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<text id=94TT0289>
<title>
Mar. 14, 1994: How To Achieve The New World Order
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
Mar. 14, 1994 How Man Began
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
BOOK EXCERPT, Page 73
How To Achieve The New World Order
</hdr>
<body>
<p>In his book Diplomacy, former Secretary of State Henry Kissinger
argues that U.S. foreign policy needs less idealism and more
Realpolitik
</p>
<p>By Henry Kissinger
</p>
<p> (c) 1994 Henry A. Kissinger. All rights reserved. From Diplomacy,
to be published by Simon and Schuster, Inc.
</p>
<p> Americans, from the President to the man in the street, have
always distrusted the very idea of international relations.
The U.S., protected by size and geographic isolation, has tried
to conduct a foreign policy based on the way Americans want
the world to be, rather than the way it really is. Now more
than ever, argues Henry Kissinger, the U.S. must temper its
idealism with a more pragmatic approach, especially toward Russia,
Europe and Asia.
</p>
<p> International systems live precariously. Every "world order"
expresses an aspiration to permanence; yet the elements that
make up a world order are in constant flux and the duration
of international systems has been shrinking. The order that
grew out of the Peace of Westphalia in 1648 lasted 150 years;
the international system created by the 1815 Congress of Vienna
maintained itself for 100 years; the international order characterized
by the cold war ended after 45 years. Never before have the
components of world order, their capacity to interact and their
goals all changed quite so rapidly, so deeply or so globally.
</p>
<p> Both Bill Clinton and George Bush have spoken of the new world
order as if it were just around the corner. In fact, its final
form will not be visible until well into the next century. In
the post-cold war world, the U.S. is the only superpower with
the capacity to intervene in every part of the globe. Yet the
issues to which military force is relevant have diminished.
The absence of an overriding ideological or strategic threat
frees nations to pursue foreign policies based increasingly
on their immediate national interest. In an international system
characterized by perhaps five or six major powers and a multiplicity
of smaller states--many of which are striving to prevail in
ancient ethnic rivalries--order will have to emerge much as
it did in past centuries: from a reconciliation and balancing
of competing national interests.
</p>
<p> The end of the cold war has created what some observers have
called a "unipolar" or "one-superpower" world. But the U.S.
is actually in no better position to dictate the global agenda
than it was at the beginning of the cold war. America is more
preponderant than it was 10 years ago, yet, its power has also
become more diffuse.
</p>
<p> Victory in the cold war has made it far more difficult to implement
Woodrow Wilson's dream of universal collective security. In
the absence of a potentially dominating power, the principal
nations do not view threats to the peace in the same way, nor
are they willing to run the same risks in overcoming those threats
they do recognize. The world community is willing enough to
cooperate in "peacekeeping"--policing an existing agreement
not challenged by any of the parties involved--but it has
been skittish about peacemaking--suppressing actual challenges
to world order. Not even the U.S. has as yet developed a clear
concept of what it will resist unilaterally in the post-cold
war world.
</p>
<p> As an approach to foreign policy, Wilsonianism presumes that
America is possessed of an exceptional nature expressed in unrivaled
virtue and unrivaled power. Since the end of World War II, the
U.S. has been so confident of its strength and the virtue of
its aims that it could envision fighting for its values on a
worldwide basis.
</p>
<p> As the 21st century approaches, vast global forces are at work
that will render the U.S. less exceptional. American military
power will remain unrivaled for the foreseeable future. Yet
America's desire to project that power into the myriad small-scale
conflicts that the world is likely to witness in the coming
decades--Bosnia, Somalia and Haiti are examples--is subjected
to growing dispute. The U.S. will probably have the world's
most powerful economy well into the next century, yet it will
face economic competition of a kind it never experienced during
the cold war. America will be the greatest and most powerful
nation, but a nation with peers; the primus inter pares but
in many respects a nation like others.
</p>
<p> As a result, Wilson's dictates--collective security, the conversion
of one's adversaries to the American way, an international system
that adjudicates disputes in a legal fashion and unqualified
support for ethnic self-determination--are becoming less practicable.
On what principles ought America then to base its foreign policy?
Can Wilsonian concepts like "enlarging democracy" serve as the
principal guides to American foreign policy and as replacements
for the cold-war strategy of containment?
</p>
<p> The growth of democracy will continue as America's dominant
aspiration, but it is much more difficult to translate into
operational terms than the containment policy it seeks to replace.
