A Matter of Perspective: the Art of U.S.-Russian Negotiation

“You have to be able to write the victory speech for the other side,” said Bruce Allyn, Senior Fellow and Affiliated Faculty at the Harvard Negotiation Project, Harvard Law School. Allyn, together with Cynthia Lazaroff, presented a workshop last week on negotiation techniques in the context of U.S.-Russian relations and track II diplomacy. Perhaps the most important lesson they have taught to the fellows is the ability to put oneself in the shoes of the other side, and then become the “third side.”

“The third side,” Allyn said in his first talk, “can be a mediator. It can be a bridge builder. It can be people playing any of ten roles using the power of peer pressure and persuasion to prevent and resolve conflict.”  The key to most tense mediations is to become that third side in the conversation, to find common ground and bring people together.” Lazaroff later spoke at length about the third side during the 1980s. The third side can be played by politicians, but more often by mediators and doctors and artists and everyday human beings. It’s bridge building that they say is sorely needed, but sadly lacking today between the United States and Russian Federation.

The other big tip that Allyn had for our fellows was to be unflappable, to develop the ability to remain unphased by a challenging moment. It’s being proactive in a given situation, and not reactive. He and Lazaroff emphasized during a coffee break that during negotiations, your opponent can switch from pleasantry to verbal aggression with absolutely no warning, but that a negotiator cannot flinch. Being unflappable is even beyond the old idiom of, “never let them see you sweat.” More than that, being unflappable means training yourself not to sweat.

During their last talk, they tested our Fellows’ negotiation skills, tried to make them flinch. Negotiating can be a delicate dance, and one has to control the narrative. Reframe attacks as friendly, seeking always to maintain perspective.  View the conflict, Allyn advised, above the fray as if you, “go to the balcony.”   Allyn focused on humanizing the other side, noting that in many cases, it’s the informal, personal connection that will seal the deal. These were only a few pieces of professional advice the Fellows heard. Suffice it to say that by the end of the week, the Fellows were ready for mediation with Castro himself.

Not all matters of bilateral relations require negotiations, though. “Today we’d really like you to think with us,” said Lazaroff at the beginning of her lecture on Thursday afternoon. As she reviewed a period of souring bilateral relations in the 1980s, very much mirrored, she said, in the 2010s, thinking together is a practice which helps bridge the gap during negotiations. Lazaroff first began this practice when she was teaching at Moscow School №45 in 1980.  During her first experience as a, “citizen diplomat,” Lazaroff cultivated contacts officially and unofficially with ordinary people in Russia with the vision of planting the seeds of cooperation. In Soviet Russia, this took the form of teaching often for more than six hours per day on matters of American culture, including shopping, fashion, music, slang, etc. The exchange wasn’t just for Soviet children, though.

Lazaroff remembers fondly being asked who her favorite author was, and she answered that it was Pasternak. One of her teenage students replied that she knew the family and would Lazaroff like to meet them? Well, of course she did. Suffice it to say, after a visit with Pasternak’s family in Peredelkino, the evening ended standing over the grave of a legend with her students reciting his poetry by candlelight. Cultural exchange. “Individuals make a difference.”

 

Bruce Allyn has a great expanse of mediating and negotiating experience under his belt, not the least of which has been a director position of the Harvard-Soviet Joint Study on Nuclear Crisis Prevention, and current work in the Harvard-Russian Working Group on the Future of US-Russian Relations.

Cynthia Lazaroff co-founded the US-USSR Youth Exchange Program and catalyzed exchanges in art, literature, theater, education, film, wilderness adventures, urban leadership and environmental service. From rich mediation experience and a long career in cultural exchange, this week’s module has been quite a success.

Dialogue: U.S.-Russian Cooperation in the Fight Against ISIS


On Tuesday, April 4, students from MIIS and the Moscow State Institute of International Relations (MGIMO) conducted a dialogue over Skype on U.S.-Russian cooperation in the fight against ISIS. With expert commentary by MIIS terrorism expert Jeffrey Bale, Summer Gary and Libiao Pan each delivered presentations on the main topic, which they coordinated with MGIMO students. Dialogues between MIIS students and MGIMO students represent one regular activity of the Graduate Initiative in Russian Studies, and are open to the public.

No conversation about bilateral cooperation in the fight against ISIS is likely to conclude without discussion of the war in Syria, a topic which both sides of the dialogue extensively covered. Dr. Bale later observed that, considering the chemical attack which occurred in Syria on April 4, a far different conversation would have taken place had the dialogue happened just one day later. Nonetheless, participants were able to reach a conclusion during the course of the dialogue on the importance of cooperation in a time when two powerful countries share a common threat. Moreover, the dialogue was a productive exchange of ideas in ways that the United States and Russian Federation might cooperate in the future on issues concerning international security.

