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- <text id=94TT0484>
- <title>
- Mar. 07, 1994: Back In The Shadows
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Mar. 07, 1994 The Spy
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- DIPLOMACY, Page 38
- Back In The Shadows
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>As the U.S. expels a Russian spook, relations between cold-war
- rivals threaten to devolve into a cold peace
- </p>
- <p>By Kevin Fedarko--Reported by James Carney, Ann M. Simmons and Mark Thompson/Washington
- and Yuri Zarakhovich/Moscow
- </p>
- <p> Late last Tuesday evening, a plane departed from Washington
- with an unusual passenger list: two high-level officials from
- the CIA bound for Moscow. The delegation's mission was straightforward
- if somewhat naive: give Russian authorities a chance to limit
- the diplomatic fallout caused by the arrest of Aldrich Ames,
- the American accused of spying for Moscow. To do that, the CIA
- officials insisted, the Russians must honor a previous promise
- to cut the number of their spies operating in the U.S. by half
- and identify their top intelligence officers in New York City
- and San Francisco. Most important, Moscow would have to recall
- Alexander Lysenko, its chief spook in Washington, voluntarily.
- </p>
- <p> When the delegation returned with word that the Russians had
- absolutely no intention of cooperating, the Clinton Administration's
- response was equally straightforward. Sometime this week, another
- plane will leave Washington with an unusual addition to its
- passenger list: Lysenko, who was declared persona non grata
- last Friday and told he had seven days to leave the country.
- </p>
- <p> If such a diplomatic dance seems familiar, that is because last
- week's theatrics evoked the old mutual acrimony, suspicion and
- rivalry that divided Russia and America for nearly 45 years.
- The dispute illustrates how fragile relations still remain between
- the cold-war rivals--and how simple it would be for those
- relations to devolve into an equally cold peace. To the extent
- that it has dramatically underscored the delicacy of the new
- relationship, the Ames scandal could probably not have come
- at a worse time for the Clinton Administration: the furor has
- galvanized opposition to the President's unstinting support
- for Russian reform at a moment when there are disturbing signs
- that the bulwark behind that reform, Boris Yeltsin, may be buckling
- under pressure from hard-line forces.
- </p>
- <p> Wary of inflicting collateral damage on his relationship with
- the man he feels is Russia's best bet for nurturing a stable,
- peaceful democracy, Clinton opted last week for a two-stroke
- response to Moscow's recalcitrance. The dramatic gesture of
- Lysenko's expulsion--too little and too late satisfy congressional
- critics--was combined with a strongly worded statement affirming
- that support remains unchanged. "I do not think," declared Clinton,
- "that the facts of this case undermine in any way, shape or
- form the policy we have followed the last year toward President
- Yeltsin and the forces of change in Russia."
- </p>
- <p> The Ames scandal catches Yeltsin at a particularly fragile time
- in his presidency. Faced with continued opposition from ultranationalist
- Vladimir Zhirinovsky and his conservative and communist followers
- in parliament, Yeltsin has been forced to retreat from the grand
- promises of reform he made to Clinton in January. Last week
- the parliament voted overwhelmingly to grant amnesty to Ruslan
- Khasbulatov and Alexander Rutskoi, two leaders of the failed
- 1993 uprising against Yeltsin's government, as well as to the
- men who plotted the aborted 1991 coup against Mikhail Gorbachev.
- Though Yeltsin's aides insisted that the parliament had overstepped
- its authority, hard-liners Khasbulatov and Rutskoi were released
- from prison on Saturday. It was the first sign that Russia's
- new legislature is prepared to launch a full frontal assault
- on the President.
- </p>
- <p> The spy scandal, say some in Washington, serves as an overdue
- wake-up call for the U.S. government--a notice that the benign
- esteem in which the Clinton foreign policy team holds Russia
- is dangerously myopic. The Ames scandal "ends the simpleminded
- optimism that we could have a relationship with Russia that
- would be without clouds," says Paul Goble, a senior associate
- at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. "The simpleminded
- confidence that Yeltsin is a good guy is naive."
- </p>
- <p> Such objections were shared by a growing number of American
- lawmakers who seized upon the spy scandal as an opportunity
- to peel themselves farther away from the Administration's foreign
- policy and begin sniping at the President. In the Senate, Republican
- leader Bob Dole declared that the affair "threatens the foundation
- of our relationship with the new republic of Russia." Adding
- that the U.S. has "moved perhaps too far, too fast in assuming
- that changes in Russia have permanently altered the international
- landscape," he called for the Russian government to condemn
- its efforts to penetrate U.S. intelligence and, if evidence
- of any further Russian espionage surfaces, even suggested dropping
- the $900 million in aid that the Clinton Administration is proposing
- for next year.
- </p>
- <p> Statements like Dole's, echoed by a number of other Republicans,
- come across as ill advised to those who believe that however
- scandalous the Ames case may now seem, its significance is eclipsed
- by the infinitely greater importance of supporting Russian democracy.
- "The rush to judgment of the last couple of days, primarily
- here on Capitol Hill," said Kansas Representative Dan Glickman,
- chairman of the House intelligence committee, "to suspend aid
- to Russia because of this case is misguided. That would have
- far more profound and damaging ramifications on this critical
- relationship--and thus on ourselves--than the damage done
- by Mr. Ames."
- </p>
- <p> Glickman's statement seemed mild compared with the reaction
- in Moscow, where Russian intelligence officials could only roll
- their eyes at America's holier-than-thou hypocrisy. Some interpreted
- the timing of Ames' arrest as a jealous rejoinder to Moscow's
- recent diplomatic triumph in Bosnia. To others the American
- anger about the Russians' paying Ames to reveal the names of
- double agents seemed baffling because, in exposing the fact
- that the U.S. is continuing to spy on Russia, Ames' arrest proves
- that America is no innocent bystander when it comes to espionage.
- Yeltsin's chief spokesman, Vyacheslav Kostikov, warned Washington
- against "returning to the psychology of the cold war and whipping
- up distrust and a new wave of spy mania."
- </p>
- <p> The public relations fallout from the Ames case will probably
- dissipate fairly swiftly. But what will not go away and will,
- in the next several months, have far more significant consequences
- for U.S.-Russian relations is the disturbing question of whether
- Yeltsin's power base is slowly eroding. Despite a newly forged
- constitution that was supposed to strengthen his powers, the
- President seems to find himself circumscribed more narrowly
- with each passing week.
- </p>
- <p> That weakness, and his need to accommodate his hard-line opponents,
- was underscored during his first annual state-of-the-union address
- last Thursday. Reflecting the Kremlin's increasingly conservative
- and nationalistic mood, Yeltsin shifted from themes of democracy
- and human rights to a pitch for more assertiveness abroad and
- a softer approach to economic reform. He also made repeated
- calls for a "strong state apparatus" that directly contradict
- attempts by reformers to diminish central control.
- </p>
- <p> So conservative was the speech that several communists outside
- the Kremlin's Marble Hall were heard joking that Yeltsin had
- stolen much of his speech from their party platform. But if
- the embarrassingly lukewarm applause was anything to judge by,
- even those concessions will not be sufficient to win him breathing
- space. Yeltsin's bow to the right--so reminiscent of Gorbachev's
- failed attempts to straddle the Soviet Union's political crosscurrents--seems only to have raised anxiety in the West and undermined
- Clinton's ability to continue supporting him. That may turn
- out to be a high price to pay for placating opponents who are
- interested not in compromise but in wrenching Russia from the
- rails of reform.
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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