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- <text id=90TT2197>
- <link 91TT0056>
- <link 90TT3064>
- <link 90TT2508>
- <title>
- Aug. 20, 1990: Read My Ships
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- Aug. 20, 1990 Showdown
- The Gulf:Desert Shield
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- THE GULF, Page 18
- COVER STORIES
- Read My Ships
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>George Bush, who has spent a lifetime preparing for the kind of
- crisis he faces in the Persian Gulf, has adroitly rallied most
- of the world behind him. Now he must keep the pressure on until
- Saddam backs down.
- </p>
- <p>By Michael Kramer--With reporting by Michael Duffy/Washington
- </p>
- <p> Communism collapses, America declines. For more than a year,
- that coupling has expressed the conventional wisdom: a new
- world is emerging, a post-cold war era driven as never before
- by economic competition, an order in which other nations, new
- superpowers like Germany and Japan, will challenge U.S.
- primacy. At best, the argument runs, an exhausted U.S., nearly
- bankrupt after 40 years of containing Soviet expansionism, will
- have to share global leadership in the 21st century.
- </p>
- <p> It may play that way. It may even be likely. But not just
- yet. The uneven distribution of wealth-producing resources--the gap between haves and have-nots--is fueling a regional
- crisis, a struggle with severe implications for the entire
- world's standard of living. And only the U.S., most everyone
- acknowledges, has the capacity to muster the international
- effort required to stop the power-grab of a vain, amoral
- crusader like Saddam Hussein. It appears that George Bush has
- the will and skill to do so.
- </p>
- <p> "Watch and learn," the President said as events unfolded
- last week--a boast reminiscent of an earlier bit of Bush
- self-analysis: "Maybe I'll turn out to be a Teddy Roosevelt."
- </p>
- <p> This is the crisis for which Bush has spent a lifetime
- preparing, the test he knew would come sometime, the challenge
- he has always been confident he could meet. Ten years ago, as
- he was losing the Republican presidential nomination to Ronald
- Reagan, Bush shucked off his shoes, loosened his tie, grabbed
- a beer and took a quiet moment to calmly assess the job he
- coveted. "You work your ass off, get credit for stuff you're
- barely involved in and none at all for things you've put
- together behind the scenes. Domestic problems drag you down and
- nag all the time. You're up in the polls and down and then up
- again. But sooner or later something major happens, something
- abroad that only we [the U.S.] can do something about. Then
- you show if you can cut it. If you can't, everything else can
- be going beautifully and you're probably out of there next
- time. If you pull it off, a lot else can go wrong and you'll
- be all right. Because when people hit the [voting] booth, well,
- then they think, `Hey, when the chips are down, this guy can
- defend us and what we stand for, and that's what it's all
- about.' I know I can handle the foreign policy side. On that,
- at least, our campaign slogan hits it. I really would be a
- President we don't have to train."
- </p>
- <p> Eight years later, Bush still saw foreign policy as his
- ticket to the White House and the true measure of presidential
- achievement. After Michael Dukakis' rousing performance at the
- 1988 Democratic Convention, Bush was down 17 points in the
- polls. A rash of silly sloganeering and low blows ensued
- (remember the Pledge of Allegiance and Willie Horton?), but the
- road back followed a carefully detailed game plan and always
- returned to attacking Dukakis as ill equipped to manage
- America's world role. Whenever complicated domestic questions
- threatened to confuse the message, Bush heeded his handlers'
- advice and pushed his central theme. "The single most important
- job of the President," he reminded audiences time and again,
- "is the national security of the United States."
