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- <text id=93TT2387>
- <title>
- Feb. 01, 1993: Time to Get Organized
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Feb. 01, 1993 Clinton's First Blunder
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- DIPLOMACY, Page 49
- Time to get Organized
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Saddam has given Clinton a breather, but the new Administration
- needs to decide quickly whether a less personal approach might
- be worth a try
- </p>
- <p>By BRUCE W. NELAN - With reporting by Dean Fischer/Kuwait City
- and Bruce van Voorst/Washington, with other bureaus
- </p>
- <p> Saddam Hussein was the ghost at the banquets last week,
- diverting the attention of both the old Administration and the
- new. All the galas in Washington could not blot out the
- uninvited presence of the defiant Iraqi dictator. For the
- millions watching it all on television, images of Saddam and the
- U.S. air strikes in Iraq mixed with those of George Bush and
- Bill Clinton in rapid sequence, as if part of the same show.
- </p>
- <p> Before dawn on Inauguration Day, Brent Scowcroft, the
- outgoing National Security Adviser, strode up the stairs to
- Blair House to deliver his final briefing to the
- President-elect. It focused, naturally, on Iraq. At the
- Pentagon, General Colin Powell, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of
- Staff, made a similar presentation to incoming Secretary of
- Defense Les Aspin. The sessions amounted to a formal hand-off;
- what to do about Iraq is up to Clinton and the national-security
- team he is assembling.
- </p>
- <p> Two years after Operation Desert Storm, Saddam is still
- the bogeyman who will not go away. The new Administration will
- be examining him with fresh as well as relatively inexperienced
- eyes. None of Clinton's key foreign policy people--Aspin,
- Secretary of State Warren Christopher, CIA chief R. James
- Woolsey, National Security Adviser W. Anthony Lake--are Middle
- East experts. When they begin their Iraq policy review, they
- will have to rely on the holdover Bush specialists like Dennis
- Ross, former director of policy planning at State, and Edward
- Djerejian, Assistant Secretary of State for Near Eastern and
- South Asian Affairs.
- </p>
- <p> Clinton's State and Defense departments are barely
- functioning yet, and Saddam will probably not allow them much
- start-up time. Having upstaged the outgoing U.S. President, the
- Iraqi leader has seized the initiative by offering Clinton a
- "cease-fire" in the no-fly zones in northern and southern Iraq
- that he has been challenging. It was, said the Iraqi press
- agency, an "expression of good intention."
- </p>
- <p> Whatever its intentions, Baghdad reinforced its mercurial
- reputation late last week by opening fire on three U.S.
- warplanes on patrol in the southern no-fly zone. (All three
- returned safety.)
- </p>
- <p> Iraq is not in a strong bargaining position. Its military
- was shattered by the war, and the country is still under tight
- economic sanctions ordered by the Security Council. But it may
- turn out that by goading Bush to bomb targets in Iraq, Saddam
- has improved his situation. He has used the attacks to show his
- toughness and the Western coalition's weaknesses.
- </p>
- <p> For a man as callous as Saddam, the losses of a few planes
- and missile batteries, a factory and a total of 50 casualties
- are pinpricks. But they were enough to unsettle America's
- allies. France, Britain, Russia, Syria, Turkey, Egypt and Saudi
- Arabia all expressed concern.
- </p>
- <p> The one thing the new President seemed to know about
- relations with Iraq last week was the importance of continuity.
- "We are going to adhere to our policy," he said. "We're going
- to stay with our policy. It is the American policy, and that's
- what we're going to stay with."
- </p>
- <p> But which policy does he have in mind? If it is Saddam's
- overthrow, as Bush insisted, the current military options are
- unpromising. Saddam shrugs off small attacks, and larger ones
- threaten to blow up the gulf coalition and the Security Council
- consensus. If, on the other hand, the policy Clinton chooses is
- to force Saddam to obey all the U.N. orders, the Administration
- will want to consider what methods might better achieve that
- end.
- </p>
- <p> Clinton tried to depersonalize the conflict, saying that
- if Saddam "wants a different relationship" with the U.S. and
- U.N., "all he has to do is change his behavior." But when the
- hints that he might "normalize" relations provoked a furor,
- Clinton backed off, saying it was "almost inconceivable that we
- can have good relations with Iraq" while Saddam remains in
- power.
- </p>
- <p> The contretemps has touched off a debate over how the new
- Administration should handle Iraq. Good relations are not the
- issue. What the U.S. demands is Iraq's compliance with all the
- U.N. resolutions; what Iraq wants is an end to the strangulation
- of sanctions. Clinton may have been right to suggest something
- more pragmatic. "His statement," observes Charles William
- Maynes, editor of Foreign Policy magazine, "was not a blunder."
- What might work, he says, "is persuading Saddam of what Iraq
- could achieve through adherence to the resolutions."
- </p>
- <p> Others argue that experimentation could be in order. "For
- two years," says Anthony Cordesman, professor of
- national-security studies at Georgetown University, "Bush
- fixated on ousting Saddam, without defining U.S. goals in case
- he didn't." If compliance with the U.N. resolutions could earn
- Iraq some easing of the sanctions, even with Saddam still in
- power, he should be told so.
- </p>
- <p> Such an opening might not be enough to keep him honest: he
- is all too likely to fall back into his old habits of
- obstruction and defiance. But it might help if Clinton can keep
- Saddam in perspective. He is more a nuisance than a threat to
- world peace or his neighbors, which are now more worried about
- Islamic fundamentalism. While insisting on full obedience to all
- the U.N. demands, Clinton could find that a less personal, more
- pragmatic approach is worth a try.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
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