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- <text id=93TT0151>
- <title>
- July 12, 1993: Tokyo's No Star Line-Up
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- July 12, 1993 Reno:The Real Thing
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 42
- Tokyo's No Star Line-Up
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>On the eve of their economic summit, the world's leaders, suffering
- from an absence of vision, seem smaller than the problems they
- face
- </p>
- <p>By JAMES WALSH--With reporting by David Aikman/Washington, Margot Hornblower/Paris,
- James O. Jackson/Bonn and William Mader/London, with other bureaus
- </p>
- <p> If misery loves company, leaders attending the annual Group
- of Seven summit in Japan this week ought to feel right at home,
- for a sadder collection of bruises and black eyes would be hard
- to find. From John Major of Britain to Kiichi Miyazawa of Japan,
- the heads of the world's richest and most powerful democracies
- have been chewed up in a grinder of popular discontent.
- </p>
- <p> The G-7 summit has an important script--coordinating economic
- policies, stabilizing Russia and rescuing free trade--but
- the actors seem far from up to their roles. Says foreign policy
- analyst Michael Mandelbaum, a friend of President Clinton's
- who turned down a high U.S. State Department post in January:
- "What we have in Tokyo is a meeting of the world's strongest
- countries but the world's weakest leaders." It is, says Michael
- Aho, a fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations, "the summit
- of the politically unpopular.''
- </p>
- <p> For Clinton the Tokyo conference was supposed to be a chance
- to shine in foreign affairs and reassert American leadership
- over the Group of Seven. By last week, however, the outlook
- had changed to a point where White House aides were scrambling
- to scale back expectations, pointing to Japan's political tumult
- as a hindrance to agreements. The sorry truth is that Miyazawa
- is scarcely alone in his fall from grace. Along with his fellow
- summiteers, Clinton is plagued by waning faith in his abilities.
- His first four months in office have made America's allies less
- respectful of the traditional U.S. leadership role and Clinton's
- stewardship. Every land and age suspects that the present generation
- fails to live up to achievements of the past, so it was probably
- inevitable that people today would be wondering what happened
- to the Churchills and Roosevelts and De Gaulles, the Adenauers
- and Nehrus of yesteryear. Yet the present discontent goes beyond
- simple nostalgia. A terrible form of gridlock has seized the
- most prominent nations, from old democracies like the U.S. to
- the newest, most notably Russia.
- </p>
- <p> Why the dearth of grand leaders on the world stage? Largely
- it is because of the absence of grand challenges, or at least
- of the clear good-vs.-evil challenges that can rally a people
- and call forth bold leadership. Franklin Roosevelt and Winston
- Churchill were 20th century archetypes of the crisis leader.
- Mortal peril and powerful enemies can force leadership on ordinary
- men--Harry Truman, for example. So can wrenching historic
- changes, like the dramatic endgame of the cold war, which cast
- players such as Reagan, Thatcher, Gorbachev and Walesa in historic
- roles.
- </p>
- <p> With the end of the cold war, the world's challenges are no
- less important or difficult, but they are murkier and more intractable.
- For a brief, triumphal moment, Western democratic capitalism
- seemed to have defeated all comers. Such elation was quickly
- replaced by a realization that the world's hardships and hatreds
- were hardly diminished by the end of the cold war. Standing
- up to the Soviets, while a daunting task and perhaps one oversimplified
- at the time, was in some ways less tricky than sorting out the
- collapse of Yugoslavia or dealing with a persistently sluggish
- global economy. Communism's demise left grand alliances of countries
- bereft of ideologies, foes and, ultimately, a vision of where
- to go next.
- </p>
- <p> Today's list of endemic woes, topped by economic stagnation
- and ethnic warfare, certainly add up to a crisis. But it is
- a creeping, chronic crisis, not one that galvanizes people or
- calls for leaders to wield a sword of confrontation. Now, when
- the challenge is mainly to cooperate, to find national and multilateral
- solutions to long-term ills, today's leaders are coming up short.
- </p>
- <p> Six months ago, many Europeans and Japanese, beset by economic
- reverses and political paralysis, gazed at the young new American
- President with frank envy. Says Max Kampelman, a former U.S.
