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- <text id=94TT0029>
- <title>
- Jan. 10, 1994: The Political Interest
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Jan. 10, 1994 Las Vegas:The New All-American City
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- THE POLITICAL INTEREST, Page 36
- THE CASE FOR A BIGGER NATO
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>By Michael Kramer
- </p>
- <p> "There are two ways you can tell when a man is lying," said
- Charles Bohlen, a respected former U.S. Ambassador to Moscow.
- "One is when he says he can drink champagne all night and not
- get drunk. The other is when he says he understands Russians."
- </p>
- <p> Today's Russian specialists are too modest to claim an expertise
- Bohlen knew is impossible, but that hasn't stopped the Clinton
- Administration from crafting a Russia-centric foreign policy
- that seriously shortchanges other vital interests. To Secretary
- of State Warren Christopher, it's all perfectly clear: "Helping
- democracy prevail in Russia," he says, "remains the wisest and
- least expensive investment that we can make in American security."
- At the same time, however, almost everyone involved with America's
- Russia policy, including Christopher, admits the West can affect
- events there only at the margin. That being so, one would expect
- the Administration to pay greater attention to Central Europe,
- an area the West can influence far more than Moscow. But it
- isn't. Central Europe's fledgling democracies are suffering
- from the U.S. obsession with Russia--as will become abundantly
- clear next week when the President attends his first NATO summit
- in Brussels.
- </p>
- <p> Normally, NATO gatherings put people to sleep. This one is different.
- In the wake of communism's collapse, the question on the table
- for the first time is whether to expand eastward to embrace
- those former Soviet satellites finally in a position to join
- the free world's premier defense alliance. "It would be a historic
- sin to miss this opportunity to bind in the East Europeans,"
- says NATO Secretary-General Manfred Worner. But the West, led
- by the U.S., is about to commit that very sin. The 16 nations
- that already enjoy NATO's protection are on the verge of effectively
- denying it to others.
- </p>
- <p> The thinking behind exclusion has a distinct cold war slant,
- reflecting the 40-year period during which U.S. geostrategy
- ignored events and concerns outside the life-and-death struggle
- between the West and Moscow. In the past it was Russia's strength
- that drove U.S. policy; today it is Boris Yeltsin's weakness.
- The primary reason offered by U.S. officials for keeping the
- East Europeans out of NATO is the fear of provoking Russia's
- nationalists at Yeltsin's expense. Yeltsin endorsed NATO expansion
- last August, but Russia's military, to which he is clearly beholden,
- forced a retreat. It is unclear whether Moscow's generals are
- seriously worried about Western encirclement or want to preserve
- the option of reclaiming the nations Mikhail Gorbachev set free
- five years ago. But the effect is the same: Yeltsin now says
- enlarging NATO would be a hostile act. "We haven't a clue what
- that means exactly," says a senior Clinton Administration official,
- "but especially because we so completely misread Russia's recent
- elections--we thought Yeltsin's forces would win soundly--we're now more gun-shy than ever about substituting our judgment
- for his. Yeltsin's our guy. We're not going to undermine him
- with a policy of neocontainment that boosts the hard-line empire
- builders. Yeltsin says drawing a new line in Europe that shifts
- the Iron Curtain back to Russia's borders could do just that.
- And we're going with his instincts. End of story."
- </p>
- <p> Not quite. A flat no to enlarging NATO would tread too roughly
- on Central European sensibilities, especially in Hungary, Poland
- and the Czech Republic, the three prime candidates for NATO
- membership. So the Administration has constructed an elaborate
- mechanism called the "Partnership for Peace," a scheme its inventors
- claim substitutes "maybe" for "no." Yet stripped of its sweet-sounding
- provisions, the partnership is anything but satisfactory to
- those it is designed to pacify. According to the draft scheduled
- for formal adoption in Brussels next week, those nations that
- sign on as partners (and every country is eligible, including
- Russia) will "over time develop the habits and patterns of cooperation
- that NATO membership entails." That sounds encouraging and prudent;
- few would fault a plan that claims simply to be "getting them
- ready." But the fatal flaw is that NATO membership isn't ensured
- even if the wannabes demonstrate their worthiness. It's a "buzz-off
- project," complains Polish Foreign Minister Andrzej Olechowski.
- "They ask us to divert scarce resources and go through all kinds
- of exercises to prove ourselves. They ask us to talk and walk
- and act like a duck. That's O.K. And we agree that letting us
- in right away could upset Yeltsin at a difficult time. What's
- not O.K. is that after we've done all that's asked of us, NATO
- reserves the right to say, `Well, now we want you to be a chicken
- instead.'"
