Soft Power by Joseph S Nye
Soft Power by Joseph S Nye
Soft Power by Joseph S Nye
153.
FOREIGN POLICY
product has averaged 23 per cent each year
since the mid-1970s. The CIA, using numbers
that reflect the purchasing power of different
currencies, reports that the American share of
world product increased slightly from 25 per
cent in 1975 to 26 per cent in 1988.
These studies suggest that the effect of
World War II lasted about a quarter century
and that most of the decline worked its way
through the system by the mid-1970s. In fact,
the big adjustment of American commitments
occurred with then President Richard Nixon's
withdrawal from Vietnam and the end of the
convertibility of the dollar into gold.
The dictionary tells us that power means an
ability to do things and control others, to get
others to do what they otherwise would not.
Because the ability to control others is often
associated with the possession of certain re-
sources, politicians and diplomats commonly
define power as the possession of population,
territory, natural resources, economic size,
military forces, and political stability. For ex-
ample, in the agrarian economies of eight-
eenth-centurv Europe, population was a criti-
cal power resource since it provided a base fi~r
taxes and recruitment of infantry.
Traditionally the test of a great power was
its strength in war. Today, however, the defi-
nition of power is losing its emphasis on mili-
tary force and conquest that marked earlier
eras. The factors of technology, education, and
economic growth are becoming more signifi-
cant in international power, while geography,
population, and raw materials are becoming
somewhat less important.
If so, are we entering a "Japanese period" in
world politics? Japan has certainly done far
better with its strategy as a trading state since
1945 than it did with its military strategy to
create a Greater East Asian Co-Prosperity
Sphere in the 1930s. On the other hand,
Japan's security in relation to its large military
neighbors, China and the Soviet Union, and
the safety of its sea routes depend heavily on
U.S. protection. While they may diminish,
these problems will not vanish with the end of
the Cold War. One should not leap too quickly
to the conclusion that all trends favor economic
power or countries like Japan.
154.
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What can we say about changes in the distri-
bution of power resources in the coming de-
cades? Political leaders often use the term
"multipolarity" to imply the return to a balance
among a number of states with roughly equal
power resources analogous to that of the nine-
teenth century. But this is not likely to be the
situation at the turn of the century, for in terms
of power resources, all the potential challengers
except the United States are deficient in some
respect. The Soviet Union lags economically,
China remains a less-developed country, Eu-
rope lacks political unity, and Japan is deficient
both in military power and in global ideological
appeal. If economic reforms reverse Soviet de-
cline, if Japan develops a full-fledged nuclear
and conventional military capability, or if Eu-
rope becomes dramatically more unified, there
may be a return to classical multipolarity in the
t w e n t y - f i r s t c e n t u r y . But barring such
changes, the United States is likely to retain a
broader range of power resources--military,
economic, scientific, cultural, and ideological
--than other countries, and the Soviet Union
may lose its superpower status.
The Great Power Shift
The coming century may see continued
American preeminence, but the sources of
power in world politics are likely to undergo
major changes that will create new difficulties
for all countries in achieving their goals. Proof
of power lies not in resources but in the ability
to change the behavior of states. Thus, the
critical question for the United States is not
whether it will start the next century as the
superpower with the largest supply of re-
sources, but to what extent it will be able to
control the political environment and get other
countries to do what it wants. Some trends in
world politics suggest that it will be more diffi-
cult in the future for any great power to control
the political environment. The problem for the
United States will be less the rising challenge
of another major power than a general diffu-
sion of power. Whereas nineteenth-century
Britain faced new challengers, the twenty-first
century United States will face new challenges.
As world politics becomes more complex,
the power of all major states to gain their objec-
155.
FOREIGN POLICY
tives will be diminished. To understand what
is happening to the United States today, the
distinction between power over other countries
and power over outcomes must be clear. Al-
though the United States still has leverage over
particular countries, it has far less leverage over
the system as a whole• It is less well-placed to
attain its ends unilaterally, but it is not alone in
this situation• All major states will have to
confront the changing nature of power in world
politics.
