Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
SGIR 7th Pan-European Conference “Politics in Hard Times” - Stockholm, Sweden, 9-11 September 2010 SGIR 7th PAN-EUROPEAN CONFERENCE ON INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS Politics in Hard Times: International Relations Responses to the Financial Crisis Stockholm, Sweden, September 9-11, 2010 Fulvio Drago Ph.D. Candidate in History of International Relations University of Florence e-mail: [email protected] - Draft: please, do not quote without the authorʼs written permission Brent Scowcroft: I would seek to reform it [the international system] rather than start over again. Zbigniew Brzezinski: To start all over again, one would have to have a cataclysm first. Brent Scowcroft: Iʼm afraid so 1. Reshaping the Hegemony: The trilateralist approach of the Carter administration 2 Introduction The aim of this paper is to analyze the history of the Jimmy Carter administrationʼs trilateralist approach stemmed from the crisis which the United States faced during the late 1960s and the 1970s. Trilateralism was formulated by a large group of experts then implemented by Carterʼs administration for tackling the crisis of cold war liberalism, characterized abroad by rigid anticommunist containment and domestically by the unlimited expansion of welfare. In the long 1970s the political, economic, social and 1 Zbigniew Brzezinski and Brent Scowcroft, America and the World. Conversations on the Future of American Foreign Policy, New York, Basic Book, 2008, p. 33. 2 This paper attempts to present a syntesis of my research activity from the last three years. Although, it goes without saying, I carry the entire responsibility of the opinions and of the mistakes in it. I wish to thank professor Leopoldo Nuti, University of Roma Tre and director of CIMA, my Ph. D. tutor who provided important suggestions on many aspects of this paper, and professors of Department of Studies on the State at University of Florence as well as CIMA scholars Duccio Basosi, Mauro Campus, Matteo Gerlini and Angela Romano, for their very interesting suggestions during our conversations. ! 1 SGIR 7th Pan-European Conference “Politics in Hard Times” - Stockholm, Sweden, 9-11 September 2010 cultural transformations forced the policymakers to carry out new political proposals in order to restructuring the U.S. role on the international arena. The Trilateral Commission, created between 1972 and 1973, sustained that an interdependent and fragmented international system was no longer compatible with the rigid bipolarism. A new internationalist approach, based on multilateralism, cooperation and concerted decisions, had to consider the cornestone of the international relations not the East-West relations, but the following goals: a new commitment of the advanced countries in the North-South relations issues, economic cooperation among capitalist nations, dealing with nuclear proliferation, pollution and global warming, promoting energy independence, and a reorganization of international institutions. That vision was implemented by President Jimmy Carter, who, during his term, tried to define a postbipolar approach. Nonetheless, however some important successes, the escalation of tension between the U.S. and the U.S.S.R. in the late 1970s, the Iranian revolution, the hostages crisis and stagflation damaged public confidence in the executive branch, which in the 1980 presidential election was defeated by Ronald Reagan. In conclusion, we consider the importance of Carter administrationʼs successes, which are still relevant, and, above all, the unresolved issues, which arose during the 1970s and still concern the international system: global warming, energy dependence, alternative fuels issue, North-South relations and market economy dysfunctions. Finally, Jimmy Carter not only began to undermine the agenda of containment, but tried to define a new U.S. global hegemony, based no longer on the East-West competition, but on a concerted management of new global issues. The United States in the long 1970s: Reshaping the hegemony in an age of limits and transformations During 1971 and 1972 [...] I lost my feeling of awe about presidents3. In 1972, shortly after the first meeting with President Nixon in Atlanta, Jimmy Carter, the governor of Georgia from 1970 to 1974, decided to run for the 1976 election. It was not a gamble, but a political project well detailed, formulated in a stage of the U.S. history, in which many social, political and economic uncertainties were coming out. Between the late 1960s and early 1970s the American superpower was facing a phase of crisis and 3 Jimmy Carter, Why Not the Best? The First Fifty Years, Fayetteville, The University of Arkansas Press, 1975, p. 137. ! 2 SGIR 7th Pan-European Conference “Politics in Hard Times” - Stockholm, Sweden, 9-11 September 2010 transformation, recognizing the limits of the cold war liberalism 4 to institutional and social level. The idea of an unlimited growth, the belief of the market economy capacity to implement influence, control and, if necessary, intervention abroad through the use of alleged unlimited resources, the desire to join the mission of containment while an assuring domestic social reform became gradually a chimera during the long decade 5. The reasons behind the cold war liberalism’s decline stemmed from many factors - some of them non-related to the policymaking - which involved not only the United States, but the international system as a whole. Since the late 1960s and during the 1970s the market economy was in deep transformation: fordism was gradually replacing by post-industrial economy and most developed countries passed from being holders of the largest industries to importers of goods and to services producers, inaugurating the beginning of the post-fordist or post-industrial era. Furthermore, the development of small and medium firms and the relocation of industries in countries, where labor was cheaper, became the cornestone of the advanced economies. According to the Italian historian Mario Del Pero During the Seventies initiated the gradual end of what historian Charles Maier called the 'empire of production ", based on the centrality of the dollar and the primacy of the American industrial system. Hence started a difficult and consequently opened transition to a new economic and international monetary system, whose details would have been decisive for world and Western balance of world power. [...] The elements of what Charles Maier has called the “empire of consumption” depended on (and depend) high levels of public and private debt, allowed, in turn, by the willingness of foreign investors to support and finance them 6. This transformation represented the fulcrum of the rising economic interdependence in the 1970s. Moreover, after more than two decades since the Second World War, global economic balances were significantly changed: Western Europe and Japan, to whom would soon be added the "Asian tigers", became competitive on the U.S. market, whose imports gradually exceed exports. Dollar convertibility into gold and fixed exchange rates, the cornestone of the Bretton Woods system, had fostered stability and prosperity of the allies, creating a gradual overloading of the U.S. economy, which was no longer able to 4 For a definition of the Cold War Liberalism see Mario del Pero, The Eccentric Realist: Henry Kissinger and the Shaping of American Foreign Policy, Cornell University Press, 2009. For the history of the Cold War during the 1970s see Niall Ferguson, Charles S. Maier and others (edited by), The Shock of the Global: The 1970s in Perspective, Harvard University Press, 2010; Melvyn P. Leffler, Odd Arne Westad (edited by), The Cambridge History of the Cold War, 3 voll., Cambridge University Press, 2010; Melvyn P. Leffler, For the Soul of Mankind: The United States, the Soviet Union, and the Cold War, New York, Hill & Wang, 2007. 5 See Riccardo Bellofiore, “I lunghi anni Settanta. Crisi sociale e integrazione economica internazionale”, in Luca Baldissara (edited by), Le radici della crisi, Roma, Carocci, 2002, pp. 57-102. See also Robert Solomon, The Transformation of the World Economy, St. Martinʼs Press, New York, 1999. 6 Mario Del Pero, Libertà e Impero. Gli Stati Uniti e il mondo, 1776-2006, Bari, Laterza 2008, p. 349 e p. 388, see also Charles S. Maier, Among Empires. American Ascendancy and Its Predecessors, Cambridge, Harvard University Press 2006. ! 3 SGIR 7th Pan-European Conference “Politics in Hard Times” - Stockholm, Sweden, 9-11 September 2010 sustain agreements fundamentally based on the reconstruction of Europe and Japan, hence on the U.S. economic supremacy7 . Since the early 1970s the U.S. economic stagflation, characterized by high unemployment, low growth and rising inflation, weakened public confidence in the American economy, which was no longer able to guarantee an unlimited growth as in the previous decades, causing anxienties of affluence 8. The post-fordist economic transition and the rise of European partners do not explain the sudden crisis of the Cold War liberalism and the Bretton Woods system. The war in Vietnam and the political and social crisis of the late 1960s and early 1970s did not allow the United States a simple reshaping of their economy: it was a more sweeping change 9. The tragic U.S. military involvement in Vietnam and the public indignation for the executive’s mistakes and miscalculations had raised intense debates about the foundations of American universalism, hitherto considered essentially right, and the Watergate scandal, which added the decline of public confidence in the institutions of government to the crisis of values 10. The major impact resulted from these changes occurred on consensus, which suffered a substantial reduction and fragmentation process, questioning the foundations of the cold war liberalism and paving the way for new proposals with an alternative vision to the rigid containment and domestic social reforms. The crisis of liberalism produced many schools of thought, some of which provided concrete political proposals, while others did not overcome the intellectual debate’s stage as too fragmented and radical 11. Even within the Congress, in which the consensus to cold 7 For the decline of Bretton Woods system see Francis Gavin, Gold, Dollars and Power: The Politics of International Monetary Relations, 1958-1971, Chapel Hill, University of North Carolina Press 2004, Duccio Basosi, Il governo del dollaro. Interdipendenza economica e potere statunitense negli anni di Richard Nixon (1969-1973), Firenze, Polistampa, 2006, Allen J. Matusow, Nixonʼs Economy: Booms, Busts, Dollars, and Votes, University of Kansas Press, 1998. 8 For the consumer culture topic see Daniel Horowitz, The Anxienties of Affluence: Critiques of American Consumer Culture, 1939-1979, Amherst and Boston, University of Massachussetts Press, 2004. 9 See also Edward D. Berkowitz, Something Happened: A Political and Cultural Overview of the Seventies, Columbia University Press, 2006; Bruce J. Schulman, The Seventies, The Great Shift in American Culture, Society, and Politics, New York City, The Free Press, 2001; Stephanie Slocum-Schaffer, America in the Seventies, Syracuse University Press, 2003. 10 For the influence of U.S. military defeat in Vietnam on American consensus decline see Steven Hurst, The Carter administration and Vietnam, London, MacMillan Press, 1996; Richard A. Melanson, Reconstructing Consensus: American Foregn Policy since the Vietnam War, New York City, St. Martinʼs Press, 1991. 11 ! See also Mario Del Pero, The Eccentric Reealist...cit. 4 SGIR 7th Pan-European Conference “Politics in Hard Times” - Stockholm, Sweden, 9-11 September 2010 war liberalism was stable since the late 1940s in the Republican and Democratic parties, except for extreme fringes, raised deep splits 12. An important school of thought was the Thirdworldism and the New Left, which influenced more on a cultural and intellectual level than on a political one because of their extreme internal fragmentation. The New Left acknowledged the executive’s mismanagement of the Vietnam war, insisting on the U.S. troops withdrawal and focusing on a more constructive approach to the North-South relations. The Thirdworldism, condemning the neocolonialist approach of the developed countries, promoted a commitment to implement the modernization of the South, without making developing countries another card to play in the global ideological confrontation between the two superpowers 13. Another proposal, better known as realpolitik or kissingerian pragmatism, stemmed from a long and fruitful academic and political debate, whose most representative character was Henry Kissinger, the National Security Advisor and Secretary of State in the Nixon and Ford administrations. According to this view, the alternative to the cold war liberalism, through which reconstruct the consensus and public confidence, would be based on the following assumptions: the foreign and domestic U.S. policy were limited and within these limits new priorities should be defined pragmatically, bipolarism should be managed as a balance of power between great nations on the model of the Metternichian Restoration, the strengthening of the alliance with partners should be functional to the bipolar system, avoiding fragmentation and splits that could benefit the enemy in the delicate management of the superpowers relations. The kissingerian approach, based on secrecy and naughty, was gradually weakened by the systemic ideological competition between the U.S. and U.S.S.R. in the Third World and the fundamental ambiguity of that approach, as Del Pero points out: Kissinger’s approach was both inside and outside the logic of the Cold War. Outside because he rejected the ideological and discursive element of bipolarism, replacing it with a proud statement of principles realists and relativists anti-universalistic. Inside because he resumed, and somewhat exasperated them by adopting a perspective maniacally bipolar, which drastically reduced the capacity to understand the nuances of a complex international system in which were radically transforming the same elements that defined the power of a State. [...] U.S. and U.S.S.R. were still superior and unchallengeable. However imposing the bipolar cage to the international system, in particular through the linkage, emphasized a series of problems instead 12 For the political fragmentation within the Congress during the 1970s see Robert David Johnson, Congress and the Cold War, Cambridge University Press, 2006, Jim Wright, Balance of Power: Presidents and Congress from the Era of McCarthy to the Age of Gingrich, Atlanta, Turner Publishing, 1996. 