Can the Quincy Institute Survive Putin’s War?
In July, Joe Cirincione, a progressive foreign policy expert
and the former president of the prominent anti–nuclear proliferation group the Ploughshares
Fund, resigned from his position as distinguished
nonresident fellow at the Quincy Institute for Responsible Statecraft, in
protest of what he called “the institute’s position on the Ukraine War.” While
this incident on its own may not be particularly newsworthy, it could signal a
more important dynamic that has been developing in elite
foreign policy circles in the six months since Russia launched its invasion of
Ukraine.
Over the last few years, largely in response to failed wars
in Iraq and Afghanistan, there has been a bipartisan effort in those precincts to
fundamentally rethink U.S. foreign policy and to push it in a less militaristic
direction. The movement, which has been broadly labeled as a push for “restraint,” is perhaps most interesting
because it created strange bedfellows out of a political coalition that spans a
number of political ideologies: anti-war progressives, libertarians,
Buchananite paleoconservatives, and realists, among others. Dating back to at
least 2016, when Donald Trump and Bernie Sanders both offered rhetorical
critiques of the prevailing conventional wisdom on foreign policy, the
restraint coalition has made inroads in Washington—both in terms of the
prevalence of its voices within mainstream media, think tanks, and academia,
and with respect to some significant policy victories, most notably the
military withdrawal from Afghanistan in April 2021.
But the war in Ukraine presents the biggest stress test to
this coalition to date and challenges whether that alliance of convenience has
staying power. In a nutshell, the Ukraine debate concerns to what extent the
United States was responsible for creating conditions that made Russia’s
invasion possible and how much of a role the U.S. should play in
supporting the Ukrainian cause. And the tension shows that while it was
relatively easy for these figures to unite in opposition to U.S. aggression,
things get trickier when the aggressor is someone else. “What seemed very clear
in something like the Iraq War, which is really where a lot of the political
energy was coming from, now seems quite complicated,” says Beverly Gage, a
professor of history at Yale, who pointed out some of these potential tensions in a 2019 New York Times Magazine article about the emerging left-right
coalition.
The Quincy Institute was founded with the explicit goal of
forging a transpartisan alliance to counteract what the group’s leaders saw as
a bipartisan effort from liberal internationalists and neoconservatives that
led to a reckless, militarist foreign policy in the aftermath of the Cold War.
Neoconservatives are the right-wing block of a foreign policy establishment
that has tended toward militarism and hawkishness, typified by the George W. Bush
administration and people like Bill Kristol, John Bolton, and Lindsey Graham.
“Liberal internationalist” is the corresponding term for liberal establishment
figures like Samantha Power and Hillary Clinton, who have often advocated for
humanitarian interventions in international conflicts. Neoconservatives and
liberal internationalists typically have a shared belief in American
exceptionalism and in the responsibility of the U.S. government to use its
military power ostensibly to promote democracy and protect human rights.
The Quincy Institute is funded primarily by conservative
megadonor Charles Koch and the liberal billionaire George Soros’s Open Society
Foundations. Shortly before the organization’s
launch in 2019, its executive vice president, Trita Parsi, told The
Nation that its members were interested not in “bipartisanship” as
traditionally conceived in Washington but in “transpartisanship,” which, he
explained, happens when “you have two sides, they disagree on a whole bunch of
issues, but they have overlapping views. Neither side compromises. They’re just
collaborating on issues they already are in agreement over.” For Parsi and the
rest of Quincy, the need for foreign policy restraint is one of these issues.
The coalition was formed primarily in response to wars in
the greater Middle East. Progressives and libertarians could agree that the
global “war on terror” was costly, mismanaged, and ultimately counterproductive
to U.S. goals. American-led democracy promotion projects consistently failed.
And the desire to project U.S. military primacy at all costs led to arms races,
militarism, and questionable commitments abroad. In many cases, liberal
internationalists could agree with these conclusions as well. In 2019, two
scholars from the Brookings Institution, one of the most established think
tanks in the country, wrote an article in Foreign
Affairs arguing “The Case for Doing Less” in the Middle East. In it, they
asserted that “it is time for Washington to put an end to wishful thinking
about its ability to establish order on its own terms.” The following year, Joe
Biden’s future national security adviser Jake Sullivan co-wrote an essay in the
same magazine outlining what America’s approach to the Middle East should be: “less ambitious in terms
of the military ends the United States seeks and in its efforts to remake
nations from within.” Restraint, as far as the Middle East is concerned, is a
broadly popular policy position.
