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- <text id=89TT3256>
- <title>
- Dec. 11, 1989: America Abroad
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- Dec. 11, 1989 Building A New World
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- EAST-WEST, Page 40
- America Abroad
- Reciprocity at Last
- </hdr><body>
- <p>By Strobe Talbott
- </p>
- <p> A critical moment in the transformation of U.S.-Soviet
- relations came on Nov. 16, just over two weeks before the
- meeting in the Med. That was the day Secretary of Defense Dick
- Cheney announced that because the Warsaw Pact was becoming "a
- very different animal," the U.S. could reduce its defense
- spending. For the Kremlin, it was the best news out of
- Washington in years, and not just for the obvious reason that
- less is better where the other superpower's arsenal is
- concerned. As seen from Moscow, the eventual military
- consequences of the Pentagon cuts are less important than the
- immediate political benefit: after numerous unilateral and
- unrequited Soviet concessions, the U.S. is at last joining in
- the process of scaling back the rivalry. President Bush has
- finally found a concrete way to help Mikhail Gorbachev.
- </p>
- <p> A year ago this week, in what may be the most important
- speech ever delivered before the U. N. General Assembly,
- Gorbachev put on a bravura performance of what he calls new
- political thinking and set an agenda for a post-cold-war world
- order. He proclaimed a benevolent decimation of the Soviet armed
- forces, an effective 10% drawdown in manpower and hardware. He
- earned loud cheers and enthusiastic praise around the world, but
- not from the newly elected leader in Washington. George Bush was
- into his prudence thing, not his vision thing. As the
- Administration took shape, it radiated not just caution but
- skepticism, with lots of grumbling about Gorbasms and
- Gorbomania.
- </p>
- <p> The pattern continued for months. Something extraordinary
- would happen in the East -- down would come the barbed wire
- along the old Iron Curtain, off would go the light in the red
- star over the parliament building, home would go trainloads of
- Soviet troops, in would come a non-Communist prime minister --
- and the response from Washington was the sound of one hand
- clapping. There were schoolmarmish homilies about the need to
- "test" Gorbachev's slogan of new political thinking and
- complaints about what he had not done for the West lately.
- </p>
- <p> The atmospherics and rhetoric along the Potomac became more
- appreciative during the summer, but what Marxists (there are
- still a few left in Moscow) call the "objective realities" of
- U.S. policy remained pretty much unchanged. A few days before
- the Pentagon cuts, an adviser to Gorbachev seemed to be
- expressing his boss's exasperation: "Our leader is presiding,
- with incredible boldness and at incredible risk, over the
- perestroika not just of our own country, but of the entire
- international order, and your leader keeps saying, `Thanks, good
- luck, and have a nice day.' What do we have to do for you
- Americans to do something in return? Restore the Romanovs to the
- throne?"
- </p>
- <p> Cheney's announcement was greeted by much of the U.S.
- foreign policy establishment with cynicism. The Defense
- Secretary, it was said, had not really had a change of heart;
- the cuts had more to do with the requirements of the
- Gramm-Rudman-Hollings deficit-reduction law than with the
- opportunities posed by Gorbachev. True, but beside the point.
- What mattered to the Soviets was that the U.S. body politic as
- a whole now accepted the proposition that Kremlin policy had
- changed in ways that justified American reciprocation.
- </p>
- <p> Reciprocity is key, not just as a principle of
- state-to-state relations but also as a source of leverage for
- Gorbachev back home. The negotiations he has ahead of him with
- his own generals and ministers will be in some respects more
- difficult than the bargaining he does with the U.S. What another
- reformer, Nikita Khrushchev, once called the "metal eaters" of
- the Soviet military-industrial complex have been gobbling up
- about 20% of the country's gross national product, year in and
- year out. That gluttony is a major reason for the backwardness
- of Soviet society. But it is also a habit that will be hard to
- break, not least because it has fed the Soviet Union's sense of
- its own strength, no matter how illusory.
- </p>
- <p> Bush originally proposed that he and Gorbachev put their
- feet up on the table at Camp David. The Soviet leader refused
- to go to the U.S. in large part because he wanted to avoid any
- hint of supplication, not to mention surrender. The venue of
- the Bush-Gorbachev meeting had to symbolize that the two leaders
- were meeting each other halfway. Conveniently, Mediterranean
- means the middle of the earth. Even so, there has been some
- black humor in Moscow about how General Douglas MacArthur once
- received the representative of a defeated empire aboard a U.S.
- warship in Tokyo Bay. Just because the Soviets are allowing
- their world to come apart at the seams does not mean they are
- delighted with the spectacle or its implications.
- </p>
- <p> The imperative of preserving at least the appearance of
- reciprocity must now guide Bush as he gets on with the task of
- regulating the military competition. It will be less difficult
- for Gorbachev to push through drastic cuts in Soviet defense
- spending if he can say to his generals, "We're not doing this
- all by ourselves. It's mutual. Look at what Mr. Cheney is doing
- with American defense spending."
- </p>
- <p> After Gorbachev's landmark speech to the U.N. a year ago,
- Georgi Arbatov, the director of the Institute for the Study of
- the U.S.A. and Canada, told American visitors to Moscow, "We are
- going to do a terrible thing to you -- we are going to deprive
- you of an enemy." Led by the West, the U.S. can do the same
- terrible thing to the diehards and old thinkers with whom
- Gorbachev must still contend.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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