Principle and Prudence in American Foreign Policy.
Abrahamson, James L.
PRINCIPLE AND PRUDENCE IN AMERICAN FOREIGH POLICY
By Macubin Thomas Owens, editor of Orbis and Senior Fellow Foreign
Policy Research Institute
http://www.fpri.org/articles/2014/01/principle-and-prudence-american-foreign-policy
Any reader unwilling to consider that U.S. foreign policy may be in
serious disarray will likely wish to skip this assessment by Naval War
College Professor Owens, who brings impressive credentials to the
subject (see header). His first paragraph sketches the extent of the
current Administration's shortcomings, as Owens sees them, and his
second begins a speculation about the causes of its failures.
Readers should bear in mind that this is an article--not a
book-length treatment supported by extensive citations. Even readers who
are less harsh and sweeping in their judgments may nevertheless benefit
from considering Owens' claims, which are largely based on material
readily available in the national media.
Largely putting aside the possibility that the
Administration's shortcomings are due to "indifference"
or "incompetence," Owens traces the problems to what he calls
"liberal internationalism," which assumes that nations
"tend towards cooperation rather than indifference," that
their goals naturally "transcend power and security," and that
non-state actors such as the United Nations have an "important
role."
He then calls for a return to what he considers "prudent
American realism." To that end, statesmen must have a clear
understanding of the ends of their policy choices while being flexible
regarding their means, which Owens believes was characteristic of the
Reagan years.
The maintenance of peace and a sound international order, Owens
asserts, requires a "hegemonic" power, willing and capable of
promoting "economic stability and international security"--a
balancer, if you will--as was once the role of Great Britain and more
recently the United States. At present a liberal world order requires
that the United States actively resume that role. International
organizations cannot do so alone.
Achieving such an order requires the U.S. to do several things:
fuse "principal and power;" "distinguish between friends
and allies ... enemies and adversaries;" behave accordingly; as
resources are finite, be prudent and "prioritize;" reestablish
the "classical connection between force and diplomacy;" and
never fear to use armed force and economic power as well. Using
diplomacy will not alone achieve U.S. policy goals. Only "prudent
American realism," Owens believes, can repair the
"disaster" of recent American foreign policy.
Reviewed by James L. Abrahamson, Contributing Editor