Curbing the power of the central government has been a principal
concern of Western political theorists; in most other societies,
political theory has sought to buttress the authority of the
state. Nowhere else has there been such an insistence on expanding
personal freedom. Western democracy evolved in culturally homogeneous
societies with a long common history; even America, with its
polyglot population, developed a strong cultural identity. The
society and, in a sense, the nation preceded the state without
having to be created by it. In such a setting, political parties
represent variants of an underlying consensus; today's minority
is potentially tomorrow's majority.
</p>
<p> In most other parts of the world, the state has preceded the
nation; it has been and often remains the principal element
in forming it. Political parties reflect fixed, usually communal,
identities; minorities and majorities tend to be permanent.
In such societies the political process is about domination,
not alternation in office, which takes place, if at all, by
coups rather than constitutional procedures. The concept of
a loyal opposition--the essence of modern democracy--rarely
prevails. Much more frequently, opposition is equated with treason
and ruthlessly suppressed.
</p>
<p> America would not be true to itself if it did not insist on
the universal applicability of the idea of liberty. That America
should give preference to democratic governments over repressive
ones and be prepared to pay some price for its moral convictions
is beyond dispute. That there is an area of discretion that
should be exercised in favor of governments and institutions
promoting democratic values and human rights is also clear.
The difficulty arises in determining the precise price to be
paid and its relationship to other essential American priorities,
including national security and the overall geopolitical balance.
</p>
<p> If American exhortations are to go beyond patriotic rhetoric,
they must reflect a realistic understanding of America's reach.
The U.S. must be careful not to multiply moral commitments while
the financial and military resources for the conduct of a global
foreign policy are being curtailed. Sweeping pronouncements
not matched by either the ability or the willingness to back
them up diminish America's influence in all other matters.
</p>
<p> The precise balance between the moral and the strategic elements
of American foreign policy cannot be prescribed in the abstract.
But the beginning of wisdom consists of recognizing that a balance
needs to be struck. A gap is threatening to open up in America's
policy between its pretensions and its willingness to support
them; the nearly inevitable disillusionment too easily turns
into an excuse for withdrawing from world affairs altogether.
</p>
<p> Foreign policy must begin with some definition of what constitutes
a vital interest--a change in the international environment
so likely to undermine the national security that it must be
resisted no matter what form the threat takes or how ostensibly
legitimate it appears. The controversy surrounding almost all
American military actions in the post-cold war period shows
that a wider consensus on where America should draw the line
does not yet exist. To bring it about is a major challenge to
national leadership.
</p>
<p> The concept of raison d'etat--that the interests of the state
justify the means used to pursue them--has always been repugnant
to Americans. That is not to say that Americans have never practiced
raison d'etat--there are many instances of it, from the time
of the Founding Fathers' shrewd dealings with the European powers
to the single-minded pursuit of Western expansion under the
rubric of "manifest destiny." But Americans have never been
comfortable acknowledging openly their own selfish interests.
Whether fighting world wars or local conflicts, U.S. leaders
always claimed to be struggling in the name of principle, not
interest.
</p>
<p> In the next century, American leaders will have to articulate
a concept of the national interest and explain how that interest
is served by the maintenance of the balance of power. America
will need partners to preserve equilibrium in several regions,
and these partners cannot always be chosen on the basis of moral
considerations alone.
</p>
<p> DEALING WITH RUSSIA
</p>
<p> Just as Soviet hostility shaped America's attitudes toward the
global order from the perspective of containment, so do Russia's
reform efforts dominate America's thinking now. U.S. policy
has been based on the premise that peace can be ensured by a
Russia tempered by democracy and concentrating its energies
on developing a market economy. In this light, America's principal
task is conceived to be to strengthen Russian reform, with measures
drawn from the experience of the Marshall Plan rather than from
the traditional patterns of foreign policy.
</p>
<p> In the aftermath of the communist collapse, it has been assumed
that Russia's adversarial intentions have disappeared. Students
of geopolitics and history are uneasy about the single-mindedness
of this approach. They fear that in overestimating America's
ability to shape Russia's evolution, the U.S. may involve itself
needlessly in internal Russian controversies and generate a
nationalist backlash. While they would support a policy designed
to modify Russia's traditional truculence through economic aid
and global cooperation, they argue that even if a political
transformation did occur, its effect on Russian foreign policy
would take time. Therefore, America should hedge its bets.
