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- <text id=94TT0161>
- <title>
- Feb. 07, 1994: Does Clinton Need This?
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Feb. 07, 1994 Lock 'Em Up And Throw Away The Key
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- VIETNAM, Page 47
- Does Clinton Need This?
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>He's ready to end the embargo against Vietnam now that Congress
- has given him political cover
- </p>
- <p>By Kevin Fedarko--Reported by James Carney and Bruce van Voorst/Washington
- and William Dowell/ Hong Kong
- </p>
- <p> As rain turned to sleet in Washington last Thursday, a young
- man stood silently on the sidewalk next to a White House gate,
- balancing a flagpole from which hung a black banner inscribed
- POW-MIA. He is a frequent and unnecessary reminder to Bill Clinton
- that the psychological and emotional turf of a war that took
- the lives of more than 58,000 Americans is dangerous terrain
- to a President who did not serve in it.
- </p>
- <p> The same day, 62 Senators on Capitol Hill voted to urge the
- President to tread into that territory and put an end to two
- decades of rancor with Vietnam. Although the Senate bill was
- nonbinding, its call to lift the 19-year-long embargo on trade
- with Vietnam offers Clinton license to take the politically
- sensitive step. The vote also provides the President with safe
- passage through a set of formidable obstacles strewn along the
- road to reconciliation; 2,238 of them to be exact--the American
- soldiers whose fate in Indochina remains unsettled and whose
- families still demand that the freeze-out continue until they
- are given a full account of what happened to their loved ones.
- </p>
- <p> Although the Clinton Administration is deliberately vague on
- timing, a senior White House aide confirmed that the President
- last week received a recommendation from his top advisers to
- lift the embargo. Some sources say the President could act as
- early as this week. When he does move, it will be the biggest
- step yet in a carefully choreographed pas de deux that the U.S.
- and Vietnam have been cautiously enacting for the past seven
- months. Aside from the financial incentives, Hanoi has been
- keen to reestablish links with the U.S. as a counterweight to
- the looming influence of China in the region. American businessmen
- are eager to cash in on the potential market a liberated Vietnam
- will open up. But all the economic and geopolitical considerations
- are hostage to the emotionally charged matter of the missing
- Americans. The question for Clinton is less geostrategic than
- political: Can he now afford to incur the wrath of a small but
- highly vocal constituency?
- </p>
- <p> The U.S. has been flirting with the idea of ending the embargo
- ever since the Bush Administration, prodded by companies that
- feared they were losing out to foreign competitors, began allowing
- U.S. firms to bid for contracts and prepare to conduct business
- once the embargo was over. The most important step came in July,
- when Clinton gave the green light for international lending
- institutions to begin pumping money into Vietnam's dilapidated
- economy. But for Clinton, vulnerability on the issue of draft
- dodging made it impossible for him to act without the support
- of Congress. With that in mind, National Security Adviser Tony
- Lake made a trip up to Capitol Hill last fall to pay a call
- on John Kerry, Massachusetts' highly decorated Vietnam veteran.
- The President, Lake explained, was prepared to end the boycott,
- but he needed political cover. And cover he got. Within weeks,
- both Kerry and Arizona Republican John McCain, another veteran,
- had made trips to Hanoi and returned issuing statements that
- Vietnam was cooperating fully on the MIAS. That set the stage
- last week for the nonbinding vote, the closest thing to a carte
- blanche the White House can hope for.
- </p>
- <p> At the same time, POW activists and the families of MIAS were
- gearing up to block any change. Most veterans' organizations
- and POW-MIA groups argue that neither Vietnam nor the U.S. has
- been forthcoming to assist the search for those missing. Says
- New Hampshire Senator Bob Smith, who spearheaded the opposition:
- "If we lift the embargo, we will lose the only remaining bargaining
- chip we have."
- </p>
- <p> Such arguments have increasingly lost headway against a tide
- of evidence running in the other direction. Within the past
- two years, Vietnam has reversed its policy of forcing the U.S.
- to drag out answers one name at a time. For several weeks, nearly
- 100 Americans have been combing crash sites in remote areas
- of the countryside in search of remains. In the face of such
- cooperation, the demand that each of the MIAS still considered
- unaccounted for must either walk out of the jungle or have their
- remains located has begun to sound increasingly niggling and
- obstructionist--not to mention impractical in a country whose
- topography and climate have thwarted the search for 300,000
- of its own missing soldiers. Kerry and McCain say the best way
- to continue the search is by improving ties with Hanoi. "You
- can't do the accounting," says Kerry, "if you're not there,
- talking to the soldiers and generals who know about the war."
- </p>
- <p> In the end, however, the issue of normalizing relations with
- Vietnam no longer hinges on the unanswered--or unanswerable--questions of what happened to America's missing soldiers;
- instead it has become a debate about whether the war is finally,
- conclusively over. And hard though it may be for those such
- as the wraith haunting the White House gate, perhaps the pain
- of the past is best ended simply by moving on.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-