home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- <text id=90TT3213>
- <title>
- Dec. 03, 1990: The Gulf:It's All In The Wording
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- Dec. 03, 1990 The Lady Bows Out
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 67
- THE GULF
- It's All in the Wording
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>The U.S. cajoles its allies to pass a U.N. resolution
- permitting military action against Saddam, but the language
- remains debatable
- </p>
- <p>By GEORGE J. CHURCH--Reported by Jay Carney/Moscow and
- Christopher Ogden with Baker
- </p>
- <p> The U.S. has managed to hold together the worldwide
- coalition against Iraq. Strains and threats abound, and Saddam
- Hussein has made adroit attempts to exploit them. But
- fundamentally, the coalition is still united.
- </p>
- <p> More or less. For now.
- </p>
- <p> George Bush uses much more upbeat language, of course. So do
- Mikhail Gorbachev, Francois Mitterrand and other leaders of the
- coalition. And it is true that no one has edged away from the
- central demand: Iraq must get out of Kuwait. But whether, and
- to what extent, the other members will continue to back American
- ideas on how to achieve that goal--especially as Washington
- comes closer and closer to converting what has always been an
- implicit threat of war to a very explicit one--remains
- uncertain.
- </p>
- <p> The U.S. has concluded that the next step in the campaign
- against Saddam must be a United Nations Security Council
- resolution approving the use of military force if necessary to
- drive Iraq out of Kuwait. And it plans to push through such a
- resolution this week, while American delegate Thomas Pickering
- is president of the Security Council and in control of its
- agenda (under the council's system of monthly rotation,
- Pickering will step down after Friday, Nov. 30). Rounding up
- support for that resolution was the focus of intense American
- diplomatic efforts last week, including talks by President Bush
- with other government leaders at the 34-nation Conference on
- Security and Cooperation in Europe (CSCE) gathering in Paris and
- travels by Secretary of State James Baker from Yemen, which
- holds the Security Council presidency in December, to Colombia.
- </p>
- <p> Though approval of a resolution appeared likely, it was
- uncertain whether the language would be as timely or as forceful
- as Bush and Baker would like. Bush would go no further than to
- say that "there is a chance" the resolution will be adopted this
- week. If so, it would give a boost to his policy on the home
- front as well. The Senate Armed Services Committee opens
- hearings on gulf policy this week, to be followed shortly by the
- Senate Foreign Relations Committee and, next week, by the House
- Foreign Affairs Committee. Congress has been demanding a voice
- in any decision to fight Iraq; 45 House Democrats went so far
- as to file a lawsuit asking the federal courts to enjoin Bush
- from committing U.S. forces to combat without prior
- authorization from Congress. A U.N. use-of-force resolution
- could encourage Congress to grant such authorization. "It would
- have some significant impact if the United Nations granted such
- a resolution," said House Speaker Thomas Foley, one of several
- leaders who accompanied Bush on his Thanksgiving visit to U.S.
- troops in Saudi Arabia. Senate Republican leader Bob Dole,
- another of that group, said if the U.N. resolution passed, he
- would urge Bush to call the full Congress into special session
- to vote a domestic version. There is a serious question,
- however, about just what the U.N. resolution would say. Spanish
- Foreign Minister Francisco Fernandez Ordonez, speaking to
- reporters at the CSCE, disclosed that the U.S. was seeking a
- two-part resolution: the first part would set a deadline for
- Iraq to comply with previous U.N. demands that it get out of
- Kuwait; the second would authorize member nations to use "any
- means necessary" to compel compliance if the deadline is not
- met. When Bush broached the idea of such a resolution to him,
- French President Mitterrand declared, "I said yes." But
- Mitterrand added that there would and should be no "automatisme"
- about the resolution. The apparent meaning: rather than starting
- to bomb without further ado once the deadline passed, the U.S.
- would be obliged to consult, presumably with the U.N.'s military
- staff committee, about what kind of military action to take and
- when.
- </p>
- <p> The Soviet attitude is even more unsure. U.S. and Soviet
- officials canceled a Bush-Gorbachev press conference that they
- had scheduled in Paris, obviously because the two Presidents,
- dining together, had failed to agree on a use-of-force
- resolution. Both sides then scrambled to deny any impression of
- a serious split. Bush declared that he and Gorbachev "see eye
- to eye," and any differences are "extraordinarily minor."
- Gorbachev and Foreign Minister Eduard Shevardnadze both said the
- Security Council needed to take further action against Iraq, but
- neither would use what journalists have begun to call "the F
- word." At a hastily scheduled press conference back in Moscow,
- Gorbachev dismissed talk of a rift with Bush and suggested, with
- a smile, that U.S. reporters were "trying to find some crack"
- in the coalition. Nonetheless, the Soviet President continued
- to dodge questions about whether he would support a use-of-force
- resolution.
- </p>
- <p> Gorbachev is under conflicting pressures. He needs Western
- economic help, and thus has a strong incentive to cooperate with
- the U.S., but he also must retain the support of the Soviet
- army, which hates to see Moscow take a back seat to Washington
- in international affairs. On top of that, Moscow sources suggest
- Gorbachev is getting conflicting advice from Shevardnadze, who
- takes a pro-U.S. line toward Iraq, and Yevgeni Primakov, a
- Middle East expert who has served as Gorbachev's personal
- representative on missions to Baghdad and still insists that a
- negotiated solution is possible. So the Soviet President is
- vacillating; he has virtually committed the U.S.S.R. to back
- some sort of Security Council resolution, but how strongly
- worded is most uncertain. American diplomats say they would
- gladly sacrifice some forceful language to maintain
- international unity. How far can they water down a resolution,
- however, before it begins to sound to Saddam not like an
- affirmation of unity but like a sign of a split, barely papered
- over?
- </p>
- <p> Primakov is not the only one advocating negotiations with
- Saddam; German Chancellor Helmut Kohl used the word repeatedly
- after a meeting with Bush last week. The President said they
- were in sync, since both want a peaceful solution, but that
- seems doubtful. In Washington's view, so long as the coalition
- sticks to its core demand that Iraq withdraw from Kuwait totally
- and unconditionally, there is nothing to negotiate: Saddam
- either complies or he doesn't and must be forced out.
- </p>
- <p> Talk of negotiations, however, taps into a deep vein of
- opinion, in the U.S. as well as abroad, that Bush is rushing
- pell-mell toward war. Officials in the British Foreign Office
- are concerned that other allies might be veering toward a
- settlement that lets Iraq keep part of Kuwait, if that seems the
- only alternative to fighting.
- </p>
- <p> Saddam has done his best to play on such sentiment. Last
- week he announced that Iraq was sending an additional 250,000
- troops to Kuwait. Some may be reservists who would not fight
- well, and Iraq might have trouble maintaining so large a force
- in the face of American air raids on supply lines. In poker
- terms, though, Saddam was seeing and raising Bush, who had
- earlier announced plans to send American reinforcements,
- estimated at 150,000 to 200,000 troops, to the area. Saddam's
- counter is likely to intensify world fears of war.
- </p>
- <p> Simultaneously, the Iraqi dictator pledged to free all
- hostages, in installments, between Christmas and March 25--just about the time period that Washington sees as the window
- for effective military action--on condition that Iraq is not
- attacked. Saddam further promised to free immediately all German
- hostages (roughly 180) as a reward for Kohl's talk of
- negotiations and as an encouragement to the U.S. and Britain to
- be similarly reasonable. That the U.S. has held its coalition
- together so far in the face of such threats and blandishments
- is a remarkable achievement. But it is an achievement that will
- get harder to maintain the closer the world moves toward war.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-