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<text id=90TT2441>
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<link 91TT0500>
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<title>
Sep. 17, 1990: Helsinki Summit:A New World
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
Sep. 17, 1990 The Rotting Of The Big Apple
The Gulf:Desert Shield
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
THE GULF, Page 20
A New World
</hdr>
<body>
<p>The Helsinki summit is only the latest sign of how Saddam's
belligerence is transforming global alignments and shaking up
established truths
</p>
<p>By George J. Church--Reported by Dean Fischer/Riyadh, Dan
Goodgame/Washington and J.F.O. McAllister with Baker
</p>
<p> It was certainly nothing that Saddam Hussein intended, but
his invasion of Kuwait bore its most significant fruit on
Sunday. For the first time since World War II, the leaders of
the U.S. and the Soviet Union met each other not as cold war
adversaries or even as wary rivals to make their competition
more manageable, but as partners cooperating against a common
enemy: Saddam. Presidents George Bush and Mikhail Gorbachev
arrived in Helsinki fully agreed on their objective: an
unconditional Iraqi pullout.
</p>
<p> As the summit began, Gorbachev presented Bush with a cartoon
showing the two as boxers, with a figure representing the cold
war knocked senseless at their feet and a referee with a globe
for a head raising their hands in joint triumph. Most of the
session was devoted to the gulf; Bush aides asserted that
neither the presence of Soviet military advisers in Iraq nor
Moscow's call for a Middle East conference that would discuss
not only Kuwait but the Israeli-Palestinian impasse and the
civil war in Lebanon as well posed a major impediment to
cooperation. En route to the summit, Bush declared himself in
favor of technical help that would enable the Soviets to
increase oil production and replace some of the output cut off
from Iraq and Kuwait.
</p>
<p> Day before yesterday, such superpower cooperation against
a nation that had long been an ally of the Kremlin's would have
been inconceivable. But their new quasi alliance is the most
striking, though very far from the only example of a
proposition that has gathered force over the past six weeks:
Saddam's power grab and the U.S.-led opposition to it have so
shaken up global political and power calculations that the
world will never be the same.
</p>
<p> Bush and his aides talked about the showdown leading to a
new world order. "If the nations of the world, acting together,
continue as they have been, we will set in place the
cornerstone of an international order more peaceful than any
that we have known," said Bush in Helsinki.
</p>
<p> The eventual course of many of the changes may not be
determined for months or even years. The efficacy of sanctions
and embargo, the future constellation of power in the Arab
world, the ability of the United Nations finally to become the
peacekeeping organization its creators envisioned--all hinge
heavily on when and how the crisis is finally resolved. But at
least the main areas of upheaval are becoming clear:
</p>
<p>U.S.-SOVIET RELATIONS. Moscow so far has played a role that
looks as if it might have been scripted in the White House. It
has been fully supportive of U.S. efforts--cutting off arms
to Iraq, voting for U.N. resolutions establishing a worldwide
embargo--without claiming any major part for itself. And it
has rebuffed all attempts to drive a wedge between itself and
Washington. In what was officially described as a "frank"
(diplospeak for stormy) meeting in Moscow with Baghdad Foreign
Minister Tariq Aziz, Gorbachev repeated his insistence that
there is only one way to end the crisis: unconditional Iraqi
withdrawal from Kuwait.
</p>
<p> There are differences, of course. At a minimum, though, the
days when every Third World clash threatened to bring on a
confrontation between nuclear superpowers backing rival clients
seem to be over. At best, there is hope for continued
U.S.-Soviet collaboration to maintain international order. The
gulf crisis, says Georgi Arbatov, a leading Soviet
Americanologist, "will make quite a few people--those who may
also have adventurous desires and who would act in a reckless
way--aware that they won't be able to play the U.S. and the
Soviet Union against each other anymore. Instead they will
probably face cooperation between the Soviet Union and the
U.S."
</p>
<p> THE U.S. ROLE. The crisis has proved that now there really
is only one superpower--at least if a superpower is defined
as a country able and willing to send a major fighting force
halfway around the globe to uphold world order. But even the
U.S. can act most effectively only as the leader of a world
coalition painstakingly cobbled together. And that places
restraints on U.S. freedom of action. Says Richard Murphy,
senior fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations: "There are
a number of silken ropes around us."