Such changes, of course, are not entirely
new. For example, the rapid growth of private
actors operating across international borders,
whether large corporations or political groups,
was widely recognized in the early 1970s. Even
Henry Kissinger, with his deeply rooted belief
in classical balance-of-power politics, conceded
in a 1975 speech that "we are entering a new
era. Old international patterns are crumbling.
• . . The world has become interdependent in
economics, in communications, in human aspi-
rations."
By the late 1970s, however, the American
political mood had shifted. Iran's seizure of the
U.S. embassy in Tehran and the Soviet inva-
sion of Afghanistan seemed to reaffirm the role
of military force and the primacy of the tradi-
tional security agenda. Ronald Reagan's presi-
dency accentuated these trends in the early
1980s. The U.S. defense budget increased in
real terms for five straight years, arms control
was downgraded, and public opposition to nu-
clear forces and deterrence grew. Conventional
military force was used successfully, albeit
against the extremely weak states of Grenada
and Libya. The shifting agenda of world poli-
tics discredited the 1970s' concern with inter-
dependence and restored the traditional em-
phasis on military power. But interdependence
continued to grow, and the world of the 1980s
was not the same as that of the 1950s.
The appropriate response to the changes oc-
curring in world politics today is not to aban-
don the traditional concern for the military
balance of power, but to accept its limitations
and to supplement it with insights about inter-
dependence. In the traditional view, states are
the only significant actors in world politics and
only a few large states really matter• But today
156.
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other actors are becoming increasingly impor-
tant. Although they lack military power, trans-
national corporations have enormous economic
resources. Thirty corporations today each have
annual sales greater than the gross national
products (GNPs) of 90 countries. In the 1980s,
the annual profits of IBM and Royal Dutch/
Shell Group were each larger than the central
government budgets of Colombia, Kenya, or
Yugoslavia. Multinational corporations are
sometimes more relevant to achieving a coun-
try's goals than are other states. The annual
overseas production by such corporations ex-
ceeds the total value of international trade. In a
regional context, a portrait of the Middle East
conflict that did not include the superpowers
would be woefully inadequate, but so would a
description that did not tell of transnational
religious groups, oil companies, and terrorist
organizations. The issue is not whether state or
nonstate actors are more important--states
usually are. The point is that in modern times,
more complex coalitions affect outcomes.
With changing actors in world politics come
changing goals. In the traditional view, states
give priority to military security to ensure their
survival. Today, however, states must consider
new dimensions of security. National security
has become more complicated as threats shift
from the military (that is, threats against terri-
torial integrity) to the economic and ecological.
For example, Canadians today are not afraid
that U.S. soldiers will burn Toronto for a sec-
ond time (as in 1813); rather they fear that
Toronto will be programmed into a backwater
by a Texas computer. The forms of vulnerabil-
ity have increased, and trade-offs among poli-
cies are designed to deal with different vuinera-
bilities. The United States, for instance, might
enhance its energy security by sending naval
forces to the Persian Gulf; but it could accom-
plish the same goal by enlarging its strategic
petroleum reserve, by imposing a gasoline tax
to encourage conservation at home, and by
improving cooperation in institutions like the
International Energy Agency.
While military force remains the ultimate
form of power in a self-help system, the use of
force has become more costly for modern great
powers than it was in earlier centuries. Other
157.
FOREIGN POLICY
instruments such as communications, organi-
zational and institutional skills, and manipula-
tion of interdependence have become impor-
tant. Contrary to some rhetorical flourishes,
interdependence does not mean harmony.
Rather, it often means unevenly balanced mu-
tual dependence. Just as the less enamored of
two lovers may manipulate the other, the less
vulnerable of two states may use subtle threats
to their relationship as a source of power. Fur-
ther, interdependence is often balanced differ-
ently in different spheres such as security,
trade, and finance. Thus, creating and resist-
ing linkages between issues when a state is
either less or more vulnerable than another
becomes the art of the power game. Political
leaders use international institutions to dis-
courage or promote such linkages; they shop
for the forum that defines the scope of an issue
in the manner best suiting their interests.
As the instruments of power change, so do
strategies. Traditionalists consider the goal of
security and the instrument of military force to
be linked by a strategy of balancing power.
