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TIME: Almanac 1995
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1995-01-31
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<text id=94TT1526>
<title>
Nov. 07, 1994: Essay:Romancing the Thugs
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
Nov. 07, 1994 Mad as Hell
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
ESSAY, Page 90
Romancing the Thugs
</hdr>
<body>
<p>By Charles Krauthhammer
</p>
<p> In 1992 candidate Bill Clinton excoriated president George Bush
for "coddling" dictators. Now forget about General Raoul Cedras
and his golden Panamanian parachute. Consider only that President
Clinton last week bestowed one of the highest presidential honors
on one of the world's chief thugs, President Hafez Assad of
Syria. The usual place for meeting the likes of him is some
neutral site like Geneva. (One comes away less soiled that way.)
Yet Clinton decided to pay court to Assad in Damascus. It was
the first visit by a President to a nation on the U.S. list
of terrorist states.
</p>
<p> The catalog of Assad's atrocities goes back far, highlighted
by the 1982 massacre of 20,000 of his own people in the rebellious
town of Hama. But put that aside. Put aside the fact that Damascus
is headquarters for a dozen terrorist groups, principal Arab
supporter of Iran, controller of Lebanon's Hizballah terrorists
(who last month launched rockets into Israel in support of the
bus bombing that killed 23 people).
</p>
<p> Put aside the moral affront of an American President who denounces
terrorism, then visits the capital of a terrorist state. Consider
only the question of political logic: What did the U.S. get
out of this trip?
</p>
<p> "An investment in peace," said the President's Near East adviser.
Now that Syria is negotiating with Israel, the trip was meant
to encourage Syria along the path of peace.
</p>
<p> Problem is, it didn't. There is not a shred of evidence, despite
the defensive protestations of Administration officials, that
Assad moved or that Clinton got anything at all for this investment
of American prestige. The only clear return was to Assad, in
the coin of international legitimacy and respectability.
</p>
<p> No one says that the U.S. should not talk to Syria.The question
is whether the U.S. should reward an intransigent--forget
terrorist--Syria with the ultimate presidential plum. The
laying on of hands is earned by those who, like King Hussein
of Jordan, make peace, not those who only dangle it while playing
dirty games on the side.
</p>
<p> Yet Syria is not our only uncollateralized "investment in peace."
Nor is it the most egregious example of up-front payment to
a terrorist state in return for promises or promises of promises.
The nuclear deal just concluded with North Korea earns that
prize.
</p>
<p> Here the up-front American blandishments are staggering. North
Korea gets: 1) a free supply of oil, 500,000 metric tons a year,
for the next eight to 10 years; 2) construction of two shiny
new nuclear reactors worth $4 billion, also free; 3) diplomatic
ties with the U.S., which will immediately lead to 4) diplomatic
ties with Japan, from which will flow 5) aid and trade and whatever
else the North Korean regime needs to keep going--and keep
threatening South Korea.
</p>
<p> In return for what? North Korea promises to allow the inspection
of nuclear-waste sites--inspections it was committed to by
treaty provisions it signed three years ago--oh, perhaps five
years from now. And North Korea promises to shut down its plutonium
reprocessing plant. Nice promise. Unfortunately, we've been
here before. North Korea made the same pledge in a 1992 deal,
which it then blithely broke. This time around it promises to
dismantle the plant. When? In the next century.
</p>
<p> Meanwhile, the oil flows, the diplomatic isolation ends, the
North Korean economy is revived by Western trade--and its
nuclear program remains intact! It is to be "frozen," meaning
ready to restart anytime in the next 10 years when Pyongyang
decides it has got all it wants from the West. Not a brick of
the North Korean program has to be removed until around 2002.
</p>
<p> And what of our most critical, nonnegotiable demand, that North
Korea ship out of the country the plutonium-laden fuel rods
that it brazenly removed from its reactor in May in defiance
of the sternest U.S. warnings? From these rods North Korea can
make half a dozen Hiroshimas. Did we get them? No. We got more
promises. The rods, we are assured, will be out--in the next
century.
</p>
<p> The Administration defends this investment in peace by saying
that the only alternative is war. This is a simple capitulation
to blackmail. The U.S. never threatened war as an alternative
to agreement. It threatened economic sanctions to squeeze North
Korea into complying now, not someday, with its nuclear-treaty
obligations. Pyongyang, economically moribund and starved for
oil, then rattled its saber. Clinton caved.
</p>
<p> The Clinton Administration is getting high marks for its recent
foreign policy successes. Haiti has gone well, meaning no Americans
have died in combat. In a place of zero strategic significance
to the U.S., however, this falls more into the category of disaster
avoided. In the two areas where we have the most abiding strategic
interests--fighting terrorism and nuclear proliferation--the Administration has reacted by romancing the thugs. Offer
the goodies, let the dictator pocket his gains, then hope for
the best.
</p>
<p> There is no denying that appeasement smooths things over and
postpones crises. But as we learned long ago, the respite tends
to be temporary.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>