</p>
<p> Administration officials fear that they may come under
pressure from allies who care a great deal about their oil
supply but very little about Kuwaiti independence to effect a
compromise allowing Saddam Hussein to save at least some face.
Bush aides recognize they may have to settle for an arrangement
under which Iraq disgorges Kuwait but Saddam stays in power,
still a menace armed with chemical and, in not too many years,
nuclear weapons. To contain him, Secretary of State James Baker
last week put forward a rather vague idea for a Middle Eastern
regional security alliance. That could sanction a long-term
American military presence in the area, though possibly one
composed of naval rather than air or ground forces.
</p>
<p> A more immediate restraint is that the U.S. is an odd
combination of superpower and beggar, pressed by both its
gargantuan budget deficits and domestic public opinion to
solicit heavy allied contributions toward the cost of
confronting Iraq with a huge, and overwhelmingly American,
military machine. Baker and Secretary of the Treasury Nicholas
Brady hit the road last week to drum up pledges totaling about
$25 billion in cash or kind (i.e., troops and logistical
support) from Europe, Asia and the Middle East. A substantial
part of the $25 billion will go to help out the economies of
the states hit hardest by disruption of commerce with Iraq,
including Jordan and Egypt. Reporters flying with Baker to
Saudi Arabia presented the Secretary with a begging cup
inscribed NOTHING LESS THAN A BILLION, PLEASE.
</p>
<p> Baker filled his cup in the Middle East: he got a Saudi
commitment to pay almost all "in-country costs"
(transportation, water, fuel) of maintaining the U.S. forces
defending the kingdom, and a pledge from the Kuwaiti government
in exile to kick in an additional $5 billion, at least half of
which would go to Desert Shield. Britain, though financially
strapped, promised a further contribution in the form of
additional troops rather than cash. Japanese officials told
Brady they would put up more than the $1 billion they had
pledged but did not specify an amount. West Germany, which has
yet to contribute anything much and whose legislators are
squawking at the idea of offering anything significant, is in
for some arm twisting when Baker visits Bonn this week.
</p>
<p> In any event the gulf crisis poses a make-or-break test for
America's tenure as sole superpower. For now the public is
solidly united behind Bush's policy. But that could change if
the crisis has an unhappy ending: a prolonged stalemate
combined with deep domestic recession, a settlement allowing
Iraq to keep some fruits of aggression, a bloody and
inconclusive war. Some experts fear that any such outcome would
inspire a resurgence of isolationism that would put a speedy
stop to any ideas of building a New World Order.
</p>
<p> SAUDI ARABIA AND THE GULF STATES. No longer can the Saudis
exist in semifeudal isolation; they must open themselves
externally and internally. Inviting U.S. military forces to
defend them was only the first step. King Fahd took another
last week by urging Saudi women as well as young men to assist
in the national defense effort. This week authorities will
begin registering women volunteers for work in hospitals and
medical services. That may gradually open the way for greater
female participation in the kingdom's public life. Saudi women
remain severely restricted; they are forbidden by law to drive,
and so far they have been limited to jobs such as teaching in
girls' schools, where they do not come into regular contact with
men.
</p>
<p> Eventually, Saudi Arabia and the equally feudal emirates,
sheikdoms and sultanates of the gulf (Oman, Bahrain, Qatar, the
United Arab Emirates--and Kuwait, if Saddam Hussein lets go)
will also have to share more of their oil riches with the
poorer Arab states, through investment and development aid. The
bitter resentment of their wealth and isolation, fanned but not
originated by Saddam Hussein, has come as a salutary shock to
their rulers. Some may be realizing too that it is unhealthy
for as much as 60% of their populations to be composed of
foreign workers (Palestinians, Pakistanis, Egyptians, Filipinos)
who are excluded from citizenship or any other role in public
life. They may even feel obliged to broaden the participation
of their own citizens in government and politics.
</p>
<p> ARAB UNITY. The facade (it was never much more than that)
of Arab unity has been irreparably shattered by the necessity
for Riyadh and the gulf states to ask for Western protection
against their supposed Arab brother Saddam. The deepening
division was underlined by the resignation last week of Chedli
Klibi, a Tunisian, as secretary-general of the 21-member Arab
League; he had been heavily criticized for balking at Egyptian
attempts to get the league to authorize the sending of Arab
troops to defend Saudi Arabia. Some observers speculate that
the league may split in two: an anti-Saddam faction based in
Cairo and a pro-Saddam grouping based in Tunis. That might be
all to the good; it would leave the moderates free to pursue
their own interests without the necessity of trying to reach
some sort of consensus with Saddam's supporters.
