{"id":13894,"date":"2014-05-19T14:45:18","date_gmt":"2014-05-19T04:45:18","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.aspistrategist.ru\/?p=13894"},"modified":"2014-05-21T17:54:51","modified_gmt":"2014-05-21T07:54:51","slug":"foreign-ministries-can-and-should-do-strategy","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.aspistrategist.ru\/foreign-ministries-can-and-should-do-strategy\/","title":{"rendered":"Foreign ministries can and should ‘do strategy’"},"content":{"rendered":"
<\/a>Peter Jennings\u2019 post \u2018Why doesn\u2019t DFAT do strategy<\/a>\u2019 has resulted in a series of posts that explore both the nature of strategy and the claim that DFAT doesn\u2019t do strategy. This claim, readers will recall, was prompted by Peter\u2019s reading of Bob Carr\u2019s Diary of a Foreign Minister, <\/i>in which the Senator observes that in his experience \u2018all foreign policy is a series of improvisations\u2019.<\/p>\n Of course, if that were literally true, it would be an indictment on DFAT. But I\u2019ve heard a similar lament from New Zealand foreign affairs officers that foreign policy is \u2018just a reaction to one damn thing after another\u2019. Or as John Foster Dulles once remarked, \u2018the great thing to remember in this business is that at any one time one third of the world is asleep. But the other two thirds are awake and making trouble\u2019.<\/p>\n Still, perhaps we shouldn\u2019t take everything we read or hear from our DFAT or MFAT colleagues at face value. Like Rob Ayson, I don\u2019t think the absence of a recent Australian White Paper on Foreign Affairs, or the musings of a former Australian Foreign Minister who sums up his time in office as \u2018just running from one international meeting to another, from one consular crisis to another\u2019, is necessarily evidence of a lack of strategic thought or capacity within DFAT. After all, it would hardly be possible for Australia to have gained a seat on the UN Security Council without having given its candidacy significant thought, and without the expenditure of some serious resources to secure the desired result.<\/p>\n I agree with Peter Jennings, though, that there\u2019s a predisposition in DFAT and MFAT to avoid what they see as the straitjacket of a strategic framework. And I agree with Peter that this disinclination to \u2018do strategy\u2019 is regrettable. Why? Because government departments that don\u2019t subject themselves to the discipline of prior strategic thought and analysis will indeed end up exhibiting the reactionary pathology that Bob Carr writes about. A policy of simply reacting to events is transactionalism writ large. It\u2019s akin to having a policy of no policy at all. It\u2019s hardly the route to achieving the kind of influence in the region and further afield that a country of Australia\u2019s strategic weight aspires to have: to be the shaper, not the shaped.<\/p>\n Is strategy best thought of as a \u2018state of mind rather than as a formal process\u2019 as my colleague Rob Ayson urges? Certainly not. If that\u2019s what Lawrence Freedman also believes\u2014Rob quotes him at length\u2014then I despair. A state of mind, no matter how elevated, won\u2019t produce the necessary requirements of good strategy: best defined, I believe, as honest problem diagnosis, a long-term view of objectives, an understanding of the critical factors at play, a coherent and coordinated response involving critical choices made, resources committed, purposeful action and relentless follow up.<\/p>\n Some readers may recognise that I\u2019m drawing from Richard Rumelt here. His book Good strategy, bad strategy<\/a> <\/i>is one of the more useful strategy texts I know. And while Rumelt depends heavily on military examples to illustrate his theme, his advice isn\u2019t limited to military audiences. Indeed, his primary audience is the US business community.<\/p>\n Incidentally, Brendan Taylor\u2019s reading of Hew Strachan\u2019s seminal paper The Lost Meaning of Strategy <\/i>takes exceptionalism too far. It\u2019s a mistake to argue that strategy should be confined merely to the relationship between military means and political ends\u2014and that, for that reason, DFAT shouldn\u2019t do strategy. I think that\u2019s an extraordinary view.<\/p>\n I know Clausewitz argued, in effect, that strategy is the bridge between political power and military instrumentality. But Clausewitz was considering the phenomenon of war in the Napoleonic era. Modern society can, and must, take a broader view.<\/p>\n In short, as Geoff Mulgan argues<\/a>, strategy is the business of attempting to find coherent, long term answers to the simple question that all of us must ask of ourselves and our organisations: where is it that we want to go and how will we get there?<\/p>\n Can foreign ministries do strategy? Yes, certainly. Ask the government in Kiev, as it surveys what\u2019s left of Ukraine, whether the Russian Foreign Ministry does strategy. Or ask the Vietnamese, or the Japanese, both facing a government that certainly does long-term strategy, as we can readily see in events currently unfolding in the South China Sea, in Africa, and elsewhere. Should the Australian and New Zealand Foreign Ministries do strategy? Yes, absolutely\u2014it\u2019s the only way to prevent the urgent crowding out the vital.<\/p>\n Can Defence organisations teach their diplomatic colleagues how to do strategy? Yes. But so can business, and arguably better so. The strategy literature coming out of our Schools of Business and Government these days is in many ways richer and more informative than that from our military colleges.<\/p>\n Let me finish by citing Rod Lyon. The Australian government as a whole, he says, struggles with strategy. The same is equally true for New Zealand. That suggests a role for both ASPI and the New Zealand Centre for Strategic Studies to take on the educational task of lifting the level of strategic performance of both governments across the board. So that, as Rod argues, Australia (and New Zealand) can \u2018define, pitch and fulfil (their) roles\u2019 in Asia consonant with the constraints of wealth, political systems, declaratory settings, and (Rob Ayson\u2019s final thought, picked up also by Peter Jennings) a \u2018sharp appreciation\u2019 of their national interests.<\/i><\/p>\n Lance Beath is adjunct senior lecturer in strategic studies in the School of Government, Victoria University of Wellington. Image courtesy of Wikimedia Commons<\/a>.<\/i><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":" Peter Jennings\u2019 post \u2018Why doesn\u2019t DFAT do strategy\u2019 has resulted in a series of posts that explore both the nature of strategy and the claim that DFAT doesn\u2019t do strategy. This claim, readers will recall, …<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":233,"featured_media":13904,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_mi_skip_tracking":false,"footnotes":""},"categories":[477],"tags":[17,89,813,73,21],"class_list":["post-13894","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-strategy","tag-australia","tag-dfat","tag-mfat","tag-new-zealand","tag-strategy-2"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"\n