China has invested billions of dollars to increase its soft power, but it has recently suffered a backlash in democratic countries. A new report by the National Endowment for Democracy argues that we need to rethink soft power, because “the conceptual vocabulary that has been used since the Cold War’s end no longer seems adequate to the contemporary situation.”
The report describes the new authoritarian influences being felt around the world as “sharp power.” A recent cover article in The Economist defines “sharp power” by its reliance on “subversion, bullying and pressure, which combine to promote self-censorship.” Whereas soft power harnesses the allure of culture and values to augment a country’s strength, sharp power helps authoritarian regimes compel behavior at home and manipulate opinion abroad.
The term “soft power” – the ability to affect others by attraction and persuasion rather than the hard power of coercion and payment – is sometimes used to describe any exercise of power that does not involve the use of force. But that is a mistake. Power sometimes depends on whose army or economy wins, but it can also depend on whose story wins.
A strong narrative is a source of power. China’s economic success has generated both hard and soft power, but within limits. A Chinese economic aid package under the Belt and Road Initiative may appear benign and attractive, but not if the terms turn sour, as was recently the case in a Sri Lankan port project.
Likewise, other exercises of economic hard power undercut the soft power of China’s narrative. For example, China punished Norway for awarding a Nobel Peace Prize to Liu Xiaobo. It also threatened to restrict access to the Chinese market for an Australian publisher of a book critical of China.
If we use the term “sharp power” as shorthand for information warfare, the contrast with soft power becomes plain. Sharp power is a type of hard power. It manipulates information, which is intangible, but intangibility is not the distinguishing characteristic of soft power. Verbal threats, for example, are both intangible and coercive.
When I introduced the concept of soft power in 1990, I wrote that it is characterized by voluntarism and indirection, while hard power rests on threats and inducements. If someone aims a gun at you, demands your money, and takes your wallet, what you think and want is irrelevant. That is hard power. If he persuades you to give him your money, he has changed what you think and want. That is soft power.
Truth and openness create a dividing line between soft and sharp power in public diplomacy. When China’s official news agency, Xinhua, broadcasts openly in other countries, it is employing soft-power techniques, and we should accept that. When China Radio International covertly backs 33 radio stations in 14 countries, the boundary of sharp power has been crossed, and we should expose the breach of voluntarism.
Exchange programs that develop two-way communication and personal relations among students and young leaders are often far more effective generators of soft power than, say, official broadcasting
Of course, advertising and persuasion always involve some degree of framing, which limits voluntarism, as do structural features of the social environment. But extreme deception in framing can be viewed as coercive; though not violent, it prevents meaningful choice.
Techniques of public diplomacy that are widely viewed as propaganda cannot produce soft power. In an age of information, the scarcest resources are attention and credibility. That is why exchange programs that develop two-way communication and personal relations among students and young leaders are often far more effective generators of soft power than, say, official broadcasting.
The United States has long had programs enabling visits by young foreign leaders, and now China is successfully following suit. That is a smart exercise of soft power. But when visas are manipulated or access is limited to restrain criticism and encourage self-censorship, even such exchange programs can shade into sharp power.
As democracies respond to China’s sharp power and information warfare, they have to be careful not to overreact. Much of the soft power democracies wield comes from civil society, which means that openness is a crucial asset. China could generate more soft power if it would relax some of its tight Communist Party control over civil society. Similarly, manipulation of media and reliance on covert channels of communication often reduces soft power. Democracies should avoid the temptation to imitate these authoritarian sharp-power tools.
Moreover, shutting down legitimate Chinese soft-power tools can be counter-productive. Soft power is often used for competitive, zero-sum purposes; but it can also have positive-sum aspects.
For example, if both China and the US wish to avoid conflict, exchange programs that increase Americans’ attraction to China, and vice versa, would benefit both countries. And on transnational issues such as climate change, where both countries can benefit from cooperation, soft power can help build the trust and create the networks that make such cooperation possible.
While it would be a mistake to prohibit Chinese soft-power efforts just because they sometimes shade into sharp power, it is also important to monitor the dividing line carefully. For example, the Hanban, the government agency that manages the 500 Confucius Institutes and 1,000 Confucius classrooms that China supports in universities and schools around the world to teach Chinese language and culture, must resist the temptation to set restrictions that limit academic freedom. Crossing that line has led to the disbanding of some Confucius Institutes.
As such cases show, the best defense against China’s use of soft-power programs as sharp-power tools is open exposure of such efforts. And this is where democracies have an advantage.
Joseph Nye is a professor at Harvard University and author of The Future of Power.
Copyright: Project Syndicate, 2018.
Talk about a self rightous schmuck———–named Joseph Nye———-and the Professor has it all figures out————-RIGHT———————-The Middle Kingdom continues to march forward!!
Joseph Nye writes in an insightful and easy to understand manner.
His style is cogent, coherent and concise.
Thank you and may your words flow around the world.
Hard power is hardware. Soft power is based on knowledge.
Before you can convince someone of your story, it must be based on reality, and must be just.
Lincoln famously said "You can fool some people all the times, and all people some of the times, but you can not fool all people all the times". True then, true now. Truth prevails.
The Chinese don’t give a damn about the professors analysis. If it gets them results, IT WORKS. The funny thing is that the Chinese have actually been using soft power for years. They have quietly, coyly, shyly and smartly with a smile been building themselves up and networking around the globe. One day the professor will wake up and be surprised to discover that his new boss in Chinese, this boss will softly tell him that he is fired for writing drivel like this. That is how they work and why they will win.
China is already the boss, and the Professor works for them already.
Nothing demoralizes the West more than Mr. Nye’s ideas, and that works fine for the Chinese. He is what is called a "useful idiot".
The article I would try explain by example: Africa. Chinese politician visits African Governor and is offering:
– U ‘ve resources but U don’t have money. We give you loan. You’ll have hire our companies to excavate Ur resources. We never ask u why/where disappeared 20% of loan. U will not back the loan by money, but only by resources. Furthermore, we pay for your resources in this manner – 9 cub m we are paying for, every the 10-th we get free, covering the loan. No payment of loan from your budget.
Now, Euro-American politician offer to the African Governor:
– We give you loan to develop ur resources. U’ll hire our corporations for excavating. We pay u for every excavated and exported cub m of resources. U have back the loan by money from ur budget using money that u get for resources, because the funds belong to our banksters, not to exploiting corporations. Plus interest.
– OK, Mr. White Gringo we have to think…
– It isn’t all. U have to change ur labor law in favor of our exploiting corporation.
– OK, we think…
– Additionally, u have to permit oppostion parties in ur country, release opposition leaders from jails, allow foreign not-government organizations, demonstrations, implement democratic elections, issue law against corruption and for LGBT preferences, to strange ur state finances and…
– Sorry, Mr. Gringo, I have to call to Chine embassy…