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Mostrando postagens com marcador diplomatic history. Mostrar todas as postagens
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domingo, 7 de novembro de 2021

H-Diplo: novas resenhas de livros - Diane Labrosse

 New items have been posted in H-Diplo.

Please help us keep H-Net free and accessible. $25 from each of our subscribers would fund H-Net for two years. Click here to make a tax-deductible donation online.


1.

H-Diplo Publication Schedule, 08 to 19 November

by Diane N. Labrosse

The H-Diplo publication schedule for the period 08 to 19 November is as follows:

Week of 08 November:

1. H-Diplo Roundtable Review of Lorenz Lüthi,  Cold Wars: Asia, The Middle East, Europe. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2020.

Introduction by Andrew Preston, University of Cambridge

Reviewers:

Lloyd Gardner, Emeritus Rutgers University

Frank Gerits, Utrecht University

Artemy Kalinovsky, Temple University

Valeria Zanier, Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

Ketian Zhang, George Mason University

2. H-Diplo Essay Series on Learning the Scholar’s Craft: Reflections of Historians and International Relations Scholars.

The Making of a Russian Cold War Historian during the Last Years of the Soviet Union

Essay by Vladislav Zubok, London School of Economics

3.  H-Diplo Article Review of G. Bruce Strang, “‘Mésentente Cordiale:’ Italian Policy and the Failure of the Easter Accords 1937-1938,” Diplomacy & Statecraft, 32:1 (2021), 31-59.

Reviewed by Jacopo Pili, University of Rome Tor Vergata

4. H-Diplo Article Review of Igor Lukes, “Was the Cold War Avoidable? Did the West Seek to Win It? A Contribution to the Debate,” Diplomacy & Statecraft 32:2 (June 2021): 375-393.

Reviewed by László Borhi, Indiana University Bloomington/Institute of History, Center for Humanities Budapest

5. H-Diplo/ISSF Article Review of Marc Trachtenberg, “The United States and the NATO Non-extension Assurances of 1990: New Light on an Old Problem?” International Security 45:3 (2021): 162-203. 

Reviewed by Julie Garey, Northeastern University

6. H-Diplo Roundtable Review of Brendan Rittenhouse Green, The Revolution that Failed: Nuclear Competition, Arms Control, and the Cold War (New York: Cambridge University Press, 2020). 

Introduction by Caitlin Talmadge, Georgetown University

Reviewed by:

Fiona S. Cunningham, George Washington University

Charles L. Glaser, George Washington University

Vipin Narang, The Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Marc Trachtenberg, University of California, Berkeley

Week of 15 November

1. H-Diplo/ISSF Roundtable Review of Rosemary A. Kelanic, Black Gold and Blackmail: Oil and Great Power Politics. Ithaca: Cornell University Press: 2020; and Emily Meierding, The Oil Wars Myth: Petroleum and the Causes of International Conflict. Ithaca: Cornell University Press: 2020.

Introduction by Jeffrey G. Karam, Lebanese American University

Reviewed by:

Emma Ashford, the Atlantic Council

Jeff D. Colgan, Brown University

Anand Toprani, U.S. Naval War College,

Maria Julia Trombetta, University of Nottingham Ningbo China

2. H-Diplo Essay Series on Learning the Scholar’s Craft: Reflections of Historians and International Relations Scholars.

Essay by Charles E. Neu, Professor Emeritus, Brown University

3. H-Diplo Review of John Campbell. Nigeria and the Nation-State: Rethinking Diplomacy with the Postcolonial World. Lanham: Rowman & Littlefield, 2020.

Reviewed by Sobukwe Odinga, University of California, Los Angeles

4. H-Diplo Article Review of Brandon Webb, “‘How to Raise a Curtain’: Security, Surveillance, and Mobility in Canada’s Cold War-Era Exchanges, 1955–65,” Cold War History 21:2 (March 2021): 215-233.  

Reviewed by Jennifer Anderson, Global Affairs Canada, Historical Section

5. H-Diplo Review of Odd Arne Westad. Empire and Righteous Nation: 600 Years of China-Korea Relations. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2021.

Reviewed by Xiaobing Li, University of Central Oklahoma

6. H-Diplo Article Review Forum on “The Korean War Prisoners Who Chose Neutral Nations.” The Journal of American-East Asian Relations 27:3 (2020): 213-307. 

Introduction by Thomas Maddux, Emeritus California State University Northridge  

Reviewers:

Leonardo Barbosa, Hong Kong University of Science and Technology

Charles Young, Southern Arkansas University

William Stueck, Emeritus University of Georgia

 

With best regards,

Diane Labrosse, H-Diplo managing editor

segunda-feira, 11 de outubro de 2021

New books in International Relations, Foreign Policy and Diplomatic History - H-Diplo

 Alguns interessam...

H-Diplo New Books Newsletter for October 2021

by George Fujii

The H-Diplo New Books Newsletter, October 2021 issue

Editors: Fred Edwards and Kaete O’Connell, editorial-diplo@mail.h-net.org
Production Editor: George Fujii

Byrnes, Sean T. Disunited Nations: US Foreign Policy, Anti-Americanism, and the Rise of the New Right. LSU Press, 2021. ISBN: 9780807175286.

Carvin, Stephanie. Stand on Guard: Reassessing Threats to Canada’s National Security. University of Toronto Press, 2021. ISBN: 9781487524517.

Friedman, Jeremy. Ripe for Revolution: Building Socialism in the Third World. Harvard University Press, 2021. ISBN: 9780674244313.

Hanhimäki, Jussi M. Pax Transatlantica: America and Europe in the Post-Cold War Era. Oxford University Press, 2021. ISBN: 9780190922160.

Helleiner, Eric. The Neomercantilists: A Global Intellectual History. Cornell University Press, 2021. ISBN: 9781501760129.

Richmond, Sean. Unbound in War? International Law in Canada and Britain’s Participation in the Korean War and Afghanistan Conflict. University of Toronto Press, 2021. ISBN: 9781487503468.

Roland, Alex. Delta of Power: The Military-Industrial Complex. Johns Hopkins University Press, 2021. ISBN: 9781421441818.

Shannon, Matthew K., ed. American-Iranian Dialogues: From Constitution to White Revolution, c. 1890s-1960s. Bloomsbury Academic, 2021. ISBN: 9781350118720.

Zaidi, Waqar H. Technological Internationalism and World Order: Aviation, Atomic Energy, and the Search for International Peace, 1920–1950. Cambridge University Press, 2021. ISBN: 9781108872416.

quarta-feira, 26 de maio de 2021

The Vital Center for United States-China Relations in the 1950s - Ilnyun Kim (Diplomatic History)

 H-Diplo Article Review 1037

26 May 2021


Ilnyun Kim.  “The Vital Center for United States-China Relations in the 1950s.”  

Diplomatic History 41:4 (September 2020): 609-635.  

DOI:  https://doi.org/10.1093/dh/dhaa045.

https://hdiplo.org/to/AR1037


Editor: Diane Labrosse 

Commissioning Editor: Dayna Barnes 

Production Editor: George Fujii


Review by Priscilla Roberts, City University of Macau

Since at least the early 1940s, more often than not relations between the United States and China have been strained and problematic. They hit rock bottom during the 1950s, a decade when U.S. troops fought Chinese military forces and two crises sparked by mainland operations against Taiwan prompted fears of a potential nuclear superpower confrontation.  From 1949 onward, the United States not only declined to recognize the new, Communist-led People’s Republic of China (PRC) as the country’s legitimate government, but maintained that the rump regime on the island of Taiwan led by China’s ousted Nationalist leader Chiang Kai-shek still represented all of China. The United States further asserted that the mainland was not entitled to join the recently established United Nations, opposition that until 1971 was instrumental in denying representation in the organization to the PRC regime led by Chinese Communist Party Chairman Mao Zedong, as the United States leaned on other nations to endorse its position and ostracize and exclude China.  Seeking to weaken the infant PRC, the United States not only took the lead in imposing draconian economic sanctions upon the country, but sought to persuade and pressure its allies to join in these restrictions. Even if PRC officials were willing to grant them access, which was by no means a given, Americans found it almost impossible to win permission from their own government to travel to the mainland. 

The near total breakdown in relations with the PRC had serious repercussions for many U.S. diplomats involved with China policy, together with academics studying China or Asia.  Those who had criticized Chiang Kai-shek’s policies or predicted that the Nationalist Kuomintang government he led was unlikely to win the civil war with the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) that erupted within months of the Allied victory over Japan in 1945 became political targets not just for Chiang but for his fiercely anti-Communist supporters in the United States.  Several high-profile China specialists—John Stewart Service, John Paton Davies, John Carter Davies, and O. Edmund Clubb—were purged from the State Department, while other diplomats, notably Robert W. Barnett (elder brother of the sinologist A. Doak Barnett), switched at least temporarily from Asia to Europe. 

Academics and scholars who had held official U.S. government positions during and after World II also became targets.  Many among them had been associated in some way with the Institute of Pacific Relations (IPR), a private think-tank federation of over one dozen national member organizations established in 1925, with backing from the Rockefeller Foundation and the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, which encouraged Asian-related research and held major transnational conferences every two to three years.  As the 1940s progressed, the organization split over various issues, including opposition to British policies in India and more broadly European colonialism in Asia, as well as policies toward China, especially the respective merits of Chiang Kai-shek and his Communist rivals for power.  Revelations in the late 1940s that Frederick V. Field, one of the IPR’s leading officers during the 1930s, was a covert member of the Communist Party of the USA, and that two Chinese research associates, Chi Chao-ting and Chen Hansheng, were likewise secret CCP members, made the U.S. headquarters of the organization and its American Council targets for repeated attacks and lengthy investigations by Republican Senator Joseph R. McCarthy, his colleague Senator Pat McCarran, and others. 

As the organization became politically radioactive, some of its members turned on each other.  In the mid-1940s, Jerome D. Greene, a trustee of the Rockefeller Foundation and past chairman of both the IPR’s American Council and International Council, expressed private concern over what he considered its increasingly radical tendencies.  From 1944 onward one member, Alfred D. Kohlberg, a New York textile manufacturer with close ties to Chiang Kai-shek, launched a protracted and highly publicized campaign intended to expose pro-Communist leanings among IPR members and officers.  Assisting his efforts were several prominent American anti-Communist journalists and activists.  At least two other well-known academics, the political scientist Kenneth T. Colegrove of Northwestern University, who had been an important figure in the development of the discipline of international relations in the United States, and the German-born Sinologist Karl August Wittfogel, a former Marxist who held professorships first at Columbia University and then at the University of Washington, joined in assailing former IPR colleagues.  Prominent among these were Edward Carter, the organization’s long-time secretary; and Owen D. Lattimore of Johns Hopkins University, editor from 1933 to 1941 of Pacific Affairs, the IPR’s flagship journal.[1]

The list of allegedly suspect individuals included American scholars of Asia with IPR connections who had served in the U.S. military or intelligence during or immediately after World War II, most notably John King Fairbank of Harvard University, who found himself accused of being at least naïve in his dealings with and views on Chinese Communists.  Others tainted by IPR associations included Fairbank’s Harvard colleague Edwin O. Reischauer; William Lockwood of Princeton University; C. Martin Wilbur of Columbia University; and Robert W. Barnett, who had established the IPR’s Washington office in the early 1940s, served in the U.S. military in China during the war, and then joined the State Department.  While in the U.S. Air Force, Barnett had worked cordially under such stalwart pro-Chiang officers as General Claire Chennault and General Albert D. Wedemeyer, but he was still subpoenaed for the IPR investigations and endured a lengthy five-hour grilling before being deemed innocuous.[2]Although the academics generally kept their jobs, throughout the 1950s several had to offer character references and other proof of their political soundness before they could obtain passports to travel abroad. Meanwhile, the U.S. Department of State and other government departments largely excluded them from advisory positions as consultants, a ban that in Fairbank’s case was not lifted until the late 1960s.

