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- <text id=94TT1333>
- <link 94TO0204>
- <title>
- Oct. 03, 1994: Cover:The Carter Connection
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Oct. 03, 1994 Blinksmanship
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- COVER STORIES, Page 30
- The Carter Connection
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> Clinton at war has the countenance of Clinton at peace. Or is
- that Carter?
- </p>
- <p>By Michael Kramer
- </p>
- <p> Given the bloodshed predicted, Haiti proved to be a remarkable
- triumph last week. It is even possible that the deal may stick
- when the muscle behind it is withdrawn. So why does Bill Clinton's
- Haitian success have that insistent scent of failure about it?
- Was it only the stumbling way in which war was avoided? Or the
- spectacle of a former President in the lair of "thugs," declaring
- them to be men of honor and denouncing his own country's policy
- as shameful? It's tempting to focus on Jimmy Carter. We don't
- encounter him much these days. But that queasy feeling isn't
- all Carter's fault. It arises from the current President's breathtaking
- presumption that what is said with deep sincerity one day may
- be repealed with equal vigor the next. In the case of Haiti,
- the demonized dictators overnight became "de facto leaders."
- The diplomacy said to be exhausted when the President readied
- the nation for battle was actually still under way as he spoke.
- Indeed, a last-minute negotiation had been contemplated for
- days.
- </p>
- <p> Bill Clinton at war has the disquieting countenance of Bill
- Clinton at peace: few principles seem inviolate; indiscipline
- and incoherence are the norm; careful planning falls to last-minute
- improvisation; steadfastness is only a tactic. At home that
- is not so remarkable. Political reality routinely demands compromise.
- And to be sure, Clinton has shown flashes of political courage
- and persistence, most notably in winning passage of NAFTA. But
- in the exercise of military power, and especially when one leads
- the world's lone superpower, retreat is contemptible. Consider
- the two other showcases of horror Clinton pledged to redress
- before Haiti. "History has shown that you can't allow the mass
- extermination of people and just sit idly by and watch it happen,"
- said the President about Bosnia. That of course is exactly what
- we have done. It will be "open season on Americans" if "aggressors,
- thugs and terrorists...conclude that the best way to get
- us to change our policies is to kill our people," Clinton said
- of Somalia. But when 18 U.S. troops were gunned down in Mogadishu,
- the President changed our policy: We left. Reasonable people
- may disagree about the wisdom of those policies. That is not
- the point. The point is that the President's words cannot be
- counted on for meaning.
- </p>
- <p> A world in which raw power is still held in the highest respect
- may be forgiven if it is unimpressed with a leader so patently
- averse to using it. In Clinton's world, intellectual effort
- is too often directed at blaming others. The President portrays
- himself variously as the victim of a public that fears change,
- a cynical post-Watergate nation or the fractionated, post-cold
- war world. What happens now that U.S. marines have drawn Haitian
- blood? If the Haiti policy doesn't go well, the Administration
- will revert to the story it had already begun retailing on "deep
- background" before the deal was even struck. In that scenario
- Jimmy Carter exceeded his brief from the start. If the President
- rejected Carter's deal, the former President would complain
- that Clinton had refused an agreement that promised a peaceful
- occupation. Clinton, in this version of the story, was his negotiator's
- hostage. He was boxed in.
- </p>
- <p> In fact, of course, whatever the shortcomings of the squishy
- agreement Carter brokered, it could not have flown without Clinton's
- approval. And even if it works, it will still be true that at
- the point of maximum U.S. military and diplomatic leverage,
- at a point when America held all the cards, Clinton cum Carter
- folded to a bluff. Protectively, some in the Administration
- are already blaming the invasion deadline for the agreement's
- imperfections (or Colin Powell for arguing that the treaty's
- ambiguities would fall to the reality of American might on the
- ground). But the deadline was artificial. What Clinton most
- feared was Congress tying his hands. The invasion had to commence
- before his policy was repudiated, and the vote he knew he'd
- lose was scheduled for the very day the war was set to start.
- </p>
- <p> Why was Carter Clinton's envoy in the first place? The President
- must have known that using the failed ex-President would remind
- many of Carter's own seemingly hapless Administration. Why would
- a President whose closest aides think the country is fast concluding
- he isn't up to the job voluntarily associate himself with a
- predecessor about whom that judgment is widely taken as fact?
- Perhaps the answer lies in their shared belief in salvation:
- Just as Clinton had raised the possibility of Saddam Hussein's
- redemption during his transition, Carter tends to accentuate
- the positive in the dictators he meets. Or perhaps in bringing
- Carter into it, Clinton was trying to embrace and convert a
- critic, as he has done to a fault so many times before. The
- most plausible reason, though, returns to the President's plastic
- sense of commitment and willingness to bend facts to his use.
- It is all too easy to see how this President--fearful of war,
- facing a wall of public and political opposition, but desperate
- to salvage his credibility after threatening toughness for so
- long--would simply reach for anyone, and any deal, capable
- of saving him from the image of body bags returning from Haiti.
- And there was Jimmy Carter.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
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