This dialogue took place as a part of the NSO-GIRS Dialogue Series.

Research Trip to the Russian Far East 2017: Amur Green Belt, Education, Depopulation and Energy Politics

In the Spring semester of 2017, four students at the Middlebury Institute of International Studies at Monterey (MIIS) travelled to the cities of Vladivostok and Khabarovsk in the Russian Far East. Their research spans a variety of topics, from development of eastern regions of Russia, to environmental policy. They met with top experts in their respective fields to yield professional-level research papers with the assistance of MIIS professor Tsuneo Akaha. 


 

Aleksandra Evert

Aleksandra is a master’s candidate in the International Environmental Policy (IEP) program with a focus on Natural Resource Policy and Management at the Middlebury Institute of International Studies at Monterey (MIIS). She participated in the DPMI Cairo program working on a sustainable development project for UNIDO. She received her undergraduate degree in Environmental Studies from the University of California, Santa Barbara (UCSB). Before coming to MIIS, Aleksandra completed a year of AmeriCorps service working in urban forestry at a non-profit organization in San Jose. She has experience working in ecological restoration at environmental NGOs, as well as marketing and communication in Silicon Valley startups.

Abstract

Climate change, biodiversity loss, and other anthropogenic impacts create economic and political tensions in areas of shared regional resources. Negative effects stemming from the exploitation of natural resources calls for regional cooperation to actively manage critical transboundary areas. This study focuses on the Amur-Heilong River basin shared by China, Russia, and Mongolia. The Amur River is the longest free-flowing river in the Eastern Hemisphere and the most important international river in East Asia. Due to its resource abundance, the region has experienced severe degradation by the encompassing countries. The Amur Green Belt Program was created to improve regional cooperation and sustainable use of shared natural resources through the creation of transboundary protected areas (PAs). This study examines the Amur Green Belt Programme and its effectiveness at implementing transboundary protected areas in the Amur-Heilong River basin using Elinor Ostrom’s “Eight Principles for Managing a Commons”. Part I explores the shared commons and the current governance regime in place, while part II
evaluates the effectiveness of the Amur Green Belt Programme through the eight principles. The study concludes that the Amur Green Belt Programme is effective in their goal of establishing PAs and indicates that environmental issues can offer a primary step in improving regional cooperation.

 

Matt Levie

Matt is a candidate for the Master’s in Public Administration degree at the Middlebury Institute for International Studies, with an emphasis on Development Policy and Practice, and he is a Graduate Assistant with the Graduate Initiative in Russian Studies. He holds a bachelor’s degree in Social Studies from Harvard College, and his undergraduate thesis analyzed the transition of the official communist party newspapers Népszabadság in Hungary and Rudé Pravo in the Czech Republic to a free press in the early 90s. At MIIS his research concerns the development of civil society in former Soviet Central Asian countries and migration between countries in the post-Soviet space.
In his free time, he runs a YouTube channel to help Russian speakers who are learning English.

 

 

Tracy Lyon

Tracy is a master’s degree candidate in the Nonproliferation and Terrorism Studies program at the Middlebury Institute of International Studies at Monterey, and is also a candidate in the Institute’s MBA program. She is a Graduate Assistant with the Graduate Initiative in Russian Studies, and a Graduate Research Assistant at the James Martin Center for Nonproliferation Studies. Her current research projects include the integration of Russia into the Northeast Asian economy via the oil and gas industry, and shifting politics in the Non-Aligned Movement related to nuclear nonproliferation and disarmament. Prior to studying at MIIS, Tracy worked in nonprofit and social enterprise consulting, as well as technical recruiting for Fortune 500 and mid-market companies. She holds a Bachelor’s degree from the University of California, Santa Barbara in Political Science with an emphasis in International Relations.

Abstract

Energy resources are powerful instruments for managing foreign relations, and have a substantial impact on countries’ economic, political and national security calculations. When analyzing foreign policy objectives of the Russian Federation, it necessary to evaluate developments in the energy industry, specifically oil and natural gas. Russia has some of the largest fossil fuel reserves in the world, including the largest reserves of natural gas, and in recent years has become the largest producer of crude oil. Due to significant government ownership in the country’s largest energy companies, it is essential to view these entities as tools which the government may use as part of a larger foreign policy strategy.

