Good cops, bad cops and international relations
My latest TNI online essay is now available for viewing on the interwebs. It looks at recent U.S. foreign policy actions through the ever-useful lens of the good cop/bad cop routine. Can a gambit that always worked on NYPD Blue work on the global stage? I have my doubts: On the whole, the good cop-bad ...
My latest TNI online essay is now available for viewing on the interwebs. It looks at recent U.S. foreign policy actions through the ever-useful lens of the good cop/bad cop routine. Can a gambit that always worked on NYPD Blue work on the global stage? I have my doubts:
My latest TNI online essay is now available for viewing on the interwebs. It looks at recent U.S. foreign policy actions through the ever-useful lens of the good cop/bad cop routine. Can a gambit that always worked on NYPD Blue work on the global stage? I have my doubts:
On the whole, the good cop-bad cop routine is of limited utility in world politics. Iran appears to be unbowed in the face of a hawkish Israeli government (though, to be fair, they have been preoccupied with other matters recently). A protectionist Congress has not made it any easier to complete the Doha round. Bill Clinton’s good cop was able to secure the release of the hostages, but at the price of a photo op that looked bad no matter how necessary it might have been. And while no one doubts that Biden occasionally goes rogue, it remains unclear just what policy benefits that strategy yields.
In theory, the best kind of bad cop is the one that seems genuinely unconstrained and ready to strike. An independent but allied government plays this part much better than a subordinate member of the executive branch. In other words, if you want to successfully execute the good cop-bad cop routine in world politics, the odds are long to begin with. To pull it off, however, under no circumstances should you let Joe Biden be Joe Biden.
[Would a threat to display more of Dennis Franz’s posterior work as a compellent threat?–ed. Hmmm… let me check the Biological Weapons Convention to see if it’s a legit move and I’ll get back to you.]
Daniel W. Drezner is a professor of international politics at the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy at Tufts University and co-host of the Space the Nation podcast. Twitter: @dandrezner
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