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<text id=93TT1699>
<title>
May 17, 1993: The Political Interest
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
May 17, 1993 Anguish over Bosnia
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
The Political Interest, Page 36
Clinton's Feelgood Strategy
</hdr>
<body>
<p>By Michael Kinsley
</p>
<p> Candidate Clinton saw no ambiguity last August: "History
has shown that you can't allow the mass extermination of people
and just sit by and watch it happen." President Clinton added a
caveat last week: The U.S. will not act alone in Bosnia.
"America is ready to do its part," Clinton said. "But Europe
must be willing to act with us. We must go forward together."
The impulse is noble, but the effect could be pernicious.
Multilateralism, the collective action by peace-loving nations
against malefactors, can either empower or paralyze. It can
confer a legitimacy that unilateral efforts might otherwise lack
(as in the Gulf War). "Or," says a self-described White House
hawk, "the insistence on consensus can stay our hand if it can't
be achieved." As Walter Lippmann once warned, multilateralism
can become the internationalism of the isolationist.
</p>
<p> What's worse, the ill-timed and poorly managed pursuit of
a common strategy can disarm the threat of force as a weapon
capable of causing the enemy to retreat. "Which is what some of
us have come to think of Chris' mission to Europe," says an
Administration official about Secretary of State Warren
Christopher's recent Continental tour. Coupled with the
President's insistence on a concerted response and the allies'
resistance to his options menu, "it's not surprising that the
Bosnian Serbs concluded we were bluffing and so voted against
the Athens agreement," says this official. "We either should
have had our ducks in a row before Chris left, or he should have
stayed home and hid behind his poker face. As it is, we looked
like beggars, when we know from experience that the allies will
fall in line if we toughly set out what we're going to do. This
business of the President saying we can't lead if the allies
won't follow ignores the lessons of the past 40 years. They'll
follow if we lead. Indeed, their domestic politics almost always
demand that we lead so their officials can tell their publics
that they're merely following. For a democratic superpower,
consultation is important, but it should always be essentially
cosmetic."
</p>
<p> The road from here seems clear enough. Having in effect
said the Bosnian Serbs must cease and desist, Clinton must act.
But enthralled by multilateralism and fearful of a Vietnam-like
quagmire (and against the private advice of senior military
officers like Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman Colin Powell, who
believes intervention should be massive or not at all), the
President seems bent on adopting a feelgood strategy--a
limited action designed, above everything, to ensure a swift
exit, a policy that defines success as merely having done
something without regard to the ultimate result. By all
accounts, Clinton aims to "level the killing fields," to borrow
the words of British Foreign Secretary Douglas Hurd. The Serbs,
says the President, have benefited from the West's de facto
intervention; the United Nations-sponsored arms embargo has had
the "unintended consequence of giving the Serbs an
insurmountable military advantage, which they have pressed with
ruthless efficiency." Lifting the embargo under the cover of
allied air support will "at least increase the right kind of
violence," says Richard Bartholomew, one of the Administration's
Bosnian policymakers. Then the Muslims can decide for themselves
"how they will die," says Senator Joe Biden.
</p>
<p> Assuming the allies finally follow (which seems likely,
since their appetite for recalcitrance appears to have run its
course), these minimeasures could begin almost immediately.
"It's the ultimate cop-out to let them fight it out," says Lord
Owen, who has been trying to broker a negotiated settlement for
almost two years. Owen aside, there is no assurance that the
genocide will moderate. Does anyone seriously think the Serbs
will picnic as their opponents arm, or that they'll suddenly
respect the lightly defended enclaves where innocents have
gathered to escape the slaughter, the so-called safe havens they
are currently shelling with impunity? Similarly, there is no
certainty that the war won't widen in the Balkans anyway, and
hardly any chance that the battle will be decisive enough to
roll back the Serbs' territorial gains (although a new balance
of power could conceivably precipitate serious negotiations).
"All of that may be true," says a Clinton adviser, "but at least
the President will be able to make the case that we've done the
best we could without putting our own troops on the ground--assuming he isn't tempted to do so if things go badly. And he'll
be able to stand behind multilateral action, which is the
Democratic [Party] politicians' historic preference. The
President's created a political problem for himself, so he's
seeking to get out of it politically, with tactics that have the
look and feel of real, muscular action. That's the game now. The
morality rhetoric--the Holocaust analogy and all that--will
of course continue as the President rallies the country. But as
the underlying reason for action, morality takes a back seat to
politics."
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>