Ilnyun Kim’s article demonstrates how American liberals, primarily those associated with the Democratic Party, still sought to work around these liabilities and address the vexed and controversial issue of China during the 1950s. Kim focuses particularly on three figures: Fairbank, the leading U.S. academic specialist on China and Asia; Fairbank’s brother-in-law and Harvard colleague, the historian Arthur M. Schlesinger, Jr.; and Chester Bowles, U.S. ambassador to India from 1951 to 1953 and again from 1963 to 1969. All three were New Deal Democrats, liberal supporters of domestic reform who believed that internationally the United States should oppose colonialism and seek to encourage the non-Communist left, a faith expounded by Schlesinger in 1949 in his influential book The Vital Center.  Married to sisters, Fairbank and Schlesinger were personally as well as politically close.  Helped by generous funding from the Ford Foundation and other sources, during this decade Fairbank was engaged in the process of making Harvard into one of the leading academic nodes of Asian studies in the United States, while writing extensively himself and mentoring dozens of doctoral students.[3] His views also influenced the thinking of leading Democratic politicians, including not just Bowles, one of whose policy aides had been a Ph.D. student of Fairbank’s, but likewise Senator J. William Fulbright of Arkansas, chairman of the Senate Foreign Relation Committee from 1959 to 1974, and George McGovern of South Dakota, his party’s presidential candidate in 1972. 

Kim seeks “to demonstrate that notwithstanding the nadir of United States-China relations, the 1950s . . . marked the ideological genesis of rapprochement in which a group of China-watching intellectuals reshaped the Democratic Party’s outlook on China” (611).[4] This movement occurred despite bitter internal rifts on the subject among liberal Democrats, which erupted mid-decade within both Americans for Democratic Action (ADA) and the American Congress for Cultural Freedom (ACCF), the U.S. offshoot of the Paris-based Congress for Cultural Freedom, which was covertly backed and funded by the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA). Schlesinger was among the original founders of the ADA, and both organizations reflected his philosophy of encouraging and working with the international non-Communist left.  From 1950 to 1955, corrosive internal civil wars raged within the ADA and ACCF over whether or not the lengthy congressional investigations and eventual trial for perjury of the scholar Owen Lattimore, former editor of the journal Pacific Affairs, were justified. Besides spearheading and fuelling the charges against Lattimore, Karl Wittfogel of the University of Washington attacked Fairbank as a Communist sympathizer, ultimately resigning from the ADA when its members continued to back Fairbank.  Wittfogel’s allegations were more favorably received in the ACCF, where Schlesinger waged an unsuccessful campaign to rebut them and to condemn the harassment of Lattimore.  After the ACCF executive board rejected Schlesinger’s demands in 1955, moderates resigned en masse.  The charges against Lattimore were finally dismissed, and the ACCF was ultimately dissolved in late 1956.

While Schlesinger and his liberal allies may have eventually come out ahead in this internecine warfare, Kim rightly notes that their broader hopes that a relatively liberal “Third Force” would gain political power within China had by this time been proved to have been illusory.  On the mainland, during the 1950s the CCP was cementing its grip on the country through incessant ideological campaigns intended to eliminate opponents and impose hard-line Communist policies.  Across the Taiwan Strait, the authoritarian Chiang Kai-shek cracked down fiercely on all dissenters to his rule.  In both Chinese states, social democrats and the non-Communist left were in short supply. 

Kim also demonstrates the differences separating Fairbank’s early position on China from the initial hopes of Schlesinger, Walt Rostow of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and other Cold War Democrats that a “Third Force” of non-Communist liberals or leftists might win power in China.  Fairbank and other China specialists, including Lattimore and those diplomats who were purged from the State Department during the 1950s, generally recognized at the time as well as later that, while they might have enjoyed friendly personal relations with the CCP members they encountered during the 1940s, these were dedicated and often ruthless Marxist revolutionaries, who also identified strongly as Chinese.  (Kim brackets Lattimore with the journalist Edgar Snow, a staunch friend of the early Chinese Communists and author of Red Star over China (1937), which helped to introduce these revolutionaries in favourable terms to the Western world.[5] In doing so, Kim significantly exaggerates the degree to which Lattimore shared Snow’s warm feelings for the early CCP.  Although Lattimore, like Snow, visited their Yanan base during the 1930s, where he appreciated the ability and candor of leaders such as Mao Zedong and future Chinese premier Zhou Enlai, he nurtured no illusions as to their fierce ideological commitment and disliked their policies towards ethnic minorities, including the Mongolians, with whom Lattimore strongly identified.[6])  

Kim rightly states that from the late 1940s onward, Fairbank believed that the revolution had improved basic living standards for most Chinese, even while simultaneously acknowledging that New China was an authoritarian Communist dictatorship embracing a highly ideologically charged worldview.  Indeed, he applauded many of the revolution’s accomplishments in the areas of land reform, the emancipation of women, education, and the breakdown of social hierarchies and Confucianism.  In Kim’s interpretation, while Fairbank enjoyed warm friendships with prominent Chinese liberals, such as the well-known scholar and diplomat Hu Shih, and hoped that their ideas would influence social revolution in China, he considered these individuals too remote from the everyday masses to constitute a viable political alternative to the CCP, a view that he expounded to the ADA.  Yet Fairbank also recognized that China’s new leaders were “doctrinaire communists” who were likely to use their faith “first to liberate the populace but later to enslave it.” (621) Furthermore, as Fairbank advised the ADA in early 1951, should the United States seek to attack the CCP, it was likely to alienate those Chinese people who had benefited from the changes implemented by the party.  In February 1951, he prevailed upon the ADA to adopt a resolution supporting recognition of the PRC, a decision strongly opposed by Wittfogel and a group of labor representatives.  This dispute marked the beginning of the corrosive internal disputes over China among American liberals that would continue for several years. 

Kim argues strongly and largely convincingly that the policy of “contact and competition” towards Red China that Fairbank advocated at this juncture eventually became the basis of the dualistic stance of “containment without isolation” of China that increasing numbers of liberal Democrats advocated publicly during the 1960s. Throughout the 1950s, when the Republican administration of Dwight D. Eisenhower and his first secretary of state, John Foster Dulles, remained publicly adamant in its opposition to almost all dealings with China, Fairbank quietly continued to lobby potentially receptive Democratic politicians who might support this outlook. High on the list was Chester Bowles, a former governor of Connecticut who was positioning himself as a potential Democratic secretary of state.  Bowles was also significantly influenced by the counsel of his close friend, Indian Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru, that China was not merely authoritarian and Communist but also expansionist, representing a potential threat to its neighbors.  Even so, India had been among the first states to recognize the new PRC, a neighbor that could not be safely ignored and was unlikely to collapse.

Bowles, who had since the early 1950s hoped to divide China from the Soviet Union, believed that the task facing the United States was to neutralize both the threat that potential Chinese expansionism represented to its Asian neighbors and China’s appeal as an attractive alternative political model.  The best means to this end were, he believed, a resumption of U.S. trade and communication with China and ultimately, the reestablishment of diplomatic relations between the two countries.  Bowles discussed with Fairbank and his Harvard colleague Edwin Reischauer his proposed strategy of “competitive coexistence,” which he laid out in the book New Dimensions of Peace (1955).  Like Reischauer’s own publication, Wanted: An Asian Policy (1955), Bowles’s volume also recommended that Taiwan remain separate from China, ruled by an independent government, ideally one that was democratic and responsive to popular demands.[7] Fairbank likewise shared this “two-China” vision, one that was acceptable neither to PRC leaders nor to Chiang Kai-shek in Taiwan, who cracked down harshly on dissent in 1960, undercutting American hopes that his regime was evolving in a liberal direction and away from authoritarianism. 

By 1960, when Senator John F. Kennedy narrowly defeated the Republican Richard Nixon in the U.S. presidential election, the outlook spearheaded by Fairbank and Bowles had become something of an orthodoxy in Democratic Party foreign policy-making circles.  Adlai Stevenson, Kennedy’s ambassador to the United Nations, and W. Averell Harriman, who held multiple State Department posts first under Kennedy and then during the administration of President Lyndon B. Johnson, his successor, both subscribed to it, as did lower level officials such as James Thomson and Roger Hilsman, assistant secretary of state for Far Eastern Affairs from 1963 to 1964. Yet Kim’s article opens with a vignette from one of the early visits to Beijing by Henry Kissinger, national security adviser to Richard Nixon.  Despite the growing interest in some kind of rapprochement with mainland China displayed by the Democratic foreign policy elite and their academic advisers, neither Kennedy nor Johnson ultimately took the plunge. Kennedy, a fundamentally cautious and risk-averse politician, probably considered China one of the sensitive issues best deferred until a second term.  Under Johnson, a change in China policy became just one of the might-have-beens devoured in the all-consuming maw of the conflict in Vietnam.  Yet as Kim points out, during the 1960s, highly publicized congressional hearings on China and smaller but significant moves by second-level administration figures signaled a new readiness to embark upon constructive U.S. engagement with New China. 

It is also worth remembering that it takes two to tango.  For the relationship between the PRC and the United States to improve, should one side make overtures, the other needed to be receptive.  For most of the 1960s, it was very far from a given that friendly gestures from the American side would have prompted a favorable response from Chinese officials.  During the Kennedy and Johnson administrations, mainland China first endured the ravages of the devastating Great Famine, the end result of the Great Leap Forward of the late 1950s, and three years later fell victim to the political and social disruptions of the Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution. China was, moreover, engaged in an intensifying ideological battle with the Soviet Union, a contest in which Mao Zedong portrayed his country as the guardian of uncompromising revolutionary purity and opposition to capitalism, a pejorative contrast to the Soviet embrace of  ‘peaceful coexistence’ with the West. 

Kim’s article is drawn from his research for what is clearly an innovative and stimulating Ph.D. thesis on American liberalism during the 1950s, focused on three major figures: Schlesinger, Bowles, and the noted Harvard economist John Kenneth Galbraith.[8] All were Democrats, prominent and articulate members of their party’s liberal wing.  Kim suggests that in the wake of McCarthyism, Fairbank and those younger scholars who shared his approach to China, such as the journalist and academic A. Doak Barnett, son of a China missionary, and Fairbank’s student Robert A. Scalapino, who became a leading professor of Asian Studies at the University of California at Berkeley, gravitated towards the Democratic Party.  Overall, their associations with Democrats were more intimate than their ties to the Republicans.  As Kim notes, Fairbank bombarded Kennedy with unsolicited advice on China, communications often intercepted and deflected by the president’s aides, especially Secretary of State Dean Rusk (633).  In the 1960s and 1970s, Barnett likewise offered suggestions on China policy to successive Democratic presidents and their advisers, pressuring officials in the Carter administration to proceed to full normalization of relations with China.

