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- <text id=94TT0039>
- <title>
- Jan. 17, 1994: Clinton's Obstacle Course
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Jan. 17, 1994 Genetics:The Future Is Now
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- FOREIGN POLICY, Page 24
- Clinton's Obstacle Course
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>The President's swing through Europe will test his ability to
- define America's role in a complex postwar world
- </p>
- <p>By Bruce W. Nelan--Reported by David Aikman and James Carney/Washington, Ann M.
- Simmons/Moscow, with other bureaus
- </p>
- <p> Even Presidents need cram sessions, and last Tuesday Bill Clinton,
- preparing for his trip to Europe, convened a study group in
- the White House. After cocktails in the Red Room, the 24 or
- so participants, including Vice President Al Gore, Secretary
- of State Warren Christopher and Secretary of Defense Les Aspin,
- sat down at a horseshoe-shaped table for elegantly served courses
- of mushroom soup, venison and wild rice, accompanied by Chardonnay
- and Pinot Noir. Since it was a seminar as well as a dinner,
- guest experts talked while the others ate, giving prepared comments
- on the future of NATO, postelection politics in Russia and the
- economic stagnation across Europe.
- </p>
- <p> The picture was complex enough to give a President indigestion.
- "You know," Clinton remarked at one point, "the problem is that
- in this post-cold war period, the lines just aren't as clear
- as they were before." One of the guests at the table, James
- Schlesinger, former Defense Secretary and former CIA director,
- replied, "Mr. President, that is your fate. You will just have
- to get used to dealing with ambiguity."
- </p>
- <p> That sums up Clinton's problem. In an unfamiliar world in which
- five decades of history have been overtaken by events, he must
- set a new course for America and decide how it should relate
- to its allies and former enemies. For a man who famously prefers
- domestic to foreign policy, Clinton is engaged in a particularly
- demanding international agenda this week. At summit meetings
- with NATO leaders in Brussels, with Central Europeans in Prague
- and with Boris Yeltsin in Moscow, he intends to take the first
- steps toward reshaping the entire East-West matrix. It is a
- task that would challenge a President far more at ease in foreign
- affairs than he is.
- </p>
- <p> In diplomatic parlance, Clinton's trip is in large part a "confidence-building
- measure." He intends to persuade Western Europe that the U.S.
- is still involved in Atlantic affairs despite its recent concentration
- on the Pacific Rim and the North American Free Trade Agreement.
- "We need to sort of gin up the collective spirit of Europe,"
- he said last week. He will also try to reassure the Central
- European states that he is concerned about their security while
- at the same time soothing the apprehensions of Yeltsin and his
- generals about an encroaching NATO.
- </p>
- <p> Clinton's first priority at the NATO summit is to gain final
- approval for his Partnership for Peace, which will provide an
- option for any former Soviet republic, Warsaw Pact member or
- non-NATO West European state to join in limited military cooperation,
- including training and exercises, with NATO's 16 members. In
- Warsaw last week General John Shalikashvili, the Chairman of
- the U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff, said NATO will be ready for
- joint military exercises with Polish forces as early as this
- year. But while strengthening links, the Partnership will fall
- far short of full membership in the Western alliance. That status
- carries a sensitive and binding security guarantee--that an
- attack on one is an attack on all. Central Europeans, especially
- the Poles, Czechs and Hungarians, have been clamoring for full
- membership because they perceive a "security vacuum" in the
- region. They argue in essence that the West is naive to believe
- the Russians can be anything but imperialists. NATO, they add,
- owes them protection as they struggle to develop democratic,
- free-market societies. "There is a firm assumption in American
- policy that reformers will finally win in Russia," says Henryk
- Szlajfer of the Polish Institute of International Affairs in
- Warsaw. "All that is nonsense." Says Jaromir Novotny, chief
- of foreign relations at the Czech Defense Ministry: "Yeltsin
- is not a democrat. He is a Russian feudal lord." Angry about
- NATO intransigence over the membership issue, Polish President
- Lech Walesa has accused the West of "indecision and selfishness."
- </p>
- <p> But leading NATO states like Britain and France are in no hurry
- to take Poland or Hungary into the alliance, which is above
- all a military pact. Outgoing Defense Secretary Aspin says he
- is "uncomfortable with extending security guarantees to new
- countries while we're cutting the defense budget." If Poland
- were admitted to NATO, "we would be saying that an attack on
- Poland would be the same as an attack on New York." A threat
- to use nuclear weapons to back that up might not be credible,
- and a conventional defense of Poland against invasion from the
- east would cost more than the allies--and probably the Poles--are willing to pay. Pushing NATO eastward, Aspin contends,
- would risk involving the alliance in the old disputes of the
- region. "Do our people," he asks, "really want to be dragged
- into some ethnic fight because of a security guarantee?"
- </p>
- <p> Already NATO has ducked the most horrific ethnic fight on the
- Continent--the one going on in the former Yugoslavia. But
- that bloody ghost is thrusting itself to the table in Brussels.