- diplomat and Ronald Reagan's chief arms-control negotiator:
- "I think the world was ready for a Bill Clinton leadership,
- but Bill Clinton wasn't ready. Our President has a capacity
- to lead, but he started out falling flat on his face." Eugene
- Rostow, an Under Secretary of State in Lyndon Johnson's presidency,
- had similar high hopes for fellow Democrat Clinton; he now finds
- himself "puzzled, startled, disappointed."
- </p>
- <p> The roll call of walking wounded extends further. Boris Yeltsin
- in Russia and Poland's Lech Walesa were heroes in opposition,
- but in power have revealed feet of clay. Deng Xiaoping in China
- is on his last legs, with no sign so far that anyone of comparable
- vision will succeed him. Felipe Gonzalez, the boy wonder of
- Spain a decade ago, barely squeaked by in national elections
- last month and is still struggling to form a minority government.
- In New Delhi a press commentary calls P.V. Narasimha Rao "the
- Prime Muddler of India."
- </p>
- <p> As the Tokyo summit neared, Clinton seemed to be attempting
- to pass the blame for some of America's woes to his G-7 partners.
- "It's very hard for the U.S. to grow without help from other
- nations," he said. The Japanese "ought to stimulate their economy
- and open their markets." Germany, he said, "should continue
- to lower interest rates," while all the major powers together
- have to get fully behind the stalled free-trade talks and reach
- a successful conclusion this year. The homily may have sounded
- like a whine, but it illustrated the extent to which American
- power really has diminished in tackling its own troubles.
- </p>
- <p> As Clinton said, quoting the Bible in his acceptance of the
- Democratic nomination a year ago, "Where there is no vision,
- the people perish." Democracy as such is not in doubt today:
- most people would pass up the chance to have another "strong"
- leader like Hitler or Stalin. But the debate over where democracy
- can take societies, as distinct from whether it is a good thing,
- was frozen for many years by the cold war struggle. In its wake,
- governments are hard pressed to supply inspiration.
- </p>
- <p> In Britain, John Major's public repute is the lowest for any
- Prime Minister since the country began polling. Miyazawa, following
- his government's June 18 collapse, is not only a lame duck but
- probably a dead one. Francois Mitterrand? His Socialists were
- routed in parliamentary elections four months ago, reducing
- the shrewd but tired 76-year-old President to a power-sharing
- role. Helmut Kohl? Three years after his luminous hour of forging
- German unification, the Chancellor has the lowest popularity
- among leading German politicians, according to a recent ZDF
- television poll. About Carlo Azeglio Ciampi, Italy's new stopgap
- Prime Minister, the best that can be said is that he is not
- a career politician. That happens to be saying a lot: the biggest
- names in Italian politics, if not the corruption-riddled political
- structure as a whole, have been heading toward ignominy.
- </p>
- <p> In its latest issue, American Enterprise reports that huge majorities
- in every G-7 country but one--Japan, surprisingly--express
- unhappiness with the direction their nations are taking: 71%
- in the U.S., 70% in Canada, 63% in Britain, 61% in France. The
- surveys bear out a growing sense that electorates see their
- leaders not as temporarily lost pathfinders so much as empty
- suits. Deriding the gallery of statesmen manque he saw before
- him, columnist Norman Stone of the Times of London quoted Nietzsche:
- "I sowed dragons and I reaped fleas."
- </p>
- <p> Former Japanese Prime Minister Yasuhiro Nakasone, the nearest
- thing to a strong leader Japan has had in nearly two decades,
- argues, "With the cold war gone and Russia no longer the enemy,
- strong leadership is going from centripetal to centrifugal.
- It is being dispersed," resulting in something "more like the
- Japanese consensus-oriented type rather than the crisis type."
- </p>
- <p> One of the unmanaged agenda items is the on-again, off-again
- effort to build what George Bush termed, apparently without
- thinking the idea through, a new world order. Why is it so difficult?
- A precedent occurred not that long ago. One reason men like
- Roosevelt are such towering figures in hindsight is that they
- won a peace as well as a war. They were like demiurges, already
- prepared to re-create the world almost de novo, with initiatives
- for such global institutions as the United Nations, the Bretton
- Woods international financial regime and the General Agreement
- on Tariffs and Trade. Conferences and charters proliferated.