</p>
<p> Nor should America expect economic aid to achieve results in
Russia comparable to those of the Marshall Plan. The Western
Europe of the immediate postwar period had a functioning market
system, well-established bureaucracies and, in most countries,
a democratic tradition. Comparable conditions do not exist in
post-cold war Russia. Alleviating suffering and encouraging
economic reform are important tools of American foreign policy,
but not substitutes for a serious effort to maintain the global
balance of power vis-a-vis a country with a long history of
expansionism.
</p>
<p> The vast Russian empire acquired over the course of two centuries
is in a state of disintegration, generating two causes of tension:
attempts by neighbors to take advantage of the weakness of the
imperial center, and efforts by the declining empire to restore
its authority at the periphery. Iran and Turkey are seeking
to increase their roles in the largely Muslim republics of Central
Asia. But the dominant geopolitical thrust has been Russia's
attempt to restore its pre-eminence in all the territories formerly
controlled from Moscow in the name of peacekeeping. The U.S.,
focusing on the goodwill of a "reformist" government and reluctant
to embrace a geopolitical agenda, has acquiesced. It has done
little to enable the successor republics, except the Baltic
states, to achieve international acceptance. The presence or
activities of Russian troops on their territory are rarely challenged.
</p>
<p> This is in part because America has been dealing with the anticommunist
and the anti-imperialist revolutions as if they were a single
phenomenon. In fact, they work in opposite directions. The anticommunist
revolution has enjoyed substantial support throughout the territory
of the former Soviet Union. The anti-imperialist revolution,
directed against domination by Russia, is widely popular in
the new non-Russian republics and extremely unpopular in the
Russian Federation. Russian leadership groups have historically
perceived their state in terms of a "civilizing" mission; the
overwhelming majority of Russia's leading figures--whatever
their political persuasion--refuse to accept the collapse
of the Soviet empire or the legitimacy of its successor states,
especially of Ukraine, the cradle of Russian Orthodoxy. Even
Alexander Solzhenitsyn, when writing about ridding Russia of
unwilling foreign subjects, urged the retention by Moscow of
a core group of Ukraine, Belarus and almost half of Kazakhstan--nearly 90% of the former empire.
</p>
<p> A realistic policy would recognize that the reformist Russian
government of Boris Yeltsin has maintained Russian armies on
the territory of most of the former Soviet republics--all
members of the U.N.--often against the express wish of the
host government. These military forces have encouraged and even
participated in the civil wars of several of the republics.
And Russian diplomacy is beginning to claim a veto over the
foreign policy of its former satellites in Eastern Europe. Long-term
prospects for peace will be influenced by Russian reform, but
short-term prospects will depend on whether Russian armies can
be induced to stay at home.
</p>
<p> Russia is bound to have a special security interest in what
it calls the "near abroad," the republics of the former Soviet
Union. But the peace of the world requires that this interest
be satisfied without military pressure or intervention. The
key issue is whether to treat Russia's relationship to the new
republics as an international problem subject to accepted rules
of foreign policy, or as an outgrowth of Russia's unilateral
decision making that America will seek to influence by appeals
to Russia's goodwill.
</p>
<p> For the post-cold war period, American policy toward Russia
has staked everything on a kind of social engineering geared
to individual leaders. In the Bush Administration it was Mikhail
Gorbachev, and under Clinton it has been Boris Yeltsin; because
of their perceived personal commitment to democracy, Gorbachev
and Yeltsin have been treated as the guarantors of a peaceful
Russian foreign policy. America's leaders have been reluctant
to invoke the traditional diplomatic brakes on Russian policy
for fear of provoking Yeltsin's nationalist opponents.
</p>
<p> It does Russia no favor to be treated as immune from normal
considerations of foreign policy, for this will have the practical
result of forcing it to pay a heavier price later on if it is
lured into courses of action from which there is no retreat.
The veterans of Russia's internal struggles are quite capable
of comprehending a policy based on mutual respect of each other's
national interests; they are likely to understand such a calculus
better than appeals to an abstract and distant Utopianism. Generous
economic assistance and technical advice are necessary to ease
the pains of transition, and Russia should be made welcome in
institutions that foster economic, cultural and political cooperation.
But Russian reform will be impeded, not helped, by turning a
blind eye to the reappearance of historic Russian imperial pretensions.
</p>
<p> American policy toward Russia should be geared to permanent
interests, not to the fluctuations of Russian domestic politics.
If American policy makes Russian domestic politics its top priority,
it will become the victim of forces out of its control and lose
all criteria for judgment. The new Russian leadership is entitled
to understanding for the anguishing process of trying to overcome
two generations of communist misrule. It is not entitled to
be handed the sphere of influence that Czars and commissars
have coveted all around Russia's vast borders for 300 years.