But as the discussion moves beyond the Middle East and the “war on terror,” some disagreement was bound to arise within the movement. While
the withdrawal from Afghanistan was a big win for the coalition, it did not go
exactly as planned, to put it mildly. Members of the coalition have continued to defend Biden’s decision to end
the war, but the botched withdrawal did give ammunition to those who already
viewed the project with suspicion.
In addition, there is disagreement within the coalition of
how to deal with the threat of China. As domestic politics grow more and more polarized, it becomes that much more difficult to solve any problem in a
bipartisan manner. And while, for the most part, Parsi believes strongly in the
potential of the coalition, he does acknowledge that the transpartisan nature
of his organization is difficult to maintain.
In order to rethink American foreign policy, “you need to
have support in both parties,” Parsi told me. “In the long run it is the best
shot, if not the only shot, to shift America’s grand strategy. But in the short
run, absolutely, everything from January 6 to the opportunity that GOP sees in
opposing Biden, to the degree to which progressives who otherwise are always
out there pushing a democratic solution have been uncomfortable to do so [with
respect to Ukraine] because they don’t want to come across as being at odds
with the administration—all of these things have made the transpartisanship
more difficult than it was before.”
Tensions are most stark around Ukraine. At the start of the
war, there appeared to be widespread agreement among restrainers on two broad
points: first, that U.S. and NATO policy since the end of the Cold War has been
mismanaged and increased the chances of war; second, that Putin’s
invasion was wholly unjustified and that at least a certain level of material
support from the U.S. was necessary.
Now, however, there appear to be two primary debates taking
place. One concerns whether questioning America’s and NATO’s role in
provoking Russia’s invasion is a worthwhile exercise, considering the
humanitarian disaster for which Russia alone is currently responsible in
Ukraine. Multiple people with whom I spoke said that they believed that some
weren’t willing to push back against U.S. policies because calling U.S. policy
toward Russia incendiary is conflated with exonerating Putin. And facing such a
charge can be difficult to deal with. Many voices, like the realist academic John Mearsheimer and journalist Robert Wright, have argued that it is imperative
to understand the long-term causes of the war, even if they are uncomfortable.
And it is equally important to question not only America’s role in
this particular conflict but the mindset that has led the U.S. into
so many military entanglements in recent decades.
The second concerns to what extent the U.S. should
continue to support Ukraine with aid and arms, and for how long. “Restrainers
are supportive of the idea, by and large, that there should be support for
Ukraine. This a country that has been invaded,” says Parsi. “But there needs to
be pressure on other countries to provide support as well. The United States
should not foot the majority of the bill every time something like this
happens.”
Cirincione, a prominent liberal foreign policy voice who has
written several books on nuclear strategy, says that he left the group because
he felt it wasn’t as squarely focused on Putin’s aggression as it should be. “I
believe [the Quincy Institute is] making a mistake looking at Putin’s invasion
of Ukraine as a continuation of America’s interventionist wars over the last 20-plus years,” he told me. “And I believe that’s their frame.”
These are arguments that have been made in progressive
foreign policy circles. The journalist Peter Beinart and Bernie Sanders’s foreign policy
adviser Matt Duss have made the case that opposition
to U.S. adventurism abroad and violations of sovereignty should naturally lead
to opposition to Russian adventurism abroad and violations of sovereignty. “We
should acknowledge absolutely that skepticism toward the kind of righteous
sloganeering we’ve seen around Russia’s war is entirely reasonable,” wrote Duss
in a June piece in The New Republic. “We
should not, however, let all of this absurdity blind us to the instances when
provision of military aid can advance a more just and humanitarian global
order. Assisting Ukraine’s defense against Russian invasion is such an
instance.”
This principled objection to use of force and violation of
international law is also what drives Ciricione’s position that the U.S. should continue to support the Ukrainian cause. “I come at this as a
progressive,” he told me. “And progressives do not abandon people who’ve been
invaded by dictators. We help them. We do not excuse in one nation what we
would condemn in our own.”
These arguments point to what has always been a tension
within the restraint movement and is threatening to bubble over. In general terms, progressives
tend to believe that the U.S. should have solidarity with victims of
state violence and center the protection of human rights and democracy. This is at odds with the naked
realism and privileging of a more narrowly conceived U.S. self-interest, which others in the coalition advocate. While those ideologies can often overlap or
align, a movement built around contrasting worldviews is bound to have a clear
ceiling.
Foreign policy observers who consider themselves part of the
restraint movement listed a number of other reasons why it may be difficult for
progressives to remain committed to principles of restraint in the case of
Russia. In particular, many progressives consider Russia a hostile regime that
was not only close to Donald Trump but was partially responsible for his
victory in the 2016 election. Furthermore, others on the left have embraced Joe
Biden’s rhetoric of world affairs being an existential battle between
autocracies and democracies—a contrast that frames the war in Ukraine as a
fight for democracy.
