United Kingdom Since the period of
Pax Britannica (1815–1914) the
foreign relations of the United Kingdom has employed a combination of influence and coercion in international relations.
United States The term smart power emerged in the past decade, but the concept of smart power has much earlier roots in the history of the United States and is a popular notion in international relations today. ; 1901 : President
Theodore Roosevelt proclaims: "
Speak softly and carry a big stick." ; 1948 : The United States initiates major peacetime soft power programs under the authority of the
Smith-Mundt Act, including broadcasting, exchange and information world wide to combat the outreach of the
Soviet Union. ; 1991 : The end of the
Cold War was marked by the collapse of the
Berlin Wall, which fell as a result of a combination of hard and soft power. Throughout the Cold War, hard power was used to deter Soviet aggression and soft power was used to erode faith in Communism. Joseph Nye said: "When the Berlin Wall finally collapsed, it was destroyed not by artillery barrage but by hammers and bulldozers wielded by those who had lost faith in communism." In an article in "Foreign Affairs", analyst Suzanne Nossel uses the term "smart power". For Nossel, "Smart power means knowing that the United States' own hand is not always its best tool: U.S. interests are furthered by enlisting others on behalf of U.S. goals." ; 2009 : Under the
Obama administration, smart power became a core principle of his foreign policy strategy. It was popularized by
Hillary Clinton during her Senate confirmation hearing on January 13, 2009 for the position of
Secretary of State: We must use what has been called smart power---the full range of tools at our disposal---diplomatic, economic, military, political, legal, and cultural---picking the right tool, or combination of tools, for each situation. With smart power, diplomacy will be the vanguard of foreign policy. Both
Suzanne Nossel and
Joseph Nye were supportive of Clinton's encouragement of smart power, since it would popularize the use of smart power in U.S. foreign policy. That popularization has been accompanied by more frequent use of the term, and
David Ignatius describes it as an "overused and vapid phrase meant to connote the kind of power between hard and soft". ; 2010 : The "First Quadrennial Diplomacy and Development Review (QDDR)" entitled, "Leading through Civilian Power", called for the implementation of a smart power strategy through civilian leadership. ; 2011 : Obama's "2011 May Speech on the Middle East and North Africa" called for a smart power strategy, incorporating development, in addition to defense and diplomacy, as the third pillar of his foreign policy doctrine. ==Contemporary application==