States wishing to preserve their independence
from military intimidation follow a balancing
strategy to limit the relative power of other
states. Today, however, economic and ecologi-
cal issues involve large elements of mutual ad-
vantage that can be achieved only through co-
operation. These issues are often critical to the
reelection of political leaders. A French presi-
dent today would not interfere with Germany's
increased economic growth because German
growth is critical to French economic growth.
The French decision to forego an independent
economic policy and remain in the European
monetary system in the early 1980s is one ex-
ample of such interdependence.
Traditionalist accounts of world politics
often speak of an international system that re-
suits from the balancing strategies of states.
Although bipolarity and multipolarity are use-
ful terms, today different spheres of world
politics have different distributions of power--
that is, different power structures. Military
power, particularly nuclear, remains largely
bipolar in its distribution. But in trade, where
the European Community acts as a unit, power
is multipolar. Ocean resources, money, space,
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shipping, and airlines each have somewhat dif-
ferent distributions of power. The power of
states varies as well, as does the significance of
nonstate actors in different spheres. For exam-
ple, the politics of international debt cannot be
understood without considering the power of
private banks.
If military power could be transferred freely
into the realms of economics and the environ-
ment, the different structures would not mat-
ter; and the overall hierarchy determined by
military strength would accurately predict out-
comes in world politics. But military power is
more costly and less transferable today than in
earlier times. Thus, the hierarchies that charac-
terize different issues are more diverse. The
games of world politics encompass different
players at different tables with different piles
of chips. They can transfer winnings among
tables, but often only at a considerable dis-
count. T h e military game and the overall
structure of the balance of power dominate
when the survival of states is clearly at stake,
but in much of modern world politics, physical
survival is not the most pressing issue.
Converting Power
The fragmentation of world politics into
many different spheres has made power re-
sources less fungible, that is, less transferable
from sphere to sphere. Money is fungible, in
that it can be easily converted from one cur-
rency to another. Power has always been less
fungible than money, but it is even less so
today than in earlier periods. In the eighteenth
century, a monarch with a full treasury could
purchase infantry to conquer new provinces,
which, in turn, could enrich the treasury. This
was essentially the strategy of Frederick II of
Prussia, for example, when in 1740 he seized
Austria's province of Silesia.
Today, however, the direct use of force for
economic gain is generally too costly and dan-
gerous for modern great powers. Even short of
aggression, the translation of economic into
military power resources may be very costly.
For instance, there is no economic obstacle to
Japan's developing a major nuclear or conven-
tional force, but the political cost both at home
and in the reaction of other countries would be
159.
FOREIGN POLICY
considerable. Militarization might then reduce
rather than increase Japan's ability to achieve
its ends.
Because power is a relationship, by defini-
tion it implies some context. Diminished fun-
gibility means that specifying the context is
increasingly important in estimating the actual
power that can be derived from power re-
sources. More than ever, one must ask the
question, "Power for what?" Yet at the same
time, because world politics has only partly
changed and the traditional geopolitical agenda
is still relevant, some fungibility of military
power remains. The protective role of military
force is a relevant asset in bargaining among
states, The dependence of conservative oil-pro-
ducing states on the United States for their
security, for example, limited their leverage on
the United States during the 1973 oil crisis.
The United States is still the ultimate guaran-
tor of the military security of Europe and
Japan, and that role is a source of bargaining
power in negotiations with its allies. In general,
the allies' need for protection strengthens
American influence, and may continue to do so
even with a reduced Soviet threat. During the
Cold War, the United States often worried
about the frailty of its allies and tended to
sacrifice some economic interests in its effort to
contain the perceived Soviet menace. Despite
the waning of that threat, if the United States
worries less than its allies do, it may be able to
demand more of them.
T o evaluate p o w e r in a post-Cold War
world, it is necessary to recognize instruments
and balance-of-power strategies necessary for a
successful policy. But new elements in the
modern world are diffusing power away from
all the great powers. Thus, any successful
strategy must incorporate both continuity and
change.
The great powers of today are less able to use
their traditional power resources to achieve
their purposes than in the past. On many
issues, private actors and small states have be-
come more powerful. At least five trends have
contributed to this diffusion of power: eco-
nomic interdependence, transnational actors,
nationalism in weak states, the spread of tech-
nology, and changing political issues.
160.
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171.