Yet altering U.S. China policy was by no means simply a partisan issue, something at which Kim hints but perhaps does not give sufficient weight.  The Democrats enjoyed no monopoly in seeking alterations in U.S. China policies.  Hard-line critics of mainland China and devotees of Chiang Kai-shek and his regime were undoubtedly concentrated among sections of the Republicans.  But from the mid-1950s onward, a significant contingent from that party began to question the wisdom of the existing American policies on China, especially the continued recognition of the Nationalists on Taiwan as the sole legal government.  This perspective reflected in part fears that the American identification with the island and Chiang Kai-shek’s bellicosity toward the PRC might drag the United States into an unwanted and unwelcome conflict with the mainland regime and potentially even into a nuclear confrontation with Red China’s Soviet patron.  Arthur H. Dean, long-time law partner of John Foster Dulles, who was Dwight D. Eisenhower’s secretary of state, publicly expressed such apprehensions, arguing in 1954 that, should the United States wish to provoke difficulties between China and the Soviet Union, American efforts to improve relations with Beijing might accomplish this, and advocating a "two Chinas" policy resembling that suggested by liberal Democrats.  The following spring Dean went so far as to publish an elaborated version of his views in the influential pages of Foreign Affairs, house journal of the Council on Foreign Relations (CFR), the premier U.S. foreign policy think tank.[9]

As Kim notes, Allen W. Dulles, brother of the secretary of state and director of the CIA from 1953 to 1961, favored an “‘inducement’ approach” to China, as did Governor Nelson A. Rockefeller of New York, a liberal Republican with presidential ambitions (626).  In the late 1950s, Rockefeller commissioned the Special Studies Project, a major set of reports on issues facing the United States, produced by several panels of experts co-ordinated by Henry Kissinger, who was at that time a Harvard academic.  The group on International Objectives and Strategies considered recommending moves toward some level of rapprochement with China, but was stymied by objections from dissenting members, including former assistant secretary of state for East Asia Dean Rusk, then chairman of the Rockefeller Foundation.[10]

The input from Allen Dulles seems to have been particularly consequential.  China clearly intrigued him.  A director since 1927 of the Council on Foreign Relations, of which he had been president from 1946 until joining the CIA in 1950, throughout the 1950s Dulles continued to serve on the CFR’s Committee of Studies, which decided on its research program.  In this capacity, in the later 1950s Dulles approved funding for a wide-ranging study of China by Doak Barnett, who argued that, while not abandoning Taiwan, the United States should seek improved relations with the PRC’s government, which was solidly established and unlikely to lose its grip on China.  When it appeared in 1960, this volume became the CFR’s best-selling title of all time.[11] In the late 1950s, Dulles himself more than once addressed the topic of China in CFR meetings, stating that the CCP controlled the mainland, a situation he expected to continue for the foreseeable future.  He was also tantalized by the possibility of a falling out between China and the Soviet Union, which the United States might potentially exploit, but thought such a break unlikely to occur in the near future.[12]

Forced to resign as CIA director following the failed Bay of Pigs invasion of Cuba in 1961, in retirement Dulles chaired the Steering Committee directing a massive set of studies on “The United States and China in World Affairs,” a three-year project covering all aspects of China’s international policies and activities that was undertaken by the CFR with Ford Foundation funding between 1962 and 1965.  The launching of this initiative went in tandem with the recognition by a range of State Department, CIA, and academic specialists on China that the breach between China and the Soviet Union was genuine and deep.[13] Throughout its operations, project members enjoyed access to confidential information and significant input from officials in the State and Defense Departments, the National Security Council, and the CIA, as well as insights from non-American specialists on China, who joined in some meetings. An evaluation of the project in the mid-1960s suggested that its most important feature was to demonstrate that the subject of China and a variety of potential policy options toward it could actually be openly discussed in the United States.[14]The overview volume, edited and completed by Doak Barnett following the death of former Asia Society president Robert Blum, who had originally been commissioned to write it, reaffirmed earlier recommendations for incremental changes in US policy towards China, moving towards gradual normalization of relations, without abandoning Taiwan.[15] Blum and Barnett’s capstone study and the seven specialized companion volumes, which appeared as congressional hearings likewise called for a new opening to China, contributed to shifting the broader climate of public opinion on the subject. 

So too did “Asia After Vietnam,” an article by Richard Nixon, the former vice-president and potential Republican presidential candidate, which was published in late 1967 in the CFR’s prestigious journal, Foreign Affairs.  While not envisaging immediate U.S. recognition, which he believed should be predicated on changes in Chinese behavior, Nixon nonetheless asserted: “Taking the long view, we simply cannot afford to leave China forever outside the family of nations, there to nurture its fantasies, cherish its hates and threaten its neighbors.  There is no place on this small planet for a billion of its potentially most able people to live in angry isolation.” The policy of “containment without isolation” recommended by Fairbank and Barnett should, he argued, be supplemented by efforts to restrain and counter Chinese revolutionary activities beyond its borders.[16] And as Kim notes, when Nixon selected Kissinger as his National Security Adviser, on occasion the new appointee, whose previous experience had focused primarily upon European and nuclear policy, still turned to Fairbank for advice and information on China and Asia, as he had done while at Harvard (634).

As Kim—following in the footsteps of the Stanford historian Gordon H. Chang[17]—accurately remarks, somewhat ironically, the absence of close contacts between China and the United States during this decade, a consequence of the virtual shutdown of interchanges of all kinds that followed the break in diplomatic relations, made the counsel of Fairbank and his fellow China specialists more valuable and convincing to Democrats and Republicans alike (611).  Experts of any kind on China or indeed Asia were in short supply, though a new cohort of academics was beginning to emerge in the United States.  Prominent among them were not just Barnett and Scalapino, but also such individuals as Lucian Pye of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and Allen Whiting, Richard Solomon, Michel Oksenberg, and Kenneth Lieberthal of the University of Michigan.  Several among these would repeatedly interrupt their academic careers to take up influential positions in government, usually as China or Asia experts within the State Department or the National Security Council.  Though—emulating Fairbank—specific individuals might gravitate more to one party than the other, the majority, driven by an amalgam of personal conviction and in at least some cases ambition, were willing to advise and sometimes serve under a wide spectrum of receptive politicians and officials.

One final question remains.  Even during the McCarthyite 1950s, it seems that a sizeable cohort of influential members of the U.S. foreign policy elite, together with many leading academic experts on Asia, felt that their country’s policy of non-recognition of the PRC flew in the face of reality and had little logical justification.  Compounding and exacerbating their ideological differences, the absence of diplomatic relations, especially in conjunction with mainland China’s exclusion from the United Nations and other international organizations, meant that in times of crisis, channels of communication between the two countries were vestigial to non-existent.  The lack of a U.S. presence in China did, of course, mean that during the Cultural Revolution Americans were spared the violent attacks and abuse to which residents of the British mission in Beijing and other assorted foreign diplomats were subjected.  Forty years on, relations between the United States and Iran still bear the scars of the 1979-1981 hostage crisis. 

Within the United States, Fairbank, Barnett, Scalapino, and other China experts labored long and hard on multi-level initiatives to change both official policy and the climate of public opinion on China.  One might also mention their work with the newly founded National Committee on U.S.-China Relations in the second half of the 1960s, which complemented and dovetailed with their more formal academic endeavors to this end.[18] The forces of inertia, supplemented by determined opposition from supporters and allies of Taiwan to any opening to China, were nonetheless hard to overcome. 

What ultimately broke the logjam in relations between mainland China and the United States was not a revolt against the irrationality of the existing situation, but a response to perceived clear and present dangers.  In spring 1969, armed skirmishes between Soviet and Chinese troops on their joint border apparently caused Chinese leaders, especially Mao Zedong, to panic that a full-scale Russian attack might be imminent.  Most top officials departed Beijing for remote locations elsewhere in the country, with only Premier Zhou Enlai left behind in the capital to hold the fort and keep the wheels of government turning.  Chinese overtures to the new administration of Richard Nixon, a president embroiled in an unwinnable war in Vietnam with no proper exit strategy, and acutely conscious that on the international scene the United States needed to manage its substantial but by no means limitless resources more effectively, arrived at the right psychological moment.  Top policymakers in both countries finally came together in identifying substantial immediate advantages their own nations might derive from the resumption of at least partial relations.  On the American side of the great divide, Fairbank and his allies had done much to facilitate a reversal of policy, not least by persistently and plausibly highlighting the potential ensuing benefits for the United States.  Chance and political contingency, however, determined whether and when their vigorous and protracted campaign would finally be rewarded.

 

Priscilla Roberts is Associate Professor of Business and Co-Director of the Asia-Pacific Business Research Centre at City University of Macau.  Her many publications in twentieth-century international history include two recent edited collections, Hong Kong in the Cold War (University of Hong Kong Press, 2016); (with Odd Arne Westad), China, Hong Kong, and the Long 1970s: Global Perspectives (Palgrave Macmillan, 2017); the two-volume set The Cold War: Interpreting Conflict Through Primary Documents (ABC-Clio, 2018); and (with Spencer C. Tucker and others) the five-volume set The Cold War: The Definitive Encyclopedia and Document Collection (ABC-Clio, 2020).  She is currently working on a study of Anglo-American Think Tanks and China Policy from the 1950s to the 1990s.


 

Notes

[1] John N. Thomas, Institute of Pacific Relations: Asian Scholars and American Politics (Seattle: University of Washington Press, 1974); Michael Richard Anderson, “Pacific Dreams: The Institute of Pacific Relations and the Struggle for the Mind of Asia” (Ph.D. dissertation, University of Texas at Austin, 2009); Harvey Klehr and Ronald Radosh, The Amerasia Spy Case: Prelude to McCarthyism (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1996).

[2] Robert W. Barnett, Oral History Interview, 2 March 1990, Association for Diplomatic Studies and Training Oral History Project, https://tile.loc.gov/storage-services/service/mss/mfdip/2004/2004bar07/2004bar07.pdf.

[3] Fairbank’s more notable books included The United States and China (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1948; 4th updated ed., 1983); Trade and Diplomacy on the China Coast: The Opening of the Treaty Ports, 1842–1854, 2 vols. (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1953); China Perceived: Images and Policies in Chinese-American Relations (New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1974); Chinabound: A Fifty-Year Memoir (New York: Harper and Row, 1982); The Great Chinese Revolution, 1800–1985 (New York: Harper and Row, 1986); and China: A New History (Cambridge: The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, 1992).

[4] Ilnyun Kim, “The Vital Center for United States-China Relations in the 1950s.” Diplomatic History 44:4 (September 2020): 609-635

[5] Edgar Snow, Red Star Over China (London: Victor Gollancz, 1937). 

[6] Robert P. Newman, Owen Lattimore and the “Loss” of China (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1992), 34-36; Owen D. Lattimore, Studies in Frontier History: Collected Papers, 1928-1958 (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1962), 12-20.

[7] Chester Bowles, The New Dimensions of Peace (New York: Harper, 1995); Edwin O. Reischauer, Wanted: An Asian Policy (New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1955).

[8] Ilnyun Kim, “The Party of Hope: American Liberalism from the Fair Deal to the Great Society” (Ph.D. dissertation, Ohio State University, 2019).  

[9] Gordon Chang, Friends and Enemies: The United States, China, and the Soviet Union, 1948-1972 (Stanford: Stanford University Press, 1990), 104-105; Arthur Dean, “U.S. Foreign Policy and Formosa,” Foreign Affairs 33:3 (April 1955): 360-375.