Energy trade has become a significant aspect of Russia’s growing relationship with China, and holds potential to become an even larger part of their relationship with Japan. Yet, the Russian Far East (RFE) energy sector has not grown to dominate regional markets. Given the opportunity for a strengthened position in Northeast Asia (NEA) through its energy resources, why is Russia not pursuing a more rapid course of development in the RFE? Is it possible for Russia to wield undeniable political influence in NEA through its oil and gas resources, and if so, what conditions are necessary for this to be realized? While North East Asia’s energy-hungry markets are in theory a symbiotic match for Russia’s abundant resources, the viability of long-term, strategic leverage in NEA via the energy sector depends on Russia’s ability to develop and transport resources to relevant areas in the RFE; a competitive advantage of Russian energy products in regional markets; and stable or improved relations with China, Japan, and South Korea.

 

Rory Roccio

Rory is a native Californian, US Marine veteran, and enthusiastic graduate student in the second semester of his BA/MA in International Policy & Development program at the Middlebury Institute of International Studies at Monterey. He is directing his studies toward political and economic development in the Russian Federation. On the GIRS research trip to the Russian Far East, Rory will be focusing on the development of higher education in Russia and its relation to economic cooperation with Russia’s East Asian neighbors.

Abstract

As Russia increases its participation in multilateral trade agreements and dramatically boosts its trade volume in the Far East, it is expected that Russia’s universities will adopt complimentary policies to increase the economic growth and development of the region. An underlying question of my research is: How are Russian universities in the Far East answering Moscow’s call of developing strategic partnerships and economic cooperation with China, Japan, and Korea and what opportunities does this response provide to students? I will be meeting with experts in international education and economics to conduct interviews and collect their thoughts.

Dr. Maksim Krongauz, acclaimed linguist and expert on Russian language and education, to deliver series of lectures at MIIS

Dr. Maksim Krongauz, current Head of the Laboratory of Linguistic Conflict Resolution Studies and Contemporary Communicative Practices at the Higher School of Economics, will present a series of four lectures this week at MIIS as part of the Visiting Experts program of the Graduate Initiative of Russian Studies.


The first deliver a lecture titled, “Russian Language in the 21st Century,” which will take place on Tuesday, March 7. The second lecture, titled, “Language, Political Power and Society in Russia,” will take place on Thursday, March 9. The third, titled, “Internet and Russian Language,” will take place on Tuesday, March 14, and the fourth, titled, “Linguistic Conflicts,” will take place on Thursday, March 16. All four of these lectures will take place from 2:00PM-3:50PM, and will be delivered in Russian. Each lecture will be given in the videoconference room at the Center for Nonproliferation Studies (V-499, VC room, CNS). Presentations will not be open to the public, due to space limitations.  

Maksim Krongauz is a linguist, professor, Doctor of Philology. His work has shown that the Russian language of today can be not only an object of criticism, but also the subject of serious study. Professor Krongauz’s career is noted for its remarkable consistency: since his graduation from Moscow State University’s Department of Philology with a degree in linguistics, Professor Krongauz has continually reached new academic heights year after year. He helped found the Institute of Linguistics at the Russian State University for the Humanities, which has become one of the leading centers for language studies in post-Soviet Russia. In recent years, Professor Krongauz has focused on studying the modern Russian language. In 2008, he wrote Russian on the Verge of a Nervous Breakdown, calling on his colleagues to avoid hysterics over the state of their native tongue. Professor Krongauz contributes regularly to various publications, where he proves time and time again that linguistics, far from being the exclusive domain of dry theories, is a fascinating and thought-provoking field.

In addition to his position as the Head of the Laboratory of Linguistic Conflict Resolution Studies and Contemporary Communicative Practices at the National Research University Higher School of Economics, Dr. Krongauz is also the Head of the Russian State University for the Humanities’ Russian Language Department. He is an author of popular print and digital articles on the Russian language, linguistics, and education, and is an active participant in public discussions on television and radio. Dr. Krongauz is a guest researcher and professor at universities in France, Germany, Italy, Austria, Estonia, Finland, and China. He is a recipient of the Diderot (France) and Humboldt (Germany) Scholarships, and was granted the title of Honored Worker of Higher Professional Education of the Russian Federation. Dr. Krongauz is a Member of the Government Council on the Russian Language of the Russian Federation, and an Enlightener prize laureate.

