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- <text id=93TT1423>
- <title>
- Apr. 12, 1993: The First Aid Summit
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Apr. 12, 1993 The Info Highway
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- U.S./RUSSIA, Page 28
- The First Aid Summit
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Clinton made a down payment on Yeltsin's reforms, but long-term
- success will tax the West's generosity
- </p>
- <p>By GEORGE J. CHURCH--With reporting by David Aikman/Moscow,
- Anne Blackman and J.F.O. McAllister/Vancouver
- </p>
- <p> The setting was majestic: a city of gleaming skyscrapers
- backed by magnificent snow-capped mountains, a
- Mediterranean-style villa perched on a splendid promontory
- overlooking the northern Pacific. The results of the weekend
- summit meeting in Vancouver, Canada, were inevitably less
- grandiose. Indeed, Presidents Bill Clinton and Boris Yeltsin
- hardly aimed at any readily measurable result. Dollars and cents
- may have been the language of discourse, but the effect was
- largely symbolic: to demonstrate that Yeltsin still has firm
- American support in his hour of trial, that Clinton is not quite
- an uninterested novice in foreign affairs and that the West
- really does care that Russia evolves into a free-market
- democracy.
- </p>
- <p> Accordingly, this meeting was presented as a sober working
- session, shorn of the pageantry that enveloped the old
- superpower summits. There was no state dinner, no glittering
- receptions, only six-plus hours devoted largely to pie charts
- and spreadsheets. Canadian newspapers were more witty than
- accurate in describing it as an "alms race"--not when the
- donors are reluctant to cross the starting line. But Topic A was
- the vexing and indispensable subject of American and other
- Western aid to Russia, complete with details of how much, when
- and for what projects. It might well be dubbed the "First Aid
- Summit": it could do little more than start the patient on the
- road to recovery, but that was a great deal better than nothing.
- </p>
- <p> Russia's transformation from central planning to a market
- economy and working democracy is a huge historic spectacle
- worthy of high summitry. As Clinton said in a speech last week
- to sell the proposition to skeptical Americans, the U.S. "cannot
- stop investing in the peace now that we have obtained it." But
- Vancouver is only a down payment--for the U.S., a $1.6 billion
- down payment--on a long-term commitment that will tax all the
- West's ingenuity and staying power, and Russia's own capacity
- to change, before it pays off.
- </p>
- <p> Arriving at Vancouver in a driving rain that dampened his
- gray pompadour, the Russian leader pledged again to keep
- pressing for reform, whatever the opposition. "The Communists
- want to take revenge, to take us back to the past," he said. But
- "as long as there is President Yeltsin in power, then
- definitely my answer is yes, the reforms will continue."
- </p>
- <p> Clinton, stepping from his plane a bit later, spoke
- soberly of the uncertainties surrounding any aid program,
- acknowledging that "future political events might undermine the
- impact." Still, he insisted, the future of Russian democracy is
- of such paramount importance that the West must "do what's
- right" to help, and he added, "I think that the kind of things
- we propose are likely to have lasting and tangible impact."
- Although Clinton's aides have made much of the idea that they
- are supporting democratic reform rather than Yeltsin per se,
- after the two Presidents had their first working session,
- spokesman George Stephanopoulos reported that his boss admired
- Yeltsin as a "true democrat" and "a fighter who is not deterred
- by long odds."
- </p>
- <p> After all that, the size of the package Clinton discussed
- with Yeltsin during a walk in the woods--ironically
- reminiscent of past arms-control negotiations--might seem on
- the small side. All of the $1.6 billion has already been
- appropriated by Congress; about half will supposedly start being
- delivered this week. The biggest chunk of the program, $700
- million, consists of food sold to the Russians at very low
- prices and on generous credit terms.
- </p>
- <p> But Clinton is hoping that the real bang will come not
- from the bucks but from the innovative kinds of projects the
- money will fund--programs that will start small but address
- needs neglected by conventional aid. When the President reviewed
- the ideas of his advisers a few weeks ago, he told them to
- start over and think bold. You let me worry about the politics,
- he told them. Tell me what will really make a difference over
- there. He gave the program planners four guidelines: I don't
- want to promise more than we can deliver; I want everything to
- have impact on real people; I want it to be of a magnitude that
- will not look paltry; I want it to stimulate bigger commitments
- from the Group of Seven industrialized nations.
