THE WORK OF DIPLOMACY
by George P. Shultz
June 11, 2002
This is  the text  of a  speech given by former Secretary of
State George  P. Shultz  on the  occasion of  the dedication
ceremony for  the The  George  P.  Shultz  National  Foreign
Affairs Training  Center, on  May 29,  2002,  in  Arlington,
Virginia.
                   THE WORK OF DIPLOMACY
                    by George P. Shultz
Mr. Secretary,  friends  of  the  Department  of  State  and
Foreign Service:   Todays  ceremony, which links my name to
this Institute  and to  the Foreign  Service,  is  an  honor
beyond anything  I ever  imagined.   I take it as a profound
compliment not  only from the wonderful colleagues with whom
I served  in the  State Department,  but also from that long
line of  strong and  creative men  and women who have served
our countrys diplomacy across the generations.  I am humbly
grateful for the tribute you offer me today.
I came into office as Secretary of State with a war going on
in the  Middle East  and a  bigger war  -- the  Cold War  --
keeping the  world in  turmoil and  keeping me  busy  to  an
extent I could hardly have imagined.
When I answered President Ronald Reagans call to service, I
also brought  to the  job a  way of  thinking developed from
years   of   experience   in   government,   business,   and
universities.  I knew I would be dealing with many crises on
a day-to-day  basis and  that for American foreign policy to
succeed over  time, I  would have  to pay attention to long-
term issues.   But  my experience  also taught  me  that  to
succeed in  these efforts, I would need the help and support
of the  people  who  were  devoting  their  careers  to  the
understanding and  conduct of  diplomacy.  So I would try to
strengthen the  institution, to  make the  best use  of  its
people,  to   pay  attention  to  their  careers  and  their
aspirations to  serve their  country.  I wanted to leave the
Department of  State and the Foreign Service in better shape
than I found them.
In the process, I learned a few things.  The Foreign Service
is the  custodian of  our countrys diplomatic experience in
the  world:   not  theories   or  abstractions   but  actual
experience.   Recognizing the  importance of  experience,  I
decided,  as   Secretary  of   State,  to  pull  together  a
collection  of   books  about   American  diplomacy.    That
collection is still up there in Colin Powells office.  (And
I know  from my  tenure in  that office that he doesnt have
time to  read those  books.)   The Foreign Service Institute
should be the center for such works that record our nations
diplomatic experience:   ideas  written down  that get  into
peoples heads and can make a practical difference.
The conduct  of diplomacy  requires a clear understanding of
what is  happening and the ability to make a clear record of
it and  report it  honestly and  in depth.   This  may  seem
obvious and  easy.   It  is  not:  it  requires  exceptional
intellectual  skills   and  qualities   of   character   and
discipline.   As  former  Senator  Daniel  Patrick  Moynihan
describes, "The  true diplomatist  [is] aware  of  how  much
subsequently depends  on what  clearly can be established to
have taken  place.   If it seems simple in the archives, try
it in the maelstrom."
Fast-moving media  coverage, impressive  though it may often
be, is  almost inevitably  focused on  the newsworthy.   The
United States  must conduct  diplomacy on  a  global  scale,
clearly dependent on careful reporting from posts around the
world and  interpretations by people on the ground who speak
the language  and understand  cultural  nuances.    And,  of
course, results  of discussions  need  to  be  written  down
immediately.   Memories are  all too  often faulty  or self-
serving.
So we need to encourage careful record-keeping and teach and
nurture that  skill in the foreign service.  This is no mere
technical matter;  in these  times  it  takes  courage,  and
issues of  national interest  may be  at stake.   Even in my
time, if  a cable  came in  from an ambassador with a highly
critical or  sensitive set of observations about the country
where the  ambassador was  stationed, the  existence of this
cable would  often become  the subject of rumor.  Relentless
demands for  that cable  would almost  inevitably follow.  I
fought those  pressures because  the release of such a cable
would mean,  of course,  that the ambassadors role would be
diminished, sometimes even ended.  Nonetheless, the pulling-
and-hauling has  an impact.  Candor in the cables inevitably
suffers.   Reliance on  telephone diplomacy  increases, with
all its  imprecision, vulnerability to misunderstanding, and
loss to the vital diplomatic record.