- In the depths of the war, thinkers were planning for the aftermath--even if their ideas ran to such silly extremes as turning
- mighty Germany into a land of milkmaids and gingerbread cottages.
- </p>
- <p> The cold war's end, in contrast, was so abrupt as to leave the
- victorious nations flat-footed. No one had really planned for
- it, believed it could happen. Some of the results are well known
- today: the enormous costs of German unity, which have helped
- trigger a Europe-wide recession; waves of economic migrants
- and refugees from Central and Eastern Europe; nations that were
- formerly enemies now appearing on the doorstep like orphans,
- hat in hand and pleading to be fed; a general dwindling of motive
- power behind such overarching aspirations as a more closely
- united Europe, not to mention the idea of a common international
- cause of any kind. Freer world trade is on the ropes, and the
- major powers, far from articulating a vision of how societies
- can act together, have been jockeying more intensely for national
- advantage.
- </p>
- <p> Kurt Biedenkopf, one of Germany's most thought-provoking politicians,
- believes that the leadership failure around the world betokens
- a lack of intellectual assets in governance. "The stock of old
- answers is obsolete," he says. "But the leaders are still using
- the old answers." Erwin K. Scheuch, a professor of sociology
- at Cologne University, chuckles at one explanation of why governments
- of the recent past were not so afflicted. "During the cold war,
- our guys always looked so much better than theirs that ours
- benefited from the comparison." Things are different now.
- </p>
- <p> The gridlock in many cases arises from a failure of national
- leaders to work well enough together, as this week's G-7 gathering
- will most likely demonstrate. In Kampelman's view, the lack
- of unity and coordination is a principal reason that so many
- democracies feel crippled. "We have seen a globalization of
- science, technology and communications, and it has moved into
- economics," he says. "Everything is becoming interconnected,
- and yet in the world of politics we are still in the Middle
- Ages." He stresses that arrangements for a new world order "don't
- happen because they are ordained in the order of the stars.
- They require leadership. Our country doesn't seem to understand
- that."
- </p>
- <p> Another flaw may be the way the power of the state in leading
- democracies has expanded in trying to be all things to all people.
- Kim Holmes, director of foreign and defense policy studies at
- Washington's Heritage Foundation, contends that West European
- nations especially have shouldered too many social burdens and
- created a logjam of conflicting public demands, which is why
- they are now frantically trying to trim costs. He emphasizes:
- "If the main thrust of governments is to take more and more
- responsibility for gratifying people's needs, you are always
- going to be setting up the government for disapproval."
- </p>
- <p> By a new world order, Bush meant primarily issues of security:
- deterring Iraqi-style aggression and maintaining stability even
- if it meant defending an imperfect status quo. These are still
- questions of great concern, especially in light of Yugoslavia's
- savage collapse. Clinton has not done much toward asserting
- U.S. leadership in the field. He threatened Serb aggression
- with a limp fist and has failed to frame the terms of a debate
- on whether the U.N. Security Council is right to intervene wherever
- such brutality exists. Yet security is only one of the world's
- several bulking issues.
- </p>
- <p> In facing down the threat of totalitarianism, democratic societies
- have grown used to the idea that the bare mechanism of choosing
- leaders is sufficient for democracy. In the 19th century, philosophers
- constantly argued and debated what the rights and ideals of
- democracy might be. John Stuart Mill, a passionate libertarian,
- was convinced that visions of freedom and happiness must be
- constantly discussed, altered and changed as societies change,
- lest they fall into "the deep slumber of a decided opinion."
- In our time, the British philosopher Isaiah Berlin has pointed
- out, "Men do not live only by fighting evils. They live by positive
- goals, individual and collective, a vast variety of them."
- </p>
- <p> Abba Eban, a former Israeli Foreign Minister, says the G-7 partners
- could be a real force for action, "but they have not learned
- to think together. They bring together an extraordinary concentration
- of power, but their meetings don't seem to produce anything."
- Eban's prescription: "They should recognize that collectively
- they have immense power to change the human condition, but individually
- they have not. They should set up a permanent institution, almost
- like a new state. Existing bodies cannot do the job." That would
- require both the wisdom and the leadership qualities of modern-day
- philosopher-kings. Though there may be some of those waiting
- in the wings, none seem to be stalking the stage for now.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-