If Russia is to become a serious partner in building a new world
order, it must be ready for the disciplines of stability as
well as for its benefits.
</p>
<p> MANAGING EUROPE
</p>
<p> The architects of the Atlantic Alliance would have been incredulous
had they been told that victory in the cold war would raise
doubts about the future of their creation. They took it for
granted that the prize for victory in the cold war was a lasting
partnership. But the alliance has been marking time since the
collapse of communism. Downgrading the U.S. relationship with
Europe has become all too fashionable. Yet without its Atlantic
ties, America would find itself in a world of nations with which--except in the Western Hemisphere--it has few moral bonds
or common traditions. In these circumstances, America would
be obliged to conduct a pure Realpolitik, which is essentially
incompatible with the American tradition.
</p>
<p> Disagreements with Europe have the grating character of family
squabbles. Yet on nearly every key issue, there has been far
more cooperation from Europe than from any other area. Europe
may not be able to rally itself to a new Atlantic policy, but
America owes it to itself not to abandon the policies of three
generations in the hour of victory. The task before the Alliance
is to adapt the two basic institutions that shape the Atlantic
relationship, NATO and the European Union, to the realities
of the post-cold war world.
</p>
<p> In the years ahead all the traditional Atlantic relationships
will change. Europe will not feel the previous need for American
protection and will pursue its economic self-interest much more
aggressively; America will not be willing to sacrifice as much
for European security and will be tempted by isolationism in
various guises. In due course, Germany will insist on the political
influence to which its military and economic power entitle it
and will not be so emotionally dependent on American military
and French political support. Europe, even with Germany, cannot
manage either the resurgence or disintegration of Russia.
</p>
<p> It is in no country's interest that Germany and Russia should
fixate on each other as either principal partner or principal
adversary. If they become too close, they raise fears of condominium;
if they quarrel, they involve Europe in escalating crises. Without
America, Great Britain and France cannot sustain the political
balance in Western Europe; Germany would be tempted by nationalism;
Russia would lack a global interlocutor. And without Europe,
America could turn, psychologically as well as geopolitically,
into an island.
</p>
<p> The future of Eastern Europe and of the successor states of
the Soviet Union are not the same problem. Eastern Europe was
occupied by the Red Army. Poland, the Czech Republic, Hungary
and Slovakia have historically, culturally and politically identified
with West European traditions. Without ties to West European
and Atlantic institutions, these will become a no-man's-land
between Germany and Russia. To be economically and politically
viable, they need the European Union, and for security they
look to the Atlantic Alliance. Since most members of the European
Union are members of NATO, and since it is inconceivable that
they would ignore attacks on one of their members after European
integration has reached a certain point, membership in the European
Union will lead to at least de facto extension of the NATO guarantee.
</p>
<p> President Clinton's objection to NATO membership for these countries
goes back to Wilson's historical objection to alliances--because
they were based on the expectation of confrontation. The President
offered an alternative vision at last January's NATO summit.
He argued that NATO could not afford to "draw a new line between
East and West that could create a self-fulfilling prophecy of
future confrontation."
</p>
<p> Instead Clinton put forward a scheme he called the Partnership
for Peace. It invites all the successor states of the Soviet
Union and all of Moscow's former East European satellites to
join what amounts to a vague system of collective security.
It is not a way station into NATO, as is often misleadingly
asserted, but an alternative to it.
</p>
<p> The Partnership for Peace runs the risk of creating two sets
of borders in Europe--those that are protected by security
guarantees, and others where such guarantees have been refused--a state of affairs bound to prove tempting to potential aggressors
and demoralizing to potential victims. Care must be taken lest
a strategic and conceptual no-man's-land is created in Eastern
and Central Europe.
</p>
<p> It will prove impossible to solve the twin problems of establishing
security for Eastern Europe and integrating Russia into the
international community as part of the same program. If the
Partnership for Peace is made an aspect of NATO, it may well
undermine the Atlantic Alliance by diverting it into activities
unrelated to any realistic security mission, magnify the sense
of insecurity of Eastern Europe and yet, being sufficiently
ambiguous, fail to placate Russia. The Partnership runs the
risk of being treated as irrelevant, if not dangerous, by the
potential victims of aggression.
