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- <text id=89TT0836>
- <title>
- Mar. 27, 1989: First Steps Toward A Policy
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- Mar. 27, 1989 Is Anything Safe?
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- NATION, Page 41
- First Steps Toward a Policy
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Baker plays coy with Israel and hangs tough on Nicaragua
- </p>
- <p>By Michael Kramer
- </p>
- <p> As past masters of the technique, the Viet Cong had a term
- for it: Danh va dam, dam va danh -- fighting and talking,
- talking and fighting. By adopting that pattern of feints and
- jabs, the P.L.O. in the Middle East, the Sandinistas in
- Nicaragua and the Marxist guerrillas in El Salvador have managed
- to keep Washington's foreign policy off-balance and on the
- defensive. Only now is the Bush Administration beginning to make
- moves that may allow it to capture some momentum.
- </p>
- <p> In the Middle East the P.L.O. has been ahead in the battle
- for world opinion ever since last December when it acknowledged
- Israel's right to exist while continuing to support Arab
- uprisings in the West Bank and Gaza. But last week, smack in the
- middle of a visit to Washington by Israeli Foreign Minister
- Moshe Arens, Secretary of State James Baker unveiled a series
- of admittedly "small" confidence-building trade-offs designed
- to get the antagonists talking. The Palestinians are being asked
- to moderate the intifadeh in exchange for a looser Israeli grip
- on the occupied territories.
- </p>
- <p> Neither side is ecstatic about Baker's gradualist approach,
- and the hard-line Likud government of Israeli Prime Minister
- Yitzhak Shamir does not want to concede anything of substance.
- But Baker's hint in testimony to Congress last week that the
- U.S. may urge Jerusalem to deal directly with the P.L.O. rather
- than with "moderate" West Bank Palestinians (who can never be
- found) may eventually force Shamir out of his bunker. Baker "was
- rather astute," concedes an Israeli diplomat. "The fact that
- Baker is clearly not eager to play a central role in our crisis
- may actually cause Shamir to be more forthcoming with his own
- proposals when he visits Bush in April."
- </p>
- <p> If Baker's Middle East strategy includes avoiding a sense
- of urgency, the U.S. must step up the pace in Central America,
- where events threaten to outrun the Administration's ability to
- deal with them. In Nicaragua the Sandinistas have cried "peace"
- just cleverly enough to convince the Central American Presidents
- that the contras, who number about 11,000, should be dislodged
- from Honduras and disbanded. Although the rebels are pretty well
- finished as a fighting force, Bush and Baker want to keep them
- in place and continue supplying them with food, clothing and
- medical supplies until the Nicaraguan elections, which the
- Sandinistas promise to hold next February. "Without the
- contras," says a Baker aide, "there will be even less incentive
- for Managua to fulfill its commitment to democratize, as it said
- it would when it signed on to the peace plan (of Costa Rican
- President Oscar Arias Sanchez)."
- </p>
- <p> However incontrovertible the logic, even Baker admits the
- Administration will have no Nicaraguan policy "without Congress
- being a full partner." Last week he met privately with key
- congressional leaders to urge that support for the contras,
- scheduled to run out on March 31, be extended at the rate of
- about $4 million a month. The Democrats haven't said yes yet,
- but they have been willing to listen. "There's a lot more trust
- with these guys than there ever was with the Reagan crowd," says
- Connecticut Senator Christopher Dodd, a persistent critic of
- Reagan's Central America policy. "We're a fair way from
- agreement, but barring the unforeseen, I think we'll get there."
- </p>
- <p> Congress may soon be even less inclined to continue support
- for El Salvador. After almost five years of fledgling democracy
- under President Jose Napoleon Duarte, Salvadoran voters are
- likely to transfer the presidency to the rightist ARENA party
- in elections that began last Sunday. A shift right, combined
- with a renewed guerrilla offensive, could incite the Salvadoran
- military and right-wing death squads to a scorched-earth policy,
- the kind of "final solution" to the civil war long urged by
- ARENA's strongman, Roberto d'Aubuisson. If that happens,
- Congress will surely move to suspend El Salvador's $600 million
- plus in annual aid.
- </p>
- <p> Last month the Bush Administration dispatched Vice
- President Dan Quayle to give the Salvadorans a well-publicized
- lecture about death-squad activity. In an equally significant
- but little noted accomplishment, the Administration forced the
- indictment of army officers implicated in a recent massacre of
- civilians, an application of pressure engineered by Bernard
- Aronson, Baker's choice as Assistant Secretary of State for
- Inter-American Affairs. Now Baker wants the Salvadoran generals
- to know that the Administration will not defend them on Capitol
- Hill if the military launches an unlimited war against its own
- population.
- </p>
- <p> But if ARENA behaves moderately, a negotiated end to the
- civil war may be possible. In January the F.M.L.N. offered to
- participate in elections if the voting was delayed. The
- guerrillas backed away when faced with a counterproposal --
- crafted primarily by Baker's State Department team -- but the
- mere fact they made the offer was significant. "The trick now,"
- says a Baker aide, "is to create a bipartisan consensus that
- will demonstrate to the F.M.L.N. that it cannot split Congress
- from the White House -- as the Sandinistas did with respect to
- Reagan's contra policy. With a united front up here, the
- F.M.L.N. might finally come to the table."
- </p>
- <p> The Administration's Central America moves are tied
- together: agreement on the contras can create a precedent for
- fashioning a concerted Salvador policy. Tiny triumphs, to be
- sure, and past Administrations have seen similar "small" steps
- collapse despite the best intentions. But it seems that Bush and
- Baker finally know where they want to go. And none too soon.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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