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<text id=94TT0029>
<title>
Jan. 10, 1994: The Political Interest
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
Jan. 10, 1994 Las Vegas:The New All-American City
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
THE POLITICAL INTEREST, Page 36
THE CASE FOR A BIGGER NATO
</hdr>
<body>
<p>By Michael Kramer
</p>
<p> "There are two ways you can tell when a man is lying," said
Charles Bohlen, a respected former U.S. Ambassador to Moscow.
"One is when he says he can drink champagne all night and not
get drunk. The other is when he says he understands Russians."
</p>
<p> Today's Russian specialists are too modest to claim an expertise
Bohlen knew is impossible, but that hasn't stopped the Clinton
Administration from crafting a Russia-centric foreign policy
that seriously shortchanges other vital interests. To Secretary
of State Warren Christopher, it's all perfectly clear: "Helping
democracy prevail in Russia," he says, "remains the wisest and
least expensive investment that we can make in American security."
At the same time, however, almost everyone involved with America's
Russia policy, including Christopher, admits the West can affect
events there only at the margin. That being so, one would expect
the Administration to pay greater attention to Central Europe,
an area the West can influence far more than Moscow. But it
isn't. Central Europe's fledgling democracies are suffering
from the U.S. obsession with Russia--as will become abundantly
clear next week when the President attends his first NATO summit
in Brussels.
</p>
<p> Normally, NATO gatherings put people to sleep. This one is different.
In the wake of communism's collapse, the question on the table
for the first time is whether to expand eastward to embrace
those former Soviet satellites finally in a position to join
the free world's premier defense alliance. "It would be a historic
sin to miss this opportunity to bind in the East Europeans,"
says NATO Secretary-General Manfred Worner. But the West, led
by the U.S., is about to commit that very sin. The 16 nations
that already enjoy NATO's protection are on the verge of effectively
denying it to others.
</p>
<p> The thinking behind exclusion has a distinct cold war slant,
reflecting the 40-year period during which U.S. geostrategy
ignored events and concerns outside the life-and-death struggle
between the West and Moscow. In the past it was Russia's strength
that drove U.S. policy; today it is Boris Yeltsin's weakness.
The primary reason offered by U.S. officials for keeping the
East Europeans out of NATO is the fear of provoking Russia's
nationalists at Yeltsin's expense. Yeltsin endorsed NATO expansion
last August, but Russia's military, to which he is clearly beholden,
forced a retreat. It is unclear whether Moscow's generals are
seriously worried about Western encirclement or want to preserve
the option of reclaiming the nations Mikhail Gorbachev set free
five years ago. But the effect is the same: Yeltsin now says
enlarging NATO would be a hostile act. "We haven't a clue what
that means exactly," says a senior Clinton Administration official,
"but especially because we so completely misread Russia's recent
elections--we thought Yeltsin's forces would win soundly--we're now more gun-shy than ever about substituting our judgment
for his. Yeltsin's our guy. We're not going to undermine him
with a policy of neocontainment that boosts the hard-line empire
builders. Yeltsin says drawing a new line in Europe that shifts
the Iron Curtain back to Russia's borders could do just that.
And we're going with his instincts. End of story."
</p>
<p> Not quite. A flat no to enlarging NATO would tread too roughly
on Central European sensibilities, especially in Hungary, Poland
and the Czech Republic, the three prime candidates for NATO
membership. So the Administration has constructed an elaborate
mechanism called the "Partnership for Peace," a scheme its inventors
claim substitutes "maybe" for "no." Yet stripped of its sweet-sounding
provisions, the partnership is anything but satisfactory to
those it is designed to pacify. According to the draft scheduled
for formal adoption in Brussels next week, those nations that
sign on as partners (and every country is eligible, including
Russia) will "over time develop the habits and patterns of cooperation
that NATO membership entails." That sounds encouraging and prudent;
few would fault a plan that claims simply to be "getting them
ready." But the fatal flaw is that NATO membership isn't ensured
even if the wannabes demonstrate their worthiness. It's a "buzz-off
project," complains Polish Foreign Minister Andrzej Olechowski.
"They ask us to divert scarce resources and go through all kinds
of exercises to prove ourselves. They ask us to talk and walk
and act like a duck. That's O.K. And we agree that letting us
in right away could upset Yeltsin at a difficult time. What's
not O.K. is that after we've done all that's asked of us, NATO
reserves the right to say, `Well, now we want you to be a chicken
instead.'"