</p>
<p> At the same time, relating Russia to the Atlantic nations is
important. There is a place for an institution that deals with
missions that all of its members interpret in substantially
the same manner. Such common tasks exist in the field of economic
development, education and culture. The Conference on Security
and Cooperation in Europe (CSCE) could be given expanded functions
for these purposes.
</p>
<p> In such a design, the Atlantic Alliance would establish a common
political framework and provide overall security; the European
Union would accelerate membership for former Eastern European
satellites; and the CSCE would relate the republics of the former
Soviet Union--especially Russia--to the Atlantic structure.
A security umbrella would be extended over the new democracies
in Eastern Europe. If Russia remained within its borders, the
focus on security would shift over time to the Partnership.
The common political and economic projects would increasingly
dominate the East-West relationship.
</p>
<p> HANDLING ASIA
</p>
<p> There has been a surge of American interest in Asia, as symbolized
by the proposal for a Pacific community made by Clinton at a
meeting with the Asian heads of government in 1993. But the
nations of Asia view themselves as distinct and competitive.
Their relations bear most of the attributes of the European
balance-of-power system of the 19th century: any significant
increase in strength by one of them is almost certain to evoke
an offsetting maneuver by the others. There is no pretense of
collective security or of cooperation based on shared domestic
values, even on the part of the few existing democracies. The
emphasis is all on equilibrium and national interest. Military
expenditures are already rising in all the major Asian countries.
</p>
<p> Clinton's proposal for a more institutionalized Pacific community
was received with polite aloofness. Asian nations do not want
an institutional framework that might give potential Asian superpowers
or even the U.S. a major voice in their affairs. They favor
keeping America sufficiently involved to help ward off threats
to their independence. But they are too suspicious of powerful
neighbors, and to some extent of the U.S., to favor formal institutions.
</p>
<p> Nevertheless, the attitude of the U.S. is crucial, for it alone
has the capacity to function in much the same way that Great
Britain once did in maintaining the European balance of power.
The stability of the Asia-Pacific region, the underpinning of
its vaunted prosperity, is the consequence of an equilibrium
that will need increasingly careful and deliberate tending.
</p>
<p> In the next century, China's political and military shadow will
fall over Asia and will affect the calculations of the other
powers, however restrained actual Chinese policy may prove to
be. The other Asian nations are likely to seek counterweights
to an increasingly powerful China as they already do to Japan.
Though they will disavow it, the nations of Southeast Asia are
including the heretofore feared Vietnam in their ASEAN grouping
largely in order to balance China and Japan. And that too is
why ASEAN is asking the U.S. to remain engaged in the region.
</p>
<p> During the cold war, Japan basked in the protection of the U.S.
A determined economic competitor, it paid for freedom of maneuver
in the economic field by subordinating its foreign and security
policies to Washington's. As long as the Soviet Union could
be perceived as the principal security threat by both countries,
it made sense to treat American and Japanese national interests
as identical.
</p>
<p> That pattern is not likely to continue. Confrontation with the
U.S. over economic issues is becoming the rule rather than the
exception. With Korea and China gaining in military strength,
and with the least impaired portion of Soviet military power
located in Siberia, Japanese long-range planners will not indefinitely
take the absolute identity of U.S. and Japanese interests for
granted. Japan's perspective differs from America's because
of geographic proximity to the Asian mainland and historic experience.
The Japanese defense budget has been creeping upward until it
has become the second largest in the world. Faced with an aging
population and a stagnating economy, Japan might decide to press
its technological and strategic superiority before China emerges
as a superpower and Russia recovers its strength. Afterward,
it might have recourse to that great equalizer, nuclear technology.
</p>
<p> Close Japanese-American relations will be a vital contribution
to Japanese moderation and a significant reassurance to the
other nations of Asia. Japanese military strength linked to
America worries China and the other nations of Asia less than
purely national Japanese military capabilities. And Japan will
decide that it needs less military strength so long as an American
safety net exists. A substantial American military presence
in Japan and Korea will be needed to give America's commitment
to a permanent role in Asia credibility. Confrontation in economic
matters should be kept in strict limits.
</p>
<p> Good American relations with China are the prerequisite for
good long-term relations with Japan, as well as for good Sino-Japanese
relations. It is a triangle that each of the parties can abandon
only at great risk. It is also an ambiguity with which the U.S.
is not totally comfortable, since it runs counter to the American
tendency to label nations neatly as either friend or foe. But
with economic growth rates around 10% annually, a strong sense
of national cohesion and an ever more muscular military, China
will show the greatest increase in stature among the major powers.
