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- <text id=89TT1927>
- <title>
- July 24, 1989: High-Wire Act
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- July 24, 1989 Fateful Voyage:The Exxon Valdez
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- NATION, Page 16
- High-Wire Act
- </hdr><body>
- <p>On a mission to Poland and Hungary, the President walks a line
- between pushing reform and making too many promises
- </p>
- <p>By Hugh Sidey
- </p>
- <p> When General Wojciech Jaruzelski had spoken and returned to
- his seat beside George Bush in the Polish Parliament, Bush
- reached over and patted the Communist boss's forearm. A little
- later, clustered with some newly chartered Polish Little
- Leaguers, he scooped up the grinning kids and pulled them close
- for the ritual team picture.
- </p>
- <p> Next day, standing below the soaring Workers Monument in
- Gdansk, the President wrapped his arm around Solidarity leader
- Lech Walesa and held the portly electrician next to him. At the
- Westerplatte Memorial, which marks the site of the first
- gunfire of World War II, Bush, draped in a large American flag
- by an exuberant Pole, reached into the crowd, picked up a small
- boy and hugged him as if he were one of his own eleven
- grandchildren.
- </p>
- <p> In rainy Budapest, beneath the huge statue of Lajos
- Kossuth, Hungary's greatest figure of independence, the
- President bounded down from the stage after brief remarks,
- stripped off his borrowed raincoat and wrapped it around a
- soaked, startled and utterly smitten old woman, who had to fend
- off other onlookers grabbing for her new prize.
- </p>
- <p> On his way to speak at the Karl Marx University of Economic
- Sciences, Bush invited a couple of students into the
- presidential limousine; one of them sported a power yellow tie,
- reflecting Alan Greenspan more than Karl Marx. At the end of a
- run with dozens of youthful joggers, Bush jovially autographed
- a dirty sneaker that a child had thrust into his hand.
- </p>
- <p> He was Uncle George on a historic dash through Eastern
- Europe, trying to reach out and touch everyone, striving to
- bring down to personal terms his doctrine of homegrown political
- and economic freedoms and what they could mean for the burdened
- people of the Soviet bloc. He was consumed with the idea that
- the economic summit, held in Paris during the weekend, ought to
- give much of its attention to the stirrings in the long-troubled
- nations of the old empire.
- </p>
- <p> What propelled Bush was his belief that history is calling
- him and the leaders of Poland and Hungary to forge some kind of
- new partnership quickly. But as he listened to the confessionals
- of Communists declaring their system a failure and searching for
- a peaceful way out, he realized that he had to move gingerly.
- </p>
- <p> Before he left home, Bush wrote Mikhail Gorbachev that his
- trip was not designed to stir up trouble in the Soviets'
- backyard. "Winners, losers -- that's not what this is about,"
- he insisted on Air Force One, as he sped toward Warsaw.
- </p>
- <p> The delicate challenge was to encourage the faltering
- nations to embrace democratic reforms and move toward a
- free-market economy mostly on their own, without provoking
- another era of repression from nervous party bosses. Bush
- offered only $115 million to Poland, a pittance when measured
- against Poland's $39 billion international debt, and $25 million
- to Hungary. But part of the President's traveling plan was not
- to overpromise and energize the dissidents, who might then make
- more demands.
- </p>
- <p> Some untutored White House aide had predicted a roaring
- reception in Poland, much like the one John Kennedy evoked in
- Berlin in 1963. A little Kennedy-like rhetoric was even
- inserted into Bush's Gdansk speech ("To those who think that
- freedom can be forever denied, I say let them look at Poland").
- That totally missed the meaning of these dramatic days.
- Gorbachev is more of an ally than a threat. On this trip there
- was no adversary for Bush to shake his fist at while summoning
- hoarse defiance in the streets. The subdued, weary Poles seemed
- to understand Pogo's famous observation, "We have met the enemy
- and he is us." They were curious about Bush but worried about
- the new world he talked of. Capitalism is only dimly perceived
- by most people in Eastern Europe.
- </p>
- <p> In a moment of cold candor, John Sununu, White House chief
- of staff, put it accurately, though he later apologized for his
- "unfortunate" analogy. Asked about the modest $115 million
- package for Poland, he replied, "In a sense we could actually
- do too much. You can't create the problem of a young person in
- the candy store, where there is so much there that they don't
- know which direction to take and don't have the self-discipline
- to take the right steps."