13 For Thirdworldism and New Left see Kevin Mattson, The Origins of the New Left and Radical Liberalism, University Park, The Pennsylvania State University Press, 2003. ! 5 SGIR 7th Pan-European Conference “Politics in Hard Times” - Stockholm, Sweden, 9-11 September 2010 of solving them. [...] Thereafter the kissingerian bipolarism tended to exacerbate local and regional tensions, always bringing them all back to the bipolar competition, now de-ideological, with Moscow14 . The contradictions of kissingerian pragmatism, constantly rising with the decline of détente, favored a new approach, named neoconservatism, which since the mid-1970s clearly influenced the public opinion and U.S. policy until the success in the presidential elections of 1980 and 1984 carried out by Ronald Reagan. Neoconservatism, originated from the fusion between the cold war liberals and the New Right conservatives, was able to reconstruct the consensus, focusing on a renewed U.S. international activism against a Soviet expansionism and domestic economic deregulation. The main goal was to exploit the potential of the American superpower and gather public opinion behind the anticommunist crusade, shifting the competition on the themes of the struggle for democracy against totalitarianism and the need to promote the destabilization of the aging and stagnant Soviet system. Moreover, in economic issues Reagan reduced drastically the federal intervention, delegating the market management to the laissez faire approach 15. The theme of the reconstructing consensus led to two central points of the long decade’s history: on the one hand, the significance of domestic politics, on the other hand, the precarious balance between the multilateralist objectives of the United States, a global superpower in a deep crisis, and the rising of unilateralism in the U.S. policymaking. The evolution of the U.S. hegemony in the Twentieth century: A brief survey In the long 1970s rised different approaches aimed to create a new consensus: Reagan's victory was the final stage that provided an adequate response to the public opinion in search of revenge after the humiliations of the previous decade. That victory broke the U.S. transformation process, which had took place since the early postwar years, in an internationalist global world power, which gradually should have promoted a reorganization of the international system, operated in concert with other major powers, and ensured 14 15 Ivi., pp. 148-149. For Reagan and neconservatives see Kyle Longley, Jeremy D. Mayer, Michael Schaller, John W. Sloan, Deconstructing Reagan: Conservative Mythology and Americaʼs Fortieth President, New York, M.E. Sharpe, 2007; W. Elliot Brownlee, Hugh Davis Graham (edited by), The Reagan Presidency: Pragmatic Conservatism and Its Legacy, University Press of Kansas, 2003. ! 6 SGIR 7th Pan-European Conference “Politics in Hard Times” - Stockholm, Sweden, 9-11 September 2010 peace and progressive expansion of welfare16. Since the 1980s, the United States boosted its economic and geopolitical influence in order to regain an unchallenged world leadership, but giving up the most ambitious project to use its strength to promote a global concertation on new issues. Here we open a vital discussion on the evolution of the U.S. hegemony in relation to the dynamics of the international system in the second half of the Twentieth century17 . In the historiographical debate on the U.S. history in the Twentieth century, there is a recurring theme of the rise of American power to global leadership, accomplished by exerting dominance over the decades in the economic and geopolitical fields and completed after World War II with a recognized status as hegemonic in the capitalist bloc 18. However, this leadership changed profoundly throughout the rest of the century. Furthermore, the U.S. leadership, after the first world war, was characterized by a strengthening of its leading economy and finance, during the 1930s by the implementation of the New Deal, whose fordist core lasted until the late 1960s. The U.S. capacity to exert global leadership was definitely harnessed by the public and isolationist tendencies within the ruling class, which strongly conditioned the aim of Franklin D. Roosevelt, a supporter of wilsonian internationalism, to involve the United States in European and Asian affairs. Despite that commitment, the management of global issues was left to the European powers or, at most, to the League of Nations 19. During and after the Second World War the idea of exerting U.S. leadership in favor of internationalism and cooperation became the dominant trend within the United States for two reasons. Firstly, the need to cooperate with other regional powers was supported in order to prevent future conflicts, to expand the market economy, to avoid protectionism 16 For the evolution of American internationalism see Michael J. Hogan, Thomas G. Paterson (edited by), Explaining the History of American Foreign Relations, New York, Cambridge University Press, 2004; Michael H. Hunt, The American Ascendancy: How The United States Gained and Wielded Global Dominance, Chapel Hill, University of North Carolina Press, 2007; Frank Ninkovich, The Wilsonian Century. U. S. Foreign Policy since 1900, Chicago, University of Chicago Press, 1999; Michael H. Hunt, Ideology and U. S. Foreign Policy, New Haven, Yale University Press, 2009; Michael H. Hunt, The Ambiguous Legacy: U. S. Foreign Relations in the “American Century”, New York, Cambridge University Press, 1999. 17 For deepening the topic of hegemony in an international relationʼs perspective see Filippo Andreatta, Marco Clementi, Alessandro Colombo, Mathias Koenig-Archibugi, Vittorio Emanuele Parsi, Relazioni Internazionali, Bologna, Il Mulino, 2007. 18 Geir Lundestad, “Empire by Invitation? The United States and Western Europe 1945-1952”, Journal of Peace Research, XXIII (1986): pp. 236-277. 19 ! For isolationism see Frank Ninkovich, The Wilsonian Century, cit. 7 SGIR 7th Pan-European Conference “Politics in Hard Times” - Stockholm, Sweden, 9-11 September 2010 and new economic instability created by new strains 20. Secondly, the United States had to face the Soviet threat, which on the one hand was the spring that boosted the United States permanently toward internationalism, on the other hand, reduced the idea of global cooperation in order to safeguard the Western bloc from the Soviet expansionism through economic stability and military security both guaranteed by the American superpower21. During the following two decades the U.S. economic leadership became the cornestone for reconstruction and stability of capitalism and the strategy of containment. The hegemony was exerted through the consensus and appropriate tools and forum, in which the U.S. influence was predominant though not exclusive - the International Monetary Fund, the OECD, the World Bank, the UN and regional military alliances like the NATO and the SEATO. Despite the limitations created by the Soviet asymmetric antagonism to the American globalist universalism, which aimed to sustain the free market economy and economic interdependence around the globe, the United States exerted its hegemony tackling promptly the needs of that time: economic reconstruction, stability and containment of communism. Since the late 1960s, the global balance and the capitalist world stability began to change profoundly: decolonization, the trilateral economic competition with Europe and Japan, the rise in the advanced societies of new values and new goals as environmentalism and the development of the Third World countries, the energy issues, gradually questioned the hegemonic status of the American superpower in the next decade through a phase of the domestic crisis and transformation, decisive for a redefinition of its role on the global arena. The pragmatic approach of the Republican administrations during the first half of the 1970s recognized the limits of the American superpower in a completely changed global context, where the indispensable accountability of each country, however, did not correspond to the international political coordination, but a particularistic and ephemeral accommodation in favor of preponderant interests. Hence, the kissingerian reshaping of the U.S. hegemony in relation to new global problems fell in contradiction, as exploiting its power only to solve the U.S. problems, disregarding an important part of the U.S. role until that time, but not abandoning the role of great power and ensuring a world bipolar 20 21 See Niall Ferguson, The War of the World: Historyʼs Age of Hatred, London, Penguin Book, 2006. For the rise of cold war liberalism and the end of interwar isolationism see Michael J. Hogan, A Cross of Iron: Harry S. Truman and the Origins of the National Security State, 1945-1954, New York, Cambridge University Press, 1998. ! 8 SGIR 7th Pan-European Conference “Politics in Hard Times” - Stockholm, Sweden, 9-11 September 2010 arrangement with the Soviet antagonist. Thereafter, the U.S. hegemony passed in the 1970s from geographical limits imposed by the cold war to unilateralism, which did not tackled the international system needs, characterized by the interdependence and the particularization of interest. Finally, the victory of Ronald Reagan in the 1980 presidential election marked, as was mentioned, a further reshaping of the idea of the U.S. global role: the leadership and the potential of the American superpower were again carried out to strengthen the rule of the United States, transforming the confrontation with the enemy not in a means for the realization of internationalism, but in the goal and the legitimacy of the U.S. leadership. It was aimed to strengthen the United States in order to defeat the enemy once for all, which in the 1980s was naturally the Soviet communism and the spread of communism in the Third World. The legimacy of hegemony, fighting the communist expansion anywhere, represented the limit of the American internationalism as well, which no more supported new goals in a changed international system, as it did in the mid and late 1940s. Del Pero argues that During the 1980s the United States forcefully reoccupied the international scene in a condition of absolute superiority and its not comparable to the early years of the Cold War. [...] But this new hegemony is fragile, contradictory and controversial, structurally weak and inconsistent. [...] The military buildup was combined with a growing awareness of its futility. The exceptional national [...] stride with the recognition, implicit but strong, of interdependence, which is indispensable also for the American leadership. [...] The world, global and interdependent, is a world whose features have also been shaped by the United States and today remains a world populated by actors deeply unequal, whose top there is the U.S. itself. However in the same time is also a world that has come to erode many elements of sovereignty, by creating networks of mutual dependencies and also the subject to which hegemonic and dominant actor must learn to obey as well, otherwise it risks a profound destabilization of the system 22. Between Two Ages: Interdependence and fragmentation in the international system Today the most industrially advanced countries (in the first instance the United States) are beginning to emerge from the industrial stage of their development. They are entering an age in which technology and especially electronics - hence my neologism “technetronic” - are increasingly becoming the principal determinants of social change, altering the mores, the social structure, the values, and the global outlook of society23. From the phase of the crisis and transformation that marked the history of the United States and the international system in the long 1970s stemmed another approach implemented by the Carter administration between 1977 and 1980: the internationalist or 22 23 Mario del Pero, Libertà e impero, cit., pp. 388 e 435. Zbigniew Brzezinski, Between Two Ages: Americaʼs Role in the Technetronic Era, Westport, Greeenwood Press, 1970, p. XIV. ! 