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- <text id=94TT1776>
- <title>
- Dec. 19, 1994: Diplomacy:Next, A Cold Peace?
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Dec. 19, 1994 Uncle Scrooge
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- DIPLOMACY, Page 50
- Next, A Cold Peace?
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> Relations between the U.S. and Russia are rapidly turning
- sour
- </p>
- <p>By George J. Church--Reported by Sally B. Donnelly/Moscow and
- Ann M. Simmons/Washington
- </p>
- <p> Perhaps there should have been no shock. Long before last
- week's meeting in Budapest of the 53-nation Conference on
- Security and Cooperation in Europe, there had been abundant
- warnings that U.S.-Russian relations were turning sour. Russian
- officials had tried unsuccessfully to get the U.S.-designed
- embargo on Iraq's oil sales lifted and had resurrected Moscow's
- veto in the U.N. Security Council to block an American-backed
- resolution on Bosnia.
- </p>
- <p> Shortly before the CSCE summit began, Russian Foreign
- Minister Andrei Kozyrev refused to go through with the scheduled
- signing of documents to create loose military ties between
- Russia and the U.S.-led NATO alliance.
- </p>
- <p> But the exchanges in Budapest joltingly escalated the
- tensions to the heads-of-state level. This time it was
- Presidents Bill Clinton and Boris Yeltsin who dropped the
- big-grin, buddy-buddy act of their previous six face-to-face
- meetings and traded barbs. Clinton chided Russia indirectly for
- opposing NATO's plans to define the criteria for admitting
- Moscow's former satellites Poland, the Czech Republic, Slovakia
- and Hungary by the end of 1995. NATO is the "bedrock" of
- European security, said Clinton, and expanding it will make "new
- members, old members and nonmembers" safer. And if Russia thinks
- otherwise? Well, tough. "No country outside will be allowed to
- veto expansion."
- </p>
- <p> Yeltsin responded by voicing fear that Europe was about to
- split again into hostile blocs, this time consisting of
- everybody else vs. Russia. Expansion of NATO, in his view, would
- push what many Russians still see as an anti-Moscow alliance
- right up against the borders of the old Soviet Union. Said
- Yeltsin: "Europe, not having yet freed itself from the heritage
- of the cold war, is in danger of plunging into a cold peace. Why
- sow the seeds of mistrust?" The Russian President also accused
- Washington of overweening arrogance in playing the role of sole
- superpower. In his words, "It is a dangerous delusion to suppose
- that the destinies of continents and the world community in
- general can somehow be managed from one single capital."
- </p>
- <p> U.S.-Russian wrangling helped keep the CSCE from reaching
- any agreement on what to do about the war in Bosnia. Russia,
- which sympathizes with Bosnia's Orthodox Serbs, blocked a
- proposal to condemn Serb attacks on the Muslim enclave of Bihac.
- German Chancellor Helmut Kohl suggested a bland appeal for a
- truce, but even that failed.
- </p>
- <p> At week's end, to placate doubting allies, the Clinton
- Administration expressed a willingness to put U.S. combat troops
- into Bosnia, possibly as many as 25,000. But the pledge came
- festooned with important maybes: the troops would go in only to
- help the 19-nation U.N. peacekeeping force withdraw, and then
- only if the blue helmets came under attack and had to shoot
- their way out--and even then only after "consultation" with a
- very unenthusiastic Congress. But even a remote possibility of
- American G.I.s shooting at Bosnian Serbs will hardly help ease
- the irritation between Washington and Moscow.
