resilience of our economy, industrial base, and capacity to innovate and compete are key to our strength abroad. It can’t be a coincidence that the national security adviser talks about making American foreign policy work for the middle class and lists first in identifying President Joe Biden’s key accomplishment in his first two years making the economy more resilient.

But good luck in trying to separate the so-called national interest from the president’s own personality, public persona, personal worldview, and the vagaries of events and Fortuna. What’s good for the United States is often mixed together with what’s good for a president, including his own priorities and inclinations, competing domestic policy choices, election realities, and international constraints that bear on the foreign policy matter at hand. 

The U.S. system is far from perfect. The founders feared special interests, and the marriage of media, money, and lobbies has had a corrupting influence on American politics. But as political scientist Edward Corwin observed, the U.S. system, for better or worse, is an open invitation to struggle—not just among the three branches of government but among lobbies, public interest groups, and the government. 

Organize, compete, and take your best shot—that’s the American way. But don’t whine and complain about it. And don’t think that you’re somehow entitled to have your way in the foreign policy arena just because. 

It annoyed me to no end to hear some of my State Department colleagues complain about the constraints imposed by the Hill. Exasperated, a very senior State Department official once exploded: Congress doesn’t know shit from Shinola about U.S. foreign policy. That might be true. But the notion that the State Department has all the answers is ludicrous too. I would no more want the department to have complete control of U.S. foreign policy any more than I’d want Congress in charge.

And nothing offends me more to listen to my foreign interlocutors, especially the ones from authoritarian countries, go on and on about our dysfunctional system. A very senior Saudi official once told me that in his view, Congress was the Little Knesset, and more European and Arab diplomats than I care to count just assume that the White House is Israeli-occupied territory. Saudi leaders only wish the pro-Arab community in America were as influential as the pro-Israeli one. 

The president’s voice is the most important one on foreign policy, both as a practical matter and as a consequence of the powers laid out in the U.S. Constitution. Moreover, unlike the Congress or the Supreme Court, the president is the 24/7 Energizer Bunny of government and doesn’t go in and out of session—but he doesn’t and shouldn’t have a free hand either. In America’s democratic polity, he presides over a cacophonous, competitive system in which various elements fight to make their case or constrain his. 

And politics—both those that pertain to the election of presidents and to their other domestic priorities—aren’t evil conspiracies hatched in dark rooms. They are the natural, inevitable currency in which business is done in both domestic and foreign policy. 

Smart presidents who are skillful, willful, and lucky—particularly when it comes to tough regions of the world (see the Middle East)—can find a way to get stuff done, overcome domestic lobbies, manage their domestic politics, and further the national interest in the process (see Richard Nixon and George H.W. Bush). Others aren’t so lucky (see George W. Bush on Iraq).

But, like Newton’s law of universal gravitation, no president escapes the political rules that govern the American system. Domestic politics are as old, inevitable, and American as apple pie. What goes up must come down. And sometimes, the best an American president can do is to make sure the apple doesn’t hit him on the head.

This piece is part of the Renewing American Statecraft series.

End of document

Carnegie does not take institutional positions on public policy issues; the views represented herein are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of Carnegie, its staff, or its trustees.

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