http://www.brookings.edu/blogs/order-from-chaos/posts/2016/05/04-us-allies-bad-behavior-shapiro-sokolsky?rssid=u+s+military+affairs


How America enables its allies' bad behavior

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[image: Description: Saudi Arabia's King Salman (R) speaks with U.S.
President Barack Obama during the summit of the Gulf Cooperation Council
(GCC) in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, April 21, 2016. REUTERS/Faisal Al Nasser]

*Editors’ Note: U.S. allies behave the way they do because we let them,
write Jeremy Shapiro and Richard Sokolsky. Washington has become so focused
on maintaining its relationships with its allies that it's forgotten what
the relationships were for in the first place: securing U.S. interests.
This post originally appeared on Vox
<http://www.vox.com/2016/4/27/11497942/america-bad-allies>.*

It is satisfying and certainly trendy to complain about America's allies.
President Barack Obama unloaded on them recently in an interview with the
Atlantic's Jeffrey Goldberg
<http://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2016/04/the-obama-doctrine/471525/>,
calling them "free riders" who rely on the Unites States for security but
refuse to pay back. The commentariat has piled on, with a special focus on
deteriorating relations with such perennial malcontents as Saudi Arabia
<https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/monkey-cage/wp/2016/04/20/whats-really-wrong-with-the-u-s-saudi-relationship/>,
Egypt
<http://www.politico.com/magazine/story/2016/03/us-foreign-policy-middle-east-213723>,
and Turkey <http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/explainers-35882201>.

The truth is that our allies behave the way they do because we let them. We
provide billions of dollars in military and other aid to countries in order
to protect and advance U.S. interests, yet we fail to use this leverage to
induce the recipients of this aid to behave in a way that actually advances
U.S. interests.

That's because the United States has become so focused on maintaining its
relationships with its allies above all else that it's forgotten what the
relationships were for in the first place: securing U.S. interests.

In part, this is a holdover from the days of the Cold War, when what
mattered was who was on "our side" and who was on the "their side" in the
great ideological struggle with the Soviet Union. In other words, it was
the alliance relationship itself that mattered more than anything. What our
friends did on their own time in their own countries and regions didn't
really matter, as long as they stayed our friends.

But that's not the world we live in today. In today's complex world, where
most nations pursue cooperative and conflicting policies across different
issues, the United States should focus less on making our allies happy and
more on making them actually behave like allies.

[T]he United States should focus less on making our allies happy and more
on making them actually behave like allies.
Allies behaving badly

President Obama is hardly the first president to complain about U.S.
allies. Indeed, there is a long history of U.S. allies and client states
accepting billions of dollars in American military and economic largesse
only to pursue policies against US interests or carp about American
unreliability. In 1996, then-President Bill Clinton had his first meeting
with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. After the meeting, in which
the leader of one of America's most pampered allies had lectured Clinton at
length, Clinton reportedly fumed
<http://www.haaretz.com/opinion/perfect-english-or-not-netanyahu-shares-no-common-language-with-obama-1.269819>,
"Who the fuck does he think he is? Who's the fucking superpower here?"

Pakistan is perhaps the most egregious example of an ally behaving badly.
As Lawrence Wright has documented
<http://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2011/05/16/the-double-game>, despite
(and arguably because of) the billions of dollars the United States has
invested in its relationship with Pakistan since 1954, its government (or,
more precisely, its military) has diverted U.S. military assistance to
build nuclear weapons; harbored Islamic militant groups that kill American
soldiers in Afghanistan; sheltered the Taliban and al-Qaida sympathizers
(and probably Osama bin Laden); and gave succor to the AQ Khan network,
which became a WMD Walmart for countries like North Korea, Libya, and Iran
<http://www.nytimes.com/2004/02/12/world/a-tale-of-nuclear-proliferation-how-pakistani-built-his-network.html>
that were shopping around for equipment and expertise on how to build
nuclear weapons.

