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- <text id=94TT1568>
- <title>
- Nov. 14, 1994: Essay:Memorandum to Woodrow Wilson
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Nov. 14, 1994 How Could She Do It?
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ESSAY, Page 104
- Memorandum to Woodrow Wilson
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>By Henry Grunwald
- </p>
- <p> I hope this reaches you at whatever resort exists in heaven
- (or the other place) for former Presidents of the U.S. Not knowing
- how closely you watch events in the world you left behind, I
- want to bring you up to date on the consequences of an ideal
- you so energetically championed: national self-determination.
- Today it is militantly invoked in many places, from the former
- Yugoslavia to the former Soviet republics, including North Ossetia
- and Nagorno-Karabakh. (You don't know where those new states
- are? Well, very few people do.) Rival claims to the same land
- have led to bloody battles, and the U.S. is apt to be involved.
- Your present successor in the White House has pledged 25,000
- troops to help keep the peace in Bosnia. When you proclaimed
- the right to self-determination, it sounded noble and progressive,
- although not everyone cheered. Your own Secretary of State,
- Robert Lansing (you never did like him) predicted that the concept
- would lead to unfulfillable expectations and large-scale violence.
- "What a calamity," he wrote, "that the phrase was ever uttered!"
- </p>
- <p> In fairness, you did not invent the idea--nationalism had
- become a religion, but you gave it a mighty push, resulting
- in new maps that were not much more logical than the old ones.
- The multinational Austro-Hungarian Empire, for instance, was
- followed by new constructs--Czechoslovakia, Yugoslavia--containing as many disparate and often hostile peoples. Hence
- today's tribal conflicts. All too often, a mistreated minority
- achieves independence and then mistreats other minorities in
- its midst or tries to "rescue" its brethren who live on the
- other side of a national frontier. Thus self-determination for
- one people becomes aggression against another.
- </p>
- <p> Before the international community recognizes a people's claim
- to sovereignty, at least two factors should be kept in mind.
- One is economic viability, which is often missing. The other
- is history, including the questions of whether a people has
- a clear national tradition and has been independent in the past.
- Without condoning the brutality of your old friends the Serbs,
- it can be said that we acted prematurely in recognizing some
- of the former republics of Yugoslavia, including Bosnia. This
- recognition transformed a civil war into an international conflict.
- America is surely the last country in the world to deny captive
- peoples the right to go their own way. But the process has got
- out of hand. Boutros Boutros-Ghali, the Secretary-General of
- the United Nations (you know about the United Nations; it's
- close to what you hoped the League of Nations would be) puts
- the problem precisely: "If each minority will ask for self-determination,
- rather than 184 nations around the world, we may have 500 to
- 1,000 countries, and that is not in the interests of peace or
- economic development."
- </p>
- <p> What to do? We now frequently resort to United Nations peacekeeping
- forces, quite an astonishing innovation, which you yourself
- visualized. But even if the U.N. had more manpower (a kind of
- international Foreign Legion might be a good idea) and more
- unified decision-making power, it would be hard to impose peace
- from the outside. Looking toward long-term solutions, a whole
- intellectual cottage industry has sprung up that should delight
- your academic heart. One of the more intriguing proposals involves
- divorcing nationality from territory. For example, Russians
- living outside Russia in the former Soviet republics might retain
- their Russian citizenship, with its rights and privileges, without
- being repatriated. There also have been suggestions for "national
- home regimes." Practical or not, such schemes are worth looking
- at, for they indicate the almost desperate need to develop a
- more flexible conception of sovereignty.
- </p>
- <p> The European Union is struggling with just such issues: how
- to balance national sovereignty against the demands of a larger
- federal structure. Despite recent setbacks, the Union remains
- the most promising model for the future.
- </p>
- <p> Mr. President, America has an obligation to make up for the
- dubious legacy of self-determination. We should stand for a
- less simplistic ideal. Such an ideal does exist--community,
- more broadly defined than it is in the tribalism now rampant.
- We should champion this not in the name of Wilsonian altruism
- (if you will pardon me ) but for very pragmatic reasons. The
- nation-state, the tribe writ large, today is often too big to
- cope with local problems and yet too small to function adequately
- in the global marketplace. The values of blood and soil are
- retrograde. They are also powerful, and they will not recede
- easily. But the U.S. should not give in to them, even if that
- sometimes means standing against the tide. The desire to belong--to family, clan, nation--may be part of human nature, but
- it need not take an exclusive and aggressive form. The U.S.
- should not automatically give its blessing to almost any movement
- under the banner of self-determination. We should perhaps go
- back to the Enlightenment's understanding of self-determination,
- namely, the autonomy of the individual. For such ideas to make
- a dent in peoples' minds will take long, slow and patient effort.
- But America should begin. Mr. President, if you have any astral
- influence on the powers in Washington, I hope you will guide
- them in that direction.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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