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NTF Insider
Dear <<First Name>>,

I am excited to share two opportunities with you.
  • We are inviting you to attend the test run of a new Executive Education program on advanced business negotiation that is currently under development with the NTF. If you are interested in M&A negotiation, investor-state relations, or complex business deals, please apply. Attendance is free of charge for successful applicants.
     
  • We are introducing an exclusive discount token for NTF Insider subscribers that allows you to enroll in our December 2021 "Red Horizon: Force and Diplomacy in Eurasia" program at a special rate. Read on and claim your token.
In solidarity,

Arvid Bell
Director, NTF
HELP REFINE A NEW IMMERSIVE PROGRAM ON BUSINESS DEALS AND GEOPOLITICS
Join us Sept. 10-11 and be first to test the NTF's new immersive workshop "Dealmaking in Complex Environments." Expert practitioners, scholars, and highly skilled students are invited to apply by August 23. 
CLAIM YOUR EXCLUSIVE RED HORIZON DISCOUNT TOKEN
NTF Insider subscribers can claim a full $500 off the price for the December 2021 "RED HORIZON: Force and Diplomacy in Eurasia" Executive Education workshop. Claim your token by August 15. Only one token per person. Must be redeemed by September 30.
 
Save the date: Red Horizon: Force and Diplomacy in Eurasia returns December 10–12, 2021
The First Mover's Toolbox
 
Nord Stream 2: A Lesson in 3-D Negotiation
 

The recent announcement that the United States, Russia, and Germany had reached an agreement on the completion of Nord Stream 2 reflects - however else one feels about it - a spectacular feat of negotiation. This success can be understood as the successful application of the principles of “3-D negotiation” that put an end to the controversy generated by the stalled pipeline project - at least for now.

Just how many barriers the deal faced is reflected in the awkward and even apologetic tone of the joint press statement released by the U.S. and Germany as they struggle to allay the worries of its many domestic and international opponents. Nord Stream 2 would enable the transport of natural gas directly from Russia to Germany through the Baltic Sea, bypassing traditional transit routes, especially through Ukraine. Until May, the company responsible for its construction was on the U.S. sanctions list, as critics are concerned that Nord Stream 2 could increase Europe’s reliance on Russian natural gas, and that Russia has a propensity to use its energy exports as a political tool.

Beyond that, Nord Stream 2 risks compromising the $2 billion/year in transit fees to Ukraine, as well as hundreds of millions to several EU countries. It is therefore perceived by some as neglecting these partner countries in service to Germany’s own interest in acquiring cheap natural gas. Other than seeking to repair the transatlantic relationship damaged during the previous administration and de-escalating Russia-West tensions, it is also unclear how the US has substantially benefited from reversing Washington’s stance on Nord Stream 2. Despite endorsing it, Biden administration officials have sometimes justified it only with a kind of sighing fatalism - it was going to be constructed anyway so they were “making the best of a bad hand.” Throw in broader concerns about increased reliance on non-renewable energy sources and it is remarkable that the deal was achieved at all. So, why was it?

Much of the credit goes to the negotiation strategy of the German government, reflecting a textbook application of Lax and Sebenius’ conception of 3-D Negotiation. Knowing that negotiation at the table is only one of the dimensions of reaching a lasting agreement, Chancellor Angela Merkel made a visit to the White House to secure the cooperation of senior American leadership, expertly “setting-up” the official negotiations that later took place in mid-July and securing a more favorable position for her talks with domestic critics and European allies. If the Americans dropped their resistance, wouldn’t it be reasonable for other Nord Stream 2 critics to look into different options as well, rather than asking for an all-out cancellation of the project?

Negotiation setup involves approaching the right actors in the right sequence to ensure the right expectations have been set before anyone even sits down at the final negotiating table. Beyond proper setup (3D) and negotiation at the table (1D), the final dimension of 3-D negotiation strategy involves creative thinking in deal design (2D) to ensure that the deal not only creates value for you as a negotiator, but is also lasting and sustainable. Any deal on the completion of Nord Stream 2 was never going to make Ukraine or the German Greens - the likely new coalition partner of Merkel’s party after the upcoming fall elections - happy, but by including commitments to invest in green energy in Ukraine and across Europe, as well as retain the threat of sanctions if Russia abuses its new leverage, no one can say that Ukrainian or environmental concerns were not taken into account. But are these substantial changes or marginal concessions? Germany promised it will “utilize all available leverage” to compel Russia to extend its transit agreement with Ukraine by ten years, and Berlin and Washington are also offering Ukraine a $1 billion green energy fund, to which Germany will contribute $175 million. However, offset against the tremendous economic benefit of Nord Stream 2 to Germany, these sacrifices seem marginal. The Nord Stream 2 agreement is as such a display in using clever deal design to extract maximum value while preventing opponents from portraying it as merely a values-free economic agreement between Russia and Germany

3-D negotiation involves moving past the simpler negotiation mindsets of both win-lose and win-win. Not everyone can always be fully satisfied. The expert negotiator knows how essential it is to expand the “Zone of Possible Agreement” (ZOPA) in complex multi-party, multi-issue negotiations. By linking green investments and German support for Ukraine with a trajectory towards the completion of Nord Stream 2, the German government has expanded the ZOPA. Key stakeholders are not fully satisfied, but not furiously opposed anyway. And when the German Greens negotiate their coalition treaty with Merkel’s party after the Chancellor has left office, they are now less likely to kill the pipeline than they were a couple of months ago.

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The Negotiation Task Force of the Davis Center for Russian and Eurasian Studies at Harvard University promotes innovative solutions to Euro-Atlantic and Eurasian security challenges by creating spaces for cross-cultural negotiation research, training, and strategic analysis. Follow the NTF Insider to learn more about us, our events, and the most up-to-date analysis in international negotiations. Email us at ntf@fas.harvard.edu, call the NTF office at +1 (617) 496 2180, or visit us online.

Negotiation Task Force
Davis Center for Russian and Eurasian Studies, Harvard University
1730 Cambridge Street, 3rd floor
Cambridge, MA 02138-4453

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