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- <text id=93TT0072>
- <title>
- Oct 18, 1993: The Political Interest
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Oct. 18, 1993 What in The World Are We Doing?
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- THE POLITICAL INTEREST, Page 75
- It's All Foreign To Clinton
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>By Michael Kramer
- </p>
- <p> Like most people, Bill Clinton is uncomfortable with what he
- doesn't know and avoids dealing with it. Fortunately for him,
- the nation he leads usually cares more about Madonna than Mogadishu;
- its turn inward following the cold war's end coincides neatly
- with the President's passion for domestic affairs. In even the
- most arcane of those areas, Clinton's expertise is astonishing,
- and he long ago articulated his formula for success: "You do
- your homework, you chart clear goals, you make sure all the
- parts mesh, and then, even though you have to bend some to get
- stuff passed, you stick by the key pieces of your plan till
- you accomplish your goals." But consistency and constancy, the
- critical prerequisites to the successful pursuit of any policy,
- are missing abroad. Why? It may be that Clinton's foreign and
- defense policy team is second-rate, judging from its performance
- in Somalia. Or it may be that a President whose interest flags
- at the water's edge is simply a slave to public and congressional
- opinion when he lacks his own clear bearings. Still, it is possible
- to understand where consistency and constancy would lead if
- the Administration were functioning properly overseas. Consider
- some current cases:
- </p>
- <p> SOMALIA Now that Defense Secretary Les Aspin has said the March
- 31, 1994, withdrawal date of U.S. troops is "etched in stone,"
- there is little doubt Somalia will revert to the ruinous state
- that inspired America's intervention in the first place. But
- a policy that truly cared about ends would be open-ended. However
- one defines the Somali mission, Clinton's desire to finish it
- "in the right way" ought to mean staying until the possibility
- of reversion is more than just "reasonably" foreclosed. Seeking
- an exit strategy before sailing in harm's way is smart, but
- it must be related to the mission's goal; an arbitrary deadline
- for withdrawal--especially one hostage to volatile domestic
- opinion--is not an exit strategy worthy of the term.
- </p>
- <p> Preserving U.S. credibility is Clinton's other stated objective.
- He foresees an "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." Which means what?
- A Defense Department official says hunting down General Aidid,
- the warlord responsible for targeting America's soldiers, is
- "definitely still an option." But the State Department insists
- that the increased U.S. troop presence is merely meant to protect
- the forces already there, and Clinton has signaled a willingness
- to negotiate rather than kill Aidid. "We have no interest in
- denying anybody access to playing a role in Somalia's political
- future," the President said last Friday. That's exactly wrong,
- says Henry Kissinger, who argues that failing to strike back
- at the forces that struck Americans virtually guarantees that
- the wrong lesson will be learned. The world's other mischief-makers
- will have no fear, says Kissinger, until the U.S. reduces Aidid's
- "power base so that it's apparent that when you tackle the U.S.
- in the brutal way in which it has been done, there is a penalty."
- </p>
- <p> BOSNIA Future humanitarian interventions, the do-good exercises
- that so charmed Clinton before he took office, seem destined
- to be judged worthwhile only if the cost in American lives is
- negligible or nonexistent--which rules out virtually everything
- besides earthquake relief. Bosnia will almost surely be a casualty
- of Somalia. In February, Secretary of State Warren Christopher
- said, "The world's response to the violence in the former Yugoslavia
- is a crucial test of how it will address the concerns of ethnic
- and religious minorities in the post-cold war world...Bold
- tyrants and fearful minorities are watching to see whether `ethnic
- cleansing' is a policy the world will tolerate." They have their
- answer. With so many Americans disgusted with Clinton's handling
- of Somalia, it's hard to see how the President could command
- the public and congressional support necessary for a Bosnian
- adventure.