Dr. Krongauz is the author of numerous research papers, textbooks, and articles on semantics, pragmatics, semiotics, and cultural and Russian studies, including:

  • Prefixes and Verbs in Russian: Semantic Grammar (1998)
  • Semiotics, or the Alphabet of Communication (2009, 4th, co-author G. E. Kreydlinym)
  • Semantics (2005, 2nd)
  • Russian on the Verge of a Nervous Breakdown (2007)
  • Russian on the Verge of a Nervous Breakdown 3-D (2012)
  • Teach Yourself Internet Russian (2013)
  • Word by Word (2015)
  • Dictionary of Internet Russian (2016, editor and contributing author)

Dr. Vladimir Orlov, renowned expert on nuclear nonproliferation and international security, to deliver two lectures at MIIS

Dr. Vladimir Orlov, Founder of Moscow-based PIR Center and current Head of the Center for Global Trends and International Organizations at the Diplomatic Academy of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Russian Federation, will deliver a series of two lectures at MIIS, as part of the Visiting Experts program of the Graduate Initiative of Russian Studies.

Photo credit: PIR Center

The first of these lectures, titled, “Opportunities for and Limits of the US Russian New Dialogue on Global Security and Nuclear Proliferation,” will take place on Tuesday, March 7, from 12PM-1:50PM, and will be given in English. This presentation is open to the public on a first-come, first-serve basis, due to space limitations. The second lecture, titled, “What it Means to Run an NGO in Today’s Russia,” will take place on Thursday, March 9, from 12PM-1:50PM, and will be given in Russian. This presentation will not open to the public, due to space limitations. Both of these lectures will take place in the videoconference room of the Center for Nonproliferation Studies (V-499, VC room, CNS).  

Dr. Vladimir A. Orlov is expert in international security and Russia’s foreign policy. His research areas include major threats and challenges to international security, primarily, nuclear nonproliferation.

Dr. Orlov founded PIR Center, a private think-tank dealing with global security and foreign policy, in 1994 and was the institute’s Director (President) until April 2015 when he decided to step down as PIR Center’s CEO while remaining on the Center’s Executive Board and concentrating on specific nuclear nonproliferation and other projects as the Center’s Special Advisor.

Since 2014, Dr. Orlov is the Head of the Center for Global Trends and International Organizations at the Diplomatic Academy of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Russian Federation.

Dr. Orlov is a member of the UN Secretary General’s Advisory Board on Disarmament Matters (since 2015). He is a member of the Global Agenda Council on Nuclear Security at the World Economic Forum (since 2014). Dr. Orlov is a member of the Trialogue Club International, which he founded in 1993. He is the Director (since 2006) of the Centre russe d’etudes politiques, a Geneva-based research and consultancy association.

Dr. Orlov is a member (since 2014) of the Advisory Board of the Government of the Russian Federation. He is a member (since 2014) of the Advisory Board on the Corruption Prevention under the Anti-Corruption Directorate at the President’s Office of the Russian Federation.

He is a member of the Russian National Committee for BRICS Studies Research Council; a member of the Russian Public Committee “UN-70”; Advisor to the Russian delegation at the NPT Review Conferences (2010; 2015) and at the sessions of the NPT Preparatory Committee (2012-2014); a member of the Russian Council of Foreign and Defense Policy (SVOP); a member of International Nuclear Energy Academy (INEA); a member of the Russian Pugwash Committee under the Presidium of the Russian Academy of Sciences (RAS); a member of the Advisory Board of the Geneva Centre for Democratic Control of the Armed Forces (DCAF); a member of the Washington Quarterly Editorial Board.

In 1994, Dr. Orlov founded Security Index journal (until 2007 published under the title Yaderny Kontrol). He was its editor-in-chief until 2015, and currently is a member of journal’s Editorial Board.

Dr. Orlov is constantly engaged in teaching and educational activities, giving lectures and expert comments on Russian foreign policy and on nuclear nonproliferation within Russia and abroad. He gives lectures in Moscow on a regularly basis, particularly at the Moscow State Institute of International Affairs (MGIMO) of the Russian Foreign Ministry where he is Academic Director of the module on WMD proliferation for MA students. He also gives lectures in Geneva, Bishkek, and Monterey. Vladimir Orlov is executive editor and co-author of the Nuclear Nonproliferation Textbook in two volumes (the 3rd edition, 2013; the 4thexpanded edition is scheduled for 2016).

He is the author (or coauthor) of more than a dozen books and monographs and nearly three hundred research papers, essays, and columns. Articles by Dr. Orlov have been published in Security Index journal, International Affairs (Mezhdunarodnaya Zhizn) journal, Russia in Global Affairs magazine, the Washington Quarterly journal, and Seguridad Internacional journal, among others. His columns and comments regularly appear at the Kommersant daily newspaper. Dr. Orlov is on Twitter and Facebook, and his blog is on PIR Center’s website.