Framing the war in these terms “appears to turn the war in
Ukraine into an existential struggle, and one that can never really end so long
as Russia is not a democracy,” Stephen Wertheim told me. Wertheim is a founding member of the Quincy Institute who left it to join the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, where he is now senior fellow in the American
Statecraft Program. He authored a piece in The Atlantic in June that urged the Biden administration to emphasize
Russia’s illegal war of aggression and its violation of Ukrainian sovereignty
instead of the autocratic nature of Russia’s government in its response.
It’s clear that, particularly among elected
officials, it has been easier for Republicans to oppose material support for
Ukraine than it has been for Democrats, even those progressives who have
generally been outspoken against American militarism. Though it is hard to
separate ideological commitments from political calculations—“There are
Republicans who voted against weapons and aid for Ukraine perhaps not out of a
pure restraint position but because it was a Biden aid package ahead of a major
election,” says Kelley Vlahos, editorial director of Responsible Statecraft,
the online magazine of the Quincy Institute—no Democrat in the House or Senate
voted against the May bill that allocated about $40 billion in funding for
Ukraine, while 57 Republicans in the House and 11 in the Senate opposed the
bill.
To be sure, the left is far from united in how the U.S. should respond to the invasion. Domestically and especially
internationally, there has been widespread leftist criticism of the role that
the American empire and NATO have played in both instigating and fueling the
war, including from powerful left-wing voices like Noam Chomsky and Brazilian former President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva.
The restraint movement has so far avoided serious fracture.
But the more important question is whether the momentum that it created in
Washington before this war still exists. Before deciding to resign, Cirincione
says, “I argued internally that the position Quincy’s leadership was taking on
Ukraine was going to do irreparable harm to the restraint position. And I
believe that it has.”
A number of sources with whom I spoke—who associate with
both the left- and right-wing elements of the broader coalition—questioned
whether Cirincione was ever a natural ideological fit with the Quincy
Institute’s mission or instead shared a focus on arms control without
entirely buying into the larger strategy of restraint. But Cirincione maintains
that he agrees with much of the work that it has done and considers himself
an advocate for restraint. He says, however, that he worries that the
reputation the think tank has built up will suffer. “The restraint
coalition has defined itself so narrowly and has established these litmus tests
for who’s in, who’s out, that it’s ended up isolating itself from the broader
currents in national security thinking for those who favor more diplomacy and
less military.”
Parsi counters that he and others at Quincy “were not
pleased to see [Cirincione] leaving. He’s been very helpful to Quincy over the
years,” but he added, “I don’t think Joe resigning was much more of an
event than on Twitter.” If this was emblematic of a larger problem, Parsi said, “we would have seen additional resignations, we would have seen offices on the
Hill not want to work with us, we would have seen donors backing off. We’ve
seen none of that.” Quincy has surely had its fair share of critics, especially
during this war. But it’s unclear how many have become disillusioned with
Quincy as a result of its response to the war as opposed to a disagreement
with the strategy of restraint writ large.
The restraint movement has made significant gains since
getting its institutional footing in the nation’s capital. And in some ways,
the fact that divisions among members of the coalition are making headlines is a positive sign for the
movement’s influence. “I would not read too much into individual disagreements
on Ukraine as a sign of the restraint of coalition fracturing,” said Dan
Caldwell, vice president of foreign policy at Stand Together, the philanthropic
organization that is part of the Koch network.
Any healthy political coalition should not only expect, but
welcome, disagreement. And more importantly, on some of the crucial questions
surrounding the war, restrainers have already witnessed the success of their
movement. President Biden has been adamant that the U.S. will not be
directly involved militarily in the conflict. Early in the conflict, his
administration resisted calls from hawks to impose a no-fly zone over Ukraine.
“If you look at the specific actions that the United States has taken in
support of Ukraine, there is a good case that they correspond pretty well to
what the restraint movement advocates,” says Wertheim.
All sides of this coalition can agree that they oppose U.S.
aggression, but they’re divided on how the U.S. should respond to another
actor’s aggression and whether U.S. power can ever be used for good. The
foundation for a movement centered around a humbler foreign policy was easier
to uphold in the aftermath of the George W. Bush era. Events in the world supported
it, and people across the political spectrum could agree that American power
had regularly been used to the detriment of both American interests and global
stability. But as the world continues to shift from one of American unipolarity
to one where other countries, namely China, are competitors, simply an
opposition to military aggression may not be enough to maintain this coalition.
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