Posted by Kenneth Anderson:
Co-Conspirator Eric's Think Again Column ...
http://volokh.com/archives/archive_2009_09_20-2009_09_26.shtml#1253720299


   and a brief note on the UN General Assembly meeting, the G-20
   meetings, Eric's state-rational-interests view of international law,
   and the effect of the US security guarantee on UN collective security
   calculations. Random thoughts, pretty much. (You can read a much more
   sanguine view of international law and the General Assembly opening by
   my Opinio Juris co-blogger Peggy McGuinness, [1]here, and you probably
   should, for a more balanced take-away.)

   Over at Foreign Policy magazine's blog, Eric (as he noted yesterday)
   has a [2]brief, breezy column on differences, or not, between the Bush
   and Obama administrations on international law. Fun, quick read,
   whether one agrees or not; I tend to agree with the diagnosis
   (although [3]I am not a realist in the same way or extent as Eric; not
   a realist, but also not a liberal internationalist). Events of the
   moment - the opening of the UN General Assembly, the UN confabs on
   things like climate change, the G-20 meetings, etc. - provide many
   opportunities to consider Eric's assessment of how international law
   works, or doesn't.

   There are things on which I imagine the G-20 will finally manage to
   come to some reasonably wide agreement, and manage reasonably wide
   adherence - most important, capital adequacy standards for banks.
   That's different from saying that whatever the new standard is called
   (I bet it won't be 'Basle III') will turn out any better than Basle
   II, but I think this level of matters of shared standards will look
   much more like trading regimes than the track record of big political
   stuff, whether in climate change, security, or larger issues of the
   global economy.

   Which is to say, in the Anderson view, the closer an issue gets to
   looking like political governance, the more likely that it will
   receive grand diplomatic rhetoric and the less likely that it will
   actually happen. There is an independent question as to whether it
   will be agreed to at all, or whether insincere promising and defection
   and free riding will simply be left to work their slow corrosion. Time
   heals all things, as it were, including international commitments one
   didn't really intend, or intends with complete and utter sincerity
   now; so perhaps we need a new term, "serial sincerity" in relations
   among states.

   ([4]show)

   The security issue is more complicated, as [5]I explained recently in
   the CJIL multipolarity issue (where Chris and I both have pieces). The
   reason, I argue, is that while much effort goes into explaining
   collective security and trying to figure out ways around the
   inevitable promising, defection, and free riding problems, it seems to
   me rather to miss the point. The UN collective action system is
   inherently subject to all those problems. Given that, one has to
   wonder why the system hasn't broken down even at the pure rhetorical
   level and gone the way of the League. My suggestion is that the system
   has, in a very broad sense, an outside guarantor, in the form of the
   US's diffuse post-war security guarantee.

   It is a sliding scale guarantee, all the way from NATO countries to
   the general security of the high seas of which even North Korea, Iran,
   and other US enemies partake of, to some extent. The limits of what
   the US security hegemony can hope to achieve in the form of
   bottom-level order are evident in Afghanistan and in the contours of
   the current US debate over whether to give up on the 'War of
   Governance', as we might call its fullest neo-conservative ambition in
   Afghanistan - and instead just go with [6]'More Predators Over
   Pakistan', Candidate Obama's pure, specific, narrow war, not on
   terror, but on terrorists, and not just on terrorists, but on Al Qaeda
   terrorists, and not just on Al Qaeda terrorists, but really one
   particular Al Qaeda terrorist, Osama bin Laden and maybe Zawahiri;
   kill bin Laden, and it's safe to declare victory and go home, shut
   down the phone and internet and anything that might raise any issues
   beyond American borders and devote oneself entirely to American
   domestic policy issues. Foreign policy is best solved by a
   presidential speech or, failing that, a Predator strike from an
   American military long since retired over the horizon to an Air Force
   base and a modem in Nevada.

   The beauty of the invocation of multilateralism is that responsibility
   and obligations are diffused: America just wants to go along with the
   international consensus and behave like any other country, which means
   that it will say anything pretty much to be all multilateralish but
   doesn't expect to have to actually do anything which is, so far as I
   can tell, the point. The United States getting tired of 'leading' is a
   perennial theme of foreign policy, likewise of first term presidents
   of either party who somehow get rudely interrupted by foreign events,
   but that, in my estimation and on Eric's methodology, as I understand
   it, is what the invocation of US multilateralism and diplomatic
   "engagement" means at bottom. We're virtuous multilateralists now,
   just like you - so don't bug us, we got our own issues to deal with,
   don't call us, we'll call you. Want us to sign some conventions? Sure.
   Why not? You don't keep your promises, neither do we, so what else is
   new?

