You can catch more flies with honey than vinegar
Trespassers will be shot
The beatings will continue until morale improves
People have been
happily using three basic strategies for exerting power unencumbered
by the terms “persuasion,” “deterrence,” or “compellence.”
But a more systematic examination of strategies may reveal some
wrinkles that are not obvious and may lead to some suggestions for
using strategies more effectively.
If you want to
exercise power over someone [that is, get them to do something they
would not do otherwise] you can promise them rewards if they do what
you want (persuasion), threaten to punish them to stop them from
doing something you don’t want (deterrence), or threaten to punish
them until they do what you want (compellence.)
It can help
understand human behavior if we greatly simplify motives and see
people as if they calculated the costs and benefits of different
courses of action. Faced with a choice between doing A or B, we act
as if we did some mental arithmetic and subtracted the costs of doing
A from its benefits and compared that to the benefits and costs of B.
The simplest
persuasion situation is when you want someone to do A but if they are
left to their own devices, they’ll most likely do B because its
benefits minus its costs are better than A’s. We can try to
persuade some to do A by promising to increase the benefits of doing
it so that it becomes a better deal than B.
In the simplest
deterrence situation, we do not want someone to do B,
and may not care much about what they do instead. If we think they
might be tempted to do B, we can threaten them with some painful
consequence if they do it.
Compellence mixes
the two other strategies in an interesting way. We want someone to
do A; we think they’ll do B if we leave them alone so we threaten
or even punish them until they do A. Instead of promising the
increase the benefits of A, we threaten to increase the costs of
doing B … the unpleasantness will stop when they do what we want.
Problems and
Issues
There are five major
problem areas that affect each of these strategies:
- Identification
- Calibration
- Credibility
- Affect
- The Future
Identification:
Figuring out what someone will regard as a reward or punishment is
not always obvious. The better you know someone, the easier it is to
figure out which buttons to push. But when we’re trying to
influence people we don’t know very well it is more difficult and
when we’re thinking about people from another country or culture,
it is even more complicated.
For example, note President Trump’s repeated promises that North Korea
could become fantastically rich with western capital investment, and
a real tourist mecca with its outstanding beaches. Does that really
sound so wonderful to the leadership of a country proudly based on
Juche, a philosophy of self reliance leading to strength and
authentic socialism, rooted the ideals of sustainability through
agricultural independence and a lack of dependency? Somehow Trump
International Hotel, Pyongyang or Trump International Golf Resort at
Hungnam don’t seem like great inducements to the regime.
Calibration.
How much is enough? Can you offer enough to persuade or threaten
enough to compel someone to do what you want, can you threaten
enough to deter them from doing what you don’t want?
Credibility:
Are your promises or threats believable? What matters is not how
sincere you are when you promise or threaten but what the other party
believes.As a wise philosopher once said, "A lie is as good as he truth if you can get someone to believe it."
Affect. It
is almost impossible to separate emotional considerations from cold
strategic calculations. It just feels wrong to threaten or punish
your friends. Even stronger is the aversion to rewarding your foes,
It’s nice to be nice to the nice and nice to be not nice to the not
nice. It is far more difficult to be not nice to the nice or nice to
the not nice.
The Future.
International
politics
is not a one-night stand. The
country you are dealing
with today is the
same country
you will be dealing with in the future. It’s the difference
between
telling the moron who just cut you off in traffic
(whom you will never see again) where to go and what to do when he
gets there, and reacting to something your significant other does.
Offering promises
and
rewards to persuade is likely to reinforce a positive relationship
and make it easier
to persuade in the future.
Deterrence,
which presupposes
the other party could intend to cause you harm, is
almost always used directly in an already conflicted or hostile
situation. It will certainly not improve the relationship, but it
probably will not make the relationship any worse.
Using
compellence,
especially on a country with whom you have
a good relationship
and with whom you may need to cooperate in the future, is likely to
provoke feelings
of resentment and make
future cooperation more difficult.
Some
Bottom Lines.
The
basic goal is to get someone to do something
they wouldn't
do otherwise.