- </p>
- <p> On Aug. 4, 1988 (exactly two years before he took the first
- steps toward ordering U.S. troops to the Persian Gulf), Bush
- delivered a major foreign affairs speech and referred
- approvingly to John Kennedy's Inaugural Address: "We shall bear
- any burden, meet any hardship, support any friend, oppose any
- foe to assure the survival and success of liberty." After
- nearly three decades of convulsive history, that single Kennedy
- paragraph, with its repetitive "anys," is one that many
- historians identify as representing a misplaced sense of
- Manifest Destiny. But Bush told his Corpus Christi, Texas,
- audience that J.F.K.'s formulation reflected "the policies and
- principles I will follow as President." As bombast worked for
- Kennedy, so too it worked for Bush. Election Day exit polls
- revealed that of the 25% of all voters who identified defense
- and foreign affairs as the deciding factors in their choice,
- 87% voted for Bush.
- </p>
- <p> If faith in Bush's ability to protect America's interests
- abroad helped elect him, his handling of the present crisis has
- been masterly. Iraq's aggression may not be the defining moment
- of Bush's presidency, but it is certainly the best so far, and
- it comes on the heels of a series of domestic miscues--on the
- budget, taxes, parental leave, civil rights and the S&L
- scandal. If Bush ignored the Iraqi threat for weeks, if his
- Administration miscalculated Saddam's messianic intentions and
- engaged in a quiet appeasement of Baghdad for the better part
- of two years, if America is at greater risk because Bush, his
- predecessors and Congress failed to develop a credible energy
- policy that reduced the country's dependence on foreign oil,
- at least since the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait the President has
- proved adroit, even brilliant.
- </p>
- <p> Bush may lack an overarching global vision, but he has a
- clear understanding of the emerging geostrategic realities and
- the ways in which they can be turned to advantage. Were Reagan
- still in office, it is almost certain that securing
- international cooperation would have been way down on the White
- House agenda. Reagan relished America's role as world
- policeman, a lone cowboy avenging evil. Bush knows that rounding
- up a posse in advance better suits today's world. Last week's
- promise of allied and Arab forces may add meaningfully to the
- U.S. military effort in the gulf--or count for little if war
- comes. But even if those actions are only symbolic, they matter
- greatly. When a dicey situation requires a long-term commitment--as the current deployment appears to be--having others in
- your corner, if not in your foxhole, makes it far easier to
- prosecute and sustain.
- </p>
- <p> The key to Bush's unprecedented freedom of maneuver is the
- new Soviet-American detente. With Moscow eager to show its more
- cooperative face to the world (and avoid offending the U.S.
- when the Soviets need Western economic assistance), a joint
- U.S.-Soviet condemnation of Iraq was swiftly crafted. Once that
- was in place, other nations could join Washington without fear
- of reprisal. But the pieces still needed assembling, and the
- years Bush spent assiduously courting foreign leaders paid off
- handsomely. "Call Fahd, call Ozal, say this to this guy, that
- to another," says a Bush aide who watched his boss calculate.
- </p>
- <p>exactly opposite of how Reagan worked. He knew the military
- thrust should follow the diplomatic. He knew that to be
- effective, the lineup against Saddam had to be perceived as
- more than just the rich West against a poor Arab." Within days,
- worldwide economic sanctions were in place: a boycott of Iraqi
- and Kuwaiti oil and a freezing of those nations' assets.
- </p>
- <p> One phone call was especially important. Before the crisis,
- Japan imported 12% of its oil from Iraq and Kuwait.
- Nonetheless, Bush persuaded Japanese Prime Minister Toshiki
- Kaifu to join the boycott of Iraqi crude. "People are always
- giving Bush guff for his first-name strategy with world
- leaders," says an Administration official. "But then he calls
- Tokyo and gets Kaifu to go along with the oil embargo, a step
- that may not be in Japan's self-interest. To say we were
- surprised is to put it mildly." Equally impressive was the
- President's engineering of United Nations sanctions against
- Iraq--a delicious irony given Bush's repeated swipes at
- Dukakis for naively believing in the U.N.'s usefulness.