Egypt is another case: The United States has given Egypt billions of
dollars in military assistance since 1979, avowedly for the purposes of
maintaining Israeli-Egyptian peace, which Egypt manifestly has no interest
or intention in breaking. But beyond that, the theory is that by
maintaining links with the Egyptian military elite, the United States would
be in a position create in the Egyptian officer corps a pro-Western force
for democratization.

Alas, 35 years into that experiment, in July 2013, the Egyptian officer
corps overthrew the democratically elected Egyptian government and has
since brutally suppressed all opposition to their rule. A U.S.-trained
former Army general
<http://www.politico.com/magazine/story/2014/02/el-sisi-egypt-dictator-103628>
is now Egypt's dictator, but he shows little special inclination toward
democracy or Western interests.

Saudi Arabia is yet another example. The Saudi regime is totally dependent
on US military, logistics, training, and intelligence support. The Kingdom
has no strategic alternative to U.S. protection, and its leaders know it.
Yet Saudi frequently acts against US interests in the region: trying to
stop the Iran nuclear deal, funding Islamic extremist causes across the
region, and undermining U.S. efforts to negotiate an end to the war in
Syria.

So why do successive administrations continue to provide massive handouts
to America’s clients when we often get little—and sometimes worse—in return?

Domestic lobbies and the influence of powerful constituents like the U.S.
defense industry no doubt play a role in inhibiting the United States from
holding allies and clients to account for behavior that is inimical to U.S.
interests. This is especially the case with countries like Saudi Arabia and
Egypt that procure billions of dollars worth of sophisticated U.S. weapons.

But these defense industrial interests don’t explain why even American
allies like Turkey that don’t buy much weaponry get away with these
behaviors. And they don’t explain why even those U.S. agencies like the
State Department that have little to do with the defense industry
consistently advocate for allied interests.
Cold War legacy: either "with us" or "against us"

The better answer is that the Cold War created pathologies that have become
deeply embedded in America’s foreign policymaking machinery, and
particularly the priority it places on "alliance management."

During the Cold War, the United States conveniently divided the world into
those countries who were "with us" or "against us" in the global contest
for ideological, military, and geopolitical supremacy between the US and
the Soviet Union. The United States had a diplomatic playbook for dealing
with countries in both categories: reward and buy off your allies and
clients in return for their solidarity and support in the fight against
communism; contain, punish, isolate, and pressure your enemies for
supporting the Soviet Union.

When it came to relations with our allies, what really mattered was that
they stood with us in the broader conflict—everything else was easily
forgiven or not even noticed in the name of maintaining the alliance.
Overall, this philosophy helped maintain an effective anti-Soviet front,
even when U.S. allies committed all manner of sins. As was often said about
U.S. support for brutal dictators during the Cold War, "he may be a son of
a bitch, but he’s our son of a bitch."

Today, most countries in the world are neither enemies nor vassals of the
United States. The United States works with Saudi Arabia to maintain
stability in the oil market, for example, but winces at its role as "the
chief ideological sponsor of Islamist culture
<http://www.nytimes.com/2015/11/21/opinion/saudi-arabia-an-isis-that-has-made-it.html?_r=0>."
Egypt supports US efforts to broker a peace deal between Israel and
Palestine, but prosecutes U.S.-funded NGO workers
<http://www.theguardian.com/world/2013/jun/04/egypt-convicts-us-ngo-workers-sam-lahood>,
including the son of the U.S. secretary of transportation, for trying to
promote democracy in Egypt. Qatar hosts an American air base that is
critical in the fight against ISIS, but actively undermines U.S. policy in
Libya and Syria <http://foreignpolicy.com/2013/08/28/the-qatar-problem/>,
contributing to the chaos in those countries that allows ISIS to thrive.

