Conservative Internationalism.
Abrahamson, James L.
Conservative Internationalism: Armed Diplomacy under Jefferson,
Polk, Truman, and Reagan by Henry R. Nau, Princeton University Press:
Princeton and Oxford, 2013, ISBN 978-0-691-15931-7, xiii, 321 pp.,
$35.00 Hardcover, also available as an e-book.
Dr. Henry R. Nau, for more than two years a senior advisor on
President Reagan's National Security Council and prior to that
Special Assistant to the Department of State's Under Secretary for
Economic Affairs, now teaches at George Washington University's
Elliott School of International Affairs. Drawing on his academic and
governmental experience, he has written a truly remarkable book
accounting for the principal diplomatic successes of four American
presidents--Jefferson, Polk, Truman, and Reagan--and calling attention
to their use of the too often overlooked foreign policy Nau describes as
conservative internationalism.
His introduction and first two chapters describe that policy at
length and favorably compare it to realism, nationalism, and liberal
internationalism. According to Nau, realists and nationalists rely on
force and the balance of power to guide foreign policy. They aim to
promote stability in the world and defend their nation's sovereign
independence while remaining largely indifferent to the promotion of
democracy abroad. Liberal internationalists, on the other hand, seek to
spread freedom by working through inter-national institutions. They wish
to limit threats or the use of force and reliance on the balance of
power. (11)
Liberal and conservative internationalists agree on a lot:
individual liberty, separation of governmental powers, equal
opportunity, and self-government. (14) Moving beyond maintaining a
balance of international power, they both seek to promote freedom
abroad, i.e. increasing the number of the world's democracies.
Liberals, like Woodrow Wilson, try to achieve that outcome by
acting through large international organizations such as the League of
Nations or the United Nations. If acting through such bodies at all,
conservatives prefer temporary or less centralized arrangements. Nor do
conservatives fear the use of force, applying it as needed to make
diplomacy work. Liberals rely instead on diplomacy, hoping to make the
use of force unnecessary. (23-24)
The heart of Nau's book--though not its longest section--are
the four chapters in which he describes conservative internationalism as
employed by Jefferson, Polk, Truman and Reagan.
Jefferson used that foreign policy concept on two occasions:
overcoming the Barbary Pirates' depredations on American trade in
the Mediterranean and in the acquisition of the Louisiana Purchase. In
the early 19th century, the movement of free goods in free ships was an
important national asset--to Jefferson an aspect of freedom--one the he
was determined to protect and extend despite the small size of the U.S.
Navy and a miniscule Marine Corps. Avoiding alliances with European
powers, he initially dispatched three frigates and an armed schooner,
which for several years made war on the pirates, eventually winning from
the ruler of Morocco respect for U.S. seaborne trade and, following
ground assaults on Tripoli from both land and sea, forcing that country
to cease its attacks on American shipping.
In the case of Louisiana, Jefferson was able to open new areas for
democracy in North America--an internationalist's goal--by
multiplying the power of his limited armed forces and the American
militias being organized in the Mississippi Valley by making the French
believe he was about to achieve an alliance with England that would
enable the Americans to seize Louisiana. So, better that the French sell
what might otherwise be lost to attacks on New Orleans from the sea or
invasion from the U.S. mainland.
With the benefit of stronger arms, a weak (Mexican) opponent, and
an (English) government willing to settle northwestern differences,
James K. Polk became the second American president to blend force and
diplomacy to vastly expand the area of eventual freedom--the entire
region to the west of the Louisiana Purchase, bordered in the south by
the Rio Grande River, and in the north by the Canadian border. His
contemporaries--and many later liberal internationalists--condemned him
for gaining new lands for slavery, though Texans already owned slaves.
Realists deplored his risk of war with England as well as Mexico;
nationalists claimed the Polk had gone too far, even for a protege of
arch-nationalist Andrew Jackson.
Whatever was held against Polk, he respected Congress, disciplined
the demand of some for new territory (even All Mexico), and expanded
democratic self-government by use of a thoughtful and patient blend of
force and diplomacy, though he had hoped to achieve both his goals
through purchase and diplomatic compromise.
The agreement annexing Texas occurred before Polk became president,
and it fell to him, however, to define and defend its southern border.
To acquire California and the region west of Texas, Polk repeatedly
sought to negotiate a purchase. In time, he sent troops into California,
used force in northern Mexico, and, eventually, invaded central Mexico
via Veracruz occurred slowly. Meanwhile, Polk repeatedly sought a
Mexican leader willing to negotiate. After long delays, his agent,
Nicholas Trist, violated the president's instructions but achieved
a treaty at a price that both Polk and the Mexicans could accept. Though
it took time and an apparent risk of war to get there, the obvious
solution to another dispute, over the so-called Oregon territory, was to
split it by extending the existing line of the Canadian border.
The 20th-century negotiations undertaken by Presidents Truman and
Reagan were potentially more grave and if mishandled could have resulted
in the Soviet occupation of all Europe or even the use of nuclear
weapons. In the end conservative internationalism well served both
leaders.
After some early indecision about his relations with Stalin, Truman
moved boldly: calling for the containment of the USSR in March 1947,
sending American warships into the Mediterranean, proposing the Marshall
Plan for Europe's economic recovery, using air power to face down
Stalin's 1948 attempt to drive the Western powers out of Berlin,
and in 1949 following that with NATO, America's first peace-time
military alliance and the long-term stationing of troops overseas in
peace. By the time of the Korean War, where he defended a future
democracy, Truman had also realized that the UN Security Council could
not keep the international peace. He had little choice but to back up
his diplomacy with force.
To achieve his goals Reagan had first to prompt an American
economic recovery sufficient to support an arms build up that the
Soviets could not match lest they bankrupt themselves. That element of
force in place, the president was ready to negotiate. Even so, he fell
short of his intention to convince the Soviet leadership to eliminate
all nuclear weapons, the MAD doctrine, and its related arms agreements
and to then replace them all with a shared strategic missile defense. He
nevertheless secured Europe by winning Soviet agreement to limit its
intermediate nuclear forces in Europe. He also gained for himself, and
for President George H.W. Bush, the trust of Mikhail Gorbachev's.
That proved sufficient to convince the Soviet leader to expand democracy
by freeing states within the USSR's European empire and Russia
itself, unifying Germany, and ending the Cold War. [These negotiations
are well covered in The Triumph of Improvisation, reviewed in the
September 2014 edition of this journal.]
In this otherwise excellent book, Nau's major shortcoming is
the manner in which he makes all its major points several times over in
various parts of the book--for instance repeatedly defining, redefining,
and refining the meaning of conservative internationalism; describing
the four presidents' policies in as many fine chapters and then
repeating much of the story in a very long conclusion; and more than
once describing a long set of tenets. This reader wondered if the
professor created his book by assembling, but without carefully pruning
the result, his collection of lectures, speeches, and articles. Even so,
his book is well worth reading--especially by future presidents and
secretaries of state!