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- <text id=93TT2551>
- <title>
- Jan. 03, 1994: The Peacemakers
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Jan. 03, 1994 Men of The Year:The Peacemakers
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- MEN OF THE YEAR, Page 32
- The Peacemakers
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>To Conquer The Past
- </p>
- <p>By Lance Morrow--Reported by J.F.O. McAllister/Washington, with other bureaus
- </p>
- <p> Low in the central brain lies the limbic system (hypothalamus,
- hippocampus, amygdala), where the aggression seems to start.
- </p>
- <p> But there is a higher brain as well. If war originates as an
- impulse of the lower mind, then peace is an accomplishment of
- the higher, and the ascent from the brain's basement, where
- the crocodile lives, to the upper chambers may be the most impressive
- climb that humans attempt.
- </p>
- <p> In 1993 the traffic was heavy in both directions, from the world's
- lower brain to the upper, and back down again. Gestures of statesmanship,
- as lately in Northern Ireland, alternated with low-brain savageries:
- the lashing tribal wars of Bosnia, Somalia, Kashmir, Afghanistan,
- Angola, Burundi, Georgia, Nagorno-Karabakh...The list of
- conflicts went on and on, like a vicious geography lesson. The
- euphoria that had attended the fall of the Berlin Wall, the
- disintegration of communism and the end of the cold war had
- some seers announcing that amid instant global communications,
- the "end of history" had arrived in the triumph of free-market
- democracy. But the brilliant moment faded, and left a sinister
- aftermath. The shadow was evident last week in Russia, where
- the followers of the fascistically minded Vladimir Zhirinovsky
- unexpectedly won 23% of the popular vote in the recent parliamentary
- elections and became an ominous new power. Zhirinovsky's ascent
- looked disturbingly similar in some details (anti-Semitism,
- fanatical nationalism, anger and economic privation among the
- people) to Hitler's rise in the 1930s.
- </p>
- <p> When incoming CIA Director James Woolsey testified before the
- Senate Select Committee on Intelligence last February, he described
- the realities of the new world order: "We have slain a large
- dragon, but we live now in a jungle filled with a bewildering
- variety of poisonous snakes."
- </p>
- <p> For years the conflicts in the Middle East and South Africa
- have amounted to terrible local dragons in their own right,
- with histories of deep hatred and the potential to erupt into
- wider violence--even, in the case of the Middle East, into
- nuclear war. These struggles were not ideological, like the
- standoff of the superpowers. South Africa and the Middle East
- worked at a nastier level, closer to bone and gene and skin.
- They had, over the years, arrived at stalemate, a no-exit of
- chronic hatred. The struggles (whether to liberate one's own
- people, or to suppress the dangerous other tribe, or simply
- to survive in the moral airlessness) became prisons.
- </p>
- <p> The Men of the Year of 1993--Yitzhak Rabin and Yasser Arafat,
- F.W. de Klerk and Nelson Mandela--did nothing more and nothing
- less than find a way to break out.
- </p>
- <p> By tradition, TIME's Men and Women of the Year are those who
- have most influenced history, for good or ill, in the previous
- 12 months. By that standard, Rabin, Arafat, Mandela and De Klerk
- might be perceived as odd choices. Neither peacemaking deal
- is complete. Extremists on all sides threaten to destroy the
- arrangements, which look at times like fragile shelters being
- nailed together in a high wind. The regions seem just as violent
- now as they did before Arafat and Rabin shook hands on the White
- House lawn, and before Mandela and De Klerk locked into their
- collaboration toward a new South African constitution.
- </p>
- <p> And yet...