- </p>
- <p> Rallying the Arab world to the American cause has been
- trickiest. Saudi Arabia feared that the U.S. might tire of its
- mission and pull out, leaving the oil-rich kingdom at Saddam's
- mercy. But the resolve Bush projected was perceived as firm,
- in part because he waived the Metzenbaum amendment--a
- restriction on the sale of U.S. jets to the Saudis. Coupled
- with the satellite intelligence showing that Saddam's forces
- were positioned to strike the Saudis, that action turned King
- Fahd into a believer, and U.S. troops were promptly invited to
- defend Saudi Arabia.
- </p>
- <p> At week's end Saddam's tirade against his Arab neighbors for
- countenancing American aid tipped most other Arab nations to
- Bush's view of the Iraqi danger. To their rhetorical anger,
- they have now added a pledge of Arab ground forces and support
- for the economic isolation of Iraq. Would the region's leaders
- have acted so decisively against Saddam if Bush had not already
- drawn so many others to his side while deploying U.S. air, sea
- and land power into the area? Probably not. The backbone
- required to overcome their fear of Saddam was supplied by Bush.
- </p>
- <p> "In terms of directional clarity," says a Bush adviser,
- "this has all been an easy call. Even a dolt understands the
- principle. We need the oil. It's nice to talk about standing
- up for freedom, but Kuwait and Saudi Arabia are not exactly
- democracies, and if their principal export were oranges, a
- mid-level State Department official would have issued a
- statement and we would have closed Washington down for August.
- There is nothing to waver about here." What Saddam offers the
- President, says another White House aide, is "a case where he
- knows what's right, he knows what the American people think, and
- he knows what he should do. Most important, he knows these are
- all one and the same thing."
- </p>
- <p> The public U.S. strategy is two-pronged. Militarily, Bush
- intends to stop Iraq at the Saudi border, guaranteeing by the
- sheer presence of American troops that an attack on Saudi
- Arabia is an attack on the U.S. The international boycott of
- Baghdad is in fact an economic offensive designed to squeeze
- Saddam so tightly that he is forced to withdraw from Kuwait.
- "Nobody can stand up forever to total economic deprivation,"
- said Bush last week.
- </p>
- <p> If a shooting war is avoided now, it may come later. When
- and if the economic stranglehold hits Iraq hard--perhaps in
- three to four months--it is entirely possible that rather
- than capitulate, Saddam will lash out militarily. No matter how
- supportive the public may be of Bush's intervention today, its
- willingness to tolerate flag-draped coffins returning to the
- U.S. for weeks on end is at best problematic. "This is not
- Panama or Grenada," says a man who has served both Reagan and
- Bush. "This is a deal with no known end," and the long haul is
- not America's strong suit. "The risk that is we won't be
- patient and determined enough to undertake the pressures of
- long-term commitment," says House Speaker Tom Foley.
- </p>
- <p> Even if no military clash occurs, Bush's skills will be
- tested further in the weeks and months ahead. Keeping the
- nation solidly behind him will become harder if a stalemate
- ensues and oil prices continue their upward spiral despite
- Saudi promises to increase production. Bush could insulate
- himself by finally pressing for a sane energy policy, but he
- shows no signs of even contemplating one.
- </p>
- <p> High gasoline prices represent but one potential political
- downside for Bush. A full-fledged recession is likelier than
- ever. A budget compromise with congressional Democrats--elusive even before the gulf crisis--will be that much more
- difficult to fashion if events in the Middle East mean that
- energy taxes and defense cuts are now deemed off the table.
- </p>
- <p> And those are only the non-lethal problems. Saddam's close
- ties to terrorist groups--Abu Nidal is just one Baghdad
- favorite--could put U.S. citizens at risk everywhere. And
- then there are the hostages, 3,500 Americans held against their
- will in Iraq and Kuwait. Of all the potential political threats
- to Bush, this is the greatest. The sight of yellow ribbons,
- already a staple of the evening news, will fester like an open
- wound. Terrified of the nightmare that doomed Jimmy Carter's
- presidency, the White House is straining to avoid the H word.
- To no avail, of course. The U.S. knows a hostage when it sees
- one.
