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- <text id=90TT1227>
- <title>
- May 14, 1990: This New House
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- May 14, 1990 Sakharov Memoirs
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- NATION, Page 26
- This New House
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>As Germany moves closer to unification, the U.S. and its allies
- begin to renovate NATO without making life more difficult for
- Gorbachev
- </p>
- <p>By Jill Smolowe--Reported by William Mader/Bonn, J.F.O.
- McAllister with Baker and Bruce van Voorst/Washington
- </p>
- <p> Old truths are collapsing as quickly as the Berlin Wall,
- while Europe rushes to meet its bright and shining future. The
- Soviet Union can no longer lay claim to the loyalties of its
- East European neighbors. The U.S. can no longer assume that its
- West European allies will look to Washington for leadership.
- And the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, for 40 years the
- crucible of security arrangements for the West, can no longer
- count on being the vessel in which Europe's future will be
- forged. All of these crumbling assumptions have left Washington
- grasping to define what role it can--and should--play in
- a newly emergent Europe.
- </p>
- <p> The frenzy of diplomatic activity last week underscored how
- energetically Washington is trying to ensure a strong U.S. hand
- in the design and maintenance of Europe's new security order.
- Over three days, Secretary of State James Baker met with his
- NATO and European Community counterparts in Brussels, then
- conferred with German leaders and Soviet Foreign Minister
- Eduard Shevardnadze in Bonn. The next day he proceeded to the
- Foreign Ministry to discuss the future of Germany at the
- so-called Two-Plus-Four talks, the six-nation group composed
- of West and East Germany and the four Allied powers of World
- War II (the U.S., the Soviet Union, France and Britain).
- </p>
- <p> The high-ranking consultations were designed both to ease
- Soviet concerns about the merging of Germany and to explore the
- creation of a fresh European security order. For Americans,
- there was the added challenge of defending the primacy of NATO,
- the main institution that channels U.S. political influence
- into the councils of Europe. As Baker made his rounds,
- President Bush articulated his vision succinctly: "NATO will
- continue to be vital to America's place in Europe."
- </p>
- <p> Bush acknowledged the changes that have swept across Europe
- over the past year by calling for a NATO summit in early summer
- to explore the "future political mission of the alliance." He
- also paid tribute to the 35-member Conference on Security and
- Cooperation in Europe for seeking to sort out the complications
- created by eased East-West tensions. But Bush made clear that
- as far as the U.S. is concerned, NATO should be retrofitted,
- not demolished and replaced with a new security structure.
- </p>
- <p> What Bush left unsaid is that if NATO collapsed, America's
- relevance--and influence--in Europe would be substantially
- diminished. "We do want to remain a European power, but the
- question is how do you do that when the only institutional
- voice of the U.S. right now is NATO?" asks a senior
- Administration official. "That's why we're talking about NATO,
- because it gives validity to the U.S. presence in Europe."
- </p>
- <p> Bush's assertion of NATO's pre-eminence is coupled with an
- awareness that the alliance must demonstrate flexibility as the
- cold war winds down and security arrangements are reconsidered.
- Thus Bush announced last week that the U.S. would not develop
- and install a new generation of short-range nuclear missiles
- and nuclear artillery in Western Europe. He also offered to
- advance mutual-reduction talks with Moscow over the fate of the
- 700 aging Lance missiles already deployed by the U.S. and
- opposing missiles on the Soviet side, but only after the
- signing of a conventional-forces treaty that would result in
- dramatic troop and weapons cutbacks by the U.S. and the Soviet
- Union in Central Europe.
- </p>
- <p> While Bush's concessions lend to the appearance that the
- U.S. is participating in great European events, they in fact
- do little more than make a virtue out of a necessity. The now
- canceled missiles would have had a 280-mile range, allowing
- them to carry only far enough to hit Czechoslovakia or within
- the borders of a rapidly unifying Germany. And neither Germany
- shares Bush's enthusiasm for the retention of the present Lance
- missiles, with a 78-mile range. Bush's stepped-up campaign for
- a conventional-forces treaty, limiting the Soviet Union to
- 195,000 troops beyond its borders and the U.S. to 225,000 troops
- in Western and Central Europe, may be stalled by disagreements
- with Moscow over aircraft levels.
- </p>
- <p> Bush recognizes that the rapid pace of events will later
- lead to even deeper troop cuts on both sides. Soviet forces are
- not capable of launching a surprise invasion of Western Europe
- now that their allies in the Warsaw Pact have declared
- independence and the U.S.S.R.'s military effectiveness has
- disintegrated. The Soviet army is significantly weakened by
- ethnic strife and insubordination in the ranks. (At the NATO
- meeting in Brussels last week, a senior defense expert disclosed
- that the Soviet army mobilized an entire division in its
- Moscow barracks last February as a signal to the Kremlin
- against further military cuts.) Warning time in advance of a
- hypothetical Soviet land attack across Europe could be as much
- as six months to a year, according to some intelligence
- estimates. In short, the need for large standing forces in
- Europe has been significantly reduced.
- </p>
- <p> A far thornier issue is Bush's demand that a united Germany
- be a full-fledged member of NATO. The issue dominated the
- opening round of the Two-Plus-Four talks. Washington's position
- is endorsed by European governments on both sides of the old
- divide. They feel that the new Germany must be "embedded" in
- a joint security system--NATO, at least for now--just as
- it is in the European Community. The Europeans count on
- America's strategic nuclear umbrella to keep the Germans from
- reversing their treaty promises not to develop nuclear weapons.