</p>
<p> Embarrassed by such criticism, the Administration is accentuating
the positive. "Six months ago, the allies didn't even want NATO
expansion on next week's agenda," says a White House aide. "We've
moved them to where we'll now say that as a philosophical matter,
enlargement is in the cards--someday." Clinton himself will
soon deliver several speeches designed to portray the partnership
as a bold, creative step. "Maybe it'll fly, and maybe it won't,"
says a senior State Department official. "All the partnership
really reflects is a judgment call. Since we don't see Russia
moving on the Central Europeans militarily even if the revanchists
take power, we don't see those states needing a NATO security
guarantee. Moscow's the needy one. It needs reassurance, not
deterrence."
</p>
<p> Perhaps so, says Robert Zoellick, who was James Baker's Under
Secretary of State. "But bringing in the Central Europeans after
xenophobic nationalists come to power in Russia would be far
harder. No one doubts those bad guys would threaten war if we
sought to enlarge NATO at that point." Zoellick and his former
boss prefer a clear road map with sure NATO membership at the
end. "Doing it that way," says Baker, "sets up a mechanistic
process. It shows the Russians that we're not acting hastily,
that we're pursuing our interests in a carefully calibrated
way. If we consult with Moscow as we go, we can give them time
to adjust and deny them a veto over Western policy."
</p>
<p> For their part, the Central Europeans' primary motivation for
NATO membership has little to do with the possibility of Russian
troops swarming to reannex them. "It's not to defend against
a Russian attack," explains former Polish Defense Minister Janusz
Onyszkiewicz. "We see that as a virtual impossibility. The key
reason we want to be in NATO is to secure our own democracies.
We need to keep down in our country the very same kind of nationalists
Yeltsin's contending with, the same kind that have destroyed
Yugoslavia." It is this point, repeated by more than a dozen
Cabinet-level officials from East European countries at a recent
security conference in Budapest, that warrants more attention
in the debate over NATO expansion.
</p>
<p> Ethnic and national tensions are perhaps most troublesome in
Hungary. Not long before he died several weeks ago, Prime Minister
Jozsef Antall declared himself the leader of 15 million Hungarians,
pointedly extending his domain beyond the 10 million in the
country. Antall, who was considered a moderate, is not alone.
Many Hungarians want to protect their expatriate brothers currently
enduring discrimination in Serbia, Romania and Ukraine. "If
our reaching out to the West doesn't produce results in three
or four years with something like NATO membership--or its
clear prospect--the nationalists will roar back," says Istvan
Gyarmati, Hungary's Director of Security Policy. "They'll just
say we moderates tried a policy that would tie us to the West
and that it failed and that it's time to try something else."
Then what? "Then it's entirely possible that we Central Europeans
would form our own security alliance, complete with a new arms
race. Or the nations in our neighborhood might realign with
Russia or with a newly nationalist Germany. Any of those scenarios
could destabilize Europe all over again. How would the U.S.
like that?"
</p>
<p> Nationalism and ethnic conflict "have already led to two world
wars in Europe," says Stephen Larrabee, a former National Security
Council staff member now at the Rand Corp. "The time to act
is now, and not with hollow promises." What Larrabee and others
know is that NATO has always been more than a security alliance.
"We understood this at the beginning," says Larrabee. "West
Germany wasn't a stable democracy before it was allowed into
NATO. Belonging to the alliance helped it become one. It's silly
to insist that the Central Europeans must be functioning democrats
before they can join up. NATO can help them on that road, as
it also helped stem authoritarian backsliding in Portugal, Spain,
Greece and Turkey."
</p>
<p> Oddly, this rationale appears to have largely escaped notice
by the Administration players most responsible for promulgating
the partnership. When asked about the Central European argument
that NATO membership is more important for internal stability
than as a military shield against Russia, a senior Administration
official responded, "It's pretty compelling stuff when you think
about it. I guess we've just been too fixated on Russia to have
given enough thought to this aspect."
</p>
<p> Clinton's Russia-first emphasis is understandable but needs
to be moderated. "We resisted blackmail when Russia was strong,"
says Henry Kissinger. "Does it make sense to permit Moscow to
blackmail us now with its domestic weakness?" The problem, says
Council on Foreign Relations president Leslie Gelb, in an insight
several Administration aides agree is "right on," is that Clinton
"is determined to avoid being tagged with having lost Russia.
Yet it should be obvious that democracy in Russia will be won
or lost almost exclusively by the Russians themselves." And
if reform fails in Russia, says James Baker, an enlarged NATO
would at least "protect democracy" where it is showing signs
of taking "firm root--in Warsaw, Prague and Budapest.''
</p>
<p> To be sure, the expansion of NATO is no trifling matter. Extending
the free world's nuclear umbrella should never be undertaken
idly. But leaving Central Europe in the cold would be an inexcusable
folly. Refusing to help these democracies could eventually raise
a question as real as the question of losing Russia is phony:
Who lost Central Europe?
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>