- The holiday season was a particularly violent one in Bosnia
- and Herzegovina, with all sides violating an agreed truce and
- killing 106 civilians. Completely fed up with the futility of
- his assignment, Belgian Lieut. General Francis Briquemont resigned
- as commander of U.N. peacekeepers in Bosnia. French General
- Jean Cot, chief of the 30,000 blue helmets in the former Yugoslavia,
- spoke out about his troops' "humiliation" and compared them
- to "goats tied to a stake."
- </p>
- <p> Though Clinton would rather not hear about Europe's major security
- failure at the NATO summit he has convened this week, the French
- government has decided to raise it. France, which has suffered
- the deaths of 18 soldiers and the wounding of 260 others in
- the past 18 months, was planning to ask the U.S. to back a proposal
- that would authorize the U.N. commander to call in air strikes
- by NATO planes. He would do this at his own initiative if he
- believed they were needed to protect peacekeepers from attack
- by the warring parties. "All we are trying to do," says a French
- government official, "is give General Cot the power to call
- for air strikes against artillery batteries firing on U.N. troops."
- Before leaving Washington, Christopher told reporters, "No requests
- have been made to us for the air support."
- </p>
- <p> After stroking the leaders of the Czech Republic, Poland, Hungary
- and Slovakia in Prague, Clinton will arrive in Moscow on Wednesday
- for three days of talks. One person he will not meet is the
- politician who set off the alarms in Central Europe and a flurry
- of reconsiderations in Washington: Vladimir Zhirinovsky, Moscow's
- ascendant neofascist. When he learned Clinton would not see
- him, Zhirinovsky, whose party won about 23% of the popular vote
- in last month's parliamentary elections, launched into one of
- his frequent tirades. He said the President's decision showed
- he was "a coward" who should "play his saxophone instead of
- coming here and meeting with nobodies."
- </p>
- <p> The discussions in Moscow will focus yet again on the proposed
- expansion of NATO and on Yeltsin's reform plans. A new furor
- about the NATO issue exploded last week when Lithuanian President
- Algirdas Brazauskas formally applied for membership in the alliance.
- The Kremlin put out a statement warning that such moves could
- generate "undesirable attitudes in civilian and military circles"
- and "lead to military and political destabilization." Russian
- Defense Minister Pavel Grachev grumbled, "We don't like their
- seeking protection by hiding in NATO."
- </p>
- <p> While Clinton will explain the Partnership for Peace as a sop
- to the likes of Poland and Hungary, he will also have to advise
- Yeltsin against behaving too aggressively with his neighbors,
- especially the former Soviet republics Moscow calls "the near
- abroad." Russia has intervened militarily in Moldova, Georgia
- and Tajikistan, and is now shaking a fist at Lithuania. If Clinton
- is to placate Warsaw and Budapest on NATO membership, Yeltsin
- will have to offer reassurance to Central Europe by dissociating
- his government more vigorously from resurgent Russian nationalism.
- </p>
- <p> Clinton must convince Moscow of this without much of a carrot.
- He will not be carrying a new aid package to Moscow, and does
- not intend to ask Congress for more than the $2.5 billion it
- voted last year. U.S. policy planning has focused on what the
- President should say to Yeltsin about the reform of Russia's
- economy. Reading Zhirinovsky's success at the polls last month
- as essentially a protest vote, Ambassador at Large Strobe Talbott
- initially said the Russians needed "less shock and more therapy"
- and the U.S. was "refining, focusing and intensifying" its efforts
- to support reform. Trying his hand at picking a new label last
- week, Clinton offered "more reform, more support."
- </p>
- <p> In spite of this seeming indecision, the Administration has
- finally concluded that the chaos in Russia's economy, which
- in part explains the Zhirinovsky phenomenon, resulted from too
- little reform, not too much. A consensus in Washington holds
- that the major problem facing Yeltsin's government is roaring
- inflation, and the only remedy for it is speedy, large-scale
- reform of the economy. Clinton will try to emphasize the continuity
- of U.S. policy, says a senior Administration official. "And
- that policy," he says, "is unequivocal support for Russian reform
- in all of its dimensions."
- </p>
- <p> The trip winds up Jan. 16 with more talking--but with a complete
- change of subject--when Clinton meets Syrian President Hafez
- Assad in Geneva. Even though Syria remains on the U.S. list
- of states supporting terrorism, Clinton believes it is important
- to meet with Assad in order to keep the Middle East peace process
- moving. For his part, Assad has made it clear he wants better
- relations with the U.S. What Clinton says he wants from Assad
- is first "a willingness to make a real peace with Israel" and
- second agreement to refrain from undermining the negotiations
- going on between Israel and the Palestine Liberation Organization.
- </p>
- <p> Even a youthful and vigorous President could be wearied by this
- total immersion in foreign relations. But Clinton has been having
- a tough time at home, with insistent questions about his private
- life and finances. Several Presidents before him have found
- that when the badgering and buffeting become too intense in
- Washington, American leaders can often get more respect in other
- capitals. If he cuts through this trip with ease, Clinton may
- yet come to enjoy what has been called the ripe melon of foreign
- policy.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
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