9 SGIR 7th Pan-European Conference “Politics in Hard Times” - Stockholm, Sweden, 9-11 September 2010 trilateralist approach. The essay written by Zbigniew Brzezinski24 in 1970 Between Two Ages: Americaʼs Role in the Technetronic Era represented the founding moment of trilateralism. Indeed, David Rockefeller, inspired by this and other academic essays and scientific articles, addressed three speeches in the spring of 1972 in order to support the creation of a commission aimed to a new cooperation among the Most Advanced Countries and the establishment of a new political agenda 25. Between 1968 and the first half of the 1970s, Brzezinski and other experts reflected on three key issues: technological progresses in the develpoded nations that shaped the perception of global events and the international community, the relentless rise of the interdependence as an indispensable factor of the world order and a coeval process of fragmentation of both values and objectives within the United States, and in the international relations. In Brzezinski’s thinking, the technetronic revolution, as progress in electronics and advanced technology, allowed the public to have a different perception of reality and events connected with it, profoundly altering the scope and the society’s perceptions. Moreover, according to Brzezinski, the United States is the principal global disseminator of the technetronic revolution. It is currently American society that is having the greatest impact on all other societies, prompting to cumulative-reaching transformation in their outlook and mores26 . With the massification of the media, images and meanings of events reached the public in industrialized countries involving it in the world events as never before. Simultaneously with the global sharing of a fact, and a versatile presentation of it by the media in competition, was gradually emerging a subjective perspective that exceeded the so-called "official" version as well. Brzezinski argues that While our immediate reality is being fragmented, global reality increasingly absorbs the individual, involves him, and even occasionally overwhelms him. Communications are the obvious, already much discussed, immediate cause. The changes wrought by communications and computers make for an extraordinarily interwoven society whose members are in continuous and close audio-visual contact-constantly interacting, instantly sharing the most intense social experiences, and prompted to increased personal involvement in 24 Other articles by the same author: Zbigniew Brzezinski, The framework of East-West Reconciliation, in Foreign Affairs (hereafter FA) gennaio 1968, Idem, How the Cold War Was Played, in FA, ottobre 1972, Idem, America and Europe in FA, ottobre 1970, Idem, Japanʼs Global Engagement, in FA, gennaio 1972, Idem, US Foreign Policy: The Search for Focus, in FA, luglio 1973, Idem, The Fragile Blossom: Crisis and Change in Japan, New York, Harper & Row, 1972. 25 “Mr. Rockefeller opened the meeting by stating that he had proposed an International Commission for Peace and Prosperity in three identical speeches which he had made to the Chase Manhattan International Financial Forums in London, Brussels and Paris in March”, Meeting on Proposed Commission on Peace and Prosperity, 9/5/1972, Trilateral Commission File, Zbigniew Brzezinski Collection, Folder “Correspondence File: 1/12/1973-31/12/1973”, Box 1, Jimmy Carter Library (da ora JCL). 26 ! Zbigniew Brzezinski, Between Two Ages, cit., p. 24. 10 SGIR 7th Pan-European Conference “Politics in Hard Times” - Stockholm, Sweden, 9-11 September 2010 even the most distant problems. The new generation no longer defines the world exclusively on the basis of reading, either of ideologically structured analysis or of extensive descriptions; it also experiences and senses it vicariously through audio-visual communications. This form of communicating reality is growing more rapidly - especially in the advanced countries 27. Furthermore, the fragmentation of the public opinion was closely related to the expansion of the media and, hence, to the development of technologies: the cumulative effect of the technetronic revolution is contradictory. On the one hand, this revolution marks the beginnings of a global community, on the other hand, it fragments humanity and detaches it from its traditional moorings28 . That revolution gradually influenced economy: in advanced countries began a process of industrial relocation and a progressive decline of fordism, which contributed to a further fragmentation due to the shift in these countries from keynesism to the primacy of consumption and services. According to Brzezinski, the crisis of the Bretton Woods system and in the Middle East after the Yom Kippur War were two fundamental aspects of the transition between the two eras. The first one officially sanctioned the end of the reconstruction’s phase of market economies in Western Europe and Japan, which entered a phase of competition with the U.S. superpower. The second one blew off the cap on the energy supplying’s Pandora’s box for developed countries and generally ended the idea of unlimited progress of capitalism. In an article, published in 1973 on the house organ of the Trilateral Commission, Brzezinski showed how the Middle East crisis and the oil shock had imposed a harsh stop to the hitherto unlimited growth of Western economies, influencing deeply the policymaking. In a arguable but effective parallelism, Brzezinski compared the choice of the OPEC to raise prices and reduce an output of oil to Russia's defeat in the war against Japan in 1904-05: in both cases the European world, the industrialized West was defeated on vital issues by external forces 29. The transformation and fragmentation of values in the advanced societies constituted another important moment of the transition described by Brzezinski. Indeed, it stemmed from the technetronic revolution, which gradually brought the public to events geographically far apart. Wars, the desperate situation of some Third World countries, decolonization, the environmental concerns, the waste of resources, were issues that through the massification of the media captured the sensibility of the public opinion, which 27 Ivi., p. 18. 28 Ivi., p. 52. 29 Zbigniew Brzezinski, “Trilateral Relations in a Global Context (excerpt), in Trialogue n°7, 31/5/1975, available on <http://www.trilateral.org/AnnMtgs/Trialog/library_annmtgs/stacks_annmtgs/ Global_Redistribution_Of_Power.pdf> last visit 10/07/2009. ! 11 SGIR 7th Pan-European Conference “Politics in Hard Times” - Stockholm, Sweden, 9-11 September 2010 increasingly felt itself part of a global community. Moreover, the globalization of the issues and the particularization or fragmentation of perspectives altered the traditional values, considered, specially by the new generations, no longer appropriate. The higher level of education provided to young people of the 1960s and the 1970s far exceeded both qualitatively and quantitatively that of the previous generations. According to Brezinski The age of volatile belief is intimately linked with the impact of the technetronic revolution on existing ideologies and outlooks on life. What man thinks is closely related to what man experiences. The relationship between the two is not casual but interacting: experience affects thought, and thought conditions the interpretation of experience. Today the dominant pattern seems increasingly to be that of highly individualistic, unstructured, changing perspectives. institutionalized beliefs, the result of the merger of ideas and institutions, no longer appear to many as vital and relevant, while the skepticism that has contributed so heavily to the undermining of institutionalized beliefs now clashes with the new emphasis on passion and involvement. The result for many is an era of fads, of rapidly shifting beliefs, with emotions providing for some the unifying cement previously supplied by institutions and with the faded revolutionary slogans of the past providing the needed inspiration for facing and altogether different future. [...] In our time the established ideologies are coming under attack because their institutionalized character, which was once useful in mobilizing the relatively uneducated masses, has become an impediment to intellectual adptation, while their concern with the external qualities of life is increasingly felt to ignore the inner, more spiritual dimension, Commitment to individual action, based on moral indignation and stimulated by a much higher level of general education, has become a substitute for highly organized activity, though it avoids the passivity and indifference to external reality that was characteristic of the pre-ideological age 30. The cultural and social fragmentation in the public perspective was in contrast with the rigid cold war bipolarism, which characterized the relations between the two superpowers since the late 1940s. This ideological perspective was increasingly flawed not only by new needs and priorities arising from global public opinion, but by the emergence of centrifugal forces within their spheres of influence: the conflict between the U.S.S.R. and China, the Soviet military interventions in the Warsaw Pact, the Ostpolitik sponsored by the Federal Republic's, the partial defection of France from the NATO and the creeping antiAmericanism in Western Europe, emerged from the criticism of the U.S. intervention in Vietnam, undermined the idea of the existence of two compact blocks. Brzezinski argues that Tension is unavoidable as man strives to assimilate the new into the framework of the old. For a time the established framework resiliently integrates the new by adapting it in a more familiar shape. But at some point the old framework becomes overloaded. The new imput can no longer be redefined into traditional forms, and eventually it asserts itself with compelling force. Today, though the old framework of international politics - with their spheres of influence, military alliances between natio-states, the fiction of sovereignty, doctrinal conflicts arising from nineteenth-century crises - is clearly no longer compatible with reality 31. 30 Ivi., pp. 61-62. 31 Ivi., p. 274. ! 12 SGIR 7th Pan-European Conference “Politics in Hard Times” - Stockholm, Sweden, 9-11 September 2010 The bipolar antagonism was not perceived as a structural requirement, but as a dated rigidism, which wasted enormous resources in arms race, hindering the resolution of problems, which the two blocks shared: the energy issue, economic cooperation, support for developing countries, the resolution of the Middle East crisis, the problem of nuclear proliferation and so on. Afterwards, in his essay Brzezinski considered the issue of the governability in the liberal democracies, arguing that the global transition toward a new interdependent and fragmented world altered the advanced nation’s domestic stability. The fragmentation of political and economic interests led the policymakers to an uneasy compromise among divergent tendencies for gaining voters’ consensus, and to a lack of competence because of the increasing complexity of the issues. The need to gather the widest consensus as possible urged the government to manage a large number of commitments, which are difficult to fulfill during the mandate. Hence, an accentuated public perception of the institutions’ incompetence and public distrust as well. In Between two Ages and in subsequent articles published during his work as director of the Trilateral Commission, Brzezinski analyzed the crisis in the antagonist block. As the capitalist system, the Communist states faced a phase of uncertainty and profound domestc transformation, compounded by the immobility of the Soviet system. On the one hand, the thrust of the October Revolution was, according to Brzezinski, totally exhausted. The final blow to the ideals of the world proletariat after the invasion of Hungary was vibrated by the Soviet tanks, which had invaded Prague in 1968, confirming the rigidism and the unreformability of "real socialism". On the other hand, the ideological and quasi military split between the Chinese and Soviets, who since the mid-1950s diverged significantly on the vision and practice of the tenets of socialism. Gradually the fog of ideology thinned, showing the true nature of the communist superpower, which was essentially conservative and imperialist. Moreover, despite the commitment and destabilization initiated by the Soviets in support of the Marxist-Leninist movement struggle for a national independence in the Third World, which had become the new cold war battlefield during the 1960s and the 1970s, it was clear, according to Brzezinski, the pragmatic reduction of the communist ideals to a mere tool in the hands of warring factions to achieve Soviet aids 32. Moreover, since the 1960s the Soviet economy stagnated, denouncing a fundamental problem that would have considerably complicated the stability 32 ! Ivi., parte III. 13 SGIR 7th Pan-European Conference “Politics in Hard Times” - Stockholm, Sweden, 9-11 September 2010 and development of the communist superpower: the lack of competition within the planned economy, ignoring any progress in the consumer sector, the waste of huge resources for increasing nuclear arsenal. The economic stagnation, the import dependency and inefficiency of the aging Soviet nomenclature to set a profound reform of socialism were, according to Brzezinski, the actual condition of the communist superpower in the 1970s. Despite its considerable geopolitical