- </p>
- <p> Embarrassed by such criticism, the Administration is accentuating
- the positive. "Six months ago, the allies didn't even want NATO
- expansion on next week's agenda," says a White House aide. "We've
- moved them to where we'll now say that as a philosophical matter,
- enlargement is in the cards--someday." Clinton himself will
- soon deliver several speeches designed to portray the partnership
- as a bold, creative step. "Maybe it'll fly, and maybe it won't,"
- says a senior State Department official. "All the partnership
- really reflects is a judgment call. Since we don't see Russia
- moving on the Central Europeans militarily even if the revanchists
- take power, we don't see those states needing a NATO security
- guarantee. Moscow's the needy one. It needs reassurance, not
- deterrence."
- </p>
- <p> Perhaps so, says Robert Zoellick, who was James Baker's Under
- Secretary of State. "But bringing in the Central Europeans after
- xenophobic nationalists come to power in Russia would be far
- harder. No one doubts those bad guys would threaten war if we
- sought to enlarge NATO at that point." Zoellick and his former
- boss prefer a clear road map with sure NATO membership at the
- end. "Doing it that way," says Baker, "sets up a mechanistic
- process. It shows the Russians that we're not acting hastily,
- that we're pursuing our interests in a carefully calibrated
- way. If we consult with Moscow as we go, we can give them time
- to adjust and deny them a veto over Western policy."
- </p>
- <p> For their part, the Central Europeans' primary motivation for
- NATO membership has little to do with the possibility of Russian
- troops swarming to reannex them. "It's not to defend against
- a Russian attack," explains former Polish Defense Minister Janusz
- Onyszkiewicz. "We see that as a virtual impossibility. The key
- reason we want to be in NATO is to secure our own democracies.
- We need to keep down in our country the very same kind of nationalists
- Yeltsin's contending with, the same kind that have destroyed
- Yugoslavia." It is this point, repeated by more than a dozen
- Cabinet-level officials from East European countries at a recent
- security conference in Budapest, that warrants more attention
- in the debate over NATO expansion.
- </p>
- <p> Ethnic and national tensions are perhaps most troublesome in
- Hungary. Not long before he died several weeks ago, Prime Minister
- Jozsef Antall declared himself the leader of 15 million Hungarians,
- pointedly extending his domain beyond the 10 million in the
- country. Antall, who was considered a moderate, is not alone.
- Many Hungarians want to protect their expatriate brothers currently
- enduring discrimination in Serbia, Romania and Ukraine. "If
- our reaching out to the West doesn't produce results in three
- or four years with something like NATO membership--or its
- clear prospect--the nationalists will roar back," says Istvan
- Gyarmati, Hungary's Director of Security Policy. "They'll just
- say we moderates tried a policy that would tie us to the West
- and that it failed and that it's time to try something else."
- Then what? "Then it's entirely possible that we Central Europeans
- would form our own security alliance, complete with a new arms
- race. Or the nations in our neighborhood might realign with
- Russia or with a newly nationalist Germany. Any of those scenarios
- could destabilize Europe all over again. How would the U.S.
- like that?"
- </p>
- <p> Nationalism and ethnic conflict "have already led to two world
- wars in Europe," says Stephen Larrabee, a former National Security
- Council staff member now at the Rand Corp. "The time to act
- is now, and not with hollow promises." What Larrabee and others
- know is that NATO has always been more than a security alliance.
- "We understood this at the beginning," says Larrabee. "West
- Germany wasn't a stable democracy before it was allowed into
- NATO. Belonging to the alliance helped it become one. It's silly
- to insist that the Central Europeans must be functioning democrats
- before they can join up. NATO can help them on that road, as
- it also helped stem authoritarian backsliding in Portugal, Spain,
- Greece and Turkey."
- </p>
- <p> Oddly, this rationale appears to have largely escaped notice
- by the Administration players most responsible for promulgating
- the partnership. When asked about the Central European argument
- that NATO membership is more important for internal stability
- than as a military shield against Russia, a senior Administration
- official responded, "It's pretty compelling stuff when you think
- about it. I guess we've just been too fixated on Russia to have
- given enough thought to this aspect."
- </p>
- <p> Clinton's Russia-first emphasis is understandable but needs
- to be moderated. "We resisted blackmail when Russia was strong,"
- says Henry Kissinger. "Does it make sense to permit Moscow to
- blackmail us now with its domestic weakness?" The problem, says
- Council on Foreign Relations president Leslie Gelb, in an insight
- several Administration aides agree is "right on," is that Clinton
- "is determined to avoid being tagged with having lost Russia.
- Yet it should be obvious that democracy in Russia will be won
- or lost almost exclusively by the Russians themselves." And
- if reform fails in Russia, says James Baker, an enlarged NATO
- would at least "protect democracy" where it is showing signs
- of taking "firm root--in Warsaw, Prague and Budapest.''
- </p>
- <p> To be sure, the expansion of NATO is no trifling matter. Extending
- the free world's nuclear umbrella should never be undertaken
- idly. But leaving Central Europe in the cold would be an inexcusable
- folly. Refusing to help these democracies could eventually raise
- a question as real as the question of losing Russia is phony:
- Who lost Central Europe?
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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