These relationships are rife with both cooperation and conflict for the
simple reason that some U.S. and partner interests are compatible while
others clash. Without the Cold War to provide discipline and context for
allied deviations, such clashes come to define the relationship. Many of
America's most important foreign relationships fall into this category, but
Washington still behaves as if the alliance relationship itself is the most
important factor.
How this enables bad behavior by our allies

*Reverse Leverage:* Many U.S. allies are highly dependent on U.S.
support—military, economic, diplomatic, and intelligence—and they should be
bending over backward to maintain that support. Yet it is more often
Washington that performs the awkward gymnastics, bending over backward to
keep relations smooth and assistance flowing.

Qatar, for example, is a tiny country full of natural resources surrounded
by neighbors that loathe its government. It is fully dependent on the
United States for its protection. Yet U.S. officials are afraid to call out
Qatar for its actions in Syria and Libya lest the United States lose its
military base.

So, rather than leveraging Qatar's dependence on the US for its entire
survival to induce Qatar to stop acting against US interests in Syria and
Libya, the United States allows Qatar to leverage the United States need
for a military base in the region to induce the United States to shut up
and let it do whatever it wants.

[I]t is more often Washington that performs the awkward gymnastics, bending
over backward to keep relations smooth and assistance flowing.

*Moral Hazard:* In the diplomatic version of helicopter parenting, the
United States protects its client states from suffering the full
consequences of their behavior by bailing them out of trouble, incurring
the costs and adverse consequences rather than making their putative ally
bear the consequences of their actions.

The result is a classic case of "moral hazard
<https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=rnmuAwAAQBAJ&lpg=PT158&ots=WMRBn2oqfg&dq=posen%20restraint%20moral%20hazard&pg=PT4#v=snippet&q=reckless%20driving&f=false>."
For example, when Saudi Arabia intervened militarily in Yemen against US
advice, the U.S. response was nonetheless to support the intervention
<http://www.nytimes.com/2016/03/14/world/middleeast/yemen-saudi-us.html>,
specifically to ensure that Saudi Arabia would not feel the full
consequences of failure. Naturally, the lesson that the Saudis learned is
that the United States will back them back no matter what they do.

And in Yemen, this unconditional support has adversely affected important
U.S. interests: The increased violence and chaos caused by Saudi military
intervention has empowered al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula
<http://foreignpolicy.com/2015/04/09/will-al-qaeda-be-the-great-winner-of-yemens-collapse/>,
which is based in Yemen and still considered by the US to be a dangerous
threat to the US homeland. It has diverted Saudi assets from the campaign
against ISIS, and it has escalated the conflict between the Saudis and
Iran, which is having a destabilizing effect throughout the region.

*Endless Reassurance: *President Obama complained in the Atlantic interview
<http://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2016/04/the-obama-doctrine/471525/>
that Saudi Arabia's competition with Iran is helping "to feed proxy wars
and chaos" in the Middle East, yet he made a personal trip to Saudi Arabia
<http://www.nytimes.com/2016/04/22/world/middleeast/obama-saudi-arabia-summit.html>just
last week to reassure the Saudis of the US commitment to Saudi Arabia's
security.

But why should the United States care if Saudi Arabia feels like we're
abandoning it?

Rather than trying to reassure the Saudis, the United States should be
leveraging Saudi fears of abandonment—along with the billions of dollars in
arms
<http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2016/apr/22/us-saudi-arabia-weapons-arms-deals-foreign-policy>
the United States sells Saudi Arabia—to compel it to curb its actions in
the region that are feeding proxy wars and chaos.
It's not you, it's me

As one U.S. administration official noted
<http://www.theatlantic.com/international/archive/2016/03/obama-goldberg-world-leaders/473367/>,
"Our allies all give us headaches, except for Australia. You can always
count on Australia." That’s great about Australia, but the overall pattern
suggests it's time to start looking closer to home for the source of these
problems. If you have one bad ally, you can blame the ally; if you have all
bad allies (except Australia), maybe it's you.




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