- </p>
- <p> Peacemaking, like warmaking or courtship, depends upon exquisitely
- balanced, mysterious and usually unpredictable combinations
- of context, timing, luck, leadership, mood, personal needs,
- outside help and spending money--all of these factors swirling
- around in a kind of Brownian motion. Certainly one of the forces
- behind peace in both the Middle East and South Africa was what
- one observer called "a biological compulsion" in all four men
- to reach a settlement. Mandela is 75, De Klerk 57, Rabin 71
- and Arafat 64. "They were aware they did not have much time
- left," says William Quandt, who was at the National Security
- Council during the 1978 Camp David negotiations. "And if they
- waited, history would write about them as people who had missed
- a chance to end their careers with a capstone achievement."
- </p>
- <p> Beyond that, they were impelled, or at least strongly encouraged,
- by new historical realities. The cold war left Arafat without
- a Soviet patron; backing the wrong side in the Gulf War cost
- him his wealthy oil-state sponsors. The Israelis were growing
- weary of the economic and moral costs of the endless occupation.
- In South Africa the white minority faced a catastrophe: a main
- achievement of apartheid had been to inflict fatal damage on
- the country's economy. As for Mandela's African National Congress,
- it foresaw a descent into chaos and civil war that might destroy
- any nation worth its inheriting. And so on.
- </p>
- <p> Some thought that South Africa and the Middle East proved what
- might be called the Exhaustion Theory of Peacemaking--which
- arises from the cynical, and accurate, observation that peace
- is the last resort when all else has failed. True: if either
- side had been able to conquer, it would have let victory dictate
- the peace.
- </p>
- <p> All that said, the settlements-in-the-making in the Middle East
- and South Africa were hardly involuntary, and they were far
- from inevitable. Without Rabin and Arafat, the Israelis and
- Palestinians would have continued down the same bleak, violent
- road they have followed since 1948. Without Mandela and De Klerk,
- blacks and whites would have descended into the bloodiest race
- war in history. In 1993 Rabin and Arafat, Mandela and De Klerk
- all rose to the occasion before them. Their common genius was
- that they saw in the convergence of circumstances a ripeness
- of moment--and that they acted.
- </p>
- <p> They worked in pairs at their two separate projects, even though
- something inside each man came to the rendezvous reluctantly,
- uncomfortably--faute de mieux, as if history had given him
- no choice. Each needed his other, absolutely, in order to succeed--and each knew it. Each of the men was putting himself at
- enormous personal risk in the enterprise--not now from his
- long-sworn enemy but from those on his own side who would cry
- betrayal. But each had the armor of his record in the struggle.
- Just as only a longtime anticommunist like Richard Nixon could
- convincingly make the opening to China, so only men with the
- longevity in their conflicts of Rabin, Arafat, De Klerk and
- Mandela had the credibility to make peace.
- </p>
- <p> None of the men much liked his partner. They were bound together,
- two by two, as if in an impossible combination: they became
- each other's steptwins. Their negotiations at times resembled
- nothing so much as the conflict they were trying to resolve.
- Mandela and De Klerk were at each other's throats even as they
- accepted the Nobel Peace Prize together. Rabin could barely
- stand to shake Arafat's hand on the White House lawn. Each of
- the settlements-in-progress shows that peacemaking is often
- as difficult and dirty, in its own way, as warmaking. The Men
- of the Year sometimes seemed to be elaborating a variation on
- Churchill's thought about democracy: peace is the worst mess,
- except for the alternative.
- </p>
- <p> For all that, these four men reasserted the principle that leaders
- matter: that an individual's vision, courageously and persuasively
- and intelligently pursued, can override the rather unimaginative
- human preference for war. If strong, focused leadership had
- come from Europe or from Washington, might it have averted the
- Bosnian bloodbath? If Jean-Bertrand Aristide were a Mandela--and if he had some equivalent of De Klerk as partner on the
- other side--could Haiti have been saved? No one can quantify
- a negative, but it seems obvious that the absence of leadership--the opportunities squandered or unenvisioned--costs the
- world dearly every day.
