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A letter from the President
Track II Diplomacy: Can "Unofficial" Talks Avert Disaster?
The National Library of South Africa
Nonprofit Journalism: Removing the Pressure of the Bottom Line
New Immigrants in New Places: America's Growing "Global Interior"
Career and Technology Education: It's Not Just "Vocational Education" Anymore
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A Conversation with Harold Saunders
The U.S. and North Korea: A Track II Meeting Brings Results
Immigration Legislation: Solutions for a Broken System
Book Reviews
Enterprising Journalism Interns Summer in the City
2005 Andrew Carnegie Medals of Philanthropy
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Track II Diplomacy: Can "Unofficial"
Talks Avert Disaster?
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As an example of Track II diplomacy taken in its broadest
terms, Montville cited President Richard Nixon's "ping-pong gambit,"*
as a way to warm the atmosphere for the formal "Track I diplomacy to pursue
the dramatic opening to China." However, more formally, he refined his
definition of Track II as "An unofficial, informal interaction between
members of adversary groups or nations that aims to develop strategies,
influence public opinion, and organize human and material resources in
ways that might help resolve their conflict. It must be understood that
Track II diplomacy is in no way a substitute for official, formal Track
I, government-to-government or leader-to-leader relationships. Rather,
Track II activity is designed to assist official leaders by compensating
for the constraints imposed in official Track I negotiations. Track II
diplomacy is a process that aims to help resolve or manage conflicts by
exploring possible solutions out of the public view and without the requirements
of formal negotiation or bargaining for advantage."
Simply, Montville says: "The goal is to take the edge off resentments,"
creating opportunities for Track I.
Typically, Track II diplomacy involves "workshops" sponsored by non-governmental
organizations, attended by invited, interested individuals with influence
in the adversarial governments. Attendees may include former top officials
acting in an unofficial capacity, such as former President Jimmy Carter
or former Secretary of Defense William Perry (currently a senior fellow
at Stanford University's Hoover Institution), who have participated in
talks with counterparts from North Korea. They may also include current
officials acting in "an unofficial" capacity. Perry offers a simple, broad
definition: "The dialogue between non-officials of nations designed to
make up the perceived shortcomings in the official dialogue."
"It's not about negotiations," says Ronald Fisher, author of several books
on Track II and Professor of International Peace and Conflict Resolution
in the School of International Service at American University. "It's about
analysis, it's about creating some options for the official folks going
into Track I negotiations to work with."
Fisher, like Montville, views Track II as a function of social psychology--that
is, in peacemaking, recognizing the need to heal wounds as well as negotiate
a formal treaty--while many of today's leading Track II practitioners
eschew the "touchy-feely" in favor of a "nuts-and-bolts" oriented goal.
In Fisher's view, "We have to look at the human relationships of the parties
in the conflict. We must open up communications, look at issues like mistrust,
hostility and the effects of trauma if you want to actually resolve the
conflict as opposed to just getting a peace agreement. Not that they're
not important: things like territory, control, these are central issues.
But often, it's the subjective factors that render the conflict more difficult
to resolve."
"I would call it social process sensitivity," says Fisher. "It's the principle
of standing back and looking at your social interactions to try and figure
out what the hell is going on." But increasingly, the more dominant forms
of Track II are those that deal more in policy issues and matters of political
confrontation.
"The touchy-feely aspect doesn't get me very far," says Michael Krepon,
Founding President of the Henry L. Stimson Center, a leading Track II
practitioner in South Asia, working at tamping down nuclear-threat issues
between Pakistan and India. "I want concrete ideas discussed. I want seeds
planted," he explains, referring to his efforts to have South Asia's nuclear
powers work together to establish security, including securing their nuclear
arsenals, a subject neither side willingly concedes is an issue. For example,
he says, at Track II sessions in 2003-2004 with Pakistani and Indian representatives,
"We entered into this discussion in a respectful way, through the use
of a common enemy."
Krepon's imagined "common enemy" was "a nuclear terrorist that nobody
could control. It could have been a Hindu rogue, or a Muslim rogue...so
it's a common threat, to all. Now what are the best practices, best ideas
and best mechanisms that are out there to deal with this problem?"
Several authorities hasten to point out that Track II is a Western cultural
phenomenon, "an egalitarian, democratic, process-oriented way of dealing
with problems," says Fisher, and may not function as well dealing with
an authoritarian dictatorship, such as North Korea, where the slightest
drift from the party line may be regarded as treason.
Indeed, while Chinese and North Korean representatives at Track II sessions
are members of what are euphemistically called GO NGOs (government-operated
non-governmental organizations), their American counterparts report a
growing willingness by those Asian delegations to adapt to the candid
nature of Track II workshops.
Track II talks frequently include current government officials from either
or both sides to a conflict, who represent that they are acting in their
capacity as private citizens, not as officials, permitting unusual freedom
to float trial balloons or hear informal proposals. In these instances,
the exercise is characterized as "Track 1" although it is still understood
to come under an expanded notion of Track II.
In many Track II or Track 1 exercises there is the essential understanding
that the attendees will return home to brief authorities, providing an
informal, back-channel method for communications, while providing everyone
involved with an elegant protective layer of "plausible deniability."
Hoping to jumpstart stalled nuclear non-proliferation talks with North
Korea, the National Committee on American Foreign Policy (NCAFP), operating
with a Carnegie Corporation of New York grant, convened two days of Track
II talks in New York City in the summer of 2005, which included officials
of the United States and North Korean representatives, all serving in
"non-official roles." (See sidebar.) These discussions mirrored the stalled
multilateral talks with the six nations involved in the negotiations--the
United States, China, Japan, North Korea, South Korea and Russia--each
sending top officials.
Instrumental to this Track II effort were several important former officials,
among them Henry Kissinger; former Under Secretary of State Arnold Kanter;
former U.S. Ambassador to China J. Stapleton Roy; and Robert Scalapino,
widely regarded as a premier Korea scholar. "These people all have gravitas
and since they are not working for the government, they can stand back
and give more candid assessments of what was going on," says Stephen Del
Rosso, Chair of the Corporation's International Peace and Security Program,
who attended the sessions. "Several of the policymakers, including those
from Asian countries, noted how useful it was to have these experts there
to set the framework for discussions and allow issues to be probed and
questions to be raised that policymakers could run with or respond to."
Next page: An important measure
for evaluating Track II, then, is the level of achievement any session
has in developing new ideas that are successfully transferred or transmitted
back to policymakers for consideration at future Track I sessions.
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