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- <text id=94TT0107>
- <title>
- Jan. 31, 1994: Enough Bear Stroking
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Jan. 31, 1994 California:State of Shock
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ESSAY, Page 116
- Enough Bear Stroking
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>By Charles Krauthammer
- </p>
- <p> Just over a year ago in Stockholm, Russia's Foreign Minister
- delivered a shocking speech announcing a return to empire and
- cold war. No more Mr. Nice Guy for "Greater Russia," declared
- Andrei Kozyrev. "The space of the former Soviet Union...is essentially a post-imperial space, where Russia has to defend
- its interests by all available means, including military and
- economic ones."
- </p>
- <p> The speech created a sensation. Western delegates were stunned--until Kozyrev explained an hour later that he was playacting.
- The speech, he said, was one Moscow hard-liners would deliver
- were they to seize power. He was warning of the dark future
- awaiting the world should Yeltsin fall.
- </p>
- <p> Well, Yeltsin did not fall. The Soviet-era hard-liners Kozyrev
- warned against fell. Some are in jail. But now it is Kozyrev
- himself declaring last week that Russia should keep its troops
- in neighboring republics: "We should not withdraw from those
- regions that have been in the sphere of Russian interest for
- centuries."
- </p>
- <p> This time he is not kidding. And because he is not, Kozyrev,
- a man who truly represents Russian moderation, has given the
- world a measure of how far Russian moderation has traveled in
- the past year. For months Russia has been interfering in neighboring
- republics, notably Georgia and Azerbaijan, to bring them under
- Russian domination. Withdrawal from the Baltics is stalled.
- And Belarus, which agreed to scrap its currency and restore
- the ruble, is in effect being economically annexed.
- </p>
- <p> Market reform is in retreat as well. The day after President
- Clinton finished his Moscow summit, Yegor Gaidar, chief architect
- of economic reform, resigned. Four days later, Boris Fyodorov,
- the other major reformer, was purged from the government. The
- ruble is collapsing. The Prime Minister talks of a return to
- wage and price controls.
- </p>
- <p> All this is acutely embarrassing for Clinton, who had trumpeted
- Yeltsin's commitment to reform during his Moscow visit. Treasury
- Secretary Lloyd Bentsen, in particular, waxed enthusiastic about
- the assurances he had received that reform would continue. Assurances
- from whom? From the doomed Gaidar and Fyodorov, with whom Bentsen
- had excellent meetings.
- </p>
- <p> Within a week of the trip to Moscow, the President's Russia
- policy had collapsed. Russia's slide is not, mind you, a failure
- of Clinton's personal diplomacy. There are limits to personal
- diplomacy. (Something politicians often have difficulty recognizing:
- "Lord," said Senator William Borah after Germany invaded Poland
- in September 1939, "if only I could have talked with Hitler,
- all this might have been avoided.") Personal diplomacy cannot
- reverse the trajectory of a great power. Russia's retreat is
- an aftershock of the December elections in which the totalitarian
- parties campaigning against reform and for empire won about
- half the vote.
- </p>
- <p> The people have spoken, and Yeltsin has listened. Clinton has
- not. He keeps campaigning for Russian democracy, but he refuses
- to acknowledge what the people voted for in a democratic election.
- Why did Clinton spend so much of his Moscow trip cheerleading
- for economic reform? That is Yeltsin's job. Why should an American
- President expose himself and his country to blame for the suffering
- such reform inevitably brings?
- </p>
- <p> By the same token, now that the Russian people have spoken,
- it is time to change our attitude to Russia's foreign policy
- too. During the fight to the finish between the Soviet-era Congress
- and Yeltsin, it made sense for the U.S. to back him to the hilt.
- That meant bending over backward not to offend Russian nationalism:
- leaning hard on Ukraine to disarm; raising no fuss when Russian
- troops intervened in Georgia, Tajikistan and Moldova; keeping
- the East Europeans out of NATO.
- </p>
- <p> We gave bear stroking a try. It did not work. Despite our extraordinary
- deference to Russian national feelings, the antireform and anti-Western
- parties did exceptionally well in free elections. Yeltsin is
- accommodating to reality. Time for us to follow suit.
- </p>
- <p> Yeltsin still represents as moderate a government as Russia
- is going to produce. But that highlights all the more clearly
- the limits of Russian moderation. It would be foolish, therefore,
- to continue a purely Russocentric policy that bets the house
- on the hope that with enough Western coaxing and acquiescence,
- Russia will turn into a Western democracy, a Cyrillic England.
- It is far more prudent for the West to demonstrate some firmness,
- to show we will respect Russia's national interests but not
- its imperial impulses.
- </p>
- <p> If Russia tires of reform, that is her business. But if Russia
- hungers for empire, that unfortunately is our business. As leader
- of the West, we must be the one to say no. Instead, for fear
- of offending Russia, we say no to the pro-Western Poles, Czechs
- and Hungarians seeking admittance to NATO.
- </p>
- <p> Russia needs to be told that it does not have a veto over NATO
- membership. That only an imperial Russia would take offense
- at East Europeans finding shelter in NATO--the Polish army,
- after all, is no threat to Moscow. And that if Russia insists
- on military pressure on its neighbors, it will pay a high price,
- economic and diplomatic, in relations with America.
- </p>
- <p> The current unpleasantness is neither Yeltsin's fault nor Clinton's.
- But it is a fact. The free ride given Russia, based on hopes
- for a kind of Russia that is not, has got to end.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-