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<text id=89TT3222>
<title>
Dec. 11, 1989: Mock Crisis, Real Players
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
Dec. 11, 1989 Building A New World
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
VIDEO, Page 88
Mock Crisis, Real Players
</hdr><body>
<p>Ted Koppel gets officials to act out a U.S.-Soviet confrontation
</p>
<p>By Bruce Van Voorst
</p>
<p> Soviet officials are already meeting in Moscow on a
deepening crisis in Afghanistan as, 5,000 miles away in
Washington, members of an American task force are rushed by
police escort to the Old Executive Office Building. The U.S.
President and Vice President have been disabled by a poison-gas
attack. The Americans receive an intelligence briefing
suggesting that maverick Soviet agents, seeking to undermine
Mikhail Gorbachev and his international peace offensive, may
have been behind the assassination attempt.
</p>
<p> The year is 1991, and the scene is the beginning of a
"crisis game" depicting what might happen in a superpower
confrontation. Conceived, produced and anchored by Nightline's
Ted Koppel, the one-hour program, The Koppel Report: The Blue
X Conspiracy, will be broadcast by ABC on Thursday (Dec. 7) at
10 p.m. (EST). It is the first time that such a televised
exercise has featured actual U.S. and Soviet foreign policy and
military officials playing the roles of government figures.
"I've played simulations against `red' teams all my professional
life," says retired Army Chief of Staff Edward Meyer, who acts
as Deputy Secretary of Defense. "This was the first time the red
team was made up of real reds -- Russians who think and act like
Russians."
</p>
<p> The show was taped in simultaneous sessions in Washington
and Moscow. The participants responded to developments concocted
by "control teams" behind the scenes. Koppel headed the team in
Washington, and TIME editor at large Strobe Talbott supervised
the Soviet operation at the headquarters of the State Committee
for Television and Radio in Moscow. Koppel and Talbott kept in
constant touch over an open telephone line. They were assisted
by experts who helped improvise minicrises as the scenario
unfolded, translated "hot-line" messages that flashed back and
forth between the capitals by fax, and doubled as supporting
actors when the stars demanded an on-camera briefing.
</p>
<p> Reassuringly, the more dangerous and uncertain the game
becomes on The Blue X Conspiracy, the more cautious the players
turn on both sides. When word reaches the Soviets that the
Afghan mujahedin rebels, backed by the U.S., have attacked the
key Afghan air base at Bagram with chemical weapons, Georgi
Korniyenko, a retired Deputy Foreign Minister and longtime aide
to Andrei Gromyko, warns his colleagues not to "jump to the
conclusion that this step was sanctioned by the highest
leadership of the U.S. Administration."
</p>
<p> The American policymakers show similar restraint when the
controllers try to unnerve them by having a U.S. KC-135 tanker
aircraft stray into Soviet airspace and a U.S. destroyer
accidentally ram a Soviet submarine. In the role of Chairman of
the Joint Chiefs of Staff is Admiral William Crowe Jr., who in
reality stepped down from that position only the day before the
taping. "These things happen," he says.
</p>
<p> The Blue X Conspiracy contains reminders of how the current
climate of U.S.-Soviet relations affects decision making,
whether in a mock crisis or a real one. Such a game would
probably not have been played in the depths of the cold war, but
if it had, there would probably have been considerably more
saber rattling, perhaps even nuclear warnings. In the Gorbachev
era, both sides go out of their way to avoid escalation. The
Soviets cancel strategic exercises because they might be
misunderstood. In the investigation of the poison-gas attack in
Washington, Georgi Arbatov, the director of the Institute of
U.S.A. and Canada Studies, who plays a national security adviser
to the Kremlin, orders the KGB to work directly with the CIA.
</p>
<p> The show also illustrates the way leaders must expect the
unexpected and not always believe what they hear. The Soviet
side is distressed as Washington gets mired in the
constitutional procedures for authorizing the next in line --
the Speaker of the House -- to act as President. Later, the
American team is incensed by an intelligence report, which
proves to be erroneous, that the Afghan army has fired Soviet
missiles armed with chemical warheads into mujahedin refugee
camps in Pakistan.
</p>
<p> Even in the tensest moments, both sides are sensitive to
how the world views the confrontation. Congressman Les Aspin,
chairman of the House Armed Services Committee, who plays the
White House chief of staff, leaves at one point to hold a press
conference. On the Moscow end, Yevgeni Velikhov, vice president
of the Academy of Sciences, reminds his comrades that they need
to keep the Supreme Soviet, or parliament, informed of
developments.
</p>
<p> Velikhov and Arbatov are, in fact, both advisers to
Gorbachev. They came to the TV set straight from a stormy
government meeting and brought with them a sense of reality that
put The Blue X Conspiracy in perspective. While waiting for a
reply to a hot-line message to Washington, the Soviet team
agreed that, however complex and serious, the problems in the
simulation paled compared with those Gorbachev faces in the real
world.
</p>
<p>--Ann Blackman/Moscow
</p>
</body></article>
</text>