More  broadly   in  our  society,  whether  in  business  or
government,  there   is  now   a  widespread  and  conscious
reluctance to create records -- and a disposition to destroy
them if  made.  What I worry about is our ability to conduct
our affairs with precision and to portray history accurately
if such  records are  not at hand and the statesman tries to
rely on his or her own memory, which invariably is flawed in
significant ways.    A  living  history  requires  tools  of
remembrance.   Moreover, so much of what we do today depends
upon our understanding of the past.  Each generation creates
the record  of the  past for  succeeding generations.  If we
lose that  past, we  are also going to lose an important key
to the  future.   So, members  of the  Foreign Service, keep
records.
The ability  to comprehend other cultures must be central to
our diplomacy.  This is an area of comparative advantage for
the Foreign  Service.   Even  in  this  age  of  globalizing
influences, we  are finding  that traditional  cultures  not
only continue  to exist  but  in  many  places  are  gaining
greater influence.   Sometimes  they serve  a useful role as
ballast in  the rough  weather of  globalization.   At other
times, they  are used  -- sometimes  badly misused -- in the
interests of some cause or grievance.  I do not need to tell
you that  those who  speak the local language have a greater
sensitivity to  cultural variations,  a greater  ability  to
comprehend mood  and nuance,  and a  heightened capacity  to
convey those  realities back  to Washington.  So the Foreign
Service Institutes  world-class capacity  to teach language
skills must be nourished and used.
We also  know that  language study is not enough.  The field
of area  studies,  once  regarded  as  essential  but  later
disparaged, needs  to be  given new life.  When I was a dean
at the  University of Chicago, I developed a strong point of
view about  the value  of experience.   Yes, experience is a
great teacher.   Formal education should develop the ability
to learn  from that  experience.  We all have seen instances
where four  or five  people share an experience but only one
or two  of them  learn much  from it.   For the others, that
experience might  as  well  never  have  happened.    A  key
objective for  the Foreign  Service Institute  is to provide
our people  with the  language, analytical,  and area skills
they need  in order  to be  the ones best able to learn from
their experiences out there in the world.
Americas need  for  a  seasoned  Foreign  Service  and  the
intelligent  management   of  Foreign  Service  careers  are
inextricably bound  together.   Half of  the career  service
will retire  in  the  next  six  years.    State  and  other
departments --  with the  exception  of  the  Department  of
Defense --  have never  handled the  problem of intake well.
Secretary Powell  tells me that applications for the Foreign
Service --  including lots  of strong minority candidates --
are two  to three  times what  they were in recent years, so
heres a chance to get it right.  Good training is essential
-- at the beginning and throughout a productive career.  The
Foreign Service  Institute provides  a real  advantage, as a
place where  careers  can  be  developed,  enhanced  through
training, and  provided with  substantive depth.  Then there
is career  structure, particularly the length of the Foreign
Service career.   We  need  to  preserve  access  to  senior
positions, so that our finest people do not resign or retire
to start  their next  careers just when they are coming into
the peak years of performance at the top of the Service.
Careers in  the Foreign  Service have  their risks.  You can
get shot  at.   On opposite  walls of  the entry hall to the
Main State  Building are  two lists  of  names  of  officers
killed in the line of duty, covering the years 1780 to 2002.
We lost  209 officers.   In  the first   187  years  of  our
history, we lost 83 officers.   In the most recent 35 years,
we have  lost 126.   The losses per year now are almost nine
times as great as in earlier times.
All too  many of those casualties were the result of acts of
terror, a  reality that  today confronts  us in  more urgent
terms and  in greater magnitude than ever before.  I want to
say a  few words  about this  acute problem,  one on which I
worked hard  and endured  the frustrations  and agonies that
come with  death and destruction.  I remember so well flying
back from Pakistan on August 21, 1988, with the remains of a
talented and  beloved Foreign  Service  Officer,  Ambassador
Arnie Raphel.  That was a sad and moving day.
September 11  was a  riveting wake-up call for the people of
America.   Stunned and  horrified, we  saw in  a  flash  our
vulnerability.  As we reacted, we also saw our strengths and
we experienced  a renewal  of patriotism and national pride.
We deepened  our realization  of how closely intertwined our
fortunes are with developments elsewhere, sometimes far away
culturally as well as geographically.
