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- <text id=93TT0579>
- <title>
- Nov. 29, 1993: The Political Interest
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Nov. 29, 1993 Is Freud Dead?
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- THE POLITICAL INTEREST, Page 40
- Putting Business First
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>By Michael Kramer
- </p>
- <p> Until now, discerning a common thread in Bill Clinton's foreign
- policy has been a futile exercise. Suddenly, though, a familiar
- coherence is emerging. Image and impulse no longer seem to guide
- policy, and Clinton, like his Republican predecessors, appears
- to have finally decided that he loathes repression less than
- he loves commerce.
- </p>
- <p> Depending on one's point of view, extolling "the new centrality
- of economic policy in our foreign [affairs]," to use Secretary
- of State Warren Christopher's phrase, represents either a welcome
- maturation or a damnable sellout. In any event, it is hardly
- a small change; it's a 180 degrees turn.
- </p>
- <p> Clinton roared into office on a wave of idealism. With communism's
- collapse, he reasoned, America could freely indulge its passion
- for promoting democracy and protecting human rights. The President
- was quickly labeled the archetypal New Interventionist, and
- promising forceful action became a staple of his statements.
- The cost of such promises became clear in Bosnia, Somalia and
- Haiti. Clinton's retreat from all three has accommodated the
- public's revulsion at risking American lives without an obvious
- national interest on the line. When humanitarian interventions
- require force, the President has learned, there is safety in
- indifference.
- </p>
- <p> Now Clinton has been reborn as a New Realist. The articulated
- heart of this philosophy is the need "to grow America's economy."
- The unarticulated dark side is, as James Lilley, a former U.S.
- Ambassador to China says, "the reassertion of geopolitics after
- the honeymoon with human rights." Assuring the personal freedom
- of everyone everywhere is still supposed to be America's great
- goal, but it will not be permitted to interfere ultimately with
- Clinton's trade-first strategy. No one would put it as baldly
- as Calvin Coolidge did when he said the business of America
- is business, but Christopher was only a bit less crass earlier
- this month. "The U.S.," he said, "must maintain a tough-minded
- sense of our enduring interests: our security, prosperity and,
- where possible, the advancement of our democratic values."
- </p>
- <p> The Administration's China policy proves how limiting the words
- "where possible" can be, and confirms National Security Adviser
- Tony Lake's observation that American interests will, "at times,
- require us to befriend and even defend nondemocratic states
- for mutually beneficial reasons" (a summation Jeane Kirkpatrick
- could as easily have made). During the campaign, Clinton scored
- regularly with his attacks on George Bush for "coddling" China's
- dictators, and it was only last May that Trade Representative
- Mickey Kantor praised Levi Strauss & Co. for abandoning its
- China operations to protest Beijing's human-rights violations.
- But "the dance today," says a Clinton adviser, "is about moving
- China's abysmal human-rights record off the agenda; it's about
- ending the superheated argument about holding China's most-favored-nation
- ((trading)) status hostage to that record."
- </p>
- <p> Until September, the Administration was still seriously saying
- the renewal of China's MFN status was at stake. Officials are
- saying the same today, but it's primarily for show. Even Christopher
- admitted to TIME before last week's Seattle summit that the
- MFN discussion is essentially fake. "We have to be realistic
- about our political system," the Secretary said. "There are
- certain realities of American politics you have to deal with."
- Christopher was referring to the congressional majority that
- wants to punish China for maltreating its people. The political
- need to mute that anger explains the Administration's seemingly
- inconsistent recent musings about China's human-rights record.
- </p>
- <p> Officially, the Administration won't renew MFN next June unless
- there is "significant overall progress" with respect to human
- rights in China. In practice, Christopher told TIME, "I'll look
- at the trend...We don't expect them to remedy all the wrongs...Little things like prison visits, whether they permit
- the Red Cross to go in" to inspect jail conditions could help
- a great deal. Within 48 hours of Christopher's comment, the
- Chinese did just that. But then in a letter to Clinton last
- week, 270 members of the U.S. House of Representatives demanded
- more--and Christopher, whose minions had earlier embraced
- Beijing's move as if it were the second coming, said in Seattle
- on Friday that China's gestures to date are "certainly not adequate."
- </p>
- <p> The pattern is emerging: a proud China won't admit it's conceding
- anything; when it does appear to give in, the Administration
- and Congress will argue about the sufficiency of those concessions.
- But the final scenario is clear. "China has the world's fastest
- growing economy," says a White House aide. "Every country in
- the world wants in--as soon as possible and big time. We do
- too, and we're not going to let something like MFN stand in
- our way. It's going to take finesse with the Congress--you'll
- see a lot more on-the-one-hand, on-the-other-hand stuff from
- Christopher--but we've finally got our heads screwed on straight.
- That was what the President's note to the Chinese was all about.
- When he wrote in September that we support a `strong, stable'
- China, those were code words used by previous Administrations,
- and now by us, to say we know you sometimes have to crack heads
- and we can live with that. The fact is that nothing we can do
- short of war can significantly impact on what China does to
- its own people. Meanwhile, we want a piece of the pie, a big
- piece, and we aim to get it."
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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