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- NATION, Page 19From Patrons to Partners
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- Bush's trip shows a changing role for the superpowers in Europe
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- George Bush's march across the Continent last week threw
- into sharp relief two major and intersecting historic trends.
- His foray into Poland and Hungary highlighted how Eastern
- Europe, at least in part, is tumbling toward greater
- independence from its Soviet overlords. His attendance at the
- Paris summit of industrialized nations at week's end
- illustrated, less intentionally, how Western Europe similarly
- continues to become more independent of the U.S. And Bush's
- skimpy aid offerings in Warsaw and Budapest showed that as the
- waning of the cold war hastens these shifts in Europe's tectonic
- plates, the U.S. is likely to find it both necessary and wise
- to let its allies take the lead in managing Western responses to
- changes in Eastern Europe.
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- The most important aspect of Bush's visit was its
- symbolism. "The Iron Curtain has begun to part," the President
- declared in an eloquent speech at the Karl Marx University in
- Budapest. In front of Gdansk's Lenin shipyard, he told cheering
- Poles, "America stands with you." While offering lavish praise
- for the courage shown by Poland and Hungary, he avoided baiting
- the Soviet Union, a sensible strategy for dealing with a bear
- that for the moment seems unusually amiable.
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- He was less lavish, however, with his finances. In Poland
- he pledged $100 million in economic aid and an added $15 million
- for controlling pollution in Cracow; he also pledged support for
- a move to reschedule some of the nation's foreign debt. In
- Hungary he offered $25 million in economic aid, $5 million for
- an environmental center, a $1.5 million a year Peace Corps
- project to help teach English, and the end of trade
- restrictions.
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- Such gifts seemed rather paltry, less than Lyndon Johnson
- might have dropped on some backwater congressional district
- during a quickie campaign stop. The $115 million offered to
- Poland, for example, would barely dent a decimal point in that
- nation's $39 billion foreign debt. Some of his European hosts
- were disappointed. Solidarity leader Lech Walesa pressed the
- case for $10 billion in assistance, and Communist Party leader
- Wojciech Jaruzelski asked for at least $3 billion in aid and a
- major rescheduling of Poland's debt. Hungarian banker and
- businessman Sandor Demjan, in a gesture that was at once
- magnanimous and a bit slighting (as well as rather amazing),
- told the New York Times that he would match the $25 million in
- direct U.S. economic aid. The $145 million in Bush's gift bag
- for easing Poland and Hungary away from Communism was dwarfed
- last week by the $70 billion the Air Force requested for the
- Stealth bomber program and by the $43 billion for the Third
- World that Japan offered at the Paris summit.
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- American officials, however, argue that massive handouts
- would be unproductive. During the past two decades, the regimes
- in Poland and Hungary entrenched themselves by using foreign
- loans to subsidize cheap consumer goods rather than upgrade
- industries. "The last thing the West should do is to forgive us
- our debts," says a senior Hungarian diplomat. "It would just
- relieve the pressure for reforms, so it would be money down the
- drain again."
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- Still, some analysts saw the meager sums as a symbol of the
- relative decline of America's economic clout. A top
- Administration official traveling with Bush conceded, "Sure, we
- could do a lot more to encourage economic reform in Eastern
- Europe. But we don't have the money. We are broke." Says Michael
- Mandelbaum, a Soviet scholar at the Council on Foreign
- Relations: "The foreign policy fruits of Reaganomics are that
- we are the world's largest debtor nation and have a budget
- deficit that constrains what we can spend."
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- When Bush arrived at the Paris economic summit, he asked
- America's industrial allies to make similar contributions to
- Poland and Hungary. The group agreed to hold a meeting in a few
- weeks to discuss both financial aid and support for reforms in
- the two countries, underscoring that the European Community is
- increasingly more able and eager to help guide potential changes
- in the Communist bloc. "Leadership in Europe on these questions
- belongs to the E.C., both by right and by their record of
- success," said investment banker Robert Hormats, a former top
- State Department official.
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- Bush's plan to send in Peace Corps volunteers to teach
- English in Hungary served as a nice counterpoint to the dropping
- of Russian-language requirements in that nation's schools. But
- the second language there has traditionally been German. The
- historic role of Germany, however, is a troublesome obstacle to
- what Bush referred to as "making Europe whole again." Poles in
- particular have suffered from German expansionism, stretching
- from the Teutonic Knights of the 13th century to Hitler's
- invasion 50 years ago. To the extent that the E.C. becomes more
- unified, fears of a resurgent Germany are likely to recede. A
- strong E.C. could also serve as the core of a more
- self-sufficient Europe.
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- The decline of Moscow's influence over Eastern Europe is
- the direct consequence of its postwar failures. The economic
- system the Kremlin imposed has been a disaster, and its
- oppressive political embrace has engendered seething
- resentments.
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- The decline of Washington's influence over Western Europe,
- on the other hand, has been the gradual and inevitable result
- of its great postwar success. America's involvement in Europe
- was a welcome response to Soviet aggressiveness, not the cause
- of it. By helping rebuild its allies, the U.S. proved the
- strengths of its economic and political systems. Learning to
- deal with the robust partners that resulted has been a fitful
- process but a healthy one. The result is that now, as the cold
- war thaws, the U.S. can feel comfortable sharing with its allies
- the responsibilities, and financial burdens, of building a new
- European order.
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