That attack  was also  a transforming event here and in many
places throughout  the world  in attitudes toward terrorism.
For decades,  terrorism has been all too frequent, mostly in
the Middle East, but also in Europe and Asia, often aimed at
Americans.   We saw our share of it in the 1980s, when I was
in office.   The  pace picked up in the 1990s, by which time
the capabilities  and intentions  of Osama bin Laden and his
Al-Qaeda network  were well  known.   I said  in  1984,  "We
cannot allow  ourselves to  become the  Hamlet  of  nations,
worrying endlessly  over whether  and how  to respond."  But
for whatever  reasons, we did not respond effectively during
these past  two decades.   Face  it:   the lack of effective
response encourages terrorism, not the other way around.
But now,  opinion has  changed.   When, in  that  same  1984
speech, following  terrorist attacks  on our  embassy and on
the Marine  barracks in Beirut and the IRA effort to blow up
Margaret  Thatcher   in  Brighton,   I  called  for  "active
prevention, preemption,  and retaliation," and said we "must
be willing  to use  military  force,"  I  was  disowned  and
dismissed by  official Washington  and on  leading editorial
pages.   (After I  had a  chance  to  go  over  my  thinking
carefully with President Reagan, he said he agreed with me.)
By contrast,  we all  cheered -- I at the top of my voice --
when Secretary  of Defense  Don Rumsfeld  said  on  the  Jim
Lehrer NewsHour on February 4 of this year:
"If you  think about it, we have no choice.  A terrorist can
attack at any time at any place using a range of techniques.
It is physically impossible to defend at every time in every
location against  every conceivable  technique of terrorism.
Therefore, if your goal is to stop it, you cannot stop it by
defense.   You can  only stop it by taking the battle to the
terrorists, where they are and going after them."
"When its  something like smallpox or anthrax or a chemical
weapon or  the radiation  weapon  or  killing  thousands  of
people  at  the  World  Trade  [Center],  then  you  say  to
yourself, `Well,  if  we  cant  stop  terrorists  at  every
location of  every technique  at every  moment of the day or
night, what  must we  do -- just sit here and take the blows
like  the   World  Trade   [Center],  take  the  blows  that
biological weapons  would pose  to us?  The answer is `No.
You have  a responsibility to defend your country.  Everyone
in the  world knows  -- even  the UN Charter provides for --
the right  of self-defense.   And the only self-defense, the
only effective way to defend, is to take the battle to where
the terrorists  are.   They are planning, they are plotting,
they have  trained thousands of terrorists very well, and we
have no  choice but  to find those people and root them out,
as the president said, and stop them from doing what theyre
doing and stop countries from harboring them."
So preemption  with military force is now an operative idea,
with wide  support.   That is  essential.    But  continuing
threats are  all too  real,  so  we  must  not  flag  or  be
distracted in  our efforts  to end  the use of this terrible
and unacceptable weapon: terrorism.
President Bush has given us the concepts we need.  This is a
war, not  a matter  of law enforcement.  States that support
terror are  as guilty  as the  terrorists. They  are in  the
crosshairs, and  the principle  of state  accountability  is
being established.   Our goal is not primarily to punish and
retaliate but to prevent acts of terror through intelligence
that enables  us to  preempt and ultimately to eliminate the
source.   These are  big and far-reaching ideas that must be
kept front  and center:  this is  a war; states must be held
accountable. We  are calling  on states  to step up to their
internal responsibilities  to end  any  terrorist  presence,
while saying  also that  we reserve, within the framework of
our right  to self-defense,  the right  to preempt terrorist
threats within  a states  borders.   Not just  hot pursuit:
hot preemption.   The juxtaposition of these ideas calls for
sophisticated diplomacy, clear intelligence, and the will to
act with the courage of our convictions.
This war  is of  worldwide dimensions  and must be fought on
many fronts.  I will identify six of them.
First, we  have the  front of  the hinterlands, those places
around the  world where states have failed or where no state
authority  reaches.     In  these  places,  terrorists  find
sanctuary where  they can  train and  plan and can emerge to
strike again.   Afghanistan was the main such area, but its
not the only place.  You can name them as well as I, and you
need more  than the  fingers on  your two  hands.   We  have
conducted a  brilliant campaign  on the  Afghanistan  front.
