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- <text id=91TT0037>
- <title>
- Jan. 07, 1991: America Abroad
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- Jan. 07, 1991 Men Of The Year:The Two George Bushes
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- MEN OF THE YEAR, Page 39
- AMERICA ABROAD
- Best of Times, Worst of Times
- </hdr><body>
- <p>By STROBE TALBOTT
- </p>
- <p> To hear George Bush tell it, the post-cold war era was off
- to a promising start. At a wreath-laying ceremony in Prague's
- Wenceslas Square on Nov. 17, he hailed the emergence of an
- international "commonwealth" based on the "renaissance" of
- freedom. Yet from the same podium on the same day, Vaclav Havel
- spoke of dreams unfulfilled, a glorious cause in danger of being
- "spoiled," a "political climate sullied by the poison of
- demagogy and political, ethnic and racial intolerance." Between
- them, the two Presidents captured the good news and the bad
- about 1990: for the world as a whole, there was exhilarating
- progress toward cooperation and cohesion, but for many nations,
- things fell apart and the center could not hold.
- </p>
- <p> Havel's concern was focused on his own country, where
- Slovaks have resumed their ancient feud with Czechs. Throughout
- Eastern Europe, hating and fearing the Russians is no longer a
- uniting preoccupation; thus many of the peoples of Yugoslavia,
- Hungary, Romania and Bulgaria are free to lapse into their old
- habit of hating, fearing and sometimes fighting each other.
- </p>
- <p> Meanwhile, in the Soviet Disunion, the growing nationality
- problem within some individual republics makes it unlikely that
- they can remain intact if they achieve independence from the
- Kremlin.
- </p>
- <p> There's a word for the force that inflames Slovaks against
- Czechs, Serbs against Croats, and Azerbaijanis against
- Armenians. It's not politics but tribalism, the same phenomenon
- that led to slaughter between the Tutsi and Hutuin Rwanda during
- the autumn, and the Zulu and Xhosa in South Africa throughout
- the past year.
- </p>
- <p> A far milder but still worrisome version of that curse
- exists even in North America. Separatist passions in Quebec have
- raised the possibility that Canada will not make it to the 21st
- century in one piece.
- </p>
- <p> So Havel, in his apprehensive, almost despairing speech in
- Wenceslas Square, was speaking for more than just his own corner
- of Central Europe. Yet Bush's upbeat assessment of a tumultuous
- year was not out of place either. While 1990 witnessed a
- resurgence of nationalism in its most divisive, destructive
- forms, it also brought a countervailing trend: an increase in
- the willingness of many nations to pool energies, resources,
- political will, even sovereignty, on behalf of shared objectives
- and mutual interests.
- </p>
- <p> The example that has dominated the headlines, and the one
- for which Bush personally deserves the most credit, is the
- multilateral response to the gulf crisis. The end of the cold
- war has also permitted the United Nations to broker the
- settlement of one long-simmering conflict in southern east Asia.
- The idea of numerous states joining in a single market is
- nowhere as close to becoming reality as in Europe, but other
- regions will, over time, almost certainly follow suit. Bush has
- contributed to that prospect with his call on June 27 for a
- free-trade zone that would embrace the U.S., Canada and all of
- Latin America.
- </p>
- <p> One powerful argument for supranational structures is that
- they can help contain the threat of nationalism. Tribal
- animosities pose a danger not only to the countries where they
- arise but to neighbors as well. Aside from anxieties about his
- own quarrelsome countrymen, Havel must be concerned whether the
- breakup of Yugoslavia would generate waves of refugees and the
- spread of violence across borders. That nightmare explains in
- part why he and other East European leaders hope the West
- Europeans will expand the geographical scope of their experiment
- in economic and political federation.
- </p>
- <p> The more Croats think of themselves as part of a continental
- union with headquarters in Brussels, the less they may nurture
- grievances against Belgrade. By the same token, Quebeckers may
- be more willing to accept ties to Ottawa if they are part of a
- close-knit and prosperous hemispheric community.
- </p>
- <p> As for the Soviet Union, the world has never before had to
- worry about a civil war in a country with almost 30,000 nuclear
- weapons. It does now. As it dissolves, the U.S.S.R. seems to be
- returning to an almost medieval association of highly autonomous
- city-states. Whether that process continues to be relatively
- peaceful depends on what happens not just inside the boundaries
- of the late, great U.S.S.R. but outside as well. The
- industrialized democracies must strengthen and broaden their
- existing economic, political and security arrangements and
- develop new, more inclusive ones. NATO which is still an
- anti-Soviet alliance, must give way to the Conference on
- Security and Cooperation in Europe, with the Soviet Union and
- its eventual spinoffs as members.
- </p>
- <p> That way, the future leaders in Moscow, Kiev, Vilnius and
- Vladivostok will feel they are participants in, and
- beneficiaries of, the renaissance and the commonwealth of which
- Bush spoke in Wenceslas Square. The more closely integrated the
- international system, the less the disintegration of the Soviet
- Union is likely to turn ugly--and the better the chance that
- Bush's hope will prevail over Havel's pessimism.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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