[10] Chang, Friends and Enemies, 178-182.

[11] A. Doak Barnett, Communist China and Asia: Challenge to American Policy (New York: Harper, 1960); A. Doak Barnett to John King Fairbank, 31 January 1984, Folder 3, Box 53, Council on Foreign Relations Papers [CFR Papers], Mudd Manuscripts Library, Princeton University, Princeton, NJ. 

[12] Allen W. Dulles, “An Intelligence Review of the Communist Bloc,” 28 October 1958, Dulles, notes on China for speech, 28 October 1958, Folder 1, Box 86, Allen W. Dulles Papers, Mudd Manuscripts Library, Princeton University, Princeton, NJ; Digest of Discussion, dinner meeting with Allen W. Dulles, “An Intelligence Review of the Communist Bloc,” 28 October 1958, Folder 3, Box 450, CFR Papers; and Digest of Discussion, “Special Meeting on Communist China,” 1 December 1958, Folder 2, Box 450, CFR Papers. 

[13] “Special Round Table on Unity and Disunity Within the Communist Bloc,” 1 February 1962, Allen Whiting and Bernard Morris, “Sino-Soviet Schism and Implications for U.S. Policy,” 21 February 1962, Digest of Second Meeting, “Special Round Table on Unity and Disunity within the Communist Bloc,” 21 February 1962, Folder 4, Box 456, CFR Papers; “Summary prepared by S/P on meeting of specialists who discussed ‘Implications of the Sino-Soviet Dispute for U.S. Policy’,” 29 March 1962, and Walt W. Rostow to Secretary of State: Conclusions of Special Study Group re Implications of the Sino-Soviet Dispute, 27 March 1962, John F. Kennedy National Security Files 1961-1963, John F. Kennedy Presidential Library, Boston, Massachusetts. 

[14] Council on Foreign Relations, Board of Directors, Meeting of 9 March 1967, Evaluation of Methodology of Ford Projects, Folder Council on Foreign Relations 1966-1967, Box 125, A. Doak Barnett Papers, Columbia University Library.

[15] Robert Blum, The United States and China in World Affairs, ed. A. Doak Barnett (New York: McGraw Hill, 1966).

[16] Richard Nixon, “Asia After Viet Nam,” Foreign Affairs 46:1 (October 1967): 113-125, quotation from 121. 

[17] Gordon H. Chang, Fateful Ties: A History of America’s Preoccupation with China (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 2015), 213–214.

[18] See the voluminous files on the National Committee on U.S.-China Relations in Boxes 128-133, Barnett Papers; also Norton Wheeler, The Role of American NGOs in China’s Modernization: Invited Influence (New York: Routledge, 2012). 

domingo, 3 de maio de 2015

Rubens Barbosa: Washington Dissensus, book review - History-Diplo

Sempre guardo as resenhas do Histroy.Net para ler com calma, e esta apareceu exatamente em 2 de março de 2015, e ficou na minha pasta de pendentes, até poder ser processada devidamente.
Já tinha lido este livro, do qual fui um dos personagens secundários, se ouso dizer, pois estava em Washington na mesma época, tendo sido chamado pelo mesmo autor de "accident-prone diplomat", em função de minha maneira desastrada de encarar certos assuntos, entre eles os caminhos erráticos de nossa diplomacia, da qual fui um dos mais persistentes críticos (assumindo minhas responsabilidades por isso, e pagando o meu preço por ser um crítico transparente).
Mas o livro tem muito mais do que um simples relato de um embaixador entre duas administrações tão diferentes, quanto as de FHC e de Lula, como evidencia a autora da resenha.
Ela lamenta a ausência de fontes, mas notando que não se trata de obra acadêmica, e sim de memórias pessoais. E evidencia todos os pontos julgados relevantes pelo autor do livro, absolutamente fiel à verdade histórica, ainda que mais propenso a ver os erros de Washington do que as deformações e os vieses da própria politica externa brasileira, ou as insuficiências da diplomacia petista, animada por claros sentimentos anti-americanos, apenas ligeiramente mencionados, embora não examinados em profundidade (e em toda a clareza, como as vinculações cubanas, da administração petista).
Em todo caso, a autora da resenha soube identificar bem o status do Brasil aos olhos da administração americana, na verdade, uma falta de status. Como ela diz, "Brazil is neither significant nor threatening enough to sustainably stay on Washington’s radar."
So be it...
Paulo Roberto de Almeida

Crandall on Barbosa, 'The Washington Dissensus: A Privileged Observer's Perspective on US-Brazil Relations' [review]

Rubens Antonio Barbosa. The Washington Dissensus: A Privileged Observer's Perspective on US-Brazil Relations. Nashville: Vanderbilt University Press, 2014. 272 pp. $69.95 (cloth), ISBN 978-0-8265-2011-1; $27.95 (paper), ISBN 978-0-8265-2012-8.

Reviewed by Britta Crandall (Davidson College)
Published on H-Diplo (March, 2015)
Commissioned by Seth Offenbach

Competitors and Allies: An Insider’s Look At US-Brazil Relations

After the embarrassing revelation in September 2013 that the US National Security Agency had tapped the personal phone calls and emails of Brazil’s president, Dilma Rousseff, relations between the two countries froze. In a chain of blistering speeches, Rousseff condemned the spying as a breach of international law, Brazil’s sovereignty, and the very institutions of democracy. She also became the first world leader in history to cancel her scheduled state dinner at the White House--an honor Brazil had not received in two decades. While genuine, Rousseff’s public ire was driven in part by the need to cater to her left-leaning political base, which is traditionally skeptical of US influence in the region.

For Ruben Barbosa, Brazil’s ambassador to Washington from 1999 to 2004, this display of domestic politics’ influence on foreign policy decisions is nothing new. In his recent memoir, Washington Dissensus: A Privileged Observer’s Perspective on U.S.-Brazil Relations, he unpacks the US-Brazil bilateral relationship and reveals the underlying factors driving policy during his tenure. His timely, direct, and balanced account spans two Brazilian presidential administrations and covers the major foreign policy issues between Brazil and the United States at the turn of the century, among them: the 9/11 attacks; the US invasion of Iraq and Brazil’s subsequent vote against in the United Nations; the prolonged and ultimately failed Free Trade Area of the Americas (FTAA) process; and the 2002 coup that briefly ousted Venezuela’s Hugo Chávez.

Barbosa does not hide his frustration with the shift in Brazil’s policy toward Washington with the onset of the Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva administration, noting that starting in 2003, Brazil’s foreign policy priorities negatively affected relations with the United States. In contrast to Lula’s predecessor Fernando Henrique Cardoso, Lula not only had little interest in deepening relations with the United States, but effectively pitted the developing countries against the developed world. Examples include the creation of South American institutions such as the Union of South American Nations (UNASUR) that excluded the United States, open sympathy for Fidel Castro and Hugo Chávez, and diplomatic overtures to Libya and Syria. Needless to say, Lula’s reference to Libyan leader Muammar Qaddafi as “his friend and brother” threw fuel on the fire of US misgivings toward Brazil (p. 17). Combined with constant friction within the World Trade Organization (WTO) surrounding the ultimately failed FTAA agreement, a relationship of competition and mistrust ensued.

Brazil’s resistance to further cooperation with the United States, Barbosa asserts, stemmed from pressure from the ideological base of the Lula’s Workers’ Party, the PT. During Lula’s presidency, the leadership of Itamaraty--Brazil’s equivalent to the US State Department--became more ideological and opposed to cooperation with Washington. Barbosa even claims that Brazil could have garnered support for its long-sought-after permanent seat on the United Nations Security Council had Lula played his cards better vis-à-vis Washington. While any US endorsement of a permanent UN seat for Brazil may seem far-fetched for observers, the erosive influence of Itamaraty on the bilateral relationship during Lula’s two terms is indisputable.

Washington Dissensus does not critique the Lula administration alone. Barbosa pulls no punches when it comes to his criticism of Washington and its lack of a “Brazil policy,” especially after the 9/11 attacks in which the already scant attention paid to Latin America diminished even further. Indeed, during the George W. Bush era, the State Department’s bureau for the Western Hemisphere did not have a “single diplomat on its staff who had lived in Brazil or could have been considered an expert on Brazilian affairs” (p. 71). Brazil, according to Barbosa, was handled in the same generic way as the rest of the region. And any Brazil policy that did exist was driven by economic and commercial interests, executed principally by the Federal Reserve and Treasury Department. As for the political/diplomatic arena, the Bush White House “displayed a mixture of affinities, suspicions, and reservations” toward Brazil (p. 16).

In addition to highlighting the lack of high-level US attention to Brazil, Barbosa directly criticizes President Bush. While lambasting Bush’s “arrogant unilateralism” (p. 131), Barbosa makes sure to reference the president’s now infamous verbal gaffes, including his question to Lula whether there were many black people in Brazil, the aforementioned question being particularly embarrassing given that approximately half of Brazilians are of African descent, brought about by a slave trade notably larger than that of the United States.

Perhaps Barbosa’s most significant contribution to our understanding of US-Brazil relations is his demonstration that the bilateral relationship is just that--bilateral. All too often, Washington is criticized for ignoring Brazil, or reverting to a policy of benign neglect. While official knowledge and understanding of Brazil within the beltway remains surprisingly weak, Barbosa shows us that the relationship is a two-way street, and that Brasilia is just as responsible as Washington for bilateral misunderstanding, frustration, or “dissensus.” Yes--US policy toward Brazil is still based on “blurred visions, myths, stereotypes, and distortions of reality” (p. 22). But the Lula administration shied away from a clear US willingness to strengthen ties. And Brazil is the only major emerging nation that lacks a strategy toward Washington, perhaps because the “Brazilian government does not have a clear notion of what to extract from its relationship with the United States” (p. 22). In that vein, the absence of a “special relationship” between the two countries cannot be attributed to the United States alone.

Washington Dissensus also correctly emphasizes the crucial role of personalities in the world of politics. Policy decisions are not made in a rational-actor vacuum, but rather by human beings influenced by their own personal histories, preferences, and personalities. Given the unilateralism of the Bush administration and Bush’s ignorance of Brazil, coupled with the PT's traditional antipathy toward the United States, the ultimate friendship between Bush and Lula was shocking to many. However, both leaders were direct and straightforward, and less intellectual than their predecessors. “Personal affinities,” argues Barbosa, “to a greater or lesser degree, helped establish a relationship that fostered solutions for issues in the national interests of both nations” (p. 65). That is, any steps forward between the two countries were helped by the personal connection between the two presidents. Along that same vein, the “lukewarm personal relationship” between presidents Fernando Henrique Cardoso and Bush contributed to the failed attempts to institutionalize bilateral cooperation (p. 76).

An added bonus for the reader of Washington Dissensus is Barbosa’s perspective as a foreigner living in Washington, DC. During the Al Gore hanging chad dispute, Barbosa was fascinated to see how effectively democratic institutions and mechanisms operated in the United States. “The strength of the institutions prevailed over all other interests, party-political or otherwise, rightly considered less important than the permanent values of democracy” (p. 29). While Americans likely took the continuation of business as normal for granted, this Brazilian observer had a much deeper appreciation for the ability of US democratic institutions to withstand such strain.