Afghanistan cannot  now serve  as  a  terrorist  refuge  and
staging area.   But an enormous task remains to be completed
there.   The fires  still burn.  A state must  be built from
the ground  up and  attain the  legitimacy and  authority to
prevent the country from sliding back into terrorist hands.
Another front  is in  Europe and,  to a  degree, in  our own
country.  In the liberal, open, welcoming democracies of the
West, terrorists  have been  able to  establish  themselves,
move about  easily, communicate and develop their plans with
little   interference from  the authorities, particularly in
many European  countries.  The terrorists know that they can
enjoy and employ the freedoms offered by the democratic West
to plan  the destruction  of our  liberal  institutions  and
societies.   This, too,  is a  matter of making the state --
the democratic  state --  effective and  accountable.  We in
the democratic West have to get ourselves in order.  We must
enhance   and    better   coordinate    our    investigative
capabilities.   We must change our mind-set.  Our task is to
prevent criminal  acts, not  just catch and punish after the
damage is  done.  Through intensive intelligence-sharing and
cooperative police  work, the war on this front can and must
be  fought  effectively  --  and  within  the  framework  of
protective civil rights and proper judicial procedures.
Another front  that needs  our  attention  is  that  of  the
regimes of  Arab and  Islamic countries.  Over the years, in
the  knowledge  that  many  of  the  terrorists  seek  their
overthrow above  all else,  these regimes  have, each in its
own way,  made their  deals with  the terrorists.  They have
paid them  off, propagandized  them  to  focus  on  external
enemies, or  sought to  use them  to build  up the religious
legitimacy of  those regimes.   They have created a monster.
They may  have bought some time for themselves, but they are
sealing their  own doom  if they  keep on  this path.  Since
September 11, some of them have come to their senses.  These
regimes have  to take responsibility as states and they must
be held  accountable.   They have to stop playing the double
game.   They should be encouraged and supported if they work
seriously to  put their  states and  societies on  the right
track.  But I have to say, when money is collected to reward
the  families  of  suicide  bombers,  that  is  support  for
terrorism.  There is no other way to describe it.
We must  also look at the front where terrorists are pushing
out to  radicalize countries that previously had escaped the
terrorist scourge.   Most  prominent  and  crucial  here  is
Indonesia, where  Jihadists have  in the  last several years
become  more   visible,  active,  and  intimidating  to  the
population.   In the  southern islands  of the  Philippines,
terrorists have  become more  daring and outrageous in their
hostage-taking and  murders year by year.  In Singapore, the
discovery  of   a  sophisticated  Al-Qaeda  network  shocked
everyone, because  we consider  Singapore to  be one  of the
most tightly run states in the world.  Jihadist terrorism no
doubt has  plans for  the new countries of central Asia, and
for China as well.
Kashmir presents compelling issues, especially since nuclear
weapons lurk  in the background.  The outline of a potential
settlement is much easier to identify than is the process by
which to  get there.  As elsewhere, the starting point is to
hit hard  against terrorism  as the  method  of  influencing
policy on any side of the problem.
And  now   we  come   to  the  front  of  the  Israelis  and
Palestinians, who  confront each  other violently  and whose
conflict captures  attention virtually throughout the world.
We can see that terrorist extremists have gotten their hands
around the  throat of the Palestinian movement.  Those hands
need to  be wrenched away so that people with determined but
constructive attitudes can emerge to take over leadership in
a  restructured   Palestinian  Authority.      Strength  and
diplomacy must go hand in hand: fight terrorism relentlessly
even as  negotiations for  peace get  started again.  We now
have some  developments to  work  with,  but  nothing  comes
easily.
I offer three thoughts.
First, in  Negotiation 101,  we teach  a negotiator to study
his opposition.  You want  counterparts  capable  of  taking
"yes" for  an answer and of delivering on tough commitments.
Saudi Arabia  has led  Arab states  into  an  initiative  on
behalf of  the Palestinians.   For the first time since King
Hussein bowed  out in  1988, states  on the  Arab  side  are
involved.   So I welcome the Presidents and the Secretarys
effort to  move  this  initiative  forward  and  bring  this
potentially important  measure of  state-based competence to
the negotiating  table.   Realists recognize  that  progress
will only  come with emerging experience of commitments that
are not  only made  but kept. Whatever the vision of a final
settlement, that vision will come into being through a step-
by-step process.