influence in the Eurasian theater and its unquestionable military power, the Soviet Union was unable to overcome a deep structural crisis. Finally, Brzezinski anticipated a fundamental concept of the trilateral process: a reorganization of international institutions, which must be equipped with new tools and rules in order to face and overcome the economic crisis and resolve local disputes: The emerging community of developed nations would require some institutional expression. [...] Such a council for global cooperation would be something more than OECD in that it would operate on a higher level and would also be concerned with political strategy, but it would be more diffused than NATO in that it would not seek to forge integrated military-political structures. Nevertheless, a council of this sort [...] would be more effective in developing common programs than is the United Nations, whose efficacy is unavoidably limited by the Cold War and by North-South divisions. [...] In appearance would therefore assist and perhaps even accelerate the further development of present world bodies - such as the World Bank - which are in any case de facto institutions of the developed world geared to assisting the Third World. A greater sense of community within the developed world would help to strenghten these institutions by backing them with the support of public opinion; it might also eventually lead to the possibility of something along the lines of a global taxation system33. The relevance of the international organizations consisted of ensuring broad participation, which guaranteed the possibility of achieving a concerted decision on several issues involving the entire international community as support for the modernization of developing countries. Brzezinski's analysis implied a radical change in the future international role of the United States, to whom he, despite the difficulties, looked with quite optimism: the U.S. economic and geopolitical power should be used to promote new priorities to be addressed in concert in international arena, but for achieving it was necessary a new global consciousness of the public opinion, which through the establishment of new priorities had the task of supporting a new ruling class capable of promoting new policies for dealing with the global changes. Brzezinski concludes the United States is the country that most urgently needs to reform its foreign service and policymaking establishment, and it is best equipped to undertake such reform. It is the first society to become globally oriented, and it is the one with the most extensive and intensive communications involvement34. 33 Ivi., p. 297 e p. 304. 34 Ivi., p. 292. ! 14 SGIR 7th Pan-European Conference “Politics in Hard Times” - Stockholm, Sweden, 9-11 September 2010 The Trilateral Commission: Sharing a new project The Aim of the Commission is to bring the best brains in the world to bear on the problems of the future 35. An important test of the effectiveness of the commission would be whether it works to reduce the walls dividing power and economic blocs from one another36. In the spring of 1972, David Rockefeller addressed some speeches on the international economic crisis and, adopting numerous suggestions offered by the writings of Brzezinski, proposed to establish a non-governmental organization joined by academics and representatives of finance, journalism, politics from the three poles of the industrialized world - North America, Japan, Western Europe - through which encouraging greater international cooperation and favoring a new concerted policy agenda. In a letter from George Franklin to Gerard Smith, both members of the Commission, we can read David Rockefeller in three speeches in London, Paris and Brussels specifically proposed a commission made up of citizens from Europe, Japan and North America. [...] Three general purpose were: (a) to make sure that leaders in the three regions came to a better understanding of each otherʼs problem and ways of thinking (b) to issue reports on significant international topics -- with specific recommendations for action (c) to try to inform citizens and influence governments37. In 1972-1973, this proposal became an object of an intense brainstorming sessions, where Rockefeller and his advisers confronted on the creation of the Commission, defining the basic principles. David Rockefeller imagined a new Commission, similar to the Bilderberg Group, of whom he was a major exponent: along with experts and academics debating on the problems and failures of global capitalism represented a model in order to define and propose new political solutions. Moreover, the main difference between the Bilderberg Group 38, created in 1954, and the Trilateral Commission consisted in two key factors: on the one hand, more transparency on the activities of the new organization, on the other hand, the unprecedented involvement of Japan as an equal partner. The idea of a commission built on a trilateral basis was an indispensable response to the changes occurring in the 1960s and 1970s, when Japan joined definitively the club of the advanced 35 Statement by David Rockefeller in Trilateral Commissionʼs Program, Trilateral Commission File, Zbigniew Brzezinski Collection, Gerard Smith [Chron File 1/3/73-31/3/73], Box 1, JCL. 36 Meeting on proposed Trilateral Commission, 23-24 luglio 1972, Council on Foreign Relations Records, Folder 1, Box 49, Princeton University Library. 37 Letter from George Franklin to Gerard C. Smith, 3/6/1977, Trilateral Commission File, Zbigniew Brzezinski Collection, Folder: Gerard Smith [File--Chron File: 1/1/76-3/6/77], Box 4, JCL. 38 For Bilderberg Group see Thomas W. Gijswijt, “Beyond NATO: transnational elite networks and the Atlantic alliance, in Andreas Wenger, Christian Neunlist, and Anna Locher, Transforming NATO in the Cold War. Challenges beyond deterrence in the 1960s, London, Routledge, 2007, pp. 50-64. ! 15 SGIR 7th Pan-European Conference “Politics in Hard Times” - Stockholm, Sweden, 9-11 September 2010 nations, thanks to an extraordinary growth in exports. Furthermore, the credibility of the organization lied, according to Rockefeller, in its capacity to bring to the public debate the issues arised in the Commission’s meetings, in order to promote political actions, which were analyzed and presented to the public through the support and cooperation of the media. Indeed, from the outset, Rockefeller and his advisers decided to involve major newspapers in the Commission’s internal debate, and to consider the media’s outlook on the meetings 39. The structure of the Commission reflected its tripartite nature, ensuring both preparatory meetings in each region and equal representation within the executive committee, which established the objectives, timing and issues. On the first stage, the founders proposed a three-year commitment - 1974-1976 - after which dissolving the organization. Instead, after the successes and the extensive participation, the executive committee decided to continue without specifying a precise time limit, thereby establishing that the Commission was not a simple tool to discuss the crisis and identify concerted motions, but a nongovernmental forum in which the best minds of the advanced world could discuss and improve their perspectives on issues of collective interest as well 40. That was noticeable in the substantial difference between the first three years and the period from 1977 onwards of the Commission's activities. On the first stage, both the members’ appointing and the choice of topics for discussion were extremely homogeneous, specially in relation to the communiqué, in which trilateralists summarized the Commission's views on various topics. On the second stage, from early 1977, when many trilateralists, who joined the Carter administration were replaced, the Commission became a forum characterized by very divergent opinions without eventually coming to a joint statement as in the previous years. That condition stemmed not only from the increasing of the Commission’s members, but mainly from the deep differences between them. The Commission's work started from a topic selected by the executive committee, which analysed it in relation to political, economic and social dynamics. That theme was discussed and presented by three rapporteurs, experts on the subject, each one from different trilateral pole. Following the submission of the report, called Triangle Paper, a 39 In the house organ of the Trilateral Commission, Trialogues, published every three months, was collected partly or fully articles from important newspapers, which followed the Commissionʼs activities. 40 The Constitution of the Trilateral Commission was completed in the April 1973 and was divided in 7 sections: 1) name, objectives and structure 2) members 3) the Executive Committee 4) the President 5) Director 6) task force 7) miscellaneous procedures, in Jimmy Carter Papers-Pre Presidential, 1976 Presidential Campaign, Issue Office- Noel Sterrett, Subject File, Trilateral Commission, Box 96, JCL. ! 16 SGIR 7th Pan-European Conference “Politics in Hard Times” - Stockholm, Sweden, 9-11 September 2010 discussion took place within the Commission. Thereafter the various guidelines and comments were reported briefly in Trialogue, which also included the joint statement of the executive committee on individual topics and the reactions of the major newspapers on the issue41. The aim of the commission was to promote a broad debate in the public opinion, from which could gradually arise concrete political proposals in order to develop the concerted decisions and the resolution of disputes in the international system. In defining the objectives during the brainstorming sessions trilateralists focused primarily on new tools to be adopted for ensuring the implementation of a new political agenda of trilateralist countries. The growing interdependence and fragmentation within the international system pushed trilateralists to propose tools for the resolution of conflict and confrontation as an alternative to unilateralism and protectionism, which produced a dangerous tightening of relations among the capitalist countries, undermining the stability in the international system. The panacea, according to trilateralists, was consultation and multilateralism which ensured concerted decisions and cooperation, specially with regard to local conflicts. The United States had to implement this approach, given their geopolitical and economic influence, sustaining, after the crises in the early 1970s, a strong cooperation on a new political agenda, using international organizations, above all the United Nations, as suitable forum for a broad participation42. Moreover, the new goals which developed countries and in particular the United States had to pursue were, firstly, paying more attention to North-South relations issues. Trilateralists identified three different groups within the Third World: developing countries, underdeveloped ones and those in possession of huge fossil fuels, above all the OPEC nations. On these complex issues, trilateralasts considered essential a concerted approach between the developed countries, both on the development of poor countries, and on the issue of "energy blackmail" moved from producing countries. The Trilateral Commission proposed more investments by developed countries in poor areas and to put these funds in partnership with them ensuring a large credit in order to allow the initiation 41 I Triangle Papers was the joint responsibility of the three rapporteurs. Although only them are responsible for the analysis and recommendations, they were aided in their task by joint or individual consultation held during the phase of preparation, which at various stages of the report included a number of other trilateralists. 42 See Trialogue n° 11 available on <http://www.trilateral.org/AnnMtgs/Trialog/library_annmtgs/ stacks_annmtgs/Improper_Corporate_Payoffs_1976.pdf> last visit 10/07/2009. ! 17 SGIR 7th Pan-European Conference “Politics in Hard Times” - Stockholm, Sweden, 9-11 September 2010 of large-scale industrial and economic activities as well43. Hence, trilateral countries should agree on the distribution of responsibilities in different areas of the planet not for unilateral or bilateral benefits, but in a concerted plan of economic development. Furthermore, on the energy issue the commission proposed a gradual economic integration of the OPEC countries through producers’ investments in the advanced world. Thereby, responding to the process of interdependence and preventing new strains in the relations between producers and consumers of oil. At the same time, the developed countries had to establish a concerted approach in relations with the OPEC countries in order to avoid unilateral actions which could weaken the position of consumers and undermine the credibility of future cooperation with them 44. The focus of the Trilateral Commission for the Middle East crisis derived mainly from October 1973 when it was obvious the lack of a coordinated policy between consumers countries, causing friction and conflict within the capitalist world. In addition to consultations between consumers, trilateralists considered essential to move towards a policy of energy conservation, to develop alternative energy sources and finding new oil fields using new technologies which allowed to exploit also deposits marine45. The crisis of the Bretton Woods system and the successive failures of the capitalist system caused by the unilateralism of the U.S. and Europe were in the center of the activity of the commission which intended to propose a solution that would avoid protectionism and economic harm to a market economy. A decisive contribution, according to trilateralists, had to come from organizations responsible for international economic coordination and indispensable for intervention in case of crisis. Those bodies required a major reorganization in relation to the greater complexity of capitalist economic dysfunctions. The International Monetary Fund and World Bank, as well as contributing to the development of the Third World countries, had to adopt new tools indispensable to create a new shared accommodations in the market economy. 