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Steel Tariffs
and Crafty Diplomacy: Lessons To Be Learned
Suzanne Nossel
Last week’s showdown between the
U.S.
and Europe
over the Bush Administration’s steel tariffs points to a
new dynamic in multilateral relations. When Europe
vowed to retaliate against Bush’s levies by targeting
industries in battleground states for the 2004
Presidential election, it hit the Administration where
it hurt. The move was gutsy, and it worked, prompting
Bush to rescind the tariffs despite howls from the steel
industry.
Europe’s move—crafty, well-planned and boldly
executed—exemplifies the type of clever maneuvering that
can allow a country or group to advance its interests in
the unpredictable, often uncontrollable arena of
multilateral affairs. Though the Bush Administration
may deny having been checkmated, it should take careful
note of what Europe pulled off and adopt similar tactics
to advance America’s interests next time.
When President Bush announced in March, 2002 that he
intended to slap a tariff on steel, the move was seen as
an election-year ploy, designed to shore up Republican
support in the Rust Belt at the expense of European
steel-makers. But
Europe
did not sit back. By the time the WTO rendered a final
judgment in their favor, more than eighteen months
later, trade officials were ready. Through research and
methodical planning over more than a year, they had
built a package of retaliatory measures targeted at
Florida citrus, Carolina textiles and other industries
in key swing states. The mere threat of such measures
elicited a turnabout from the White House, which moved
last Friday to withdraw the tariffs.
Though European Trade Minister Pascal Lamy’s gloating
over the triumph was unseemly, it was also
understandable. After a long year of failing to rein in
the U.S. through international forums and treaties,
Europe
succeeded. Moreover, watching steel duties, the
Middle East peace
process, and the Iraqi election timetable hinge on the
U.S. political calendar, Europe
had managed to turn the unavoidable influence of
American politics on global affairs to its advantage.
Now that Europe
has an apparent winning strategy, it won’t let go
anytime soon. This weekend, it announced plans to
target the very same swing states in a new initiative
aimed at ending what it views as another form of unfair
trade, American corporations that are technically
headquartered in the
Bahamas, Cayman
Islands and other tax havens.
Rather than ignoring or denouncing Europe’s strategy,
the U.S. should recognize the move as marking the
maturation of multilateral trade relations and consider
carefully its implications for
America’s
own diplomacy. The U.S. rarely plans its multilateral
moves a year, or even months, in advance. We are
ambivalent about multilateral bodies and convinced that
the unwritten rules of power relations ought to win us
the day, whether or not other countries agree. We
therefore, very often, go into multilateral debates
without any strategy or plan.
The ongoing Iraq debate offers many examples. By the
time we sought an initial UN resolution to reinstate
inspectors in September 2002, it was obvious to many
that we had begun the process too late to allow the
cat-and-mouse game of inspections enough time to play
out before the warm spring weather made it too late to
invade. Had we started earlier, the Administration
might have achieved consensus for military action. This
fall’s quest for Security Council support for the
postwar operation led to an empty victory: a consensus
resolution that yielded precious little by way of
foreign troop or financial commitments. Better planning
and more careful diplomacy might have ensured that, in
return for ceding some power to the UN, we actually got
the help we needed.
The collapse of the recent rounds of trade negotiations
in Cancun
and Miami, followed the same pattern of poor preparation
and unsatisfactory results. The American failure to
plan or lead culminated in a paralysis that hurts, above
all, us. We lost out both in terms of free trade, and
because, as the world’s foremost economic as well as
military superpower, we are blamed for global
initiatives that go awry.
Three steps are needed to shift America’s strategy from
come-what-may, often blustering ill-preparedness for
multilateral negotiations to one calculated to advance
America’s interests. First, we need to recognize, once
and for all, that we are in forums like the WTO and the
UN to stay. As maddening as they may be, we are not
about to walk away. Step two, a corollary, is advance
planning; thinking through priorities ahead of time and
carefully analyzing whose support we will need on key
issues and how to get it.
The third step is marshalling our diplomatic
infrastructure for effective retail diplomacy. If we
had spent the last few years quietly building our case
against Saddam in capitals around the world, the call
for invasion would not have seemed sudden or hasty. As
the steel tariff case illustrates, the rest of the world
may sometimes be able to get its way simply by
out-flanking the U.S. We, most often, need to influence
multiple, even dozens of countries to win the day.
Fortunately, our network of ambassadors, and economic
relationships worldwide positions us better than any
other country to orchestrate mass support by figuring
out what matters to each key player in the debate, and
how the U.S. can influence it. We have the resources
but rarely mobilize them fully on multilateral issues.
The Administration justified its about-face on the steel
tariffs by claiming the measure had simply run its
course. While its fine to save face by denying that
America was out-maneuvered, the next time we face high
stakes in the multilateral arena, the U.S. had best have
planned some better maneuvers of its own.
Suzanne
Nossel was Deputy to the Ambassador for UN Management
and Reform at the
U.S.
Mission to the United Nations. Her article, "Retail
Diplomacy: The Edifying Story of UN Dues Reform",
appeared in the Winter 2001/02 issue of The National
Interest. (An excerpt can be read at
http://www.nationalinterest.org/issues/66/Nossel.html)
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