- </p>
- <p> What will constitute a victory in the showdown against Iraq?
- If a year from now, oil-price stability has been achieved and
- Saddam is either back within his own borders or deposed, the
- political benefits for Bush will be great. As he said a decade
- ago, he will have delivered when the chips were down.
- </p>
- <p> Beyond the President's personal political fortunes, the
- present mess may spawn some truly significant legacies. The
- post-cold war U.N., ripe for realizing its lofty aims--the
- maintenance of peace and respect for international law--has
- passed an important test, and could become the useful forum for
- conflict resolution it was intended to be. In the Arab world,
- new alliances will probably emerge. Whether they are pro- or
- anti-Western, less or more hostile toward Israel, they will
- surely be different. Of greatest moment--at least to the U.S.--is the fact that Bush may have stumbled on a new role for
- America and the military power it commands. Leading the free
- world is less of a mission now that so many are free or on the
- way to becoming so. But someone is always going to have to lead
- the civilized world. Saddam Hussein isn't the last despot
- around.
- </p>
- <p> For hundreds of years, Iraq has been governed by men with
- ambitions to expand their country's borders. Whether a
- successor to Saddam would perpetuate that tradition is
- unknowable. But as long as Saddam himself is around, trouble
- will be close by. He is, after all, the same Saddam whose air
- force crippled the U.S.S. Stark with an Exocet missile three
- years ago. (A mistake, said Baghdad, and apologized.) Saddam
- sees himself as the rightful ruler of the Arab world--and he
- is embarked on a nuclear-weapons development program that the
- CIA says could be successful in three to five years. Thus the
- unstated third prong of Bush's strategy is actually to topple
- Saddam, perhaps by letting him stew long enough for domestic
- Iraqi discontent to reach new heights. "Let him off the hook
- now," says a White House aide, "and sooner or later he will be
- back, and we will be too--back to square one. Drag this out,
- and maybe, just maybe, Iraqis will become so fed up that
- they'll balk at the prospect of another long war and take out
- the fellow who can't seem to live without another one to
- fight."
- </p>
- <p> Symbols tell tales, and politicians manipulate them
- shamelessly. When Bush addressed the nation last week--"in
- the morning, because that's when he's best," says a White House
- aide--the credenza behind his Oval Office desk was loaded
- with family portraits; the extended Bush family as a metaphor
- for the even larger American family the President seeks to
- protect.
- </p>
- <p> But when he made the decision to send Americans to the
- Persian Gulf, Bush did so in a conference room at Camp David,
- the presidential retreat in Maryland's Catoctin mountains. Not
- far away, in a long hallway, a showcase of war mementos greets
- passers-by. Dominating the scene is a life-size photograph of
- Bush, the kind that tourists in Washington pay $5 to pose with.
- But Bush's version, a Christmas gift from the U.S. Army, is
- framed and has a dozen-odd bullet holes in its head. It was
- retrieved from the private pistol range of Manuel Noriega.
- Nearby are the original police mug shots of Noriega, face front
- and silhouette. Does the President enshrine these images as
- prehistoric men wore totems from which to derive strength? Or
- is this the beginning of a Terrorist Trophy Room, where the
- President, who often trains a double-barreled shotgun on Texas
- quail, can display what he has bagged in the way of bigger
- game?
- </p>
- <p> There is enough room on the wall for a picture of Saddam
- Hussein. In what pose, exactly? a Bush adviser was asked last
- week. "Dead would be nice," he replied--a flip remark that
- nonetheless reflected both the situation's seriousness and an
- outcome the Administration would welcome.
- </p>
- <p> After seconding John Kennedy's ringing declaration of
- America's purpose in his 1988 campaign, Bush was criticized for
- jingoism. "I don't think Kennedy was advocating intervention
- in every trouble spot," said Bush, and he was right. Many of
- America's foreign adventures have divided the nation. The gulf
- mission, so far, has united much of the world.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-