43 See also Trialogue n° 5 available on <http://www.trilateral.org/AnnMtgs/Trialog/library_annmtgs/ stacks_annmtgs/May_July_1974_North_American_European_Japanese_Affairs.pdf> last visit 10/07/2009. 44 See Harold Brown, “American Condition” in Trialogue n° 5 may-July 1974 available on <http:// www.trilateral.org/AnnMtgs/Trialog/library_annmtgs/stacks_annmtgs/ May_July_1974_North_American_European_Japanese_Affairs.pdf> last visit 10/07/2009. 45 For energy issues see Trialogue n°18 e n° 5 available on <http://www.trilateral.org/AnnMtgs/Trialog/ library_annmtgs/stacks_annmtgs/Energy_Industrial_Relations_1978.pdf> and on <http://www.trilateral.org/ A n n M t g s / T r i a l o g / l i b r a r y _ a n n m t g s / s t a c k s _ a n n m t g s / May_July_1974_North_American_European_Japanese_Affairs.pdf> last visit 10/07/2009. ! 18 SGIR 7th Pan-European Conference “Politics in Hard Times” - Stockholm, Sweden, 9-11 September 2010 Furthermore, the Trilateral Commission reconsidered the capitalist world’s relations with communist countries, which during the 1970s cooperated with the adversary on economic, and nuclear issues. Trilateralists proposed to carry out a multilateral cooperation to benefit the entire international system. In conflicts as in the Middle East or in Subsaharian Africa, cooperation and not competition between the superpowers, thanks to the geopolitical influence of both, could contributed to the achievement of lasting agreements. The regional approach had to prevail, therefore, over the traditional global and bipolar approach of the two superpowers, which saw in local destabilization an opportunity to reduce the enemy’s influence46. Even détente should be carried out in a multilateral perspective and not simply for regulating the competition between the two superpowers. According to trilateralists, a new kind of cooperation should be occurred specially on arms negotiations and the issue of nuclear proliferation. Negotiations had to promote not agreements on even higher nuclear weapons ceilings, but cuts in the arsenals in order to reallocate resources from the military industry to the development of the Third World countries. Moreover, the proliferation identified another area, in which the two superpowers played a key role and where it was essential to set a joint commitment to address any information and technological sharing with other countries to peaceful energy use, not military47 . Cooperation with the Soviet Union should have been functional to the problems of the international system and not a pragmatic regulation of bipolarism. The process of normalization with China should be carried out in order to guarantee to the United States a valuable partner for the Asian issues, the progressive opening of a new market and geopolitical and economic cooperation with Japan 48. Hence, according to trilateralists, the United States had to give up the kissingerian triangular strategy, whereby the U.S.-China normalization should have been used exclusively for building a cage around the Soviet Union and pressing on it about arms negotiations. 46 See Trialogue n°14 “Managing Global Problems: Avenues for Trilateral-Communist Collaboration available o n < h t t p : / / w w w. t r i l a t e r a l . o r g / A n n M t g s / Tr i a l o g / l i b r a r y _ a n n m t g s / s t a c k s _ a n n m t g s / Managing_Global_Relations.pdf> last visit 10/07/2009. 47 See Gerard C. Smith, “Remarks on non Proliferation”, in Trialogue n° 15 available on <http:// www.trilateral.org/AnnMtgs/Trialog/library_annmtgs/stacks_annmtgs/ East_West_Relations_Strategies_Increase_Food_Production.pdf> last visit 10/07/2009. 48 For the US-China Normalization see Trialogue n° 20 available on <http://www.trilateral.org/AnnMtgs/ Trialog/library_annmtgs/stacks_annmtgs/Tokyo_1979.pdf> last visit 10/07/2009. ! 19 SGIR 7th Pan-European Conference “Politics in Hard Times” - Stockholm, Sweden, 9-11 September 2010 In conclusion, the new internationalism, supported mainly by economic interests linked to multinationals, and postindustrial economy, tried not only to avoid a new phase of economic protectionism and international tension, but also to bring the potential of the greatest exponents of the world capitalism toward new priorities and a renewed cooperation. The Trilateral Commission summarized the internationalist approach, which in a profoundly changed context considered the three poles of the industrialized world the engine, which could tackle the crisis of the international system. Hence, the United States had to play a key role thanks to its economic and geopolitical influence promoting concerted multilateral actions of the advanced world. According to trilateralists, the American superpower had to pursue a new hegemony, which finally responded to the needs of the entire international community. A new U.S. hegemony consisted in the role of a coordinator of global policies, a mediator in the local conflicts and a promoter of a new political agenda on energy, environment and North-South relations. This role should be directed to multilateralism in response to developments in the international system toward interdependence and fragmentation. An Outsider in Washington: The Jimmy Carter presidential campaign In April 1973, Jimmy Carter was contacted by George Franklin about the possibility of his candidacy as a member of the Trilateral Commission. The governor of Georgia, who decided to compete in the presidential elections of 1976, accepted the proposal, considered crucial to his political education, specially in economics and foreign policy, to cooperate with experts and academics 49. During the following two years the contacts between leading members of the Trilateral Commission and the election committee of Jimmy Carter intensified considerably, up to conceive a closer collaboration for the election debates with President Gerald Ford. The great contribution of trilateralists to the preparation of the democratic candidate, particularly on foreign policy issues, were fundamental to understand the new US approach in international affairs during the Jimmy Carter presidency50 . 49 For Jimmy Carterʼs appointing as Trilateral Commission member in April 1973 see letter from George Franklin to Peter Bourne, 27/1/1977, Trilateral Commission, Vertical File, Box 113, JCL. 50 Memorandum from Zbigniew Brzezinski, Richard N. Gardner, Henry Owen, “Foreign priorities for the first six months”, 3/11/1976, Cyrus R. & Grace Sloan Vance Papers, Folder 12, Box 8, Yale United States Library Manuscripts Collection. ! 20 SGIR 7th Pan-European Conference “Politics in Hard Times” - Stockholm, Sweden, 9-11 September 2010 However, it would be a mistake to present the collaboration between the commission and Jimmy Carter as a mere influence of the first on the second: indeed, Carter had already in mind a profound redefinition of the U.S. foreign policy agenda and a modus operandi that favored transparency and cooperation between allies in order to deal with the complex problems of the international system. It is more correct the term interaction between the three conditions existing in the mid-1970s: the rise of the trilateralist internationalism, a chance for an outsider to win the presidential election and the aspiration in the opinion public for a political renovation and for a reconstruction of trust in institutions after the Watergate scandals 51. Carter, as the trilateralists, was convinced of the need to restore the U.S. leadership in the international system, specially to use the economic and geopolitical influence of the United States for multilateral, not unilateral, goals. Thanks to his cultural and religious background, Jimmy Carter believed in the messianic role and in the American exceptionalism, whose universalism had been reduced to a pragmatic pursuit of a ruthless supremacy within its sphere of influence and regulation of the bipolar relations with communism by the previous republican administrations. Moreover, Jimmy Carter was aware of the profound change occurred in the late 1960s and early 1970s, so he did not intend to constrain the U.S. politics in the classic cold war containment, but rather to promote a new dynamism in foreign policy and particularly a new agenda of priorities 52. The Trilateral Commission shared with the democratic candidate many concerns and projects about the economic crisis, which, in the opinion of both, stemmed not only from structural changes in capitalist economy, but also by lack of coordination between advanced countries 53. The 1976 presidential campaign, in contrast to the previous one, was not characterized by a predominant theme, but by issues concerning the conduct of politics: the naughty, immorality, secrecy, corruption, inefficiency were the themes that led the election debates during 1976, facilitating the rise of Carter in the polls. His outsider status was more crucial than competence. 51 For election campaign see Patrick Anderson, Electing Jimmy Carter: The Campaign of 1976, Baton Rouge, La., Louisiana State University Press, 1994 and Gregory Paul Domin, Jimmy Carter, Public Opinion, and the Search for Values, 1977-1981, Macon, Mercer University Press, 2003. 52 For new world order and new foreign policy approach see Address by Governor Carter to the Chicago Council on Foreign Relations, 15/3/1976, Jimmy Carter Papers - Pre-Presidential, 1976 Presidential Campaign Issues Office - Stuart Eizenstat, Foreign Policy 1/27/76-3/76, Box 17, JCL. 53 For the information sharing between Carter and Brzezinski on foreign policy issue during the 1976 campaign see Memorandum Jimmy Carter allʼExComm della Commissione Trilaterale, 8/1/1975, Trilateral Commission File, Zbigniew Brzezinski Collection, Brzezinski Correspondence [1/1/75-31/3/75] Box 8, JCL. ! 21 SGIR 7th Pan-European Conference “Politics in Hard Times” - Stockholm, Sweden, 9-11 September 2010 The uniqueness of the 1976 election campaign did not overshadow the profound differences between the proposals of the two candidates: Ford, continuing the policy of Nixon, counted on the Republican administration skills and experience; instead, Carter, as well as promising an executive no more influenced by powerful groups in Washington, proposed a domestic political reorganization, an economic recovery and a new commitment to the Third World issues and, in general, an overcoming of the executive opportunism in the relations with Communist superpower54. Trilateralism and Decisionmaking: the trilateralist approach between cooperation and regionalism The trilateralist approach stemmed from the interaction between the proposed trilateral background of the democratic presidential candidate and the historical circumstances of the first half of the 1970s. Jimmy Carter, despite his inexperience in foreign policy and international economics, compensated that deficiency appointing many trilateralist experts in the executive branch not to delegate its decisionmaking, but to have a wide range of outlooks for a most compelling vision 55 . Jimmy Carter’s postbipolar approach did not consist of an rejection tout court of the competition between the superpowers. The President was aware of the crucial importance of continuing to have good relations with the Soviet Union, through reciprocity in bilateral 54 For the election debates see Sidney Kraus (edited by), The Great Debates: Carter vs. Ford, 1976, Indiana University Press, 1979; The Presidential Campaign 1976, 3 voll., Washington DC, United States Government Printing Office, 1978; Patrick Anderson, Electing Jimmy Carter: The Campaign of 1976, Baton Rouge, La., Louisiana State University Press, 1994. 55 Trilateralists appointed in the Carter administration: Lucy Wilson Benson, Undersecretary of State for Security Assistance, C. Fred Bergsten, Assistant Secretary of the Treasury for International Affairs, W. Michael Blumenthal, Secretary of Treasury, Robert R. Bowie, Deputy to the Director of the Central Intelligence for National Intelligence, Harold Brown, Secretary of Defence, Zbigniew Brzezinski, Assistant to the President for National Security Affairs, Jimmy Carter, President, Warren Christopher, Deputy Secretaty of State, Richard N. Cooper, Undersecretary of State for Economic Affairs, Lloyd N. Cutler, White House Counsel, Hedley Donovan, Senior Advisor Domestic and Foreign Policy and Media Relations, Richard N, Gardner, Ambassador to Italy, Richard Holbrooke, Assistant Secretary of State for East Asian and Pacific Affairs, Samuel P. Huntington, Coordinator on National Security, National Security Council, Sol Linowitz, Special Middle East Negotiator; Director, Presidentʼs Commission on World Hunger; Co.Negotiator of Panama Canal Treaties, Walter Mondale, Vice President, Henry Owen, U. S. Ambassador at Large, Special Representative of President for Economic Summits, Elliot L. Richardson, U. S. Ambassador at Large with Responsability for U.N. Law of the Sea Conference, John Sawhill, Deputy Secretary of Energy, Gerard C. Smith, U. S. Ambassador at Large for Non-Proliferation Matters, Anthony M. Solomon, Undersecretary of the Treasury for Monetary Affairs, Cyrus R. Vance, Secretary of State, Paul C. Warnke, Director, U.S. Arms Control and Disarmament Agency, Chief Disarmament Negotiator, Leonard Woodcock, Ambassador to Peking, Andrew Young, Ambassador to the United Nations, Paul A. Volcker, Chairman of the Federal Reserve Board. ! 