- </p>
- <p> Clinton pushed for greater attention to improving oil and
- gas output, which would generate hard-currency income for
- Russia; to building housing for Russian soldiers, because the
- military plays a pivotal role in maintaining political
- stability; and to student and other exchanges, which would
- please the U.S. Congress. His plan will put less emphasis on
- short-term humanitarian aid and more on long-term technical
- assistance; three-quarters of the dollars will go to
- nongovernmental recipients, and 75% will finance programs
- outside Moscow. "We can't make our assistance coup-proof," said
- a senior official, "but we want to make our economic partnership
- with Russia as invulnerable as we can to the ups and downs of
- Russian politics."
- </p>
- <p> The Administration has earmarked nearly all the money for
- people-to-people projects, including $50 million for a
- capital-venture fund supporting small and medium-size Russian
- private businesses and an additional $95 million to help the
- government sell off state-owned property to private individuals
- and businesses; $48 million for a Democracy Corps of American
- lawyers, accountants and judges who will offer guidance to civic
- groups and private foundations; $30 million for energy projects;
- a program to build 450 housing units for military officers
- withdrawn from the old Soviet Union's far-flung ventures.
- </p>
- <p> Officials said Clinton might yet decide to ask Congress
- for even more money--if Yeltsin can convince him it would be
- used wisely and if the U.S. public and Congress might prove
- more receptive. If so, aides say, he will announce his proposal
- before the G-7 ministers meet in Tokyo next week. But the
- current package is modest, largely because both Presidents are
- subject to tight domestic restraints. Yeltsin knows Russia's
- economic crisis has hurt the pride of its citizens as well as
- their living standards; many Russians resent him as a leader
- under whom a onetime superpower has been reduced to begging for
- scraps from the tables of its former adversaries. In language
- hardly ever heard from the head of a country seeking foreign
- assistance, Yeltsin acknowledged at the summit that "too much"
- aid would enable his opponents to claim that Russia was being
- "shackled" by the West.
- </p>
- <p> Clinton was aware that this meeting offered him his first
- opportunity to assume the mantle of statesman. But the bigger
- test will come in persuading American voters and legislators,
- who resist even the most minimal help to a former foe at a time
- when the U.S. is having its own economic troubles, that aid to
- Russia will help the U.S. as well. He used the summit to
- continue his sermon on the wisdom of Russian aid as, basically,
- a domestic issue. Democracy and economic reform must be fostered
- now in Russia, "not out of charity," he said, "but because it
- is a wise investment."
- </p>
- <p> Nonetheless, resistance will be strong enough that Clinton
- kept his initial package small, in part to make sure that he
- would not offer Yeltsin more than he would be able to deliver.
- Said one of his aides: "We've been sort of haunted" by the
- memory of last year's promise of $24 billion in aid by the G-7.
- To the chagrin of the Russians, only about half was actually
- delivered. The U.S. is now busy trying to persuade its G-7
- partners to pledge even more this year--and pay it out.
- </p>
- <p> Even so, the U.S. effort and its justification tend to
- slight by several orders of magnitude the difficulties and
- frustrations involved. They can be illuminated by a kind of
- parable:
- </p>
- <p> Suppose rich Japan decides it cannot afford to let the
- American economy stagnate. There is popular opposition to an aid
- program that would help the U.S. compete. But after a round of
- slightly bombastic and self-congratulatory speeches in the Diet
- about how much the Japanese people have to lose if the U.S., a
- customer as well as a competitor, turns inward and hostile,
- Tokyo approves various forms of help: exchanges of high school
- students and the loan of Japanese experts to teach
- inventory-control techniques to Detroit automakers and to preach
- the virtues of a lawyerless society to the American Bar
- Association. Japanese diplomats visit every American city with
- a population of more than 750,000 to locate grant recipients who
- promise to spread the lessons of Japan's economic success to
- their countrymen.
- </p>
- <p> Swallowing national pride and braving the taunts of the
- America First party, the U.S. President goes to a summit meeting
- with the Japanese Prime Minister to accept the package--a
- munificent $2 billion, less than half as much as IBM lost all
- by itself in 1992. Yet it is supposed to not only help restore
- IBM and other faltering corporate giants but also enable
- American cities to get a start on clearing slums and assist in
- reducing the unemployment rate.
- </p>
- <p> The analogy is hardly exact. But that is not necessarily
- encouraging, because the situation in Russia is so much worse.