- </p>
- <p> While Bush made eloquent pleas in his formal addresses
- about "the power and potential of this moment," perhaps his most
- telling diplomacy was conducted around the dining tables of
- Warsaw, Gdansk and Budapest. At U.S. Ambassador John Davis'
- residence in Warsaw, Communist leaders sat down with the
- Solidarity reformers who just last month startled the world by
- winning all but one of the contested seats in the Polish
- Parliament. The lunch took on a life of its own.
- </p>
- <p> When the idea of mixing the political enemies was first
- proposed, Jaruzelski turned down the invitation, then changed
- his mind, the first hint of Bush's healing touch. "I have lived
- perhaps 50 or 80 meters away from here for 16 years, and it is
- the first time that I have come to this residence," he said. If
- he was startled, the Solidarity members who had been imprisoned
- by the Communists were even more amazed as they pulled up chairs
- at the same round tables with their former jailers. "Rather
- strange," said Janusz Onyszkiewicz, a spokesman for Solidarity,
- "if you take into account that a year ago I was in prison." His
- wife Joanna, also a Solidarity partisan, admitted to her table
- partner that it was "uncomfortable sitting with people you have
- been fighting for years."
- </p>
- <p> Yet Bush pulled it off. In the unseasonal heat, he ordered
- coats removed. He jumped from person to person with his
- outstretched hand. A thaw of sorts set in. Though Bush had
- ruled out toasts, he changed his mind and ruled them in again.
- He, Jaruzelski and Bronislaw Geremek, opposition leader in the
- Parliament, rose one by one in feeling tribute to the moment.
- It was at this lunch that Barbara Bush claims to have discovered
- a jocular streak in General Jaruzelski, known to most of the
- world as an unsmiling dictator lurking behind dark glasses.
- "Very amusing," insisted Barbara. "When George said, `Take off
- your coats,' (Jaruzelski) said, `I have to sneak in and take off
- my suspenders too.' So then when he had to get up to make his
- speech, he said, `Well, I'd better be careful. I've got to
- remember I don't have my suspenders on.'"
- </p>
- <p> In Gdansk the next day, Bush was at the luncheon table
- again, this one in the 100-year-old home of Solidarity leader
- Lech Walesa. Women from the neighborhood had prepared an
- avalanche of Polish dishes, ranging from smoked eel to
- schnitzel. Bush looked at the groaning board and commented, "My
- mother taught me to eat what's before you. In this house I would
- weigh 300 lbs." Framed pictures of Christ were in almost every
- room; crucifixes hung over most of the doors. By Polish
- standards the house was a mansion; Walesa noted that his work
- with Solidarity had some benefits.
- </p>
- <p> Bush chatted with kids and patted dogs, but there was some
- serious talk when he and Walesa strolled alone. Walesa had said
- he was not ready to run for President of Poland, but Bush
- reportedly reminded him that if successful reform was to occur,
- somebody should be ready to lead. Walesa poured out his hopes
- for luring $10 billion in investments to Poland, a vague scheme
- of venture capital that caught the fancy of the former Texas oil
- entrepreneur.
- </p>
- <p> Wherever Bush went, he heard quiet endorsement for his
- restrained attitude toward the Soviet Union. "Gorbachev makes
- it possible for us to move ahead," confided one of the
- Communists to Bush. "We appreciate your keeping a good
- relationship with him." It seemed, as Bush hurried along his
- route, that his hosts gained nerve and expressed not only their
- conviction that Communism was a botch but also their uncertainty
- about how to untangle their political and economic messes. "We
- are where you were in 1776," Hungary's party president, Rezso
- Nyers, told Bush. "We need a currency that is convertible. The
- question is, Can we get it fast enough to keep things moving?
- We know that reform means instability in the Soviet Union,
- Yugoslavia, Poland and Hungary. At the same time, we know we
- need foreign capital. Most basic is, How do we reform the
- thinking of our people who for the past 40 years have not been
- told how the world works?"
- </p>
- <p> Before he left Hungary, Bush had a special demonstration of
- the new wave. When he arrived to deliver his formal address at
- Karl Marx University, it was difficult to find any sign of Marx.
- The lone statue at the far end of the huge hall was blocked from
- sight by the press stand. "Your people and your leaders --
- government and opposition alike -- are not afraid to break with
- the past, to act in the spirit of truth," Bush told the
- students. "And what better example of this could there be than
- one simple fact: Karl Marx University has dropped Das Kapital
- from its required reading list." All over the hall George Bush,
- a proud product of U.S capitalism, saw the young Hungarians
- break into wide smiles and nod in agreement.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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