That
means changing their assessment
of the benefits
and
costs of complying with you.
1.
Given the problems of
identification and
calibration, it is prudent to be prepared to use both promises and
threats,
trying to affect both the expected
benefits and expected costs of going along with you
or saying “no.” That
is true even though
it may not
feel right.
2.
Persuasion will usually have a positive
effect on a relationship,
deterrence will usually have little effect, compellence
will usually have
a negative effect on a friendly
relationship and make future
cooperation more difficult.
3. Beginning with
promises to try to persuade someone to go along
with you and then making an implicit or explicit threat is not the
same as starting with threats to compel compliance and then
adding some praises if that doesn’t work.
The Trump
administration seems to rely on compellence far more often than
persuasion. A brief analysis of four examples may help clarify the
limitations of compellence.
NATO. A long term
American goal has been to get the European members of NATO to spend
2% of their GDP on defense (the latest figure for the United States
is 3.2%.) Persuasion has not worked in the past. President after
President has urged our Eur open allies to spend more, they have
promised to ramp up their defense budgets … and very little
happened. (That’s not too surprising, since it is the various
parliaments that must pass a budget and the majority of their
constituents, across the continent, are not in favor of higher
military spending.) Trump took a different approach, trying to compel
budget increases by threatening to abandon NATO. Again, lots of
promises to raise budgets, and a small increase here and there. But
the United States has spent a great deal of time and energy trying to
restore the damaged relationship as officials from the Secretaries of
State and Defense, members of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and
prominent Republican and Democratic Senators have tried to reassure
Europe that the U.S. is as committed to NATO as ever.
NORTH KOREA. The
Trump administration adopted a policy of maximum pressure, pushing
harsher and harsher sanctions on North Korea and working hard to
convince other states, including China, to enforce them. Trump
himself added fiery rhetoric and Kim Jung Un responded in kind
(experts disagree on whether “Little Rocket Man” or “dotard”
is the best epithet.) Amid rumors of U.S. plans for a preemptive
military attack, North Korea agreed to a summit meeting in Singapore
at which Kim agreed to disable a nuclear site he no longer needed for
producing weapons grade material, Trump agreed to hold off on new
sanctions and they both agreed to “denuclearize” the Korean
Peninsula without even trying to define what “denuclearize” might
mean. The second summit in Saigon was a complete failure, either
because the Koreans were completely unreasonable, or because Trump
was unprepared for a negotiation where the other side started with a
maximum position. The recent exchange of “beautiful” letters
between Trump and Kim and Trump’s few steps into North Korea hardly
represent a rousing success for U.S. strategy.
MEXICO. The Trump
administration tried to compel Mexico to stem the flow of asylum
seekers from Central America by threatening unilateral tariffs that
would cripple the Mexican economic. (The fact that the threat was
almost as scary for American businesses and Republican politicians is
somewhat beside the point here.) Mexico did agree to do some things,
but what Mexico has actually done that they were not already planning
to do is not clear. What is clear is that getting the Mexican
Congress to ratify the trade deal that is supposed to replace NAFTA
will be more difficult.
IRAN. Another cases
of maximum pressure on an adversary. The assumption was that pulling
out of the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (“Iran deal” is a
much more user-friendly term) and crippling Iran’s economy by
zeroing out oil exports would being the Islamic Republic back to the
bargaining table to make major concessions. The Iranian strategy of
putting increasing pressure on the remaining parties to the agreement
to circumvent U.S. sanctions. was not part of the plan. Now the
United States is stuck, with few punishments to inflict short of a
potentially disastrous military adventure and no rewards to promise.
About all the hard liners in Washington can do is cross their fingers
and hope the Iranian economy collapses completely and by some miracle
the people revolt against the regime. And that the new regime is not
even more hard line and radical than the old one.
Conclusion.
There is no “best” strategy. What is most likely to work depends
on your goals, the other party’s goals, and what you can promise or
threaten. Compellence differs from persuasion and deterrence because
it can undermine long term relationship goals if used on friends or
allies. That is the real art of the deal.
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