Barbosa’s “observer’s perspective” is a memoir rather than an academic text. Still, the absence of sources weakens his assertions, especially when referring to foreign policy documents or citing colleagues. Separately, the book often times reads as a who’s who list of high-level individuals Barbosa befriended or brushed shoulders with. His references to the various elite clubs in which he dined, or private camps in which foreigners were rarely received were superfluous, and did not bolster his undeniably important role in Washington. Finally, his comparison of the United States’ Patriot Act to Brazil’s Institutional Act #5 issued by an authoritarian Brazilian dictatorship in 1968 was a stretch, even for the fiercest critics of Bush’s antiterrorism law.

However, any shortcomings in Barbosa’s memoir are minor for the enthusiast of US-Brazil relations. Barbosa’s personal accounts provide a greater understanding of the delicate maneuverings required of an ambassador of a major country. The reader understands the difficulty of Barbosa’s “biggest obstacle” during his term, which was to disabuse the State Department’s perception that Brazilian foreign policy during the Cardoso government had an anti-American edge to it, “when all we were trying to do was defend our national interests” (p. 71). But we also know that Cardoso’s successor did have this aforementioned anti-American edge.

His memoir is a provocative, fair, and hard-hitting account of the sausage-making of foreign policy. We gain a clear perspective on an ambassador’s ultimate hope to broaden and deepen his country’s relationship with the United States, while serving two very different Brazilian presidents, confounded by the timeless problem that plagues Brazil: it is neither significant nor threatening enough to sustainably stay on Washington’s radar.

Printable Version: http://www.h-net.org/reviews/showpdf.php?id=42963

Citation: Britta Crandall. Review of Barbosa, Rubens Antonio, The Washington Dissensus: A Privileged Observer's Perspective on US-Brazil Relations. H-Diplo, H-Net Reviews. March, 2015.
URL: http://www.h-net.org/reviews/showrev.php?id=42963

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 United States License.

sábado, 11 de abril de 2015

Historia diplomatica, o estado da arte (perspectiva americana) - William R. Keylor


H-Net H-Diplo Essay No. 126
An H-Diplo State of the Field Essay
Published on 10 April 2015 to the H-Net Commons, and accurate as of that date

The Problems and Prospects of Diplomatic/International History[1]
Essay by William R. Keylor, Boston University

When the editors of H-Diplo asked me to write an essay on the “state of the field” for this list, they included with the invitation a link to an article that Marc Trachtenberg had written on the same subject for e-International Relations and was later published on H-Diplo.[2] On reading Trachtenberg’s piece I found myself agreeing with most of what he had to say on the subject. So in order to avoid a tedious repetition of the points made in his excellent article, I asked, and was granted permission, to approach the topic from a slightly different angle: that of a latecomer to the sub-discipline of diplomatic history from another corner of the historical profession. While Trachtenberg’s article mainly deals with the present and future state of the profession, I concentrate on the transformation of the profession in the past four decades or so.

Unlike most of the academic members of this list, I was trained in graduate school not in American diplomatic history but rather in the history of European thought and culture, with particular emphasis on France. After receiving my doctorate from Columbia University, I joined the history department at Boston University to teach modern European history in general, and modern French history in particular. In the meantime I had begun to pursue my ‘side’ interest in diplomatic history that had been sparked by a course I took in graduate school given by Professor Arno Mayer of Princeton. I began to read widely in this new sub-discipline and developed a new undergraduate lecture course on the subject.  While striving to establish my scholarly credentials in modern French intellectual history (publishing a couple of books and a number of articles in that field in the course of the 1970s), I continued to read widely in the scholarly literature of my recently adopted field. I eventually decided that the time had come to try my hand at something new.

Once I had resolved to pursue intensively this long-standing professional avocation, I selected a topic for my maiden effort at original research -- a study of Franco-American relations after the First World War --, obtained the necessary funding, and went off to Washington, Paris, and several other sites of archival repositories with a feeling of exhilaration at embarking on what for me was an exciting new intellectual endeavor. After a year of  research in the primary sources (which eventually yielded a journal article and a book chapter), I accepted a publisher’s invitation to write a general history of twentieth-century international relations based on my extensive reading of the scholarly literature in that field. 

My intention in recording the minutiae of this professional odyssey has been not only to convey the sense of genuine intellectual excitement that such a shift in scholarly orientation entailed. An additional purpose is to set the stage for what was to become a rude awakening as I plunged headlong into my new scholarly endeavor with the unabashed enthusiasm of a novice. Simply put, what I encountered was a sub-discipline under siege from a number of quarters within and beyond the historical profession as well as a hardy group of practitioners struggling to affirm the validity of their craft amid this increasingly inhospitable intellectual environment.

At the risk of taxing the patience of the reader already weary of references to the first-person singular in this essay, I cannot resist broaching the topic of the challenges that confronted the subfield of diplomatic history in the 1970s and 1980s with three anecdotes from personal experience as I revealed to colleagues my plans for a career change. The first anecdote is a brief one:  “You’re what!?” exclaimed a social historian acquaintance at a professional conference of French historians, with a glare of absolute incredulity I shall never forget. “History from the top down, huh?”

The second anecdote concerns an amiable colleague in the political science department of Boston University who was doing excellent work on the theory of international relations. In the course of a lunch conversation it became apparent that he and I shared an interest in the role of Germany in the international system. Toward the end of a lengthy description of his current attempts to develop heuristic models of interstate conflict in Europe ‘over time’ (as they say in his profession), I interjected a reference to one of German Chancellor Otto von Bismarck’s foreign-policy initiatives as a prime historical example of one of the generalizations my interlocutor was striving to validate. ‘Bismarck?” he replied. “I don’t give a damn what Bismarck said, thought, or did.”

The third and final incident from personal experience occurred during my participation in something called the ‘Scholar-Diplomat Program,’ which annually invited a dozen academic specialists in international relations to Washington for a week-long sojourn at the State Department. The dual purpose of the undertaking was supposedly to give the invited scholars practical experience in observing at first hand the operation of the government’s foreign-policymaking apparatus while affording the host diplomats access to academic specialists whose research bore on their own particular area of responsibility. The fact that I was the sole historian in a group otherwise composed of political scientists should have alerted me to the disappointment I was soon to experience: None of the unfailingly courteous officials in the various branches of the State Department bureaucracy—including the genial officer at the French desk whose daily activities I was allowed to observe--evinced the slightest interest in the historical background of the contemporary problems with which they were required to grapple on a daily basis. For them, the record of what had happened earlier seemed to be not only ‘past’ but ‘passed,’ filed away for deposit in the archives, where it would sit unnoticed for decades before being declassified, resurrected by the Historical Office of the Department, and published in the Foreign Relations of the United States series primarily for the edification of the diplomatic historian rather than the policymaker.

On the basis of these three encounters I began to get the hint: the craft of diplomatic history had become the object either of derision or disinterest beyond the restricted circle of its practitioners. As I waded into the historiographical literature of the sub-discipline, I soon discovered there abundant confirmation of the impressionistic evidence gathered from personal experience as illustrated in the aforementioned anecdotes. In 1970 Alexander DeConde had sounded the alarm in the newsletter of the recently established organization of American diplomatic historians, the Society for Historians of American Foreign Relations (SHAFR).[3] Ernest May, already on his way to becoming one of the leading historians of American foreign relations, chimed in the next year with a much longer lament.[4] In 1980, a volume assessing the current state of historical scholarship in the United States included contributions from eminent historians celebrating the path-breaking work in a wide range of sub-fields during the past decade.  In the chapter devoted to diplomatic history, May’s Harvard colleague Charles Maier announced that diplomatic history had achieved so little in the way of important scholarship in the 1970s that it had become a “stepchild” of the historical profession. Diplomatic history was “marking time,” while the other subfields of the historical profession were advancing in leaps and bounds with innovative and creative work.[5]  

How to account for the cacophony of complaints about the genre of history that once enjoyed an honorable place in the profession? Clues to this question had already appeared in my three encounters described above. First, there was the objection from social historians to the very subject matter that diplomatic historians customarily address in their work. Second, there was the widespread dissatisfaction with the methodology—or should I say lack of it?—of diplomatic history expressed by political scientists concerned with the theory of international relations. Third, there was the lack of interest on the part of practitioners of diplomacy, who seemed to dismiss the lessons of diplomatic history as irrelevant to the pressing concerns of the policymaker in the ‘real’ world of the present.

1. The State as Autonomous Actor in the Conduct of Foreign Relations: The Critique from the “New Social History”

For many years diplomatic history obviously took as its primary point of reference the traditional concept of the nation-state (as opposed to the broader concept of ‘society’ employed by social historians). More specifically, it concentrated on the relations between a particular nation-state and its counterparts in the international arena. Because of this preoccupation with the state and its relations with others of its kind, diplomatic historians inevitably focused most of their attention on the select group of individuals within a particular society that constituted the foreign-policymaking elite of its government. The composition of this elite might vary widely according to the extent of democratization and popular participation in the affairs of the country. As A.J.P. Taylor remarked, in reference to the great powers in nineteenth-century Europe: “[M]ost citizens of the country concerned knew little of its foreign policy or cared even less.” Terms like “the French” or “the Germans” meant no more than “those particular Frenchmen or Germans who happened to shape policy at that particular moment ... Sometimes they were literally two or three men--an emperor, his foreign minister, and some less official adviser; sometimes the permanent staff of the foreign service; sometimes the leaders in a parliamentary assembly and the principal writers on foreign affairs; sometimes [he added, almost as an afterthought] public opinion in the wider sense.”[6] But even that “public opinion in a wider sense” in a democratic society such as the United States, an early student of the subject asserted, has never exceeded fifteen percent of the population. And it is usually much smaller than that.[7]

In short, according to this traditionalist view, the subject of the diplomatic historian’s research is a very thin layer of social reality. It was usually a self-enclosed, self-perpetuating oligarchy that maintained its distance from the rest of society and preserved its privileged position through various markers of distinction: the right schools, the right clubs, the right social circles. As a consequence, the primary-source data on which the diplomatic historian had to rely for an accurate reconstruction of a country’s record in foreign affairs were the communications among the members of this exclusive coterie: official telegrams between foreign office and embassies abroad, private letters, diaries, and memoirs of policymakers, and the like. It was this dependence on the historical evidence left behind by professional diplomats, who were hermetically insulated within the sanctity of their bureaus from the larger society whose interests they were employed to protect, that gave rise to G. M. Young’s oft-repeated indictment of diplomatic history as “little more than the record of what one clerk said to another clerk.”[8]

Throughout the 1960s and 1970s the elitist biases that underlay most of what had passed for diplomatic history were sharply challenged by the proponents of the ‘new social history.’ The watchword of this school was ‘history from the bottom up,’ by which was meant the study of social groups that collectively constitute the vast mass of humanity customarily ignored by traditional historians. It is beyond dispute that no branch of the historical discipline has been more inclined to practice ‘history from the top down’ than the traditional type of diplomatic history represented by the Taylor quotation above. This was not necessarily so because of any temperamental or ideological preferences of its practitioners for ‘the classes’ as against ‘the masses.’ Indeed, even those diplomatic historians who considered themselves political radicals were as dependent as their more conservative colleagues on the evidence available. And, as noted above, that evidence came largely from the wielders of power in the society.[9] Whether they liked it or not, diplomatic historians of whatever political persuasion accepted as axiomatic that the governing elite, rather than the ‘common people outside the political arena’ so dear to the social historians, shaped and executed the foreign policies of states, usually in as much secrecy and with as little accountability to the public it served that it could get away with. What this meant in concrete terms was the widespread conception of the state as an autonomous entity in the conduct of its foreign relations.