- </p>
- <p> Those tensions are not the whole story of U.S.-Russian
- relations. After their testy exchange last week, Clinton and
- Yeltsin reconvened at a ceremony that formally put into effect
- the Strategic Arms Reduction Talks treaty. Under terms
- negotiated in 1991, Ukraine, Belarus and Kazakhstan will destroy
- all their nuclear warheads, while the U.S. and Russia will
- greatly reduce the numbers they possess. The fact that the
- ceremony went almost unnoticed testifies to how effectively
- Washington and Moscow have worked to dispel the once rampant
- dread of nuclear holocaust. On a lower level, Yevgeni Kozhokin,
- director of the Russian Institute for Strategic Studies, points
- out that thousands of ordinary Americans and Russians are
- working together every day on various projects and that "that's
- a new factor for stability that never existed before." Vice
- President Al Gore is flying to Moscow this week for a scheduled
- meeting with Prime Minister Viktor Chernomyrdin at which some
- soothing will probably go on.
- </p>
- <p> Nonetheless, the tensions are real and not to be dismissed
- as mere mouthings by Yeltsin to appeal to nationalist sentiment
- at home. The very fact that Washington bashing is increasingly
- popular will make it tempting for Yeltsin to do more and more of
- it--especially since his prospects of being re-elected in 1996
- currently seem as shaky as Clinton's. In one recent poll,
- Russians were asked whether they would rather live in the "state
- system" headed by Yeltsin or in the one ruled by the late Leonid
- Brezhnev, whose leadership of the Soviet Union was long derided
- as the "period of stagnation." Brezhnev won, 46% to 28%.
- </p>
- <p> Some of the frictions result simply because certain
- Russian national interests clash with U.S. policies. Russia has
- been trying to get the embargo on Iraqi oil sales lifted
- because the oil revenue is the only way Iraq can pay for arms
- it buys from the old U.S.S.R., and Moscow needs the money.
- Financial pressure also underlies Moscow's insistence that any
- Western companies drilling for oil in Azerbaijan build a
- pipeline through Russia, a demand that has aborted some
- promising deals. The U.S. responded calmly to Yeltsin's
- announcement on Friday that he had authorized the army to use
- "all means at the state's disposal" to bring the breakaway
- republic of Chechnya back into the Russian Federation. "The
- Chechnya question is a Russian internal matter," announced the
- State Department. But in some American--especially
- Republican--eyes, Russia's dispatch of "peacekeeping" troops to
- Tajikistan, Georgia and other now independent Soviet republics
- looks like an attempt to force them back under Moscow's rule.
- But Russians insist they have a legitimate interest, indeed a
- duty, to prevent disruption in neighboring countries.
- </p>
- <p> The big problem is one of psychology. Despite, or because
- of, current military and economic weakness, Russians of every
- political opinion yearn to see their country once again treated
- as the great power it historically has been. Instead, they
- think, it is being brushed aside. Russian fears of an expanded
- NATO may be exaggerated but are not totally paranoid. Fear of
- Russia is indeed a factor driving Moscow's former satellites to
- seek full NATO membership. Russians tend to forget their
- country's long history of aggressive expansion under czars as
- well as commissars. Worse, Russians think the U.S. and other
- Western powers are reneging on an implied deal. Moscow has done
- much of what they wanted--pulled its troops back from Central
- Europe and the Baltic states, for instance--only to face
- continued exclusion from an alliance that now aims to include
- much of Europe.
- </p>
- <p> The U.S.-Russia strains may get even worse when the new
- Republican Congress takes office. While the Clinton
- Administration has made friendship with Moscow a top
- foreign-policy priority, the conservatives who will run key
- committees are inclined to mistrust even a non-Communist Russia.
- In particular, some incoming congressional powers are likely to
- look on Russian financial aid with a jaundiced eye,
- believing--with some reason--that much of it has been stolen or
- misused. They may try either to cut the total, or to redirect
- some of it to Ukraine and other former Soviet republics. That
- would intensify another Russian grievance: that when it comes
- to aid, the U.S. and other Western countries talk big but
- deliver little.
- </p>
- <p> Neither Russia nor the U.S. is so idiotic as to take any
- chance of reviving the cold war. In the midst of his blast
- during the CSCE meeting, Yeltsin took care to insist, "We are
- no longer enemies, but partners." But however one-sided his
- expression, there is a very real danger that what just a short
- time ago looked like a blossoming friendship will indeed
- degenerate into a mere cold peace.
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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