- </p>
- <p> War is a profound habit--and sometimes a necessity. When Neville
- Chamberlain declared "peace for our time" after Munich, he gave
- peacemakers a reputation for fatuous optimism and appeasement
- from which it took them years to recover. Philosophers of war
- since Hiroshima have taught, hopefully, that the nuclear threat
- has made armed conflict ultimately untenable as a Clausewitzian
- instrument (foreign policy that happens to kill) useful in settling
- disputes. But not everyone has absorbed the lesson. Among other
- things, war has an archetypal prestige and bristling drama with
- which peace has trouble competing: Milton's Lucifer in Paradise
- Lost is much more interesting than Milton's God. War is rich
- and vivid, with its traditions, its military academies, its
- ancient regiments and hero stories, its Iliads, its flash. Peace
- is not exciting. Its accoutrements are, almost by definition,
- unremarkable if they work well. It is a rare society that tells
- exemplary stories of peacemaking--except, say, for the Gospels
- of Christ, whose irenic grace may be admired from a distance,
- without much effect on daily behavior.
- </p>
- <p> Kant said that even a race of devils, provided they were intelligent,
- would be forced to find a solution other than war for their
- disputes. "Nature," Kant thought, "guarantees the final establishment
- of peace through the mechanism of human inclinations." The race
- of devils was busy in 1993, but the mechanism of human inclinations
- was working as much in the uglier direction, toward war. The
- global village is really a large, disorderly global city, with
- many poor neighborhoods, a few that are rich and a number that
- are terribly dangerous. But as the Balkans reminded everyone,
- the global city has no police force. Bosnia has been a tragedy
- of peacemaking turned against itself: the U.N.'s lightly armed
- blue helmets became virtual hostages to the Serbs and an excuse
- for Europeans and Americans not to use real force lest the peacekeepers
- be hurt. The collapse of international law and civil behavior,
- and the failure of the U.S. or Europe to do anything effective
- to stop the killing, helped subvert the idea that the world
- had made much progress toward the higher brain. The feckless
- sighing and the elaborate international shrugs that masked themselves
- as realism were somehow worse than plain indifference.
- </p>
- <p> It was against all the usual inclinations of the war devils
- that these four men took what must be the first step in the
- metaphysics of peace: they recognized the other's existence.
- They crossed the line from the primitive intransigences of blood/color/tribe
- to the logic of tolerance and, farther down the road, of civil
- society. They asserted the power of the future to override the
- past, a fundamental precondition of change. Few forces are more
- intense than tribal memory and grievance, the blood's need for
- vindication. The past wants revenge, like Hamlet's father's
- ghost. Peace settlements in South Africa and the Middle East
- will bury the bloody shirt, shut down the past as an imperative.
- </p>
- <p> The projects of Mandela-De Klerk and Arafat-Rabin are not yet
- realized, of course. Leaders must bring followers along. Leaders
- must exercise the visionary's gift. They must tell their people
- a new story about themselves (in these cases, the story of themselves
- at peace, to replace their older myth of struggle) and make
- it plausible. Peace is a way of reimagining the world. Often
- the peace must actually be made before people will embrace the
- idea. We do not know--and may not know for months or years--how good these four will be as storytellers.
- </p>
- <p> Of course, it is possible that the year's peacemaking has merely
- lit a couple of candles on an altar that has been dedicated
- for centuries--and is still dedicated--to human sacrifice
- on an Aztec scale. Blessed are the peacemakers, and few in number.
- Still, in the words of Dominique Moisi, deputy director of the
- French Institute of International Relations: "The fact that
- Muslim and Jew, black and white, accept each other proves that
- war between civilizations is not inevitable. This sends out
- a global message of hope."
- </p>
- <p> Jean Cocteau remarked in his memoirs that stupidity is always
- amazing to behold, no matter how often one has encountered it.
- If war represents at bottom a kind of moral stupidity, the Men
- of the Year were making their way out of that violent region
- and toward a better part of the mind. That too was amazing to
- behold.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-