Recognition of the state’s autonomy in the matters of foreign policy is by no means confined to the study of hierarchical, authoritarian societies. The chief executives of parliamentary democracies in Western Europe, whose authority in domestic affairs has been severely circumscribed by the countervailing power of parliament, press, and public interest groups, have traditionally enjoyed wide latitude in the conduct of diplomacy. The Official Secrets Act of the United Kingdom confers on the prime minister virtual immunity from public scrutiny when affairs of state (usually meaning relations with foreign powers) are concerned. The British government’s astonishing ability to keep the secret of ‘Ultra’ --a cipher machine capable of decoding German radio messages that gave the Royal Air Force advance knowledge of the Luftwaffe’s targeting schedule during the Blitz--for almost thirty years after the end of World War II must have provoked the envy of publicity-averse dictatorships everywhere.[10] Under the Third French Republic in the last decade of the nineteenth century, governments were toppled with comical regularity by shifting parliamentary coalitions, usually for reasons of domestic politics. Yet amid this environment of acute ministerial instability, a succession of shaky political coalitions in Paris was able to negotiate a military alliance with the Russian Empire between 1891 and 1894. The precise contents of that agreement were known to no one beyond the half-dozen diplomats, statesmen, and military officials who had been party to the talks; it was never submitted for legislative ratification in spite of its fateful provisions obligating France to mobilize its armed forces against the signatories of the Triple Alliance (Germany, Austria-Hungary, and Italy) if any of them mobilized against France’s new eastern ally.[11] The notorious ‘secret treaties’ of World War I stipulating the redistribution of the Ottoman spoils among the European allies, the ‘percentages agreement’ between Churchill and Stalin concerning the partition of the Balkans into Soviet and Anglo-American spheres of influence during World War II, successive plans by the United States government for top-secret ‘covert operations’ to topple regimes in disfavor[12]--all of these attest to the persistence of the presumption (in democratic and authoritarian regimes alike) that in matters of foreign policy, governments are seldom answerable to anyone but themselves.

Expressions of distrust of foreign-policymaking elites and their exercise of almost unlimited power have a long pedigree. In the United States they appeared in the 1920s and 1930s amid the popular revulsion against World War I and its consequences. Many critics on this side of the Atlantic blamed Europe’s slide into that catastrophe on the clandestine plotting of statesmen and diplomats. After the Second World War, Senator Joseph McCarthy had a brief but spectacular career indicting the ‘cookie-pushers’ and ‘Ivy-Leaguers’ of the State Department for ‘losing’ China and Eastern Europe to Communism. The antagonism on the part of a large section of the American public toward the ‘Best and the Brightest’ in the Kennedy-Johnson foreign-policymaking elite who dragged the United States into the Indochina quagmire during the sixties merely revived in a different form and with a different cast of demons the anti-elitist, populist sentiments of earlier eras. The consequences of this periodic resurgence of anti-elitism have been deleterious for the discipline of diplomatic history. By studying the state and the handful of individuals who controlled and managed its foreign-policy apparatus, scholarly specialists in the history of international relations have been put in the uncomfortable position of tacitly acquiescing in that oligarchic conception of the foreign-policymaking process—even if they express trenchant criticism of many of the policies themselves.

Partly in response to this anti-elitist critique, a new school of diplomatic historians extended the scope of its definition of the foreign-policymaking public beyond the narrow confines of the state to include identifiable nongovernmental elites and interest groups that operate outside the political process. In so doing, these scholars implicitly discarded the traditional conception of the state as an autonomous actor in history--long the underlying assumption of most traditional diplomatic history--in favor of a redefinition of the state as a political entity that is organically and inextricably linked to the larger society over which it exercises authority. The school that proposed this more inclusive approach to diplomatic history-- one is tempted to call it the ‘social history of diplomacy’--derived much of its original inspiration from the long-neglected writings of the Weimar German historian Eckart Kehr, which were resurrected by Hans-Ulrich Wehler in the 1960s and thereafter exercised an important influence on several diplomatic historians in the United States.[13]

According to Kehr, the domestic political system (Innenpolitik), far from being irrelevant to the refined world of diplomacy (Aussenpolitik), as traditional diplomatic historians had believed, has had an important influence on the formulation and execution of foreign policy. The diplomatic historian was put on notice that she must devote a great deal of attention to the social, economic, political, and cultural processes within a particular society in order to grasp the dynamics of that society’s relations with the outside world.[14] An early application of the Kehrian doctrine of the Primat der Innenpolitik was Arno Mayer’s two-volume study of the latter stage of the First World War and the Paris Peace Conference of 1919. Instead of rehashing the old debates based on the official records of the major states involved, Mayer concentrated on the activities of radical political movements, labor organizations, and other groups outside the political arena. It is scarcely surprising, in light of the type of data on which he relied, that Mayer’s conclusions contradicted the conventional wisdom on the subject: In Mayer’s analysis, considerations of national interest and balance of power, traditionally thought to preoccupy foreign-policy makers in times of crisis, recede far into the background. Instead, he insisted that internal social, economic, and political developments within the major belligerent states—notably conflicts that raised the prospect of a Europe-wide insurrection mounted by working-class movements inspired by the Bolshevik Revolution in Russia—decisively influenced the policies of the warmakers of 1917-1918 and the peacemakers of 1919.[15] N. Gordon Levin’s revisionist study of Wilsonian foreign policy reached a similar conclusion, emphasizing the domestic pressures on an American leader intent on shoring up the deteriorating liberal capitalist order in the world amid the twin menaces of Bolshevism and Imperialism.[16]

Whereas Mayer and Levin underscored the domestic political determinants of foreign policy, the opening of the private papers of various businesspeople and bankers in later years resulted in a number of studies that emphasized the economic wellsprings of diplomacy. Stephen A. Schuker’s exhaustive study of the origins of the Dawes Plan drew heavily on the private papers of the Morgan partners Thomas Lamont and Dwight Morrow, Montagu Norman (governor of the Bank of England), as well as the Krupp and Thyssen collections.[17] Charles Maier’s celebrated analysis of social and economic stabilization in Western Europe after World War I exploited private business archives such as those of the Compagnie de Saint-Gobain-Pont-à-Mousson in France.[18] Thomas Karnes’s monograph on the Standard Fruit Company’s ventures in Latin America,[19] Dan Morgan’s historical treatment of the international grain cartel,[20] and Anthony Sampson’s and Daniel Yergin’s studies of the seven multinational petroleum companies all focus on the foreign-policy consequences of the activities of organizations in the private sector that operated entirely apart from their governments.[21] Akira Iriye called attention to the important role played by international non-governmental organizations on the global stage and urged diplomatic historians to pay more attention to their activities.[22] Tony Smith chronicled the influence of ethnic and religious groups within the United States on behalf of foreign states, as did John Mearsheimer and Steven Walt in their controversial study of the Israel lobby.[23] During his brief career, Charles De Benedetti enriched our understanding of the activities of American pressure groups promoting the cause of world peace and their impact of their government’s foreign policies.[24] 

This increasing attention to the influence of non-governmental organizations on foreign policy represents a powerful affirmation of the close connection between foreign policy and domestic politics. These and other works in this genre treat the state not as an entity unto itself, with its own interests and means of pursuing them, but rather as a reflection of the interests of its various constituencies within the broader social order. It is worth recording the caveat that this new sensitivity to the domestic sources of foreign policy does not entirely dispose of the social historians’ objection to the ‘elitist’ assumptions of diplomatic history. This ‘new diplomatic history’ did not emulate the ‘new social history’ by directing its attention to ‘the common man or woman,’ who, by no stretch of the imagination could be thought to exercise an important influence on foreign policy. It merely substituted non-governmental elites (bankers, businesspeople, trade union leaders, professional revolutionaries, spokespersons of ethnic or religious groups, officials in organizations dedicated to peace, environmentalism, and advocacy for special interest groups) for the traditional foreign-policymaking elites in government. This neo-corporatist conception of international relations, which emphasizes the constraints imposed on foreign offices by organized interest groups or influential individuals in the private sector cannot be very comforting to the devotees of a genuinely egalitarian approach to diplomatic history. It is certainly a far cry from ‘history from the bottom up’ as exemplified by the influential work of my late colleague Howard Zinn.[25]

Another indication of the movement away from the state-centered type of diplomatic history that prevailed for so long has been the increasing attention devoted by diplomatic historians to the role of culture in the interaction among nations.  In the late 1970s Lawrence Kaplan, Morell Heald, and Akira Iriye were already pressing diplomatic historians to take note of the cultural setting of United States foreign policy and to pay close attention to the interaction of ‘cultural systems’ in the world.[26] It is important to note that this new interest in the cultural basis of international relations has tended to focus more on ‘popular’ rather than ‘high’ culture. Such a predilection made this type of diplomatic history much more acceptable to cultural historians who, like their social historian peers, strive to address their subject from below rather than from on high. The flagship journal of the profession has published a number of articles with popular culture as their centerpiece.  Michael Hunt has hailed the proliferation of studies based on this new cultural approach to the history of the relations among states as a welcome sign that “The Long Crisis in U.S. Diplomatic History” is finally “Coming to Closure.”[27] 

Although they may not satisfy the stringent criteria of the most demanding social and cultural historians, the trends in diplomatic history sketched above demonstrate how far the sub-discipline has traveled in the last several decades. The time is long overdue, therefor, for scholars outside the sub-discipline—particularly those laboring in the vineyards of social and cultural history--to discard their outmoded notions of what diplomatic historians have been up to. They ought to recognize that most practitioners of the craft are no longer content to record “what one clerk said to another clerk,” but rather have been probing the wider world of society and culture to explain the ways in which states conduct their relations with other states in the world arena.

2. The Absence of Methodological Rigor?: The Critique from the Theorists of International Relations

For many years diplomatic historians and international relations theorists formed a single field of scholarly inquiry. The classic texts of international-relations theory were written by political scientists who were fully conversant in the language of diplomatic history. Hans Morgenthau,[28] Raymond Aron,[29] Henry Kissinger,[30] and others freely acknowledged their extensive reliance on historical data in the formulation of their theories of international politics. International-relations theorists such as Robert Art, Zbigniew Brzezinski, Stanley Hoffmann, Robert Jervis, Richard Ned Lebow, and Jack Snyder, among others, have been unapologetic in their insistence that theory can and should be informed by historical knowledge. But during the 1960s and 1970s a significant group of theorists effectively turned its back on the lessons of diplomatic history to form a sub-discipline of political science that seemed to repudiate all connections with the field of historical scholarship. For many years thereafter, these two sub-disciplines, which had previously shared a common interest in probing the operation of the international order and mutually profited from intellectual interchange, went their own separate ways with little regard for the work being done in the other field. It is no exaggeration to say that most diplomatic historians and international relations theorists had little to say to one another.

The principal source of this professional parting of ways was a sharp disagreement over methodology. The political scientists accused the diplomatic historians of producing essentially worthless studies of isolated international events that could be ignored by the theorist intent on establishing scientifically verifiable generalizations about the relations among states. The accusation is a familiar one to all historians and is by no means applicable solely to the sub-discipline of diplomatic history: The historical approach treats each past event as unique, unrepeatable, and therefore incomparable to any other event before or since. The business of the traditional historian—diplomatic or otherwise--is narration and description rather than analysis. Her goal is to produce, on the basis of exhaustive research in the surviving records of the past, an accurate and comprehensive rendition of what actually transpired in a particular time and place.

