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- <text id=90TT1429>
- <title>
- June 04, 1990: America Abroad
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- June 04, 1990 Gorbachev:In The Eye Of The Storm
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- THE SUMMIT, Page 36
- AMERICA ABROAD
- The Fear of a Weimar Russia
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>By Strobe Talbott
- </p>
- <p>MOSCOW
- </p>
- <p> The most contentious issue of this week's summit may also
- be the most important foreign policy challenge facing the U.S.
- in the '90s: how to keep the peace in Europe now that the cold
- war is over. George Bush not only wants to preserve NATO, with
- a united Germany as a full member and U.S. troops on its soil;
- he also wants the Soviet Union to like the idea. In his TIME
- interview, Mikhail Gorbachev dismissed as "not serious" (a
- scathing put-down in the lexicon of Soviet diplomacy) the
- notion that a strengthened NATO will replace a disintegrating
- Warsaw Pact as the guarantor of the U.S.S.R.'s security.
- </p>
- <p> Gorbachev was rebutting an argument that American officials
- dare not make in public and are circumspect about making even
- in private. Their winks and nods, euphemisms and disclaimers
- can be translated into one stark sentence that summarizes the
- only truly strategic thought the U.S. Government has about the
- 21st century: a Germany "anchored" in NATO is less likely to
- cause trouble than one that is neutral and nonaligned. Note the
- verb, with its metaphorical suggestion not only of safety from
- rough seas but also of a heavy chain and benevolent captivity.
- </p>
- <p> Even in their most confidential communications with the
- Kremlin, U.S. policymakers and diplomats have been careful not
- to make this pitch too explicit. They are afraid the KGB may
- make mischief between Washington and Bonn by leaking any cable
- or memorandum that reveals Americans to be exploiting Soviet
- anxiety about Germany. There is nothing cryptic about the
- apprehension of the British, French, Czechoslovaks and Poles
- as they watch the juggernaut of German unification. The Bush
- Administration keeps hoping the Kremlin will therefore not
- object too strenuously as the U.S. helps sponsor the emergence
- of a new Germany at the center of a new NATO.
- </p>
- <p> At the beginning of the year, the Administration was
- counting on the summit to help advance its German policy. The
- meeting , predicted one presidential adviser, was going to be
- "Christmas in spring," with Bush in the role of Santa Claus.
- Gorbachev would go home in triumph, laden with so many honors
- and agreements that his countrymen would barely notice he had
- let the U.S. have its way on Germany.
- </p>
- <p> Then the Lithuanian crisis complicated the work of Santa's
- helpers in Washington and steeled resistance in Moscow. The top
- brass of the military was already upset about "losing" Eastern
- Europe. Now it looked as though Soviet power might be
- humiliated even within the borders of the U.S.S.R. Marshal
- Sergei Akhromeyev, Gorbachev's personal military adviser,
- bluntly said that no setback would be more galling than "seeing
- our East German allies defect to NATO." Yevgeni Primakov, one
- of Gorbachev's closest associates on the Presidential Council,
- agreed in a conversation a few weeks ago: "A united Germany in
- NATO is something we just can't swallow."
- </p>
- <p> A high Foreign Ministry official explains why. "Having East
- Germany leave the Warsaw Pact--that's one thing. It means
- we've lost the cold war. Okay. We can accept that, although
- it's not so easy. But having our enemies of the '40s, the
- Germans, join our enemies of the '50s, '60s and '70s in an
- alliance whose whole reason for being is anti-Soviet--that
- makes us feel as though we lost World War II."
- </p>
- <p> Then comes a telling reference, frequently echoed in Moscow,
- to the aftermath of World War I: "The U.S. and the West must
- not rub our noses too much in our defeat; it must not impose
- on us at the end of the 20th century a version of the Treaty
- of Versailles that caused so much trouble at the beginning. We
- don't want to feel like Weimar Germany. And you shouldn't want
- us to." Not even in private will a patriotic Soviet finish that
- thought: the Weimar Republic gave way to Hitler's Third Reich.
- Yet that is what some Soviets seem to have in mind. They fear
- not only the worst from Germany's past but also something just
- as bad that may lurk in their own future. These twin dreads
- interact powerfully, if not quite logically. As Gorbachev at
- least tacitly acknowledges, in his country rationality is as
- scarce as soap these days. The outside world is a mirror into
- which Soviets look and wince.
- </p>
- <p> What can they do to stop the U.S. from ramming its own
- answer to the German question down their throats? "Nothing,"
- admits a close Gorbachev adviser. "But the outcome will
- influence our approach on many other matters. If the old German
- Democratic Republic joins NATO, the Soviet military will be
- harder for all of us, including Gorbachev, to deal with on a
- variety of other issues." That presumably refers to the many
- issues of nuclear and conventional arms control that will not
- be resolved at the summit this week.
- </p>
- <p> Washington's response is predictable: Oh, that's just
- Gorbachev letting his marshals and generals play the bad cops.
- But George Bush may find that on this subject there are no good
- cops in the Soviet Union.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-