</p>
<p> China welcomes U.S. involvement in Asia as a counterweight to
its feared neighbors, Japan, Russia and, to a lesser degree,
India. Yet an American policy that seeks simultaneous friendship
with Beijing and with countries that Beijing perceives as potential
threats--which is the correct U.S. stance--requires a careful
and regular dialogue between the U.S. and China.
</p>
<p> For four years after the events of Tiananmen Square in 1989,
this dialogue has been inhibited by the American refusal to
engage in high-level contacts--a measure never employed against
the Soviet Union, even at the height of the cold war. Human
rights moved to the center of the Sino-American relationship.
</p>
<p> The Clinton Administration wisely restored high-level contacts;
the future of Sino-American relations depends on the substance
of these exchanges. Clearly, the U.S. cannot abandon its traditional
concern with human rights and democratic values; the problem
is the degree to which all aspects of Sino-American relations
are made conditional on them. China finds condescending the
implication that Sino-American relations are based not on reciprocal
interests but on American favors that can be shut off at Washington's
discretion. Such an attitude makes America appear both unreliable
and intrusive, and unreliability is the greater failing in Chinese
eyes.
</p>
<p> China might be prepared to make some human-rights concessions,
provided they can be presented as emerging from its own free
choice as part of a broader relationship. But American insistence
on publicly prescribing conditions is perceived in China as
a humiliating attempt to convert its society to American values
and as a sign of a lack of American seriousness. Such an insistence
suggests that America has no national interest in the Asian
equilibrium as such. But if America cannot be counted on for
that purpose, China will have no interest in making concessions
to Washington. The key to Sino-American relations--even on
human rights--is a tacit cooperation on global, and especially
Asian, strategy.
</p>
<p> STRATEGY FOR THE 21ST CENTURY
</p>
<p> When, in 1821, John Quincy Adams warned Americans against the
penchant to slay distant "monsters," he could not have imagined
the magnitude and sheer number of monsters that would exist
in the post-cold war world. Not every evil can be combatted
by America, even less by America alone. But some monsters need
to be, if not slain, at least resisted. What is most needed
is criteria for selectivity.
</p>
<p> America's leaders have generally stressed motivation over structure.
They have placed emphasis on affecting the attitudes more than
the calculations of their counterparts. As a result, American
society is peculiarly ambivalent about the lessons of history.
American films often depict how some dramatic event transforms
a villain into a paragon of virtue, a reflection of the pervasive
national belief that the past has no final claim and that new
departures are always possible. In the real world such transformations
rarely happen.
</p>
<p> The American habit of rejecting history extols the image of
a universal man living by universal maxims, regardless of the
past, of geography or of other immutable circumstances. Since
the American tradition emphasizes universal truths rather than
national characteristics, American policymakers have generally
preferred multilateral approaches to national ones: the agendas
of disarmament, nonproliferation and human rights rather than
essentially national, geopolitical or strategic issues.
</p>
<p> A country with this idealistic tradition cannot base its policy
on the balance of power as the sole criterion for a new world
order. But it must learn that equilibrium is a fundamental precondition
for the pursuit of its historic goals. And these higher goals
cannot be achieved by rhetoric or posturing. Foreign policy
is conducted by a political system that emphasizes the immediate
and provides few incentives for the long range. Leaders are
obliged to deal with constituencies that tend to receive their
information through visual images. All this puts a premium on
emotion and on the mood of the moment, just when priorities
need rethinking and capabilities require analysis.
</p>
<p> At a time when America is able neither to dominate the world
nor to withdraw from it, when it finds itself both all-powerful
and totally vulnerable, it must not abandon the ideals that
have accounted for its greatness. But neither must it jeopardize
that greatness by fostering illusions about the extent of its
reach. World leadership is inherent in America's power and values,
but it does not include the privilege of pretending that America
is doing other nations a kindness by associating with them,
or that it has a limitless capacity to impose its will by withholding
its favors.
</p>
<p> The fulfillment of America's ideals will have to be sought in
the patient accumulation of partial successes. The certitudes
of physical threat and hostile ideology characteristic of the
cold war are gone. The convictions needed to master the emerging
world order are more abstract: a vision of the future that cannot
be demonstrated when it is put forward and judgments about the
relationship between hope and possibility that are, in their
essence, conjectural. The Wilsonian goals of America's past--peace, stability, progress and freedom for mankind--will
have to be sought in a journey that has no end. "Traveler,"
says a Spanish proverb, "there are no roads. Roads are made
by walking."
</p>
</body>
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