By contrast, the theoretician of international relations displays an interest in specific historical developments only insofar as they can be related to comparable developments in different times and places in order to yield eternally and universally valid generalizations about the interaction of states in the international system.[31] Although the late neo-realist theorist Kenneth Waltz paid attention to historical developments, he constructed general theories of interstate relations that did not engage the findings of diplomatic historians.[32] To return to the earlier anecdote about my encounter with an advocate of this position: What Bismarck said, thought, or did is of no interest whatsoever to the theorist of international relations, whatever entertainment value it may hold for the antiquarian or the devotee of history-as-literature.

It is important to recognize that the crucial distinction between these two approaches is not, as is often alleged, that the former is descriptive and the latter analytical. The diplomatic historian worth her salt is no mere chronicler of past events. Her obligation is not only to recount what actually happened but also to explain why it happened in the way that it did. Such an explanation requires the identification of the causal connections between the events that she describes. This attention to causality belies the theorist’s attempt to portray the traditional historian as a mere storyteller.[33] Instead, the difference is to be found in the type of analysis that the diplomatic historian undertakes. He is content to offer an analytical explanation of a specific historical development (say, the formation of the Anglo-Japanese alliance in 1902) by identifying the chain of causality linking that event to preceding ones: the conclusion of a military alliance between France and Russia in 1894; Russia’s subsequent rivalry with Japan in Korea and Manchuria; Japan’s desire for Great Britain’s assistance in keeping France neutral in case the competition with Russia in the Far East were to result in war between the two; Germany’s decision to construct a navy; Great Britain’s consequent desire to transfer much of its naval power from the Western Pacific to the North Sea in order to counter the impending German buildup there; Great Britain’s decision to rely on Japan to balance Russian naval power in the Western Pacific after the aforementioned reduction of its own naval power in the region; etc.

The theorist of international relations could not care less about the exposition of the causal relationship among the discrete historical events sketched above, for its sole contribution to knowledge is the explanation of why these two unlikely candidates for an alliance proceeded to form one. Its scope is restricted to the specific historical period and geographical space in which the events under discussion unfolded. It contributes nothing to a general theory of alliance formation, deterrence, the operation of the balance of power, naval competition, or any other category of universal applicability. In short, the diplomatic historian is concerned with explaining important developments in the past as a self-enclosed chain of cause and effect. The theorist of international relations insists on treating such supposedly unique cases as members of a class of phenomena that recur regularly throughout history and therefore can be analyzed systematically in an effort to discover correlations among all members of the class. The ultimate objective goes far beyond the modest goal of the diplomatic historian, which is to describe and explain what has happened in a particular time and place. It is to elaborate a general theory of international behavior that will yield predictions of how nations can be expected to act in the future.[34]

The specific methods employed by the theorist to attain the twin goals of generalization and prediction vary according to the particular school to which he subscribes. A mere recitation of the labels conventionally applied to some of the schools and sub-schools of international-relations theory-- behaviorism, systems analysis, game theory, cybernetic theory of decision-making, content analysis, transnationalism, functionalism, bureaucratic politics theory, operational codes theory, realism, constructivism, liberalism, world systems theory, among others--indicates the extraordinary variety of methodological approaches available. But however they may differ among themselves, what they all share in common is a marked disinterest in the type of research conducted by traditional diplomatic historians. Each of these theoretical approaches, whether acknowledged or not, is modeled on the procedures and methodology of the natural sciences. Topics for investigation are chosen not on the basis of intrinsic interest but rather according to the specific requirements of a carefully prepared research design. The mode of inquiry is frequently collaborative in nature, with a research ‘team’ assembled at some institution of higher learning or think tank. The means of verification are typically statistical, marked by attempts to determine the standard deviation from ‘mean’ activity (to the social scientist, that term signifies a quantity having a value intermediate between the values of other quantities, rather than something that is ‘nasty’).

The esoteric language employed to describe the results of such macroscopic studies is likely to exasperate the diplomatic historian. A cursory perusal of the premier journals of international relations theory—The Journal of Conflict Resolution, The Journal of Peace Research, International Studies Quarterly, International Organization, and World Politics--reveals that such ahistorical research has come to dominate the field. The American Political Science Review often publishes articles on international affairs, but not ones that would be of interest or use to diplomatic historians. A comparison of such studies with those appearing in journals such as Diplomatic History, The International History Review, Diplomacy and Statecraft, Relations internationales, La Revue d’histoire diplomatique and the occasional article on diplomatic history—very occasional--in the American Historical Review, confirms that the two groups inhabit entirely different intellectual universes.

Is the yawning chasm between international-relations theory and diplomatic history bridgeable? For many years the theorists apparently thought it was, so long as the historians stuck to the drudgery of gathering quantifiable evidence of international behavior that could be fed into the data bases for use in subsequent large-scale studies. Much time and effort is saved if the project director can readily determine from some historical monograph precisely how many Zulus perished in the war of 1879 or how many square kilometers of territory were ceded by Germany in 1919. But the historian who resisted accepting such a subservient role in the pursuit of knowledge was hard put to define areas of common interest with his brethren in political science. The few genuine attempts by theorists to bridge the gap -- such as Alexander George’s “Structured, Focused Comparison” approach failed to stimulate much interest among diplomatic historians.[35] Another valiant effort by diplomatic historians and international relations theorists to find common ground at the turn of the twenty-first century does not seem to have had much resonance in either field.[36]  As a lot, diplomatic historians seemed more resistant than most members of the historical profession to the intrusion of quantification, model-building, and all the other accoutrements of the behavioral sciences. Two notable exceptions to the rule are the journals International Security and Ethics and International Affairs, which publish articles of theorists and historians, proving that détente is possible in the longstanding Cold War between the two approaches.

3. The Relevance of the Past for the Present?: Benign Neglect from the Policymakers

As we have seen, the theorist of international relations is inclined to devote at least cursory attention to the fruits of historical scholarship, if only because they furnish the raw data upon which analytical generalizations about the behavior of states in the international system may be constructed. The social scientist may condescendingly regard the diplomatic historian as a sort of fieldworker who laboriously collects ‘the facts’ to be programmed into the computer by the research team in quest of longitudinal patterns of aggregate behavior. But to the policymaker and the policy-oriented social scientist who is sometimes called upon to advise him, it seems that the discipline of diplomatic history has almost entirely been neglected as a potential source of usable information for the conduct of foreign policy. 

Such was not always the case. When the representatives of the victorious powers assembled in Paris in 1919 to draft the peace treaties terminating the First World War, the counsel of historians was eagerly solicited by the various delegations. President Woodrow Wilson brought with him across the Atlantic a number of scholars who tendered advice on matters pertaining to the territorial claims based on historical boundaries of the Habsburg successor states.[37]  The British historians R.W. Seton Watson and Charles K. Webster attended the conference and provided advice on a number of issues.[38] The French delegation relied on the advice of its country’s most eminent historians, one of whom, Ernest Lavisse, had headed the Comité d’études, the French counterpart to Woodrow Wilson’s wartime committee of scholarly advisers called ‘The Inquiry.’[39] This respect for the expertise of historians was revived during the Second World War. ‘Wild Bill’ Donovan, the swashbuckling chief of the newly created Office of Strategic Services (OSS), looted American universities of scholars, including such specialists in diplomatic history as William Langer, Raymond Sontag, and Bernadotte Schmidt, for service as intelligence analysts, presumably in the expectation that their historical knowledge would serve them well in that capacity.[40]

Alas! We no longer live in an age when the architects of foreign policy conceive of history (and the historian) as a useful guide for present practice. The presumption that the past record of diplomacy has little or no relation to the practical concerns of the foreign-policymaker seems to be widespread, particularly in American governmental circles. One senses not so much disinterest in the historical background of current events as a preoccupation with a multitude of fast-breaking crises that demand practical solutions now. In short, if the social historian denounced diplomatic history as elitist and the theorist of international relations dismissed it as methodologically unsophisticated, the practitioner of diplomacy (in those rare moments when he has the time to give it thought) rejects it as irrelevant or at least places it far down on the list of priorities for the engagement of his sustained attention.

This indifference to the scholarly literature of diplomatic history on the part of foreign-policy makers doubtless stems from other considerations besides the constraints of time. Surely another must be the pervasive conviction among government officials as well as the public at large that historical understanding, particularly when it involves the domain of world affairs, is not something that belongs exclusively to a professional community. When economic matters come before this or that agency of the government, the advice of academic economists is frequently solicited. When questions of science policy are up for discussion, the Cambridge-to-Washington shuttle is filled with MIT professors summoned to the capital to give their views. But whenever government officials feel the inclination to reflect on the historical context of particular international developments in the present (which, as noted above, they apparently seldom do), they are unlikely to tap the expertise of the appropriate specialist in diplomatic history. Instead, they are probably inclined to rely on whatever hazy memories they may retain from college history courses; or, as in the case of John Kennedy’s thumbing through Barbara Tuchman’s The Guns of August during the hectic weeks of October 1962 for hints on how to prevent the Cuban Missile Crisis from degenerating into what followed the Habsburg assassination crisis of 1914, they may be expected to consult whatever historical work happens to appear on the New York Times best-seller list at the time.[41] And such works are seldom produced by professional diplomatic historians.

Herein lies the irony: the disinterest of public officials in the body of scholarship built up by professional diplomatic historians is accompanied by an almost obsessive propensity for employing ill-conceived historical arguments to address contemporary problems or justify current policy. As Ernest May remarked, foreign-policy makers “are often influenced by beliefs about what history teaches and portends.” Unfortunately, as he demonstrated with considerable persuasiveness, the policymaker’s knowledge of what happened in the past is more often than not wildly inaccurate and a distorted version of historical reality. As a consequence, the policymaker is prone to drawing the wrong “lessons of the past” and likely to make choices for the future that are often unwise.[42] The examples of such egregious misreading or misuse of history that May cites may be supplemented by others. Former Secretary of State Dean Rusk’s constantly reiterated contention during the Vietnam War that any negotiation with the Hanoi regime would constitute a revival of the ‘spirit of Munich’ is perhaps the most memorable case in point. (The Munich analogy has resurfaced recently in the writings of those who oppose the negotiations with Iran over that country’s nuclear program). During the Cold War, references to the ‘Yalta sellout’ reverberated in the rhetoric of Republican politicians and conservative media without any noticeable attempt to consult diplomatic historians who had delved into the records of the Crimea conference to determine what had actually transpired there.  The current crises in Iraq and Syria have produced innumerable references to the Sykes-Picot Agreement of 1916 by public officials and pundits who seem to have only the haziest understanding of the complex set of issues surrounding that wartime understanding that diplomatic historians have addressed.