22 SGIR 7th Pan-European Conference “Politics in Hard Times” - Stockholm, Sweden, 9-11 September 2010 relations. Nevertheless, Carter did not reduce the perspective and action of the administration to a simple management of relations with the Soviet Union, to contain it and to react to possible destabilization, real or imagined, implemented by the Soviets. Instead, Carter tried to define new foreign policy priorities and direct relations with the Soviet Union toward cooperation, multilateral détente, from which the entire international community, specially the Third World countries, could benefit. According to Jimmy Carter, an economic and geopolitical leverage, which both superpowers exerted within their respective spheres of influence, could be exploited to facilitate the resolution of local conflicts and promote the development of poor areas with non-invasive and interventionist actions, but with a collaboration functional to the needs of the country. Thus Carter altered the vision of a systemic ideological competition in various theaters of the Third World and also opposed to a preconceived perception that any political change or destabilization in these countries was necessarily a sign of the Soviet interference. Furthermore, the trilateralist approach was characterized by the need to cooperate with allies on an equal basis seeking a concerted solution to reduce divergences among them about political and military issues. Being a harsh critic of the unilateralism and protectionism of previous administrations, the president sought to promote a shared project with allies regarding common problems and goals. The accountability sought by Carter on relations with allies differed greatly from which desired by Kissinger in the early 1970s. The former Secretary of State simply tried to implement an U.S. unilateral approach aiming to reduce the U.S. responsibilities about the allies’ security and economic stability. However, in Kissinger’s perspective, sharing responsabilites did not correspond a concerted management of the world politics, specially regarding relations with the countries of Eastern Europe. Kissinger openly contrasted the Ostpolitik and the Conference on Security and Cooperation in Europe (CSCE), strongly desired by the Europeans, as complicated the complex regulatory process of bipolarism. The Ostpolitik affected one of the cornestone of Nixon and Kissinger policy: the essential unity of the Western bloc behind the policymaking of the American superpower. Carter, as well as shared responsibilities, favored a multilateral management of relations with Communist countries, using the CSCE as an instrument of pressure about the Soviet conduct in Eastern bloc on human rights 56. 56 For Kissinger and CSCE see Daniel C. Thomas, The Helsinki Effect: International Norms, Human Rights, and the Demise of Communism, New Jersey, Princeton University Press, 2001. ! 23 SGIR 7th Pan-European Conference “Politics in Hard Times” - Stockholm, Sweden, 9-11 September 2010 The regionalism of the Carter administration was a new approach to manage local conflicts and disputes by the superpowers. Carter considered to assess every single issue at the local level through the lens of bipolar competition a dangerous limit. Carter administration’s approach to a local conflict consisted on a super partes management using its influence to reach an agreement between the parties without finalizing the U.S. efforts to an a priori exclusion of the Soviet Union or to a simple support the anticommunist forces in the field. The regionalist approach, in which the United Nations and the possible cooperation between the superpowers played a crucial role opposed firmly to the global bipolar approach, whereby any change or a regional turmoil was inscribed in a wider project of the Soviet Union of weakening the influence of the adversary in the region 57. During Jimmy Carter’s presidential term, relations with allies were characterized by several differences in the economic and military sectors and were not facilitated by the gradual escalation of tension between the two superpowers. The economic crisis and the decision of deploying euromissiles on Western European soil were a arduous test for the trilateralist approach of Carter’s administration. Since the first week in office, Carter worked with his advisers, first of all Henry Owen, a former member of the Trilateral Commission, to organize the first meeting with European allies 58. The occasion was the G7 summit in London in 1977, where, after the clashes and differences caused by the unilateral and protectionist policies of Nixon and Ford, Carter tried to build a new trust and renewed cooperation between allies. During that meeting Carter proposed the adoption of the locomotive approach 59 to overcome the stagflation of the Western economies through a stimulus package of the three most advanced countries - the United States, Japan and the Federal Republic of Germany - aimed to reduce unemployment and boosting economic growth and productivity. Despite differences between main economic philosophies - the antinflationist Germany and the United States against unemployment - the allies reached an agreement, which provided stimulus to the locomotive economies. The final meeting 57 See Donna R. Jackson, Jimmy Carter and the Horn of Africa: Cold War Policy in Ethiopia and Somalia, London, McFarland & Company Publishers, 2007. 58 Henry Owen, member of the Trilateral Commission U. S. Ambassador at Large, Special Representative of President for Economic Summits in the Carter administration played a key role in the definition of the locomotive approach during the G7 of Londra and Bonn in 1977 and 1978. See also Trialogue <http:// www.trilateral.org/AnnMtgs/Trialog/library_annmtgs/stacks_annmtgs/London_Summit_Revisited.pdf> last visit 10/07/2009. 59 See Carl W. Biven, Jimmy Carterʼs Economy: Policy in an Age of Limits, Chapel Hill, University of North Carolina Press, 2002. ! 24 SGIR 7th Pan-European Conference “Politics in Hard Times” - Stockholm, Sweden, 9-11 September 2010 and the agreement, however, showed the first rifts in the relationship between Carter and Chancellor Schmidt, who judged the U.S. president's economic policy adventurist, quite excessive respect to monetary rigor promoted by Germans, specially for the gradual weakening of the dollar that caused the decline of German exports to the U.S. market and higher oil prices on the world market. Japan was asked to curb exports to the U.S. market and reduce oil imports from the OPEC countries. Again the agreement was reached with difficulty. In two subsequent meetings were evident the contradictions of the trilateralist approach of Carter’s administration, as the continued devaluation of the dollar and the substantial failure of the stimulus package did partially withdraw the allies from supporting Carter’s proposal. The issue of the production and installation of the ERW or neutron bomb in Western Europe also strained relations between the American superpower and its European allies in particular with West Germany. Everything was caused, as has been clearly described by Robert Strong, by the ambiguity of the Western European position, which on the one hand secretly supported a strong response to the deployment of Soviet SS-20 in Eastern Europe, on the other hand, publicly did not intend to take responsibility for a decision so unpopular. The neutron bomb issue was characterized in late 1977 and spring of 1978 by a heated debate between allies, much emphasized by the media. The catastrophic fallout caused by the explosion of the bomb would have caused an ecological disaster and an impressive number of victims. Hence, the strong opposition from the European public opinion about the installation of the ERW. European governments, facing a deep crisis in the consensus on the issue of taxation aimed to the U.S. imposition, thus, playing a dual role in private urged Americans to produce and install the bomb in Western Europe to balance the difference between the continental theater Warsaw Pact and NATO, but publicly they opposed to the installation of the ERW on the European soil60. Carter was not going to impose unilaterally the neutron bomb and, after having suspended the ERW production, asked the explicit consent by the European allies, so that the decision would be multilateral and shared 61. The choice of the President, also opposed by the members of 60 For the US-European relations during Carterʼs years see Matthias Schultz e Thomas A. Schwartz (edited by), The Strained Alliance: U. S. - European Relations From Nixon to Carter, New York, Cambridge University Press, 2010. 61 For the ERW issue see Robert A. Strong, Working in the World: Jimmy Carter and the Making of American Foreign Policy, Baton Rouge, Louisiana State University Press, 2000. ! 25 SGIR 7th Pan-European Conference “Politics in Hard Times” - Stockholm, Sweden, 9-11 September 2010 the administration, was stigmatized as an act of weakness by the allies, who rejected the option ERW, moving gradually to the idea of deploying Cruise and Pershing 2 missiles. On the military issue, in the Far East there were also clashes between South Korea and the United States, which from the first weeks of 1977, announced the withdrawal of the U.S. troops from Korea, causing disappointment within the South Korean government that felt abandoned to the mercy of the enemies, North Korea and China 62. Carter repeatedly granted the military substantial coverage for South Korea through an implementation of air defense, more flexible and less expensive. To this the President added a greater accountability of Japan in the Far East63 . The U.S. President intended to use the U.S. influence to encourage more equitable NorthSouth relations and the rise of democratic forces throught a functional support to those political factions. The Panama Canal treaties represented a victory for the U.S. image in relations with Latin America and the Third World after the Chilean crisis in 1973. Domestically, however, the administration was accused of downsizing the U.S. leverage in Latin America and the New Right led by Reagan was reinforced by exploiting the dissatisfaction with the inconsistent foreign policy of the executive64. Moreover, the war between Somalia and Ethiopia was an opportunity for implementing the regional approach of Carter’s administration in local conflicts. The Soviet change during 1977 from the Somali partnership, which invaded Ogaden in July, to the Ethiopian one could potentially extend that conflict to the classic competition between the two superpowers. President Carter during 1977-78 tried to involve other African countries for a cease-fire: 62 For US troops withdrawal from South Korea see also Trialogue available on <http://www.trilateral.org/ AnnMtgs/Trialog/library_annmtgs/stacks_annmtgs/Managing_Global_Relations.pdf> last visit 10/07/2009. 63 See memorandum from Cyrus Vance to the President, “Request for Approval of Coproduction of F-5 Fighter Aircraft in the Republic of Korea”,12/10/1979 National Security Affairs, Brzezinski Material, Folder Korea, Republic of: 10/1979, Box 44, JCL. 64 For Panama Canal Treaties see Adam Clymer, Drawing the Lineat the Big Ditch: The Panama Canal Treaties and the Rise of the Right, University Press of Kansas, 2008; Michael J. Hogan, The Panama Canal in the American Politics: Domestic Advocacy and the Evolution of Policy, Southern Illinois University Press, 1986; Jordan, William J. Panama Odyssey. Austin: University of Texas Press, 1984, John Major, Prize Possession: The United States and the Panama Canal, 1903-1979, Cambridge University Press, 1993, George D. Moffett, The Limits of Victory: The Ratification of the Panama Canal Treaties, Cornell University Press, 1985, Peter Michael Sanchez, Panama Lost? U. S. Hegemony, Gainesville, University Press of Florida, 2007, Harvey G. Summ/Tom Kelly (edited by), The Good Neighbors: America, Panama, and the 1977 Canal Treaties, Ohio University Center for International Studies, 1988. ! 