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The Devil You Know Versus the Devil You Don’t

Dan Drezner, who has been teasing us with his Kerry-like indecisiveness as to whom to vote for in this election, is leaning ever so slightly toward Kerry.

A few days ago, he asked:

Which is better: a foreign policy with a clearly articulated grand strategy but a f#$%ed-up policy process, or a foreign policy with no articulated grand strategy but a superior policy process?

After getting input from Phil Carter, Kevin Drum, Fareed Zakaria, and Matt Yglesias (links and extensive excerpts in Dan’s post), he’s leaning toward the latter.

Honestly, this choice, even if we take its premises for granted, seems obvious to me. I’d rather drive a crappy car that breaks down now and again in bad neighborhoods, but at least know where I’m trying to go than drive a slightly less crappy car that turns around every few minutes because because it’s nuancenator kicks in. Neither option is all that great, to be sure. But there is at least some slight chance of reaching your destination in the first instance. Indeed, in the second instance, even if you somehow got to where you were supposed to be going, how the hell would you know?

About the Author: James Joyner is the publisher of Outside the Beltway and the managing editor of the Atlantic Council. He's a former Army officer, Desert Storm vet, and college professor with a PhD in political science from The University of Alabama. He lives just outside the Beltway in Alexandria, Virginia with his wife and infant daughter.

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Comments
 

It's a fake choice. Kerry is a talker, not a doer -- a George McClellan of our time. The option of well-executed strategy will never come to pass; we'll just cool our heels in the hallways of the UN.

Posted by Alan | August 18, 2004 | 06:44 pm | Permalink
 

Kerry has a superior policy process? And what exactly would that be, aside from kissing France's, uh, ring.

Posted by charles austin | August 18, 2004 | 07:07 pm | Permalink
 

Indeed. I am by no means convinced that he offers a superior policy process. A less proactive one, yes, and therefore lower risk--but I am not sure that qualifies as "superior."

Posted by Steven Taylor | August 18, 2004 | 08:55 pm | Permalink
 

You guys are so right. I'd rather sacrifice American money and lives for a guy that used 9/11 as an excuse to invade a country that didn't attack us. Clarity: let's get Iraq. Frenchy-lover Kerry probably would have just gone after bin Laden instead.

Attacking caves instead of cities? He wouldn't know a good target if it bit him in the ass.

Posted by Patriot | August 19, 2004 | 12:10 am | Permalink
 

Grand strategy with poor process? You just described Churchill in WWII.

No strategy and great process? That's the Wermacht.

Ummmm. Guess who won?

Posted by craig henry | August 19, 2004 | 04:35 am | Permalink
 

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