Global News : Passport : Ricks : Drezner : Walt : Rothkopf : Lynch
The Cable : The AfPak Blog : Net Effect : Shadow Govt. : Madam Secretary : The Call
Catching up on Clinton's big speech

By Peter Feaver
Catching up on some reading after multiple trips, I have just waded through Secretary Clinton's Big Speech -- capital letters are warranted because of the breathless promotion that attended it before, during and after.
I found the speech more familiar than newsworthy. The section on priorities read like the table of contents to President Bush's 2006 National Security Strategy: terrorism, regional peace efforts, trade, development, energy, supporting and encouraging democracy, etc. Even the caveats were familiar: democracy is more than elections (check), foreign policy must reflect the world as it is, not as it used to be (check), no nation can meet the world's challenges alone (check), no challenge can be met without America (check). Her Five Pillars are also remarkably evocative of the goals laid out by both of the administrations immediately preceding Obama's.
This is not a criticism of the speech. Indeed, as anyone who has worked
on a top-level speech or document will understand, it is rather like pop music:
there is a basic I-IV-V chord progression
that is detectable in almost every "new" effort. Some do it better than
others, to be sure, but it can't really be hidden from the attuned ear.
It would be unfair to label Clinton's speech a "Heart and Soul"
effort, but it would be a reach to credit it as transformative.
To me the best part was its frank acknowledgement that the core of the
challenge of achieving better multilateralism was in overcoming collective
action problems -- a familiar insight to anyone who has taken an introductory
international relations course, but one that is all-too-often ignored in the
partisan commentary on foreign policy. While there were the
now-ritualistic swipes at those boors in the Bush administration, the Secretary
did not, in fact, pretend that the problem was simply Bush (or even American)
arrogance. I would have liked to see more discussion of how, in fact, she
will overcome those collective action problems, especially in achieving a
global architecture that met these desiderata, which she summarized so pithily:
"one
in which states have clear incentives to cooperate and live up to their
responsibilities, as well as strong disincentives to sit on the sidelines or
sow discord and division."
This
has been a priority challenge since before the 9/11 attacks. Indeed, a
colleague of mine at Duke, Bruce Jentleson, has repeatedly talked about the
"September 10th agenda," and uppermost on that was the mismatch between what
the world asked of international institutions and what those
international institutions were capable of doing.
Coincidentally -- or perhaps not -- Bruce Jentleson is coming on board the State
Department to serve as a senior advisor to Anne-Marie Slaughter, the Director
of Policy Planning. With Slaughter, her deputy Derek Chollet, and now
Bruce Jentleson, Secretary Clinton will have at her disposal an impressive
cadre of experts who have thought long and hard about this mismatch. I am
hoping that the Secretary's speech was just the opening salvo and that in the
coming months we will learn more about what her brain trust has in mind for
addressing this serious problem.
PRAKASH SINGH/AFP/Getty Images






Nordstrom
Realizing that we people, are all updated when it comes to fashion, Nordstrom is having their Nordstrom Anniversary Sale, which runs every year for the last 2 weeks of July into August. It will end this year on August 2nd, after beginning on the 17th of July. Lots of people will be interested, and those looking for deeper discounts can head to Nordstrom Rack Outlets. A person could get an almost brand new wardrobe for a small loan from a payday lender. The store began as a humble shoe store in Seattle in 1901, and became fantastically successful with an emphasis on customer service above all else, which is why an instant payday loan is well spent Nordstrom.