26 SGIR 7th Pan-European Conference “Politics in Hard Times” - Stockholm, Sweden, 9-11 September 2010 we decided to explore means of getting as many African leaders as possible to partecipate in a call to all outside powers to refrain from supplying arms to fuel the Ethiopian-Somali confrontation so that there can be a cease-fire and an effort at mediation65. Despite the pressures at the national level, both from the neoconservatives and from the cold warriors within the administration, President Carter maintained a cautious and equidistant approach to the conflict in the Horn of Africa, providing the humanitarian support and refusing military aid to Siad Barre. The Soviet invasion of Afghanistan changed the American perspective as the strategic position of Somalia respect to the Middle East, forced the administration, after many failed mediations, to support Siad Barre asking a permission to install the U.S. military bases in exchange for defensive weapons 66. Meanwhile, in Southeast Asia Carter’s administration tried simultaneously with the normalization with China an opening for Vietnam, which did not respond positively to the US approach 67. Moreover, in July 1979, the Sandinistas took power in Nicaragua thanks to Carter’s refusal to send military aid to dictator Somoza, to whom the American President had proposed democratic reforms. During the riots, Carter committed himself for a democratic transition, trying to prevent the rise of a marxist-leninist regime. Compared with the global approach of Nixon and Kissinger, Carter aimed to mediate and to support for a democratic change in Nicaragua without closing the door to the Sandinista revolution 68. In the relations with Communist countries Carter intended, on the one hand, to overcome the pragmatism of Nixon and Ford, on the other hand, to continue the dialogue with the communist superpower proposing a cooperation based on reciprocity and multilateral benefits. In the early 1977, Carter’s administration worked on reviving détente trying simultaneously to define new shared goals. Firstly, an agreement on arms reduction in each nuclear arsenal and not a new SALT based on ever raising ceilings of nuclear 65 Memorandum from Zbigniew Brzezinski to the President, “PRC Review of Situation to Horn of Africa”, 26/8/1977, Subject File, Zbigniew Brzezinski Collection, Folder: Meetings--PRC, Box 24, JCL. 66 See Donna R. Jackson, Jimmy Carter, cit. 67 For “Vietnam syndrome” see Steven Hurst, The Carter administration and Vietnam, cit.; Richard A. Melanson, Reconstructing Consensus, cit. 68 For regionalist approach in Nicaragua see Robert Kagan, A Twilight Struggle: American Power and Nicaragua 1977-1990, New York City, The Free Press, 1996, Morris H. Morley, Washington, Somoza, and the Sandinistas: State and Regime in U.S. Policy Toward Nicaragua, 1969-1981, Cambridge University Press, 1999; Robert A. Pastor, Not Condemned to Repetition: The United States and Nicaragua, London, Westview Press, 2002. ! 27 SGIR 7th Pan-European Conference “Politics in Hard Times” - Stockholm, Sweden, 9-11 September 2010 warheads and weapon systems 69. Secondly, a collaboration to exploit the geopolitical influence of both to resolve local conflicts, specially in the Third World. Finally, the possibility of cooperating on the issue of nuclear proliferation, for which, according to Carter, was essential to define rules for the development of nuclear energy for peaceful purposes exclusively. The development of these plans ended in the first year of the presidency, when a renewed bipolar tension, also caused by the insistence of Jimmy Carter on human rights in Eastern Europe, damaged the new proposals in the SALT negotiations. Furthermore, regarding the peace process in the Middle East, the lack of Soviet influence from the first half of the 1970s and the lack of willingness to cooperate with the United States closed another chapter in the bipolar cooperation project for multilateral goals 70. Between the end of 1977 and the spring of 1978 was fought a conflict in the Horn of Africa. In principle the United States, which intented to assume an impartial role in the crisis, acknowledged the importance of collaboration with the Communist superpower as closely linked at first to Somalia and, after the Somali attack to Ogaden, to Mengistu’s Ethiopia. Furthermore, in that local conflict the U.S. and U.S.S.R.’s goals differed significantly because of the Soviet willingness to impose to Ethiopia a marxistleninist economic development plan, which, inter alia, Mengistu strongly disapproved71. The normalization with China brought to clearly different outcome, as both Jimmy Carter and Chinese leaders after Mao's death aimed to conclude the process of sino-american rapprochement, which began in 1969. The Kissingerian approach, aiming to exploit the normalization with China to put pressure on the Soviet Union about the Vietnam War and the SALT negotiations, to achieve a public consensus in the presidential elections of 1972 and 1976, and then to reconstruct a more favorable balance of power in Asia 72 was sharply different from the normalization strategy conducted by Carter’s administration, In cooperating with China in her modernization plans, we should avoid foolish talk of playing a “China card”, that is to say, cooperating with the Chinese, whether economically, militarily or diplomatically, in order to reduce Soviet pressures on Europe. Such talk is a myth: China is not a passive card to be played. Nor do we 69 For deep cuts proposal see cable from Cyrus Vance to the President, “SALT Discussions”, 23/3/1977, Subject File, Zbigniew Brzezinski Collection, Folder: SALT -- Chronology: [24/1/77-5/9/77: Tabs 11-19], Box 39, JCL. 70 For Jimmy Carter proposal of US-Soviet cooperation on peace process in Middle East see, Keeping Faith, Memoirs of a President, The University of Arkansas Press, 1982, pp. 299-303. 71 72 See Donna R. Jackson, Jimmy Carter, cit. For China Card issue see William Burr (edited by), The Kissinger Transcripts: The Top Secret Talks with Beijing and Moscow, New York, The New Press, 1999. ! 28 SGIR 7th Pan-European Conference “Politics in Hard Times” - Stockholm, Sweden, 9-11 September 2010 wish to improve our relations with China at the expense of our relations with the Soviet Union. In order to avoid the mistakes made on previous occasions when China has attempted to modernize, we should cooperate in Chinaʼs modernization plans at her pace. We should also seek to reduce external pressures on China73. Carter, unlike the previous adiministrations did not consider the U.S.-China relations a card to play in the ideological confrontation against the Soviets: There are those who tend to view our relations with China through the prism of our relations with the USSR. This is not wise. The U. S. has long had a deep interest in China and a high regard for the Chinese people. Close U.S. - Chinese relations is a central U.S. goal. We feel that a strong, productive, and stable China can play a great role in preserving peace in Asia and throughout the world over the next century and that strengthening of U.S. - Chinese relations can contribute to this worthy aim. [...] We do not project US as protector of PRC 74. Jimmy Carterʼs aim was to integrate China in the market economy and cooperate with it for managing a geopolitical balance in Asia: The goals of our China policy: to partecipate constructively in Chinaʼs economic development, not just for their benefit, but so that american businessman can secure a fair share of China market; to draw China into the search fo solutions to the problems that confront all mankind (energy shortage, nuclear proliferation, arms race, etc.); to advance our relations with China on their merits and not to allow our China relationship to be held hostage to relations with others; no desire to provoke a Sino-Soviet conflict or to manipulate SinoSoviet tensions for tactical benefit75. Carter’s administration faced a patient Chinese leadership, as was that of Mao, tackled the question of Taiwan by finding a compromise between the demands of the Chinese and U.S. commitment with the ally. Moreover, compared to the vague statement of 1972, whose core was the counterhegemonic U.S.-China cooperation in Asia, in 1978-1979 was the economic and cultural cooperation, which played a key role, along with the final opening of the Chinese market, and the beginning of a partnership in Asia with the Japan 76. Finally, as Kissinger, Carter also faced an internal opposition of the neoconservatives, who accused Carter’s administration of abandoning a strategic ally in the enemy’s hands 77. 73 Michael Oksenberg, “China and International Community” in Trialogue, disponibile su <http:// www.trilateral.org/AnnMtgs/Trialog/library_annmtgs/stacks_annmtgs/Tokyo_1979.pdf> last visit 10/07/2009. 74 Memorandum from Zbigniew Brzezinski to the President, “Outline of Speech on U.S.-Soviet Relations”, USSR, Country File, Brzezinski Material, National Security Affairs, Box 83, JCL. 75 Memorandum from Zbigniew Brzezinski to the President, “Vance and Brown exchange on China Policy”, 14/12/1979, Peopleʼs Republic of China, Geographic File, Zbigniew Brzezinski Collection, Box 9, JCL. 76 Sadako Ogata, Normalization with China: A Comparative Study of U.S. and Japanese Processes, Berkeley, Institute of East Asian Studies, University of California, 1988; Qingshan Tan, The Making of U.S. China Policy: From Normalization to the Post-Cold War Era, Boulder, Lynne Rienner, 1992. 77 For neoconservatives reactions see Gong Li, William C. Kirby, Robert Ross (edited by), Normalization of U.S.-China Relations: An International History, Cambridge, Harvard University Asia Center, 2005. ! 29 SGIR 7th Pan-European Conference “Politics in Hard Times” - Stockholm, Sweden, 9-11 September 2010 Escalation of Tension: The decline of the trilateralist approach The return of Ayatollah Khomeini in Iran in February 1979 and the end of the reign of Shah Reza Palhavi marked a profound change in the Middle East, the drastic reduction of the U.S. influence and the outbreak of an era of transnational and unconventional conflicts between the American superpower and the militant Islamic fundamentalism. The Middle East crisis was characterized by several phases in which both the U.S. and the new Shiite regime quickly changed their perception of events, specially after a new escalation of tension in the relations between the superpowers. Between the late 1978 and the departure of the Shah Reza Pahlavi in early 1979, Carter’s administration attempted a difficult mediation between the revolutionary forces and the ally, trying to encourage a process of domestic reforms to reduce the population’s discontent. The decennial crises inevitably came to an end with the revolution that threw the country into chaos, during which it was difficult for Americans to identify new referents with whom negotiating any kind of agreement78 . The situation got worse with the departure of the Shah and the return of Khomeini, who was determined to exploit a popular resentment against the American superpower in order to strengthen the Shiite power. Despite the popularity and authority of Ayatollah, the first months of revolution planted an uncontrollable disorder for the same leaders of the country, and that condition created more confusion and concern in Carter’s administration. Moreover, to the chaos caused by the revolution was added the issue of the Shah’s admission in the U.S. hospital for specific cancer treatments. In April 1979, the Shah, after some hesitation of the executive, was permitted to enter in the United States for the treatment he needed further complicating relations with the Islamic regime in Teheran. Since early 1979, the Islamic government demanded not only that the United States denied the asylum to the Shah, but also the American support for the return of Palhavi, who, according to the Shiite regime, should be tried for his crimes against Islam. This 78 For Iranian crisis and the escalation of tension between superpowers see Said Amir Arjomand, The Turban for the Crown: The Islamic Revolution in Iran, Oxford University Press, 1988; David Farber, Taken Hostages: The Iran Hostage Crisis and the Americaʼs First Encounter with Radical Islam, Princeton University Press, 2005; David Patrick Houghton, US Foreign Policy and the Iran Hostage Crisis, Cambridge University Press, 2001; Russell Leigh Moses, Freeing the Hostages: Reexamining U.S.-Iranian Negotiations and Soviet Policy, 1979-1981, University of Pittsburg Press, 1996; Kenneth Pollack, The Persian Puzzle: The Conflict between Iran and American, New York, Random House, 2004; Ofira Seliktar, Failing the Crystal Ball Test: The Carter Administration and the Fundamentalist Revolution in Iran, Westport, Praeger, 2000. ! 30 SGIR 7th Pan-European Conference “Politics in Hard Times” - Stockholm, Sweden, 9-11 September 2010 proposal was unacceptable for the U.S. executive, which would not betrayed a long time ally. Once granted the asylum to the Shah, and relations with Iran worsened, until November of that year the complex process of the normalization of relations with the new regime stalled. The attack on the U.S. embassy in Tehran on November 4th 1979 and the seizure of 52 American hostages marked a point of no return in the relations with the Shiite government. The hostages were being held, provoking consternation and confusion in the U.S. public opinion as in the executive, and President Carter and his advisers began to plan a rescue operation to extricate the hostages 79. Since January 1980, simultaneously with the difficult negotiations with the government in Teheran, Carter’s administration prepared a rescue operation planned for the spring of the same year. Sided in favor of the operation there were the first lady and the National Security Advisor Brzezinski, who pushed strongly for a resolute choice against an arbitrary and aggressive Iranian action. The executive, however, remained divided: the Secretary of State Cyrus Vance threatened to resign if Carter approved the rescue operation, as strongly opposed to covert military actions. Vance was convinced that the action could undermine relations with the new regime and dissolve little hope of rescuing the hostages 80. The pressure implemented by interventionists within the administration, combined with those of the public opinion, which was expecting a firm action from the government and the criticism of the Right of Reagan, urged the President to opt for intervention. From President’s memoirs was evident a rough management of the operation, with little analysis of the topography and climate, that provoking many problems to the U.S. helicopters’ landing81. The uncertainty of the moment and the danger of losing all the men engaged in the operation finally led Carter to cancel the rescue throwing sharp criticism on the administration regarding the preparation and impotence of the executive. Meanwhile, the frustration that characterized the spring of 1979 did not vanish, but, instead, was intensified in the same summer, on July 15th 1979, when Jimmy Carter with the malaise speech to the nation spoke in tones of accusation and a deep distrust in the Americans’ spirit of sacrifice. The speech was followed by the resignation of key members of the administration, including The Secretary of Treasury Michael Blumenthal, who was 79 Jimmy Carter, Keeping Faith, cit. 80 For Cyrus Vance resignation see Hard Choices: Critical Years in Americaʼs Foreign Policy, New York City, Simon & Schuster, 1983. 