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<text id=94TT0710>
<title>
May 30, 1994: The Political Interest
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
May 30, 1994 Jacqueline Bouvier Kennedy Onassis
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
THE POLITICAL INTEREST, Page 48
Is It Time for Him to Go?
</hdr>
<body>
<p>By Michael Kramer
</p>
<p> Earl Weaver, the former Baltimore Orioles manager, was famous
for an off-color vocabulary even a Hell's Angel might envy.
When he was particularly upset with an unfavorable call, however,
Weaver would stow the four-letter words and calmly ask the offending
umpire, "Are you going to get any better, or is this it?" The
same question (and the identical implied answer) could be asked
of Bill Clinton when it comes to the President's feeble and
often feckless foreign policy. In fact, experts have been asking
it for months, but "it's getting heavy now," concedes a senior
Administration official. "All the polls show it. Real people
are getting real nervous. The perception of ineptitude is growing.
The public doesn't like foreigners' thinking the President is
out of his depth. Americans don't like being embarrassed. It's
hurting the President's overall job-approval ratings, and it'll
continue hurting unless something's done about it."
</p>
<p> But what? How about a sacrifice? Unlike baseball managers, Presidents
can't be fired until the next election. In politics, it's the
appointed players who go. Soon that player may be Warren Christopher.
Friends and associates of the Secretary of State are quietly
discussing his possible departure, hints of which can be found
in last week's statements from the Middle East. During Christopher's
latest diplomatic shuttle between Israel and Syria, the guarded
descriptions of progress contained a caveat. Both Jerusalem
and Damascus, U.S. officials said, want Christopher even more
involved as the "honest broker" in their negotiations. "Now,
what if that's ratchetted up?" asks a Clinton adviser. "What
if a comprehensive peace is seen to require Chris' full-time
attention and he becomes our special Middle East envoy? Or maybe
he can get some declaration of principles signed and just walk
off. Either way, he could save face and claim a legacy, right?"
</p>
<p> As trial balloons go, this one has more air than most. But who
would replace Christopher? Five people are mentioned by those
familiar with the Administration's desire to project a new certitude
abroad. From among the current insiders are Deputy Secretary
of State Strobe Talbott, an intellectually gifted friend of
the President's; and National Security Adviser Tony Lake, who
appears to have the greatest day-to-day influence on Clinton
when the subject is foreign affairs. The question, though, is
whether anyone from the present roster would be seen as a credible
"agent of change," to borrow a favorite Clinton phrase. Leading
the list of new-blood types from outside the inner circle:
</p>
<p> LEE HAMILTON. Despite his reputation as a dispassionate analyst,
the House Foreign Affairs Committee chairman has at times blasted
Clinton's weak performance abroad. On Haiti, for example: "We
don't know what the policy is, but we know what kind of underwear
((Clinton)) wears." Cracks like that one can't endear him to
the President. But Hamilton "would bring some professionalism
to the amateur hour around here," says a State Department official.
"If we'd changed our refugee policy on Lee's watch, you can
bet there would have been some interim way of dealing with the
Haitian boat people before we got the new procedures in place.
We wouldn't be turning people back and looking ridiculous. After
all, the reason for our change is that those we've sent back
so far are being brutalized when they're returned."
</p>
<p> WALTER MONDALE. The former Vice President and current U.S. ambassador
to Japan is a cool, straight-talking pol. During his losing
race against Ronald Reagan in 1984, Mondale resisted promising
what he knew or suspected he couldn't deliver. Clinton needs
to learn what Mondale seems to know instinctively: disaster
haunts those whose rhetoric doesn't match reality. On North
Korea, a Mondale-inspired policy would probably avoid any further
"public blue-skying about U.S. options," says Leslie Gelb, president
of the Council on Foreign Relations. "What's needed there now
is a forthright expression of our goal--the denuclearization
of the Korean peninsula; an articulated willingness to trade
improved relations and economic assistance as the means to get
the North to play ball; a sternly delivered reminder that we
stand by our pledge to defend the South--with the specifics
left purposely vague; and then an intense but completely private
diplomacy." For tasks like those, Mondale fills the bill. He
is exceptionally well disciplined and has the standing to ensure
that everyone reads from the same script--and shuts up when
told to.
</p>
<p> COLIN POWELL. The former Joint Chiefs chairman is a long shot,
but he would bring instant credibility and remove a possible
1996 rival to the President. Powell is as risk-averse to military
adventures as Clinton is, but that could be a strength. Given
his background and especially his command of Desert Storm, Powell
alone may possess the stature necessary to make diplomacy work
when the President's primary objective is to avoid the use of
force.
</p>
<p> A shift at State may be clever and helpful, but in diplomacy
as well as in baseball, it's the manager who sets the tone.
The players can make the President look good, but only if he
sets the goals and pursues them resolutely. If he doesn't, the
losses, both real and perceived, will mount. Before long, that
weakness could spark a crisis that dwarfs Bosnia, Somalia and
Haiti--a crisis that the evidence so far indicates Clinton
would bungle miserably.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>