- </p>
- <p> EASTERN EUROPE "In a new era of peril and opportunity," Clinton
- told the U.N. last month, "our overriding purpose must be to
- expand the world's community of market-based economies...We seek to enlarge the circle of nations that live under those
- free institutions." That goal has led the U.S. to support Boris
- Yeltsin at all costs, which has so far meant ignoring his authoritarian
- impulses. Russia is a special case, of course, but other states
- of the former Soviet empire eager for democracy and free markets
- are also eager for security from Russia. Poland, Hungary and
- the Czech Republic view membership in an expanded NATO as the
- way to achieve it. Against the wishes of his army, Yeltsin seemed
- to agree last August. Now, however, the Russian President has
- changed course, apparently as part of a deal with the military,
- without whose support Yeltsin would have been deposed last week--and Washington has swallowed that too.
- </p>
- <p> Locking countries like Poland and Hungary into the free world's
- premier defense alliance would serve Clinton's goals and ensure
- that if Russia reverts to totalitarianism, at least a few hundred
- million more people will be outside Moscow's easy grasp. Right
- now, potential Western investors are holding back from Central
- Europe, and who can blame them? Offer those businesses a more
- secure environment and they'll create the markets Clinton wants.
- </p>
- <p> FOREIGN AID Thriving markets, Clinton says, are impossible without
- free trade. Totally free markets are a myth, but the Administration's
- recent decision to adopt "tied-aid" practices is inconsistent
- with Clinton's support for NAFTA and for a new, freer global-trade
- regime. Tied aid forces recipients of U.S. financial help to
- spend some of the dollars they receive on American goods and
- services. The U.S. has long criticized Japan, France, Germany
- and other countries for attaching strings to roughly $6 billion
- in their foreign assistance in exactly the manner Clinton has
- now proposed. "There is way too much of it, in ways that cost
- Americans way too many dollars and jobs and export opportunities
- that we could win under any free-market scenario imaginable,"
- the President said last month.
- </p>
- <p> Why, then, do two wrongs make a right in this case? They don't,
- as the State Department insisted. But Clinton sided with his
- trade negotiators, saying his decision was necessary to "counter
- the tied-aid practices of our competitors." At the modest levels
- proposed, a mere $150 million, Clinton's action won't deter
- anyone. What it will do is cede the moral high ground to those
- who have pursued tied aid for decades and entrench such subsidies
- for years to come. The President has "been captured by those
- who want to whack Japan,'' says a White House aide. "He's acting
- petulantly, not to mention inconsistently. We'll pay for this
- in scores of ways as we try to push for freer trade. It's not
- just stupid; it's counterproductive."
- </p>
- <p> CHINA NUKES "If we do not stem the proliferation of the world's
- deadliest weapons, no democracy can feel secure," Clinton told
- the U.N. That's right, of course, and so is the President's
- first ever call to ban the production of nuclear weapons. But
- Clinton's instruction that the U.S. prepare again to test such
- weapons, a knee-jerk response to China's recent nuclear test,
- represents one more inconsistency. Resuming American testing
- would also make it harder to extend the Nuclear Nonproliferation
- Treaty, which expires in 1995. The truly pernicious problem,
- says a senior Defense Department official, "is that if we start
- testing again, others will follow. As we see in every dealing
- with Beijing, China wants to show it's a big-deal country that
- can't be pushed around. You accept that need, and you deal with
- it diplomatically. You don't open a can of worms testing your
- own stuff simply to prove that our nukes are bigger than theirs."
- </p>
- <p> At too many points in foreign and defense policy, Clinton is
- responding like Everyman rather than as the Commander in Chief
- and leader of the free world. "The role of the President in
- foreign affairs is to fight the American public," says Paul
- Nitze, the veteran diplomat who began his career in the Truman
- Administration. The President must "teach the public that things
- they want in the short term are not really in their interest."
- Nitze also knows that Clinton's basic foreign policy goals are
- vintage American ideals. It was he who drafted the 1950 National
- Security Council document that grandly set U.S. cold war strategy
- "as one designed to foster a world environment in which the
- American system can survive and flourish," rhetoric that caused
- the U.S. to contest communism at every turn for four decades.
- With the cold war over, America has survived. To continue flourishing,
- Clinton must apply to the rest of the world the constancy and
- consistency he has often displayed at home.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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