81 ! Jimmy Carter, Keeping Faith, cit., pp. 525-528. 31 SGIR 7th Pan-European Conference “Politics in Hard Times” - Stockholm, Sweden, 9-11 September 2010 charged with the failure of economic policies of the executive, entangled in a serious stagflation, which had already deteriorated the stability of the US economy82 . The rising unemployment, the weakening of the dollar due to the rising inflation, budget deficits, rising oil prices deeply shattered the Carter administration’s economic reforms. As Carter had feared since 1978, the economic stimulus package provoked a serious inflation and partially overcame in the early 1980s 83. The year of 1979 was a turning point for the trilateralist approach of Carter’s administration. The President was convinced of the necessity of radical economic reforms that would promote the efficiency, decentralization, preservation, and moderate deregulation in the energy sector, in general, and the federal state. The malaise speech showed a substantial proximity to trilateralist philosophy in the belief that the 1970s had marked a profound turning point in the national and world history, specially in the developed countries, which had the onerous task to set change, which would be coupled by other countries. They also had to change the idea of welfare and development, considering the economic transition to the post industrialism and the energy shortage as an equivalent of war, remembering how during the Second World War the U.S. showed a great spirit of sacrifice and adaptation84. The nation did not follow the President on this path, on the contrary, the public opinion thought that the crisis, specially in the energy sector, was artificially created by companies to raise prices and that the executive with his weakness and indecision was not doing anything to resolve it. The first step towards the decline of trilateralism was made during the hostage crisis, when, with the failure of negotiations, the administration opted for a dangerous and unilateral action just to reach the aim of extrication the hostages. The second step was the defeat of the proposal on domestic front stemmed from the malaise speech, after which it became clear that the public, under pressure from the crisis and distrust for the alleged incompetence and impotence of the executive, did not intend to follow the President, favoring a deep fall in the polls and Carter’s inevitable defeat in the 1980 election. The third step was the failure 82 Daniel Horowitz, Jimmy Carter and the Energy Crisis of the 1970's, the "Crisis of Conference" Speech July 15, 1979: A Brief History with Documents, Boston, Bedford/St. Martin's, 2005. 83 84 See Carl W. Biven, Jimmy Carterʼs Economy, cit. There is a clear nexus between the malaise speech in July 15th 1979 and the Trilateral Commissionʼs Report The Crisis of Democracy, published and discussed within the Commission in 1975, available on <http://www.trilateral.org/library/crisis_of_democracy.pdf> last visit 10/07/2009. From both stems the necessity to promote a new idea of affluence, whereby the economic growth doesnʼt mean a simple increasing in consumption, but a delicate balance between resources and needs. ! 32 SGIR 7th Pan-European Conference “Politics in Hard Times” - Stockholm, Sweden, 9-11 September 2010 of cooperation or, better coordination, between allies in responding to the Soviet invasion in Afghanistan, first Soviet military operation outside the Warsaw Pact. The U.S. government was warried not only by the Soviet intervention, but by the fact that the invasion occurred at the moment of the profound instability in the Middle East and the situation would have encouraged a revival of the Soviet influence in the region, on Iranian oil, in particular. The response of President Carter was determined, as he tried to join an aggressive and intransigent posture, favoring a collective response to the crisis. The President decided both to stop ratification of the SALT II agreements, which would had been definitely rejected by the Congress in a crisis situation, both to suspend the transfer of grain and other goods to the Soviet Union, opting for a boycott of 1980 Moscow Olympics 85. Carter in his intense correspondence with the European key allies sought support and cooperation, but in that case, the allies did not go beyond the formal condemnation of the Soviet Union. Carter’s administration in January 1980 confirmed its commitment to intervene, even militarily if necessary, to defend the strategic balance in the Persian Gulf in case of invasion by third parties. In Presidential Directive 59, Carter approved the increase of military expenditures and the development of new weapon systems, as a MX ICBM missile, to respond to the crisis 86. With these measures, implemented in a state of emergency, the trilateralist approach and multilateralism of the administration was overshadowed despite his efforts in promoting a concerted response to the renewed Soviet expansionism. Conclusion The decline of the trilateralist approach originated from two factors, essential to fully understand the changes of the 1970s: the first was a public consensus, the second regarded the effectiveness of policymakers to implement a new polical agenda to deal with domestic and international transformations. The reconstruction of the consensus was the main objective on whom to base a new approach in foreign and domestic policy in the long 1970s. It was the distrust in the proposals of the Republicans that pushed much of the electorate to choose an outsider, 85 86 Jimmy Carter, Keeping Faith, cit., p. 496. For Presidential Directive 59 see Brian J. Auten, Carterʼs Conversion: The Hardening of American Defense Policy, University of Missouri Press, 2008. ! 33 SGIR 7th Pan-European Conference “Politics in Hard Times” - Stockholm, Sweden, 9-11 September 2010 unknown to powerful groups in Washington. The main advantage of Jimmy Carter, the achievement of consensus, wisely used during the campaign, showed the other face of Janus during his presidential term: the consensus became a tight control over executive decisions, bringing the importance of the public perceptions to unprecedented levels. Unfortunately, new projects of the Carter administration trilateralist agenda and the complexity of their implementation damaged consensus. Pluralism within the executive and the absence of a clear and direct message to the public compromised the support of the electorate. The status of the outsider from a favorable and determinant factor for victory became a further complication in decisionmaking, in which the support of the Congress was essential, as the question of the Panama Canal and the comprehensive energy plan had showed 87. The leeway in economic and international issues outside the unilateralism and the classic Cold War agenda narrowed gradually because of the events that profoundly changed the political priorities of the executive and reduced to a minimum the alternatives to containment. The hostage crisis in Iran, the Shiite revolution, the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan further diminished the possibility of the trilateralist approach, difficult to implement in a phase of a profound economic crisis and the lack of cooperation with allies. Neverthelss, the trilateralism, unlike other policy proposals arising from the long decade, did not reach the exhaustion of its innovative edge, but was gradually set aside as lacking a sufficient base of support and favorable historical circumstances. Instead the realpolitik of Nixon and Kissinger, which by the mid-1970s had demonstrated the ineffectiveness of regulating competition between the United States and the Soviet Union and the bipolar accomodation of the international system modeled on the great powers of the Nineteenth century, as undermined by obsession of the credibility and global ideological conflict. Similarly, after 1980 election, the new unilateralist and aggressive approach of Reagan, in a few years, from 1981 to 1983, was exhausted, forcing the republican administration since late 1983 to abandon its most radical features 88. The aims of trilateralism - multilateralism and international cooperation, a new concept of economic development, resolving the energy issue, a new focus on North-South relations, 87 For relations between Carter and the Congress see Jim Wright, Balance of Power, cit.; Robert David Johnson, Congress and the Cold War, cit.; Charles O. Jones, The Trusteeship Presidency: Jimmy Carter and the United States Congress, Louisiana State University Press, 1988. 88 Beth A. Fisher, The Reagan Reversal: Foreign Policy and the End of the Cold War, London, University of Missouri Press, 1997. ! 34 SGIR 7th Pan-European Conference “Politics in Hard Times” - Stockholm, Sweden, 9-11 September 2010 a new concerted management of interdependence, tackling fragmentation of the interests, renovation of international institutions and dealing with environmental problems - are still relevant. Emblematic is the dialogue between the journalist David Ignatius, Zbigniew Brzezinski and Brent Scowcroft in 2008 on current topics, which are very similar to Carter’s administration objectives: Ignatius: [...] A bipolar world like the one we had in the cold war with the Soviet Union was fairly stable, and that a multipolar world, where you have many diffuse centers of power, would be fairly stable. But the transition from the one to the other would not be stable and would be very difficult. Scowcroft: [...] Itʼs no longer the old balance-of-power world of Herman Khan or the Henry Kissinger world of multiple balances. Itʼs something different. Globalization is eroding national boundaries everywhere. Importantly in information technology, but also in health and environment. Nation can no longer provide for their citizens what they traditionally used to. Brzezinski: [...] We have to face the fact that the global system as it now exists was shaped largely between 1945 and 1950, when there where entirely different power realities. So the first order of business is to adjust the existing global institutions to these new realities, which involve the rise of power like China, India, Japan, with Indonesia on the horizon. [...] In that kind of world, the premium will have to be put on effective political management of the complex reality. And that I think is going to be very difficult for a mass democracy like America to effectively pursue, in part because our public is woefully uninformed about the implications of these new realities [...] And our diplomacy and our leadership in recent years have not been inclined to engage in the kind of consensual assumption of responsability that this new age requires. Look at the hesitations, the zig-zagging on climate control and the global environment. Or on the issues of poverty and inequality. I think weʼre entering a period in which complexity is going to be the biggest challenge89. Proposing to achieve these new goals is, in the trilateralist perspective, the fulcrum of a new U.S. hegemony, which, unlike other countries, thanks to its economic and geopolitical leverage, might implement a new strategy of renovation of the international system through a consistent commitment to concerted and multilateral resolution of global problems, for which is ineffective and counterproductive an unilateral response. Brzezinski concludes Brzezinski: I think the American leadership is necessary - if by leadership we mean, first of all, not dictation, but inspiration. If by leadership we mean an enlightened insight into the meaning of history and our time - a leadership that understands what is truly new about the twenty-first century. [...] Then that kind of American leadership - it can be a catalyst. Not for actions directed by the United States, but for actions that the global community [...] is prepared collectively to embrace. That kind of leadership is needed. But for that kind of leadership to emerge in America, we not only need wery special people as leaders [...] but we need a far more enlightened society than we have 90. 89 Zbigniew Brzezinski and Brent Scowcroft, America and the World. cit., pp. 26-28. 90 Ivi. pp. 33-34. ! 35