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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
Recent Events
Foundation Roundup
The Back Page
Also in this issue:
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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#10: Spring 2005
#9: Fall 2004
#8: Spring 2004
#7: Fall 2003
#6: Spring 2003
#5: Fall 2002
#4: Spring 2002
#3: Fall 2001
#2: Spring 2001
#1: Summer 2000
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Track II Diplomacy: Can "Unofficial"
Talks Avert Disaster?
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Gauging the Cost of Success
"Our founder, Andrew Carnegie, was a Track II man himself," says Vartan
Gregorian, president of Carnegie Corporation of New York.
Indeed, Carnegie financed a 1910 European peace junket in which one of
his heroes, recently retired President Theodore Roosevelt, would meet
with his other hero, Kaiser Wilhelm II of Germany, for a conference advancing
Carnegie's concept for a "League of Nations." Carnegie's biographer, Joseph
Frazier Wall, writes: "This visit of Roosevelt to the Kaiser could bring
about the triumphant resolution of all he had worked for, written about,
and dreamt for the past five years: Carnegie's two heroes, at last meeting
face to face, reaching agreement, and by that forcing Britain into line.
'If any man can get the Emperor in accord for peace, you are that man,'
[Carnegie] wrote to Roosevelt. 'He will go far to act in unison with you,
of this I am sure. You are sympathetic souls.'"
Unfortunately, on May 6, 1910, just as the series of meetings was schedule
to get under way, news came from London of the death of King Edward VII.
Protocol demanded a suspension of plans which had taken more than 18 months
to formulate. Undaunted, little more than six months later, on his 75th
birthday, Carnegie launched the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace
with a $10 million gift, charging the organization's trustees to "hasten
the abolition of international war, the foulest blot upon our civilization."
Though today the Carnegie Endowment is one of the world's most important
organizations "dedicated to advancing cooperation between nations" (as
its mission states, in part), that may not have been the way it was viewed
in the early years of the 20th century. Says William Perry, "If you look
at the [original] goal of Andrew Carnegie's endowment it's certainly possible
to conclude that it was a failure because four or five years later, World
War I started. Hardly a successful conclusion to [Carnegie's] effort."
Clearly, gauging success in this arena is really difficult, especially
for funders like foundations, which continue to try to find indicators
of success. Says Ronald Fisher, "Funders look for short-term results and
that's just not realistic. Most of the successful interventions in this
field involve a continuing series of interactions or workshops over time--sometimes
ten years or more."
"We can't simply measure success by the direct impact on the United States
government," argues Leon Sigal, Director of the Northeast Asia Cooperative
Security Project at the Social Science Research Council. "We have to think
about the impact on other governments; we have to think of the impact
on informed publics, on the press and on legislature." Sigal notes that
foundations and funding agencies are, understandably, focused on results,
on being able to find clear, quantifiable successes. But, he says, as
in the case of North Korea "This is not simply about the North Korean
nuclear issue. This is about the American relationship with Asia, and
particularly, its presence in Northeast Asia and what the future of that
relationship is."
The question of greater coordination and of avoiding stepping on toes
is also an issue that foundations are concerned about, hoping to avoid
duplication of efforts. However, as Krepon points out, it is frequently
of value--particularly in tough cases--for the more resistant representatives
to a dialogue to hear confirmation of a position from several voices.
In the administration of George H.W. Bush, the United States showed little
willingness to engage with Mikhail Gorbachev. However, "The messages we
were hearing in Track II from our Soviet counterparts were very different,"
says Krepon. "They were basically telling us, work with us, help us beat
the old system." He adds, "We rarely know when the timing is right, except
after the fact, so we need to be ready, we need to be positioned when
the time is right. We are part of a process of reinforcement and repetition
of messages that can lead to success. But governments work slowly and
government workers tend to be risk averse; on the other hand, NGOs are
impatient and they have little to lose by pushing the envelope."
For foundations and other funders of Track II activities, "It's a high-risk
capital investment" says Sigal--certainly not a sure thing, perhaps not
even a very likely thing, but a very necessary move for those looking
towards long-term investments that go beyond immediate results.
Track II fills important gaps in social psychology, it promotes and provokes
ideas and widens the scope of discussion for current and potential future
leaders in ways that simply are not possible in formal settings, such
as bilateral negotiations.
It produces results in good times and hard times, most especially when
there is a very rare type of person at the table, those who Krepon characterizes
as "tightrope walkers" -- people like Gorbachev and Anwar Sadat who recognize
the need to invest their political capital in high-risk ventures.
And sometimes the return-on-investment won't be realized for a generation--or
more. But as a senior Congressional staffer noted, "In every Track II
dialogue there is the possibility that one participant might be a Gorbachev-in-the-making."
In that connection, several Track II practitioners have noted that many
of those engaged in hammering out the Oslo Peace Accords enjoyed a familiarity
with those on the other side of the table from years of working together
in Track II sessions. "Down the road you have to believe that we can change
both sides," says Sigal. "The United States and [North Korea], for example,
can change their relationship with one another. If they do, victory will
have a thousand fathers."
Resolving relationships, identifying success and defining terms in Track
II diplomacy is a long-standing source of frustration for Joseph Montville.
"Track II involves so many disciplines" that putting labels on it or evaluating
it "drives social scientists nuts," says Montville, who when he is asked
to identify his field, says, "I call myself a political psychologist."
That important social psychology factor was clearly on display at the
Corporation-sponsored Track II meetings with North Korea, according to
several of those in attendance, who noted how informal interaction permitted
each side to find a comfort level to address real or imagined slights,
resolving what Montville calls "the psychology of victimhood."
While that may sound like some kind of pop psychology, the value of Track
II skill sets are the subject of a $500 million, five-year U.S. Agency
for International Development grant program being launched this year.
According to an administration official, the grants would be "a worldwide
mechanism for any of our USAID offices and bureaus, as well as the State
Department and the U.S. Office of the Coordinator for Reconstruction and
Stabilization...providing a range of services, focusing on the themes
of conflict, instability, fragility and extremism in regional crises."
Grants and contracts would go to NGOs as well as to for-profit groups
"able to combine Track II skill sets with thematic expertise in other
areas, such as land management, governance practices, etc."
Montville hopes to take part in some of those projects. Meanwhile, he's
writing a history of Moslem Spain, exploring the commonality of the Sephardic
Jewish community and Islamic community in an effort to find closure between
the two. Similarly, he's pursuing a program intended to resolve lingering
hostilities from the U.S. Civil War, "transforming the polity of this
country" through Track II workshops and dialogues to resolve generations
of North-South resentments. Whether you're talking about individuals,
married couples, sects or nations, he says, "The same rules of human psychology
apply everywhere."
M.J. Zuckerman is a Washington,
DC-based veteran journalist, author, newspaper reporter and editor, who
has written extensively about the intersection of technology, security,
democracy and justice for more than 20 years.
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