- The country is plagued by raging inflation, has a government so
- weak and unstable that it cannot collect most of the taxes it
- levies, has few managers trained in modern business techniques
- and, despite its past achievements in space exploration, is so
- backward on the ground that many of its hospitals lack even
- bandages and aspirin. It lacks most of the laws and protections
- that would invite investment from abroad. Even zealous
- advocates of Russian assist ance recognize that a few billion
- dollars' worth of demonstration projects can no more remake the
- economy than a putative $2 billion from Japan could in the U.S.
- </p>
- <p> Even counting prospective G-7 aid, the mismatch between
- needs and means is every bit as great for Russia. German
- economists estimate it will cost $100 billion a year for a full
- decade to bring living standards in the former East Germany up
- to 75% of those prevailing in the western part of the country.
- Russia has about 10 times the population of eastern Germany, and
- had a much less developed economy to begin with. On a straight
- mathematical projection, the size of the aid program needed to
- produce even a measurable and sustained rise in Russian
- standards of living would be so enormous--on the order of $1
- trillion a year for years on end--that no Western statesman
- would even discuss it.
- </p>
- <p> American officials portrayed Vancouver as the first step
- in a two-stage process, the next and bigger step coming from
- the G-7. Quite as important as the total sum agreed on--as
- high as $30 billion in some estimates--is a loosening of the
- rigid rules that kept much of last year's $24 billion package
- on the shelf. The main portion will again be aimed at shoring
- up the ruble; Moscow's failure to slow down the money-printing
- presses last year forced international backers to withhold
- stabilization funds. Russia also lost access to promised aid
- when it failed to make payments on its estimated $80 billion in
- foreign debt. That attitude is changing: just before the summit,
- the Paris Club, an informal group of creditor nations, agreed
- to give Moscow another 10 years to repay $15 billion in interest
- and principal originally due in 1993.
- </p>
- <p> One of Clinton's aims in Vancouver was to earn the U.S.
- some credibility for prodding the G-7 partners to pick up a
- bigger share of aid for Russian reform. That pitch will run into
- resistance. Tokyo resents Moscow's refusal to return four Kurile
- Islands, seized at the end of World War II. Clinton phoned
- Japanese Prime Minister Kiichi Miyazawa on Friday and told
- Yeltsin that he expected Japan to "play a constructive role."
- </p>
- <p> Other G-7 members, and even some Russians, fear Western
- aid will largely be wasted, disappearing without a trace into
- the chaotic, inflationary maw the economy has become--if not
- into foreign bank accounts in a vast capital flight reaching
- between $10 billion and $30 billion a year. The Russian economy
- "is like a large and deep pool of mud," says a senior British
- diplomat. "You can toss in anything you like, and it just sinks
- to the bottom."
- </p>
- <p> His views are echoed by Vladimir Ivanyushkin, a Moscow
- businessman. Says he: "If the Westerners keep giving us aid or
- credits, it's stupid. No matter what kind of government we have,
- communist, fascist or democratic, it's still going to be a
- Russian government, which means that all that aid will simply
- go down the drain, and nobody will ever find where it ends up."
- </p>
- <p> To a surprising extent, Western aid appears to be buying
- resentment. One placard waved by demonstrators in Moscow
- pictured Yeltsin fatuously caressing a cow labeled RUSSIAN
- FREEDOM, while an evil-looking Uncle Sam milked dollars from the
- cow's udder. Russians are irritated that so much Western help
- seemed to be promised and so little appears to have been
- delivered. And some are suspicious that foreigners are out to
- swindle them; they resist making their once powerful country
- look like a Western clone.
- </p>
- <p> At bottom, government aid can only prime the pump; to get
- things going effectively will take private money. Only Western
- business can supply the massive funds Russia needs. Over the
- long term, says Michael Mandelbaum, professor of American
- foreign policy at Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International
- Studies, "the most important economic contribution the West can
- make is not assistance at all but access to Western markets."
- That means trade, which will not flow unless Russia reforms its
- tax and legal codes enough to assure foreign businessmen they
- can make, keep and repatriate profits.
- </p>
- <p> Very little can be done until a resolution of Yeltsin's
- conflict with the hard-line Congress puts Russia squarely on the
- road to reform. Nothing will help rescue the Russian economy
- until the state brings hyperinflation under control; it cannot
- do that unless the central bank stops its wildly profligate
- printing of rubles; that seems unlikely to happen unless Yeltsin
- can wrest control of the bank from his parliamentary opponents.
- First aid cannot restore a body, or an economy, to health, but a
- country bleeding to death needs any help it can get.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
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