Linkage, first given foreign policy meaning by Henry Kissinger, hasn’t been around for a while. He defines it on page 129 of White House Years:
“In our view, linkage existed in two forms: first, when a diplomat deliberately links two separate objectives in a negotiation, using one as leverage on the other; or by virtue of reality, because in an interdependent world, the actions of a major power are inevitably related and have consequences beyond the issue or region concerned.”
The first is like a parenting style, bargaining with a child to obtain good behavior. The second is experienced by the exhausted parent at an evening meditation session, contemplating the connectedness of all things.
Ronald Regan’s secretary of state, George Shultz, repudiated linkage. Quoting from The NY Times, October 19, 1984, “SHULTZ SAYS U.S. SOVIET RELATIONS ARE LIKELY TO IMPROVE, BUT SLOWLY”:
The rejection of linkage was based on the failure, in the preceding dozen years or so, to prevent the numerous Third World revolutions sponsored by the Soviet Union. So Schultz relegated it to “tactical” status, meaning that although it might fit a specific problem, it was not the overarching theme of American foreign policy.
We give something a name, and it suddenly becomes real. But linkage comes naturally to any good negotiator. “You give me this and I’ll give you that.” And Kissinger was arguably the best negotiator the U.S. has ever had in foreign policy. Most of those who came before and after learned by OJT (on-the-job-training), too late and too little.
Schultz served an ideologue, Ronald Reagan, albeit one of the better ones. An Ideologue simplifies reality to fit a framework. To an ideologue, the failures of the previous ideology, or lack of one, resulted from errors. Schultz logically concluded that the error was linkage. It may not have occurred to him that his own counterfactual history, featuring some word other than linkage, might have turned out pretty much the same.
With linkage off the table, we’ve had a theme shortage. Since 2000, we’ve seen these second-rate, long winded themes:
- The War on Terror.
- Project for the New American Century, which had a significant role in promoting the neoconservative vision of a revitalized Middle East, the first step of which was to be the invasion of Iraq.
- “Lead from Behind”, with possible first reference in a New Yorker article by Ryan Lizza, The Consequentialist; How the Arab Spring remade Obama’s foreign policy.
- FAYDIT. This snappy acronym stands for “Fly Around and Yell Dire Threats.” First practiced by John Kerry, it’s been pirated without credit by the Trump Administration. I hope it fades [sic].
So what is linkage, anyway? Before it was inducted into textbooks, it was the natural tool of the skilled negotiator. It’s not the only note, but a strong one. It’s not a solution, but it’s a note to hit.
How can such a useful concept be rejected, as Kissinger asserts, in favor of “the pragmatic tradition”? The word itself is a call to be skillful. If you bluster too much, too often, people will tune you out. But nobody tunes out linkage.
To be continued.