Carnegie
Corporation
of New York
Spring 2005

 

 





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Benchmark Achievements

The Corporation’s extensive investment in Soviet/post-Soviet-related projects was successful in many ways at meeting specified programmatic objectives. A seminal set of achievements pertained to the direct-line effects that grant clusters had on U.S. and Russian policymaking. For example, former U.S. Secretary of Defense William Perry attributes much of his success in office at forging historically unprecedented U.S.-Russian “military-to-military” cooperation to the opportunity provided via Carnegie Corporation support (which he received earlier, as a Stanford University scholar) to devise the conceptual underpinnings of preventive measures. Similarly, the Corporation’s funding provided a decisive catalyst for mobilizing the intellectual critical mass needed to refine basic thinking, flesh out operational details, promote the significance and update assessment of the landmark Soviet Nuclear Threat Reduction Act in 1991 (or the eponymous “Nunn-Lugar” after its bipartisan patrons in the U.S. Senate) and related legislation. As recounted by former Senator Sam Nunn (who is also a former Corporation trustee), Ashton Carter, a Carnegie Corporation grantee, gave a compelling series of breakfast presentations on cooperative security before an august group of Congressmen who were instrumental to his and Senator Lugar’s efforts at securing “one of the fastest turnarounds in both the Senate and House” in support of their sponsored legislation. Senator Nunn also credits the Corporation with providing “unburdened and uncompromising” travel to Russia for frank conversations with Gorbachev about the seriousness of “new thinking” that were critical for easing the politics to establish joint risk reduction centers. Subsequent trips enabled Senator Nunn personally to gain a first-hand appreciation for the chaos experienced within the Russian defense complex. This, he claims, reinvigorated his subsequent campaign to convince skeptics in the Congress and executive branch to unlock initial funding for U.S. nuclear dismantlement and safety assistance to Russia.

The Corporation’s support also occasionally had a direct impact on Russian policymaking. The Hague Initiative, for instance, brought together senior Russian and Chechen political advisors for rare informal discussions on settling the ongoing war in Chechnya in 1996. The meeting produced a “ten-point” statement on resolving the conflict that was embedded in the main provisions of the first, though illfated, peace plan signed by both leaderships only several months later.

The Corporation’s Russia-related grants also indirectly influenced policymaking in both countries. Sponsored dialogues and linkages between Russian and American policymakers, officers, insiders and experts were instrumental at dismantling stereotypes that, according to Senator Nunn, “serve as the template for future efforts to clear the air with America’s European allies.” The Aspen Institute’s Congressional Program, led by former Senator Richard Clark, was especially effective at building a bipartisan cadre of nearly 120 Congressional leaders, first on arms control and then on a broader set of issues concerning Russia. This group transcended the dramatic legislative turnover and played integral roles in shaping U.S. policy debates on NATO expansion and aide packages to the former Soviet Union. Several U.S. Senators specifically acknowledged this experience as vital to their education on Russia, as well as to making personal contact with respected experts who they felt comfortable calling on for advice. The winning formula of this ongoing dialogue on Russia, notes Clark, is that it “serves as a unique forum for U.S. legislators to engage experts and distill their own policy implications, while allowing them and their spouses to fraternize free from the distractions of Washington and their home districts.”

On the Russian front, support to Duke University produced guidelines for election coverage that were used by the Russian government as a guide for the election laws in 1993. The Carnegie Moscow Center also played a crucial role, sustaining independent policy analysis amid shifting political winds in Russia. As observed by Arsenian, the Center provides a “safe home” for meaningful exchanges between Russian policy analysts, journalists and officials that has become a model not only for other NGOs but for budding Russian philanthropists interested in creating additional sources of independent analysis within the country.

In addition to the impact on policymaking, the Corporation’s support was integral to catalyzing knowledge-based communities composed of scholars and researchers from the hard and social sciences. This produced collaborative understandings of concepts such as “cooperative security” and “preventive defense,” as well as via the Russia Initiative, deeper appreciation for the interlocking travails of post-Soviet transformation. Furthermore, the Corporation’s support for joint study groups provided effective mechanisms for translating these collaborative problem-solving approaches into the policy realm. Hamburg recalls that Gorbachev was especially keen on using the findings generated by these groups to stretch his thinking about the long-term implications of Soviet reforms and the prospects for creating a “soft landing” for Russia’s future relations with its new neighbors and the U.S. The same expert findings also carried weight among American policymakers. On more than one occasion, President Ronald Reagan’s senior advisors on the Soviet Union turned to these groups for the substantive basis of their policy recommendations for responding to Gorbachev’s reforms. According to several sources, President Reagan personally enjoyed such presentations and valued independent scholar-scientist contact, sometimes incorporating group findings into his speeches, as well as using their audience to send conciliatory signals to the Soviet Union.

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