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- <text id=94TT1526>
- <title>
- Nov. 07, 1994: Essay:Romancing the Thugs
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Nov. 07, 1994 Mad as Hell
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ESSAY, Page 90
- Romancing the Thugs
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>By Charles Krauthhammer
- </p>
- <p> In 1992 candidate Bill Clinton excoriated president George Bush
- for "coddling" dictators. Now forget about General Raoul Cedras
- and his golden Panamanian parachute. Consider only that President
- Clinton last week bestowed one of the highest presidential honors
- on one of the world's chief thugs, President Hafez Assad of
- Syria. The usual place for meeting the likes of him is some
- neutral site like Geneva. (One comes away less soiled that way.)
- Yet Clinton decided to pay court to Assad in Damascus. It was
- the first visit by a President to a nation on the U.S. list
- of terrorist states.
- </p>
- <p> The catalog of Assad's atrocities goes back far, highlighted
- by the 1982 massacre of 20,000 of his own people in the rebellious
- town of Hama. But put that aside. Put aside the fact that Damascus
- is headquarters for a dozen terrorist groups, principal Arab
- supporter of Iran, controller of Lebanon's Hizballah terrorists
- (who last month launched rockets into Israel in support of the
- bus bombing that killed 23 people).
- </p>
- <p> Put aside the moral affront of an American President who denounces
- terrorism, then visits the capital of a terrorist state. Consider
- only the question of political logic: What did the U.S. get
- out of this trip?
- </p>
- <p> "An investment in peace," said the President's Near East adviser.
- Now that Syria is negotiating with Israel, the trip was meant
- to encourage Syria along the path of peace.
- </p>
- <p> Problem is, it didn't. There is not a shred of evidence, despite
- the defensive protestations of Administration officials, that
- Assad moved or that Clinton got anything at all for this investment
- of American prestige. The only clear return was to Assad, in
- the coin of international legitimacy and respectability.
- </p>
- <p> No one says that the U.S. should not talk to Syria.The question
- is whether the U.S. should reward an intransigent--forget
- terrorist--Syria with the ultimate presidential plum. The
- laying on of hands is earned by those who, like King Hussein
- of Jordan, make peace, not those who only dangle it while playing
- dirty games on the side.
- </p>
- <p> Yet Syria is not our only uncollateralized "investment in peace."
- Nor is it the most egregious example of up-front payment to
- a terrorist state in return for promises or promises of promises.
- The nuclear deal just concluded with North Korea earns that
- prize.
- </p>
- <p> Here the up-front American blandishments are staggering. North
- Korea gets: 1) a free supply of oil, 500,000 metric tons a year,
- for the next eight to 10 years; 2) construction of two shiny
- new nuclear reactors worth $4 billion, also free; 3) diplomatic
- ties with the U.S., which will immediately lead to 4) diplomatic
- ties with Japan, from which will flow 5) aid and trade and whatever
- else the North Korean regime needs to keep going--and keep
- threatening South Korea.
- </p>
- <p> In return for what? North Korea promises to allow the inspection
- of nuclear-waste sites--inspections it was committed to by
- treaty provisions it signed three years ago--oh, perhaps five
- years from now. And North Korea promises to shut down its plutonium
- reprocessing plant. Nice promise. Unfortunately, we've been
- here before. North Korea made the same pledge in a 1992 deal,
- which it then blithely broke. This time around it promises to
- dismantle the plant. When? In the next century.
- </p>
- <p> Meanwhile, the oil flows, the diplomatic isolation ends, the
- North Korean economy is revived by Western trade--and its
- nuclear program remains intact! It is to be "frozen," meaning
- ready to restart anytime in the next 10 years when Pyongyang
- decides it has got all it wants from the West. Not a brick of
- the North Korean program has to be removed until around 2002.
- </p>
- <p> And what of our most critical, nonnegotiable demand, that North
- Korea ship out of the country the plutonium-laden fuel rods
- that it brazenly removed from its reactor in May in defiance
- of the sternest U.S. warnings? From these rods North Korea can
- make half a dozen Hiroshimas. Did we get them? No. We got more
- promises. The rods, we are assured, will be out--in the next
- century.
- </p>
- <p> The Administration defends this investment in peace by saying
- that the only alternative is war. This is a simple capitulation
- to blackmail. The U.S. never threatened war as an alternative
- to agreement. It threatened economic sanctions to squeeze North
- Korea into complying now, not someday, with its nuclear-treaty
- obligations. Pyongyang, economically moribund and starved for
- oil, then rattled its saber. Clinton caved.
- </p>
- <p> The Clinton Administration is getting high marks for its recent
- foreign policy successes. Haiti has gone well, meaning no Americans
- have died in combat. In a place of zero strategic significance
- to the U.S., however, this falls more into the category of disaster
- avoided. In the two areas where we have the most abiding strategic
- interests--fighting terrorism and nuclear proliferation--the Administration has reacted by romancing the thugs. Offer
- the goodies, let the dictator pocket his gains, then hope for
- the best.
- </p>
- <p> There is no denying that appeasement smooths things over and
- postpones crises. But as we learned long ago, the respite tends
- to be temporary.
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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