- </p>
- <p> U.S. policymakers are convinced that the Soviets will
- eventually come to regard German membership in NATO as the best
- way to guarantee a stable and secure Europe. As yet, however,
- Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev has continued to hold out
- for either a neutral Germany or one belonging to both security
- alliances. Bush's grave concern is that the Soviets may promote
- unacceptable conditions. They might call for German unification
- without NATO membership or membership in NATO but modified to
- forbid the placement of any NATO nuclear weapons on German
- soil. The latter proposal could become a hot issue in the West
- German elections scheduled for December, offering a powerful
- campaign weapon to the opposition Social Democrats, whose calls
- for a nuclear-free country strike a resonant chord in both
- Germanys.
- </p>
- <p> Moscow's current intransigence over German membership in
- NATO makes Gorbachev the odd man out. After meeting with
- Gorbachev in Moscow last week, East German Prime Minister
- Lothar de Maiziere said that, despite Moscow's objections, his
- country would be interested in joining NATO, albeit one with
- a changed "structure and strategy." De Maiziere did not spell
- out what changes he had in mind, but West Germany is confident
- the East Germans will follow Bonn's lead.
- </p>
- <p> NATO has already embraced a plan put forward last February
- by West German Foreign Minister Hans-Dietrich Genscher, under
- which NATO would not station troops on East German soil and a
- reduced number of Soviet troops could remain in East Germany.
- Hence the Bonn government remains strongly committed to a
- unified Germany's membership in NATO. Says West German Defense
- Minister Gerhard Stoltenberg: "The alliance between the North
- American and West European countries continues to be an
- indispensable guarantee for a stable change."
- </p>
- <p> Even as West Europeans affirm their commitment to NATO,
- however, they are exploring new political and security
- arrangements that could render the alliance an also-ran at best
- and obsolete at worst. Two weeks ago, at a special summit of
- the European Community in Dublin, Community leaders voted to
- consider a Franco-German proposal for full "political union"
- by 1993, including a common defense policy. The proposal raised
- the distant prospect of a challenge to NATO as the new Europe's
- primary defense forum.
- </p>
- <p> The Community's progress toward a common market by 1992 has
- made Washington keenly aware that if it is to continue playing
- a vital role in Europe, it must strengthen its ties to the E.C.
- There have been some procedural adjustments that signal
- Washington's increasing regard for the Community's importance.
- Bush has inaugurated a policy of receiving the E.C. president
- twice a year, and plans are in place for the E.C. and the U.S.
- to hold two summits a year to provide a forum for
- European-American dialogue.
- </p>
- <p> More adjustments can be anticipated if Washington hopes to
- change its profile within the Community as a perennial
- outsider. Baker has suggested a treaty with the Community to
- establish "a significantly strengthened set of institutional
- and consultative links," a loose formulation that he has not
- yet begun to clarify. No less vital is the need for a mechanism
- to handle disputes so that, as former Assistant Secretary of
- State for European and Canadian Affairs Rozanne Ridgway warns,
- "We don't get bogged down in mutual recriminations over American
- beef hormones and French wine."
- </p>
- <p> The U.S. must also redefine its relationship with the
- Conference on Security and Cooperation in Europe, the assembly
- that first met in Helsinki in 1975 to seal formally postwar
- borders and advance the cause of human rights. The CSCE is the
- sole international organization to bind the whole of Europe.
- It doesn't have so much as an office, a desk or a secretary.
- But its membership includes all members of NATO and the Warsaw
- Pact.
- </p>
- <p> As a result, the CSCE is very much the flavor of the month
- in Europe, particularly in Bonn. Genscher asserts, "The
- architecture of all Europe is taking shape in the CSCE." He has
- put forward eight proposals to energize the organization,
- including regular conferences of the foreign ministers and a
- pan-European institution for the protection of human rights.
- The West Germans see the CSCE as a vehicle to provide the
- Soviets with a feeling of continuity and security as the Warsaw
- Pact falls apart. "Gorbachev has absorbed such monumental
- defeats," says a Genscher aide, "that we've got to give him
- some compensation."
- </p>
- <p> The U.S. is willing to boost the organization's fortunes,
- provided it does not become a substitute for NATO. The CSCE
- hopes to convene a summit later this year, probably in Paris,
- to give final approval to the unification of Germany within
- borders accepted by all. But the U.S., which is a member, is
- stalling a summit until the Conventional Forces in Europe talks
- are concluded, and the CSCE meeting can serve as the forum for
- the signing of a treaty. "The CFE talks are the mechanism for
- the Soviet withdrawal of military forces from East Europe,"
- says a senior Pentagon official. "There can be no higher
- priority."
- </p>
- <p> The final shape of Europe's new house is far from clear. The
- one certainty is that European voices will increasingly
- dominate the Atlantic-security debate. There is an interim
- consensus that NATO still has a role to play. "The argument
- over NATO is not over its existence but over its adaptability,"
- says a senior State Department official. Still, with
- parliaments and voters demanding a reduction in military
- outlays, it seems inevitable that many U.S. troops will leave
- Europe, and the specifics of European security will increasingly
- be in European hands. Democrat Sam Nunn of Georgia, chairman
- of the Senate Armed Services Committee, is urging the U.S. to
- scale back its forces in Europe to between 75,000 and 100,000
- within five years.
- </p>
- <p> When it was first formed in 1949, the Atlantic alliance was
- a treaty rather than an organization, and Washington officials
- insisted that no American troops would have to be stationed on
- European soil. One year later, the North Atlantic Treaty became
- the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, and U.S forces in
- Europe were increased. Today Washington's challenge is to
- ensure that NATO does not revert once again to a group that
- looks good only on paper.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-