A Look Back at Three Grand Strategies
I took a little trip back in time today and read a statement Dr. Barry Posen prepared for the House Armed Services Committee back in 1993. Dr. Posen’s statement examines the three competing grand strategies of the day: Isolationism, Collective Security and Selective Engagement.
The first and the third perspectives focus on great power war as the most significant danger to the US. Their major difference stems from the assumptions of each. The Isolationist perspective assumes that foreign entanglements represent the greatest danger while Selective Engagement assumes that - given 20th Century history - some situations of regional instability will explode into great power wars which will draw America into them. The Isolationists are left with the problem of explaining how we’ll know where to retailiate for the violence that America will inevitibly encounter, while the Selective Engagers are left with the challenge of creating a guide for when and where intervention is (and is not) needed.
The second perspective, Collective Security, at first seems like the most familiar, given our current understanding of the relationship between globalization and security. After all, it includes the proposition that “peace is effective indivisible, and that the US has a huge national interest in world peace.” Small wars combined with the proliferation of conventional and nuclear weapons make it both a moral and a strategic imperative for the US to work with other powers to address these problems before they cascade through the international system.
Nuclear weapons, however, are the primary mechanism Dr. Posen describes for how these disruptions would jump from the regional to the international realm. Other consequences of instability, such as pandemics, terrorism, and organized crime, are not examined. This shows how great power war (and the ultimate tools of great power war: nukes) ruled the thinking of the time.
Reading through Dr. Posen’s analysis, one finds tantalizing clues that point to the problems we face today. For example, he argues that given the number of interventions that a Selective Enagement policy would demand, its required force structure could reasonably be met through a “two regional war” capability. With the benefit of fourteen years of history, we can see that this statement leaves unresolved the question of whether those two simultaneous missions would involve major combat or whether they would have more of a MOOTW flavor.
After this little jaunt back in time, I tried fitting Dr. Barnett’s grand strategy into the strategic continuum Dr. Posen described, in order to draw out how the insights of each perspective in 1993 came to play itself out over the next decade.
First, the Isolationist focus on the role of nukes in preventing great power war, when combined with Collective Security’s recognition of the interdependant nature of stability in a globalized world, together form the foundation of Dr. Barnett’s assertion that great power war is effectively done (or the probability of great power war is at least at a local minima). This is now generally accepted (whether explicitly or implicitly) in current strategic discussions.
Second, subsequent experiences with transnational terrorists, international crime and global pandemics have shown that strife in the Gap has strategic consequences (not just the moral consequences that Dr. Posen’s of Collective Security focuses upon). Thus, ethnic conflict can still be dangerous to distant powers, even if it doesn’t spark a great power war. This connection (which is essentially Dr. Barnett’s “disconnectedness defines danger” argument) blurs the line between Collective Security and Selective Engagement. The Core seeks collective security, which requires selective engagement in the Gap in order to grow the Core and, thus, grow the sphere of collective security.
Finally, Dr. Barnett’s force structure crosses all three of the 1993 strategic visions. The lack of any explicit discussion of the varying training, manpower and equipment requirements of MOOTW missions, compared to major combat missions, illustrates how the coming demand for COIN and stability operations couldn’t be seen within the Cold War/great power war perspectives.
When thinking about where we ought to go from here, it’s useful to look back on these past debates and examine how unfolding events brought us from that snapshot to this moment.

More Tom around the Web
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Trackback by Thomas P.M. Barnett :: Weblog — March 6, 2007 @ 9:34 am
Have you read “Ethical Realism,” by Anatol Lieven and John Hulsman? They have a concept called “The Great Capitalist Peace” that reminds me very much of Barnett.
Comment by A.E — March 9, 2007 @ 2:31 am
No, I hadn’t encountered their work before. Thanks for the heads up!
~W
Comment by Wiggins — March 9, 2007 @ 9:46 am
Your welcome.
Your post also inspired me to do a post on my blog about isolationism.
Also, the post on sci-fi I was planning on writing a long time ago turned into a larger article I’m working on– its about lessons policymakers can learn from popular movies and science fiction in terms of counter-terrorism and global guerrillas theory.
Comment by A.E — March 9, 2007 @ 11:46 pm
Nifty. Lots of interesting connections in your post.
As a counterpoint to what policymakers can learn from popular movies, have you read Bruce Schneier’s critiques of what he calls Movie Plot Security? I think he offers some of the most grounded thinking on these matters.
I assume you’ll post a link to your article once it’s done? I’ll be very interested to check it out.
cheers,
W
Comment by Wiggins — March 10, 2007 @ 11:05 am
Schneier is a genius. I’ve read his “psychology of security” essay as well.
The thrust of the article goes like this. If you’ve read the New Yorker story about 24, there’s a bit in it about how the Army is concerned that Jack Bauer is making illegal torture and thuggish operating procedures more attractive to soldiers. My article–probably around 14-17 pages–would examine movies that make valuable points about terror that are largely ignored in the national discourse. For example, take the Matrix–which in many ways has you seeing the world like an Islamist terrorist would.
Neo believes that the rest of the world is a fake, consumerist, decadent, shell that hides domination by a series of powerful actors. He takes on any identity he wishes and bends the operational reality of his universe in order to carry out guerrilla attacks that sometimes hurt and kill innocent people. But why do we emphasize with him?
I’ll post the link up when I write it. Any ideas about where to send such a piece would be greatly appreciated. I am trying to look for some new places to send my work with more of a focus on security issues.
Comment by A.E — March 10, 2007 @ 4:25 pm
Hm. I think Fight Club might be a better example of what you’re describing. After all, Neo seems more focused on killing Agents, not on rallying like-minded people to him and creating systemic disruptions. Or maybe I just wanted an excuse to cite myself ;-).
As far as a journal for your article, you might consider anything from International Security and Security Studies (two of the most prominent journals in the field) to more specialized periodicals like Studies in Conflict and Terrorism or Terrorism and Political Violence.
cheers,
W
Comment by Wiggins — March 12, 2007 @ 12:57 pm
But, there’s the attack on the human security guards in the lobby in the first movie. Uniformed and armed personnel yes, but entirely unaware of the plot and probably could have at least been incapacitated without lethal force, given all the amazing abilities and weapons Neo has. Thanks for the input though. The post on Fight Club was very interesting too.
I didn’t know about those journals. Thanks for the links. I noticed Bruce Hoffman is the editor of Studies in Conflict and Terrorism.
Comment by A.E — March 12, 2007 @ 5:41 pm