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- <text id=93TT1699>
- <title>
- May 17, 1993: The Political Interest
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- May 17, 1993 Anguish over Bosnia
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- The Political Interest, Page 36
- Clinton's Feelgood Strategy
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>By Michael Kinsley
- </p>
- <p> Candidate Clinton saw no ambiguity last August: "History
- has shown that you can't allow the mass extermination of people
- and just sit by and watch it happen." President Clinton added a
- caveat last week: The U.S. will not act alone in Bosnia.
- "America is ready to do its part," Clinton said. "But Europe
- must be willing to act with us. We must go forward together."
- The impulse is noble, but the effect could be pernicious.
- Multilateralism, the collective action by peace-loving nations
- against malefactors, can either empower or paralyze. It can
- confer a legitimacy that unilateral efforts might otherwise lack
- (as in the Gulf War). "Or," says a self-described White House
- hawk, "the insistence on consensus can stay our hand if it can't
- be achieved." As Walter Lippmann once warned, multilateralism
- can become the internationalism of the isolationist.
- </p>
- <p> What's worse, the ill-timed and poorly managed pursuit of
- a common strategy can disarm the threat of force as a weapon
- capable of causing the enemy to retreat. "Which is what some of
- us have come to think of Chris' mission to Europe," says an
- Administration official about Secretary of State Warren
- Christopher's recent Continental tour. Coupled with the
- President's insistence on a concerted response and the allies'
- resistance to his options menu, "it's not surprising that the
- Bosnian Serbs concluded we were bluffing and so voted against
- the Athens agreement," says this official. "We either should
- have had our ducks in a row before Chris left, or he should have
- stayed home and hid behind his poker face. As it is, we looked
- like beggars, when we know from experience that the allies will
- fall in line if we toughly set out what we're going to do. This
- business of the President saying we can't lead if the allies
- won't follow ignores the lessons of the past 40 years. They'll
- follow if we lead. Indeed, their domestic politics almost always
- demand that we lead so their officials can tell their publics
- that they're merely following. For a democratic superpower,
- consultation is important, but it should always be essentially
- cosmetic."
- </p>
- <p> The road from here seems clear enough. Having in effect
- said the Bosnian Serbs must cease and desist, Clinton must act.
- But enthralled by multilateralism and fearful of a Vietnam-like
- quagmire (and against the private advice of senior military
- officers like Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman Colin Powell, who
- believes intervention should be massive or not at all), the
- President seems bent on adopting a feelgood strategy--a
- limited action designed, above everything, to ensure a swift
- exit, a policy that defines success as merely having done
- something without regard to the ultimate result. By all
- accounts, Clinton aims to "level the killing fields," to borrow
- the words of British Foreign Secretary Douglas Hurd. The Serbs,
- says the President, have benefited from the West's de facto
- intervention; the United Nations-sponsored arms embargo has had
- the "unintended consequence of giving the Serbs an
- insurmountable military advantage, which they have pressed with
- ruthless efficiency." Lifting the embargo under the cover of
- allied air support will "at least increase the right kind of
- violence," says Richard Bartholomew, one of the Administration's
- Bosnian policymakers. Then the Muslims can decide for themselves
- "how they will die," says Senator Joe Biden.
- </p>
- <p> Assuming the allies finally follow (which seems likely,
- since their appetite for recalcitrance appears to have run its
- course), these minimeasures could begin almost immediately.
- "It's the ultimate cop-out to let them fight it out," says Lord
- Owen, who has been trying to broker a negotiated settlement for
- almost two years. Owen aside, there is no assurance that the
- genocide will moderate. Does anyone seriously think the Serbs
- will picnic as their opponents arm, or that they'll suddenly
- respect the lightly defended enclaves where innocents have
- gathered to escape the slaughter, the so-called safe havens they
- are currently shelling with impunity? Similarly, there is no
- certainty that the war won't widen in the Balkans anyway, and
- hardly any chance that the battle will be decisive enough to
- roll back the Serbs' territorial gains (although a new balance
- of power could conceivably precipitate serious negotiations).
- "All of that may be true," says a Clinton adviser, "but at least
- the President will be able to make the case that we've done the
- best we could without putting our own troops on the ground--assuming he isn't tempted to do so if things go badly. And he'll
- be able to stand behind multilateral action, which is the
- Democratic [Party] politicians' historic preference. The
- President's created a political problem for himself, so he's
- seeking to get out of it politically, with tactics that have the
- look and feel of real, muscular action. That's the game now. The
- morality rhetoric--the Holocaust analogy and all that--will
- of course continue as the President rallies the country. But as
- the underlying reason for action, morality takes a back seat to
- politics."
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
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