</p>
<p> Whether or not there is a formal split, many Middle Eastern
experts expect power and influence in the Arab world to flow
to a new axis of Saudi Arabia, Egypt and Syria. Some
glimmerings of this alignment surfaced last week when Egypt and
Syria agreed to send as many as 50,000 more soldiers to help
defend the Saudis. The new grouping would not be entirely
reassuring to the U.S. unless Syria's leader, Hafez Assad,
completely abandons support of Palestinian terrorist groups.
But the U.S. would benefit if Egypt developed political
influence to match the cultural clout it already wields as a
supplier of films, books, newspapers and teachers to much of
the Arab world.
</p>
<p> The big loser in the Arab realignment is Yasser Arafat of
the Palestine Liberation Organization. His support of Iraq has
earned him the enmity of Egypt, as well as Saudi Arabia and the
gulf states that had been the P.L.O.'s principal financiers.
Abu Dhabi would not even let Arafat's plane touch down on its
territory last week. Dubai grudgingly permitted a landing when
the aircraft ran dangerously low on fuel, but only on the
condition that Arafat not set foot outside the plane.
</p>
<p> ISRAEL. Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir told visiting U.S.
Senator Alan Cranston of California last week, "I am sure that
it will be easier to promote peace between Israel and the Arabs
after the gulf crisis is over." Shamir did not explain his
reasoning, but it is conceivable that Israel could be helped
by a squelching of the implacable Saddam and by increased
influence for the less hostile Saudis and Egyptians. On the
other hand, the U.S. will be under greater pressure than ever
from its Arab friends to lean on Israel for a solution to the
eternal Palestinian problem. And the crisis demonstrates that
Israel is no longer necessarily the No. 1 U.S. priority and
the top U.S. strategic ally in the region. Ensuring the flow
of oil has become an even more sharply perceived vital American
interest, and the friendship of the Saudis and Egyptians
accordingly seems all the more significant. One illustration:
when Bush last week promised, Congress willing, to forgive
Egypt's $7 billion military debt to the U.S., Israel could only
wail, How come you're willing to do that for Cairo and not to
erase our $4.6 billion foreign debt?
</p>
<p> THE UNITED NATIONS. The organization, long derided as
tangential at best, was quietly making a comeback by mediating
settlements in such trouble spots as Namibia and Angola. In the
gulf crisis it has functioned at long last as its creators
hoped it would 45 years ago, focusing world condemnation on an
aggressor, authorizing a global embargo and even voting to
permit the use of force to back up that squeeze. The Bush
Administration would like to make the U.N. a cornerstone of its
plans to construct a New World Order. The U.N. will continue to
be effective, however, only so long as no proposed action runs
counter to the interests of any of the five permanent members
of the Security Council (the U.S., Britain, France, the Soviet
Union and China). Otherwise, it will be hamstrung again by
vetoes.
</p>
<p> Conceivably, the U.N. could one day throw its umbrella over
a new peacekeeping (i.e., Iraq-containment) force in the Middle
East; it has already voted to dispatch 20,000 soldiers and
civilians from various countries to police a prospective
settlement in Cambodia. For some time, though, its primary tool
to enforce its decisions will probably continue to be the
embargo. Not long ago, such economic sanctions were considered
useless. But that thinking is changing. British Prime Minister
Margaret Thatcher, formerly the loudest voice in the
sanctions-never-succeed school, stated last week, "It is just
becoming obvious that some of them are beginning to work."
</p>
<p> At the same time, one tactic that has worked all too well
in past showdowns is failing so far. Saddam Hussein has taken
hostages by the thousands. But the U.S. and other Western
governments--paralyzed in the past by fear of harm to
hostages, and willing to strike bad deals to get them freed--this time have insisted that they will not be diverted from
their fundamental policies. Up to now they have been as good
as their word, and there has been surprisingly little outcry
about rescuing the hostages first.
</p>
<p> Many of these changes could be quickly reversed, most
notably if the confrontation with Saddam should come to open
war. But then there would be other changes, as hard to forecast
as they are dreadful to contemplate. Win, lose or draw, Iraq's
dictator made a mark on history by invading Kuwait Aug. 2;
nothing will again look quite the way it did Aug. 1.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>