Perhaps it is unrealistic to believe that policymakers can be induced to resist the temptation of amateurish historical analysis and to pay closer attention to the findings of professional historians who devote entire careers to the interpretation of past events. The tradition of ‘everyman his own historian’ is deeply rooted in a society that would be horrified at the thought of ‘everyman his own brain surgeon.’ The remedy for this propensity for faulty historical understanding that May suggests is one that should please the diplomatic historian who is insecure about the ‘relevance’ of his work to the problems of the here and now: Let governments consult eminent historians on a regular basis when a historical analogy or precedent for a current policy issue presents itself, just as they are accustomed to consulting molecular biologists or specialists in air pollution when matters within their competence are raised as questions of public policy.[43] 

Conclusion: The Promising Prospects of the “New International History”

In the course of this essay, which has recounted the widespread dissatisfaction with diplomatic history on the part of social historians, theorists of international relations, and practitioners of diplomacy in earlier decades, I have tried to indicate how the field has undergone a fundamental transformation that has removed much of the justification for such criticism. By displaying a concern for the broader context of international relations, diplomatic historians in the past two decades or so have begun to repair the broken bridge to the world of the social historian by examining the role of organizations and groups that had previously been ignored. By remaining open to the potential application of international-relations theory to diplomatic history, diplomatic historians have opened long-clogged channels of communication to a small group of scholars of international relations in political science departments.[44] The one disappointment has been in the failure to persuade policymakers of the relevance of diplomatic history scholarship to provide appropriate ‘lessons’ for the conduct of diplomacy in the modern world.

To take account of these notable advances in professional diplomatic history, I would reissue a modest proposal that I have unsuccessfully pitched to colleagues in the profession for many years. It involves a simple semantic change that would accurately reflect the methodological and substantive strides that the discipline of diplomatic history has taken in recent decades. As we have seen, practitioners of the craft can no longer be justly accused of confining their scholarly attention to the messages between diplomats. They are increasingly attentive to the entire context–economic, social, and cultural, as well as political and military—of the relations among nations in the world. Why not consider adopting ‘international history’ as a new label for the type of scholarly work and teaching that “diplomatic” historians have been doing. That term has existed in the United Kingdom as the title of a scholarly journal to which diplomatic historians regularly contribute. It is the title of the division of the history department in the London School of Economics and Political Science in which diplomatic historians reside.

Lest anyone think that this modest proposal for a name change is in any way original, I will conclude with a declaration by the late Ernest May that was issued at the very beginning of the period addressed in this essay: “Diplomatic history as such has entered a decline. It may be approaching demise. The field gradually taking its place—perhaps best termed…international history—is new. Its nature and contours are just beginning to become perceptible. It promises, however, to be one of the rich areas of future historical scholarship.” [45] Of course, even such a radical semantic change—which would require a renaming of the flagship journal and the flagship H-Net list of the profession-- would not satisfy those who have come to believe that the term ‘international’ itself is inappropriate and anachronistic in a globalized, borderless world in which the nation-state is on the way out. But that is another story for another time.


William R. Keylor is Professor of history and international relations at the Pardee School of Global Studies at Boston University. He is the author of A World of Nations: The International Order since 1945 (2nd edition, 2009), The Twentieth-Century World: An International History since 1900 (6th edition, 2011), The United Nations’ Record as the Guardian of Global Cooperative Security” in Vojtech Mastny and Zhu Liqun, eds.,The Legacy of the Cold War: Perspectives on Security, Cooperation, and Conflict (New York, 2014), pp. 81-122 and, most recently, “The Second Cold War in Europe: The Paradoxes of a Turbulent Time,” in Lorenz Lüthi, ed., The Regional Cold Wars in Europe, East Asia, and the Middle East (2015), 141-174. He is a proud member of the Editorial Board of H-Diplo.

© 2015 The Author.
Notes

[1] This is a radically expanded and revised version of remarks I presented to the International Security Studies Program at Yale University and to the Sorbonne course of Professor Georges-Henri Soutou. In addition to my gratitude to many people in those audiences for their comments, I want to express my appreciation to my friend, colleague, and neighbor David Mayers for recently reading the penultimate version of this piece and offering his usual constructive criticism. (It is worth mentioning, in the context of the construction of bridges between diplomatic history and political science discussed in this essay, that this esteemed diplomatic historian will soon become chair of the department of political science department of Boston University, a post he held in earlier years). 
[3] Alexander De Conde, “What’s Wrong with American Diplomatic History?,” Society for Historians of American Foreign Relations Newsletter, Vol. 1, No. 2 (May 1970). 1-16.
[4] Ernest R. May, “The Decline of Diplomatic History,” in George Athan Billias and Gerald R. Grab, eds., American History: Retrospect and Prospect (New York, 1971, 399-430.
[5] Charles Maier, “Marking Time: The Historiography of International Relations,” in Michael Kammen, The Past before Us: Contemporary Historical Writing in the United States (Ithaca, 1980), 355-382.
[6] A.J.P. Taylor, The Struggle for Mastery in Europe, 1848-1918 (London, 1957), xxi.
[7] V.O. Key, Public Opinion and American Democracy (New York, 1961), 173, 174.
[8] G.M. Young, Victorian England: Portrait of an Age (London. 1953), 103.
[9] See, for example, William A. Williams, Roots of the Modern American Empire (New York, 1969) ; Carl Parrini, Heir to Empire: United States Economic Diplomacy, 1916-1923 (Pittsburgh, 1969); Gar Alperovitz, Atomic Diplomacy: Hiroshima and Potsdam (New York, 1965).
[10] When the British government ban was lifted in 1974, one of the participants in the decoding operation revealed its existence.  F.W. Winterbotham, The Ultra Secret (London, 1974).
[11] George F. Kennan, The Fateful Alliance: France, Russia, and the Coming of the First World War (New York, 1984).
[12] Stephen Kinzer, Overthrow: America’s Century of Regime Change from Hawaii to Iraq (New York, 2007).
[13] On The Bielefeld School founded by Wehler, see Roger Fletcher, “Recent Developments in West German Historiography: the Bielefeld School and its Critics.” German Studies Review 1984 7(3): 451-480.
[14] See Eckart Kehr, Der Primat der Innenpolitik: Gesammelte Aufsätze zur preussisch-deutschen Sozialgeschichte Im 19. und 20. Jahrhundert, ed. Hans U. Wehler, [Veröffentlichungen der Historischen Kommission zu Berlin, 19] (Berlin, 2012).
[15] Arno J. Mayer, Political Origins of the New Diplomacy, 1917-1918 (New Haven, 1959) and Politics and Diplomacy of Peacemaking: Containment and Counterrevolution at Versailles, 1918-1919 (New York, 1967).
[16] N. Gordon Levin, Woodrow Wilson and World Politics: America’s Response to War and Revolution (New York, 1968).
[17] Stephen A. Schuker, The End of French Predominance in Europe: The Financial Crisis of 1924 and the Origins of the Dawes Plan (Chapel Hill, 1976).
[18] Charles A. Maier, Recasting Bourgeois Europe (Princeton, 1975).
[19] Thomas L. Karnes, Tropical Enterprise: The Standard Fruit and Steamship Company in Latin America (New York, 1978).
[20] Dan Morgan, Merchants of Grain (New York, 1980).
[21] Anthony Samson, The Seven Sisters: The Great Oil Companies and the World They Shaped (New York, 1975); Daniel Yergin, The Prize: The Epic Quest for Oil, Money, and Power (New York, 2008).
[22] Akira Iriye, Global Community: The Role of International Organizations in the Making of the Contemporary World (Berkeley, 2002)
[23] Tony Smith, Foreign Attachments: The Power of Ethnic Groups in the Making of American Foreign Policy (Cambridge, MA, 2000); John J. Mearsheimer and Steven M. Walt, The Israel Lobby and U.S. Foreign Policy (New York, 2008).
[24] Charles DeBenedetti, Origins of the Modern American Peace Movement, 1915-1929 (Millwood, NY, 1978); The Peace Reform in American History (Bloomington, 1984).
[25] Howard Zinn, A People’s History of the United States (New York, 2005).
[26] Morell Heald and Lawrence S. Kaplan, Culture and Diplomacy (Westport, 1977); Akira Iriye, “Culture and Power: International Relations as Intercultural Relations,” Diplomatic History, Vol. 3, Issue 2 (April 1979), 115-128.
[27] Michael Hunt, “The Long Crisis in U.S. Diplomatic History: Coming to Closure,” Diplomatic History, Vol. 16, No.1 (Winter 1992), 115-140.
[28] Hans J. Morgenthau, Politics among Nations: The Struggle for Power and Peace (New York, 1973).
[29] Raymond Aron, Peace and War: A Theory of International Relations (New York, 1968).
[30] Henry A. Kissinger, Nuclear Weapons and Foreign Policy (New York, 1969).
[31] An early articulation of this view may be found in E. Raymond Platig, International Relations Research: Problem of Evaluation and Advancement (Santa Barbara, 1967), 95-103.
[32] Kenneth Waltz, The Theory of International Politics (New York, 1979).
[33] Theorists of postmodernism, of course, enthusiastically defend the historian’s status as a teller of tales.  The most lucid explication of the postmodernist approach to diplomatic history may be found in the writings of Frank Ninkovich. See, for example, his “Interests and Discourse in Diplomatic History,” Diplomatic History 13, No. 2 (Spring 1989), 135-161; and his “No Post-Mortems for Post-Modernism, Please,” Diplomatic History 22 (Summer 1998), 451-466. For a gentle critique of the postmodernist enterprise, see the review essay by William R. Keylor, “Post-Mortems for the American Century, Diplomatic History 25, No. 2 (Spring 2001), 317-327.
[35] Alexander George, “Case Studies and Theory Development: The Method of Structured, Focused Comparison,” in Paul Gordon Lauren, Diplomacy: History, Theory, and Policy (New York, 1979), 43-68.
[36] Colin Elman and Miriam Fendius Elman, eds., Bridges and Boundaries: Historians, Political Scientists, and the Study of International Relations (Cambridge, MA, 2001). The theorist Jack S. Levy remarked that while graduate students studying international relations in political science departments were required to take courses on research design and statistics, history departments rarely offered such courses to their students. He also observed that political scientists were “troubled by the failure of historians to be explicit about their theoretical assumptions and propositions.”  Jack S. Levy, “Explaining Events and Developing Theories: History, Political Science, and the Analysis of International Relations,” in Ibid. 80-81.
[37] The Harvard historian Charles Homer Haskins was the major adviser to Wilson (his former colleague at Johns Hopkins) on territorial issues. William R. Keylor, “Versailles and International Diplomacy,” in Manfred F. Boemeke, et al., The Treaty of Versailles: A Reassessment after 75 Years (Cambridge, U.K.: 1998), 492.
[38] See Erik Goldstein, Winning the Peace: British Diplomatic Strategy, Peace Planning, and the Paris Peace Conference, 1916-1920 (Oxford, 1991). Webster was commissioned to prepare a handbook summarizing the diplomatic procedures of the Congress of Vienna. Seton Watson also gave advice to the Czechoslovak government.
[39] Comité d’études. Travaux (Paris, 1918).
[40] Robin W. Winks, From Cloak & Gown: Scholars in the Secret War, 1939-1961 (New York, 1987), 495-97.
[41] Barbara Tuchman, The Guns of August (New York: 1962).
[42] Ernest R. May, “Lessons of the Past”: The Use and Misuse of History in American Foreign Policy (New York and Oxford, 1975), ix.
[43] May, Lessons of the Past, 172-190.   See also Richard E. Neustadt and Ernest R. May, Thinking in Time: The Uses of History for Decision Makers (New York, 1988).
[44] A recent example of the efforts of diplomatic historians to explore the intellectual, cultural, and social context of international relations as well as to take account of international-relations theory is Peter Jackson’s superb Beyond the Balance of Power: France and the Politics of National Security in the Era of the First World War (Cambridge, UK, 2014).
[45] Ernest May “The Decline of Diplomatic History,” in Billias and Grob, American History: Retrospect and Prospect, 430.