   Thinking about that US security guarantee and its closest allies and
   friends today, however, one must inevitably wonder if "NATO" instead
   really means, NATO countries that don't border Russia. One French
   senior intellectual friend (a very leftwing Gaullist whose operational
   view was "pour la EU" = "pour la France") once put it to me that all
   said and done, NATO exists to protect the German border. No matter
   what the US thinks or Western Europe says, in other words, that's
   where NATO stops. The best evidence is the European willingness to let
   NATO divide into the 'Russian natural gas dependent' and the 'Russian
   border states'. It used to be believed in Eastern Europe that even if
   Western Europe believed that Germany was still the true eastern border
   of NATO, the US did not, and that's what mattered; the Germans might
   encourage the Poles to accommodate the Russians and gently hint that
   they would not come to their aid, but the Americans would not. That
   comforting thought, at least to Eastern Europe, is now much more
   whispey than it was the day before the 70th anniversary of the Soviet
   invasion of Poland.

   True, the global US security guarantee doesn't extend everywhere.
   Congo, Darfur, and places don't have any option other than UN
   collective security, if it's even on offer. But up until now, in the
   post-war period, US security hegemony has offered an independent
   ground for minimal global security that has allowed UN collective
   security to avoid being put to tests that might terminate it even as a
   rhetorical frame.

   Multipolarity, US decline, all sorts of things, including
   self-fulfilling prophecies of decline, might undermine the broad US
   security guarantee. But political progressives and liberal
   internationalists should perhaps consider what the world looks like
   under multipolarity - meaning China and Russia holding far greater
   sway in the world's affairs - and a decline in the ability or
   willingness of the US to provide a loose security hegemony that
   parties trusted sufficiently that they did not feel an obligation to
   build their own. [7]The discussions of universal human rights and all
   that look a good deal more dicey if, instead of being able to guilt
   and shame the wicked Americans, one is trying to guilt and shame ...
   China?

   But there is an important analytic question here, quite apart from the
   politics. And I'm not completely sure it is taken up by Eric's book or
   other state-interests-rationalist analyses of these things. There are
   two somewhat distinct dimensions on which collective action in
   international law and institutions might fail. [8]"Costs" outweighing
   benefits can be disaggregated into two modestly distinct forms. One is
   simply the accumulation of costs, but costs in small increments; small
   in each case, but adding up to too much as against the benefits of
   compliance. Climate change agreements, if defection from the current
   round of agreements were to occur, would be most likely an example of
   an accumulation of small costs to economic growth that, taken
   altogether, created too much "drag" for the perceived long-run
   benefits.

   Security, however, is often different - at least if you are not in the
   position of being fully sheltered by the US security guarantee. Viz.,
   what causes defection is not the small accumulation of costs, but the
   fear of a catastrophic cost down the road. Possibly of low likelihood;
   but set against the catastrophe, sufficient to persuade one either not
   to sign on to some risky multilateral security deal in the first place
   (principally in order to signal intentions) or else to do so
   insincerely and quietly defect, usually by non-implementation, later
   on.

   In a general sense, sure - it's all costs to factor into the CBA. But
   in order to actually work out the costs, it seems to me you have apply
   two different analyses to how to sum them up. And, outside of the
   abstraction, they tend to correlate with particular international
   conditions, especially with regard to security concerns. I'm
   re-reading Eric's book, and I'll be on the lookout for how costs are
   treated with respect to small-cost accumulation versus low likelihood
   catastrophe. (Cross-posted in different form over at OJ.)

   ([9]hide)

References

   1. 
http://opiniojuris.org/2009/09/22/un-general-assembly-week-2009-what-to-watch/
   2. 
http://www.foreignpolicy.com/articles/2009/09/17/think_again_international_law?page=0,0&%24Version=0&%24Path=/&%24Domain=.foreignpolicy.com,%20%24Version%3D0
   3. http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=896843
   4. file://localhost/var/www/powerblogs/volokh/posts/1253720299.html
   5. http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=1421999
   6. http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=1415070
   7. http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=1265833
   8. http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=1329406
   9. file://localhost/var/www/powerblogs/volokh/posts/1253720299.html

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