Second, declare  a commitment  to an  eventual   Palestinian
state up front.  But make clear that a proclamation does not
create a  functioning state.  Patterns of government must be
created and  the legitimacy  of leaders  established so that
properly made  sovereign decisions  are effective, and means
of accountability  for policy  decisions  and  for  handling
funds are  instituted.   If a  Palestinian state  were to be
established without  a far-reaching  reform of  the  present
Palestinian Authority,  it would be a failed state at birth.
And just  as a  Palestinian state  can hardly  even begin to
function effectively  where citizens  cannot move about from
one urban  center to  another, so the state of Israel cannot
agree to anything other than its own secure, defensible, and
internationally recognized borders.
Third, realize  that transformation  in this  tiny area is a
necessity.   Palestinians and  others in the region now lead
miserable lives  without the  light of  hope  for  a  better
future.    Israelis  continue  to  live  within  the  lethal
environment of  a hostile  neighborhood.   A major effort is
imperative to  improve the  quality of  life in  the region:
security,  water,  education,  health,  the  opportunity  to
create the  jobs on  which standards of living depend.  Help
in the  form of  private as  well a  public  initiatives  is
critically needed.  So there is lots of work to do.
Finally there  is the  most important problem of all -- what
is in  the minds  of the  worlds people.   There  are still
those who  profess not  to know  the  difference  between  a
terrorist and  a freedom  fighter.  The difference is clear.
The definition  of terrorism  is  simple  and  unmistakable.
Terrorists use  random violence  on  as  large  a  scale  as
possible against  civilian populations  to make their points
or get  their way.  Anyone who claims to be confused at this
point in  history will  have to face up to being known as an
apologist for terrorism.
We have  a war  to win.   Every  tool available must be used
aggressively.  The message of the Great Seal of our Republic
is front  and center  once more.   The eagle faces the olive
branches to  show that the United States always seeks peace,
but holds  onto the  arrows to  show that  the United States
understands that,  if we  are to  be  effective  in  seeking
peace, we  must be  strong.   The  message  comes  from  the
earliest days  of our  Republic: strength  and diplomacy  go
together.
The end  of World War II brought a compelling opportunity to
put in  place a  new vision  of how  the world  would  work.
Looking back  at the  remarkably creative  response to  that
opportunity, we  see  Foreign  Service  officers  --  George
Kennan, Chip  Bohlen, Foy  Kohler, and  others, notably Paul
Nitze --  as well  as the  soldier-statesman of  that  time,
George  C.   Marshall,  developing   the   ideas   and   the
institutions that  shaped the  way one  American  generation
after another  engaged the  world during  the dangerous Cold
War years.   Once  again, with  the huge  changes  in  world
affairs since  those  days,  punctuated  by  the  trauma  of
September  11  and  the  shifts  in  attitude  toward  state
accountability and  rights to preemption, the times demand a
new burst  of creativity  and sustained  efforts to  achieve
needed transformation.   Now  the ball  is in the hands of a
new generation  of Foreign  Service  Officers,  under  Colin
Powell, todays  distinguished  soldier-statesman,  able  to
work with  a president,  George W.  Bush, who  is  decisive,
bold, and resolute.
So I  salute the  members of  the Foreign  Service and  this
center for learning the practice of diplomacy.  We are lucky
that you and your leaders are strong, experienced, and wise.
You have lots of work to do.
Let me  conclude with  a story from my time in office.  When
an ambassador  had made it through the hurdles of nomination
and confirmation,  I invited  him or  her to  my office  and
said, "Before  you can  leave, you  have one  more test.  Go
over to  that globe  and show  me that you can identify your
country."   Without exception, the ambassador-to-be spun the
globe and located the country to which he would be posted.
One day,  the late  Mike Mansfield,  already many  years our
ambassador to Japan and an old friend from my previous times
in the  cabinet, came  in for  a visit just before he was to
return to  Tokyo.  I told him about my little test and said,
"Mike, how about you?"  He and I laughed, and he went to the
globe.   Mike put  his hand  on the  United States and said,
"Heres my country."
In this setting dedicated to representation, always remember
Mikes words.   Be  proud to  be  a  citizen,  let  alone  a
representative, of  the greatest  country ever,  the  United
States of America.