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- <text id=92TT0884>
- <title>
- Apr. 20, 1992: America Abroad
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1992
- Apr. 20, 1992 Why Voters Don't Trust Clinton
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- AMERICA ABROAD, Page 64
- Hot Issues Turn Cold
- </hdr><body>
- <p>It's hard to tell the geopolitical tough guys from the softies
- </p>
- <p>By Strobe Talbott
- </p>
- <p> In an important respect, the presidential campaign of
- 1992 already marks a welcome break with the past: the issue of
- America's role in the world is proving to be much less
- contentious than it was throughout the cold war.
- </p>
- <p> For nearly half a century, the U.S. had two paramount
- tasks: containing the spread of communism and preventing a
- nuclear war. Sometimes American Presidents conducted military
- operations against Soviet surrogates and allies, notably in
- Korea and Vietnam; sometimes they engaged in diplomacy with
- their Kremlin counterparts, particularly on arms control. These
- were the hard and soft dimensions of the same global mission.
- Maintaining the right balance between the two required a degree
- of rational public discourse that is almost always missing in
- U.S. election campaigns, which tend to be nasty, brutish and
- long. When the defining issue in the national debate was a
- matter of war and peace, life and death, the topic of foreign
- policy was bound to be highly divisive.
- </p>
- <p> In the '50s a pattern emerged. When the cold war turned
- hot and Americans who had been sent abroad to fight communism
- came home in coffins, challengers assailed the President from
- the left, accusing him of bellicosity and offering themselves
- as champions of the soft option. At other times, when Americans
- were not directly involved in a shooting war but were worried
- about the Red menace, the most potent political attacks on the
- man in the White House usually came from the right; he was
- faulted for being too accommodating or insufficiently vigilant
- or both.
- </p>
- <p> This pattern cut across the traditional lines of party and
- even ideology. On several occasions, Republicans carped at
- Democrats from the left and portrayed themselves as peacemakers.
- In October 1952, just before that year's election, Dwight
- Eisenhower vowed, with great fanfare, "I shall go to Korea." It
- was a gesture of political theater, not statesmanship.
- </p>
- <p> In 1968 candidate Richard Nixon pulled a similar stunt by
- hinting that he had a secret plan to bring Americans home from
- Vietnam. Almost exactly four years later, his National Security
- Adviser, Henry Kissinger, proclaimed, "Peace is at hand!" What
- was really at hand was another election. Nixon won--then
- unleashed the Christmas bombing.
- </p>
- <p> There have also been several instances when Democratic
- nominees stormed the White House from the right, casting
- themselves as the geopolitical tough guys against the Republican
- softies. John Kennedy scored cheap points in '60 with the phony
- charge that under the Eisenhower Administration, the U.S. had
- ended up on the wrong side of a "missile gap" from the Soviet
- Union.
- </p>
- <p> In '76 Jimmy Carter criticized detente and claimed he
- would drive harder bargains with Leonid Brezhnev than Gerald
- Ford had done. Ronald Reagan, who was contesting the Republican
- nomination, said much the same thing, only more vociferously.
- Going into a defensive crouch, Ford passed up a chance for a
- strategic-arms pact that year and may have cost himself the
- election.
- </p>
- <p> Four years later, the Reagan campaign made devastating use
- of a photograph of Carter embracing Brezhnev at the summit
- meeting where the arms pact was finally signed, adding a
- caption, YOU, TOO, CAN KISS OFF CARTER. The voters obliged.
- </p>
- <p> And so it continued right up to 1988, when George Bush
- flexed his own anti-Soviet muscles. He implicitly criticized
- Reagan for going soft on Mikhail Gorbachev. "The cold war is not
- over," Bush warned. The U.S. must be prepared for a "protracted
- conflict" since the Warsaw Pact was "still poised to take the
- offensive in Europe."
- </p>
- <p> That was only four years ago, but since then the Warsaw
- Pact, the Soviet Communist Party and the U.S.S.R. itself have
- all passed into history. So, perhaps, has the divisiveness of
- American foreign policy on the home front.
- </p>
- <p> Bush and Bill Clinton will no doubt stake out what they
- will depict as vital differences between them. Neither wants to
- be heard echoing or applauding the other. But on the Persian
- Gulf, the Arab-Israeli peace process, U.S.-Japan relations and
- chaos in the Balkans, they have so far been playing up what are
- in fact relatively minor disagreements over tone and tactics.
- Earlier this month, the two got into what amounted to a bidding
- war over which of them is more committed to keeping reform
- alive in the former Soviet Union. For the first time in 40
- years, the interplay between rivals in the heat of an election
- season may actually end up helping rather than hindering U.S.
- foreign policy.
- </p>
- <p> It could just be that what's taking shape in Campaign '92
- is, willy-nilly, a new bipartisanship. That may be awkward for
- the candidates but it is good for the country--and the world.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
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